" AC'PR The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau, Forecast Seattered thundershowers. (Details Page 2) es) Eat OVER P i ICLY 28, 1959 —26 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ‘ ASSOCIATED PRESS 117th YEAR ek ewe ke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, Suspect in Shooting of ra J Hold —— eee seers atten tt ener tn ae penta croton serene ee sciences + | Touring . Pontiac Area Subdivisions Hazel Park OKs Hawaiians Xway Route Through City 200 Citizens Debate _, Issue to Save Homes, | Churches to No Avail ae HONOLULU (AP)—The today in its first election. In Honolulu, the meltin this 300-mile island chain, for two U.S. senators, one and a 76-member ‘Legislature. The polls close | ; | By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG kes . at 10:30 p.m. EST. | Progress - “We're com- It appeared certain — for the ing through! , first time in U.S. history—that a A lot of little people in person of Japanese or Chinese an- |Hazel Park will make the,cestry would be sent to Congress. sacrifice for the betterment’ . | | | Republicans. conceded their un- lof all. -- | derdog role but hoped to upset The Hazel Park City predictions of a Démocratic Council last night un-! Sweep by grabbing several major animously resolved to give, **fices. its consent to the align-, Democrats made a strong show- ing in the June primary and have Pontiac Press Phote MERCHANTS TO SEE FOR THEMSELVES — About 50 Pon- viewed new schools in the Pontiac and Waterford Township school Ment of the Walter P. won Hawaii elections since 1954 tiaé area merchants are shown here before they boarded two buses systems. The trip was to acquaint merchants with new develop- Chrysler Expressway -@x-! Election officials predicted a ments in their marketing area, said John A. Riley, Pontiac Press advertising manager. this morning for a tour arranged by The Pontiac Press of new tension through ‘the heart record vote, perhaps 90 per cent residential developments in Pontiac and environs. Merchants also of the 183.099 registrants : of its city. Most Hawali attention was _ fo- ; * * * cused on the race for governor . Yen ee 1s ‘ Te It marks the final municipal ap- Pitting Democrat John A. Burns Hint He Favors Nikita U.S. Visit . a ou againgt | Becnha pointed i. von armer prpval needed to complete the ex- ~ > William | - — Gov Viliam F. Quinn xressway from the south Oakland e ; e e e P : h k Burns, 50, serving a second term l e a | an e com e txon County line north to the Fenton- as elec.e 1 delegate to Congress : Falls 6 Feet Clio Expressway near Flint piied up 69,152 votes in winning tas ie ) wr eC . More than 200 citizens turned ” f ; ; on Jun ’ No Cur . ' - rn 4 ~ - : qualified with one word,” said Ru Chamber members are invited to : lin the treasury’s general fund to-! Air Task Force in Formosa, laude@bin. ‘Yes! \]Juncheon from noon to 3 p.m. and! ian: Gh nce to) day ‘but nearly half is there only the cooperation of the U. S. and] “You could delay us,” he con-/dinner, 6:30 to 8 p.m 8 Bet. | because the auditor general's of- Nationalist air forces in construc- ceded. “But, we've been told by) Entertainment will Meanwhile, Gov, Williams and | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) tion of the base. ' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) ‘dinner, said Hirlinger. | | Early this year, the Commis- 0 ne sion gave Willman blanket aa- thority to finance remodeling of the hospital’s east- wing out of | . capital improvement funds. follow ge a ve rnernrntennenta The B irthplace , ole saat -of Trucks and Coaches ¥ At the same time, the Commis-| sion authorized the hospital to use’ $200,000 in its equipment fund to get remodeling underway again. Last week, Harold B. Euler, hos- pital administrator, reported that $216,000 in work orders had been issued local contractors who are| undertaking the remodeling, Now that the initial $200,000 has been used up, further ‘work will be financed straight out of capital, improvement funds, Willman said. | “The hospital has promised to! pay the city back whatever it costs: té complete the east wing,” he reminded. mona . egy aye" ~The city, in turn, promised to | reimburse the equipment fund | with $200,(00 after the first of the year. Me equipment fund is $950,000, which the city promised. from tax! anticipation notes on 1958, 1959 and | 1960 taxes. The first two install-| ments (1958 and 1959) already have been borrowed. Euler reported that the remodel-| ing — the final step in the hospital construction program — is proceed- | * ‘ 7 *¥, . arr :* ay! SENT R * Peer . 2 3 U.S. Congressmen Books Area Man state+ Strike Looms | aluminum Fa Phy ee wy SICian | Electing Narcotics Squad nation’s newest vate votes for Questioning | Lloyd ‘Tunnel Says He Found Doctor Bleeding After Attack g pot of people who live on and elsewhere, cast ballots representative, a governor By DICK SAUNDERS The man who said he discovered Dr. W. Charleton Warrick bleeding and staggering around his E, Huron street office last . Friday night was being held Meanwhile, Steel Talks for investigation of a nar- in Deadlock; Copper cotics charge today. Also Threatened The physician died from , the gunshot wounds Satur- NEW YORK (AP) — A major day at Pontiac General Strike in the: aluminum industry Hospital. x, . -Lloyd J. Tunnell, 53, was booked tions in the two-week-old steel at the Oakland County Jail by for Aluminum was threatened today as negotia- strike remained deadlocked Redford State Police narcotics David J. McDonald, president of squad officers for. investigation ol the United Steelworkers of Amer- violating the state narcotics law. ica. said he expected no agree-| He was arrested shortly before ment in the aluminum industry Midnight at the Sunset Rest Home, before contracts with major firms 1755 Williams Lake Rd., Water- - expire at midnight Friday ford Township, The rest home is McDonald, whose union repre nin by Bid “Wee, Fontelia, o : : istered and licensed rest home | sents workers in aluminum as operator well as steel, said the same “no : ecntrac’, no work" policy covers Tunnell teid Pontiac police he both industries. had discovered Dr. Warrick a | few moments after the doctor | The copper industty also faced had been shot by whom police a possible strike threat i believed was a burglar whe en- * * tered his office at 2444 E. Huron. Oificials off the Mine, Mill and sp. Smelter Workers Urion were i ported considering a strike against Dr. Warrick, Tl, of 263 Chip? the nation’s copper plants next PEW4 Rd., was shot in the hamd month. The union's contracts and abdomen 'pired June 30, but its members There. is no definite connec- are working while negotiations " #8 yet between Tunnell’s ar- eaatinee ~ rest and the shooting,’ said Lt, repre. William Nesbitt, Pontiac Police : detective bureau commander. “But we plan to question him thoroughly today,” he added, Tunneli was te make a state- ment at the Oakland County Prosegutor’s office today. Tunnell said he was a long time patient of D¥. Warrick's and had come to his office for treatment of Steel industry and union sentatives met jointly Monday for the first dime -since the nationwide steel strike began Joseph F. Finnegan, director oi the Federal Mediation and Con ciliation Service; met newsmen ‘after the two-hour session, STILL DEADLOCKED “There was an exchange of a back. injury, viewpoints by the parties, but I) State Police Det. . Sgt. Walter can’t say anything beyond that,’ Sokol of the Redford Post narcotics iFinnegan said. “I don't think bureau and Pontiac Police Det. there was any sibstantial change in the position of either party.’ Finnegan scheduled separate meetings. with both sides today. | But there was no immediate plan for joint talks. Sgt. Raymond E, Meggitt appre- hended Tunnell at the rest home. “We are holding him for viola- tions in running the home And in dispensing narcotics to. patients,” “Meggit said. . * * * The situation ‘doesn't look) Tunnell had received prescrip- good,"’ Finnegan said tions fog a _ synthetic narcotic The strike threat in the alufi-| known as Demerol, detectives said. . . aoni . ig! num industry is against the Big) “Dr. Warrick was only one of Arica Ge eee ec aerere: afee > had . : silk - ~, | written prescriptions for Tunnell and the Kaiser Aluminum & : \ & for use on his patients,”’ Meggitt Chemical Corp. | explained, “It is ly a - * * | pain killer.’* Contract negotiations in the aluminum industry are continuing} Detectives said the last prescrip- here with the help of federal me-| tion written by Warrick was dated diators, but no progress has been July 17, the day Tunnel) left for reported . a vacation in Springfield, Mo. The Big Three aluminum pro-| ‘We became suspicious of Tun- ducers—like the major steel com-|Nelt about a month ago when a |panies — have rejected a United| routine check of prescription lists | Steelworkers’ demand for a ,wage/@t area drug stores showed his increase of 15. cents an hour in|name frequently,” Meggitt con- each year of the new contract. The| tinued, companies, like the stee] companies, have proposed a one-year wage freéze * * * a Detectives said they have found discrepancies" in Tunnell's story —_—__———— about the use of the drug. - “Yestrday, Tunnell had a pre- ‘scription filled for 30 c.c. of Dem- erol for use on a patient,’’ Meggitt (Continued on Page 2, Col, 6) Showers Coming; b High Wednesday 89 Frequent and scattered thunder- showers may be expected tonight through Friday, the weatherman forecasts. Tonight will continue to be warm and humid with a low of 70 Wednesday will be partly cloudy s\and continued warm with scattered « thundershowers and the high climb- ing to near 89. , Showers are predicted through- out Michigan tomorrow with tem- peratures remaining in the high 80s. : , The lowest recording in down- m™ town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 66 degrees. The mercury rose to a 87 at 1 p.m. t | In Today's Press ing “very well.” ‘omics *.. He noted, however, that comple-| 4 a cate <4 cH ee ae, = tion of the third floor remodeling’ ote NO@WS - 066 eeeeeces “sli " Editorials ....... eet obdcc ches ‘ may be delayed “‘slightly,”’ due to’ sarin 2 tardy delivery of equipment for the’ eee ep a “ floor kitchen. The floor, with space. 4 re got ‘ A » i ieee ee a ae for 33 new beds, was to have been * be esa eae fi oe _ a be jteese Vepyiiecn : ready Aug. 15. [ ‘GMC PLANT AS VIEWED FROM, AIR — An aerial view of From its, early beginnings in 1927, the plant has grown until it now = - . Exclusive. Pontiac Press Aerial Photo . Ponies iy eee aL Mee Officials do not expect the east) the GMC Truck and Coach plant makes a lasting impression, on inclydes ‘more than 2% million square feet of manufacturing space. | GMC products have grown in stature and the physical facilities | yy @ Radio Programs .....98 ‘ wing remodeling to be finished un-| anyone who looks down on the huge, impressive home where thou- The jbuildirig of the plant started ‘in the summer. of 1927 when a of the GMC Truck and Coach Division have/kept pace. . ; til some time next year, sands: of trucks and coaches roll off the assembly lines' yearly. whe field on South boulevard was ; } ‘ ace up. Through the years, \ . LY Big Rumor |Allies Stand Pat | _ Links Maid, _,,, . . | “Rocky's Son on West Berlin ¥ « * | KRISTIANSAND, Norway (AP) Plan to Stay in City as —There's a hot rumor. here that Long as German Land is Sweven Rockefeller. son of Gov .. -NBison A Rockefeller of New Stays Divided York. and a former maid in the Recketeller househol d are in GENEVA (AP j= The Western “ye. Allies today were reported deter- Steven, however. says he and ming’ to remsin in West Benin pretty Anne Marie Rasmussen are as long as Germany remains di-| ‘vided. Diplomatic informants said a re- vised Western proposal being drawn up for the Big Four foreign ministers’ conference would de- mand once again that the Soviets, "| pledge not to take unilateral ac-| - ‘tion against West. Berlin at any making a big time in the future * * * Over the weekend British kor eign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd had yust good friends. That's that Anne Marie. 71. daughter of a grocer here. says there has been talk. af a wedding dg zx The romance rumors sparked by a long leisurely bike trip they took together. } here are thing of it Steven. 23, said Monday: “I'm Just on vacation and just visiting ~p. Papers nnie 4 “ie” z — ° “ h been reported pressuring his allies rie Saic a wnen 1¢ We e- ~ e said t t ; 1 L he as Te 45 accept a Soviet pledge for a leased from U.S. military service : But Lloyd was said today to have agreed with U.S. Secretary of State Christian A.! Herter that Western policy on the issue of protection, for West Ber-! lin should stand unchanged. # limited time July 10 he ‘had flown to Oslo and met Annie Marie. They bought the motorbike the same day and set oft for Kristiansand, 150 miles away, to see her parents. : * * * kt we ES ‘The girl went to the United Bo Sr: : _ ‘ : th the Soviet Union and the States in 1956 to do domestic work./ western powers were rewrit ing | HAWAIIAN HOPEFULS — From Hilo to Honolulu, the nation’s as do many young Norwegian girls. While working in the Rocke- newest state holds its first congressional election today. By 10:30 their rival proposals for breaking} this evening two of the men pictured above will be duly elected the Berlin crisis. Each side obvi-| feer home ~ au = a ‘0 ously hoped the other would come) members of the U. S. Senate. On the left, is Chinese-American have had several dates with Sfev-!. with new concessions Hiram L. Fong, 52, Republican, who is vying with Connecticut- en i 7 ‘ : If neither side gives ground, the born Frank F. Fasi. 33 smocr: ¥e - = ‘en * Later she returned to Norway g g born Frank F. Fasi, 38, Democrat, second from left. Oren E. Long, eight - week - old conference may, 79, Democrat, second from right. at i former Territorial Governor eee ‘yila x : ' at, seco ght, and former Territorial Governor, ‘even went into military service end by the middie of next week, : in January for a six-month tour GM Institute Slates Banquet * * Some Western diplomats said Lj W Add i | chances are the new plans will dif-! ist rong ress fer enough from the earlier ones i to indicate the possibility of f § Flk f) | a compromise agreement which, OF yivan S ance would lift the Soviet threat to Ber- | lin and clear the way for a sum- (Continued From Page One) A “Cinderella Night” dance will are contesting for one of the Sen- be held by the Sylvan Lake Elks previous demand for creation of Franklin Rd.. not at 114 Orchard |longtime territorial legislator, and FLINT — The fourth annual ban- a“ Sauniies ot cast and West Lake Ave. as reported yesterday.