P i The Weather U.S. Weather Burtag Forecast Partly cloudy, ' Slightly warmer. (Detalis Page *) THE PONTIAC PRE 117th YEAR wk KK PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1 eT. wr saad ob 959 —40 P AGES Intensify Search for State Trooper x & * Laos Requests U.N. to Help Repel Red Attacks Britain Favors Action | if Aggression Proved’ in Asian Conflict LONDON (/ — Laos has appealed to the United Na-| tions to send troops to help: repel Communist attacks, | the Laos Embassy said to- day. Britain at once an- nounced it favored U.N. ac- tion if aggression in Laos is| proved. In its appeal, Laos ac-| cused Communist North Viet Nam of intervening én the side of the Red rebels | of Laos. : A British Foreign Oftice spokes. man told a news conference after the Laotian annoyncement was is- sued: ‘If aggression is established, | WASHINGTON — U.S. mil- | itary help for Communist: | menaced Laos now is limited to | providing basic, light equipment. If the United Nations should | approve Laos’ plea to intervene the volume and type’ of this aid might change sharply, but still would not necessarily mean | American forces would be in- | volved. the British government would ob- | viously be in favor of the United | Nations taking action to deal with| that aggression."’ Laos Ambassader Prince Khammao said in a statement: “Facing the characteristic ag- gression of the Democratic Re- public of (Nerth) Viet Nam, whose troops are attacking Mu- ong Het and Xieng Kho, using artillery based an its free | the royal government of Laos has asked the United Nations to send forces urgently.” The commander of forces fighting rebels in northern; ‘Laos has charged that the insur- gents are being supported by a bat- talion of regular North Viet Nam troops. * bf * The rebels launched an offensive Sunday after a bombardment from guns the Laotians said were based across the border in North Viet Nam. In Sam Neua, Laos, the royal army commander today armed civilians and sent out an appeal (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | Reinstatement: Won by Scott However, Judge Finds - * Asks x * “ess: IT SHOULD! — Motorists during this final summer holiday weekend might take a* good look at this “reminder of the Grim Reaper between now and Tuesday morning, he will have x * * x * for Troops This Sonne ent * ¢- — House All Ready to Pass Labor Curb Measure OK'd by Senate 95-2; Compromise Bill Has Strong Controls From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — The |House was ready to end the bitter legislative battle over jlabor reform legislation by isending a compromise ;medsure to President Eisen- shower. The Senate passed the bill last night by a 95-2 vote Eisenhower was certain to sign the bill with relish The compromise retained imost provisions of the tougher House bill he had endorsed over the original Senate version House opponents planned no move to block the bill, forged by conferees as their measures to 'Senate-House compromise clean up corruptioy th ubtons * * * for Bardea (1D the House bill would with Graham A. NC). chairman of | conferees, said the i “pass overwhe Imingty ' problem at all.’ Rep. ne The House margin was expected to be far greater than the 305-125 ivote by which it passed its original ILandrum-Griffin bill last) month Some moderates who voted against that measure as too tough wer lining up suppert) for the com | promise ONLY BILD. POSSIBLE AP Wirephote Senate passage of the compro claimed the lives of a predicted 450) persons in’ mise Measure came after Sen John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) said it was “the dnly bill possible to ob-, tain under the circumstances " He conceded that no one probably wa For traffic accidents across the nation. Don't be one of them. completely satisfied ‘Expect 450 Labor Day Fatalities ee the nation 450 will be dead by Tuesday, according to the National Safety Council. State police and sheriff's deputies are stepping up road patrols to- day, bracing themselves for the highway onslaught. Additional unmarked cars, ra- dar devices, three airplanes, and 129 National Guardsmen will be added to the regular highway | patrols in Michigan, Gov. Williams urged drivers to} ‘keep the death toll under 12. That! | Was last the lowest years. toll, nine year's Labor in Michigan Day for * “To save your own life and those * * of your loved ones, don't drive at Seem to mind paying it, at least on run-of-the-mill pur- excessive speeds,” ‘cautioned. ‘Don't passing, don’t drive if you are |tired or have been drinking.’ take chances No Proof for Damages. ONLY 1 LAST YEAR Against Union By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. for reinstatement in the Interna-, tional Barbers’ Union, AFL-CIO, but without winning a penny of the $150,000 damages he sought “I'm satistfied very much so,"’ Scott, 53, of Waterford Town- ship, told newsmen upon hearing ja Walled Lake man. only Oakland County Robert P. Scott has won his fight the weekend, The first traffic death recorded in Michigan last vear was that of! fatality for Weather forecasters are opti- mistic, They predict nice weath- er for most of the three-day holi- day, but warn of possible show- ers Sunday evening and Monday. If the weather is good, authori Oakland County Circuit Judge Wil- ties predict there will be an all- liam J. Beer's pronouncement zee tne high in highway traffic terday afternoon “Above all I wanted to prove — I am still a union man despite all the assertions te the con- trary,” he added, Detroit Local 552 of -the Inter- national expelled him last year for dual. unionism — for holding a charter membership and being lob- pte for the. rival 750-member' State Barbers Assn. Scott, how-| ever, said his removal was Team- ster-inspired because he twice tes- tified against _ Teamsters boss James R. Hoffa before the Senate. To see if thig might have been a reprisal for guch testimony, Ro- bert F. Kennedy, chief counsel of the committee, had Walter J. Sher- idan, an investigator, sit in on yesterday's court session. ‘NO CONNECTION’ | Sheridan and reporters were told, by the union's attorneys that there’ wasn't “the faintest connection”) _ (Continued 09. Page 2, Col. - Pontiac Sales 126 Per Cent Over Last August Both Adams has suggested you arately on the cash register, even -| should get a ipt that aon if we were asked to,” one drug- | the wee tax separate f the Store clerk explained + sales tax. . * *f Retail sales by Pontiac deal. ers during August totaled 45.- 149 new cats, a TR per cent increase over August of, last year when the figure was 15,- S71, 4 was announced by §. FE. Kandsen, since 1965, and one of the high- est August sales in the Divi.” sion'’s history. * * With a public introduction date of Oct, 1 for its new 1960 model, Pontiac production fa. cHities are returning to full op- erations, Kaudsen said. the governor He was the; “lin event the State Supreme Court ‘| “I read in the paper that, the: quest, the mew tax hasn't creat: | “taungine whet © jam sp ore | The twa opposing Varles were cast by Sens. Wayne Morse (1D) Ore! and Wilham Langer (R-ND) Morse said the bill would “liqul date’ some of labors “hard : : . : -arne ‘gitimate rights The heaviest Labor Day traffic) Memorial Day and Independence, their ciistomary & hour shifts, at‘ arned legitimate righ Laotian jn Michigan's history is expected) Day fell on Saturdays and were noon today 2 The bill containing unprece to jam highways, and throughout | ficial two-day weekends hold-) The emergency measures will deated controls over the internal ‘ing traffic down iremain ino effect) until midnight! affairs of unions, is by far the * * * Monday, although road patrols will mest substantial rewriting of the Pontiac and Redford state police be heavy throagh the early morn- nation's laber laws since the posts both will be bolstered by ing hours Tuesday 197 Taft-Hartley Act, National Guardsmen. Redford ex. Sgt. Lorenz Ahlgrim, commander pects to use four and Pogtiac two. of the Pontiac Post, said today Ha Tirst) six Uitles, mused al | All weekend passes have been,"“We expect to have a minimum Tacketeering and other abuses: in _cancelled and troopers began work- of 12 cars on highway patrol duty SCTE UNIONS prove: detatl twit C cuants sail PuSsayt anf thie hachway tell bry Width bil ( the Phertisa Ria 1 ““hefewt fart United Pachinet . REN ite it} anny thie hivhiw aa Viryiant : lead 4 ! tod cred rA 4 4 wiosothe He led a floor fight to defeat yee oecte Gries a jast-minute amendment to the plants across the counts bill which would have set up a 4 walkout bs op ir policy for reimbursing toll read sainst Walser a “nerthie States $4,200,000,000 for those |. h : - highways which will be part of d the interstate systeni Wilson and the untons, ap But Sen. Albert Gore cD Tenn parently near an agreement, a committee member and author memareet) ffhe ett oestiteset of the 1956 act setting: up the big whieh expired Vag. at would highway program. fold a reportes romain (nn clfect anather 74 he would battle tor pul inta: the hours to give baurcuiners an bill some reve source Olle ether da¥ to reach a setile than the penny vas tax boost ment The Tennesse: Democrat said hie id oof fesast twa calle \ Mi ‘ native plans for financing the an CMa I A terstate haghwav system Fle out Pent Veeack tne ut hned them as the finance commit Met Tharsda pean tee started hearings om thee bill sid ow 1c] birt i Sen. Harry FF. Byrd (DP Val. jo a, ‘ the committee chairman, said he helieved the House bill raising the tax from 3 to ft cents a gallon through dune 30, 1961, would he reluctantly approved eS MAKE OVER PAGES yo . PRESS UN ITED PRESS TINTERNATIONAL TROOPER SOUDEN ALVIN KSIGHP Two Unions Call » Strike Against ‘ Meat Company In Today's Press he Plouse passed the tall 24 its Thursday wgter week of wrangling The floor debate mace Caniles +H Wooevident there was ittle en Coudive Near | thusiasm fer the fax increase Faliforials 6 Phe Senate is alsa set for 4 bar & Garden 6 hattle over a wed fer peaset Markets o promram On aa ries 14 hye bull yy faa thebiate { Sports i reoay nuthorise hiv ‘ ’ tbaut 4 theaters x79 billion dollars of farm tt A Radio Progranis te] pluses over the ries three eu Wilson, Foarl i9 my the foot for preaee pire 11Yi Women's Pages 19 the Ailsa who donated it td £4 of his life Ike Grabs a Weekend Holiday _ + AP Wirephotd apartment in Cul- The castle was formerly owned by the! fifth Marquess « Scotiand, * years ago when. they lived in small hved in Brant Fear Violence After Squad Car Found in Field Question Suspect in Vanishing of Officer Investigating Break-In HARVEY ZUCKERBERG AND PETE LOCHBILER Search for missing State Trooper Albert Souden was intensified late this morm- By ing after his abandoned squad car was spotted by helicopter in a Livingston County farm field. More than 100 troopérs in 62 patrol cars were aided by three airplanes and two helicopters in combing an area 30 miles northwest of Pontiac and 20 miles south- t of Flint. Souden, 28. may have killed officers break Souden s a Knight, 48 Peal that injured or state police ist Lansing ta the stience of botedr ica poet Alvin bene se riousty 1 in «adhe red Po Cap ital after by a squad of troopers at 8 a.m. ina cabin on Cedar Lake, 10 miles north of Oscoda in Tosco County, Knight was taken to State lice Headquarters near the seized he was Souden hy been ter when he picked up Wmght juestioning as A Dural preal if a ottaye mn Linden lt h of the Hrigh ton State | s \ ~ wliatiore * * * hae mi WA t 4 4 hort Inivht and sitar then t involved hugdreds of law Fiteivl otlac X wonuine et via ran and northern Ome WAS WENTAL PATIENT Knight is a rmer ment p tient and ex-convict with a ran ipAnal record , Saiden wanted to qu stion Hi in the Thesda night break af the Pneumatic Plastic Co off YN Milford Rd | Milford The break-in was 4 \ olent sith filing cabinet desks and frawers smashed or pl But of a reall cin nt when The squad wis SI 935 am_ by Troope Benpimin 4 } ' padding in vski it m Selfpadge Air F he heopter fr Base The car ‘wa nai lone hers field on Deeer field Township, \* niles soutlhw t of Ff Kulsryski inspected the auto “after the Air Forve pilot had set the helicopter down in the farm field. He said there were no ap- parent blood stains ner signs of a struggle 14 faut ‘ ad the ca Duh Neder Wife Awaits Trooper With ‘Icicles BRIGHTON -® lave vou ever had ieieles nd vour heart the voun math sacd as she cud dled he child vt havent vou dent know hew | feel Mires Clara Souden. 73. wife of missing Michigan State Trooper Albert Souden 28 sobbed occa- stonaliy as she sat in her modest asbestos covered ranch home “Yesterday everstPing was fine" she said “Al had his usua! heavy. breakfast, mentioned something about a burglary case he was working on and said he hoped to wind it ep by the ead of the day. “He kissed the baby and me and then drove to the post and that’s the last 1 heard or saw of him Ir isn't hke him to stay away.” fhe Soudens met ata dance eight communities near Sagmaw. Souden and his future wife in Marion Springs. * * * They dated steadily and the m- jmance continued while Souden served in the Air Force, He was es discharged in 1953 and they mar- ried in 1956. Their son, Edward, was born seven months ago. ‘ 4 ' The search for Souden began p when his wife called the post to ‘ ask where he Was. “Why can't they find him?” she isaid. “Don't they know we need ;him here?’ : ra MR { odd Vd ¢ (Continued From Page One) tol appeared to definitely link him with the sullen, tight-lipped Knight. * * * The gun was found in Knight's possession when four troopers crashed into the cabin and found Knight sleeping soundly. The service pistol had not been fred, said one of the troopers, Gordon Clark. In the cabin there also was angther pistol, apparent- ly Knight's The ex-convict put up no strug- gle but refused to answer ques- tions and remained silent when questioned about Souden, Clark said. Knight was still close-mouthed Jate this morning in East Lansing, as Ohio troopers rushed his moth- er to Michigan from her home in Lima. It was hoped, that elderly Mrs) Knight could persuade her son to break his silence * * * suuden is marned and the fa ther of a 7-month-old boy. He and his wife, hire 23, live in Brigh- ton. An Atr Force veteran, Souden joined the State Police in 1954 and been assigned to Brighton has ‘since completion of his recruit training. | “He is one of our most compe- tent, conscientious young offi- cers,” sald Capt, D. LL. Young- fer, district commander and Souden's superior officer. “We are praying for word from FE. Lansing that Knight has con- fessed and told where Soudes is.” The longer Knivht held his si lence, the larger loomed the fear that Souden dead. his body hidden somewhere Knight's criminal imile long” saie Capt Youngler * * * Once a mental patient in a state hospitalkin Lima, Ohio, “night was parolled from Jackson State Pris on only «a year ago. after serving five years for tlempted murder Wal record ar | js Today's search — one of the widest In recent history—had Its beginnings in a roatine investl- gation which Souden was as signed to follow yesterday morn ing. The officer the Linden Knight's in-laws, sought WKmeght out at owned by and Mrs cottage Mi Says Phantom Sniper Not Ready ihland County Cirewt Judge Fiank |. Doty today refused to concur with a recommendation of the medical superintendent of Tonia State Hospital that Gary A. Tay lor the phantom shiper of two wears ago, was ready to be re lensed Judge Doty ordered the 22 year old Southfield patient back — to Tonia after four psychiatrists agreed that he needed further hos pital treatment The judge ordered Taylor com mitted to the hospital in March of 1957 after he went on a ram. mostly in the southern part he believed that) Taylor needed further hospitalization, but not at Tonia “He should be sent ty an insti tutlon where the facilthes are available to bo Eset what's ime matter with the boy." Dr. Hi feld testified. Judge Doty then rile | I eanot concur with Dr Robertson. [be lieve Mr Taylor might aan be come aA menice ty soctets * * * Saying he had ro legal authority to send him to another wishilution the judge ordered him returned to lonia, He emphasized ta Taylor's parents, who were in’ the court room, that this didnt poevent them from filing a petition aetany that them son ob co ulined to another instifution nearer pyar Complaints Few page, of the county, sheoting at wom. en with a 2? callber rifle. At the time Taylor said, “[ just hid an urge to shoot women ” Following a letter from Dr Per, ry ( Robertson, Toma medic al su perintendent, saying that