| pe Came. a eee quet for senior students and spon- aitiniie dank mate tn ba agen * * * a pm vad (pollu iis GE dasa ’ ca i a Le : of isla t ans apanese _ sors of the Foundrymen’s Club of “ Highlight of the evening will ; bd “lin crisi ancestry. General Motors Institute in Flint Berlin crisis. dies ce ath Fry [EES will be held tomorrow evening at * * oi hes Tee) ol Pe Long is a Democrat, Tsukiyama * THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JU * opposes Wilfred C. Tsukiyama, 62, other seat. Tsukiyama is of Japanese ancestry. On the same ballot Hawaii will also elect one member It appears certain that as a result son of oriental ancestry will, for the first time, be elected a mem- ber of the U. S. Congress. 28, 1959 ee pep The Day in Birmingham \Southfield BIRMINGHAM — The city,com- mission turned down requests by Hugh R. Mack Jr. of 1710 Latham Rd. and Richard B. King of 1700 Latham Rd, for construction of sidewalks in. the- area lying be- tween Southfield road, the Bir- mingham Country Club, 14-Mile road and Lincoln road in a regu- lar meeting last night. According to ‘Mrs. Mack, the | IONE ee he the possibility of children playing in the streets which often contain speeding cars, ; After a study of the area by the Birmingham Police Depart- ment and a counter petition signed by many other Latham area residents requesting that \walks not be installed, the com- Wission voted against the con- struction” af sidewalks, : The commissioners, however, | recommended that the police de- partment review the possibility of stop signs in the area. ACCEPTS QUIT DEED . In other action, the commission accepted a quit deed from Howard and Hazel Bell for a triangular piece of property on the southeast corner of Ann and Landon streets. The land will be used for highway purposes. {} AP Wirephote Republican, on the right, for the of the House of Representatives. of the Congressional vote a per- * * * City Manager L. R. Gare an- nounced that a delinquent bill of Hawaiian Voters Electing’ 3 New U.S. Congressmen Seven Escape iscored the only upset of the pri- mary by winning the Democratic nomination mit meeting. ate seats * “ + Foundrymen Students, Reports circulated that Soviet Lodge 723 from 8 to 11:30 p.m. to- once The 1 f 158 candidates for . Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko night / VIE FOR SENATE eS ae Sponsors Set Dinner ' mnister 4 : lop =n (major offiees: and the legislature . . jin recasting his Berlin proposal, e ke They are Oren E. Long, 70 reflects the racial mixture of in Flint Tomorrow might omit direct reference to his! The dance will be held at 100 former appointed governor and aw aie population. It includes 56 | Japanese-Americans. 12 Chinese- Americans, 3 of Korean descent and 2 of Filipino descent. The rest are Caucasiars__or of Hawaiian and *mixed blood. 7 the Institute. Western officials said this could, —the girl whose feet will fit a |. Republican BOOST SALARY * mean Gromyko was cutting his Pair of glass slippers and who For the other Senate seat, Hawaii's first governor will R.-M. Critchfield, vice president price for a Berlin truce. It also cemes close to certain specified ° se . : serve until Dec. 3, 1962. He will of General Motors and ee of the Could mean he had decided’ mMeasurments. Haga oh Repub 3 Hiram b receive $25,000 a year, a boost of |. process development staff, will ad- 284!DSt pressing his apie oe * oe * nied ee millionaire Chinese $6000 ever the present appointed dress the club on “Development in ™oment_ in hopes of prolonging She and her date will be treated’ American businessman, is Oppos- execytive ‘asti ses’ Willi , Negotiations on other aspects of to dinner at a Pontiac restaurant. ing Connecticut - born Frank F one Ee the Peungvy: the Berlin dispute. © ~ Dancing will be ie records. Fesi, 3B, .a feel] ot Ms Sho men's Club and cooperative stu-; dent from McKinron Industries, St. | Catharines, Ontario, will preeite e ° *L.: ° Members of top management in | IXOn e Col ) Ie in | erld General Motors and other indus. | ‘trial leaders will be guests of the club at a reception before the banquet. (Continued From Page.One) Novosibirsk has always been one. The shipyard master refused at ‘of “Swan Lake” ballet with mem- of the cities closed to foreigners. first but was overruled by higher officials. Rickover then ' The two U.S. senators will serve two, four or six. years. . Their, jterms will be decided by the Senate, probably by drawing lots | as in Alaska's case last year. | x *« * The first representative serve only until Jan, 3, 1961. Hawaii's three-man congression- al delegation could be seated dur-| ing the current session. will | ous, , $3,056 owed the city by the Michi- ‘an Liquor Control Commission for ithe returnable portion of retailer’s +ficense fees will be paid as soon ‘as the state’s financial conditions | permit, ° In accepting Gare’s recommen- ‘dation to convert from oil to gas heating in the Baldwin Library, the commission decided to adver- to tise for bids for the conversion. According to Gare,. the estimated cost would be approximately $5,000 “a substantial saving over the in- Kentucky Jail Roadblocks Fail Yield Fugitives; “ Two Considered Dangerous Area Walks | Retused by Commission made the effort hardly worth- while in either case, according to Birmingham police. ; Missing from St, James Epis- ecpal. Church, 355 W. Maple Rd. was a total of $2. And from the First Methodist Church, 1589 W. Maple Rd., a seven-foot length of oak stripping was taken from a door jam, ~ * * walks were needed to decrease / “Gordon Brown, a janitor, re- ° ported the St. James breakin at 8:30 a.m, yesterday, Police found that thieves had gained entry by dropping from the church roof onto a patio ffdm which they entered through a_ window. An asbestos door leading to. the vault had been chiseled through. but only $2 was in the room. * * x While police were investigating at St, James, the Rev. Allen E. Wittrup, pastor of the First Methodist Church, called at 9:10 a.m, to report a similar occur- rence at ‘his church. ; Entry in this case had been gained through a boiler room win- dow, Police combed the building in search of the length of oak stripping but were unable to find it. Nothing else was missing. Hazel Park Approves New Xway Route (Continued From Page One) other cities ‘You are not going through.’ “We are going through!”’ Mayor Louis Elias told his con- stituents: * * * | “We know they are going to ‘come through our little city. If anybody here has any magic he can pull out of a hat to stop the \stallation of a new boiler,”’ he | said. NEWPORT, Ky. W—Seven men, five of them federal prisoners, The commission authorized the sawed their way out of the New- gas conversion regardless of port jail today and made their get-- whether the proposed extension away despite traffic-jamming road to the brary is built. blocks. ; = : Ste yay : Newport is directly across the vcent ner nf deters ast Ohio River from Cincinnati and! Pat — : sts of the traffic was backed up for long split the maintenance costs o traffic signals on U,S. 10 within the city was turned down by the |commissioners, They voted to re- Two of the escapees are under, West that the State Highway De- 20-year sentences for bank rob- partment continue with the present bery and are considered danger- agreement of 25-75 per cent par- distances as police checked every automobile crossing into Cincin- ‘ | They are Demphus Lewis, 37, | of Camden, Ohio, and Howard D. | Glenn, 28, of Birmingham, Ala. | They had been sentenced to pris- on earlier this month for the cent. * * Springdale service building plans submitted last night by architect Carl Marr, Birmingham, were ac- cepted by the commission. The ing the 25 per * |ticipation, with Birmingham pay- Special displays from General Motors foundries and from the GM} Technical Center wil] bé featured! ' in the gymnasium-during the day,|0n Made a one-hour refueling stop| Individual favors are being cast by |at Sverdlovsk, where there were) the Pontiac Foundry for banquet guests. Those senior students being hon- ored are from foundries of Buick, Ppntiac, Chevrolet-Tonawanda, Chevrolet Grey Iron of Saginaw, Canada and Central Foundry Di- vision of Defiance, Ohio, Danville. Ill., and Saginaw. Afternoon Rains to Bring Reliet. to Part of Nation By The Associated Press Tropical air continued to cling across most of the country east of-the Rockies, with increased hu- midity in wide areas. Little change was indicated from Mon- bers of his party. | This is a big machine manufac- Soviet * x -* turing centef 1,750 miles east of made a two-hour inspection - of fr traveling to Novosibfrsk Nix. | Moscow. It has a population of ‘‘everything I wanted to see.’’ The Within a few days, the election. lresults will be certified to. Presi- robbery last Jan. 30 of a bank +t Glencoe, Ky, They were await- ing transfer to a federal penal institution. building, located on Springdale iGolf Course, will house lockers and showers for both men and - eastern European affairs, 300 persons at the airport, | Authorities famitiar with Nixon's views reported he believes his tour thus far has surpassed his jexpectations after a slow-rather ‘cool welcome in Moscow. ‘FRONTIER’ CABINS | Nixon-passed hundreds of one- room log cabins, some still under construction, on the 15-mile trip WASHINGTON ® — The State | Department is sending reinforce- ments to assist Vice President | Richard M. Nixen on his visit to | Poland. Two department experts on Polish affairs, Albert Sherer, act- re and | Polish desk officer Richard John. | Son asked for Polish visas. They | are scheduled to leave Thursday. | The vice president is due in War- _ saw Sunday, Aug. 2. | nen \from the airport. The area resem- 7,000. reactors themselves were inactive.| dent Eisenhower and he has said x « * x *« * he would proclainr Hawaii the 50th . Nixon's schedule of activities in, He emerged to describe the state in mid or late August. The others were listed as: Joseph Dinardo, 24, Newark, iN. J., who was awaiting trial on a charge of violating the Mann Act; Elbert Wellman, 30, Logan, W. Va.; who was under a four- year sentence for auto theft; Law- rence Adams, 26, Cincinnati, charged with a postal law viola- tion; Carl H. Webb, 20, Newport, jand Harry Lee King, 19, Cincin- Novosibirsk was still in the proc-| pride of the Red navy ‘‘a fine. less of being arranged. He is due! job'’ but said, “it does not Seeks | f f § ttl ito visit the scientific community sent an advance in the reactor ena e 0. cu e Wednesday morning. He leaves art.” ‘ > boa isi ~- =| * * * i : . by boat {o visit 4 big hydroelec-/ dint “tte shipyara FAXES ON Business ‘tric station on the Qb River, : spending the noon hour there. was the only disconcerting note of the first stop of the Nixon par- NIXON INTERVENES ames "s five-day : Moscow. ,; ' - On the visit to Leningrad Nixon tie Siva day tome cutabie: oes fice hasn't sent out checks which ‘intervened to help Vice Adm. Hy-, have been written against the Sen nati, both charged with breaking ‘man G. Rickover, the -naval ex. /NSurance Agent jeral fund. . ‘and entering. ipert in his party, get a close look |, ; | Also due in the next week or so, < at the heart of a new Soviet. Must Talk ae $5,300,000 in welfare payments, | jatomic icebreaker. Soviet officials , 6*2 million dollars for the big. three (Continued From Page One) * * The men got out of their cell- aos ease ib k Saw 1 jstate universities, 22% millions: to! lock by sawing bars and then women, and kitchen facilities. City Manager Gare anticipated that bids will be received for the constric- ition by Aug. 13. * * * parking lots. the two-hour meters. had balked at first. About Union Deal'** 7 tO crawling. to an upper runway. : | tk & ’ i moc can sod federal tm |zro™ there they forced open) The commission announced ne ; ‘SING (UPI) — Chieago in-|i! 20cial secur iD-lheavy screeni that hearings to discuss the pro- Nixon and Rickover, father of; LANSING (UPI) — Chicago in-\ one taxes withheld from earlier je oa mad oeees 0 posed -changes in the Twelve America's atomic submarines, col-/Surance agent Allen Dorfman was! ...4,, payrolls lided with’ Soviet restrictions Mon- Warned today he will lose his) 2° Sonate figuring excluded day as they toured the 16.000-ton Michigan license if he invokes the what ever might be desired to whit- |Lenin nearing completion in Len-'Fifth Amendment on questions) +1. the deficit and restore a portion ‘ingrad. ‘about his handling of Teamsters | of the veterans’ trust fund, should x * * Union policies, ‘it be used to ease the immediate Rickover protested they were ~ *& * ‘cash crisis, getting a run-around because they ‘Michigan insurance laws re-| * «* & | were allowed only a long-range quire “full “disclosure,” Blackford) 4 decision on whether ‘the vet- look at the three reactors that| Said shortly before the final round erans’ will power the ship. He said So- of- hearings started on Dorfman’s | Police said four other prison- ers told them the men had been sawing at the bars for three days. They said the escapees threatened the others with death if they told of the plan. | i4 a.m. trust fund should be tapped’ Police immediately set up road The escape was discovered about day’s high. ae eniee ‘bles in some ways the frontier : | Viet First Deputy Premier Frol R. qualifications to do business in! x * American West. puty ol R.q Readings reached above 100 de-| Among Nixon's advisers. Que-| senor’ ee ee sisi x * k a ee ™ rion lens ise bai mentioned as a Pos-/look at American atomic installa-- Dorfman, who has been under S.D. They were wou ig th pas be : ce for & Samet confer-| tions” and ‘‘we answered every questioning by Blackford about a and 90s in the eaias ‘alt Fast Ce, If and when one is agreed question he asked.” policy for Tearfster Union Presi- country. Showers Goad da, : 4 °. <« x | x *& * dent James R. Hoffa and alleged ea maa te 0s i the mer-| wie ae “T want to see the insides,’ de- ‘‘misuse of funds,’ has had his e in many areas.) Nixon, in a talk to the throng manded Rickover. Nixon backed license pending before the state as Of airport well-wishers, noted that him up, . The Weather jagency since late February. *———_ i Report 'was put aside. ® The 1'2-hour GOP caucus fol- | lowed a 20-minute senate session. | The House, with only 44 of its 109 members present, set a record for brevity this session, meeting | only six minutes because it lacked the necessary 56 for a | quorum, . After the caucus, it was reported, the Senate was ready to add an-| other 20 million dollars to help re- blocks at bridges leading to Cin- cinnati and on highways leading south out of this northern Ken- tucky area. Police Hold Suspec in Death of Physician Town Relief Drain system will be held at 19 p.m. Aug, 14 in the Southern Oakland County Agencies Building, Reyal Oak. phe drainage: board explained. In its final action of the night, the commission rejected a request by Dr. A. L. McNaughton to re- zone lot 28 and the west 40 feet of lot 29, Castle Addition, located on the northeast corner of South- field road and Townsend street, from R-7 multiple family to B-1 non-retail business, * * * (Continued From Page One) use the property for a dental clin- The commission authorized the continuation of the present main- tenance arrangement with the city) Under this policy, | ithe city does not charge the park- ‘ing system for maintenance. The Mayor's Parking Committee will discuss the possibility of keeping two-hour meters in Municipal Park- ling Lot No. 1 at its next meeting. Local merchants are in favor of Proposed changes in ‘the ‘Ste- n’’ trunk of the drain sys- tem are due to the construction of the Chrysler Expressway, the Dr. McNaughton had planned to ic. The commission turned down State and federal government from jbuilding a highway through Hazel ‘Park, let us know. We'll use it.” Owners of homes that would be left abutting the expressway | were told that their property | Would not depreciate more than one per cent. . Rubin said it is expected that close to six million dollars would be needed to purchase the homes due to be condemned. * * * At one point in the proceedings a woman sobbed hysterically, ‘‘It's aging to ruin our lives. You aré | jtaking everything from us. I'll just 'have to take gas.” |. * oe * | Champion of the people for the jevening was Oak Park's City At- torney Carl W. Forsythe. Forsythe has been hired by Hazel Park's Church of Christ to fight its con- demnation. He was applauded wild- ly during his impassioned plea to the Council. . Located. on the stephenson highway near Pearl street, the $100,000 church has a member- ship of about 350. It had been condemned previously by the State Highway Department in | 187 to widen Stephenson high- way. “We were condemned out of Stephenson once before,"’ said For- sythe. “You are thus, for the pur- pose of saving taxable property, forcing this church out of your community. My clients don’t be- lieve that lightning should strike twice in the same place. * * * After passage of the resolu- tion, Forsythe conceded “‘the con- ‘ gregation hasn’t much of a fight. But,” he said, “‘we will take the matter to. court in our condem- nation suit in which we will con- test the necessity of the Highway through our property.” . The Rev. Clifford J. Tucker, pastor, said, “We had to bring suit against the State Highway Department when we were con- demned in 1947 in order to get our losses back.’’ A statement from State High- way Commissioner John C, Mackie said in part: * * * “Since last November the De- partment has held over a dozen meetings with Hazel] Park officials in an attempt to mutually agree on a proposed alignment — a sen- sitive and difficult task. Full U.S. Weather Bureag PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy, warm and humid teday, high 88. Chance of scattered thundershowers this afternoen and tonight. Lew tonight 79. Winds tligh: te southwest teday and tenight. Tomorrow partly elowdy and continued warm with Seattered | thundershowers. High 89. Today in Pentiac PO soho: temperature preceding & a.m. At 8 am. Wind velocity 3- Direction—Southwest. sinha che Sun sets Tuesday at 7:56 pn Sun rises Wednesday at 5 21 a m Moon sets Tuesday at 2:07 p.m Moon rises Wednesday at 12.39 am Downtown Temperatures 6 a.m . 66 1] a.m 83 a : 12 m 85 a a hie lpm 7 9 am ) ..76 . § 10 a.m - 80 Monday in Pontiac As recorded downtown) Highest temperature oc a8 Lowest temperature .... 63 Mean temperature .... 55 Weather—Sunny. One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature .......... 88 Lowest temperature ... 64 Mean temperature .... ae |) Weather—Sunny. tire the deficit. said. “He d The Senate decision to strip 15 last night oad we can't see how million dollars from the- House a patient, unless: addicted to the packages was influenced primarily; drug, could use that much in a by a revenue report prepared by| day.” | a eewarch Conc St Detectives said the approxi “The state stands to take in| ™@te mormal dosage about 22 million dollars more in} ®™ount to three hypos of 1 to this fiscdl year than was thought 1% c.c, per day. possible seven months ago,” the! | vealed. Detectives also said that sev- eral doctors had refused or “cut off” Tunnell’s prescriptions in the past because “they didn’t feel that the drug was being put to proper use.’ + Tunnel] and his wife own the rest home at which they live. They also operate the Sunsetview Rest ecutives, said, This doesn't jibe with estimates of administration officials and house tax experts, A Senate-House dispute on rev- enue estimates could prolong the record session even longer, ~ “We've compromised as far any human can,” said Rep, Frank D, Williams (D-Detroit). “If they (senators) want to run the state with a whip, let them run it right Mighest and Lowest Temperatares This into the nd. is a rented ea igs 1881 Rep. Willard Bowerman (R-Lan-| They have owned and operated Monday's Temperature Chart sing) said the legislature could ‘‘be| the Sunsetview home for about five Alpena tt SE Marquette 82 6 ‘|here unti) Christmas” if the Sefiate|Y€&"s, according to detectives Bismarck 304 71 Mist ob. §3 i failed to compromise. |. Nesbitt, heading the murder in. bas nm 4 3 ae Sinaes 544 Si P .. L pee gyi Ape ne mat ew eho Be cane : ; oe ee open in the doctor’s office, but ia” often -3 oi ae « AP Wirephote | LANSING (UPI) ~ Gov. G. Men-, no evidence that any had been Detroit om tok «of % SCEBREAKER VISIT — Vice Presitient Rich- Soviet Icebreaker, Lenin, in the background after nen Williams has ‘sfimed into law) broken into.” : Bator 84 G2 & Francisco 42 $3 ard Nixon. secdnd from left. and Adm. Hyman first being refused permission fo gee the nuclear | ™ Gat rg the, transfer-of| ‘The doctor had few drugs in Houston # fs atthe 2 ie Riekover, dark suit, chat with Soviet officials as reactors. In the center is I--V. Spiridonov, a rata ponaice sien after oan ll prndlpace peed: — yong’ k City Be 1 Fraverse city 91 57, they are surrounded by curious Russian onlook- member of the Soviet Presidium, At’ the right is ~~ included in a seiiiGaian sys-| fice it ‘is almost ri tired roars Rs oy oe Hi 4 — siadied ers. Adm. Rickover made a two-hour tour of the Major M. N.. Smirnov, of Leningrad. - ltem for all city employes. , lit any thad been taken.” co. | ‘ es ; * | is ' é ‘ Rey - . \ i would | “It is our belief that Tunnell shot Council, composed of business ex-' it all into himself,” Meggitt re- not account for if his request on the .grounds that |the zoning change would create} - | ‘not available in the plans, Thieves broke into two Bir- mingham churches early Mon- day morning, but their “take” ;a spot zone, the property can be i used more properly for family un- jits and that sufficient parking was * * * “The alignment which has been approved can serve as a model of the results of cooperative plan- ning between the department and a city, and an example of how differences and objections can be overcome.” Hazel Park citizens agreed, “It was inevitable, Progress.” BAY CITY (UPI) — The sec- ond of four guided-missile de- stroyers slid down the ways sep Dod aetna apcarty He told those gathered for the ceremony that the St. Lawrence pp Hips gto fe. moe Be of a hew era of opportunity Great Lakes shipbuilders,” . ca! \ a aie me ae ae eee 2nd Missile Destroyer Launched at Bay City injuries. No one was arrested. The entire expressway is sched- and. 1967, It will stretch for 50 miles from downtown Detrvit to a connection with U.S, 23 just south of Flint, Total cost was estimated at $175,000,000. * * * The road is planned to skirt around the east side of Pontiac. Pontiac Township had asked for alignment approval, but does not have the right as it is not an in- |corporated municipality. Arabs, Israelis Fight in Viennese Restaurant VIENNA (UPI)—Arabs and Is- raelis attending the Communist’ run World Youth Festival battled. with knives in a Vienna restaurant last night, police reported today. Police broke up the bra!) -be- fore anyone was seriously hurt, but some persons suffered minor # z uled for completion between 1962 _ e \ 1% : ‘3 ‘ a * |much. Others contend it’s too lit-| The National Safety Council, |tion-in the last 35 years. ltle. The White House has labeled | year . Acciden acts, o - Des | pres é said today that 270 auto passengers iam, a ae ae gabon | boosted by $390,295,000. and drivers were killed on turn-, ge average of 92,100. | An increase of that amount | pikes in 1958. 7 \would provide $3,576,795,000 for | More than 24,000 such deaths | : occurred in cars and taxis else- (Uday is the week's worst day for|tg help friendly ‘nations in their! _ where. ‘traffic accidents followed by Sun- resistance to communism. That is| A highway collision, a slip and day. the amount authorized by Con-| fall down a stairway, or a drown-} * * * igress in separate bills setting ceil-| ing usually don’t make screaming) And teenagers, as a group, have ings for the aid program. headlines. |been worse drivers than the aver-|. x * * x«~ k jage. The 7 per cent of drivers) \President Eisenhower: originally But their combined total has under 20 years old have caused|gought an authorization for $3,929,- mounted much higher than the more than 12 per cent of the na-|995,000 for the present year. He toll from the nation’s wars and oth-'tion's aute accidents in recent|added 500 million dollars to that er great catastrophies. lyears: request last week with the expla- Sey -geaage nation the extra half:billion would ‘be an advance against loan funds ‘authorized for next year. The committee not only rejected | the advance payment of 500 mil-| ‘lion for next year but lopped $390,- '295,000 from the amount Congress ipreviously had authorized. * * * The dual operation put the com- mittee in a position to boast an | Three famous disasters—the Chi- 7 over-all] cut of $1,243,495,000, an E ° A ATED WITH HEADACH jappealing figure to Democrats ONLY SiMPL ' » NERVOUSNES | seeking a record for budget-cut- iting. But there remained the ques- tion how much of the claim would | | Stand up after action by the Sen- jate, which frequently is more lib-| eral with foreign aid and other} ifunds than is the House. ane Students Complain | of His Sex Survey $1.98 pAIN soe ne pain PRESCRIPTIONS ROFESSIONALLY ERFECT ROPERLY, RICED PERRY DRUGS 689 EAST BLVD. 1251 BALDWIN COR. OF PERRY AT YPSILANTI FE 2-0259 FE 2-8359 LOS ANGELES (UPI) — A 38-' year-old high school teacher who_ | conducted a “little Kinsey"’ survey | jon sex relations among his teen-. jage students today faced the pos- | jsible loss ‘of his teaching creden-| | tials. | | Cecil M. Cook, science and math jteacher at Van Nuys High School (and father of three children, re- iturned to a state board of educa- |tien hearing today where he was charged with “‘unprofessional con- iduct involving moral turpitude.” He has been on suspension | since some students complained | of his sex sufvey last January. | Conviction on the charges would BEAUTIFUL TV BENCH—W EUREKA MODEL NEW HASSOCK ITH 1010 Foreign Aid Bil << =st2e Has No Artichokes | about them. The NSC study showed that Sat-| y<6 during the present-fiscal year id ® fee B'nai B'rith Probes “ : . ith oups have had in fighting| 1958 month. It said unemployment | #7 Bias Against Whites ldicrtweention. agaioek "hae Ne weouhed 70 per cent and the num- drive to get Negro liquor sales- men a larger share of the Harlem that this may constitute discrim- at Tahquamenon | NEWBERRY (# —.An 1l-year-|{ NEW YORK (AP) — How can you expect a horse to run oid boy was in serious condition! Jf without artichokes? today from injuries suffered when @ The horse is named Jamin. He is 6 years old and he has |he slipped off an observation stair¢| / eaten artichokes all his life. way and fel] 50 feet down the side They seem to agree with him, too, because, as every (of the Tahquamenon Falls. sporting Frenchman knows, Jamin is the trotting champion Fast rescue action by state po- of all France. He came to the United States to run in the |lice and spectators was credited; $50,000 International Trot at Roosevelt Raceway on Long |With saving the life of Roger) 9 Plichta of Muskegon. Island Saturday. The boy and his parents, Mr.| and Mrs. Matthew Plichta, and a sister Phylis, 20, were visiting | 77 the famed falls near Newberry in| * x * The artichokes — 150 pounds of them — came in on the plane with Jamin last week. They were inpounded for in- spection by the Department of Agriculture. But wheng truck | Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Rog-| 7 came to pick them up for Jamin, they were missing. ‘er walked ahead of the family as_ None can be found here because they’re out of season. | it descended a stairway to the top th Jamin has had to live for a whole week on oats and hay. of the falls. * * * - He ee et ck some wel i : 5 : . ye stairs, 1 rocks | 4 = psexpaprahconed Jean Riaud, gave him a workout Mon- side of the falls, and plunged down | J ay. He was gloomy about the result. the side to the bottom, landing on “He ees, ‘ow you say, sloogish? Not good. No artichokes.” | pocks and coarse sand. Gi Food for two Italian trotters who came over on the same plane was impounded too, but no one seems to care beans |\Aore Jobs This June | CHEBOYGAN Uf — An economic | @ survey shows industrial employ-} } _._.....ment in the Cheboygan area last! @ |month was 12 per cent higher than | 77 The league said the problem | for June 1958. The survey said) was extremely delicate, hegense|*2 persons were employed this! 7 of the long and close association | June compared to 389 in the same They eat artichokes too? Nope. Beans. . iber of cases on direct relief de- |groes and Jews. : jclined 62 per cent. * * * The campaign was begun by 2 mes the New York branch of the Na--34 Win in Michigan tional Assn, for the Advancement ination against whites of Colored People. The national) DETROIT ~ Ford piles Co. : 4 organization was not consulted in| has awarded cash prizes to 4 * * * jadvance, So far it has taken no Michigan high schoo] students in| # The Anti-Defamation League ofistand on the issue, ‘its 13th annual industrial arts) B'nai B'rith, a national Jewish) ‘awards contest. The Michigan’ / organization, said Monday it was | ‘There are about 25,000 known Students were among 671 award) NEW YORK (AP)—An NAACP market has touched off allegations oe aha een Red Sea’ and the ie) s anean, Dead a. COME, SAVE! 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SAGINAW ST... .FREE PARKING . a eee _ oe a a ces = investigating such allegations. ispecies of spiders. ‘winners across the nation. ‘i -‘This is the life! a summer night...a harbecue...an mean revo¢ation of his Cali- fornia teacher’s certificate. \ _ CLEAN 3 TIMES FASTER WITH NEW EXCLUSIVE EUREKA Three blushing 17-year-old girls testified at the start of the hearing yesterday that they thought ques- tions asked by Cook in his. physi- ology course were “disgusting; out- rageous and of little value.’’ The class was comprised of about 30) Vibra B “CLEANING boys and girls, aged 15 to 17. at ACTION ( PLUS POWERFUL SUCTION House Opens Hearings .—— oe | ; é lon Drinking in Clouds | WASHINGTON (AP) — The ONLY 84” HIGH | question of mixing air and liquor ROLLS EASY ‘arises in a House Commerce sub- Can Tip committee today. | Specifically, the group opens ‘hearings on eight bills to prohibit the serving of alcoholic beverages to airline passengers while the ‘plane is in flight between points in the United States, Some airlines don't serve drinks | ‘at all, some limit drinks to two per person. Some offer drinks free some sell them. One serves only champagne, Housing Bill Veto NEW EUREKA MODEL 1010 | Beats! Sweeps! Suction Cleans! | : For the first time, powerful airedriven “Vibra-Beaters" shake the rug—leosen, dislodge embedded dirt. Cleans 3 times faster. Deluxe 10-piece set es cleaning tools SPECIAL TRS EER/ Bad, Says Meany EUREKA [057 ccm on, mesg! $ 25 WASHINGTON (UPI)—AFL-CIO Model 060-A per | President George Meany said to- $ 83~ took week day the vetoed Democratic housing : : 4 INTRODUCTORY bill would fight inflation rather) . Mfr's original $79.95 TRADE-IN than fan it as President Eisen- . ALLOWANCE hower charged. : accom “Inflated prices are the result ‘See live demonstration in our store Meany told the Senate housing sub- : bs committee. The measure would ‘ make possible the construction of 200,000 homes, he said, and thus CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY wi? ‘i> 2ie= “iti prifes rather than increase the.” a eee” a eee ee “Experience as well as common sense ‘indicate that housing prices decline when the housing volume Bi J expands,” Meany said. He urged u Congress to override the . veto. ® . Nicholie , * Calling! | Central China Peasants Now Facing Drought TOKYO (UPI)— The New China |News Agency said today that 10 ‘million peasants in Communist China’s central provinces ‘are waging a hard fight” to overcome the effects of drought. Emergency irrigation proced-| ‘ures have been instituted for 3.4 million acres of land, the agency | reported. In one province .alorte, | Anhwei, more than’ 32,000 ditches | and canals were dug. | Only a month ago China was| fighting major, floods in South) DOES YOUR INSURANCE COVER THEFT? ARE YCU POSITIVE? We've been dealing with insurance for many years now... and We have found that most people are ~ not absolutely sure What their insurance is protect- ing them against, If you have any doubts, let us talk to you! | “He R. NICHOLIE AGENCY 49 MT. 'CLEMENS ST. : FE 3-7858 , | / | ea . s i 4 { wn 4 J q é i } ‘ | \ t i , 2 ’ j \ ‘ ( \ i : ¢ 5 ‘ 1% : ; America's..only. -fire-brewed beer! ¥ by the case. You'll like ] ON TV: Enjoy MACKENZIE’S pre | i x ie « } Friends, music and good food make a wonderful combination. And Stroh’s adds good taste to it all. That's because lighter, smoother Stroh’s beer can’t be equaled for refreshment. For barbecues, better buy Stroh’s «: it’s lighter! RAIDERS (Wednesday, 7:00 PM, Channel 7) ¥ The Stroh Brewery Company, Detroit 26, Michigan > 5 * , xa % } \ . = o t i 4 THE Sit i PRESS, TRESDAY.. JULY 28, 1959 e By Leal VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My. parents have been married for 44 years and they are still fighting. Ev- “7 ay I take my children . (age 11 and 13) to visit them because I feel it is ny duty. It’s a 22- mile drive. From the minute we en- ter the house I have to be the referee. If my mother it's a my father says it's If my father says ABBY nice day, too windy. his feet hurt, my mother says Says if he didn’t walk all over town his feet wouldn't hurt. | All they do is argue and con- tradict each other. My children are beginning to resent spending every Sun- day there. I can’t change my parents at this stage. Is there any solution?” My neryes are about shot. DAUGHTER DEAR DAUGHTER: Try cut- ting your visits down to every other Sunday. Your company would be more appreciated and your children would be less resentful. Your duty as a ‘‘good daughter" is important — but don't neglect your role as a good mother. * * * DEAR ABBY: My husband is a grand gentleman who stands up when a lady enters the room, pulls out their chairs and helps them on with their coats. But when he’s home with his family he is-a big slob. His clothes are thrown all over the house. He leaves his razor, soap and whiskers in the sink and damp towels on the bath- room floor. H I complain he says Cleaning up the place is MY job. He’s a good husband, a won- derful father, brings me _ his paycheck and I know he loves me, but his sloppy habits get me down, Are there other men like mine or am I all alone in my misery? MISERABLE DEAR MISERABLE: Boy, do you have company! Every week I hear from hundreds of women who are wed to “gentlemen-slobs."’ If he’s too fee —‘‘Lend’” her her, own coffee. * * * DEAR ABBY: I was recent- ly divorced. I have two chil- dren. My Mpsband gives me only $70 a month and I can’t get along on that. I don't want to work out because I] want to be home when my: children come from school. I have an extra bedroom. I know a nice | man about my age who is sep- | arated from his wifé. He asked | if he could rent the room. Do waar a Pate we Tey Fights gj taal “Grandchildren; Mother Feels ‘Duty’ to Visit you think it would ‘look bad ia if I rented the room to him? | RESPECTABLE DEAR RESPECTABLE: Yes, it would ‘‘look’’ bad. You'd be better off renting the room to = a female. A respectable wom- an must consider ‘‘rumors”’ | when considering roomers. | } * * * What’s your problem? For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of.this newspaper. En- close a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Charles Landrys Make Making their home in Euclid, Ohio are Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Landry. Mrs. Landry, the former Lou Ann Shunkwiler, is the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Shunkwiler of Mentor, Ohio. Mr. Landry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Landry of Cleveland, Ohio and formerly of Pontiac. a a oe The couple was married May 20 in Cleveland. Dorothy Zack of Painesville, Ohio was maid of _ honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Jack | Jacobson, the bride's sister of | Painesville; Joan Morley of Willoughby, Ohio and Carol | Whitley of Painesville. Junior bridesmaid was Diane Jacob- son of Painesville and Patty Ann Jacobson and Annette Lee Landry of Pontiac were flower girls. x* * * William A. Landry of Pon- tiac was his brother's best man. Ushers were another of the bridegroom's _ brothers, Marvin R. Landry of Pontiac: Ronald Mistur of Cleveland and Glenn Livingston of East- lake, Ohio. Junior usher was Lee Allen Neubert of Mentor, Ohio. Pontiac Teacher Weds; Will Live on Middle Belt Their Home in Euclid It’s Not Strong | Without Em Even good marriages have problems. If they didn't, a noted marriage counselor points out, they would not be good in the first place. Writing in a current maga- zine, Dr. Robert A. Harper takes strong issue with the ‘‘ro- mantic illusion” that success- ful, happy marriages are marked by a_ problem-free bliss, without difficulties to be faced and handled. ~ we we “Denial of reality — living, vibrant, changing and, hence, problem-filled reality — is comme. in present-day Amer- ica in general and. American marriages in particular,” he asserts. It is the denial of the exis- tence of problems which may form the biggest hurdle to marital accord, he adds. We frequently tend to think that problems in marriages will disappear, like magic, by being ignored. ‘NOT LIKE THAT’ “But life is not like that, Dr. Harper, who is vice president of the American Assn. of Mar- riage Counselors, warns. “Life, marriage included, is a problem process, and ignored problems simply grow into big- ger and often unmanageable ones.’”. How do partners in matri- mony learn to deal with their problems? The article suggests that one of the best and most practical aids is to bring humor — “‘shared humor’ into these situations, for hu- mor reduces anxiety, a major block . to understanding and problem-handling. * * * “This lighter approach to marriage, especially a sense of humor about yourself and your imperfections, is likely to open the way to a clearer understanding of yourself — and that, obviously is essen- tial to working problems through,” ‘Dr. Harper explains. “Some husbands and wives, in facing up to their marital differences and difficulties, focus on ‘understanding each other.’ “But desirable as it is to have an accurate perception of the thoughts, feelings and actions of your mate, it is the realistic perceptions and eval- uations of yourself that are of greatest importance. ‘BRING OWN EMOTIONS’ “This is true,” he goes on, “because you — not your hus- band or wife — bring to a sit- uation your feelings, your own i emotions. “And in good measure you cause your feelings by your evaluations of what happens in your marriage (and, for that matter, the other aspects of your life). ~ “It is what we tell ourselves about our problems that makes us happy, sad, encour- “Ate eg, ys | Broble ems Good for Marriage. aged, depressed, glad, resent- ful. a. x * * A big factor is the way you look at things and the degree of importance you attach to them. Some examples: Your hus- band’s never on time. It’s cataclysmic? No — it’s a nuisance. Your wife can't get up in the morning unless you rouse her out of bed. End of the world? No—pain in the neck. Shared humor can go a long way. RECOGNIZE DIFFICULTIES Dr. Harper contends that those who claim ‘‘we have no problems” are really chanting a theme of unhappy mar- riages. “Happy marriages have problems,” he concludes, ‘‘and happy marrieds this fact of life with a zest ‘for tackling the problems to- F Making their home on Middle - 7 MRS.- CHARLES T. LANDRY Bridges the Gap. A simple black crepe sheath is a wardrobe must for late summer. It helps to bridge that gap from cottons to early fall woolens. | < alk at 3 isis wette Lt ee ae a ee ee REA Ried ISR Paris Fashion Show Stresses Sophistication By NADEANE WALKER PARIS # — Sophistication is the swelling note in Paris fash- ions for fal] and winter — less prettiness and more. elegance. Diagonal drapes are going strong, but most other trim- mings have been trimmeg off the new ‘“‘plucked’’ silhouette, with a slimmer line and slight- ly longer skirts. * * * Pierre Cardin’s show Mon- ’ day brought new shapes and shaded colors. Have You Tried This Make Refrigerator Rolls Without Any Kneading * Cardin’s promised suit revo- lution turned out to be long- jacketed tunic suits, mostly slim but unwaisted tubes. Jackets strike halfway between waist and knee. Tunic dresses have sheath underskirts show- ing just about an inch at the bottom. * * * Cardin refuses to be pinned to one hemline, Some are short, barely covering the kneecap. Others come down to midcalf, as long as anything likely to be seen. Colors of his coats shade subtly to a deeper tone at the hem. A coat trio called Ox- ford, Cambridge and Harvard was in wide-shaded chalk stripes—one blue, one brown, one green. * * * Big smuggler collars turn down to become small capes. Coats range from shapely bar- ee ee , Sigs SEEPS so Marilyn Ann Melvin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Melvin of Augusta avenue married Verl | Nelson Wolfe May 30 in | Muncie, Ind. | The newlyweds will teach in Riverside, ; Calif.. oy fall. atopy ee aS | MRS. eon WOLFE — this | Why Didn’‘t Visitor Tell Her Name? By EMILY POST “Dear Mrs. Post: The other day while my wife was up- stairs, the doorbell rang and I answered it. It was a young woman I had never seen be- fore. She asked to see my wife. I thought she might be solicit- ing for something so I did not ask her in. I called my wife and told her that there was someone to see her. “When my wife saw her she recognized her immediately and asked her to come in. It turned out that she was an old school mate of my wife’s, La- ter my wife reprimanded me for not asking her in and said that I was very rude to leave a visitor standing in the door- way. I would like to know if I was wrong, and also the cor- rect way to handle a situation of this sort.”’ Answer: You were right Belt road after Sept. 1 are Mr. and big to punish and too old to |Mrs. Harry R. Chambers. The COU- | = train, you can't win. Accept him as he is and whistle while By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor REFRIGERATOR ROLLS By Mrs. Myrta B. Jennings | rels with curving stave seams >| to flaring trumpet shapes. | Some have braid buttons and Bride-to-Be Hazel Miller | e was m J SS er ipedirg ae a arried July 10 in =| Somebody told us that Mrs. 4 cup wegetabie shortening | ; nu old friend of your wife's. zs * Mrs. Chambers, the former Mrs. | Sa be best salt Pewbaiing water |B Ba seen th Fr eted at M aceday Lake “Dear Mrs, Post: 1 sent a DEAR ABBY: I have a (Lawrence C. Coolman, is the | risin’ bread ee rid and T peaoe oaks. iripackags a Sots Gd io) oe te wedding present to a bride and neighbor who has to watch (|daughter of Mrs. Hiriam of ‘North| = z . in the world a 2 eggs | Stars of ue jecsenes but saEe, c after not hearing from her for her pennies. She is a lovely rson street. Mr. Chambers is|= WOUld we please get = 5 cape sittea teu -=| Breens, white, carrot, egg- A miscellaneous shower hon- Concluding the guest list five weeks, asked a member little woman but she is always |the son of Mrs. Truman Chambers é recipe for this column. We ; _, Plant purple, orange pink and | Qing Hazel Lee Miller was were Mrs. Dwight Blinn, Linda | o¢ her family if the had ing sh a of North Branch. called Mrs. Jenings and had a Cream shortening and sugar | rosy reds all are present in ; Burt, Phylli 4 “ running short of coffee so | : Mf : held Monday evening at the urt, Phyllis Burt, Constance been received. I was told that she’s at my door to borrow | The new Mrs. Chambers h 4 delightful chat with her. But together, then add boiling | the Cardin collection. Maceday Lake home of Mrs Shroyer, Nancy Johnson, Sus- rs 45'= no salt risin’ bread recipe (it's water. Let cool. Dissolve » all belted waist is - “ * it had been and ? was also in- every few days. When I give taught in Pontiac schools for man ag ‘ The sm t A. C. Kirby anne Madole, Barbara St. John P her coffee I give her the kind and A been too long ago). Instead, yeast in a little warm water —| oyt: the wide variety ranges Te Sete M , 4 fe : , formed that Emily Post said a I give years is currently teaching at Ge d add to first mist Add &= , on Miss Miller, niece of Mr. and rs. .Howard Sage and Mrs. bride had as long as six months we use, which is the finest cof- | Willis School. & we did get a recipe for re- and add to first mixture. ;| from bloused-over tops giving | 415 Royal McGill of Water- | Ray Madole. in which to write thank fee you can purchase. When » frigerator rolls. - cold water. Add rest of in- ®| the illusion of a longer waist ; = Se eee the telat a - + in Pea e k-you ie Ties Sede tha cate an Di : - a + zk & gredients. Stir well. Knead- | to slightly waisted effects. ord will become the eo er pre-nuptial parties notes. Is true? I can't be- lee s ip Blinds in Tub z Pie’ _ Clyde R, Kizer, son of Mr. and | have been given by Mrs. Allan | lieve that you have given such brings me some very inferior Mrs. Jennings who just cele. ing is not necessary. fe 5 Mrs. Maynard Kizer of Clark- Cross, Mrs, Gary Grimes, Mrs. advice.” 