Taylar had made “a satisfactory adjust nent and was ready for a conva judge ordered fo re-examine, Iesqent parole, the three psychitrists ‘I ayior * * * fe fkan A LaCore said he found “a good deal of hostility and averession’”’ remained in the youth “which might again flare up” Jradyre Doaty did not ask Drs Clinton J Muniby and Abraham Taher to take the conference in his chambers showed that they shared the same opin ion oof Dr LaCere that) Taylor needed further hospitalization Then Gilbert Ho Davis, Taylor's attorney produced Dr Alexander Vo dirsechfeld of Berkley who said stand after a laughed too Over Tax Addilion (Continued Fran Pace Ome hand out any reeespls eather, the cashier wid conty one Customer had mentioned the subject of re ceipts to het “He asked me for a reeert and [ laughed, (honking he was hidding I guess he wie boenuse he and lett A shoe salesman sald be had one customer who wanted a spe celal recelpt with his name on it affer purchasing a ot) pair of shoes “He said he was pom to spend about $100 that day on @ new ward robe and tiared tt would be worth his tne fo save peecipes ta cet the laos Requests U. N. Inouse taxes buck the sales man explamed ] But even this thratiy custome fo Help With Troops aciny ie ey listed separately, thn vhesinan (Continned From Page One) said for reinforcements to stop Com munists massing for an assault on the strategic town, Bi Gen Amkha Soukhavong, whose command post for northern Laos is in Sam Neua, predicted the Red assault would come with. | in 10 days dle said the situation | ‘os not pretty ENLIST TEACHERS Submachineguns and handed out AMMUnt fo govern fion were tment workers and schoolteachers, hastily oentisted nm the defense forees In Washington, Sen Thomas H huchel CR-Cahtt said tod: vy the La-| otlan appeal for United Nations | traps Cay? ‘hi to be considered | Kuchel Senate assistant Kepub-| lican leader, told newsmen the sit- uation is deadly serious and) is! “one more example of the wanton eruelty and savagery of Red China.” | The Weather Full US Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Palr and com tonight, low 40. Temerrow Cw cloudy and a Withee warmer, hig Southweaterly winds 12-18 miles Neder) diminishing tenight and becoming | southerly KIS miles tomerraéw Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding & am 63 At &# am ph Direction Wert-Southwest Bun sets Friday at 70) pm Bun ftlaes Baturday at 6 0) Wind velocity 5-8 m arn | Moo neta Friday at TSS pin Moor rises Saturday at @ 50 am j Thursday in Pontiac | (As recorded downtown! Highest temperature : 18 Lowest temperature. ...... 60 Mean temperature 69 Weather Sunny One Year Age in Fentine | Highest temperature | Lowest temperature a) Mean temperature cans 7 Weather —Light ratn ‘ Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in #4 Years $1 im 1963 47 in 1874 Therefor. s Temperature Chart 56 hyesterday ‘Harold Marquardt, 43 . marshes Sue Gawne vs. Mrs. LeClair in WDGA Final Mis Samuel ° Stsie' cChawne of Franklin and Altix dverh beChar of Ann Atkor are battling today for the “anual Womens Dustriet Golf Axsoctation ehamypoonship at Lochmoor Golf @lub Anew champion is diestied: since [neither Woman has ever won the coveted tith Both grained thee finial TS hole round by turnin: in conte ti umphs yesterday in the mech pay event Mrs Gawne had te finteh strong to defeat Mrs John LaBoskey 1 ‘up Thursday after taking a +up| lead for 12 holes | The second winner in as many days bowed before. Mes LeClair when she downed Mrs Some Mosquitoes Feed on Reptiles WASHINGTON — Most mosqui- toes prefer warm-blooded prey, but) some feed on reptiles: and even) frogs. One species lives entirely fon fluids sucked from the mouths of ants The female usually lays 30° to 200 eggs on the surface film. of) still water, Swamps and salt-water: are favorite breeding grounds.~ Many species deposit itheir eggs in damp soil, but these! will not hateh until covered with: water * * * In about two days. the eggs hatch into larvae or ‘“wigglers.” The active, aquatic creatures must rise periodically to the surface to breathe ihrough an clangated air tube, They eat minute plants and animals: their enemies include fish) and aquatic insects After about al week, the larvac pass through the pupal stage and emerge as adults, Ten, United “States vice presi- Alpena vil Milwaukee 1° 88 Baltimore 89 «671 Memphis 90 72 Bismahek ™% #46 Miami B e764 Brownsville 04 80 Milwaukee 78 68 Bulfale 8 59 Minneapolis 70 51 Chicago t4 64 Mew Orleans 03 1 Cincinnati #3 6@ New York 85 12 Cleveland f1 57 Omaha Tp 91 Denver 65 66 Prlisten 7 42 Detroit 79 61 Phoeni« 104 (78 Duluth 63 51 Pittsburgh 82 63 Fort Worth 83 60 6t. Louis an 664 G. Rapids 86 67 & Francisco 62 55 Houghton 65 67 868. Marie 74 58 Jacksonville 06 75 Traverse C, 76 60 Kahsas C, 87 66. Washington 90 73 La C4 78 86 Meattle | #7 «61 $2 Tampa oo 75 dents have succeeded to the pres- idency YIA0 IVW. Intensify Search for State Trooper | Community He PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 Carl Woolner of Detroit. The Woolners stay at the cottage only on weekends; Knight generally, stuys there during the week, neigh- | bors said. Neighbors saw ‘Souden enter the cottage, stay inside about half an hour, then leave with Knight. * * * They said Souden drove off in| his squad car and Knight followed’ in a blue, 1953 Cadillac. (It was later discovered that the Cadillac) beionged to Woolner There were no further re ports | | | of the pair’s whereabouts until | early this morning when the Cad- | IIiac was spotted at the losco | County cabin. No one suspected anything was| wrong until late yesterday alfter- noon when Mrs. Souden called the. Brighton post and said she was, worried because her husband hadn't come home at his usual time A few hours later police | were on the alert throughout south- | ern Michigan looking for either the | missing squad car or the Cadillac. | stute * * * karly this morning, a car inatching the description of the Cadillac: was spotted near Lyons, Ohio, just south of the Michigan) line. Road blocks were set up, but the car eluded them For a number of hours it believed this car could hay Knight's, but then was spotted at the cabin Ike Vacations x in Scotland Will Spend Labor Day Weekend at His Castle and on Golf Course Was | e been Knight's car! Cedar Lake KNIFE DEATH in the He is th Of the HELD IN questioning by police New York last Sunday sought in the slayings with homicide, From Our News Wires TURNBERRY, Scotland Pre« ident Fisenhower put aside his of * , | " oT; \ ficial cares today for -a short va NEW YORK (UPIi—Angry of cation as an honerary citizen of fi ials today began a drive to Seothind strengthen the police force in a The President arrived today for “ne coddling” assault on teen gang a Labor Day weekend of rest and Violence golf at Culzean Castle, his Scottish} Mayor Robert F. Wagner author- vacation home of 1,080 men In after a meet- ized an increase the city’s police force 8 16 room apartment there in ap preciation for his services as com other teenagers early Sunday were arreigned on murder charges yes- so, as a non-unionist, Gov. WII- > , = ® mander of Allied forces in World terday before a judge who demand- jiams would be lesa likely to re- rien we ae A he War I ed “more drastic action against! appeint him to the three-member Oakland County Jail for inventiga| Kixenhower completed his his. hese punks State Board of Examiners of (tion of felonious assault. torie 10day Buropean peace “p see these things going on Barbers, A mission equipped with pledges every day and nothing has been No successor has been named) The victim, Willie Tige, 32, of: of support from his European done about it,"" Magistrate Da- since his term expired last Sep-|520 Branch St., was taken to Pon- allies and was reported highly | vid Malbin said as he stared tember. He was first appointed by|tac General Hospta] and treated gratified at the results of his down at Salvatore (Dracula) Williams in 1953. for a bullet wound of the left leg. | amazing tour Agron, 16, and Luts (the umbrel- | After Scott's and the Union at- * * * The 68 yearold American Pres ta rena) ermaedes SFr. torneys negotiated unsuccessfully Tge and Worthington had been ident, reaching final agreement ‘The rights of the people have for nearly two days toward an out-| together earlier in the evening po-| with President Charles De Gauate been nexlected "he added \of-court settlement, Judge Beer or- “|lice .said. Worthington said he of France on the main points of | Swift justice was handed out to dered them back in court in order! ‘found $19 he had been carrying| cold. war strategy, flew by jot one teenager vesterday iio make a ruling based solely on’ ‘missing and thought Tige had tak- from Paris to Seotland | Fourteen-vear-old Grant) Young, the paper work submitted in the on it, according to Patrolman Refore leaving France. the Pres of Brooklyn, attacked a nurse at lawsutt. | Thomas L. Hereford. ident said ina brief speech at Le knifepoint on a subway and was : Testimony: never got under way Tige and Worthingtor. had been Jourget airport that his talks with sclzed by police. A little more ab ause Scott's attorneys, pie Montgomery, of 35 Elizabeth St. De Gaulle would mark “ao fur than five hours later Justice Reet ck jvalled i and aul Worthington appeared at the Mont. ther step in our cooperative ef Leonard EF Ruisi sentenced the |Franseth of Detroit, uncovered an 'gomery home around 9 p.m., called youth to the state fraining school | iw Warwick, rity, ‘until he takes his proper Keep Nie Home- VEW place in society" That could mean seven vears Other spearheads of the city’s) attack on teen violence included orders to speed up the: lighting of parke and playgrounds and; plans for establishing additional work camps The camps would be for youths records apparently forts fo achieve ao qust peace” LOS ANGELES up erans of Foreign Wars posed to Saviet Premier Nikita Khrushehev's visit to the United States. Delegates to the VFW's 60th national convention adopted a resolution Thursday denounc- | ing it, iwhose police rhe Vet are ap Canvass City Door-to-Door Park Fund Gets $500 The off. The carw have been donated by Pontiac area auto dealers, Wever - Owen - Hawthorne Club has gone one- fifth the distance in its drive for $2,500 to help improve Hawthorne ‘Park The club collected $500 in a house-to-house campaign, in northwest Pontiac this week, | ‘and hopes to net another $500 to rides and boat trips around Little $1,000 during an all-day festival [Silver Lake _ Labor Day at the park, said Mrs __ ‘ George W. Gray Sr.. club presi-| ae dent Autumn Touches: The festival will -coincide with | ‘Much of Nation the dedication of the park by With Cool Air city officials, Hawthorne is the city's ‘newest, By The Associated Press Cool, dry air covered much of park — located on Little Silver| Lake south of Walton boulevard at! | the nation today, bringing a touch lof approaching atumn in ‘some and sil- winners Anyone There're some trophies ver dollars awaiting the of a 3 p. m. talent show ‘can enter the contest. Other features of the festival ‘include pony rides, hayrides, train more than N. Telegraph road — and the first! areas. to be officially dedicated. * * * Festival activities will be from) But temperatures rose: in parts "0 " roe 21 pn ees ree lol the West, notably Montana, And ge dance scheduled to last from! portions of the Mississippi Valley after showers which swept east- ward into the Southeastern states 7 to 10 p. m. There'll be races and =] Through the Midwest the sky tests for children and-adults at | 35 weed cars will be auctioned {perature moderate. fatal stabbing of twe youngsters in other while the rest face lesser charges. under maximum secu i Ita. m. At 2 p. m., more than (generally was clear and the tem-| J AP Wirephote — Hector Bouillerce, 17, awaits e jast of 13 Puerto Rican youths 12, six have been charged Strengthen New York Teen Violence Fight stem from troubled homes as well as for teenage hoodlums who must! be penned up for the safety of society. Kennedy said he hoped the new policemen could be trained and on the streets by Jan. 1. He pledged to support any patrolman who! used “reasonable and necessary force’ all the way — ‘1,000 per) cent.” Rules Reinstatement in Scott- Union Case | (Continued From Page One) between Scott's anti-Hoffa _ testi-| mony if Washington in August of last year and September 1957 and his expulsion. A union official de- nied the alleged connection also. Scott, unsuccessful Democratic candidate for state representa tive at the time of his removal last year, charged also that the union wanted to keep him out He tackled the beautiful 6,690 ing with city officials yesterday yard Allsa course, five miles Polhlee Commissioner Stephen P from the castle, this afternoon, joonneds promised he would begin The weather is Scotland. u« culling applications at once nally the dampest part of the Wagner was to confer today British Isles was warm sunny with Gev Nelson A. Rockefeller, and breezy who held his own discussion with * * * state officials on the juvenile Scots pave Lisenhower the) ertme problem yesterday. friendliest of, welcomes | The two planned to lay the| Eisenbowtt is oreturning to ° exte P| Washington after the weekend jgeoundwork for on. Bors cael For golf partners here he ha: Coa Reerne! 01 ee state areas his son, Maj John Eisenhowe “% benders Tuy einy : The mayor warned there would and John Hay Whitney, the US be no eeddling’ ef youthful ambassador to Britain criminals whose outbreaks have Culzean Castle is administered shocked the city hy the National Trust. which «u * * * pervises national monuments and Two teenage hoods who alleged: | beauty spots. Scotland gave him jy Jed the attack that killed two iarticle In the Union's constitution! which, they. argued, showed the, Union had violated its own by- laws in booting Scott out | Judge Beer agreed | “If the Union officers had read this section with care I feel cer- tain they would not have expelled ‘one of their members contrary to their own constitution,"" he said. CALLS FOR FINE The section calls for a fine for) the first violation of the Union ‘rules, and suspension “if convicted | more than twice for the same of- |fense.”’" Union attorneys admitted 'Scott was guilty of but one of- jfense, although they opposed this |“‘literal’’ meaning of the section. “It would trespass upon fair play to say that any other member, officer, or group of officers could /provide a punishment beyond the ‘simple, plain English meaning of this article,” the judge said in ruling Scott's removal void. Scott's attorneys also asked that testimony be taken im order to determine damages reaulting from “humiliation and mental anguish” they said thelr client had suffered after his expuision. Saying that pleadings insuffi. elently showed such damages were denied by Judge Beer. Thirdly, Schnelz and Franseth asked court costs based on a total 450 hours they said they logged in preparing for the case, Judge Beer awarded $700, to be paid by the International and Local 552. Both Union attorneys said they couldn't say whether the Union would appeal Scott's reinstate- ment. ; One Union officer remarked when asked if they would welcome Scott back, ‘Don't you know. He's one of our brothers now.” claimed Scott was still active in ithe association, \ r Kills 2 Women, Paul, 8, Missing 110,000 tons of crushed stone by in Shooting of Relative Police, Guardsmen The Day in Birmingham Then Himself Argues With Wife Over Daughter; Also Wounds Another Man LOS ANGELES (UPI) — A 2% year-old man shot and killed his estranged wife and another woman, wounded a man and then took his own life early today to climax a\ bitter argument over custody of his daughter, sheriff's deputies re- ported. A 5-year-old boy was in the room| during the shooting but escaped injury. The daughter, who was fhe cen- ter of the argument, was not) present. | Bruce Kelly shot and killed his wife, Rose, 20, and Mrs. Coy Lee Bates, 40, wounded Clar- ence Legee, 42, and then took his own life, said deputies. Legee suffered a minor wound of the hand. He told deputies Mrs. Kelly had been living at Mrs. Bates’ home since the Kellys separated about a week ago. He said Kelly arrived at Mrs. Bates’ suburban Lawndale home late last night and asked to talk with his wife. The fatal argu- ment followed. Since Tuesday Police Fear Port Huron Boy Has Been Abducted by Molester PORT HURON (UPI) — Fears! rose today that 8-year-old Paul Ferriby, missing since Tuesday, was abducted by a molester. Hugdreds of searchers combing this area