2 aS Did you ever try dipping | brated her 88th birthday lives Place in greased bowl. © Tile Kit Available | ston aug. 1 at the Methodist | Pickering Miss Lowrie, Miss — should pay back | your Venetian blinds in the |= alone and does all her own Grease top of dough and | Church of Clarkston. . Willets and Mrs. Gray Robert- Answer: I have never given ba ge da har she borrows, bathtub? Suds and rinse the |= Cooking. She got the meal for store, a in refrigera- » You can now obtain a kit of Gussis al'the: showex were son. any such advice. A_ bride I t know how-to get blinds and hang them to dry -, her birthday celebration. She tor. When ready to use, ‘ assorted ceramic tiles, in vari- Mrs. Royal McGill, Mrs. M. I. should acknowledge wedding around it. over a pair of parallel lines, enjoys church workand is an shape into rolls and let rise® ous colors. Apply them with COFFEE USERS | outdoors or indoors. Venetian = active member of the WSCS. 3 hours. Bake 12-15 minutes "| adhesive to create an attrac- Pas , eon agi aie oe (> __ DEAR USERS: Keep the re- blinds should be carried out- |~° In general, she just loves at 375 degrees. Makes about tive planter from any ordinary sa ae = i = “ 4780 , 1 pare “Dear Mrs. Post: I have turned coffee on your cupboard doors in some container to | people. 2% dozen rolls, wooden box. The tile can be P ean ye a "Edeasd been asked to be the maid of shelf and when your little prevent dripping on floors or |— ‘| washed with soap or detergent Strone areas yde Ger hire honor at a friend’s wedding. -I neighbor comes to borrow cof- | rugs. Lcsithiichicociihdnis ate iedetanimais aad Eee cee cae As CF a "Mrs. F. M. Kirby. am told that it is the duty of oF. p, Mrs, F. M. Kirby, Mrs. A. J. Kizer and Mrs. Car- Odor i ee rds gd son Kizer. : : Others were Mrs. P. J. Vier- this true? I hadn't planned on lech, Mrs. Robert St. John, ay Me se ll lo do Mrs. Thad Taylor, Mrs. George Mattinsen, Mrs. Charles Rei- chert, Mrs. Harold Adams, Mrs. Buhl Burt, Mrs, Maynard Holmes, Mrs. Edward Manley, Mrs. V. H, Hancock, Mrs. John Madole, Mrs. Charles N. Dailey GRAND OPENING OF | N Bon and Mrs. ae Shroyer and ams 00 Georgi izer, 7 i-\ Schumacher = 24 F amily Sales Engr. Members Arrive for Get-Together Honor Bighams at Going Away invites his friends and public to visit him at this new ALES OFFICE Sales Office. Party Here A family gathering was held F Estimat ; Thursday even t the home of 3415 W. Huron St. No Obligation Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bigham Mr, and Mrs. padi: S. Krantz of Plenty of Parking and son, Harry, of South John- son avenue were honored at a going away party held Satur- day evening at the . West Strathmore avenue home of their son-in-law and daughter, Voorheis road. Twenty-four family members were present. Out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Russel] F. Taber of Denver, Colo.; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Taber of Albuquer- (Near Elizabeth Lake Road) Den Schumacher No. 1 VALUE! ' Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Van- que, N. M.; Mr. attd Mrs. Earl M. TODAY 5 See ert eee a: Taber of Atlanta, Ga.; and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald L. Williams and . children Sheri Lynn and Larry of t+ * & Pontiae residents present were Double-feature neckline! Go cool or covered-up thanks to the button- Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hill and their children, Joanne and Billy on bolero, Princess midriff slims and sm-o-o-ths shorter, fuller fig- Joe; Mr, and Mrs. Morgan Siple and children, Pamela and Greg- ures. Tomorrow's pattern: Misses’ play-suit. ory; Mrs. Verna Nelson, Mrs. Rob- ert Wells, Ronald Krantz and Mrs. Printed Pattern 4780: Half sizes 1444, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. 100% EXTRUDED ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS se $1095 6 or More....... 10 Less than 6 . $21.95 ea. We Also Specialize in ALL ALUMINUM About 35 close friends and relatives attended. They were from Pontiac, Cass City, Bay City, Saginaw, Flint, Ionia, Lum and Los Angeles, Calif. The Bighams with their son, Harry, will be leaving shortly for Hutchinson, Kan., where _they will make their home. They have been residents of Pontiac for about 30 years. Christine Taber, Bothered by Bee? Here’s Treatment Yarns ®@ Lessons THE KNITTING NEEDLE | 452 W. Huron FE 51330 ALL AWNING a @ Siding @ Awnings | COINS=STAMPS tor cach pattern for 1etclass inail| ‘Then remove the Winger with Dg 8 STORM WINDOW SALES @ Patios @ Carports SUPPLIES ing. Send t0'asie Adee, core ef | 3 @ Comb. Doors — @ Basement Comb. a, Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern} If the victim has trouble L. W. BOGERT — Owner @ arch Enclcoures We Buy apd Sell | Dept., 243. West 17th St., New York| breathing, call a doctor be- LE | PONTIAC STATIONERS || 11, N/Y.. Print plainly Name, Ad-| cause this symptom may indi- at SALES OFFICE WAREHOUSE “Formerly Brown Bros.” dress with Zone Size and Style} cate an allergy to the bee's - (3415, W. Huron St FE 3-7800 233 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 8-1123 | - Seniammenasieh stb eas : |) se “Shot at Twice . PONTIAC. PRESS. ‘ae TUESDAY, JULY, 28. 1959, PONTIAC. Mic LG. AN Expect 75, 000 at + Berkley Motorist Carload of Six Men Pulls Up Beside Him, | One Opens Fire, Misses BERKLEY — Two pistol shots | “ere fired point-blank at a mo- orist on 11-Mile: read here last |” light but he escaped unscathed. | - < . | Berkley police are seeking six | nen who were reported by Themas | FE, Smith, 63; of 1828 Bacon St., in the car which pulled up ilongside him at about 8:30 p.m. He said one of the men leaned | eut the backseat window and | fired a revolver at him twice, | while the others cursed. “They | then raced gway, heading west | on 11-Mile, past Greenfield,” | said Smith, He could give no explanation | hy anyone would want to shoot im, according to police. Smith ; employed: as a foreman at a/| ‘ilroad terminal in Detroit is A roddblock was set up but to | 10 avail. Police have one clue, | nowever. Smith was able to give them a good. description of the car and a Missouri license plate | number which they are checking out. No spent cartridges were found in. the vicinity ‘of the shooting, and) according to. police it is possible | that blanks were used as a prank | to scare Smith who just happened along at the time “I've had no trouble with no- body,” said Smith apparently puz- zled by the incident Beetles Chomp Way Atter Candlelight Rites ‘Through Detroit Area Japanese beetles are chopping their way through the metropoli tan Detroit area in the largest numbers in years, the State De- partment of Agriculture has re- ported. The department’s plant industry division said 1,383 of the destruc- tive inseets were trapped in a very limited area The plant industry division has placed more than 12,000 beetle traps in the state, mosfly along the southern boundaries and transportation centers. The beetles, highly destructive of all kinds of vegetation, are about the size of a-fly but do plenty of damage. The beetle also is a hitch- hiker. riding into Michigan on rail. road cars, trucks, buses er cars. Farmington to Auction Off Excess Property FARMINGTON — A parcel of _broidered edge. ~ excess Highway Department prop-| return to their offices. Aug. Rs . They, too, will enrol) new stud erty just east of the city limits’ willbe auctioned off here Aug. 27, Highway Commissioner John C.) Mackie announced yesterday: Minimum bid on the 2,9-acre parcel, which is located near the intersection of the new U.S, 16 expressway «rd Grand River | avenue, is $48,750. The auction will be held at 2 p.m. in the Civic Room of the| Farmington Savings Building, 31500 W. 10-Mile Rd. The sale is another in a series) in which the Highway Department) i is disposing of over 2,000 parc els of| excess property. WHAT’S OUR TIME, BOSS? ris, of 109-Fairbrook Rd., Nort finished giving his four-year-old nastern mic senigan Fair Boy,”’ a workout on the E Ronaveson | in Tennessee Woman Embezze Placed on Probation AVON TOWNSHIP — Karen Eliz- abeth Yakey and Donad R. Seed were’ united in marriage Saturday at Saint Paul Methodist Church at Roches The couble-ring, candlelight cere- mony was performed by the Rev. Dougins Parker, pastor of the church : The bride is the daughter of Mrs, Charles Yakey of 1085 Thames St. and the late Mr. Yakey. The bridegroom is the son of Mr, and Mrs, Earl Seed of 1450 Livernois Ra. A gown of. re-embroidered nylon tulle ina dainty daisy design over silk taffeta was selected by the bride for her wedding. The gown featured a softly scalloped,” modi- fied sabrina neckline, short sleeves and a bouffant skirt of redingote design. Each panel of the skirt was accentuated by a scalloped, re-em- er She wore short gauntlets, and a fingertip veil of silk illusion falling softly from a crown of tiny seed pearls. Attending the bride as maid of honor was~ Sandra Sherer of | Rochester. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Thomas Vigus, Ann Sawyer and Mrs. Paul Easterle? was flower girl. Best man was Thomas Vigus of Rochester. Neil Randall: and Patil Esterle, both of Avon- Township, Rodney “Treais of Pontiac, and! ‘Richard Brown of Marlette serwed as ushers. A’ reception. was held. in the church parlors immediately follow-| ling the ceremony. The newlyweds are honeymoon- ing in Gatlinburg, Tenn., reside at 1085 Thames "St. upon) their return, | which ‘matched the chapel-length gown, | and will, — Gordon Nor- hville, has just trotter, “‘Joy hg & MRS. DONALD. R. SEED track .in Imlay. City. and continue through Aug. 8. Harness racing will be featured nightly Wednesday through Saturday and SUR cat act |from ition | Corswell jon safety deposit box rentals, ~po- | 4 at : The ehurch is located at the inter-| | section of Baldwin and Silver Bell! reads, i ‘ok. wk * Press Photes Aug. 3 : Pontiac The fair will open *four-vear-old_trotter, after a workout Father of the horse's owner, ROMEO — Mrs. Edward FE. | (Mayree) Harms. 47-year-old book- ‘coeagst accused of embezzligg $2,330 the Romeo Savings Bank, was placed on two years’ proba- of vesterday. WASHINGTON \ — Secretary Agriculture Ezra -Taft Benson has criticized Congress for not giv- Mrs. Harms pleaded no contest jing farmers more of a choice in to the embezzlement charge twO Thursday's wheat referendum that months ago in-U.S. District Court. poculted in continuation of the pres- Detroit. ent program which has piled up Mrs. Harms, who lives at 226 jarge surpluses in past years St, admitted saking “the Wheat farmers voted 80.7 per money from receipts she obtained 5 : d : cent for and 19.3 against continuing lice said. She has miade full resti. tution. | es icent ef parity on a national acre- 7 ‘age allotment of 55 million acres. To. Serve Church Dinner _ “This means,” Benson said, ORION TOWNSHIP — The! “that many farmers will soon be- Howarth Methodist Church WSCS. Sit planting wheat under the | : thoroughly discredited program will serve -a dinner Wednesday in. the church hall. Serving will begin! § p.m. The public | billion dollars and which has seen the buildup of costly, bur- densome surpluses.” is invited.) Michigan farmers voted sésinsi AH-H, THAT FEELS GOOD — gets a refre at the Imlay City fairgrounds. Charlie the* 1959; program into 1960.. Under this, wheat is supported at 75 per, which has already cost several “Joy Boy," shing sponging attendant, Boy” Norris of controls with a preliminary count showing only 043 per cent for. There were 2,755 yes votes and 2.317 “opposed. Michigan wheat | farmers voted against federal re- strictions twice before, in 1955 and 1956, but were overridden by farm- ers in the rest of the nation. Secretary of Agricuiture Mursboro, “Fenn., ‘Charlie Majors, holds the reins. was a winner twice at the Northville track last year and once at Hazel Park. Benson Criticizes Condincs | for Wheat Vote Constrictions Ezra | Officials Vow ‘Biggest, Best New Grandstand Race Track Lighting Plant Ready for Show IMLAY CITY — Attend- ance at the 6lst annual Eastern Michigan Fair to be held here from Aug. 3-8 is expected to reach 75,000, Kenneth Ruby, fair secre- tary, said today. - The program has been expanded and promises to be “with biggest and bes” in the history of the fa‘r, Ruby reported. There is a completely new and modern grand- stand which has a seating capacity for 3,000 and a new lighting plant for the race track this year. “Every inch of the fair grounds is sold out for commercial exhib- its,” the secretary revealed. ‘The exhibitors will come from as far applies the sponge while stable “Joy vetoed a wheat bill which would) have cut acreage allotments by | 25 per cent but increased the ptice support level to 90 per cent of | parity. The administration has re- |quested lower instead of higher supports. * * Wheat supplies now are at rec- away as Rhode Island, California, Arkansas and North Dakota.” Highlights of the six-day pro- gram will include a 4-H Livestock show, The show, which will start at 6 p.m. MondAy, will be marked by |the opening of the midway followed by the flag-raising ceremony at 7:45. At 8 p.m. “Dapper Dan” —* Parisian Hell Drivers | wil ‘high wire act will be presented. * * * On Tuesday 4-H livestock will be judged beginning at 10 a.m. At the same exhibits ‘of flowers, grain, canned goods, baked goods, produce, 4-H and youth entries will be judged in the cent to the grandstand. 1 * \completely new Floral Hall, adja- Taft Benson told a news confer- ord highs. Thé big 1959 crops is ‘TO FEATURE TUG-OF-WAR ence that farmers could do little | but re-approve the program. He| expected to add to the surpluses. Benson said the farmers should jp. i blamed the Democratic-comtrolied| ihave been able to choose between ‘Congress for what he called its failure to provide growers with a} better program. In the referendum, farmers it out and accept support levels of 50 per cent of parity for those farmers who complied with al- lotments and no supports for those who did not. Cleans Up on Canines 1 of | Avon Township. Debra Ann Seed | By LEE WINBORN ORION TOWNSHIP—Mrs. Wil lard F. (lah) Hall needs a co nb, brush, electric clippers, shears and “plenty of patience’ to practice |her new business trimming French poodles. F Mrs. Wall, who lives at ‘Hemingway Rd., took up poodle itrimming about two months ago and has already built up quite a | dientele in the area. “Poodle of trimming in your home” is the way her advertising | reads, and she often travels many miles to homes where she has appointments to fill. 617 * ‘Clip Artist’ Needs Patience “When the price of ‘irds dwin- | She has been French ded down to alm: switched to dogs,” Mrs, said. raisi ng Hall | now ‘three- month old puppies. | Mrs. Hall says it’s sometimes ; jhard to overcome the fear some jdogs ‘have of being trimmed. And, ishe said some of her experiences |with poodles have :been hair-rais- The Walled Lake Board of Edu-; cation has re-elected all officers) for the coming year, They are Julius Nelson, president; Dwight) Wiseman, secretary; and John) Clark, treasurer. Trustees re-elect- ed are Walter Horstman and Jo- seph Long. The board is seeking bids on three cars to be used for driver training classes. They will be opened at the Aug. 10, meeting of the school board. The Clifford H. Smart Junior High school on Commerce road will be ready when school opens Sept. 8, as will the addition to the Walled Lake Senior High School, according to Walter T. Anicka, architéct. Prineipals of these buildings and of the Walled Lake Junior High will be in their offices again begin- ning next Monday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. They ask that newcomers report for scheduling prior to the start of school, Principals also will discuss any necessary schedule changes , this month with pupils presently enrolled, since schedule changes will not be made after school starts. * ’ Flementary school principals will Officers ~ prior to Sept. 8 in order to avoid confusion on the opening day of! school. The school board reports that it is still accepting applications for elementary teachers in the lower grades. | Custodians in the schools have been granted a $100 increase at every step of the salary schedule and another step has been added. Bids for fuel oi] have been award- ed to Aurora Gasoline Co. of De- troit: small oil to Standard Oil; and gasoline to City Service, the latter fwo through Walled Lake dis- tributors. The Farm Bureau Insur- ance Co. was the low bidder for fleet insurance. All cities and townships ‘in the school district have been eye that the tax spread will 13.98 mills for operating and 6.50 mills for debt retirement. Passes Senate 76 to 7 WASHINGTON: (AP)—A bill to speed research to develop new in- dustrial and commercial uses for farm products was. passed by the menaie, 76-7 late Monday. ‘Tt now goes to the House where similar legislation died last year'|pi after clearing the Senate ge ‘ing. “Some poodles are so spoiled or jhave had such rough handling that is a struggle to try and trim ‘them,” the hobbyist asserted. “You have to treat the dog | gently, much like a child about | to get his first haircut,” she explained. ‘Yo move slowly, turn on the electric clippers, let- ting the dog get accustomed to the noise, and then proceed.” Mrs. Hall -says she trims all classes of..poodies, She works on “toys,” which measure up to 10 inches, “miniatures,” from 10 to |15 inches, and the ‘standard’ size of 15 inches and above. The time this Orion Township dog fancier spends on one trim- ming operation depends on the size of the poodle and the condi- tion of his ¢coat. It varies from ‘an hour to an hour-and-a-half. - Mrs. Hall started out by fol- lowing a poodle trimming man- nal, and she also knew a vet- erinarian in Ann Arbor who tet her help him trim dogs a couplé of times for practice. school, I think I'd have become a veterinarian,’ said Mrs. Hall. dates back many years. In fact, in the early 1950's her . interest was parakeets. She raised them for sale, ahd for three years hef birds scored high in show compe- tition. | “If 1 could have gone on’ to . jj Her love for animals and birds) | Pontiac Press Photo | booster they reach five years of age. | the present program and . one where the supports would be set at a level where wheat would move ‘into the «markets instead of into) ' could choose between continuing | prereng hands. the present program or throwing Farmers Asking for More Rain Recent Moisture Eases Corn and Potatoes but Reservé Needed Recent rains have eased drought Mrs. Hall explained that on nice | conditions slightly in lower Michi- similar and usually has an audi- ence. “Once when I was trimming a dog in a basement, I had peo- ple lined all the way up the ‘stairs watching the operation,” she said. : Mrs. Hall has to have four or five. customers in one locality to! make it profitable for her to travel very far from home. She has had! South-| eral, Birming-|are in good condition at this time. jobs so far in Franklin, field, Bloomfield Hills, ham, Pontiac, Rochester and Ox- ford. — : What she doesn’t mention in her advertising is that a free pedicure goes with the trim job. ‘Urge Vaccinations for Whooping Cough LANSING (UPI)—Three deaths from whooping cough and almost twice as many cases as last year have prompted the Michigari De- partment of Health to yrge parents to have their children~vaccinated. The department recommended a shot for children when First, immunization is usually given in combination with diph- theria and tetanus shots before a child is a :eay old, Boosters should be given at three years and again at five, the department said. ‘ There were 1,001 cases of whoop- ing cough yeported in the first 29. said. ‘In the comparable period last year, there were 503 cases. There were two deaths in 1958. The de- partment said many of this year’s cases. were, among five | and six year old youngsters who ' POOCH GETS HAIRCUT — Mrs. Willard F. Hall of Orion Township recently embarked on a new profession — she trims French poodles in their homes. Mrs. Hall travels all over the county. to practice her trade. She * shown here giving a demon- stration using one of her own dogs, “Mon Petit Palot Noir,” ““Qlown’; for short. A pedicute goes with the trim. had shots shortly after birth and | again at two years old. |. “Apparently their immunity wore lout and was too weak to protect ip | without a booster shot,” the de- | partment said. 8 { growth. . not'ng, I poodles for about four years and days she does the trimming out-/gan, but farmers aren't over the has seven—three of ther side on a picnic table or something! hump yet, according to both fed- eral and state crop reporting serv-|/@4y¥. ices. Much more rain is needed ‘to restore exhausted soil moisture re- serves and provide for future crop ~*~ * *° Corn in the lower peninsula is now in the critica] tasseling Stage when it needs more rain to pre- vent any serious damage. In. gen however, corn and potatoes Michigan’s bean crop was most appreciative of the recent rain- fall which arrived at a crucial moment. Beans are expected to recover and make good growth if the moisture supply remains adequate. Pastures have shown some im- | provement following the rain. Some second cuttings of alfalfa have been made but were reported very light because of the inadequate moisture. * * * Cherries in the south central counties are not up to usual size. High winds and a _ shortage of pickers in the west central area have held down the daily harvest. * * * Vegetable harvesting is picking up. The pickle harvest started earl- ier than usual and sweet corn and snap bean harvests are well under Way. Tomatoes are now being har- | vested extensively. 4s are rasp- berries and blueberries. Senaté. Passes Aid Bill weeks of 1959, the department for Coal Mine Industry | WASHINGTON (AP)—The sen- ate has passed a bill authorizing spending two million dollars the first year on a@ big new research program aimed at helping the -ail- ‘ing ebal mining ‘industry. * * * It would create a new agency, ithe Coal Research and Develop- ment Commission, to handle’ the progrant, The bill gods back to the ‘House for consideration of an amendments, ble aol s champion light and vy draft horse pulling teams - wi te attractions of the evening program. Another highlight, at 7:30 p.m., will be the Lapeer County firemen’s tug-of-war. At 19 a.m. Wednesday thé East- ern Michigan Dairy Show will be held at the sarbe hour as the judging in the horse department, A total of $29,000 worth of purses will be offered for the entire pro- gram of harness racing which be- gins at 8 p.m, Wednesday. gene ae emteg tee, caged te Featured races Wednesday night will be the 2-year-old filly pace, be the 2-year-old stud and gelding 2.17 pace, The comedy music of Paul Koh. ler, fetured at the International Exposition in Toronto, will be an added attraction. Friday's program wil open at 10 a.m. with the judging of Future Farmers of America departments. At 1 p.m. the. tractor hauling con- test is schedued. Harness races at 8 p.m. will include the 2.23 trot, the 2.21 trot and the 2.19 pace. STARS TO PERFORM ‘Recording stars, Homer and Jethro, and Johnny Matson, mas- ter of ceremonies of the Ernie Ford Show, will perform between races, The final day of the fair, Satur. day, will feature harness racing beth afternoon and evening, The afternoon program of races , will include the 2.25 pace, 2.25 trot |and 2.21 pace beginning at 2 p.m, 'At 8 p.m. the 2.23 pace, the FFA trot and the FFA pace are sched- uled. Highlight of Saturday night’s pro- gram will be the appearance of Ann Marston, Miss Michigan in the |Miss America Pageant, performing feats of .skill as national archery champion. Methodist Men’s Club Working on Fund Drive GOODISON The , Methodist Men’s Club of Paint Creek Meth- odist Church are currently work- ing on a néwspaper drive to raise funds for the church. The committee im charge of the — died up and delivered to the church on Sunday. ‘ Discovers Son Dead BURLINGTON, Vt, (AP) = Patrolman Donald Ray went. a be featured after which a - pace, 3-year-old filly pace and the . drive asks that all newspapers, magazines and cardboard be bun- th ge ag amon me Pilhesle ii Vth ieod Oe | Ed Heikkinen, who gets his first crack as head football coach at Pontiac Northern this Fall, will have Arnie Wilson and John Backman as his assistants. Wilson was with Ed at Pontiac Central when both were assistants, and Backman, a grad of Marquette University, was the assistant at Grand Ledge before coming to Northern. With a team made up mostly of juniors, PNH has. Lake Orion, Grand Blanc, Rochester and Hazel Park! plus Inter-Lake Conference members, Waterford, South- field, Walled Lake, Farmington and Berkley, making up its nine game schedule. FOOTBALL LOSES A GREAT GUY Football lovers can always be sure of one thing. Big Jim Tatum wasn’t a hypocrite. In fact he became) a controversial figure because of his frankness. He wasn’t the type who put winning secondary to everything else. He admitted it. Jim scoffed at those who thought football] was) Washington merely to build character, and for him it was winning or losing with no such thing as “moral victories.” : ~ * * Two of his most famous quoted expressions were: “It is sad when academic leaders don’t have a sufficient) ¥ education in athletics to realize the benefits that ath- Bes letes receive from the field of sport.” This was his thought about victories: “I don’t think winning is the most important thing —I think it’s the only thing.” We had the privilege of meeting Tatum a year ago at the Michigan State clinic and it comes from the i¢;.,Anselss heart when we say, football has lost one of its greatest men. DITTOS FROM THE PRESS BOX Bill Lear, of Lake Orion, whose name often appears among some of the Seniors’ golf tournaments around s, Leols at Cincinnati, the South in the winter and in Michigan during the Summer, was going through his daily routine at Indian- wood the other day. * At 81 years of age, his “routine” consists of 36 holes a day. “If I can’t find-anyone to play with, then I play 18 and hit about 500 or 600 balls afterward,” he said. . i ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, TURSDAY, JULY Fock. é ae ee oad s Li J a ; 2 =, Fea * € * x kw a * Blanked Indians Drop in AL Tie Braves Take Second | By United Press International jhave found a brand new bunch of|them healthy again quick. Now |er led the Reds’ 11-hit attack as | The Cincinnati Reds are refusing |‘‘cousins'"’—the Pittsburgh Pirates. to play dead for the Milwaukee| Remember how the Braves Braves any more, but the Braves, marched to the National League pennant in 1957 by rolling up an amazing 18-4 mark against the Reds in their season series? And repeated last year by beating the losses? Now they're doing the same thing to the Pirates, A 5-2 Mil- waukee triumph Monday that boosted the Braves back into sec- AMERICAN LEAGUE ond place was their 10th in 13 | Wea Lest a ea Behind games with Pittsburgh this year, | Cleve “se 4 a the last five wins in a row. Baltimore 49 1505 7% oe New Sy “2 §$ 4 s* | This win on Joey Jay's five-hit Detroit % 2 -$ 38 (pitching climaxed a four-game se-| 15 |ries sweep that really saved the Braves’ bacon. The champs stum-) bled into this series with eight losses in their last-10 games but a) case, Ol 55 427 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS .- Baltimore 5, 2 Boston 4, Cleveland 0, night Kansas City 7, Washington 6, night Only games scheduled. pay pale ajor Leag oo ; ., the seventh inning in a rally that Reds 17 times against only five | ctired Bobby Avila’s two-run tri- i ple. By i * x * . t they're only a game-and-a-half be- they beat the Cards. Bob Purkey hind the league-leading San*Fran-/ scattered win” Card bits to gain cisco Giants, | * a * * * 8 | Rookie Jerry Casale pitched a Ronnie Kline of the Pirates had three-hitter for the Red Sox to beat the Braves blanked, 2-0, until Mil-| the Indians, snapping the Red Sox’ waukee scored all its five runs inj six-game losing streak and the In- dians’ five-game winning streak. ackie densen’s 22nd homer and The loss was the seventh’Frank Malzone’s 12th led the Sox straight for the Pirates, who now|at bat as they handed Herb Score have skidded into the second di-|his ninth defeat, vision, - | Roger Maris hit a grand-slam = homer for the A's in theit win over aa ee ae — the Senators, but actually Kansas nati downed St, Louis, 3-3, In (City’s pair of winning runs in the the American League, Boston eighth inning were unearned, thanks blanked Cleveland, 40, to drop to an error by Ken Aspromonte, place tie with idle Chicago and | ‘‘0PS in the Majors) and a grand Oe a rae meee win, 7-6, over Washing- straight defeat. The White Sox and Yankees were Johnny Temple's three-run hom-|not scheduled. (Tee ee aes visit from the new ‘‘cousins’’ got. New York at coaneege 8 p.m. — Terry 3-7) vs. Donovan (7-5). | ash: at Kansas City, 9 p.m.