and the St. Clair River| have failed to turn up any trace of the boy. Workers at the Peerless Cement Co. plant, a few yards from young Paul's home, had moved about early today on the chance the boy had wandered into the plant yard and somehow become engulfed in the huge stone pile. But police said there now ap- peared to be little likelihood that |Paul had fallen into the stone pile. Authorities said they fear Paul tae = into the river, which is ar his home, or was pulled inte a etematiie by a molester. Community House Offers Russian Language Course BIRMINGHAM—A course in the Russian language will be included in the fall series of craft and hobby classes at the Birmingham Com- munity’ House. Registration for classes in the fall series begins Tuesday at che Community House and will last for two weeks. Those wishing to at- tend are urged to register early as classes will be limited in size. Courses start the week of Spt. 21 except for gardening which courses have proven the most popular at the Community House. They are starting their tenth year with this series. Three new teach- ers have been added to the staff this year—Mr. Neal Maas, inter- ior decorating; Mrs. Priscilla Jac«- son, magazine writing and Mrs. Maximovich. , * * * Returning teachers are Mrs. Vir- jginia Anders and Mrs. Dorotny |Charlton, bridge; Mrs. Edith Fos- ter, ceramics; Charles Doan, dan- will begin Sept, 14. cing; Peter Buenas, design; and The course in Russian, to be|/Kenneth Peck, first aid. taught by Mrs. Veronica Maxi-| Also, Mrs. Alice Slawson, flow- er arrangement; Mrs. Alice Bur- lingame, gardening; Mrs. Patricia Cucchi, millinery; James Rosen and Mrs. Dorothy Siddall, paint- ing; Laszlo Ispanky, sculpture; Mrs. Bea Roach, sewing; and Mrs. Thelma Anderson, silver and en- movich, will instruct students in reading, writing and speaking the language, as well as facts about the Soviet Union. The Community House expects it to be one of the most popular courses. * ameling. Seamanship = safe boat han-) Mrs. Virginia Schafer has charge dling will also be taught for iac|/of the youth program in painting first time this fall. and drawing. This course, for ages 14 and up, will offer basic instruction in nauti-} cal tein: tet shen: Awards School Building Bids splices; aids to navigation; charts and compass; inboard. and out- board engines; rules of the road; Waterford Board Holds Special Meeting for Letting of Contracts and motorboat safety. Lectures will be given by the training staff of U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary, Flotilla 12-3. Returning as part of the regu- lar series will be courses in bridge, creative pottery, adult ballroom dancing, design, en- ameling and silver, first aid, flower arrangement, gardening, interior decorating, magazine writing, millinery, painting, sculpture and sewing. “There will also be a youth pro- gram of painting and drawing taught after school hours and on Saturdays. Over the years, Construction contracts for a new $350,000 elementary school in Wa- terford. Township were awarded at a special Board of Education meet- ing last night. * * * The Leslie Construction Co, of Pontiac was awarded the general jconstruction contract to build the the bridge|14room school on Walton boule- vard on a low bid of $269,170. This does not include school equipment. A well drilling contract went to B. W. Layman & Son of Pon- tiac with a low bid of $1,638. | This was estimated on a base depth of 160 feet.. Architectural contracts were awarded to the firm of Smith & Smith for designing two additional elementary school buildings. One of the buildings will be erected on Merrie road on the south side of Watkins Lake. The second &chool site has not been acquired yet, ac- cording to Superintendent William Shunck. Druggist Refuses to Take Added One-Cent Tax CROSWELL (®)—Druggist R. L. Sherman says he is sing to collect the added state sales tax from his customers. Sherman is a Democrat but he sald that has nothing to do with his decision. Democrats in the Legislature generally op- posed the added tax. ' * * * “I’m not going to have my friends saying for years ‘you clipped me’,” said the veteran * * * A former -Board of Education member, Marshall Smith of the Smith & Wilson firm, was hired City Man Held A Pontiac man was arrested last night after allegedly shooting his! cousin's husband in the leg during an argument over money, accord- ing to Pontiac police. ‘Tige outside and shot him, inves- tigating officers said. The weapon used was a 38 cal- iber automatic pistol. Set for Labor Day (Continued From Page One) at all times during the day. We, would have six in use for a sormai weekend. “Every uniformed trooper available will be on the road. The county's traffic record has been outstanding se far this year but it takes just ene bad holl- day weekend death toll to put safety officials behind the eight bali.”” he said. : The Oakland County Sheriff's Department will work on a similar, basis. Detectives will hold down desk jobs, freeing uniformed depu- ties for highway patrol. * * *® Special water deputies will be out in force on area lakes, watch- ing for boaters after ‘one more! , |fling” before fall closes in. “One more fling can be fun if: boaters and swimmérs observe! state laws and follow common safe- ty. precautions,” warned Sheriff. Frank W. Irons. “If they don't, | it may be the last fling.” The specially equipped sheriff's ambulance and rescee unit will be in use on a 24-hour basis be- Sanilac County merchant. as the Board of Education's first legal counsel. Proposed exterior lighting for the, Cooley Elementary School, and a request from the faculty regarding a payroll deduction plan were both tabled until the next regular Board meeting. Several residents were present asking assistance from the Board for the installation of a signal light on Williams Lake road, near Schoolcraft School. The same detegation had ap- pealed to the Waterford Township Board Monday night. Sherman said he would not collect the added tax unless and | until the state supreme court finds that it is legal. He branded the new tax as an “evasion of law” and said that to him it was not a question o? money but one of ‘‘integrity.”’ * * *. He also complained that there will be trouble if the court de- cides the tax is illegal. “How,” he asked, “are you going te compensate for the money people paid you if the tax is found illegal?” —- 2 of SIMMS ‘Best Sellers’ Go on SALE Tonight and Saturday — $3 HOLDS! Taveltktidiol etek sete. 7” POWER SAW Regular $49.95 V alue Rugged extra power saw cuts 2x4s at 45 degree angle with blade to spare. Ball bearing slip clutch prevents ‘kick- back.’ Complete with 7-inch hardened steel blade. Universal AC-DC motor, 115 volts. . GEARED CHUCK Electric Power Drill 3 | $23.95. List T 2 88 FACTORY GUARANTEE Drills \a-inch steel t«inch hardwood _ Universal AY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 1 |. = S ae &) — — S ea & = = = L | GIRLS’ QUILT-LINED HOODED CAR COATS 2 days only! - Where else but Robert Hall do you find such outstanding values! Attached or hide- away convertible collar-hoods . . . multi-color stitching . . . novelty braid treatments ... orlon-piled trims! Two new styles . .. each in lustrous cotton sheen! 7-14. 200 N. Saginaw St.—Plenty of Rear Free Parking 4° % GETS KEY TO PARIS — President Eisen- hower holds the key to the city, given to him by Paris City Council President Pierre Devraigne. The presentation of the golden key was one of | THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRID AP Wirephete the highlights of the tremendous welcome given Ike at the French capital. Standing in the center of the group witnessing the presentation is Pres- ident Charles de Gaulle. Butler ha 13 col 2-36 Ant Stag—Paul Butler the 1960 Democratic | WASHINGTON (UPI) — Demo- re-adopt a 1956 rule to stem any tation on all standing committees leatic National Chairman Paul M. revolt by Southern party delegates. of the convention. In the past they s formally proposed that Paul Butler Finds Way | to Halt Southern Revolt convention; —Giving women equal represen- In a memorandum to the party's have had equal representation only national committee members, But-/on the resolutions and platform ‘ler noted that several Southern committee states have acted recently ‘‘to re- * * * — Requesting state delegations Fake Reducers llease presidential electors from (he ponteation of voting in the electoral to designate their committee mem- | college for the nominees of our bers 14 days in advance of the Choose from one of Waite’s many convenient Charge Plans! _Exclusive at Waite’s... All Orlon Pile Lined Scie MEN’S COAT SALE $24.50 to $29.50 Values $7 999 * Ideal for School or College * New 1959 Stylings * All Fleecy Orlon Pile Lined * All Full Cut, Extra Warm * Sizes 36 to 46 * Tan, Charcoal, Brown, Grey or Olive 2 This action, he wrote commit. | Americans Fleeced for tee members, indicates that the | $100 Million, Endanger "eed fer re-adopting the 1956 | | convention rule ‘‘still exists.” | Health, Says Official He said the 1956 rule was ‘‘large- ‘ly responsible for the absence of WASHINGTON (UPI) — Health any serious or divisive contests) ‘Secretary Arthur S. Flemming over credentials of delegates or, lsays overweight Americans are dclecations in that convention and ‘endangering their health’ and for the lack of any problems as to) |being fleeced of 100 million dol- electors.” jlars yearly by resorting to fake * * * [ster aide: and alien devices 10° He told the committee members ‘lose fat. he would ask them to approve a | Flemming called. a special news resolution recommending that the ‘conference to warn the public wonvention re-adopt the 1956 rule.| against pills, potions, freak diets. The resolution will be presented) vibrators and other gadgets being, 9; a committee meeting here Sept.| billed as weight reducers 16 | | Whatever claims may _ be Wica ‘werd icaked cot last | ee ‘hagas — yet week that Butler was going to | to come up with a “simple, | nace such a meve, a samber | safe and sane food, drug or de- of Southern Democrats called | . |party when they have won the convention instead of seven days | e 0 ‘electoral votes in these states." | * * * i Plus 500 Gallons before it opens Yael = ee ee etee eeeee =e ct NEO — — per ewe es - —= % SPEEDWAY 79° Gasoline! Get Detajls and Entry Blank from Your Rambler Dealer or Spredway ''79" Station r Vom mm Le) 2 CHOOSE FROM FIVE STYLES! Washable 37” Toggle Coat, Zip-Off Hood Washable Car Coat with Shaw! Collar Washabe Barracuda Style Jacket Wool Melton Suburban Coat, Solid Color Herringbone Tweed Suburban Coat Waites Men's Wear... Street Floor vice’’ that will, in itself slender. anew for his resignation. He has | ize a user. ' long been under Southern attack | “There is no such article,” he for, among other things, his in- said sistence that the party take a The only real way to lose weight.) strong stand on the civil rights he made clear, is to vat less and issue. exerose ue * * Butler told the committee today that there was nothing new in the George P. Larrick, director of & rule he was proposing. It was ; worked out as a North-South com- promise in 1956 to supplant an earlier controversial loyalty oath * * * Under the 1956 rule, the seating of convention delegates could he challenged unless their state par- ties gave assurances that voters would have a chance to vote for convention nominees and for elec- tors ‘‘pledged formally or in good conscience" to those nominees. | Some Southern states have acted te omit the Democratic | | presidential and vice presiden:ial_. | Bominees’ names from the ballot and to elect free electors. The | ‘the Food and Drug Administma- ‘tion (FDA), told the news confer- ‘ence his agency is investigating all products that claim weight reduc- ing miracles. The agency moves! lin where a product is falsely la- ‘beled | The American Medical Assn. has |made the estimate that overweight |Americans are being fleeced to the itune of 100 million dollars a year ‘in their zeal to lose weight. Lar- ‘rick has called the figure ‘'con- jservative.”’ Crowd Cheers Ticketing CHICAGO (UPI) — Two police sergeants, trying wrathfully to dis-/ Purpose of this ts to withhold sup- cover the cause of a traffic jam,| Port from any nominee found came upon fellow policeman Jack, °bJectional to the South. Muller in the middle of the tangle’ x *& * hanging tickets on 50 cars parked; Butler also said he would pro-. around the U. S. Courthouse while pose these other changes in con- a crowd of 300 cheered him on. vention rules: | —— Shop Tonight ‘til 9 Ne. 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In new ‘Free- ift with floating bra you'll never know you're wearing shoulder straps. The bra moves. with you. ' And, Free-Lift curves you frorn waist to thigh with lightweight power net. B,C cups, 34-40. ~ 15.00 Waite's Foundations . . . Second Floor ee ee ee i ~ 5 48 West Huron Street -. THE PONTIAC PRESS- FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 Owned and Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company Hasoty A Pirzognatp President and Pubiisher Howaep H. Prrresaste LL Jonn W Vice President and Business Manager Hasay J Rego. Esat M Teeapwett, Managing Editor —S ee . Prreogaato, Secretary and Editor Circulation Manager ——— ee ———— Jonn A Riaegy, ~ Treasurer and Advertising Director G@rosce C. Loman, G, Maasswatt Jonpan. Classified Manager Local Advertising Manager a eiemiaianin Hopes Defeat Misgiving for Ike-Nikita Exchange Old ‘Harry loves to sound off. Just ask a question and he'll rant on against the Republican administra- tion. But there are times when he is joined by others, such as the doubts about the wisdom and prospects of the EISENHOWER - KHRUSHCHEV e€x- change. * * * The way former President TRUMAN views it, he would okay Mr. KHrusH- CHEV’s visit_to the United States, but he is against the President’s trip to Moscow. : Mr. Truman wrote, “The power and leadership articles y, a Voice of the People Readers Add Comments _— to Discussion About Russia s Congratulations on the recént Press articles regarding Russia. Your reports and the recent statement by J. Edward Murray of the AP Managing Editors meeting in which he pleaded for truth in foreign news give one hope for the future. x & * You pose the question, ‘‘Why?” to a sumber of things. He’s short in material goods and housing because of the unprovoked attack by Hitler. Just how many cars, TV sets, refrigerators, etc., would we now have, if this country had been overrun as far as Chicago — every industry, factory, village and city together with all schools and li- braries having been destroyed or carried away? x * * Your ‘‘why” with respect to religion leaves the ordinary Russian unexcited. He’s now made communism his religion. He’s quit praying “Thy Kingdom come on earth as it is in Heaven.'’ The average Ameri- can’s deluded concept of Heaven is considerably more commuznistic than capitalistic. x * * Concerning the ‘“‘why” of freedom im politics, the ordinary Rus- sian isn’t interested. Most ef the world laughs off our tweediedum and tweediedee political parties. Not even the leaders can state wherein they differ except that one is in office. All Russians can vote at the lowest level and from there to the Presidium each: group uses its judgment to elect its superiors. Their entire philosophy of government differs from ours. x * * Lincoln White said, ‘I have seen the future and it works.”’ The eco- nomic revolution of the past 40 years and now. affecting most of Asia and Africa is bound to make changes as great as the industrial revolu- tion did. Million dollar missiles and any other firecrackers now being played with cannot stop these changes. If used in a war, they'll surely make what is left of this civilization commuanistic, no matter which side thinks it is the winner. Orchard Lake —_— There's little doubt of a newspa- per’s responsibility to maintain rigid standards of reporting. The about Russia state: "only members of the Commu- nist party can vote...” and ‘ | four per cent of the Russian people vote.’’ This is not true. * * * Hedley Donovan, managing editor of Fortune, after his 1958 tour reported: ‘In the U.8.S.R. voting is in effect compulsory.” and “Only the insane, and the people in jails and slave labor camps (perhaps twe or three million) can evade the election.” and “When ballots had been tabulated all over the Soviet Union, it was reported that close to 134 million people had voted.” * * * John Gunther states, ‘‘. . .more than 120 million people voted in the last election."' True, Russian elections are mere rubber stamps, but the point is that many people have been misinformed. While accurate information is needed in combating a menac- ing ideology, it is also essential that we must be able to present a clear and realistic picture of American life. * x * Given the opportunity to clarify the status of the Negro in America, the article seemingly fails. In speaking of the Negroes that have worked in homes, it only contrib- utes to the false concept of the Negro as a servant class. Why didn't it speak of the Negro School Board member, the Negro doctors. lawyers and teachers who function in a leadership role in Pontiac? Robert FE. Vackaro 784 St. Clair (Editor’s Note: Mr. Vackaio should re-read the material. The point is plainly made that two Ne- groes are working at The Press and 25 at The Chicago Tribune. Paul B. Line The voting Mr. Vackaro mentions is on unimportant bottom level is- sues.) ‘Carey Can § Speak Just for Himself’ Unionleader James B. Carey, head of the electrical workers sent letters advising 229 House mem- bers who voted for the labor re- form Will that he will be out to beat them in the next election, Mr. Ca- rey Can speak for himself, but not for all the electrical workers that would appreciate some type of pro- tection. This is a free country and we can vote for candidates of our choice. ‘ For Honest Bill e Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Take a walk some morning when ... The sky is clear and blue .. . Breathe the air so fresh and clean . . . That is so good for you . . . Meditate on nature and... The beauty all around : Trees and pretty flowers and . Each pebble on the ground . . . Soon your soul will fee] that God . . . And heaven are so near... Ali your troubles and your tears .. . Will melt apd disappear .. . Courage will come back to you .. . Faith restore your sight , . . Every dream will surely seem .. . More beautiful and bright .. . Try it out some morning in... The very early dawn .. . Love and life will lift you up... And help you carry on. (Copyright 1959) Smiles Some kids think mommy is lucky —only Monday is Washday. * * * The best tip for summertime: don’t, when you are out in a canoe! Case Records of a Psychologist: All Mystery Has Logical Answer Johnny’s case is a twin for the very same thing Plato de- scribed 400 years B.C. But Pla- to’s ingenious theory is not the prevailing explanation which we psychologists advance. So compare the two carefully and don't let your children be ad- dicted to witchery or super- stition. There’s a logical cause for everything, even if we haven't found all the answers yet! By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE ‘CASE C435: Johnny B., aged 16, is seriously puzzled. “Dr. Crane,’ he began, “I took a vacation trip through Mexico last. summer for the first time. “Mother and Dad were along. And as we were driving down a the place looked “There was a was a rustic bridge and a native hut a few yards from the bridge and on the left hand side, ; “Sure enough, when we made the turn, there was the bridge and the hut. exactly as I had described them ; * * * “Mother and Dad thought I was psychic. And I can't figure it out. How do psychologists explain it?" PLATO'S THEORY Readers, Plato described this very type of thing about 400 B.C. in ancient Athens. Our apparent familiarity was thus due to the fact that we re- tained fragments of our former knowledge. * * * But modern psychologists have a better theory. We ascribe John- ny'S case to an error in recogni- tion. Suppose you are walking along the street and see a friend ahead of you. You rush up and slap him on the back cordially, only to find when he turns around that he is a stranger. How did you make the error Faulty recognition. The stranger had a few things that resembled those in your friend, and you sim- ply jumped to a hasty conclusion. * & & For example, maybe his coat was of the same style or color. Possibly he swayed just like your friend in the act of walking. Anyway, you picked out a few similtariities and then jumped te the conclusion you had seen him before. You slapped him on the back as you would the friend for whom you mistook him. Well, that's what happened in Johnny’s case. Some elements in the situation resembled a Mexi- ean pastoral painting he had seen or a view he had experienced back in the U.S.A. RECOGNITION ERRORS “But he predicted accurately the bridge and the hut,” you may vague feeling of having been there before. Scientists take the general prem. ise that anything that occurs on this earth can be explained by earthly laws, without having to invoke magic or telepathy or Plato's belief in transmigration of the soul. + * * Doubting Thomas is thus typical to evolve a logical explanation hi lif aay ai f -aer i) S = a 35 EE without recourse to voodoo magic, but it is better to err that way, than to become a dupe for every bit of superstition. Alas, people actually seem to WANT superstition and voodoo ex- planations, for they: are suckers for the mysterious. Ask any magi- cian. Afway to Dr. ¥ ) in ire of : oP demeek welf cover a Sa for logical charts and pam- q FH] i : ; ut i ae ‘hy iain ti ee ¥ fo. - THE PONTIAC FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 7 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN F SS ’ » ; = 7 Dryden Area Group Sets. Dinner fo Honor Teachers DRYDEN Members of the the clubhouse at the Old Mill. It Dryden Area Development Assn.|will be a potluck affair with the last night completed plans for a association furnishing the ham, dinner meeting Oct. 1 to honor beverages, rolls and butter. — in the Dryden School sys Special guests, besides the ‘ teachers, will be members of the In other action, association mem- bers began work on their 1959-60 tact them personally and by mail| LANSING W — The Michigan “bout, joining the organizations, | Assn., an MMPA affiliate, last week called a strike against Seal- Mora and Lapeer. County boards of education is being planned for, The social event will be held at t of Education, Scl ad. ; ministrators, village and town- membership drive. They have al- ready sent letters to former mem-) Milk Producers Assn. (MMPA)| ‘The association’s main project | has threatened a statewide strike for the coming year is to rally | ‘St é | ther dairies here. tent ard tee deat Glenn Lake. ‘te Middle of the month to discuss MMPA President Glenn Lake 15. problem, a local board mem-| | ship beards, local businegsmen, | ministers, and their wives, Coun. — ty Superintendent of Schools Ed D | Mt ik 1: *¢e bers urging them to join up again. MMPA . Official Hits Last night each member took a/ Wisconsin Milk Import list of names of men from the Dry-| against Sealtest Dairies in support, support for the local high school | of striking Lansing area milk pro- jm its drive for annexation with | ducers. | the Metamora district. said producers in other parts of a wiichigan were aroused over ‘aad tok the Etcu, what he said were attempts by All of the volunteers who-offered Lynch also will be invited. in Lansing Walkout den telephone book. They will con- The Lansing Milk Producers iy meeting of the Dryden, Marte: Sealtest to break the strike by | their services last year as com-| importing milk from Wisconsin. }mittee chairmen were re-appointed . . * = ‘last night. They are Don Osborne, TOPS IN 4-H Janet Lony, 18, of 3988 Sleeth week Shown with Janet is one of the ofher wit There was it Seeccie com- area survey; Harry Youngs, mem- Rd., Milford is one of four teenagers named ners, Peter Sp 18, of Milan, at left, and “. oe ules ee bership; Axton Hammond, plan-) «most outstanding of Michigan's 70,000 4-H Russell G haw state 4-H Club leade?. The a Said: ining committee; Ross Reynolds, . : ors. The , . ; 4 ther winner ire » Ruon “Sealtest is bringing milk into ublicity: Dr. Don Fl tee doc Club members. They won the honor for the r ¢ ther wi shown ro Luanne Ruona, . m i P aa le af = » GOC- booths entered in competition during the State N oof Pelki { Nick Vu of Waterviiets > Lansing from every available tor: Harold Foot. lights on the source in Michigan and is import-| thietic ; ; field, and Don Hagemeis- ing milk from Wisconsin at a cost ter, white elephant sale 4-H Club Show at Michigan State University this Vacant Seat Reminder WASHINGTON—There will be a the homeroom at Romeo Junior Hich School next week Lindy was the oldest ef five Fourteen - old) Lindy Lou’ children ef Mr. and Mrs. James (Micielli of Washington was killed Micielli, 7272 Smale St. at 1:40 pm. when shETAOIN ninth grade at 1:40° p.m yesterday when she turned her bicycle into the path of a panel truck near her home vacant seat in when classes resume year - e-- Spent Night in Farmington Runaway Children Safe Five runaway children from De weeds youngsters, aged 10 fo ) safe yesterdiy 21 hours | troit — a y Pol : J ALT lf. turned for home. A motorist gler ) tr oli they get tater ‘er ciiibek ee rs mive them soda pep and cookies as far as Fi won Wh hes 1 off the police spent the might beneath the * of a shopping center any ithe ' * * x °@ After breakfast of * * The children, objects of an in- tense police search, were picked by patrolmen in Redford Township later im the day up Four of the runaways were the ect rson children of Mrs. Miltred Stafford of Herman Ganten Detrouw, The fiith w Ll-veat i J (ase 1 . B BI h who i he t nt In arm aZe * * * } ; = Patt ‘ 1 1 rus IMLAY TOWNSHIP -— Arson ig DRT aks w ms taulvattor for her meatl hawin “te ' the Nt { li - ‘i suspected as the cause « punished her She said her mother jlast_night which destroyed a barn yao ston strict 2" jand equipment on the Albert Stolat \farm at 1869 Black Corners Ra * * * kapeer County Okemos Man Named sheritts dep uties said today that this is the third barn fire in 4a mile square to Farm Bureau Post | of Girl’s Tragic Death Neighbors said she was a cheer- ful girl, always with a smile and a kind word for everybody. And, added, she always warned the younger chlidren to be careful riding their bicycles. They could hardly believe an accident like this could happen to her. * * * Romeo State Police said Lindy “was riding on the shoulder of the road and made a left turn starting MOS in front of the truck driven by Robert Wilson, 36, of 6536 Mayfair St, Utiea The accident happened just north {@7 Mile road Wilson they aCToss told troopers that he tried to aveid hitting the girl but was unable te do so. She was dead on arrival at the Com- munity Hospital near Almont. She had suffered internal in- juries. The driver was not held but was make a statement at the Ma- County prosecutor's office {no ome today Lindy had three brother, Frank, Jimmy. 10; and Patrcik, 4, ind a little sister, Kathy. 24%.. Her body is at Van Lerberghe Funeral Home. Detroit 10 . Highway Bids Include Two for Oakland totaling $4,826,507 on trunkline projects, in- two in the Oakland Coun- were announced yester Low | ids en state " | irea far in excess of what Lansing : : area during the past vear : = , day by the State Highway De farmers are asking. - . Champion Steer Brings $l 50 Per Pound LANSING; c uence E. Pren- partment at Lansing “When a dairy is willing to Pupils to Register = Lost in the cor thet be- tice of Okemos has been named * * x pay $5.15 a hundred weight for . . ' des the buildu a $6,000 secretary-manaygel of the Mic higan The Sano tt ANT STE Anare Wisconsin milk just so it won't at Dublin School EAST LANSING op-—The grand youngsters attend r" eck long pound for h > pound resery: ymbine, 1,000 and Farm Bereau epat < on the old U.S 16 bridge have to pay Lansing farmers | champion steer of the state 41{ Jumior state fa champion hoy and 25 cents a pound come fertiliz He succeeds Norwood Do East- crossing the Chesapeake & Ohio the same price otber Michigan Next Thursday Club sh a Mp i BI hi * * * her champion pen of two hog The Iml 7 — man. who restgned in July to be- Railroad tracks st Novi and 39 dairymen get, it indicates to | a a * SE atk =n Twelve-year old ( riwson totality 400 pounds f ‘ “ uvparimen come head of the Midwestern miles of 22-foot bituminous aggre us that the dairy will resort to | WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—The SUS “8S Sold for SE30 a Pound: ne on fs * * * fought the lize. and no estimate states Appeal Division of the gate surfacing on Newark road any means fair or foul to main. pyblin School will open for regis- Jee ne ae vests a " - . Other prize livestock sold and OF kotal lose Hes Se American Farm Bureau Federa- east and west of M24, south of tain sub-standard prices in the tration of pupils in. the first Ste dtesem jock at Michigan ficie price pee ipaind méluded lafieer and @S ike hie awn, Lansing area.” throuvh the eighth grades at & 40° | : OETA ett ED tes Highland Republicans * * + struchon on Barnes road east from Lansing area farmers get 50 to a.m. Thursday. The children will Theletect * * he ane Says Farm Fire Losses Hears - Saar & ard ai Joint va ti Prentice, 53, for the past six Med 60 cents less per 100 pounds of be dismissed at 9:30 am. and re- Willoushhs 0 of Plymuuth , I ac on Upswing in 1958 ( onan er aaa 25 an 20in Benny years has been state administra * * * milk than farmers in neighboring; turned home by bus vear the erand vapeur nb cht 4 ; ir Leslie Wa 12 # ! HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP. A joint. ve efficér ef the State Agricul A low bid of $28,335 was made markets, Lake said tegular classes for grades one only 70 cents per pound by ASHINGTON , The Kai Reserve pen of thre lamb ®mecting of the Highland Repubh-| taral Stabilization and Conserva- for the bmdge job at Novi by The striking Lansing group |S through eight will begin on Friday A = + eure Department reports tha Inds, sec) Ballantyne New can Club and the Huron Valley, tion Committee, a division of Lee Turzillo contractors of Brecks- demanding $4.85 a hundred weight oy next week at 8:40 am. Regular’ ¢ ren oe ‘iti ‘a: ims fire losses increased nearh lacaeioah Wee fee. Gadand © Repiblican ‘Women’s Club 1. the federal Department ot Agri ville, Ohio for Class [ (drinking) milk, about qigmissal time will be at 2 10 pin hie fesers cham ein. SLUT a haa fitth ance et and : XS awiecy 8 heduled for & f m Tuesday at .calture. The Lapeer County road project 40 cents over = rate tte sroup foe all grades pantie a c ae ana Nd per cent cee ’ gee yea! : ee Me : ; . ‘ . ares a low bid of $65,464 rom the says is now being paid by ec * ‘ ® vlett Construction Co, a artfore struck dairies =| , Kindergarten pupils, including * * * This report. was made as the eorapnriy, als. cd i Pbe Mrs bie’ Prentice, a native of Hastings Also includéd ip the on bids wos Ses those yet to be registered, will Both prize gnimals vere pur- agendy prepared to cooperate with was named dress revie Peters fi cepublican State | County, atte nded Michigan one for $2,283,488 to complete the attend their first class in both chased by Wrigley Stores, Inc . of the National Fire Protection Assn and will represent the stat Central Co MN Phe pubhe is State University and Kansas State final 4 miles of the Detroit-Chi U.S. Imports More kindergarten rooms at 8:40 a.m. Lansing in’ a National Fire Prevention 0909 elothing club members at the [Ms !ted and oe on the MSU staff as a cago expressway in Jackson Coun- . Friday. * * * ale campaign between Oct. 4 national 4-11 Club Congre in Chi ' mal | mound re 4H Club agent, agriculture exten- ty and another for $173,812 for work A ricultural Products Parents registering their children The livestock auction was a high- and 1) to m ne farmers more cae this fall Her alter nate js freshment period will conclude the-Sion and marketing specialist be-'on the Ford and Lodge express g at this time are reminded to bring light for the more than 2:000 rural aware of fire dangers “Rarbara Bartos. 16 of Corunna evening's activities fore he joined the federal agency.) ways in Detroit. WASHINGTON —In a reversal |birth certificates or baptismal of form, the United States im-| records for the youngsters. They ported more agricultural products|must be five years of age on or during the year ending July 31/before Nov. 30 of this year to be than it exported. ~ ‘enrolled in kindergarten Preliminary figures put exports | Bus schedules for pupils in kin- doring the year at $3,720,450,000 | dergarten through the eighth grade in value and imports at $4,- | Will be the same as last year. 005,258,000. In the preceding | Ninth grade students attending year, the exports were $4.- |the new Cilfford H. Smart Junior 001,820,000 and the imports (High School and special education $3,929,422,000. A pupils will ride the same Dublin Wheat topped the lists of ex School buses as they did last year. They will be taken to the Dub- from ported items with a total value of $620,849,000. Topping imports was lin School and transported coffee at $1,102,466,000. there West Bloomfield ~~ Schools to Open WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- High School and will report for SHIP — The 1959-60 school year will begin in the township district with a general teachers’ meeting the session they were assigned when they registered. Morning session will be from 9 to 11:30; afternoon session will be from 1 to 3:15. at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in the cafe- teria of West Bloomfield High School. First graders will attend Green New teachers in the district will sonoo} from 9 to 12 noon. Second be introduced at the meeting by| yraders wilt attend Green ‘Schocl School Supt. Leif A. Hougen. ‘from 12:30 to 4 p.m. Third and = the afternoon, all of the | fourth graders will be transported ers will go to their respective!+, scotch School. The morning ses- schools to meet with their Prin) sion will be from 8:30 to 12; after- cipals. /noon session from 12:30 to 4 p.m. All classes, except kindergar- | Fifth and sixth graders have been ten, will be in session for pupils ‘assigned a room at the West attending Scotch, Green and West | Bloomfield High School. The morn- Bloomfield High School on Thurs- ing session will be from 8:30 to day. 1/12: the afternoon session from 12:30 ‘to 4 p.m. 5 dr regularly attendin Chil en regi ' Ca . ; . Roosevelt School will be transport-| Students who plan ora | to attend ed to the other schools ufitil build | Roosevelt School for the first time ing remodeling is completed. The! i. tan should t s § register at the remodeling is progressing on sched- ‘Board of Education office, which is ule and it is expected to be com-' : pleted by Nov. 15 ‘open from 8:30 am. to 4 p.m., * ae Monday through Friday. There Roosevelt School children, grades they will be assig one er Class, and report for class as- 1 through 6, will report for class |. assignments on Thursday at the signments at the Roosevelt Schoo} building on urday. Roosevelt School gymnasium, using; * Pig * y “ the north entrance. Students will) . 4. The bus schedule for Green and pi gala oe greege doo the teach scotch Schools and West Bloom-. ae semen ee be. field High School will be the same gin with letter A through Lwin en p nchool. Minos report any time from 9:30 to 1 | iS Mohd Ned boot : v . adjustments, if necessary, will be i a.m. Students whose last narr s| made later 7 begin with letfer M through 7 willl“ Cyidren’ living in the Roosevelt report from J to 2:30 p.m. Roose-| 11.4 being transported to the other velt pupils will begin classes 0M) ca iote will be picked up at any Friday. ‘one of the following three places: Kindergarten teachers will ac-) cept children for enrollment on, — First stop . South end of Roose- Thursday and kindergarten classes velt School; Second stop . Cor. will start on Friday. | her of Hester and Orchard Lake * + * | Reads; Third stop - Fordham — Roosevelt School children will be, and Semmers road. Children upon reporting at Roose- | velt School on Thursday will be igiven the assignment as to bis number, leaving time and ing time. given ty. following assignments: ‘until the kehoo] rémodeling is com- pleted Kindergarten children will have return. | a room at the West Bloomfield ; OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAY NIGHTS You Get Complete: @ Box Foundation @ Innerspring Mattress @ Headboord @ Legs AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS You Get Complete: @ Box Foundation @ Innerspring Mattress @ Headboard @ Legs °32°? : 8°? ‘USE YOUR GOOD CREDIT TAKE UP, TO 2 YEARS TO PAY! as " TITE. PONTIAC PRESS. wn rought Ends With FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 __! lions’ 35-24 Victory | Scoring Spree Comes Affer 8 SPORE Empty Quar fers Yanks, Orioles, Cards Win Only Other Major Loop Tests sve» “ers LR Willies’ Do It Again tnited Press International Those White Sox’ scouts out to the ‘‘hook’’ on Wil McCovey sure hia with an encyclopedia instead Only Dodger By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press TOLEDO—It took eight quarters of football but the touchdagen drought finally ended for the de troit Lions last night and Coach George Wilson saw the 35-24 vie- Al Campanis came back with tory over the Philadelphia Eagles bulging 15 page report S: in Toledo as a big psychological) Francisco's spectacular 2] - ye: factor lold rookie, $0 you Can ImMayi Since the first period of the aj) the paper work ahead for t Cleveland game two weeks ago, White Sox who expect to fa not a single Lion had been able| yecoyvey in the World Series to cross the goal line for a six pointer | The White Sox can virtual | Wrap up the flag by knockin The drought covered three over Cleveland in’ another bi quarters of the Browns’ game... ping beginning — tonight four empty quarters against the Comiskey Purk, Early Ariants last week and the first | will duel Jim Perry. quarter against the Eagles last | night. Only a field) goal was | The scored during this time. i White Finally, in the second period with Tobin Rote running and pass . ing like the same Rote who led the! team to the 1957 championship in| the final stretch of the season, the| Lions broke loose for 28 points ’~ + * | This was as many points ag P'l four other exhibition games com- bined Kote started the game and | went all the way. This was the first time he had gone the en- tire route in an exhibition game since coming to Detroit from the Green Bay Packers three years ago. "That Rote" said this should pet are fo come rece ntly, on} by t back assigend report acOUS Sox will thing for Wilson afterward,” help him regain his! confidence — and psychologically} him and the team ao dng! hifi” | * * * 6 The big Texan completed 18 fo was a food pive sentand tight, low and aways and even trate “sleuth” notation ut Wynn that * * Lf National League pitchers tried While those White Sox’ scouts Ken Boyer's 27th homer with at it, they'd better concen on that other Willie hechanging speeds meaning Mays. He slantmedadis ck Then, in small print at the bot-25th homer with one on in’ the tim, there will probably be the sixth. Ed Bressoud also homered “nothing worked."’ for the Giants as did Alvin Dark the [or the Cubs Stu Miller took over for An tonelli in the third inning and allowed seven hits and one run the rest of the way to gain his eighth victory against seven de feats. The Cardinals beat the Dodger KK McCovey’s homer came off los 5-3, in the only other NL. game Ker Dave Hillman in the fifth in * re * Dirig ail at pur te tdants ahead The Yankees trounced the Sen er a ne - bad ators, 9-2 and the Orioles defeated anne ta x 20 lead oft MEE he Red Sox, 5-4 in the only Amer- he Johnny Antonelh : ican League action everything on McCovey Inside are too, “That was pretty much story Thursday when McCovey, hitting safely in his 16th straight game hammered his 10th homer in an 84 victory over the Cubs than enabied the to widen their National lead to 2!) games. int il ne he ct (,lants ¥Y Iaakue yood two on in the third inning was the key blow for the Cards tn their triumph over the Dedgers. It marked the 22nd straight game Boyer has hit safely. Joe Cunningham homered in the | first inning and was hit by a | Don Drysdale pitch in his next time up. The incident almost precipitated a fist fight between St. Louis manager Selly Hemus and Drysdale, who had to be kept apart by the umpires after players from both teams came charging onto the field. Drysdale, who lasted only 214 innings, suffered his fifth straight loss and 11th of the season. Rookie Bob Miller hurled a seven-hitter for his third victory. * * * Ditmar of the Yankees | AP Wirephote Art pitched no-hit ball for 644 innings but was forced to settle for al GREETS COLTS — Little Mark Evans was on hand with his four-hit victory over the Senators autograph book when the world champion Baltimore Colts ar- Roy Sievers broke up Ditmar’s; rived at Miami yesterday. They meet the Steelers there tonight no-hitter when he hit his 18th! in a United Fund exhibition. Waiting to sign are, left to right, hamer with two out in the seventh! Jim Parker, Ray Krouse, Gene Lipscomb and Art Donovan. and Clint Courtney belted a pineh ——— = es : |homer in the eighth. i | Bob Nieman clouted his 16th and 17th homers in pacing Balti- Skinny Brown was jhis ninth victory although he was knocked out in the ninth when the Red Sox scored two runs and had the run on base with. two oe WMith A's 3-Tilt Series Billy Loes relieved Brown and) got Pumpsie Green to ground out, | thereby recording his 14th ‘“‘save’’ of the season. Frank Baumann tO Certainty as the Detroit Tigers was the loser. head-mto the last 21 games of the [American League season is that ithey won't finish first, second—or this season. Don Mossi, who threw a three- hitter at the A's last week in EY , DETROIT (®—The nearest thing, been scored against the Tigers | Former Michigan star Jim Van Pelt scored one TD, passed for three and kicked four conversions last night to lead Winnipeg to a 34-23 win over British Columbia in a Canadian game. * * * Cleveland General Manager Frank Lane today denied a state- ment attributed to him that the White Sox would be “the lousiest team ever to win the pennant.” He claims he said the Chisox would be “the weakest team ever to play in a World Series.” * * * | Outfielder Al Nagel, a Western Michigan graduate, was named rookie of the year in the Texas League afte rhitting .342 Ama- rillo. * * * Althea Gibson said she will go next to either pro tennis or Broadway after winning Pan- American net honors Thursday. She has already appeared in a movie and made singing appear- ances. * * * | Vicki Von Hook of Long Beach, iCalif., won the women’s slalom title yesterday in the World Water Ski championships. Nancy Rid- out of the U. S. was 3rd. * * * Eight men have been charged with allegedly doping a horse and fixing races at Santa Anita and Caliente in California. Hollywood private investigator Fred Otash is |accused of bribery of jockeys and | doping. Detroiter After AFL Franchise Lion Official Wilson Hopes to Have Miami Club | NEW YORK (UPI)—Ralph Wil- ’5 passes for 272 yards and three touchdowns and he also gained 6% yards himself and plunged for a Tl) When the prearnty tarted out it looked like another long evening for the Lions The Fagles hit) pay dirt twice and had a 140 lead after one quarter. In three plays after the opening kickoff’ Norm Van biagdes Lopez Can Signe. swiss: ue sn a atOwn Terms — as seventh Right now they are fourth, a AP Wirephoto | ‘ ; : | game back of the New York LIONS GO AHKAD Lions quarterback football game at Toledo. Rote’s tally made it 21- | Yankees, but only 5! games P . i! * > Fobin Rote (12) leaps over the goal line late in If and the Lions went on to win, 3524. Behind Veeck Quoted as Saying ahead of the seventh - place the 2nd quarter to put Detroit) ahead of the Rote are Eagles John Nocera (29) and Ed Kansas City Ath'etics who open Hose Manager Also in for the Ist time in last night's exhibition Meadows (66). a three-game stand in Briggs with a little trouble as far’ down Kansas City, has been picked for | 80 Jr., a Detroit sportsman who is mound duty today as the Tigers @Xious to acquire a Miami fran- attempt to keep a four-game win-|Chise in the pew American Foot- ning streak against the Athletics | ball League, left today for Florida going. | to discuss his Plans with members Jim Bunning is slated to pitch | Of the ial oy Se for Detroit Saturday and Dykes | If Miami wants professional has indicated Pete Burnside, who | football, I rm personaly ae toils principally in the bullpen, pared to back the team financial- may be assigned Sunday’s start- ly. Wilson said after meeting with ing Tole. Harry Wismer, head of the new league’s television committee. Brocklin passed to Tommy Me Line for Pay Boost | Stadium today. Donald 40 yards for the score Only 1:45 had elapsed. | | The Tigers have no chance to! Aftek-poliig: 0 yartls down fie a s s CHICAGO (AP)—Bill Veeck was catch the flying first-place Chi- | the Lions nyare h ended whon fos quoted today as saying Al Lopez cago White Sox, 161% games ahead | mer U of D. halfback Lee Paley can virtually write his own ticket of them, and hardly any more of, intercepted dte’s quan can the U4 if and when he decides to sign’a making up the 11 games that sep-, nud Gartled io the 2 . contract as the White Sex field arate them from second-place | * * * ANN ARBOR um - Michigan's) Syring as first team pivot man. , less prone to injury. acai for 1960. Cleveland. The Bayes went all the way football team went through its first) Syring suffered a dislocated Another contact drill was set for’ Lopez could sign a two or three * * * again con tine plays cand Vou serimmuape yesterday as coach) shoulder Wednesday during & | Saturday afternoon in Spartan Sta. Year contract and at ISIS in’ The Bengals ended up fifth in| Brocklin tessed a qine sarder (0) Bump Ethott continued a program) light contact drill. dium. | Pay, the Chicago Sun Times 1958, 15 games down to the | oy ee cole! ' ia Wal ost pped up weaian . | . It still was not known how long! Timing and conditioning have tte the Sox president as Say- pennant-winning Saas | auikaecan ‘tRAOUE Several offensive combinations! gyring's injury would keep him out been stressed in’ carly workouts; The paper said Veeck has had! And where the Tigers finish in o Wen Lest Pet. Behind Riely once again thuarted the were used in the tough one hour of aetion xX rays disclosed no leading up to the head-bumping pecans jalies with “Tiger | 1959 may determine whether | Cleveland ' s Fe seg “5% Bion march by intercepting a ccontact drilP with) running and break but showed an operation is Linesmen have been — busy l about moe vear but said oped! manager Jimmie Dykes gets a on ; ply be roe Ps pass out of dim Doran's hands passing plays getting almost equal pecessary sooner or later. An op learning blocking assignments indicated he would prefer to delay mew contract to try again with |Peroe eo «3 A on the next series of plays ithention eration now almost certainly would gor plays used in the new double ‘any contract signing until after. ® team he took over from Bill - Kansas City 59 71 “4 7 After taking an beagle punt, ot Elliott sald the session was de. (Shelve Syring for the rest of the) wing, man in motion series. Ithe 1959 season _ Norman with a miserable 2-15 See erkierew cca connected on three stought passes signed to polish up tricky hand. Sensor Daugherty has been spending! Lopez currently is working un-, record May 3. Balicwee Redcat nian from the Woyard dine, hithioay Dorin offs and backfleld maneuvers ~ much of his time watching the der a one-year contract which ex-! Dvkes isn't unaware of this. (Only ee SOA e GAMES for WY yards and Hopalong Cassady) needed in th eteam's new wing PEP ROPT uM Coach Jim. Mil progress from the field tower. ipires this year. So he's tightening (he hopes) Baltimore at New York, 7 ‘p.m.—Pappas 10 yards twice, the last netial for PT offense, Three backfield al ler will put the University of De The squad already has been| Would Veeck offer Lopez a one petroit’s defenses for the short Boston ‘at Washington, 7:05 pm.—Casale the TD to make at Ti7 with Jerty ternated on offense against a des troit football squad = through an showing some signs of weariness—| or three.year contract? home stretch. Ted Lepcio is go- ee Pascual (13-10) Perry's: placement | fensive unit composed largely of hourlong scrimmage tomorrow, especially after the wind sprints| “That's up to Al.” Veeck told ing to get another crack at short- tra) ve Coes (Ine) a pra —-Kieks * * * third and fourth stringers. Pouailing ont the {iret Week et prac: ini wind upeach diy of workouts. | the paper “All T can say is that stép in the Kansas City series ean Poiagdhe quiartertyrcs EMEA hans aihe tere at quarterba k fice for the fall campaign. The passers particularly first) we'd be delighted to have him . | paltene moiety lhe al al mouse Ciel eben hit ty en Stan Noskin, halfbacks Brad Myers The Titans will open their reg. stringer Dean Look—have been) back Of course he'd get a raise ee ee | Boston at Washington. 1 pm Peeing eens Nt eel and and Darrell Harper and fullback ular season here Sept. 18 Ina putting in long drills with the ends He certainly is entitled to it.” cll oe tel ad Goon! oa Paid Cae ae ee Lions then ae oyards fo the Tony Rio opened the scrimmage’ night game with George Wash. learning new patterns. Quarter-| There have been indications Suffering an ankle injury July ie . SUNDAY'S SCHEDULE ting: secon slate seen Whe Tnest ive as the first string backfield ington University, backs also have been doing a lot that even if the Sox win the pen. 74° and his glove work has been me Wace ti hen oe a pe ile i biliott alternated them with a \i0), seatertay deseribed his throwing to backfield recivers;nant Lopez magn take a year’s Shaky, too. oo Cleveland at "cnicago, 1030) ge Jim Martin dribbled) the batt Secs backfield made up of John a, problem so far ts sbonneee the new offense. leave of absence from baseball, | Larry Osborne's fielding st first = NATIONS tee bu wee on the kickoff and Perry ich rene nue quarterback, Bennie Mi renter His Noo 2 center, Frank hase has been erratic, but Dykes pel erancisce B “ +4 on ree eredoon the Flagle 47 Om dhe Rae and Fred Julian at halves Jockunas of Haldwin is out of ac — SARA BERN'S likes , his over-all performance Milwaukee 70 62 530 ‘3 fall plow, to Car sapped his and Johnny Walker at full fon wath a pulled leg muscle and : better than that of Gail Harris chp Eada hance mid Cassady s neckin | Jerry Smith, sophomore center John O Bien Hiner center from : or Gus Zernial ie faved sein ibe . ou 4 pies D% interferences uy othe pas was from Detroit, replaced Dlek Heya Pook NY quit the sqtiaed ‘idea of bringing Chariev Maxwell Philadelphia 56 79 415 20 ealiceiienn iin sepedin nelle ; 0) Oring Our in from left field, but abandoned = Francisco &. cee 2 — Half the distamee to the six was | Midler on edo fw players toe . qiit ; - Only games wna GAMES ve added when Cart objected and was fer tackte Tob Tees semi . ee = “He would need a week or more Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 7:05 p m.—Had- ealled ter unsportsimantike con Matthews Morales Viney (erhe (lara ‘x tullback By DR. CARY MIDDLECOFF to get adjusted to the ground talls ne cus vs. Owens (10-11) or Robin- duct) Rote then went four yard ’ Bit Rowan of Washington. 1 PATIENT'S COMPLAINT: “Hitting the ball fine, coming his way. and wo don't Milwaukee at Cineienstl, 8 p.m —Spahn Helton tis (At te te ae al IV RI B ttl The team’s No. 1 center, Bente scoring lousy!” have that much time left,” Dvkes chicago at Ban Pranciseo, 10 15 pm —Hob- end for the dast sand to male at In Ing d e Fritsch of Massillon, Ohio, drilled DIAGNOSIS: Losing sight of the main goal. said of the Maxwell switch. Duly games saeeee oe 21-14 Another fumble by pass receiver) ATLANTIC. CIEY Nw CAPD Billy Barnes on the 40 started the) young Len Matthews: of Philade Lions toward their 4th TD of the phia, a flashy seventh ranke quarter. The big plity HO Lightweight, battles Cuban) ehan yard sprint by Rot® behind four pion Chico Morales tonight. in blockers to the six nationally televised 10-rounder 4 Convention Hall here Ws Danny Lewis then took a short flip from Kote and skirted the | The bout wil be seen over NBC back Jim) Shorter of Pontiac an look good hitting the ball, end to make it 28.14 with only 28 | beginoing at 4 pom . EST iqured his right knee and will be or to hit good looking seconds in the half. Matthews, 20 will be seeking sidelined for five days Sophomore shots Barly in the second half Nick his third stra\ght vietory the. two sard line and Theron Sapp ranked John Gonsalves easily scored to make it 28-27 9 | Candy McFagand + ok ot | A moment later Jerry Keichow made a beautiful catch of Rote's! pass to complete a OO vard seo ing play for a 35-21 advantage The seoring ended when Dick! Bielski kicked a 42 yard field Nate ~ Lions Statistics - LIONS BAGHE First Downs Rushing 12 6 | : In his Bilt Kane of Forty Forks, Pietrosante fumbled a pitehout on Hist two starts|he defeated fourth ANd) bruised shoulder | “BAST for the first time yesterday after | being laid up with the flu. TREATMENT: The idea of golf is to get the ball | A Into the hole in the fewest possible number of strokes. +) attempts to plug leaky defenses“ led TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 1 pm: Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 1:30 = Louis at San Francisco, 3:30 pm. major reason for Dykes’ 4 hy 1 : eas . = ‘ ri Only games scheduled d Three players were injured in This is a simple and obvious statement. is that 89 unearned runs are MUNG Lele ECHREDULE yesterday's practice Terry Favlot Many golfers, neverthe- - 2 aaa Saal Se : Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 12:35 p.m. Te PCOU Hinionrn: \ i Lette Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 1:30 p.m ale - : Renee an betes less, seem to lose sight of 5 | Chicago at Los Angeles (1). 4 pm an t F f ° 4 ~ a uis at San Francisco . DUAT SPOR POR Waste, inch Wa It. They seem to feel that - Shada Named Coach itll cease etal at kno ked groggy but expects ta he it ds back in action today. Janitor halt tds more important to Pa will ; The idea I'm trying to nursing a get over is that you should fight the course with every resource you have. If you miss the green with an iron, don’t despair. Try to get that next one up there for a one-putt. If conditions force you be out for two days LANSING UR First Iscrimmage session of the fall was ischeduled today in’ the Michigan State football camp, Coach Duffy Daugherty sched. * ued the hitfing for the morning in the third quarter, rivet hewns Penalties a t on the theory -playrm would be . Quarterback Earl Morral sat onidle! Ries o is fresher after a night of rest and | the sidelines all during the amie! Yarss eree a “ ~ getting in only to hold the ball for|passes Atemptea 38 24 ; In this connection I'm the placekicker. Punting. Bootes ‘i, * 12, Fastest Tuneup Times Gene Gedman, out with a bad Penaltics — vances Ue 10 | . if knee, piayed for the first time, ards Prnalired " 0 A pair of Britons, Stirling Moss: » carrying to ball twice for ix) Liens 0 76—%5 and Tony Brooks, recorded the’ yards eset kaaie scortve oo" fastest times Thursday in tuneups | Michigan Staters Walk Kowal-) McDonald (40 yard pasa from Van for Saturday's world champion. # Hrocklin) ezyk and Clarence Peaks did weil ton ; , ’ \ Bielski «47 yard field goal) in the Eagles’ running game aNd sire. Delnts Sapp (2 vard phinge) Walston ¢ Wals- - ; | verd pass from Van Rrockliny, | Ship sports car race here. “Are we playing HOW Moss, in an Aston Martin, went |j a to be a scrambler, be one—not a prima donna. Remem- ber that a scrambling par looks the same on the score- © card as a perfectly played one. & Lloyd Mangrum, an old and valued friend of mine. Lloyd had just parred a hole by coming out of the brush on his third shot and getting down a longish putt. His opponent who had two-putted for his par, observed that Lloyd didn’t deserve a halve. ,’ asked Lioyd, “or HOW - for St. James Crew i Pirates Recall 13 =| Johnny Shada, one-time footba . ; : ontiac St. Frederick g caret for Pontiac st_ Frederick \ntigned fo Minors © ant grid coach at University of De- . 'troit, has been signed to handle the PITTSBURGH (AP)—The Pitts- > Ferndale St. James post this fall. burgh Pirates Thursday recalled © School authorities confirmed the’! players who were on option to § appointment today. minor league affiliates. | ot = ; Sir soi Those recalled: & __Shada will succeed Tom Fitrger-| rom Columbus, Ohio — Out- © ald who turned in a good job for), * the ‘Dales, last fall. He has named hah Wanuie, unt wiaee reo }|Bob Hernbro“h and Tom Zotte as qie) Alvin Jackson, Curt Raydon, : his aides, school authorities report-' nop, Williams, and Ron Black- — ed! today. Johnny also was the Titans’ cage, = in 1946-48, and was line ae) burn. From Sait Lake City—Pitchers reminded of a remark b : : y coach during the same period He first baseman R. C_ Stevens, ‘Teturned to the Titan's staff in catcher Daryl Westerfeld, 1957 Pitcher Jim Hardison was | jcalled from Mobile, Ala., and out- |fielder Jim McDaniel from Den- iver, Colo. All will report to spring train- yestet: ing next year but opty Hamlin . Wins Junior Title » | Firing a fine 79, from the batk » tees at Oakland Hills CC, George Perez and Don Rowe, ' Although he is a minority stock- holder in the Detroit Lions of the National Football League, Wilson is ready to jump to the A-F.L. Earlier this week, he discussed the possibility of acquiring a Miami franchise with Lamar Hunt of Dal- las, the founder of the new circuit. Wilson said he did not yet have a franchise but reported his group had been approved by Hunt and other top men in the A.F.L. Other members of the Wilson group include Benjamin Jayne and |Jack Tompkins, both of Detroit, |and Dale Miller, a Miami auto- | mobile dealer. Olmedo Is Anxious fo Take Nationals FOREST HILLS, NY. (AP)—“I want to win this one very much— lI try awfully hard." | This was Alex Olmedo’s prom- [se to a disillusioned tennis publie today as he opened his bid to add the U. S. National to his Austral- ian and Wimbledon championships jfor a rare “‘little slam.” | Olmedo is top-seeded. In the bottom half of the draw his tough- ‘est rivals appear to be Earl Bach- holz Jr., Rod Laver and Roy | Emerson. Neale Fraser, Austral- fia’s Cup star, and Barry MacKay of Dayton, Ohio, head the upper 'bracket,.They play Saturday. * * * | The two best matches on today's card involved non-seeded players. iIn the men’s division, former Wimbledon champion Dick Savitt lot New York met Martin Riessen iof Hinsdale, Tll.. a promising jun- jjor. In the women’s .competition, Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode of For- est Hills clashed with young Gwen Thomas of Cleveland. Now the Giants Must Win Flag SAN FRANCISCO @® — “The Giants have to win the pennant,” | 1 relations director Garry Schuma- cher. “We've ordered World Series programs,” he explained, “dust do me one favor,” said Manager Bill Rigney, supersti- tious as most baseball men, “Let's not tell the other clubs in the National League about « this.” Reds’ Brothers Battery | CINCINNATI (AP)—The Cin. Cinnati Redlegs will have a broth-— er battery beginning Friday. General Manager Gabe Paul Thursday announced the purchase of left-hander Jim Bailey, 24, 48 pass receivers, | LION SCORING around the tricky, 22-5 mile track)? MANY?" © day, Fred Ewald won’ the club's!and Jackson will join Pittsburgh from Nashville of the Southern The game sponsored by the To yoety yard fens em Pole at an average of 94.74 miles per | In golf, you play HOW MANY! . ‘ If, title over Dave Cam-' this y fte of the Assn. He is nger brother of ledo Elks drew a slim crowd of run). Lewis 16 yard pasa! trom eeceis i Brooks j cor lid it? gol, you play ¥! y, Junior go over it is year after the close . He is a you r 9,500 “* |Reichow (40 yard pasa from. Rate) |e: eee on & Ferrari, did it _ eron, Cameron wound up - hi8/ International League season and) Ed Bailey, first string catcher for ” ibid Perry (b extra points jat 93.91 m-p.be | ise eee Ooo nee round with 83. | playoffs. the Reds. . ‘ \ | ( . - says San Francisco Giants public | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 -- ¥ . ‘ 4 . * — _TWENTY-THREE Hurricane Beats Logan |State Body to BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Tommy ee ee ee ey study Rules on his way to a unanimous 10-round ‘F lies Only’ decision over George Logan of Boise last night in a bloody heavyweight brawl. . HIGGINS LAKE (# — The state conservation commission was scheduled today to reconsider flies It was Logan’s first defeat in! only regulations on trout fishing 15 pro fights. He fought a draw on selected streams. once. Logan also. weighed 198, ee te expire on portions ef the Little South Branch of the Pere Marquette River, Newaygo County; the Seuth Branch and main stream _ || of the Au Sable River, Crawtord L | County; Boardman River, Grand | Traverse County; and the East FIX-UP Branch ef the Fox River, School- TIME eraft County. ‘commission's informal meeting) jhere yesterday with a slight ma-| jority opposing extension of the | regulations. | The regulations, imposing larger minimum sizes, were introduced | See our wide range of 'to determine whether they wouid | allow more trout to reach spawn- PITTSBURGH finish- jing size. \ es and colors to meet | The commissioners heard a re- ‘port from the fish division that | trout mortality under the flies only lrules had been considerably less every home painting need. \single major team that can look| Oklahoma, of course, must be u| oe South Branch of the A forward with any certainty at all considered seriously any year, and to an undefeated season. And I)I feel Coach Bud Wilkinson wiil | can think * several wnich are have his best quarterbacking and |good enough, if personnel comes!most dangerous attack since 1956. Pontiac Glass Co. Darn Safe Becomes ithrough as anticipated and is not'In the Southeastern Conference, Top Harness Winner DU QUOIN, Ill, (AP) — Darn Safe became the top money win- ning harness horse of all time Thursday when he earned $3,000 ‘as winnter of the Trotting Derby. | His lifetime earnings now total | $355,887, surpassing the $353,037 ,won by the pacing mare, Belle Acton. GOOD HUNTING : @ COMPLETE LIWE OF EQU/PAAENVT! EVERYTHING for the HUNTER ° and OUTDOOR SPORTSMEN! - | NEW EQUIPMENT - is arriving right now! We've got | everything from bullets to bull- dozers (almost) so come in and browse around . . . Put your wanted needs on If§-away and have them ready for the coming season. Bank financing easily 1 available WE WILL CLOSE AT NOON SATURDAY SEPT. 5 Closed All Day Monday Sept. 7 SEE YOU TUESDAY! ® Slaybaugh’s ° Plenty Of Parking ~ 630 Oakland e FE 8-0453 23 W. Lawrence St. FE 5-644] PITTSBURGH Points Exclusively for 37 Years lone team being “up” and the other “down”—and this usually | Fifteen persons appeared! at the | «isproportionately by the breaks or unless it enjoys an ad- | vantage in personnel too wide to be bridged by the “up” team’s itoo disaffected by injuries, Predicting college football is a precarious pastime. Foot- ball is not a game that follows form. It is basically a game ef movement, blocking and tackling. The degree of execution of these fundamentals depends greatly on desire or spirit, which can vary appreciably with individuals and teams from game to game. We often hear an unexpected result exptained by makes sense. The “down” team will invariably lose, unless it is favored spirit. Such advantages in personnel become increasingly rarer with egch season for two reasons. First, the deliberately scheduled “breather” or “rabbit hunt” game is fast becoming lextinct. Second, there is an ever-increasing spread of bal- ‘anced strength, both within conferences and on a national ,| basis. In this respect, I can recall few+ iseasons that have matched and none that have surpassed the wayinext year, they probably will be 1959 shapes up. I can’t think of a) ‘up near the top again. to be Louisiana State, Auburn and Mis- at or near the top by season’s sissippi all have rich possibilities. vend. There is also a second group, Every section has at least one | jncluding Alabama, Senmanees, team and most of them have two | Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Fler- or more capable of the highest | ida and Georgia, out of which ranking. The Western Confer- | one of two could move up high- ence has at least four in Ohio | er than expected. The Atlantic State, Wisconsin, Northwestern | Coast Conference offers two solid and Purdue. contenders in North Carolina and It is never wise ta underestimate Clemson, with South Carolina a Notre Dame team, yet I feel) Mot too far behind. that the Irish schedule, squared; The Southwest Conference has a against the time needed for Coach candidate capable of challenging Joe Kuharich to develop his line, the best from any other: area in will keep them from national char-'Southern Methodist, with Texas pionship contention this year. BY and Texas Christian only a fur- long or two, if that much, behind jthe Mustangs. And it is axiomatic jamong football men that Rice, lunder Coach Jess Nealy, can be jreal tough on any given Saturday. Army will have another fine foot- jball team this year, capable of irepresenting the East respectably jagainst the best of any section, KANSAS CITY (AP)—Tommy |, : ~'and you can also keep an eye on Bolt, once the temperamental ter- Penn State. In fact, let me say ror of professional golf, says he that the top Eastern independcnt is playing a ‘“‘jol afie” with'sroup of Army, Navy, Penn State, oor alts mys Syracuse and Pittsburgh will year . ‘in and year out stack up well | So far this year, Bolt said yes-!against the best five from any| iterday, he hasn't thrown a club,!area. | | snarled at a tournament official | Bolt Now Plays a ‘Jolly Game, ° ‘but Can’t Win The Ivy League should have two| or insulted a fan. And, he hasn't|Vvery fine football teams in Dart- mouth and Princeton—and the out- |won a tournament, either. ‘come of their game may well de- | "IT just can't get started,’’ Bolt AMERICA jcide the championship in that group, as it did a year ago when Dartmouth won. \ | told newsmen gathered to watch |the pros limber up for the annual | | $20,000 Kansas City Open, which | In the far west, Southern Cali-; pees today. “‘I don't know what |, h jews a a it is. But I know this much, ve|ormia has a strong enough line) thi =e to test the best, even Ohio State, got ve i a Nat and UCLA now seems straightened) away to climb toward the dom}-| ‘nance it knew a few years back) TRURSDAY'’S FIGHTS The Associated Press By ss H ) Biting “rgane A ergigilt iy ONY out under the late Red Sanders. In) lore Kevad paar 198, Poise, i aan ithe northwest, Washington State, | | Mexico, outpointed Irish Bobby écanion.|a dangerous passing team and also|f- tt a ll "Denny Moyer, 149%,/80und otherwise, can move up near} Portiand st ret dy DeMarco, 146'2. the top. Brooklyn, N.Y. 10 s|SsAN this portends a hlazing foot- BUY NOW and SPECIAL PURCHASE! — SAT. ofl | i year. One I'm really looking SAVE! vt State licenses 40 - SUN. - TUES. fog Shooting Preserves — GUARANTEED 1 Full Inch Thick Aluminum Door @ Full Length Piano Hinge @ 1 Screen—2 Glass Panels @ Full Weather stripped @ Pneumatic Door Closer @ Knob Lock @ Storm Chain @ Deluxe in, Every Detail ONLY 22: ‘YOU PAY ai LANSING W — Forty shooting ) | preserves, six more than in 1958, | ;are licensed to operate in Michigan this year. | | Most will be ready for the season ya opening Sept. 15, three weeks jahead of the regular waterfow! season and five weeks ahead of the |small game season in the area | Peninsula. | Preserves. some of them private, | % | will be eligible for 47 more days ‘of operation than last year when! * ithe preserve season on pheasants | pa opened concurrently with the small |game seasons and ducks became While They Lest INSTALLATION CAN BE ARRANGED 1 IO kk Ok REG. $18.00 NATIONALLY ADVERTISED Ast ALUMINUM SIDING COMPLETE HOUSE Labor & Material 24'x22 carries a “seb yr House- keeping, Parents mag. & Brand ve Foundation sea 586. DIXIE HWY. 3 Blocks N. of Telegraph CALL OR 4-0388, 9-6 P. OPEN SUNDAY 12-4 P. M. NATIONALLY. ADVERTISED ACTION ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS Heavy Extruded Aluminum Never Need Painting YOU PAY Only 14" pmcomrenmmg EEY legal preserve targets Oct. 1. | ° The season will end March 31. | A 10 per cent increase in the) allowable take of birds, as against those released, also will be in) effect. State game men said this | rw erwrwrerarararas bd FAVORITE NUMBER Tonight, at relaxation time, more Seagram’s 7 Crown will be sipped, savored and richly enjoyed by more people in more places than any other whiskey. SAY SEAGRAM’'S AND BE SURE GLENDED WHISKEY, 66 PROOF. 659% GRAIN WCUTRAL SPIRITS. SLAGRAM DISTILLERS COMPANY, WEW YORK CITY. ge _and the longer season are expected | |to lower shooting fees. LE TILT to: es HOMER HIGHT President i SEE US FOR @ CHEVROLET ®@ PONTIAC le e BUICK mae. , Deg i 4 ‘15 Minutes from Pontiac Homer Hight Motors M. 106 $. WASHINCTON ON M-24, Oxroro PHONE OA 8-2528 280 S. Saginaw ROCK BOTTOM PRICES New 59 Cars and Executive Cars CADILLACS — 20 MUST GO Up ‘ T 500" OFF OLDS— 40 MUST GO Up to 1000" OFF JEROME OLDS - CADILLAC Pontiac f \ ae THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 | . : a Record U.S. Pan-Am Pace Slows is ha CHICAGO (UPD — The United pushed aside, temporarily, at least,;by Althea Gibson, New York, in trio combined to win the team title States was running away with the | by a protest. It was lodged against| the women’s singles, } Chile’s| handily with 13,175 points against swimming competition in the Pan Allen C. Bell, Somerville, N. J.,'Luis Ayala took the men’s singles) Brazil's 11,512. American Games today, but its after he had a record time|crown. Mexico’s oa vn =e record setting pace in piling up/of 1:12.2 in the 1,000.meter time|the men’s and women’s Y' ° gold medals was slowing down. |tral in cyeling. Some Latin Amer-|and the mixed doubles OS ee Sane 1f@1° Dave Gillanders of University of ican groups claimed Ws! The U. 8. grabbed both gold | p rig — , a STORE Michigan, a former state and na-! Pushed, and after Sdges ruled he medals in shooting with Danicl Mick, uioed tr mca ee tional prep champion from Royal/ fad to Tide agin, the test was de-| p. Puckel, Fort Benning, Ga., | sen s2 points in the Nerd Mone Ome Deters Ha, See eee « * * the best indivitnal in emall bere | icon Junior Sailing Champics- a record 2:20.2 mark in qualifying he tail ve rifle with 1,107 points. Gary An- ships yesterday, M : R ACLE hf | LE for the 200-meter butterfly event. oar then ° ev Pre! derson, Axtell, Neb., was third Winner was the Hudson Yacht all right in the championship de-) 2T4241, 12.3, could win, while with Verle F. Wright, Fort Ben- | .oreg 43% points. , | are 75| David Staub, the’ other U. 8. en-| ™ ss Center caste nee ce trant from Daly City, Calif., could and 3 ‘ 7 ar The Pontiac Yacht Club crew gold medals decided so far, veep up with a time of 1:12.4 a split.-Wensceslau Malta, a para-| included Don and Tom Van Do- pevcentapemiee, yeuercny was the) trooper in the Brazilian army, won| ren of Birmingham and Janct cause the U.S. picked up only 12 of} won a silver medal in the 1,000 | Lambert, Sioux City, Ia., Leslie the 19 contested. | meter sprint in cycling behind Calif. and Pre Football catiua’s Sasa (Gande: Bleamaster, Downey, ; tomo Those seven were the most the | 4™6 ° : Robert Miller, Seattle, Wash., fin-} Baltimore vs. Pittsburgh at Miami, night other 23 competing nations trom | U. S. boxers won three of five} ished four but the U. S.! petro 35, “Phusdefpnia new fe all | the Western Hemisphere had won | gold medals awarded in boxing, i in one day, but the U. 8. still | when featherweight Charles . tte | was far out in front of runners- Brown, Cincinnati, lost a one point pa TNS iM up Argentina and Mexico, each | decision to Carlos Aro, Argentina, . ° : with four. ‘because of head butting in the third arrive in : } Of Thursday's gold medals, the Tound. 15 FAMOUS SERVICES: f 4 U. S. won four of them in ae ee ae ote Vince ‘- . ianeene ka Was f, 4 ming, sweeping all events. Today New York, a technical knock-|} Remove all ¢ wheels; tnstall “GRIP All 4 Wheels | g it was expected to win five more. out over Luis Aranda, Argentina;|, grams; sdject’ F are Soo Tac ~—sincluding labor and en e Ons ° | Of the 21 gold; silver and bronze! Wilbert Mc Clure, Toldo, Ohio, de- a feseeet qpanger es po gg are y ‘ ‘medals in swimming thus far the |cisioned Jase Burgos, Venezuela ini] Clearance; ebeck brake flaid; check all grease § 5 ee chev. 4 U. §. had won 20—losing only one the light middleweight class; and] fess: cleon entire sesamly a © Plymouth is third place bronze medalion. Amos Johnson, Stockton, Calif., de-|] inspection; rotate tires © Ford y ( A 15-year-old Saratoga, Calif. | feated — a oypenaan y , high schoo] girl, Chris Von Saltza,;for the lig avywe crown. 4 4 | hit a record 2:18.5 to win the wom-| Flyweight Helji Shimabakura, Other Cars $16.95 Except Nash, Studebaker, Hudson cat's Gime Tinea Se ee Ret | MARKET TERE CO DIVING GRACE — Brazilian Wilma Carvalho executes a roe ae of ahh dag Ligers _ unfit, lost by default to Tite e back-1%4-layout in diving competition in the Pan American Games '€ammates Shirley Stobs, Miami,) Bianco, Venesuela, in a third- s| at Chicago yesterday. The U. S. is dominating swimming as it = and oan pearapi e ieor place bout. 77 W. Huron FE 8-0424 , d other events. | eX. S00 je next mete: POer) Ait eight U. S. wrestlers went - *| hag track and o tions —————E—— Sa unbeaten through the second night! L | Paula Jean Pope, Los Angeles, (of competition and heavyweight | @ 12-time national champion, Wants Baseball Included | tr ven! ron' userdae ‘in Anti-Trust Measure | troit, swept women’s springboard I diving, George Breen, Indianapo- lis, with a record 4:34.1, finished | ahead of George Harrison, Orin- WASHINGTON (AP) Sen./ing professional football, hockey da, Callf., and Eugene Lent, San- Kenneth B. Keating (R-NY) said/and basketball, is ‘completely in-| ta Maria, Calif., in the 400 meter today he will fight to include base-| adequate because it does not in- men’s freestyle, and Frank Mc- ball in a bill that exempts other|clude baseball.” Kinney, Indianapolis, Charles |professional sports from the anti-| “I do not intend to stand by trust laws. while basebal], which has been the * * * subject of extensive hearings, is Bittick, Long Beach, Calif., and |ington, N.Y., and welterweight Louis Schaefer, Berea, O0., were He said a bill approved yester-|shortchanged in this way," Keat- ‘day by the Senate Anti-Trust and ing said in a statement. ( Doug Blubaugh, Fort Sam Hous- 1-2-3 in the 100 meter men’s Monopoly subcommittee, cover-| He added that when the bill is ton, Tex., one. backstroke. = ——!considered by the Senate Ju- Only one of five tennis gold med- | Another U. S. gold medal was! als went to the U. S. It was won! diciary Committee, parent body of the subcommittee, he will offer iss=i""""| Major League Boxes Lewis, Milwaukee, light heavyweight Frank Rosenmayer, | Redwood City, Calif., middleweight James Ferguson, Oklahoma City, Okla., lightweight Jim Burke, Boul-! der, Colo., and flyweight Dick| Wilson, Toledo, O., had perfect zero scores for pinning every op-| ponent. Bantamweight Dave Auble, | Ithaca, N.Y. had two points, | and featherweight Lou Giani, Hunt-| BOWLERS Open Bowling Daily Choice Time Openings Aveil- able for: © Men’s & Women's Leagues © Men's Teams & Individuals © Women’s Teams & Individuals © Women’s Afternoon Leagues ‘Completely Air Conditioned’ MONTCALM BOWLING CENTRE ee ee 30 E. Montcalm St. FE 5-2221. within its coverage. * * * ' Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn ),| the subcommittee chairman, said soston bal — aé Just ived...all the new Pendleton Q baseball had been purposely eX-\oreen m "4's'o's carseat wet cece nt oo oman a0 eh . ¢ us rece “te . | Used Car and Truck is inspected, reconditioned, read-tested end werranted 256 S. SAGINAW BEATTIE MOTOR SALES EDDIE STEELE, INC. CY OWENS, INC. 1 ; Prien inéiuae 4% enciee tar > 5806 Dinie Hwy. 2705 Orchard Loke Rd. 147 $. Saginew St. | Usea Convenient Lion Charge = "580.2. umoenon, va. aoe0 FE 2-1010 Witerterd, Mich. Keege Harbor, Mich, ee WHISKEY: 06 PROOF:72)4%% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS, 2 LEO EGS PRE mete PORT RETT | te, hah & * 7 Posible io Make Maney, Teo Investing for Income Still in Style! By SAM DAWSON ments came to 6% billion dollars, institutional investor made these month dividend checks rahging AP Business News Analyst ja gain of 3% per cent over the NEW YORK (AP) — Investing tice period of 1958. for income is still in style today x * * despite all the talk about invest-| picking the right stocks isn't ing for capital gains. easy and portfolios take constant *~ * *® watching. How one institutional in- And it’s still possible to get &/vestor does this for a group of fair return on common, stocks —|clients—in this case 83 New York if you pick the right ones—despite|/State mutual banks—is set forth|year There all the talk about the yields of/today by the New York Stock Ex- m, blue chips at current prices|change’s magazine, ei below those for bonds. The investor reports that in the ; April-May-June quarter dividend Also it’s possible to choose a income from the common stocks stock portfolio that will bring in a| jwneq jointly by the banks yield- dividend from one or another com- ed 5.05 per cent—as based: on the pany each month in the year. Just price paid for the stocks. ask your broker. But during the three months the Dividend payments have been| —_— .|56 splits in the like period of 1956. It says that an i shares each in the three compa- nies would have received each from $4.50 to $11 for a 12-month total of $72.50, or a return of 3.94 per cent on the price he would have paid for the lot a year ago. For the 12 million or so persons who do hold common stocks, 1959 has had some pleasant news, * * * The magazine says that in the first six months of the year 51 stocks listed on the big board have split in a ratio of 2-for-1 or bet- ter. This compares with 5 such splits in the first half of 1958, and is second only to the record of Of the 39 splits in the April-May- June quarter, 35 advanced in mar- ket price. climbing this year and seem sure Se investment ; i ths} YYg canes cameo TA, extra YZ dends to 443, and resumed pay- Yy GOT ments to 131. In the same period} Y THAT BEAR I WAS TELLIN’ % FER HIM ON MY PLACE & *® * * Y) Thus favorable actions out-| % AND CRACKY IF L e ~ N'T KETCH HIM LAST } PP ats dna Sat ns on 1s] Bo) Niort / PHONES THE AF ZOO PEOPLE AND THEY KE COMIN’ TO GET HIM~~y, there were only 66 decreased pay- Yj ments and 67 omissions. Yj ratio of more than six to one, In the first eight months of 1958 it was just the opposite. The unfa- vorable by a ratio of more than six to ore. In the first eight months of 1958 it was just the op- posite. The unfavorable ran 114 to 1 ahead of the favorable. The reason for the change is that the 1958 period was seeing the depths of the recession and the start of the recovery, while this year corporate profits have been rising to new highs. 1 Using figures for the first seven months, the Commerce Depart- ment reports that dividend pay- Set Oil Drilling ay Control Hearing a Public State Meeting Will Consider New) Wells in Allegan LOOK A Ke BOARDING HOUSE yy + Yi, EGAD, HE MARAUDING Yorn BRUTE WAS HERE OL QLAST NIGHT/ HE HAD ff LOOKED) STOLE OUR SUPPER [7 crane Tair) oe PNEUMONIA! TRI we : ) fH ONLY MY RUGGED x —~GesuNDHeIt= AND NEARLY eS Bs =| aa me 3 = THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959_ ADAM AMES THIRTY-ONE, AND WE'S JOST DANDNS BOT W'S VR PAINFDL DUTY © 1969 by NEA Service. inc. TM Reg U.S. ‘Ppt. OF. By Carl Grubert C'MON, JIMMIE / aaa SAY MAMA! REMEMBER HOW ANXIOUS WE WBRE TO HEAR JILL SAY HER FIRST WORD2 LANSING (UPI) — Oil and gas drilling controls for three pools in. Montcalm, Allegan and St. Clair counties will be the topic for a public hearing in Lansing Sept. 17, according to the Oil Advisory _ Board. Drilling and well spacing pat- terns will be discussed for the Sa- lina pool in Heath Township, Alle- gan County, where early testings of a wildcat well have shown gas pay characteristics. The well is near the northeast section of the Allegat¥ State Forest. Gerald Eddy, wells supervisor, sald the Board would also hear evidence on location of drilling unit and spacing patterns at the Edmore Traverse pool in Home Township, Montcalm County, A proration order set earlier this year for the Boyd Salina-Niagaran pool in Ira and Casco townships of St. Clair County will be re- viewed for possible changes. The hearing is scheduled for ‘Lansing’s civic center. ‘ Boys Pick Bad Place From Which to Steal CHARLOTTE, N. C. (UPI)—Po- lice atrested two 13-year-old boys after the youngsters were caught sneaking away with loot from a room. pn The room was in the police de- TM Reg VS. Pat OF I SEE TH’ Doc's IDEA-- HE KNOWS SHOPS |S FULL OF TOBACCO AND TOOL. BUMS, AN’ HE'S GOT AEYE FER BUSINESS-- TLL BET THAT GUY'S GOT LATHE SO TI CAN'T TELL You! THE INVALIDS LIVER AND A SPOON IN HIS POCKET/ TRwitams © 1999 by NEA Service, ne 4-4 partment building. 4 “F DONALD DUCK é By Walt Disney A TWO-MINLUTE SPOT [yz VA DIGPLAY AD THAT SIZE COSTS TEN DOLLARS, rm YOUNG MAN / ANNOUNCEMENT COSTS : PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITI Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way | You'll Find™ | WANT AD driving drowsiness.. : hew gum while - gum you like but chew you’re behind the ' while you drive. Nat- wheel hel ' Gum—for lively, _ fying flavor and real THE GIRLS PMY CLUBS HAVING A DANCE, Da'sy. BUT DON'T TELL > _ Lo.» ') T'S TOP SECRET! By T. V. Hamlin : T DUNNO..BUT A REMARKABLE |YEH! UT TLE A TRICK OF OF GUMPIN! y -s ‘ Gary “4 (A; . | yee \é i om ! YOU SHOULD'VE MARRIED TH BLIGHTER] WHEN HE ASKED YOU, YEARS AGO! IF YOU'RE GOING 10 THAT PARTY YOU'D NANCY I THOUGHT HE WAS GOWNA STRIP CLEAR RIND, AFTERWARDS, HE SAID HE By Leslie Turner -" ii WILL YOU LEND ME YOUR BASS DRUM @--- TM IN THE IF HE'S STUNTS--- OF ALL I WONDER CHEAP MAD AT ME A PARADE TODAY OKAY to. Ot te ot - ae Coe YF ey Cet teens Rpt, Soe, —_— Mt GU Sannin 4 EM By Dick Cavalli SRC Gon ——" I WHAT . / THATS rn cr] f © MY MY, y= TCH TCH! i. c) ee eennenmal of [hi i] \ A OM, THEY'LL SOON BE IN ACROSS TH’ STREET / i OK.AGAIN! FRESH PECS WOULDN Market Rallies in Active Trading NEW YORK «—The stock mar- ket rallied early today after three, ye Vaew va J “THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer’: them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the MARKETS (Grain Prices Are Unchanged | CHICAGO w—Grain futures prices scarcely budged from their Market by growers and sold by) Standard Oil [Trouble Pesky Mosquitoes Cancels Ancient Tormentors Plans Merger x75 Test —_xaswmarorme pay mx Would quito—now thriving in humid sum- EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, mer weather—is an ancient. tor- imentor of mankind. _mestic Calif. (AP)—An X15 rocket ship} Early Egyptian writings contain went aloft today for what had references to mosquito nets and |been scheduled ag its first power | smudge pots. In-600 B.C., Indians; . sersey Firm | Consolidate | Affiliates | | Hight, but technical difficulties’ wondered if the doctrine of non- = pexvute vanceled the attempt. violence to all living creatures ap- NEW YORK (UPI) — Standard ©@°Ce . Oil Co. of New Jersey is planning ~ * * plied to mosquitoes. Cleopatra ap- Ang 1d domestic, Test Pilot Scott Crossfield jet-| plied castor oil to her skin as pro- Nene tog the a ean ‘nem giant tisoned his fuel about an hour aft-\tective trom the pests. corporation. er the 50-foot-long black dart took | There are some 2,000 known spe-| , off fastened under the wings of a cies of these small flies of the The merger B52 bomber. The two planes then family Culicidae, the National Geo-| would put all of its Walpole Road Section Closed Off for Lodge ALGONAC (UPD—A Detroit in- dustrialist group has been granted permission to close a 300-foot sec- tion oe Ipole Island River road News i in Brief — |where Paley toe passes in front of A sheep shear valued at $49 was |their new $100,000 hunting lodge. yeste | Closing of the road was author- ee note, Tracer oo sive 1 | ized by the Walpole Island Coun- Pontiac Rd., Pontiac mes Bas cil by a 7-3 vote with. the pro- ivision that the group provide an ee ee om, lalternate route and pay half of \the cost of maintenance. A .22 caliber rifle, miscellan- Lodge Calendar | Special communication of Sea bent. 4th. Bs ag Ls, tf aaie| L. Hotehkiss W.M. —Adv. The Detroit group, represented eous bedding, and mens’ clothing, 'by Wendell Anderson, Detroit at- were reported stolen yesterday by ‘torney, agweed to the conditions. la burglar who broke into the apart-| ment of Daniel Baker, at 90 Au- Tell Nitro’s Origin : j » eapty producing, refining and marketing | i ‘burn Ave., according to Pontiac | straight sessions of persistent sell- troit Bureau of Markets, as of previous closes in draggy early Nas onder one unified manage: headed back to earth. lgraphic Society says. They are: Police, 4 iyceri ing pressure, Trading was fairly Thursday. [dealings today on the Board of oa cule ue in There was no immediate indica- found from the Arctic to the Ant-, STOCKHOLM — Nitroglycerine { ss : . . , ow opera as 3 -On- wetive | . | Trade, a a My ot sl tion as to the trouble. \arctic, but are more prevalent in| Rummage sale. First Presby-|had its origin in experiments con tees . jidual ce anies. Key stocks rose from fractions! Detroit Produce | Several contracts were un- Gvidual comps x * 'warm climates. North America has terian Church. Friday. 5 P.M. ducted in 1846 by Ascanio Sobre- to a point or better. Some leaders | pacts |changed during the first several The plans affect Humble Oil A leak in a hydrogen peroxide 138 species of mosquito, and most —Adv. ro, but its explosive force was ie were unchanged or off slightly. | gpoles Crabs ts bul $2.09 Minutes and most fluctuations were & Refining Co., a 98 per cent ine last week forced postpone- of them bite human beings when’ Rummage Sale. First Presby- developed until about bel at the Lal Apples, Early McIntosh, bu. ... . 360 limited to minimum fractions with owned affiliate, Carter Oil Co., ment of-a sec heduled power alight they get the chance. terian Church. Friday 5 ‘pm. Adv. (hands of Alfred B. Nobe ta tbe ret fe I ead | apples. waskar au. sees corer aso the failure of any important COM- peyso Standard Oif Co., Okla- at that time ——— ———$—$——$——————————— ea =a liay weeken t was apparen 3 ! ’ soterceceevere ; _ | i ples, Wolf River. bu ---» 250 mercial business to develop over- oma Oil Co. and Pate Ol Co. ; : ; ‘ prices had been knocked down [ebebenries ert 12 plas ccscee. abe night! . . a X15 is de “te ie hes of ‘antaloupes . if —~ wt : . “ _ low enough to revive speculative [Grapes Concord) pk oD b0 The uhnouncement said) the) os , ete ei tel. ° interest in hope of a change in [nec hes Toda ee _ od Pakistan was understood to be merger would be subject to the space and return him safely trend after the holiday, a tra- {Peaches Bomm reven: DO. or enseerne 3D in the market for a small amount 4p roval of Humble stockholders The tiny ship made the round ditional milestone. Pears. bartjett ‘la $25, Of hard wheat but Brazeil which oy ater vote. Tentytive plans trip attached to a bomber piloted (Pears, Clapps, bu. .....-+600+ . 300) had been expected to take about 41) for j{umble shareholders to by Crossfield's buddy, Air Force Meanwhile, evidence of higher Piums Burbank % bu. eeccseess 200 “la took § she i sbtea! . b ‘ 1 abroad Plums. Damson, % bu. 225 three million bushels too es8 -eceive five shares of Jersey stock Capt. Charles Bock. interest rates at home and abroad piu, Prune 4 bu 228] than a million ach { nares of Humble | ind a credit squeeze on lohnable- Watermelon, DU. .....cscsecerer secre 3.00 ° for each four shares 0 funds continued VEGETABLES Trade way at a standstill near stock. New Use Tax | Steels, motors, rubbers, air- Seana green fla, ou. ....,....8225 the end of the first) hour with ® * * = : in round, bu. .........5. 269 . , i . ; , | crafts, oils, drugs and electronics er Ks Wenaert bu oe “"'" 960 wheat My cent a bushel higher to”) Standard officials said it was Will M Hike were well on the upside. Chemi- | Beans nonce t TOE TOR GBGOue oe « lower, September $1924; corn hoped a ‘substantial improvement 1 ean 1 . eana onan DU. eee feeeee > Fi * * we ce cals affd rails were generally Beans, wax, bu 279 “ws higher to ‘4 lower, September jn the effectiveness of the opera- - G Prices higher Coppers showed — little Beets. ir 160 $1.18%: oats Me higher to Y lower, tions of these various Companies In as 1 chanye |Broccoll, N ol dos. behe ~s 5 September new type contract 66M, ’ would result from the merger. " Cabbage, bu DOOD ace oo. 160 , ; : ! \ 4 . — icig x *® Cabbage Curly, bu. ..s.cccccseceee, DTS TYE V4 higher to 1 swear, Sep = | DETROIT — An official of Texas Instruments took off on a! | geetene Ale — 2 fed tember $1 31%4: soybeans 'a higher ; = the Retail Gasoline Dealers Assn eee aaa) f rt ie a 7: * ’ gain of around 4, Thiokol rose Carrots, topped, bu. .........e0.0s 150 to '%4 lower, September $2.09% Medical Missionary of Michigan said today the one ic t i ; piste clclsis/eie.e'e ee > Ten ag fe more than a point as did Youngs-|Cartors dus. bene ai < a8 penny increase in the use (sales) ; town Sheet |Selery. pence! 2% GOS. cicccc. we Hs Grain Prices 5 tax probably will result in an in- ut Sale Prices! US. Steel halved an early 1-point| |Celery. root, dot .... so lsc eee. 200 ue in oyd a crease in gasoline prices. a OS@= . e gain. Lukens gained more than m| Core, Guest ail tases. bu. 425 CHIE Aisi — a i ane Opening * * * Ol can Motors continued |Cucumber lokle, DU. ..uceecceeece 480 crain . P . ‘ mane ; +. 5 _ ; al mc a + ae tke el Cucumbers, ‘slicers, bu ee, Dec, ..... 10% ROYAL OAK An internation-' Michigan’s numerous _ service NEW ~ 51 2 als fairly active ar pt re bil coe ieee «Fs eonecaeoorna Hoe Bep 102%. Mar : W* iy famous medical missionary station operators are among sales | Is Also At : Chrysler bac ned away slightly rena’ eae ies pg nes ine Dee. 1e%%s | 141’ will vist a brother in Royal Oak tax licensees and thus are affected Other Vodet: T ' W 232 50 from a gain of about a point, hirabt, dor bet us slejesien ws vate 150 oo) 5 eee 4g _ : vy “ise 5 OUN S , 4 $ fre £ I Keonirs ae = bch ieee 200 oe ae ie a hefore returning to Laos or Cam- by the rise in the tax from three BIG DIS . ere oJ Okra. pk hey een a seh orn Ma 144 |bodia, depending on the Asian to four cents. However, it is up to — SALE! ons, ‘ FB escent vearcnens ies «3 tus : 4 . pase L New York Stocks Onions, bry bo Ib thaw 1 Oe fee 4 : political situation, before Christ- the individual station owners to MODEL ry 5.50 ‘ Quota Pars curly don. beba Soo G's big ft 102 as determine whether the increase glectrie Starting al gfe Mornulig uotational | eer eens : Ma 131% Cn ans ; > ‘ = . sect st c Figures after decimal point are elghtha rade erty a bu mein ae ie Date new type: N a} | The Rev. Dr. Thomas Dooley, will me noes d to the price of gas- SUPER ‘. im $757.00 $605.60 les ‘ 1d CGR SCQECSERHEG (nat pat 67 Ibe 910 . : = ., oline. They can either absorb it or Manse! 514 - ae 709 tke Ane 81 Pidedle ees be 5000 see oe in this country for Jung cancer is . ee sEA-HORSE v-50 alae 504 40 Reena is lal Here Ons Peppers hot. bu act 1 50 isurgery, plans to stop at the home Pass it along to the motorist. Electric Starting . $ . A 4 th tit ! ary ) . ? 225 é . ' : A r 663 Int Mick 4, M3lpow: Suet ca 150! Livestock of his brother Malcalm, a stock ~ * * SUPER * ting 8500.50 $423.60 A Chal ato pint haper 130-4) Potatoes, New, 50 Ib bag ..... 1 20 broker, residing at 1011 N. Edge The association official, who Maneal OE 35 4 A Ltd 95 Int Tel & Tel 328) pumpkine, bu 1 50 DETROIT LIVESTOCK ots b : ; gE A-HORSE ~~ 18 40 Alviva 108 et Sod Coal 15 1 Radtahes (0d, 406. occcccrescce-. 100) DETROIT Sept. 3 (AP) Cattle sale worth St. isked that his name be withheld, ae $398. $3 . A Atriin 2630 2 0nns men Radishes white doa. ..... coccccene 1 OM arin 20H Trade on Timited supply . Sale e ink: » > " = 18 kn Gas 431 Jones & Ly. os pees Acorn, bu. ......-s000....., 278 Fodehiee ene Fi te cine Dr. Dooley underwent a suc.” id he thinks they will pass it HORSE $313.00 $250.40 An Cyat saq Kellogg - JT.) @quash, Buttercup, % bu 200 giscay to sling. come * Mov fully cesefg) exploralcry operation at along. { SEA- . Ain MAF ag = Kelsey Hay .. 494 gquash, Butternut, % bu. 290) ccisiilahed. several joeds 4 grade(CcoeeeUl EXPIOratony pers _ . HORSE 10 .-*° $161.50 $129. 20 Arn Met C1 281 Mennecott 99 isquash, Delicious, % bu. .. aes aes teers 900-1000 iba 2600-275 atter- the Memorial Hospital in New * * * SEA- ff ; ae fe ba Kresge, rn , yl peppered ba i ta ices on x 100 ab Se AE poles Phir hous hee ipso, York City last week He will make “We doubt that the station own- HORSE 3 ode Ymitea in pumber— In addition to the low discounted prices, we offer a I N Seem renerene 2 , ane f erin utllity 11 rut oe BIN Briel ae ee an UE poy gs a chal aa ey 66, tae ani and caer 1006-'q speaking tour of the United er will absorb the hike,’’ he said. Some ™ nile they last LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE on your used motor, , el an” 3° 15 & M 00 2) Tomatoes bu. .oeceec vee sine . 20 hi . \ ‘ 7 at * : ve > T" ; a= | ) ai To m o ak Rive 18 7/Turnips, ba ee ola. inured leet week, ey and States before returning to the Far “All other businesses will pass it regardless of make or condition! Anaconda 642 Loews Ini 114 Turnips. topped dU. ... cc seeeeeee nes TOO ee eee term wcticn, 25. 40 amt along and so probably will the Anac Wal 47 Lone @ Cem . 30 - higher, utility and atandard gra trera, ; ane y a cee 8 A o &tl 84 Lone’ 8 Cas 394 GREENS and heifers slow. steady to oere [1 Dooley operated clinies in gasoline owners NOTE! EASY LOW BANK TERMS ARRANGED Ar ir & Co 2 Lorillard 421 Cabbage, Mo 1, OU. ..cececereseees i we 100 jower. bulla steady to «tr M 1. belore: eeturn — —— M Atchison 116 Lou & Nash 6804) Collard. No. 1, bu. iv riwo loads hiatechnlcelda prime (110 nie VIUSONP SINK, aos, berore Fe z : a = i] Amount Ay Cory 135 Mack Trk 414 Kala, bu. wsaveees cose es coe 2 ly rae 29:00. around 5 loads NED) nonin to this country and will H C ee te ip asoniha bs aces Mara. [me chron! Son! A suet - on T [ NO PAYMENTS © Raelt w Ob 4460 Martin €n nA Mustard No 1 bu aig chotre 1900 Lows Ib cilitie ales mais (INK ALR eat aquse of Disaster ware Depot, rather than the usual meen bememuee tt. Down—Take Up Te when out of work Feth Mteel 41 May D Ste any aasace an : aq meat Chater pso-11 1) ers 2750-\return to some part of the area, Daenih: theory guarantee | month credit terms. 18 Months To Pay J) ! pe ee 3 5 ater = “ © wine Chard, DU. ....cccccce sss ceeee D 2 a eat roan eee Sih Uatce=e ipso Gane Pecandiess sof srecent Communist | WASHINGTON (®—The Inter- , ts 2 j | | 1 bi 2 00 ierde 20 th eer i | . : ite on a ae sy & re \r Lill td) jload high choire a ‘ prime o8 tb HUDrisingss | State Commerce Commission said ACE HARDWARE DEPOT Borg \ sla on i ' , 25 ape to f olee teer } tinea Mie hie ies AP ae be WEL) COE) er Sb Ee T1136, load igh acct wiih on Ge 2 | today that 98-degree temperature - is ewan abe Badia ence one. cess ceenecenee 209,08 Chole aroun ie eee 28 ; triggered a wreck that spilled In W. Dearborn In W. Dearborn In Farmington Mee alias Ele aoe rie aT Escarole, bu gio) 08a Blah chalice 816 Jo tellers Announces the Opening freight cars off a trestle into a 22501 MICHIGAN AVE. 2645 MONROE BLVD. 28859 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Myon 102 pan AW. Air. aya(fattuce, Rib. pb on setdesaene 1 OC) ETS Flees otoa Grane cuol ian Meldri , Near Military Near W. Outer Drive Between 12 and 13 Mile Rds. hele doe : Lettuce, Boaton, bu ‘ saisie 200 > heifer mor iolee . : | recreation area near Meldrim Cal Pack 9 Panh Fpl rr helfers 2625 2700. good to low choice tal ffic re , . ( & H SY) Param Viet .. 47 [Nattuce esd ne a i heifers 2400-23625. ulllity and standard of His Den O e | Cra. last June 28. Twenty-three ALL STORES OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Closed Sundays) € ateapit up 40 Parke Da 454 am yt ‘ steers and helfer A028 OO aLdlity | are ea j Can D 1@ Jenny, JC ita meine: be 7 118 Nowa closed 1730 1850 canners and cut-| Dr. Steven D. Socrates has an-| Persons were killed. | Pac | al es me, 18 4| tera 1409-1750, few thin cannera do"0 Hn iced the opening of his dental . . epet Cole 2 2% to 1700; utility bulls 237060 2400) strong : ; ‘ : ay ° a0 etd D a | Poultry and Eggs eran sagen rane ai a a 4 er al office at 920 Riker Bldg ’ ;, : Pipa 2 J ote geo o ee Q rt Cater Trac 1n4 rhileo anal eurRbIy BOLLTEY 190 780 Ih yearling feeder steers 27 00 A graduate of Northwestern Uni Che, & Oh 686 pri Pet... 4a . T25 load yood 409 Jb. stock steers ¢ Yale A Tow (NP fee @ontne] an Young BAW 19 A Yeut SHAT Jane Men in Brawl Appear Before JP, Pay Fines ROCHESTER The four men Invelved inca brawl on Main street early yesterday morning appeared before Justice of the Peace Luther Green, paid fines of §25 each plus $> court costs and were released, They had been charged with dis- orderly conduct Motorola 4-Speed The four are Rex Chambers, 24, of 1480 Cadmus St _ Troy: William RECORD PLAYER J. Swinson, 21, of 1475 Cambra St., Troy; Curtis F Watson, 24, of 4000 Baldwin St., Pontiac, and Jer- $ 95 ry.B Fisher, 23, of 53 Edith St., Pontiac 7 a Automatic changer — plays all seeds -— shuts off after last : Labor Heads § See , Reds spee iia record. MOSCOW (UPI)—Visiting Brit- ish Labor Party leaders Hugh Motorola a Gaitskell and = Aneurin’ Bevan : me, for two hours yesterday with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and planned to meet with Premier Nikita Khrushchev today. The two declined to re- veal the nature of their talks with Soviet officials. Racers Outrun Autos CHICAGO (UPI) — The Pan- American games this week proved a suspicion jong harbored py Chicago motorists. Fourteen mar athon runners were able to race along, Lake Shore Drive faster than lift as her wedding day nears, Sheilah Joyce balances on the ha band-to-be Albert Mayer in Hamt rush-hour traffic. Mayer is the assistant of master HERE COMES THE BRIDE — Getting a hg British dancer anag (left), nds of her hus- with an illusory urg, Germany. a desire to de magician Kal- « who's supervising the proceedings spectacular manner. CLOCK RADIO Push button controts — Wake up ‘to music $1.25 Weekly BUY ON EASY TERMS 90 Days Same as Cash The GOOD 51 W. Huron UPI Tevepheote gesture. Sheilah has expressed carried to her wedding in this Beautifully styled cabinet with powerful, depend- able unit. 263 square inch viewable orea. HOUEKERNGGZ,, cee es tia FE 4-1555 a TH 9 PM.