—Pas- cual (11-6) vs. Kucks (4-6). at Cleveland, 2, 5: m.—Mon- bouquette (2-3) and Sullivan (6-6) vs. Bell (9-9) ‘errarese ( . Mossi (8-4). TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE aig York at Chicago, 8 p.m. ad AP Wirephote HEADS THIRD LOOP: — Bill Shea, 52-year-old lawyer, talks to newsmen in New York where he announced yesterday the formal organization of a third major league to be called the ‘‘Conti- nental League.” It includes New York, Toronto, Houston, Denver and Minneaspolis-St. Paul as charter cities. , 1:30 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE Wea Lost Pct. Behind San Francisco 35 43 561 — | Milwaukee 52. 43 M7 o's 55, 460 S45 ha 49 48 505 Sta | | Pittsburgh ee Bt. Louis 47 51 480 8 i | Cincinnati «ceo A 4 449 «(11 Philadelphia 4 S66 417 «14 | YESTERDAY'S RESULTS | Milwaukee 5, Pittsburgh 2 Bunning Nears ‘Gopher Ball’ Record 4! {Cincinnati 8, St. Louis 3, night ‘Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES es Eastern Standard) 8 p.m.—Broglio . §& p.m.—Hobbie (10-8) vs. Pizarro (3-1). Pittsburgh at Los Angeles. 10 p.m. — Daniels (5-6) vs. Sherry (1-2). | Philadelphia at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m |— Owens (6-8) vs. 8. Jones (1410) or | Antonelli (14-5). \ TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE St. Louis at Cincinnati, § p.m | Chicago at Milwaukee. 8 p.m | Pittsburgh at Los Angeles. 10 p.m. Philadelphia at San Francisco, 3:30 p.m. Often in the evening he completes his day with a couple lines of bowling. Note to Dr. Crane who said 10-Horse Field yesterday that bachelors die young — Bill might have » ° ’ Premier Cap the- secret. eel kok ok In Tony Mitchell, Pontiac’s state water ski jumping State Racing Season champion, who has a wrenched knee covered with a Opens 2nd Half Toda brace, says he will be in Ann Arbor in a couple weeks, P § Bark Track y to defend his title even if he has to go “on one leg.” | % Hazel Park Trac PGA Championship Site Rated Difficult Layout hit job, with By HUGH FULLERTON JR. MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Conversation among the early arrivals for the tournament hasn't Not since the PGA was played at Oakmont, Pa., in 1951 has the Now they're back on the beam includes virtually every profes- sional of course that was the site of a mem- Urzetta and Frank Stranahan for the ship x * * champion, tabs this as one of the half-dozen best courses in the over par in a practice round terday, he. commented that it was softer and better than when he played it a couple of months ago. again with a 180-man field that! any importance and a time is the usual weekday tie of jorable match between Sammy| National Amateur champion- Premiere handicap. Dow Finsterwald, the defending Jets, Talbott Win United States. And after going, yes The Jets and Talbott Lumber ' | - : laa in the first two innings ges 5Woodling Great Hitter—Richards == === | DETROIT (UPI) — The second |half of Michigan's thoroughbred racing season was to get under way today at the Hazel Park race course. | More than 13,000 fans were ex- pected to be on hand for the open- ing $7,500 Premiere handicap. | All 10 horses in the opener jturned in notable performances at i the recently concluded Detroit |Race Course meeting. | Nine races, instead of the usual, jeight, were planned for the open- ling of the 59-day meeting. Post (3:30 p.m. Nissen & Brock’s Pan+was a strong favorite in the six-furlong a, + a Be ae. é Pi i, ee ie | together in the dressing room their PIRATE BEATERS — Braves pitcher Joey Jay, left, and second baseman Bobby Avila got combined efforts helped beat Pittsburgh 5-2. | i Jim Serves Up 17th Home Run ve Plans Operation by 1961 Continental’ Loop Has Five Charter Cities Many Questions Must Be lroned Out for New Baseball Circuit NEW YORK \®—The five found- ing cities of the third major base- ball league the Continental League — plan to operate in 1961 with at least eight clubs. Where will they get the players? Will they work with the other majors? Or outside the present structure? * * * These questions -will be batted around when the founders meet Aug. 18 with Commissioner Ford | Frick’s seven-man committee from the existing “majors. The meeting probably will be held in Boston because New York has * been so closely identified with the third league movement, New York, of course, is one of the five founders, The names and backers of the others were announced yesterday at a press conference by Bill Shea, chair- man of Mayor Robert Wagner’s baseball committee, Toronto, Houston, Denver and Minneapolis-St. Paul round out the group of founders, Shea listed ll cities that have evinced in- terest in joining. They are But- falo, Montreal, Aflanta, New Orleans, Miami, Indianapolis, Dal- las-Fort Worth, Seattle, Portland, Oré., San Diego and San Juan, as Tigers Lose mows Gene Woodling Drives in All Runs as Orioles Win, 5-2 | Jay flipped a five-hittes while. Avila belted a two-run triple to clinch the verdict and scored yesterday after . himself on an error. Baseball Games had easy pickings in city baseball | Bill McGuire had a_ three-hit shutout going before weakening in DETROIT im — Paul Richards. ithe 7th in hurling the Class A Jets a manager who does not specialize to a 3-3 win over Shaw’s. Ben Rob- in praise, recently said of Gene tion learned the hard way that More than a yard or two off thejinson and Gene Cox combined for Woodling: spectators won't turn out in num- bers for a match play tournament and that clubs won't guarantee large sums of money for a tourna- ment where spectator interest isn’t guaranteed. Studt’s Single Wins |Players were tuning up their shots. In spite of this, Jackie Burke, the 1956 champion, fired a 2-under-par 68 and a Yew others shaded par. ~*~ * * by an injured left hand since be- fore the National Open last month, said it hasn't been bothering him for Spencer in 10th John Studt’s single in the bottom lately but he doesn’t dare risk re- injuring it by much practice. + * * Burke, who has been troubled } { ie . half of the victors’ 14 safe- Pe * * The Lumbermen breezed Car “Whether people realize it or Nicholie 14-1 in a B” game. Glen 0t, here is one of the finest hitters Gunck and Sonny Cruz each had)! our time.” | two hits. This was long before the 36- | Finsterwald’s Golf Tip: Lett Side Is the Trigger By DOW FINSTERWALD PGA Champion ‘wrists to develop maximum club- ‘head speed, year he was a Yankee outfielder, playing in 122 games. * * * But never since has Woodling enjoyed such a year at the plate as he’s having now with the year-old Baltimore outfielder with the awkward stance beat the Detroit Tigers yesterday 5-2 by driving in all his team's runs | with a grand-slam home run and a single. _ battles a pitcher, the way he It's a good thing. * * * meets the ball, the way he comes : Bob Nieman has been hurt much through in the clutch. jot the season, Gus Triandos is in \ ~* «* * ja bad slump and rookie Willie Woodling, having the finest year Tasby has tailed off after a tre- of his big league career that dates ™endous start. * ~* * back to 1943, has batted across the | Gene Woodling, who started play- Orioles’ last nine runs and is ing baseball for making a ican League batting crown, An- Walker were out of diapers, is DETROIT (UP!) — Jim Bunning is well on his way to establishing or three more cities lined up with the founders before his group meets with Frick’s committee. He declined to reveal details of his plans for securing players from existing major league teams and their minor league farms. That subject will be one of the most im- oe a new American League record, portant matters to be worked out. but it’s a mark the towering right-| The new league said it expect. i es hander would like not to attain. ed full cooperation from the Bunning served up his 17th home| American and Natonal Leagues, ‘run pitch of the season yesterday | who voted in May to favorably and it came off the bat of Gene Consider applications for major Woodling with the bases full to) league status by “an acceptable lead Baltimore to a 5-2 victory, Sroup of eight clubs which could jover Detroit. | qualify.” The American League record | Shea said the league would have for home runs off a pitcher in la minimum of eight clubs, perhaps one season is 43, held by Pedro (10 and more than 12 when fully of the 10th inning last night broke| Finsterwald Zz : i put out the argu-| a 44 tie, to give his Spencer Floor} ment that the course is good but) The swing is initiated by the Covering softball club a 5-4 win'his golf has been bad—he has left side. The left arm, shoulder, As I point out to those I teach at Tequesta, the right arm is close other of baseball's senior citizens grabbing the headlines away from Baltimore's man of the hour at the plate. over Lakeland Pharmacy. Game'been in the first 10 only in the |hip and knee start moving together t0 the side. It stays there as the was the first of two in tthe Water-| Buick Open last month and then /|at the outset. In unison they ca he lost a playoff to Art Wall. Gene the club to the top of the swing. ford Recreation league, with Dray-| ton Drugs defeating Dobski’s 6-2 in the nightcap. * * * Studt’s hit scored John Herring-| figured. | 5th. way| in e wi @ 1-1 tie, then, n 6th. Jim) the winner, Ken Marrow two doubles for losers. _ Compton Builders defeated Aloha Twin Pines 8.2, and Elizabeth Lake Estates “A” ‘defeat oil, 20, in the Li { By Fe \ t o & iplay the winner, Littler, who won his fourth tour- | Playoff Victors | The two RLDS teams advanced in the playofts wi victories Monday. votts with meet next Mon-. iL |Showpiece of the MGC, with his transfer of weight back to the left hole side. | play right-handed, most of the | | used properly. It is in this ‘re- Avondale Church Softball League forms its important function. easy The hands go into action in the |\downswing when reaching the) jsame level at which they begin to a bye and will the lett side completed you are in \posilion to start, wncgcking the! clubhead continues through impact with the ball. te & “ss At this stage the left side con- tinues its dominant action by trig-, gering the downswing through the) | | Since 90 per cent of golfers | | power comes from the right | hand. It would be wasted if not per: vi * * * The wrists are fully cocked, 1 = —~— D7PC191597 wil come, monthly, ‘ou wish, Standard Oil (New Jersey) paced | IPeas, No tu. 8.7... tr 4.25 VIENNA, Austria (AP) — The at till E Eight Mile ‘Rd teow gg ee 5 Drop in write or hans us: . the oils with about a half point |peppers ——— _— eeeenee 300 oo Austrian Communist party's news- é Iatede me ieee Lome veers . for full. particulars on in- ; gain. Richfield Oil slumped Peppers. sweet, DU. oo... eee ee 450, paper charged today< that ‘“‘rats P] n f T Bi ] 3 n f b speci 2 Potatoes, New. 50 Ib. bag i July 27, 28, ‘se.) vestments in the future of ! around 1, Radishes, red, doz. ..........00. 006 Too! of the cold war’ are trying to Dal man | 5 a Ss O g O a ante ‘ Radishes, white, doz. .............. ite | BIDS WANTED our country. '. Burlington Industries, an ac- | Rhubarb outdour dee behs........ spall ie Seventh World Youth Sealed bids will be taken for furnishing, ¥ 5 Squash, Acorn, %4 9.50|F estival, now in its third day here. in em Ocr 1 mM I tive gainer recently, added a phe sy Delicious. i coal oonnnene., oid Rebel leaders in the bitterly, a IC 1Dp OVa spans Ueater vensteer Wise the teseaee om | small fraction after the com- Per poe iy “ie ba 100, feuding U.S, delegation claimed at, | controls in the Goodrich Farms Pump- 8 pany raised the dividend. Tomatoes, hothouse, 8 Ibs. ...... .. 150 . | —e bg RIGGS pd Clarkston, Tomatecs, outdoors 14 Be. zee) [cast i temporary victory over : | WASHINGTON (UPI)—Diploma- President Charles De Gaulle get)Twesday” Auguat oie an he te: Me We Le Gains of a point or so were rurnips. topped bu. '............... 2.30 f@¢tion which they charged was tic reports of a big three Paris together — regardless of the out-|Ship Office, at which they will publicly 9 ps, toppe: ° po f g gard the out posted by General Tire, Inter- | “inclined to yield to Moscow dic- Charges Two-Thirds of conference in September won Dem- come of the current Geneva con-| to cmon ‘all bids. “The torus LERCH ER national Niekel, and Johns Man-|. owele tation Pri Contract Let ocratic endorsement in Congress ference. . has the necessary permits and the gas ville. Pfizer lost about a point Conarh Novi bul 1022002 SP8) we mms Crees . today and brought a plea that ‘ ie Se paddy mom) | & co after the company announced Kale, ba 0..2..00.000.0000NII. 178 In a heated two-hour meeting Without Bids ; Gear Ce -| But he said in an interview HAROLD J. DOEBLER, . . Mustard, No. 1, b ee, A | I j Italy and West Germany be _ in-) “ ; slightly lower first half earnings-|sorrei, bu SIL x00 attended by 180 delegates, the e| cluded. , at Ho Une hy eg’ oeee July 38, $0, 1988 | Soe, Ke ‘Sing chara “ 11s ee ron aval WASHINGTON «” — Twenty Senate Democratic whip Mike — Seni same eons on NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING __ ophnydoupry , Among opening blocks were: |Turnips, bu. ....... 1.50 hee ae fon vetting 4 new Mansfield, a foreign relations com-| 7,0. Notice is hereby given of a public ond other leading exchanges facti These the ‘“‘New York large tompanies are getting 50 per resentation in deliberations b P Richfield Oil off 1% at 81% on| SALAD GREENS CUONS hues are ew " eS imitteeman. said he thought it al 7° : a five ring to held by the White Lake P group,’’ whieh had been favored cent of the government's defense ~~": ae the chiefs of the western alae ! Senin Board at the Town- 14.100 shares; Burlington Indus- | ‘Celery Ca Cabbage, doz. ........... $2 75 by the festival’s Communist or-\contracts, Sen. John Sparkman ‘Splendid idea” to have President) eer a Hall on ee tt ee oe > MGV. BU siisccec. ce cem. cacdee one : - » en. rep ; aon | s. . to cons ollowin: tries od \g at 26 on 10,000 shares: \eeeartle ou. o ganizers. and the “Chicago (D-Ala) said Monday. | Eisenhower, British Prime et , ceneeee a the Zoning Map . twee ew meee ee ee ee, American Telephone unchanged at | Lettuce — on. 1c ecun” The Chicacoans char ed| ‘+ & «& jter Harold MacMillan and French) Chairman J. William Fulbright Oe eee ‘Commercial 1 § Watiing, Lerchen & 79% on 4,000 shares; Standard Oil recuce Post Oe eee 23 = a had bee . ked - f - (D-Ark,) of the Senate foreign re-| Lot One (1) of “MacDiarmid Acres,”"| @ Wt Ponilae State Bonk Bids. (New Jersey) up % at 51% on/|Lettuce, leaf, bu. we, 2.09 that they had been locked out of' Sparkman, who heads the Sen-, lations committee said the “‘rea-|the 8B. % of the NE. % of Section 3,| § » Michigan 1 2,500 shares and Studebaker- [Romaine BE ec ecencoee 4 discussion seminars. jate Small Business Committee, soning of a big three conference take dewnckage Gonhené fo White I Please send me more information ! Packard up % at 13 on 2.000 Poult df said in'a prepared Senate. speech Sears Breaks Own lis almost inevitable gan. on , ttec eee | | sbdeut Diversified Investments. shares. | ouliry ano Cggs 2 Waive Exam jthat waste and inefficiency are He aid he was ail for “dowa-| wie: . . ¥ Name avsueendaxas¥uvassdinaes iden 9 DETROIT POULTRY . Bee = i coe - pene ; Ad erti in Record grading’ the belief that solutions NW. M4, Section “it town. 5p Range p Address ......... iriseeciares al — eo . : , wn - New York Stocks mea POR Doteal fer i. Prices per’ on Breaking and Ree ae a eeia ee verils g always must emerge from meet-|igng County, Michigan, ‘ DMG ceictindncinonncorenooeti’ ' (Late Morning Quotations) ve Poultry: = oO paper * going aay : ‘g ings like the big four foreign min- Persone, tnlerested ere seine Shay be oe oo ak -18: = { vi 4 a ‘. 4 . Figures after decimal point are eighths nese Bll oepenetes agin Heh “te: E nter _ Char g S| out competitive : 4 ee wit | For the 13th consecutive year, ‘sters' conference at Geneva, He eee es ae har el Admiral | 22.4 Kennecott .. 103 ‘type young erie ie turkeys, heavy | Sears, Roebuck and Co. last year ear ir that conferences might loweenie aa aa anf = ‘enentined : ts Reduce 90.4 Kresge, 8S ... 34 Tw | Sparkman said more than d d-breaking number %e held more often just to ex-|by_those interested. Allied. Ch 125.4 fa) Highland Township me n| pa invested a record-breaking he {hue . Allied ‘Sirs 003 Tov cians. 39°| panini raged |waived examination Monday be-| two-thirds of the prime contracts of ‘dollars in newspaper advertis- Change ideas. ciared 1 be immedietety neceseaty. fer TELEP HONE ' Allis Chal 32.2 DETROIT, July 27 (AP) — Eggs F.OB h tion of health Aum Lid. 38 re eee - 22 || Detroit in case lots federal stale grades: | fore Highland Township Justice, — im dojlar value — are being es space, Edward Gudeman, vice | “If the Geneva meeting fails , ace and safety ond are pm - ig ordered ANSWERING Am Airtn ... 296 Loexh Alre ... 30 is eee ee ee “Small ai, Roy J, Carl on charges of break-) let “without a vestige of com- president in charge of merchandis-. and there is no summit con- La eee ee oe oe ’ an on Sas Lone 8 Cem 314, ee ae browns — grade 4 ing and entering in the nighttime. petition.” ing. announced this week. ference, certainly consultation by ZONING BOARD NUP SERVICE Am MaPay .. 90 Lene 8 Ges. G2 Commercially Guéd | «Richard T° Lang, -25, of 2585) “Yet the tax-paying public, and) x ke the big three powers to consider DON. CAVIN Am N Gas | 616 Mack Tre ie tra large 38: large 32-35 medium 99. Ormond Rd., and Steven L. Win-|1 dare say some members of Con-| The company’s 1958 retail store what our. position should be is CHARLES R. HARRIS. You Leave— Am Smelt 43.5 Martin Co ._ 2 0%; browns — grade A_ extra jarge Chester, 23, of 3225 Ormond Rd., ‘lgress, still believe that the federal Newspaper advertising expenditure) in erder,” Fulbright said, ‘ ° Am Tel & Tel 796 May D Star. 50 |33%: large 31-33; medium 29; small 16- ‘were bound over to Oakland Coun- July 28, Aug. & "88 It Rings— Am Tob mi Mead CPs... 463/18, “grade B large 25-2644. bou! government conducts its purchas- Of $48,650,000 exceeded the 1957) Diplomatic sources in Washing- ——e ' Armco su. so. Merck. ae ity Circuit Court og irhgredtie ing activities under an advertised, |total of $46,472,000 by more than ton revealed that plans were in eee bh bone ee of « scheduled We Answer It! Armour & Co 30S Mois Hon... iC ] I the Oakland County Jail wi sealed bid system in which, all/$2,000,000, Mr. Gudeman noted. | the making for the Paris meeting |public hearing to be held by the c ALL Aveo Corp. ies Minn M & M14 ri aim NNOCENCE | set at $2,000 each. other things being equal, the bid-| more “4. lof. the American,” British ana (formate Zonin g Board at ‘ne Townenip ' Beth Steel... $6.7 Monsan Ch .. 38.4 They were picked up in Gladwin! gop attering the lowest and most ate Gan 100 Geky aad week: French heads of g t night, August 3rd."1960, at 7:30 p.m. to FE 4.2541 Boeing Air |. 34.9 Mont Ward .. 49.5 of Destruction la ida ight by Bay Cit . . ly newspapers shared in the 1958 |*'rench heads of government re-|consia (der the following’ sppiication tor Bobn Alum 32.2 Mot Pod - 58 : mE eeay em ty y ¥| economical price to the govern- gardiess of whether the Geneva _|tezoning: ‘ oa BE More ae 3 ] 1 Sate Police. > ment geéts the government’s expeeitere. _. |talks lead to a summit conference. |—"° cMinge trom R-2 to C2: Lat 2 of = Briaes Me 7 Mucler Br 3 In Bloomfield Both men admitted breaking business,” he said, and added: | Miscellaneous advertising, fn- Sim ro comers cy ! Budd Con”... 33. Net Bsc... ae a into a. Shell Gas Station, 2955 | “To a large degree we have Cluding radio and television, circu-' Burroughs -... 33.4 Nat Gab B .. LT A Birmingham teenager and a Highland Rd., Highland Town- |turned the small businessman out|lars, and direct mail, accounted, veen, Philip Start ; Calum & H |: 26-7 Nat Gpys ... 60 7/Clawson man pleaded not guilty to ship, and Burley’s Motor Sales, |to pasture as far as milit ro- for the remaining $13,931,000 of! Campb Soup. $12 Nat Lead. ...1286| malicious destruction charge be. are =e Can Dry 20.5 NY Central .. 28.7 ae Tges De-| 144 8. Center St., Highland, ear- |curement is concerned.” Sears’ total retail —_— expenses. Can Fac 4 93 Nort & West 101 fore West Bloomfield Township Jus-| jy Friday, Oakland County Sher- x * Las eg 0 OUT ~ INVESTMENT Docs eed eas Ei =. Ror een 824 nr Elmer bed aa es ee iff’s Detective Sgt. Leo Hazen In 1958, Sears “ retail and € Cater Trac | 118-4 Otte On...) a18le eee Teeumed to the Uakland| ssid. W { R { B { mail-order net sales of $3,721,272,-. TRENTON, Ont. (UPI) —Queen aie ged Ll es a «_.. 92.4) County Jail with bond set at $2,000 . a er a e 00S 080, the largest in the firm's 72- “ ee ACCURATE QUOTATIONS Clark Equip #3 Owens Ill QI 101.4) each, A gas station attendant in the ee Th Elizabeth and Prince Philip fly to Ee Scie Seim'g Pan. AW Alt.. 3831 Robert H. Lamb, 19, of 1646 Web- 27° had noticed the men in tne OLS First Flint OK ‘ated TE stores in this country. |New Brunswick today to begin the |i 2 CA LL Gon wai, HA Param Beet .. 4 ster St., Birmingham. and Howard 3 U're ane a eo note of thelr last leg of their 15,000-mile, 45-day | f= on N G 50 ‘arkke ae : z Consumer’ Px $03 Penney, JC: 112 |) E- Beckman, 22, of sot E. Baker license number,” Hazen explained.| FLINT (UPI) — A 50 per cent Joe E. Brown Marks Canadian tour. C. J. NEPH LER CO. Con Pw Pf4.52 96.6 Pa RR ...... 17.7'St., Clawson, will be tried Aug. A pgs After flying to Fredericton, the Gont ear $34 Pe si Cola ... 33 11 on the charge of malicious de- A bulletin of the description was boost in water rates was given 67th Bi h d y B 4 ’ Goat Gop & 8146 Pheipe D.-... §83| struction to a building, " | Picked up by troopers in the Glad- initial approval last night by the irthday in State oak bck Go ped ag FE 2-9117 noes ie “BABAK win area. i i issi 2 . , q Sop s< 23 Phill ‘Pet... 473! ame two were arrested by Flint City — eo bag UE ee John, Moncton, and the army town 818 Community National Bank Bldg orn sees 4. 106 ‘ _ “dian Joe E. Brown observed|of Camp Gagetown during a LISTED & UNLISTED SECU .< Curtis Pub ... 13 A; . 672 Bloomfield Twnship Police aft Commander’s Prayer The commission also approved a hic g7h birt j vad ee OUR P. MUTUAL FUNDS eere ..... 65 Repubiic Sti .. 783) er a teenage party at the home y ; id home| is 67th birthday here today, combined car and air trip. ACILITIES EXTEND COAST TO COAST Det Edis ..... 43.4 Revign ....... 62.6 sewage fed which wou cost home * * ee : Doug Aire . 464 Bex Dr Met. | Siomaiiea Resreaee aie DARTMOUTH, England (UPI) [owners two-thirds the price of their Brown, who will play. a leading sad ex beahard nave bese uote : Dow Chem .... 88.5 Tob ..... §2.3 POS —Field Marshall Viscount Mont- jnew water bills. le in.“ Y onesies coy a i Fatl re - Du Pont " ae Royal Dut 41.2 gunplay Saturday morning. | gomery, noted for his outspoken — role in ather of the Bride’’!at Governor General Vincent Mas- : Safeway St .. 3 | seers The proposal must pass a sec- jopening tonight at the Cherry sey’s summer home near here rest- : East Kod ..... faz St.Reg Pap .. 53.4) Police said the party was being criticism of Western. leaders, . : sn nw ic weet eae ‘ Eaton Mig 88.4 Sceville Mi .. 26.2 : ond reading at a special com- County Playhouse, began his stage ing up from their tour of Westefn WwW H | E] Auto L 512 Sears Roeb .. 47.3 given by Patrick Caldwell, 18, while; yesterday told cadets at the . : : i i e e El & Mus 6.6 76.4! y ; . mission meeting set for tomor- (career in 1902 at the age of 10 Canada Emer Rad |... 17 Simmons... s9.4/his parents were out of town for a} Royal Naval College the special | pow . ExCeneo 1... na Bocony. sores $2.1 week, prayer he said should be used saa : : ht 3 — Firestone .....146 "SS ag'g by all commanders-in-chief, ‘‘Oh initial approval came on a spill . . Pood Mach... 50 Sou Ry 1... $¢.2| Beckman and Lamb were lord, teach me to be right in- |Vote after a long political wrangle.| Alps Histor Still Holds Make Home Plans Come True 8.1 ' ght ’ Freep oul... aa SpeZ Rd... BS ed eg ae ine two ae stead of wrong and help me to | Ppesent water rates are $5.40 per Fardney Den.. 1.2 St4 Oi Cal -. 8, fromm a 20-gauge shotgun through 4) ive with others when 1 em |quatter. The increase would boost “ = Gen Bak ..... 127 §'4 Ot Na*:: §1:3| Sliding glass door of the home when right.” the figure to $8.10 with another an S 1ae Ol S U r nN O Gen Dynam .. $1.4 S14 O11 . 56.5| young Caldwell refused them ad- . dded f — maki Gen flee ..... $2 Stevens IP... #4 | |mittanc a alae = x13. sewage — making : pon) heh GB EO IES Stud Pack ... 12. . e to | ills |. ..110 CHICAGO GRAIN Gen Motors S13 Buther Pap .. 388 - CHICAGO, Jay Ma (AP) =-Opening x * LE PLANEY, France (AP) —|could have taken the 7,300 - foot pide Tle Me Switt ig ia Woman Dies of Burns ore Wheat Dee veeeeeeas 69% Raves - the rate boost/Jumbo the traveling elephant high Clapier Pass in his elephant-| Gerber Prod . a Texaco ....... $2.3 | Bep ban doade ete Mar weteteeece 704) would be used to expand the city’s|headed slowly back home today,|assisted invasion of Italy in 219) Gillette, 51.7 Fexone.... 39.1 GRAND RAPIDS \W—Mrs. Mar 1.98% Hye | present sewage system and provide her handlers’ attempts to re-en-'B.C. Other historians believe the | onal oss 7ink RB Beat. 27 Gorgiana Collier, 45, of Grand Te ee BR oc: 1.29% ‘starting funds for an 80-million-dol-| act Hannibal's historic crossing 6f|Carthaginian used lower passes’ Goodyear ....142 ‘Transamer .. 30.5 Rapids, died Monday of burns she — Mar Sh anue ae 1%) lar water pipeline. to Lake Huron./the Alps foiled by a landslide| near the Mediterranean. : Grah h Paige ro ——_ He us suffered Saturday. Police said the'sep ......... 1.19% Lard (drums) everybody overlooked. After covering 72 miles and, ; Gt No Ry 54.7 Un Carbide ...150 [woman was burned when a cig-| Oe. i ‘Tie on United States farm families) British historian John Hoyte|climbing from 726 feet to 7,150,| i Gu’ ol... 113” Une aw Lin. 431\arette lighter ignited her dress. May... had 7,500 fewer accidental deaths! started climbing with Jumbo a/Hoyte discovered on arrival here, Hammer Pap . 32, Unit Airc ... §3.1/14 — ARABS - ine types, in 1957 than in 1947. week ago to prove that Hannibal Monday that the pass had- been’ Homestk 472 Unit Fruit .... 34 |, ‘ ed CECE iS : Hooker Ch .. 43.7. US Rub ..... 66.5 : blocked for some time by a slide. a oe ba cel ay ao N . B ® “We thought of just about every- n weed OF VY Bio asses “ . Inland & wae $3.3 Up john ..... mo ews in rief thing, even a coat for Jumbo to ; Inspir, Cop ... 40.8 Walgreen -.. 49. ward off the mountain chill,”” said | ; int Bus Moh ..64 oe A Bk. 35°] Mrs. Edward J. Roberts, of 2760 Hoyte, ‘“‘but we just didn’t think: P gat = cor waite rele rip Farmingdale Dr., Bloomfield Town- of that.” Int Tare “M1 Wilson & Ce .. 4-4) ship, reported to Pontiac State Po- he historian. said he hoped to| | : johns Man... ori yale & Tow. 382/lice Monday that clothing valued find another route through which ; Kellogg . 3 nith Rad ..119.2/ at $300 and a $100 camera were to maneuver Jumbo back to her Kelsey Hay .. 48.2 stolen from her home while she home in the Turin, Italy, zoo. | ; wait > am was away on a vacation. ; . ae Planning to build a new home . . . or buy one new =o = H | built? W' SEY, FR ccomplieg oy the At rag and wrist watch valued House Opens Hearing me . Sire eet Cleat meer Ph Oe Didust. Ratle Ue, Gtorks|2t 999 each, plus $80 in a wallet, on Drinking in Clouds p to make them come true with a low- Prev. day .. ..360.1 141.1 98.8. 232.8| Were stolen Monday from a car i] cost mortgage loan, geared to your budget. Month ‘ago "3408 igs 963 gaui|elonging to David Hossenflug, of WASHINGTON — The ques- Year eB: 200.5 101.0 82.3 193.1 359 Mossoit St., Clawson, while it tion of mixing air and liquor arises} 1958 low .....g8084 1338 ‘e87 dixs| Was parked in a lot at Dodge State in a House Commerce subcommit. | * 68 high ...... 312.0 136.5 /95.7- 214.3) Park No, 4, according to Pontiac tee today. ; x low 234.7 80.9 (72.9 156.6 T pe . , 3 Specifically, the group opens bd hd ae een a hearings on eight bills to prohibit Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. : Barn Burns to Ground ted by Jim Bradford. A the serving of alcoholic beverages eT , spied weet | Pe oumber of years experience with to @ passengers while the Pad ALMONT TOWNSHIP — A barnlone of Pontiac's largest t plane is in flight between points Established 1890 ° filled with new hay burned to the : ty cleaning of = in the United States. . ES ground yesterday on Kidder road, /0eting, russ and furniture. Free . Some airlines don’t serve drinks} 75 W. Ruron St., Pontiac — | FE 4-056 north | of Tupbspring road. No es-|Gall Jim, pes. —Adv. 4 ‘at all, some limit drinks’to two per} e p i ot ties jperson. Some offer drinks free, | ustomers arking in = $ mek gr ae KEEPING COOL — With the temperature hit-_ the! poo} in Las Vegas. Cool water and the big ||some sell thern, One eserves only. at : wat 3} ing over 110 degrees, pretty Mini Hines takes to 1 Cet vention ra ve aside Ve a ‘champagne. ‘ st lei ee oe “f 7 : . , : f ry \ ; ' +; ; ; 2 ( ( He / i * é -- \ ~7 x ux | “4 : : Z . % 5 § ‘ : ‘ 3 a4 ; , } Ped 1 ‘ : her ce ae : ie coe ‘ + x ee : a igh Ay" ees or: