i eS ES ce ae , 2 us Ne _ Bis: * zs * Pe BO 4 ioane Me j oN : ae : a , st * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, _ 3 i JULY 10, 1957-88 PAGES: + Claiming ‘Air Crash’ Only a Timber Fire BARSTOW, Calif. (AP) Mountain — involving an intensive search for the sur- — The mystery of Clark ad Tah eOm During Prague Visit PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia w — Nikita Khrushchev promised =o Czech nist bloc. Zapetocky epeniy endorsed Khrushchev's purge of his rivals in the Kremlin leadership, say- e removal of Malen- * dispersed so {Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Job by 2-1 Vote - Romeos Plans an Appeal Board's Action meos was discharged last night by) the Police and Fire Civil Service| testimony from Romeos, Sets. Gerald Guinan) victim| } \Manager Walter Willman two) weeks ago after he had been il-| legally suspended by Police Qhtiet, Se ever made, and one that will ‘Herbert W. Straley and reinstated iby Willman within five days. to Circuit Court From . The commissioners voted to re" move Romeos after nine hours of Hfe Pyshed His Luck Too Far “| TOLD YOU SO” — This is what William D. Singleton (right) of 1341 Kirkway Dr., Bloom- field Township, heard many times this morning from his wife Saily (center) and his seven-year- old son, Danny. For two years, Singleton and hundred others scoffed at This creature was all that him. It was fished out of gator wrestler at 4 a.m. today. 3 Early Morning Capture Ends Long ’Gator Hunt ick a little too far. He (or she) didn’t think anything) ‘way, his growling stomach was ‘turned, litehing for a nige big muskrat. , | So-he splastied into his Bioom-| joined the department ‘in August 'fieiq Township lagoon in search of never be forgotten. and boisterous” when corrected for'for more than two years. \refused an opportunity to explain ‘why some parts of his euniform were missing. That's One Solution NASHVILLE, Tenn. (INS) — The former Mrs. Florence Nor- ris, 65, married 2i-year-old * * * & lagoon’ this morning Waiting on the.opposite side of! the r George Koukoulis, 20, a iwrestier at his brother's Animal Kingdom serpentarium at 9860 Dix-| ie Highway. land \years ago. "By GEORGE TRUMBULL JB. { He apdhis brother Andy, £ : had seen iy a Press story Alphonse the Alligator pushed his |that the elusive creature, ibeen plaguing township residents, * iseven-year-old son Danny isparked what became the biggest! . jalligator safari in Oakland County) the middie, probabl i the state. They first spotted) something or someone was 4 was; "0 | 'gator|‘he scaly thing in the lagoon two Both decided: they would see | for themselves “| though: "4 it | | would be a wasted night,” said is one a, biggtee mistake | AN4Y- But it wasn't |They began what could have posite me, I thought ‘Could this be .|been a two-week vigil on the la-)¢”” | vor now the ‘gator is 2 prisoner|S0" benk some 200 feet south off He was accused of being “‘loud|o¢ the society which he toyed with) * * “[ never gave ap fhe iden Sat jward my bank. When he was with- | be was tn there,” sald Sally 6 lin seven feet of me 1 leaped in Thomas Henderson and then said: “I sure was tired of living alone,” Detroit Floods Cost $15 Million ae County News ........60.06+ 12 Wiiferinke ....s...sccccccees 6 ee ener oo 32 Obituaries ..........ceeeee 5 Pot-0-Gold Puzzle ......-. 4 Sports ........6565 26 fiira 29 pis ee ese oe 30 TV & KRadio Programs .... 37 Wilson, Earl ........-...-5 37 Women’s Pages 21 thru 25 DETROIT (INS) — As esti- mates of damages are being tab- ulated, it appears natuge’s ram- page has cost more than fifteen million dollars. . * * * DETROIT (INS) — Detroit and Wayne County have been declared a federal disaster area as a result of Monday's torrential rains and the flood- ing of the Rouge River, ‘els today. “All Over but the Paying DETROIT. (INS) — The Rouge River, which flooded hundreds of nearby basements and threat- ened riverbank homes, was re- ported down to near-normal lev- MIDLAND (INS) — The Titta- bawasse River crested early to- day nearly two feet above flood stage after driving a dozen fam- ilies from their Midland homes. that had| “People called me all sorts of |things during the years. But this iis the greatest vindication I could jask for.” * * * way by Koukoutis: | “When I heard this thing splash linto the water from the bank op- “|. didn't budge an inch. I was the William D. Singleton home at lying flat on thy stomach as it |1341 Kirkway Dr. The watch began'swam toward the center of the la- inot wearing a complete uniform.| Thus ends (at least we hope) * 11 last night. iHe denied this and said he W€S the tale of the mysterious alligator; of Lower Long Lake in the town-) ship, | goon, probably in search of musk- irat. Then I spotted the glittering It was Mrs. Singleton and her/eyes and the nose poking through! that the sarface." the ‘gator froze in | “Neither of us moved for about |15 minutes, Suddenly he came to- “Apparently I caught him by isurprise because he didn't have ‘much chance to attack. I pulled him by the hind legs down in the jwater and came up sliding my; \hands about his jaws.” |. om & sane Se ey brother and made my way wading (Continued om Page 2, Col. 2) P water on top of him.” Aga Khan ‘Very Weak’ GENEVA (INS) ~ The ailing Aga Khan was “very slightly improved” today but ke remains “very weak.” He does not appear The capture was explained this An Alligator in Lower Long Lake? Here’s the Proof lurked in the lake. ‘Decree Today | New Wife Candy Hopes o May Bring Out He Will Receive Trial in Japanese Court From OUR WIRE SERVICES WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court appeared likely today to issue an early decision in the case of GI William 8. Girard. The court itself did not rule out the possibility of a decision sometime today. Neither did it indicate just when it might be an- The eight justices lis- tened to four hours of agus Detroit Pair Await Trial | Treasury Department in an Income Tax Fraud® Called ‘Biggest Ever’ DETROIT (# — Two brothers, one of them a former internal revenue agent, were free on $25,000 bond each today to await trial on what federal officials describe as “the biggest fraud ever. perpetrated against the income tax refund scheme.” Edward J. Zacharski, 40, the former revenue man, his name, stood mute at t and his brother, Norman G. Zachary, 28, who changed heir arraignment yesterday Cloudy and Warmer Thursday Forecast The weatherman says tonight will be fair and pleasant with a low of 54 to 59 degrees. Thursday will be partly cloudy and. warmer with a chance of scattered thundershowers. Tomor- row’s high will be around 82 to 87. Winds will be gentle ‘to moderate north the northwest. In downtown Pontiac, the low- est temperature preceding 8 a.m. was 52 degrees. The thermometer to be near death. registered 76 at 1 p.m. Orchard Lake-T Both east and westbound Or- chard Lake traffic have been rout- jet , ed for the first time over the four- Stare thehway Department spokes jane bridge that will span the) on said. y , evenjual relocatiqn of Telegraph) “ie believed the two northern road, lanes of the bridge would also be Only the southern two [anes ‘open for traffic in about a week. are in use at present, since conm- | Approaches to the bridge are ‘|They will be paved later by the Bridge Open for Traffic still unpaved, although graded. contractor in charge of paving the entire project, This involves the widening of Or- chard Lake into 4 four-lane, di- vided highway from Berkley ave- nue itr Pontiac to Wellington street in Bloomfield. Township, as well as the four-lane, divided reloca- tion of Telegraph from Rockwell avenue to James K. boulevard. The mile-long relocation curves west of the present Telegraph road. Clearing the Telegraph ap- proaches to the bridge, plus con- struction of a new. Telegraph road bridge over the Clinton river jest south of James K. are on schedule, the spokesman said. The whole project is scheduled for completion in December, before Federa] Court Judge Theodore Levin. Innocent pleas were entered for them. The brothers, who run a Detroit real estate, accounting and tax service office, were indicted by a grand jury on 139 counts and, if jconvicted on all counts, could be jsentenced to 800 years in jail and fined $1,201,000 each. Asst, U, §, Atty. Donald F. Welday dr. said tle brothers filed 70 fraudulent income tax returns in 1956, each of which claimed a $3,000 to $5,000 re- fond, Welday said the two cashed eight refund checks worth $30,460 before they were caught. He said the false returns were made out in the names of fictitious persons and had the refund checks mailed to their office by using change-of-address forms. Welday said the scheme was cracked when*a refund check ‘was delivered to a homeowner who turned the check over to postal inspectors. Zacharski worked for the In- ternal Revenue Service for 14 years before being fired in 1955 on charges of falsifying his educa- tional background, Cats Unloved? GRAND RAPIDS (INS) —.Only seven persons have applied for tion for their pets that dog lovers do.” i hittin ef a z i presented as formal writ ass 3-Car Mixup : Has Garage in a Spin hicle (Car No, 2) to drive in the meantime, + * Then Wilkerson, in Car 2, : aT T it yz , ton Township, and “Mrs. ees oe jee i i a for Air Force That Can! Carry Atomi¢ Bomb FORT WORTH, Tex. @ — The| Air Force unveiled its first eed sonic atomic bomber, the Convair B58 Hustler, today. The plane's top speed remained a _ secret. It's a surprisingly small needle- nose, delta-wing craft with four powerful jet engines. It carries a crew Of three. The length is 9 feet and wing span 55 feet. “As of right now the BS8-is the fastest jet bomber in the world,” said Lt. Gen. C. S. Irvine, Air Force deputy chief of staff for materiek -- . ; * * * '“The “Hustler represents one’ of the most significant forward steps in the history of military aviation —and through it we are made aware of some mighty possibili- ties.” * a Frank W. Davis, chief engineer at Fort Worth for Convair Divi- sion of General Dynamics Corp., put it this way: “The magnitude of advance in the B58 is best em- phasized by the fact that it pro- vides a greater increment in top “Helicopter Taxi’ Rushes Visitors Into Waterford A “helicopter taxi” this morn- to waiting Township. Tt was the first time a whirly bird has been. used as a commer- cial taxi in this area. relatives in Waterford Willow Run and the local area. Woman, Child Injured in Farmington Collision A wollen and girl were injured Tuesday: night in an accident at Ten Mile and Middlebelt Rads., Farmington Township, according to! Farmington Township Police. The accident occurred when two cars, driven by Ray Arrington, 54, 23107 W. 10 Mile -Rd., Farming- O’Kennon, 32, of 2728 Gleriview Rd. Royal Oak, ogllided at the inter- section, - Arrington's wife, Edna, 52, was admitted to Pentiac General Hos- pital with a fractured pelvis and is reported to be in fair condition today, Toni O’Kennon, 5, who was riding with her mother, was treated at the hospital for cuts and bruises, and released. Lake Orion Youth * Injured in Accident A Lake Orion youth, James Ran- » 10, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Randall, 856 Orion Dr., was injured in an accident yester- day at Broadway St. and Smith Ct., in Orion Township. Oakland County Sheriff's deput- ies said that t boy rode his bicycle into. the Side of a car driven by Muriel D. Ahiborn, 32, of 876 Heights St., Lake Orion._He was treated and released for minor injuries. at Pontiac General The Weather Fell U.S. Weather Bureag Repart PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Clear and cool this morning. Lew 54. Fair today, high #6, Temerrow partly clouding, chance of «jew seattered thunder- showers, warmer. Gentle to moderate noth te porthwest winds, Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding & a.m. 32 At @ a.m: Wind velocity 10 m.p.h, Direction: Northwest:. Sun sets Wednesday at 8:10 p.m, Suh rises Thursday at 5:05 a.m. Moon sets Thursday at 4:56 a.m Moon rises Wednesday at 7.05 p.m. Dewntewn Temperateres 6 a.m. 62 $1 O.Mvcccee.- W 7 O.M. ccsene- 57 13 Mc scenes: 75 BOM. ,er000- 60 3 GWE iw cccsscs 7 9 B.T.. eens OF TO B.80. costs ue: ei % Tuesday in Pontiac . {As recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperature ....cccsue tens: Mean temperature . 2... .cseeseees — Sunny. : One Year Ago in Highest temperature .... Ceeee nee eRe ee a0 - 59 Pontiac seecesessavell eee eee eee ee! Weather: Clear. Mighest and Lowest Temperateres This Date in 85 Years 102 im 19% 61 tm 1895 First Supersonic. Plane| lmer Esther M, Nash of Belding. “and a son, Richard K., and reside +0 him.” . 56 5) RICHARD B, GOULD Sheet Metal Plant WU.S. Eyes chief Nikita- Khrushchev, in the wake of the Kremlin shakeup. Promotion Revealed wtoee Coa of “Caen ; > % : : E oh of =e : + B. ‘of the — fe a collective _ Gould as t of ler out of the way, however, tiae Motor Division's sheet. can now expect far more sup- plant has been announced by Buel!port and much less opposition. E. - Starr, manufacturing) 3. Marshal Georgi K. Zhukov manager. William L. Kelley, wh0|may be the real strong man. Zhu- has been superintendent of that) kov represents the military power, {plant since 1948, is on an extended|anq Khrushchev could not have sick leave. continued as Conimunist party A native of Rockford, and. &/poss without his support. graduate of General Motors Insti-| x“ *« % tute, Gould joined the division in 1934, In 1942, he was named as- sheet metal plant and.in 1951 was assigned the same position on Pon- tiac’s 40MM Bofors gun froject. Two years later he became assist-|: ant superintendent of . production on that project, . Gould, 41, is married to the for- They have a daughter, Darlyne, at 1040 S. Lake Angelus Shores. Early Morning Catch Ends Gator Hunt — (Continued From Page One) to the bank and handed the ‘gator So the ‘five-hour watch paid The Koukoulis’ had themselves a ‘four-foot, nine-inch American § al- was called to prove that the Single- tons haven't been out of their minds these past two years. Neigh-, bors poured in to see the catch. Koukoulis theorized that some- one had purchased a pet alligator and had tossed it into a lake when it grew to around five feet and 75 \pounds in weight. He added that it had “shrunk” to° around 40 pounds because of lack of enough food. this was not the original Lower Long Lake serpent. “It definitely is not that alligator,” said Paul T. Allen, owner of the Springfield) Township “‘Snakes Alive” serpen-| tarium. _ But Koukoulis said the crea- ture Was about eight years old and had been living in the fairly- secladed lagoon for about three years, “Tt probably had a home in one| of the mud banks and lived on; muskrats, fish, and other prey.” Tt lived through thelong, cold Michigan winters by living: off the summer eating, the wrestler) claims. He. said hundreds of searchers, including other professional alliga- tor wrestlers and hunters, failed to find the mammal because they searched for him during the day. The Koukoulis brothers participated ibriefly in a mammoth July 1955 ‘search, |. This led many lake residents and janimal experts to raise an eye- jbrow-or two to the tales of. Al- pease named by Mrs. Single- on, * * * George Koukoulis said this was probably the first alligator cap- j tured in Michigan. Most’ come \from Louisiana and Florida, he added. - During the brief bout with Al- phonse, Koukoulis didn't receive a scratch. He didn’t carry a knife into the water, although his broth- er had one strapped to his belt. “We both went out there never thinking we would find him,” Andy | Said, “I was never so surprised in |my life when I saw those eyes,” |brother George gleefully added, Today Alphonse has a new home at the Koukoulis' serpentarium. | “We'll put him among the other '60 ‘gators and fatten him up a little,” the brothers explained. | Injured when his car rolled over ‘Tuesday: moring on Orion road (north of Dutton road, Oakland | Township, was Marcus L. Freud, |68, of 1455 Nakomis St.. Lake , Orion. ‘ Marcus, who was treated for ;euts and bruises by Dr. H. J. | Brown, of Oxford, told Oakland \County Sheriff's deputies he was Jars off the’ road by a large gravel truck as he Avas traveling/ sistant master mechanic of the}: Today there were Glaims that} . Child fat it stered inside him by heavy} the with | will, develop his power, assuming he, is the strong man. Harsh action) would probably bring the conclu-/ sion that Khrushchev is building) r? e2aa7 2 ; ‘ Ear Problem Are Usually Curable DENVER (INS) — Medical ree- ordg reveal that about five per cent of all American children suf- * But if these men are simply consigned to political oblivion, the tendency will be to think that the present Soviet leadership wants to continue to prove that it has really) abandoned the ruthless ways of that it wants collective B PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, } Ae aS Par 4 Se ae | 2 ae =) fe bee \, Pee Power? Dictator? Pawn? By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON U.S, experts British Speed — Atomic Power Scheduled Completion of Electrical Stations Likely to Be Beaten LONDON (INS)—Britain is erect- ing her atomic power stations so quickly that the nation’s $2,800,- 000,000 plan for six million kilo- watts of electricity from atomic fer from loss of hearing, * * * The Colorado State Medical So- ciety. notes, however, nearly all children with hearing troubles can be cured with antibiotics and sulfa drugs. Most childhood ear problems, the society reports, develop from infected tonsils and adenoids and outer ear infections. middle ear can result in scar tis- sue forming and a permanent im-| pairment. True deafness is nearly always caused by gnerve troubles, for which there is no medical treat- ment. The society says training ean conserve what hearing is left by teaching lip reading and a habit of more critical listening. Squawks Fire Warning STAMFORD, Conn.-A tiny fire- alarm unit weighing only 6 ounces any alternating-current electric out- let, the uit makes a lound squawk when the heat in the area reaches 140 degrees. It is reusable, uses No power except when. signaling, and can be tested by holding a lighted match nearby. Kansas was first settled in 1827 of Colorado in 1954. Thereafter Kansas was admitted to the Union \power station scheduled for Hink- Repeated ear infections in the ‘@Tse and bgesame a territory with a part forming the a is that the that the Tarshal tie» Uae | added. to the enlarged Presidium phagi = Pontiac City Affairs Comméssioners Delay Final-Rezoning Action Allen A, ing to Commercial 1 of two lots on Joslyn upon recommendation of the me oe - “i to the Detroit Edison Co. for pur- chase of property off Pine street which was opened this week as a new municipal parking lot. A protest against concrete pav- ing of Columbia avenue from Baldwin te Stanley was aired by a citizen, They tentatively agreed to grant Commissioner Floyd P. Miles, in whose district the work falls, au- thority to permit those assessed energy by 1965 is likely to be com- pleted with a year or two to spare. At Berkeley, Gloucestershire, work on a 300 megawatt atomic power station for the Central Bee tricity’ Authority is far ahead of schedule, « * * * : A year ago the CEA only had a piece of land, Today a big atomic power station is taking shape at record speed. The station is not scheduled for completion until the autumn of 1960 -but given good weather there is now every prospect that | work will be completed by the autumn of 1959. Stations are also bigger than an- ticipated. The twin-reactor atomic ley Point, Somerset, is to have a capacity of 500 megawatts instead of 275 megawatts. * * * This means of course that not so many atomic power stations as en- visaged only a few*months ago will be required to fulfill the program t. ss Britain. will only have to build a dozen stations instead of the scheduled 19 to produce six mil- lion kilowatts of electricity, Turkish Pipeline Built ISTANBUL — The Turkish Petro- leum Administration -has finished construction of a 14-mile pipeline connecting a new refinery at Bat- man with ptoducing wells at Ra- man, It is estimated that produc: tion at Batman next year will meet ohe third of Turkey’s present vol- ume’ of petroleum consumption, New Safety for Miners CINCINNATI—A new spray noz- zle has been developed that per- mits the safety application of rock dust to coal-mine working surfaces during working shifts instead of in off hours. The machine wets the dust as it leaves the nozzie, a slurry that sticks to the walls instead of filling the area as a state on January 29, 1861. with choking dust. The dust pro- tects against explosion and fire. for the paving five years to pay. HARDSHIP CASES - This followed a statement from a resident that there were several hardship cases in the area, In other business, the Tel-He- ron Merchants Assn, was grant- ed permission to hold a July 1520 festival in the city. The Bemis Olsen Post 113 of the Amvets agreed to hold an Aug. 3 circus on a Franklin road site when Miles said residents of dis- trict 4-objected to holding the show on a proposed Oakland avenue plat. : Khrushchev Assails Ousted Red Leaders (Continued From Page One) ears in the official party were halted temporarily. - : Prague was primed to give the Soviet Communist .party boss and Buiganin full assurance that the jpurge of top Soviet leadership had not changed the loyalty of Czech- oslovakia’s Communists. HALTED ‘BLACKSHEEP’ During his leisurely trip across the satellite nation, Parushiener in one speech described the purge with the pungent-remark, “We took the black sheep by the tail and threw him out." “It's no secret what happened in the |Soviet Union recently,” he told a cheering crowd of factory workers at Zilina. “We an- nounced it ourselves, We had some “\black sheep in a good herd. They thought they would take over pow- er, and you know how it ended.” SULY 10,/108 Saltz, the developer, | asked for They okayed payment of $25,007) fig yo F ; gee ead = = oe U.S. Attorneys Unveil Information Against 15 Lake Threatened by Power Project INVERCARGILL, New Zealand by 100 feet, for its outlet into the Waiau River would be blocked and Sky-High Payoff for Top Grades MANSFIELD, Ohio (INS)—Imag- ine the pride of a junior high school teacher when only four C's were recorded in one six-week pe- ‘Tiod by his 33 students and all other grades were A’s and B's. the students + the coveted honor roll, that is had all A's or all B's. - Collier, who is also an aviation instructor, agreed that 29 was close enough and treated every member Re eas can ee ee students were flown over change ‘the lake. Its level would be raised Jof a cut in the school’s request for Students Receive | S| nevecview St., Detroit, was ar- Hi = tz & Hs 2 ia radia _Eiead id il Bol ity, of the standard of patient care in others <2: added, Michigan State University will have to limit enrollments for the first time this year because operating funds, ‘Boys Steal Hamburgers, Threaten Customer Pontiac Police are searching for Robert Keller, of 82 N. Johnson Ave., a patron of Cappy's Drive Inn, 157 Auburn Ave., told police his life was threatened by one of the boys when he attempted to apprehend him, The boy escaped on foot and the other drove off in an auto. : Detroiter Awaits Trial on Bogus Check Charge Robert V, Schuster, 22, of 13527 raigned before West Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer C. Die- terle Tuesday on charges of lar- ceny by conversion and passing bad checks. Schuster waived examination on both charges, was bound over to their respective homes to give their Oakland County Jail with. bond set iat $2,000, circuit court, and returned to the Southern Senator Reports: WASHINGTON (#—Sen. Russell (D-Ga) said after a conference with President Eisenhower. today that Eisenhower's “mind is not closed to amendments would clarify” the a tion's civil rights bill, Russell, | quarterbacking ’ South- ern fotces opposed to the legis- lation in the Senate, told er Eisen at of any /‘punitive’ measure: Auitinore $1. Se Marquis’ ap $¢|S0uth on Orion (onl. Bismarck 3 663 saean | e674)’: —- : é Batfale 70 $4 Milwauken 35 $2, | Nestianal Pérk ‘cago 14 60 Mimcenpoils os es\FOrt 1s National Pork =; 86 57 Bi Ofieans 93 78 yo Ae ents gale ” ae &| HALIFAX, Nova Scotia — The Detrott a 4 Canadian Goverhment hag desig- Fors W n , " a7 brs the \historic fortress atop . &. | Cita Houghton 4 & SS iand its many-armed harbor, as a/! fee 5 8 est ni Sel wh built in 1749, &) i, overtooking Halifax! utes at the ‘White House. | Although Russell said Eisenhow-/ ‘national historic \park, The fort ¢r has an open mind with respect ‘ lto the | possibility 2 8 ‘over the bill ry about 50 min- Eisenhower May Accept Civil Rights Bill Changes amendments, the senator refused to express an opinion as to wheth- er the administration will back such amendments. z In adiVance of Russell’s confer- ence with Eisenhower there were é ls “ Ay fe a % 4 —_ a birds’ eye view of mELeRE ae” * “ling that the CAP had access to’ numerous government films in the field “of aeronautics. Among the future activities of the CAP is the forthcoming of 2% British Air Cadets, hours, . But said it would only be a brief res- In a similar retrenchment, Hart) Pite in Pontiac Hospital i. i gla A AM fi le m= gh hs i ie as — Ai lg ad spi oll TR oy Ps) ii F on Pilot's Abi lity, Must Land, Take Off: at 14,000-Foot Peak. to Save Climber KINGS CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Calif. @—The life of a critically injured mountain: climber depends today on the abil-. ity of a helicopter pilot to land and take off on rugged 14,000-foot Palisade Peak. \ L i A furious Sierra. thundersterm last night—and the usual vagaries | of the air currents at that altitude —~posed formidable odds. “It's his only chance,” said Dr. Henry Jakes in a terse radio re-/ port describing the condition of 23-year-old John Findley Scott, University of California student / who suffered internal and other injuries in a 4-foot fall Sunday. “He could nevér live through) being packed out. He needs im- mediate hospitalization.’ The doctor and park ranger James Barton arrived at the crude base camp on Upper Palis-| ade Lake last night e « @ Scott was taken to the camp. after his removal from a_ lofty ledge by six mountaineers Mon. | day. The last portion of the trail | to the camp was So steep the doc.’ tor and ranger had to leave their horses behind. The vital question was: Could a helicopter land and take off at) that treacherous, high altitude— even in good weather? Helicopter | pijots said yes, if’it were the right type of craft with a good pilot and went in lightly laden. i Streetcar Ride Would've Been Much Cheaper WASHINGTON (@—Mrs. Elinor K. Wolf should have taken the streetcar up to Capitol Hill in- stead of accepting a ride in a big! limousine with her boss, foreign’ aid chief John B. Hollister. : Hollister asked Mrs. Wolf during, the 10-minute drive about her functions as a $30-a-day Tonsul- tant, The next thing she knew, she was fired. Z William J, Caldwell, director of the International Cooperation Ad- ministration’s Office of Public Re- - ports, gave this account yesterday’ to House investigators looking in- to ‘complaints that funds were im- properly spent for public opinion | polls surveys to buttress the for- eign aid program, | Caldwell said he hired Mrs. Wolf, in January for a six-month task of putting together detailed infor-| mation about foreign aid and] ‘dispensing it to national organiza- | tions actively interested in the/ program, She was doing a good | job, Caldwell. said. — Then one day in April Mrs. yer happened to be headed for the Capitol at the same time Hollister — was. “She hooked a ride,” Cald- well said, and the fateful conver-|— sation took place. ‘Caldwell said he speedily heard from Hollister that “such activi-|— ties are an unnecessary expense to. the taxpayer.” So about fivel— days later, Caldwell said, Mrs. be was dropped from the pay- ie COME IN for “Sales $ Service Suddenly...you have the figure you've always dreamed about! 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Exposure Meter | 72x108 Inch Size $2.98 as Value 81 = 108 lnch.. $1.8 First quality ‘CANNON? mus- ua tants Wale only. 130 thread count for extra service Pastel SHEETS 72x108 Inch Size $2.79 ] 99 Value 81x108 Inch Size Assorted SUMMER Materials YARD GOODS 29 Pillow Case Ls = 69° eves $1.25 IN - : HAWK first quality percale low cases. 42 x 38% inch size in white only. ee : t ; Hoe & Cultivator a: —as ‘Advertised on ae are Ss & * FERTILIZES YOUR LAWN, te KILLS WEEDS & CRABGRASS, * KILLS MOSQUITOES, ANTS AND: OTHER SOIL INSECTS, same, etna ens san a grease while you water. Jest fill chamber and attach nossle. Contains enough to treet 2800 oq. ft. of lawn. Refill Price. $1.49 Heavy deus: Gelvanized =3 Sensctionally UNDER-PRICED tor This Week Only All Steel WHEELBARROW Regular $13.95 Quality— rr 7 7 eeeeeceseseeoosceoseoeseeoeseeeeeeseseseoseeseeeS Flex-Spout FREE cssoune CAN Given With Every. Power Mower Purchased This Week! Pa ox: ‘sO Ballon size. Draft in bottom, sides and cover. Raised legs. eeepc ooveoososeseess * Tubular Frame * 10” Wheel . © Sturdy Braced * Rubber Tire _ Epting Bpel=22 Took 33x29” Tray First. Quality Leaf Rakes Handy, all purpose wheelbarrow built for service. Buy now at record low price, Heat Treated Steel Round Point LONG HANDLE Shovels $2.98 Value | 99 High Speed Rotary “GEMCO” Giant Power Mower Nationally Advertised $84.95 Seller First quality, j 2% Horse Power ruggedly * built. f 4-CYCLE Engine 8 8 Long handle, / perfect balance. rawetsd by Just 100 at this “CLINTON” eecccccvssscosseooos * 20-inch = ® — Curved Tooth—Long Handle * Throttle § * Adjustable Garden RAKES a Compare anywhere! $2.29 77 More deluxe features Value than any mower at ; this price, Lifetime tele eral ae ne housing guarantee, FREE! | LEAF MULCHERS Seeesoesesoecooeooes 2-in-1 Combination Mower cuts * grass to , mulch lawns without effort, Soeeeceecosorccessoeresdeenceesocesoeeeess All Metal . $1 Quality 713* Record Low Price! Exactly as pictured. handle, ‘eeeceecocseccocococes - Fertilizer & Seed Spreader Steel Blade GARDEN Finger-Tip ge a oe te 5 Positions ‘Trowels Regular $ 87 $7.95 = : 2 3 ¢ Value— Full 16-Inch Size | : Hand style, 6'2- Exactly as pictured, 7-inch “pubber inch 0 Green tires. ‘Spreads seed or fertilizer unis ~ . rd ee ce ae ee ee re kom amiammaR TSE Hr Deluxe TRIPLE Tube Sprinkler Hose $3.95 Value ae 25 foot length. $925 100% virgin vinyl plastic. eeeoscoesesooseseses Whirlwind Style $1 Value 1 Throws water like Weighted base. eccosecoecsseecoesese Rotary Sprinkler natural rainfall, $9.95 Seller Adjustable to any — gasomene 7 dh Child's Outdoor | DRINKING / oy | te Pes ae i i oases i = ae i pee Dy seers i $ Fits. We ee AL : 4 | is a Wa a is is visited Washington last December. x * * Along with Iran and Turkey, Suhrawardy’s Pakistan probably America’s best friend in the turbulent Moslem world; and a vital link between anti-Communist defenses in east and west Asia. lomatic tight-rope through bitterness, hatred and fear has grown between India Pakistan during 10 years of dom. KASHMIR IS CENTER Center of the turmoil is Kash- An undeclared war was stopped by a United Nations truce team in 1947 but shoting “‘ineidents” still are reported along the uneasy After the cease-fire, the U.N. Maj. Gen. Glen E. Edgerton (Ret.) ig the only American on the Suez Canal Company’s internation- al board of engineering advisers. Japanese Cabinet * With the legs filled with wa a2 ! | i Hh 5 : i t aegeed Resigns on Request TOKYO @®—The Cabinet Japan- * QUESTION: What American hero became a Russian Admiral? , eae eee ANSWER: One of the great captains in the history of the U. S. .| Navy, John Paul Jones, joined the Russian Navy and became an ad- miral after the American Revolution. : It was just one more amazing fact about the amazing Capt. Jones. He became a sailor at the age of 12, was captain of his own ship at 21, and offered his services to his nation against England. Formation of the new Cabinet a) 2 School Elections Set DETROIT w — Special school proposals will be voted om Monday in the Detroit suburbs of Harper He raised the colonists’ banner over the first American Man of had war and was captain of the first American ship to be saluted iby foreign guns. In September of 1779, as captain of the Bon Homme Richard, he met the British man of war Serapis. Though his own _jship was sinking, Jones refused to surrender and said, “I have not yet begun to fight."" Eventually he won. fight, he joined the Russian Navy, became an admiral, and then re- signed. He is buried at the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. |.. x .* * t FOR YOU TO DO: Ask your librarian to help you find the-com- plete story of John Paul Jones’ battle with the Serapis in a history . book. Then sit down and write it like a news story for a newspaper. You can color this picture to illustrate it. * * * Philip Curtin, Laona, Wis., wins a $10 award for this idea. Send your idea to this newspaper. Tomorrow: Why do we say someone is. “fighting windmills?” Violet Moore Higgins, AP Newsfeatures. | e ") a8 8 A : i if sige i. & i e of nature and re can Pesetgal ie a z I live in Paradise. I do.” t ae J When the Revolution ended and there were no more battles to At the moment seven skunks. live) whippoorwill’s dawn. I tell people | live as I do,” he said, and when) edad 9 L ; : ee tj iA ge re Piet ee ’ j Ve Pee fe : Me f 1A | / fh, j 4 i j + a) ans 4, 4 ; ; { j La %. ~ ve tS \ : e ef ee ro THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 10,1957 | WY | Lie , = es : a . : y 2 | : : ; ie ; es » : j i 4 Nee a ‘s Te ef ; a ae eS 1 i my Ae x :, ‘ # ij f ‘ ci v3 : ae : ig a #) : « Py Fg z a ‘af a} _ NS ; * a s E ale See : re 4 : : ‘ x - : ae } ‘ 7 : ji I : : ayy ‘ : \ ; g 2 < i a he ae > i - lke Will Be Told Atlantic Coast, (Hal BoyleSays: ©) ts ee OR a ae Oe oe a J aoa pode \Gets Its Third ; LO Wa! fare \ NO ie ee OU Oe 2, Bt eM ae pie gs ty Pakistan Story eda Tower \(Vature Lover purns Civilization === . ' 5 | 4 ' NEW (~The pla : : é 3 ee 4 : ; : : ( = - Pe : E ye p : ee d € > : ' leader Arri Ocleny be he natin's tite Tones Gower NEAR MARYVILLE, Tenn, (#)lectual some of those 20 years were)civilization probably would go ker- 2 Air Ci ves T rose slowly from the sea today as|—Here lives a man who can whip/out he can flooie. ™ Robert to . ountry’s VieWS |, ydraulic jacks lifted it to the top|inflation by the only possible way.|at the rate * x* * “Well maybe it wouldn't be a . Wiliam —— on Dispute With India jot three huge legs resting on the) . 3 * less. In an era of creeping inflation the| tae, ea tostraTt it Sul over again) Ricnase i. ex Robert. w cross 7 edge of the Continental Shelf 65| He doesn’t buy much. He rare- stem of We deltee @tarine Mena Pen DB. Carson KARACHI (INS) .{miles southeast of here. ly spends in public. He lives by a| He hand : : : - Jew, S Mettaree — Pakistani The tower when completed will|personal standard above th e|beans The berries along the mountaiCalls for Home Religion John Robert, L. Wink Premier Hussain Shaheed serve as an offshore radar warn-|changing dollar. _ j|powdered trail red his palate and his path.|~™ ¥, Gangier 7. is due to arrive injing station against enemy air at-| “This is no stunt with me,” said/0f it and His home has no plumbing, no} NEW YORK wm — p> barever Washington today fo tell Presi-itack Similar towers have been|Bert Garner, a tall, bent intel- electric lights, no radio, no tele-/Dr, Rose Franzblay says “the lost B sede ¥ eey dent Eisenhower his nation’s sidelerected on George’s Bank off vision, no telephone, His utilitylones among the modern . ith. Mekeliar of the dispute with India over/Boston and on Nantucket Shoals bill—two gallons of kerosene tojwill remain lost unless | Taran ac won” — aT me J the southern. coast of Cape| [———~Sunior Editors Quiz on light his lamps—is 38 cents ajtoday devote themselves Hit oe 4 Karachi leader Cod, year. completely to religion 2. BE. i. Nelson itching to place his views before| Five ocean - tu f the “ raising a family cou Fs 4 Willet ©. Newlander the President since India's Nehru}Moran sorter Aad this No man we home. . Russell A. Olson * * Bert says he has lived in depres- sion times for as little as $15 a * * Wedding Gift for a new | General Printing | and Office Supply asked what was the main virtue] - 17. W. Lawrence , FE 2-0135 i ally cequires replacement of dog-eared file folders and guides. Let us supply you. noma with metal strip Genuine Weis, medium better storage file for less heavy, % cut. Special at $249 per 100 General Printing & Office Supply 17 W. Lewrence St. FE 2-0135 We Close All Day Seturday During July and August 1-Ib. ctn. HUNT'S Yellow Cling Star-Kist “ Chunk Style BLUE VALLEY BUTTER © 69° . 1 -Ib, pkg. BIRDS EYE FROZEN Frying Chicken 89° THIS COUPON HILLS BROS. WITH Pineapple-Grapetruit = 25‘ Babo Cleanser 3 25° meat Colts = WAS” 45 29" Chili Sauce ‘= 23°||Sweet Gherkins ‘i 29° Salad Dressing 35° Kosher Icicles im 29° > Dog Food 8 = 69% ‘Beverage Syrup vat 29° We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities PHILLIP’S “ “Solid Pack SHADY NOOK FARMS Large EGGS [Free $e Coupon With ii } Birds Eye French Fries |) | omatoes a Save 10¢ 3-Ib. CAN © ‘CRISCO : csi 888 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Open Daily ‘til 9 P. M. Open Sunday 6 P.M. _ PEACHES Select Grade “AA” Whole FRYING CHICKENS 39, CHUCK ROAST BLADE ~ CUTS A U.S. No. 1 Sweet + ¢C ii i . Ibs. ; ¢ | ae. As 7 tt 1 fis ae Tt bis é a : ra n + —s es i o i \ see i T = ee Nis & bon \ 4 ( a ece \ pu ee. i Ly RYAN ws Analyst 5, cs Y secton.oa, purges.) reputation as a tough negotiator vera adroitness and pee : politics. able demeanor” cast a pall over _Winstoy Churchill once de-|postwar efforts to achieve a real 3 i cg He $ : ; i i i ! he did in William Fife Knowland. — A few years back when a small group was waging a talkathon : against a bill the then en gna leader was guiding through the Senate, Knowland got up from a few hours sleep on a couch in his office and declared: the effort to have a White House approved bill made into law, The. 48-year-old present minority Jeader hasn’t always gone down his coli; leagues on both sides of the aisle} he | vigor with which he defends views. rr's BIRTHRIGHT ? Ht oH s ? : 5 E tailed to account for their move- ments. The IRA seeks to unify Ireland aoe ont by raids across the border into North Ireland. I had been bothered slightly pee ¥ - pe mg ng msn ge, or seven years, w Marriage License an Fone, Shen years ago, it Applications fame Phyitis J. Dange th | Boverty i. =~ ge ~ Spe ‘at et AE | Ralph 8 to bed for Beaten i Ede, Birmingham days at a Fear s’Binwcrtied haittord a et A Charles M. Joki, 12 Allison Theare B. “Barker 06 E. Beveriy Me aes Ee b a = Emy arms to Panetta ede rane ae oy et pA TNE | homme and ath te i Jy area Bi Pe amy | WAS CRIPPLED WITH ARTHRITIS UNTIL | TRIED O-JIB-WA BITTERS Marit,” cane raise my arms becsere of Rieu. Frank Gaeman, 611 Wisconsin Avenue, Gladstone, Michigan. . be able to do again. I'm get- j ting around fine now, and just finished washing the walls jand ceiling of my kitchen. Why Ith even able to get out and help other people with their housework that are ail- ing with one thing or another. Last winter I shoveled «the snow from my walks, and I that's pretty good for a lady going on 72 years old, who , just @ year ago was in bed, all ‘crippled up with_arthritis. I igive OJIBWA BITTERS full 5° credit for putting me back on imy feet. I am always recom- medicine which contains no pain killing dope, will be as happy with the results as I was.” INSIST ON GENUINE 0-J18-WA AT ALL DRUG STORES Vernie suffering terribly. Then I =e ey — read about OJIBWA BIT- Joba D TERS in my newspaper and K. Graves. Ridge « @ecided to try it. It took Richard Brain. he about a month before the 7 Charie: Hogan Jr, Ost Park Soon I was back doing my own : SS 8. base dhs housework. and a lot of things ! Sas, t Bek. Vee” SAVINGS see ee wesc siemens tn | Knowland comes by his politics Bill was elected to the state assembly in 1932, the state Senate two years later. Io 1945, wiile in Paris as an Army major, he learned his old friend Earl Warren, then gover- nor, had named him to the Senate seat left vacant by the death of Hiram Johnson. He's” been there ever since, Taft died in 1953. Knowland married his childhood sweetheart in 1926. They have two daughters and a’ son, over as GOP leader when Robert . industry. The Molotovs have two eek Bye no ma over the ac-) daughters, Svetlana and Sonya, the latter adopted. inch measurement. ss lee tie tolamacaae banal a4 {a8 Molotov, me, wae, bei im 0 cob icing tock ol 0 Tail Pipes, Dual Exhaust Systems, — : Starters, Gezerators, Coils Airplane Type Shock Absorbers Corburetors — Spark Plugs — Fuel Pumps _OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAYS" WEEK DAYS 9-9 - | FABSPRAY sproy or point it on. $52 ee 93% Hollerback Auto Parts The micron is 1-250,000th of an! _ 340 Baldwin Ave. FE 3-9477 — FE 8-1431 CARPETS - DRAPERIES - LINOLEUM - TILE - RUGS - UPHOLSTERING - SLIPCOVERS | McCandless’ Warehouse Sale - oer rat ee Seu” ot Choice of 4 col- ors. Rayon tweed carpet at below —. Naa 12’ Re machen ee RAYON TWEED = “OPEN EVERY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 P.M. 2 : sas | OUR WAREHOUSE IS LOADED And The Fall Season Merchandise is rolling in. In order to make room we have to sell out our present inventory. And we are passing these Price Reduc- tions on to you! Something new in Wilton Textured = */* ton, random tex- ture in three | combinat i Choice of four Be a striking colors. 12’ a4 wide, almost $2 =, "= below replacement = cost, ’ an | woven for years” wear ? tn 8, 12 and 15-foot Wool Wilton ' Sq. Ya. Beautiful all wool Wilton scroll in 2 colors, 12° x 15° width, ‘=a, Heavy all wool eee Wilton, bark tex- Ny , ture in choice of six decorator col- ors, offered at im 6 below dealer's Bark Texture " ; eT Re - ‘ ' ; ® i » ‘ WOOL WILTON 3 and Lt. Green, 12’ BS and 15° width, Choice of Nutria $B Sq. Yd. Choice of 2 plain -§ 99 and 4 tweed ef- fects at $$ gen dealer's cost. te To get where you want to go .*. . to have want to own. . .will take money. to get it, and that’s to SAVE it. SAVINGS MAKES THE DIFFERENCE It Figures, Fellows the things you a o There’s just one way . between wish- ing and having! Little by little, your regular deposits plus our high rate of dividend add up to BIG THINGS. 5 a Carrent Rate : : . A P ontiac, Bf bosch Nd Federal Savings at : € HOME OFFICE: 761 W. HuronSt. Bi CHE 2407 Main St PONTIAC: 16 E. Lawrence St.) ies cost. 12° width Reg. value $15.00. wide only, Baal Sq. ¥4. Sq. Yd. | ASPHALT TILE| tnoueum | vue Vinyl. | : ein PLASTIC Plastic Sandran | . CASE CASE Six Patterns FLOOR TILE 7 39 Sqe Ya. | Case of 80 Tile Case of 80 Tile 4 Cov 7 Ft. € Sq. Ya. € Each : ot . ot dhl _ = a Ft. 8S : 12 19 pals ae aes from Shower Curtain Sets Plastic Taffeta d Shower and Window Curtain Incl. Plastic Sets Taffetas | 3” Set Sar a 5Q°9 sa | Bamboo Cafe Curtains NATURAL FINISH 30” 36” 45” . Vel. 99°. $4 pr. 94% pr. 99° ea. 48x84" — $39 Pr. READY-MADE DRAPERIES ~ 38”x90” Values to $10.98 ep NOW | ae Pr. Pontiac’s Oldest ahd Largest Floor Covering Specialist <4 ‘ — _THE PONTIAC PRESS: WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1957 UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY [S IT Inches High 4 Inches Thick weighs over 15 SECTIONS AND A TWO-PART BINDER Get A Section Each Week! Just about six months ago; AaP brought ae wonderful Funk & Wagnalls Encyclo- a! Now! Az&P brings you the opportunity to own a great, big, unabridged dictionary like the ones you've seen in Schools and Public Libraries! NOW YOURS! AT SMALL COST! . A GIANT, UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY! Up until now, with the introduction of this sensational, money- saving, Assemble-It-Y ourself Edition, the cost of a giant, Unabridged _ROWDAy’ has always been a stumbling block for most families. NOW! AT A BARGAIN — OUR STORES bring you this great, big, . beautiful UNABRIDGED dictionary! VOCABULARY ENTRIES INCLUDING MANY OF THE LATEST ADDITIONS TO THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE IN THE NATURAL & SOCIAL SCIENCES, THE ARTS AND SPECIALIZED BRANCHES OF KNOWLEDGE 2,763 ILLUSTRATIONS — Many ‘iin Full Color “ILLUSTRANIVE QUOTATIONS — SYNONYMS — COMPARATIVES — ETYMOLOGIES 2,400 TRIPLE-COLUMN PAGES OVER 25 sre FEATURES + IN OUTSTANDING SUPPLEMENTARY stCTIONS % Dictionary of Names in 1K Metrle System of Weights Dictionary of Commerce ‘and Law Each week, at small cost, you get one of the 15 Sections of this master ‘reference work. Then, during the final — two weeks, you get the beautiful, em- bossed, permanent, two-part binder, and you assemble this great, big, mar- velous giant dictionary YOURSELF. Take this wonderful dictionary — ' OUR GOOD-WILL OFFER —into your home or office. Begin acquiring the Sections right away. Get Section No. 1 for only 25¢ (with $2.50 in pur- chases). Get each of the remaining Sections — A SECTION-A-WEEK for only $9¢ each (with ANY purchase). Each part of the beautiful two-part binder, made available during the final two weeks of this good-will offer, costs only 89¢ each (with ANY purchase). Save all fifteen sections, and then assemble all the sections yourself in the permanent binder. Start now! with Section No. 1. NOW! Get Section No. 1—Only 25¢ A Wonderful Treasure for Every Family! For home... . for office... for school... nothing can take the place of a fine dictionary! And no other book, outside of the Bible, can be as essential, as valuable,'as useful or as educational! No other book can be as important to you and to your family in your choice of words and in the manner in which , —. eer nc H Dictionary of Foreign k Commerciél and Financial % Dictionary of Scripture Words end Phrases Terms in Eight Languages Proper Names. Biblical Maps. % Dictionaries of Painting $,000 Words Most Com & Dictionary of Abbrevia- deditprore~ rhonly Mispronounced tons and Contractionis: | Chronology of Werid Wart & 3 alaicaion ¢ ° DINING ROOM poo | IPA, M.-11 P.M. - $$$ Te alen Business Men’s Luncheons |) por; ywoop cs) — Frank START 11 A.M. )Sinatra had no more than re- (@ «SERVING © [SK. ‘usghone wo New York LIQUORS AND EXCELLENT [long distance he bought the rights FOOD — STEAKS — CHOPS |'to “A Hole in the Head,” Paul SEAFOODS — FOWL Dougias’ hit Broadway show. PUBLIC DINING WITH Se ie pogpoc saad A CLUB ATMOSPHERE 7 dan will ae ag Hole in the Head” and will make it for . a ol GOOD MEET ~ Sessa > ' det |p| BEUCIOUS FOOD : We Gerve Banquets snd Pertics 4 AHOE @. BEER 7 @ WINE ; Cus T @ CHOICE > 3412 Dixie tier. OR 3-9754 LIQUORS ) > BANQUETS sod PARTIES @ DELICIOUS é nnd COCKTAILS - FAMOUS SPAGHETTI HOUSE | AND PIZZERIA 1038 WEST HURON ST. NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH LIBERTY COCKTAIL’ LOUNGE was|siris lutering around Frank Sina- va é ‘ oi lee an age ys satay uf ; ea ve ee ie PONTIAC PRESS 5 WEDNESDAY, OLY 0, rast ere 6 eee oR es pate or» newcomer) ety te lead opposite atone iG tae teas Helen “Although Carolyn was one of the tra in “Tender Trap’ she didn’t make her big screen impact until the femme fatale role in “Bachelor Party.” For this, she dyed her naturally blonde hair quite dark. For Mickey's movie she'll dye back to her original blonde. Of course, you know that “Baby B creo Buys Film Rightsiose riv \\for ‘A Hole in the Head | é BES aie Carolyn Jones, | jnotorious gangster, producer). Jerold L Sylvan Glen Golf Course od ca nae uae ome Wee Al Zimbalist says it starts imme- A Dining Room and Bar Davis but is beginning to act (diately for UA release. BETWEEN 18 & 19 MILE ROADS like her (and that’s plenty of (YOUNG AND HAPPY ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN Great to be as young and happy Baaaaas. 2 tre Sacco den oot beck : g g z s * a EF by 8 | Ht George F. Sweet, Ferndale K. Terrell Birmingham. ean D, Wellman, Hasel Park The trasic death of Judy Tyler Cohare in an auto accident before the | release of the Elvis Presley pic- satisfied ay ture, “Jailhouse Rock,” will not Par a E. fie as interfere with the release of the’ picture because it will be shown in October. “lt hasn't even been sneak- previewed yet,” one of the MGM executives told me. “Everyone liked Judy so much, and we were Rd. Heense tevoked and Births | Following is a list of Oakland 85 North Saginow » Pada ocol FE 3-7396 EM 3-061 COMMERCE DRIVE-IN THEATER South End Union Loke Road STARTING TONIGHT THE SHOCK SHOW OF THE YEqp, 2 oF Mork (ielbnpocB GREATE ; J 4 Pg * 5 7, | Pm, Fs S Sell ye te + in eh “J - aw mo don ete LY | Lahn 1 |keep a date with Lana Turner. He if ialso took a look at himself in | ‘What's in a Name? 1 James, 44, a mail truck driver, i bezzlement. Post office inspectors i isaid he had stolen approximately all saddened by her death.” Death came to Jimmy Dean, Jean Harlow and Walter Hampden before the pictures they were ap- pearing ‘in were released. Only in Jean Harlow’s case did it affect ‘the box office, and that was be-| cause a substitute had to be given’ the Harlow role as Jean hadn't finished her picture. County fathers named on birth certificates recently registered with the County Clerk’s office: Pentiae Witem ft. os _ Rosedale - Hall, i Bob Evans flew in Saturday to “The Sun Also Rises.” Hernande Courtright, all born Lewis July 10 but in different years. | 3°90 "ince * Tonight Helen O'Connell is salut- | Russell H Newman, 264 W. Corsell ing composer McHugh with = | SiC Bowcil"iiie Ded” program of his songs on her TV Leo M. Halfpenny, 36 Lewis John W. Hancock, 108 show. Vie Damone is also honor- Milterd’ Lee W. Johnson, 3876 Teeple Lk... ing Jimmy, and ditto dise jockey Robert W. Webber. 4044 Bluebird Raymond J. Killoren, 2225. Poison Lawrence L. Wendell, 3055 W.-Com- meres Robert R. Robert. 15009 Duck Lk. Robert D. Dunham. 3201 Jackson Johnny Grant. , Harriet Parsons, covering the Carol Channing opening at. the Tropicana in Las Vegas, says that Anita Loos is flying to Vegas from Europe next month. She wants! Carol, who leaped to fame in|, DETROIT w—Thomas A. Lead- Anita's play. Blondes,” writing. Leadbetter, who says he never spends money on his campaigns, has led the municipal ticket in the last four elections, There are two other candidates so far for ‘the $15,000-a-year post. They are Warren R. Dolan, a city health inspector, and Thomas J. Murphy, a rigger. 300 letters from the mails, remov-) ., ‘ - ing any cash he found in them. Oil Spending to Rise LOS ANGELES wi — Jesse’ has been charged with mail em- “Take it from us. Your Plymouth dealer can save you big money! The salesman convinced us they're giving special deals now because sales are so high. - Try Torsion-Aire Ride, check that low price, and you'll soon be proud Plymouth owners, too.” See your JP\yMOuUTH & _ DEALER \ © Quiex - ; “Save like we did! See your 6 DALLAS — According to oil - in- dustry experts, the industry will make capital expenditures of more than 6.1 billion dollars for new plants and equipment during 1957, an increase of $635,000,000, or 11 per cent, over last year’s record spending for such purposep. ot Fresh Sea Food, Superb ~s Prime Beet, Steaks and ‘© Chops, | Game Dinners. Happy birthday today to Jiramy Robert L Stumkeski, 148, Whittemore ' ; Dona umbaug 8. Bird. & McHugh, Mike ‘Connolly and Donald D. Pransworth, 212 Sanderson | Leadbetter to Run Again | “Gentlemen Prefer! better said he will file Monday for - for the musical she is: this eighth term as city clerk.' RICHARD MALTBY AND HIS ORCH. FRI. & SAT. WALLED LAKE CASINO BALLROOM WALLED LAKE, MICH. ain a - NIVEN in that spicy stage comedy in blushing color! a en neem ra ges aaa rae OPEN 6:45—MA oo AIR CONDITIONED AVA me LITTLE HUT ‘Duck, Turkey, Se Tee PERM RN SE NE! : oe re ee | i] YOUR EYES HAVE 1 a NEVER OPENED “1 WINE CELLAR WIDER WITH is Wines. Beers and Ales TERROR AND ie From All Over the World EXCITEMENT 1 ‘ LUNCHES . * Open Every Day VICTOR | PHONE: OR 3-1907 Es se SGeeeeeene+s ‘ Doors Open 6:45 Thru FRI. NOW! MATURE wi We | NOW! | BLUE EXCLUSIVE! GUNE IGHTy “CHASING DRIVE-IN ALL COLOR =a AS MMERTIME Wil PARADE a" O. ee a PHONE FED ERA ] OAKLAND: MOOEeNLY AIR COND TIONED AT LAST... SHOCKING STORY OF THE AFRICAN | MAU-MAU! Wee REST. SUNS NOWER COMES > to SCREEN” ROCK HUDSON a WYNTER 4 rn POITIER 2: 10 9:20 STARTING SATU RDAY pa TANGLES WITH MOBSTERS! FIRST RUN! now HAL WALLIS mu K C ¢ CORRAL THE SU N” Taal Ts THE A wT THIS Cor 'LD BE THE Lis, JEANS SHMOHS PAUL DOUGLAS ae ORLD IN rv, f+ " STARTS SUNDAY /MONKEY ON MY BACK" South End of Union Lake Road at Haggerty Road. EM 3-0661 TONIGHT | —TONIGHT— THE KING OF ROCK ‘nN’ ROLL ALAN FREED Rock Rock Rock! : —end— Harry Belafonte Dorothy Dandridge Carmen Jones CINEMASCOPE AND COLOR WALAKE MAPLE ROAD East of Walled Lake Sun., Mon, Teen Gangs Fight to the Finish “City Across the River” Starring TONY CURTIS ! BLUE SKY 2150 OPDYKE ROAD Phone FE 4-4611 EXCLUSIVE. FIRST SHOWING KIRK Lancaster - Douglas Hal Wallis’ Production of GUNFIGHT 43 0: K. CORRAL A Paramount Pictare ADDED CHASING THE SUN IN COLOR WATERFORD Corner WILLIAMS LAKE and AIRPORT ROADS Phone OR 3-2683 Gregory Peck _ Jennifer Jones in Oscer Hommerstein’s RA WRN eRMilA csc rircigilnrieis ror passenger July volume would be approxi- a doliar outlay greater than that required for a complete model change less than a decade ago. be officially disclosed by car mak-|ing ir nobile Production ‘During | July : that industeywide the Sa will run close to 1% billion dollars. Probably more than half that Exact cost of switching over to|sum will be incurred by General 1958 model cars prchely Ot sat ote eee a sever changes throughout ite several), ers. It is a oN however car aviions. mately the same as that of June. : * * * Generally, July has seen a level- To Pass Last Seater Century ing off in production volume. Last ‘year when the industry was trying to reduce dealer inventories the factories rolled out 448,870 cars. Aside from that, however, . there have been only three years since World War II in which July output went above. half a million cars. = ¢ * * Scheduling of the heavier July volume this year reflects to some degree the auto makers’ more opti- mistic outlook with respect to retail sales. A consideration also is that Ford probably will get some output ing Mt Be mee Deed model Seng, the ‘000 deliveries. In Some sources expect July sales) to top factory output again. That production slashes that-marked the final’ montha of the 1956 model year. CUT IN SEPTEMBER ] But September is certain to see a sharp curtailment of assembly line operations. Current guesses are that July - August - September output will come to about 1,200,000 ears, There is a good prospect the factories will build 1,300,000 in the the industry, retail delivery total oats were unchanged to %s high- is mu than quarter century, the prediction is -«'(300d Weather. |. idipped because of favorable grow- . | Midwest. WASHINGTON, D. C. — The growth of American businggs in/engineers, the next 25 years will be greater than in the past 25 years, accord- to a report issued by the Kiplinger Washington Agency. The result of a year-long re- portorial investigation into the next Drops Grain CHICAGO w — Fine weather over the Midwest and most of Southwest was a little too -much for the grain futures market on the board of trade today. 4 Wheat dipped around a cent in hedge ‘selling apparently causing some jof the downturn. Prices came back somewhat, however, due to strength in.wheat at Kansas City, where the bulk of the crop is be- ing received. Corn; oats and soybeans all ing weather and forecasts in the Near the end of the first hour, new style wheat was % lower to 1M Pr re July $2.13%; corn was %s lower to Y% higher, July $1.30% er, July 69%; rye was unchanged to 4 cents higher, July $1.34%; soybeans were % lower to %s high- er, July $2.42%; and lard was un- changed to 10 cents a hundred pounds lower, July $13.70. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN — July 10 iAP) — Open to- major styling and engineering ad- Wheat = ae So 2] vances that will mark the new/Sep = March °".2.. 14% cars to be introduced for the 1958 “ai age) oe model year. Some will be entirely 5:>* ++ 2.18% duly 1.36% new; others will have designimarch ’..: Pr ~giereors tet changes almost as as though 4 ec cese es 2 ime Slareh ovness 41 the car were wholly new. - Sap saves ¥24 2g 2 sh a ep tne ee es ee Most industry merchandising ex- March ,,....125% Oct, 14.20 cats coe te ice eg ee factor in car sales. They are not uly ones = Claim New Air Fuel Lifts Flying Limits some cases at the start, with|i Rapid Business Expansion =: Forecast in Next 25 Years, aie point | Eske Borns onband cain Men Olin-Mathieson rose a full point Se ne 4. ohn lee, and was in active demand Eon and federal taxes will rise from of the present price level. grow in direct ration to population ber, furniture, stone, clay and glass ee steel, coal, food Over ait Ges total etional- ant Over June 1956 Gain as Compared With Last Year Is Offset by Monthly Decline Employment in the Pontiac area boom will start ‘paving its effect construction will reach two mil- lion homes a year in the 70's. in defense spending, leaving. room for more. e n of civilian needs; no world war; some inflation throughout fhe period. last month was 400 higher than in NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. ®—The Olin Mathieson Chemical Co.. an- nounced today development of a new high-energy fuel it said could power a B58 jet bomber anywhere in the world and return without refueling. * * * oe. The company said the new fuel/* increased the range of jet en- gines by 40 per cent. The name of the new chemical fuel is HEF-2. The base of the fuel is borax, a crystalline sodium compound used as a cleansing agent or disinfectant, The United’ States has huge supplies of borax. * * * Olin Mathieson announced con- struction of — 36-million-dollar plant to manufacture HEF-2 at Model City, 10 miles northeast of iagara Falls. The company said it had already perfected produc- _ of the fuel in a pilot piant re. Awards 2. ok TOLEDO, Ohio WY — The Shel- by, Ohio, Air Force Depot was awarded two-contracts worth a to- tal of $114,737 to the Aeroquip Corp, of Jackson, Mich., for hose monthly decline was continuing be- tween May 15 and June 15 of this, ear. < wag 700 less than in May. This re- manufacturing employment and a in the area, in the non-farm group. On a two-year comparison, |it- tle change for non-manufacturing employment can be noted, while manufacturing has declined by 9,600 between 1957 and 1955, The _ decline, since June 1955, in motor vehicle plants bovrt 4 dip of $990 was experi- enced, Unemployment at mid-June was estimated at 5,700. A year ago, in mated at 8,500. Currently, the un- employed make up-7 per cent of the total labor force of 80,900, com- pared with 6.8 per cent in May and 10.2 per cent in June of 1956. The Pontiac MESC office report- ment insurance checks issued dur- ing June was the highest since assemblies, the Department of) In June of 1956, the branch of- Commerce field office here an-! nounced today. fice granted $758,798 in 21,032 un-|Carl, who returned him to jail with)™ lemployment payments. June of 1956, although a sng be Current employment of 72,000) 500 increase in non-manufacturing g;_, June 1956, unemployment was esti-|- News in Brief | Nina Jeffrey, 42, of 1681 Dover Free Fernadale, demanded exam- Fy" ination on charges of unlawfully driving away an automobile, Tues- day, before Ferndale Justice Earl/Ge® Mills N, Nash, who returned her to the|Gen Shoe Oakland County Jail with bond set at $1,000. tiac Police. report, erty. ed that the number of unemploy-| Albert R. Moye, 20, 4527 Old Plank Rd.,. Milford, waived ex- amination and was bound over to last October. There were 13,943|circuit court on charges of larceny checks totaling $485,874 issued. [from a building Tuesday by High-| Noon w land Township Justice Roy 4J. bond set at $1,000, © @ © HOME BUILDER © © @ PA Ay) SAVINGS WITH , SARIAC STEEL for Industry and the Building Trades ons i saat pen oa others whose jobs re- ee Seer Great employment expansion is Kiplinger organ- Retail and wholesale trade willl - =i » % : Gm ::: “ne* % ® z= toe ” By ite E z = i a | oe. : pa. ae &S-SS 825838 aevveane i Hy BEESEEEBBEES 5 i gasddgsics bP ‘Re ‘See Se See Se Se | ae + * * In six or seven years, say the} &¢ Kiplinger editors, a new housing) Carrier Cp Cen Ii! Ps on the economy, and the rate of) Cen sh et ee ee fe bow eae SASVSASBESESESRToSSa8 Rew Pewee Veh auere In reporting the business out- look; the Kiplinger organization’ ¢,j, has assumed a gradual cut back $ normal icon business ups and downs; but no ©, serious depression; and a gradual ee “cena , 8 SSSSSS8a5H: oe ee Six dollars was reported stolen 1, pont from the apartment of Rose Ann Salek, of 193 Baldwin Ave., after| Fray someone entered through an un- locked door, according to Pontiac sulted from a decrease of 1,200 in|P oe Seite sueniteatest ce. 8 - BESes After forcing the lock on the Goos: apartment door of Rosella Wilson,|Grsn of 344 W. Huron St.,. thieves escaped with a ladies watch, Pon-|o tSEs$s: S8-83.88 ~ Seeaes avee MG Vem Ww M. C, Baird, at yee Otte BE reported pump valued at $300 from his prop-| tnt were blamed for a $20 fire in an Grand Trunk boxear be- tween Jessie and Allen streets about 3 p.m. yesterday, Pontiac firemen said. | Children playing with matches mors it ‘will merge with a major Scie cur that pare chemical firm. . Getty Oi] was enether issue which enjoyed active turnover. Lt rose around a point. : : But ‘steels, base metals, rails, uy) of . Milford, Guinesen Brighton, ehiand, Rose and Lake Townships, Oakland and’ Livingston Counties, Michi- the same to White Lake ) of White Lake chemicals and oils were mixed. American T New York Stocks . (Late Morning Quotations) il mas ee ... $18 bd Bobket* Eats 35 “es Sed - Ed = STOCK AVERAGES {Compiled by The Associated Press) ni Sale, Center, ubber Lake OF ion, uly i and 13 bea Gets Quickline Account | elephone was up 4 oe. sat eee will | fraction following news of its high- | (eh, °oekiand County, er earnings. Othér fractional gain- Pol -voe sa — cen og — County Bchool Office Building. 1038. N. e ectric, Kennecott ; Illinois Central, Texas Co., Johns- | p or xauuee F icetindicdheal - Be we ~o fereeergpetnette® | ed useeesnsesessss Beads Suan Ve me ees - se ee 8 sgeegs ’ ‘ alt diana oe Wate HRA ee WDM HE HR He aha . see e . ‘ad oe OS od oe Oe ee SSeasseseenssssaeese: 187.1 “De for Punerals” in0| ae SMBUTANGE, GROUND — at " 3 ‘sf . and Union Telephone Co. The union ae gener ry lines of riet No. 4 oe t .8 22s (Huron Valiey) of Milford. Ber U. S. Borax, producer of Boron, | Lake ’ ps. Oakland and Livingston | on which the new fuel is based, | fotios oe dutnching “We will be held at the ‘Oak Mi You ere hereby notified” ‘that a public of it and 28 ent w Mr, Crawford, Hote velt, ‘lf to 4 pm. Don’t _ A. UTLEY CO. Poot “Games territory samator, boundaries wilt be 2. ee date Fs the transfer, ‘operty so, the equitable consideration therefor. nee above munity school district, Lapeer and Oak- 19 land Counties, Michican. 36 NOTICE “39 of proposed alteration of school district *“g2.6 | boundary lines of the Romeo community 30.6 | schools rict, Macomb and Oakland , 24.5 | Counties, ichigan, by _—— the . ae desc larkis, to-wit: 39 TSN Ril ace 26, Ll 47850 ae ft. of, W 100.50 50 ft of NW % of SW %, + County ‘ointie will By ge Whethe bouin# aries tau be if “eens 3. ———, or rea eh £2 hw place shor day of June, OF sad a as oh Road, ~ - day of Feng est, at ‘2:00 orctock the ad f the | Chrysler. ‘The Oskland and Livingston Count, hay the losers were Caterpil- Boards of Edveation will determine: ’ ar, Anaconda, International Nick- - "New York Central and Royal ei 3. Whether or not any personal or real pr is to be. transferred and. if Any interested parties will be civen an opportunity to be heard at the time and quoted, Dated at ore ee . type os this 10th dey of 7, inD COUNTY BOARD Or ENTCATION : BY: W. J. EMERSON, Secretary aly 1, "ST Michigan, and of the Oxford area com- lesraph Road. the lieth day of July, 1957. at 7:00 o'clock PM. to consider the advisability of the peer, Roards — acting he proposed alteration of made: The effective date of the transfer, Any interested parties will be given > = Fig ng vd hag be heard at tie time ‘e quo Dated at Pontiac, Michigan. this 11th 2 OAKLAND COUNTY BOARD Bed nae Death Notices LL BOYD, JULY 8. ier ge J. ‘Thomas officiating. Interment in Nerthwood Cemetery, Cambridge. Olio. Mr. Boyd will be taken to Ohio ursday morning. Funeral arrangements by the C. J. God- — Funeral Home, Keego Har- 6 et JOLY 9, 1987, ROBERT ¢. kston; Chambers: dear father of er. i] ~ — Thursday, July 11, at2»p Fi Pu- 6. nerea ‘Home : with Rev. James 7. Luther officiating, Interment tn 8, i Cemetery. Mr. Cha 4 will lie tn state at the Huntoon 2. _Prneral_ Be a RS ee ee 3 RANDALL. DALL, JULY 8. 1957, WILLIAM 8. 1202 Willow her Flint; <2 $2; 5. Ssloved husband of Stella Ran 2 dail; dear father of Mrs. Russell a: Beveridge, Mrs, Mareus V. Gaten- - 14 jo ba cong — b gl a 37 ursday, July 30 p 28.2 from B: Punerail Hi . Sincetiee ee Sunset oy = 3 Hills Cemetery. Randall will Ye in state at the Brown __Home, 1616 Davison Rd., Print. Wood, JULY 8 1957, MRS. EVA L. 6 formerly of 94 Mary Day: ace 79; 3 dear mother of Gerald F. Gran- don, Mrs. Ruby H. Austin and the q late th E. don. Funeral 3 service will be held Thursday. 5 July 11, at 12:30 p.m. from @ 3 Donelson-Johns Funeral Home 3 with Dr. Milton Pa ons offict- ‘ Cemetery. Adrian. Mrs. Wood is 1 ao Donelson-Johns 2 4 or Cae of Thanks 1 : 4 ee Funeral Directors 4 86. By 84!’ Donelson-lohns 187.1 PUNERAL HOME bil , ee Sy FUNERAL Boe aie Next to “EXPERIENCED SALESMAN commission. bonus. For ier 1-1102 og SRE ST Alert Men : work. W BRICK | RS WTD. INSIDE WORK, CHEV- -ROLET MAJOR SUP- PLY. DEPT, OTTER- BURN, MICH. ON: Mere GAB SaIVERE, how! — part time night. 25 or one Ap py 438 i Lake Ave, at ™m ‘Walkers Cleaners. Lake Orion DRIVERS WANTED mode! pick or inte mates rs .to transpo: J Sil stater and 35-55 inal Manager, ay Morea f iver Michigan, Nh FOR full time retail position — CHRYSLER ME- —_—* 368 8. Woodward. Service CooK R taurent. 198 56. aie, Bir- mingham Mt nates or Junior Executive who wants to do sales work ome over $9500, Protected well ¢ terri- " , future, paid vaca- . ‘group and hospital ance, social mous * ent. Present ne over gr Sale or elles abi ment phape St The Thal, FIRE FIGHTERS CITY.OF PONTIAC Applications are now being taken HAVE OPENING For two real es whe wish to work salesmen an active _— Must be expert rienced and plans for your fomily’s best insurance reurement creased aati a ogee’ service son $30. : A PB oe sigh or par pag ! to, ban. weeks Make t, Fee es over, “. BOOKKEEPER, AUTO DEALER EXPERIENCE. |. NICE PLEASANT * SURROUNDINGS. PERMANENT “- POSITION FOR QUALIFIED PERSON. Rammier - Dallas Inc. for a capable EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. FOR PUN AND GOOD EARNINGS sei] Avon cosmetics, Any Avon or time—it's profitabie! Ci or write ay. 44508 or tine PO x 560. GIRL TO CLERK IN D ¥ a ie : -." CLEAN- eit ag TR mont SHIFT. Boy Drive-in. 2490 y Hien * . PART TIME. Must have references and own Call FE 5-6873. 9 LADY TELEPHONE ¢ CARY & it not ener; Fis teat. Se comes ce RPS LIBRARY AID CITY OF PONTIAC 40 hour alary $3575 —~ . Fev sal, ineresting Mork 3 Se a aeey preinig Sea. Ne. tee Ge sek canes. T APPEARING 25-35. Ligh da coer, Es Gea Oakiand, oe cated WOMAN WANTS DAY work. FE 8-3362. . & manufactu will be os mee eer yong y an bag a od Eee ze Ae RUN “and ft sho ——S © and gift be ree ee oie sass is et at ath Goodyear. mum § years. Part-Time Man tea Waked Call FE 6-008, Ask for Mr, r. County residence Mini- _8-8203_ Between 4 & 7 p.m. _ PART TIME MEN WANTED, FE anette a —— MAIN- BE gg Pull PLUS COMM! SSION, Ramil - Dallas Ving, \. | Crestines, Lae eee irs, lacs en yg tion « oeessity the rds, Ra. orth- __ Western. 6-3510. ~ SECRETARIAL AND GENERAL OFFICE. ~ SHORTHAND: "REQUIRED . § days. No eve- salon, Call , MEAT COOKS VEGETABLE COOKS youre? COOKS BAKERS PIE, ROLLS & CAKES ‘SALAD MAKERS DESSERT MAKERS DISH WASHERS POT & PAN WASHERS HOSTESSES . CASHIERS WAITRESSES BUS GIRLS. . "E VELYN EDWARDS L COUNSELING VOCATIONAL - €02 Community Bank Bidg. FOR A SECURE TOMORROW SECT’Y With Shorthand ff take ilte have a position as Prt. Sec- retary the vice of «s SECT’Y No Shorthand rd you'd like te be ® secretary heve a are Tear we ns Bee Miss Carison at Career Cen- ter Bi Riker Big PE 20416. “Instructions LEARN TO DRIVE WAY AT “SAPE-WAY” DRIVER . TRAINING THE SANE SCHOOL. Bus. PE 22253. Res FE 6-165 : TT MEN ded For fmm as JET ENGIN train for Jet iearehe Poy Gas Turbine and a tem lalists. Train now for ; top-flight positions in the newest ‘et once Isbor-shortage | for full informayin, JET ENGINE D iON, Northwest Schools. Dept. JX26 nee ee Se ck ste sereeses ees AGE Socm I ban ee Majors in rel For A Good Paying Joh Air Conditioning, Heating, Refrigeration EVENING CLASSES Start Week of September 16th _ FREE CONSULTATION Evenings, By Appointment ge oe DAY, JULY 10, 1957 i A iss ee e Z Ai | £ } fs his : jee NE see |e oe ; ; J H ‘Worst.in World’ Says rites South African Mayor Hits New York Street Signs : Nestadt is a member of the) from half way around the world United Party, the chief opposition | took Lansing where: they| mu nine ines snes et te wormn and ote weaning MSU at Til Cad the new. withe : . cae ' vcr, "” tts Seymour Lake’ De ‘wire./insects which might damage a Setegnten, ~~ or ! plants Friday. Store-Wide Sale Starts Tomorrow : f it Fi i? & a i Hi it. * if] ; T'm for South] [ fe zi i 5 t te § i zg ite ne ‘Native Women Thriving Garden to hear evangelist Billy a *'on Mlegal Liquor Trade many new buildings have been cm One cation $850. woman, fined + aetna was Jost in the’ paid the amount in spot cash. Pro-| . jtecting them are a small army of last visited America eee ago. “I I one who complains. he said, Se ee ia weautis tas Tubs Made Slip-Proof meat ae ORANGEBURG, N.Y. — A new, the United States colorless lotion packaged in al realize the actual spray applicator has been devel-' position . . . it is not as black oped to make bathtubs slip-proof —. . If they|The manufacturer Strang one ap they would plication of the lotion lasts for’ weeks. : For the best approach to perfect Gin drinks... _ Bing to Gorton’ sthe one gin with sper : ' fiqueur quality! Gordon's brings smooth per- fection to drinks . ; -smooth pleasure to you: ‘Sprameaie Buy 1 sq. yd. Plastic Surface Floorcovering at °1.29 sq. yd.-Get Second sq. yd. for lc © Exclusive Harmony House Patterns A 3.58 Value Keep your floors looking their best, cover them with wear- tested Harmony House plastic surface floor-covering! It's 2 sq. yds. the toughest resin used in floorcovering today .. . it takes for on | lots of wear with half the care. Colors stay bright. Select y your favorite pattern in Harmony House colors at Sears r Selection Limited . Broadloom Carpeting Low as 5.95 sq. yd. . . . Get Pad for le Both for as Low as 95 | Yi. Choose any broadloom carpeting priced low as $5.95 - ‘square yard to $15.95 square yard and the -wafile- ) weave tug pad will be included for only | cent extra, ‘. i Wide selection of colors and patterns. Sears will meas- ure, install any size room. Call today for your tree 4 es- ’ timate.: <. ) Save °1.97... Buy One Picture... Get 2nd for Ic A 3.96 Value Both for : See this beautiful assortment of pictures at a huge sav ings. Choice of Gold, Black or Maple frames; foil back- ground. Choice of several beautiful scenes. Be SA. kas ns si acces) 2 OS BPO WO cc vc tans .2 for 3.99 Lamps and Mirrors—Second Floor *ee eee eee Ca Save 8.94! A $43.90 Value! Both iss 3496 | | Attracitve, matching table cover is. yours for Ic re you, pur- chase this vinyl, ‘umbrella. 2-pe. vena oF gen springless ‘steel - frame. or green. Save 79.89... Buy 3-Pc. Bedroom Get Mattress and Box Spring for 1c A 318.90 Value 01 All for ete Down Limed Ocak finished, modem design , .. 3 pieces include bookcase bed, chest and double dresser, plate glass mirror.- 312-coil mattress and 312-coil box ‘spring is ‘yours for just le when you purchase the suite. Buy 2 Step Tables at 23.90 All 91 Get 12.95 Coffee Table for 1c Pot Down i j : $36. 95 voi Just imagine, get 3. occasional tables be the (price you would normally pay for 2. Graceful styling ra mahogany finished solid hardwood, miar-resistant plas. ie ' tic top, brass térie _—e Ee * dak SAVE 39.94 Buy 1 Swivel Rocker— Get cf 2nd one for I*! j Both for A 79.90 39%. Value Handsome. ¥ ond cotton fy deck” SEARS | 5 -- Today's Radio SaaS -- WIR, (760) CKLW, (e090) WWJ, (000) WCAR, (1130) WXYZ, (1270) WPON, (1400) WJBK, (1490) TONIGHT 11:66—WJR, Lenhart WJBK, Reid 1:00—WIR. | Wen arren WWJ, Witching Hovr WCAR, bp 1. Malone News, Hufnotiand bs gg ee WXYZ, fop of Town WPON, Early Bird Club W2¥2. Sunshine rte, Wattrick CRLW. Hews, 9:00—WJR. William Sheeban| CKLW, News, Davies mee WIBK Reva, Kasem Wwi, Min ute Parade | WCAR, News, B. Sgn a Spincrama ‘t reakiast Gu = — WPON, News, 8 CKLW, News, Davi ee oo fewes Weather | 20-Wm Mune, | Wane Mews, Ocoee, | WEZ News ‘Argund Town €:39-WJR, Dinner Date | WJBK. News, Kasem WPON, News, Shanley CKLW, Gabriel Heatter wave oe M WPON, Music With Mason 9:30 WIR, Jack Harris 0- WIR. Me Perkine E —— Phen JBK, Ti CKLW THURSDAY MORNING KDW, Austin Grant Don Mcleod 0:00— Godtre . wae al M 6:00--WJR, News, a ews pgp hres n= va — pe Op . Music With Mason | WWJ. News, Bob Maxw WXYZ, My True Story WPON. Baseball 99G—WIR, Guest House mate ee ee CKLW. News, Homecha WXYZ, EP. Morgan WIBK. Clark Reid WAR, News, MB. Beal! “ways News Around Towe po af Pulton Lewis Jr. WCAR. News, B. Allen ween. America, 30 ‘ness CKLW. on bd iK, Casey WPON, Country Roundup 0:30—WW4J, Bandstand WCAR. Sports Parade WPON, Music With Mason a gy yc Agrictt|* WXYZ, Girl Marries $:00—WJR, Pat Buttram 7:30—WWJ 3 Star Extra CKLW, Guy Nunn Gren, "Gu aeenhs |. Weawh phakomatoses Matinge WXYZ, Mickey WJBK: News, Reid z 11:00—WW4J, NBC News CKLW, Buq Davies CKLW, Music CAR, News WCAR, Ne Ree, 700--WJR, Amos ‘nh’ Andy WPON, Early Bd. spts. WXYZ, Paul Winter . CKLW. Fanaa 36— W, House Party eee ee ne TT | Te, Dem Ente WJBK, News, Reid WW4, Hilitop House con ee We wae, Bens WoAR News, B alerts WXY2, News, McKesais :38—WW ightline PON, CEL ews, Chase WXYZ, Mickey Shorr Saw —, Toby David 11:99 20-4 Time for Music Pe Shy Walrod : 00 9:00—WIR, World WEAR Hews Alea | CKLW. Robert ¢ Burley WWJ, News, Confessions WXYZ, Short = :30-Wsk Muif Han’ | WBK. Clerk Reid WaYR, w WCAR a ag WEYZ News, Well THURSDAY AFTERNOON | 4:36—wJR, Music Hall : : CKLW, Charles Warren 12:00—Ww J. Vinal, Parm WWJ, Jim Deland 9:30-——WJIR, Update WJBK, News, Reid WWJ, News, Faye Blizabeth| W. News, McKenzie p we CHLW, Platter £xp. wi News WXYZ, Curtain Calls CKLW, Ne 16:06--WIR, Sym y Hall ywa. ie gg at wink won one Ceeres awa ows. ta Deland ww Al ua WAYZ, News, Woll WCAR, News, B. Martyn WXYZ, Wattrick, Sports Fs Ie Yd ge SHEE wets ene ows, ie 12:30--WJR, Time for Music . . CKLW, G. Heatter WCAR, Hews, Allen Wwx¥2, ‘Hews, Lady ot woe & kel iis ga ee Re i > versa: we iruce Martyn ews, “CELW. Piatter Exp. warn Pred Welt CKLW, News, E. Chase WPON, Chuck Lewis Organize Party for Australians Irish Aren't ‘Satisfied With Opposing British in Their Country Alone MELBOURNE ®-Not satisfied with their so - far - unsuccessful campaign to take Northern Ire- land away from the British, the Irish have organized a party to make Australia a republic. Richard Mullins, secretary of the new Australian Republican party, held his first press confer- ence today—for one reporter—and announced a platform of ‘‘Aus- tralia for Australians.’’: * * * - “Today Australia no longer wants to be dominated either by American capitalism or English imperialism,” he said. He said the party is planning an w' republican anthem and a new for this hitherto staunchly loyal member. of the British Commonwealth * * * Mullins, a’ 35-year-old native of Shanagolden, County Limerick, came to Australia five years ago and now teaches in a Melbourne high school, The party was organized at a public meeting a week ago at- tended by two people, Mullins and Irish truck driver John Murray, Murray was elected party presi-/ Walker, they’re reviving Walker tales. dent. By today the party mem-| bership had swelled to 10, most of ig he faced & noisy crowd, he didn’t speak at all—he just) moved his lips. Soon everybody’d he saying, “Sssh, what's Then he had to have something to say. them Irish. Drinking Pastors May Turn Others Into Drunkards LOMA LINDA, Calif. @ — El- bow-bending pastors who take an occasional social cocktail may be, responsible for turning some of| their parishioners into skid row drunkards. * * * This is the opinion of Dr. Win- ton H, Beaven of Washington, D.C., who yesterday told the eighth annual Institute of Scien- tific Studies for the Prevention of Alcoholism: ‘’The minister may be able to hold his liquor, but some saint in the church who fol- lows his example and takes to drink may end up on skid row. x* * * “If the minister drinks, members of the congregation will do likewise.” Strategy Holds Fate of Hells Canyon Dam WASHINGTON (® — Survival of Hells Canyon Dam _ legislation— symbol of a great political and power fight—depended today on parliamentary strategy. * * * You Want to Be on TV? Try Jack Paar Trick — | By EARL NEW YORK — Broadway and Hollywood Comedian, Jack Paar has told me quite an amazing tale of how he got into and became so ad glib. “As a boy living in Canton and Cleveland, O., and Jackson and Detroit, Mich., I. was sickly,” recalled Jack, radio and TV... JACK “I learned to speak without job as an announcer.” “And that started you on your way to success?” I asked, Jack who's taking over NBC’s “Tonight” show shortly. “Well, not exactly. stuttered — Anyway, the moral is that as Some he became a famous TV personality. * Fi *. Due to Bob Hope’s “Beau When Jimmy was making his woman said it must be hard replied, “Yes, lady, you can burning hours after I've gone.” Mayor John Hylan, once asked him, “What would you do if you ever had Jimmy re- ‘torted, “I'd do it in half a day.” MY day's work to do?” THE MIDNIGHT EARL... ‘n’ roll show ... Vieter Borge Vegas .. . Errol Flynn may hake movie in Australia... and as an investor. x « * >» That's earl, brother. + “to be on radio , . , because I I'd make the commercials last longer.” An. excited autograph fan bit singer LaVerne Baker’s finger at a N.Y. rock | a whopping $480,000 contract in Las . Mrs. Glenn Miller may sue a film company for alleged “unauthorized use” of his music on records... Carol Stevens has a record out soon— “Satin Doll.” ... Walter Slezak’s on his TV series will be $2,000 a week then|- - Paul Douglas is ad three-way winner with “Hole in the @ Head” — he collects salary, percentage, TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: The way those Russian officials are being fired wholesale, you'd think they were TV comics. (Copyright 1957) ° WILSON “and my father got me a little work-| bench near my bed. “There I made little radio sets ... but I couldn't hope stuttered. * * * *I read somewhere about Demosthenes becoming an or- ator by talking with pebbles’ in his mouth. “I would take the buttons out of my mother’s sewing basket, put them in my mouth, gnd go inte the base- ment and read. stuttering and at 16, I got a of the sponsors wish I still soon as Jack lost his buttons, * James” picture about Jimmy great reputation as an orator, he saying?” Once when a te be Mayor of N.Y., Jimmy see my light at City Hall His predecessor, the late will sign inger take 7 his next CAROL Butfalo Crusade Howse Interior Committee Dem-! ocrats, anxious to get a Senate-| passed bill through the House,) planned to pit strategy against voting strength in an effort to -keep alive chances for a big at the Idaho-Oregon border. * * * Republicans, counting on help! ‘November if an a A Bit be-| The crowd increased total at-) two Southern Democrats, claimell enough strength to kill| | the authorization legislation. | from / federal project! wonld ‘flood the sites of three! smaller dams being built hy te) Idaho Power Co. with the Eisen- hower, administration's blessing. High Lightning Loss 'WASHINGTON—Lightning in the d States sales gd ‘an éstimated | 000,000 worth of \damage to buildings during each/ calen-| rye } Called Possible by Billy Graham NEW YORK # — Evangelist] federal dam in the Snake River Billy Graham said last night) there’ $ a slight chance he will hold| 'a crusade in Buffalo, N.Y., next! comes available. His staff confirmed monthiong | crusades’ in San. Francisco -for| April 1958 and in Charlotte, N.C., ijfor October 1958. *. *_* Graham told’ 19,000 \persons in Madison Square Garden last night that “heaven would be hell on earth to some of you.’ Sinners by their very nature, he said, ‘would feel out of place in heaven.” 8 ae |admits he’s a sinner.” Everyone pe said, “‘has a disease the Bible calls sin.” * * * Repentance of sin and a spirit- ual regeneration are the way to heaven,” he said. “You can have a new life... ifrom the moment when you let ‘Christ in your life,” he said. jtendance for Graham's New York ‘crusade to. 930,000. wok e | At the evangelist’s call 568 per- “‘rowiair:s TV HIGHLIGHTS _|s:00—-() Sport Focus (D Popeye. _MISSES TELEVISION — Despite her stardom in movies, Eva Marie Saint misses “the excitement of TV." The actress is shown hens sexton in Hew York wee som Addrell. + | her husband, Jeffrey Hydan, and '6:20-—-(4) Box Four. |6:30-—-(7) Disneyland. Romantic life 6: 45—(4) News, 7:00—(7) Disney (cont.) (9) ‘Mi. lion $ Movie. Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell in “Brigham Finds Movies Less Exciting. Actress Recalls Being} Jack-of-All-Trades _in Early TV Days By DICK KLEINER NEW YORK (NEA) — Eva Ma- rie Saint went from TV to movie stardom—and now she says she misses “the excitement of TV." * * * rie says, “You have a detached feeling about your work, like you were working in a vacuum. But TV— ah, that’s like a first night all the time.” In her early days on TV, she did everything, worked on almost all) the big and little shows, did mod- \eling and commercials. * * * “T did.” she says, “gosh, I don't know how many—thousands, I guess. From ‘47 through ‘56 I was doing TV all the time. In those’ 9 or 10 years I only took out un-) employment checks five weeks, so you get an idea. SHE APPLAUDED “The first thing I did was some- Show. I got $10. I applauded—and| not even on camera. “After I'd been working for a year, I began to teach TV. I taught a class for models, in cdse they) got on TV. With my one year, I was an expert. I got $5 a week for teaching three classes."’ Eva Marie Saint—and the Eva Marie part of her name, she in- sists, is all a -tegitimate first a ee eee ee one is an Albany, N.Y., girl. Her last name — it's Scotch — started her out on the radio acting. : “As a child in school,”’ she says, “the teachers would take one look at the name Saint and decide I -|was a natural for the part of an angel in the Christmas play. My mother was forever sewing ad wings.” * * * but now she isn't sure. Out at the » Paramount studios in Hollywood, iS Bate | |she met a man in the property de- =. ipartment named Saint. He came i ifrom Iowa; so did Eva Marie's father. ) (SOMETHING ALIKE She thinks they look something f jalike. And she thinks he must be; some sort of relative. So now she? guesses she’s the second Saint in) show business, * * * —“A Hatful of Rain” and “Rai “T don’t work too hard any more,” she says. “I don’t want to do too much in the first place— and I don’t want to do anything any more ions it is important.” Fled With Loose Nose PHILADELPHIA. » — Police ber nose and carrying a toy pistol surprised him inside the house and he fled, his nose flapping in ‘ithe breeze, without taking any-|! thing. Answer te Previous Pussie INIOIVIAIS 1] LANL | 1 | he | aeenat ii. PATTI EINE a Uae j SITIAR Te INISrd0l PRL A, Hh. | C3 ba [ ies IAIN] i | M034 EBL 4 INTO IN: - LEIBIN TT ake i Re ICAML i INIT Als iS ON Sie fai. IPS! = | IAIN] eye] “and you don't see what| ‘you've done for months, Neither |does anyone els¢. thing called the Borden Variety, i She always said that she was) _\the first Saint in show business, 49 She's just finished two pictures) 41 Males , : . Ty 45 Scottish plant tree County’’—and is taking it easy.! said a man wearing a huge rub-| 5 broke into a home. A neighbor Hollywood obi in 1948 Returns as Matinee Idol role in the movie version * 7 * apparently was ora part because he loves to sing. * * * The actor arrived on the liner United States with his wife and ‘his wife’s father, Pietro Bertolini. Bertolini said he would go to Byrn \Mawr, Pa., to visit a brother, ‘Anthony Bertolini, a sports pro- moter, whom he has not seen for 48 years. Brazzi plans to visit Philadel- phia, Boston, Cleveland, Chicago land Detroit before reporting in | Hollywood. \Mavreen O'Hara Suing Confidential Magazine SANTA MONICA, Calif; (—Act- ress Maureen O'Hara wants a mil- lion dollars damages from Confi- idential magazine, which_ printed an article about her in the March 1957 issue. rs * * Her libel suit yesterday said the article was false and impugned her character. * * * Her attorneys included Confi- dential’s publisher Robert Harri- son among the defendants and also named up to 3,000 John Does who sell the magazine at their | stands. j i i vs. Willie Vaughan in 10-round middleweight bout. (9) Homer Bell. (4) This is Your Life, Jack Dempsey (repeat). (2) Fox Hour. Maria Rivo, Ricardo Montalban star in mystery British diplo- mat's valet deals valuable infor- mation, sells to Nazi spies. $:30—(7) Boxing (cont.). (9) Un- expected. MariesWindsor in Playing for at the dancing Walled Lake Casino Ballroom this’ Friday and Saturday evenings be Richard Maltby and his orches- tra, ACROSS ea | i— Harbor, | Maine | 4@ Tropical plant | & Musical passage 26 Continent 27 Female rabbit +4 Middle 2 Body organs |34 Acting ruler | Fox Hour (cont.). Young.” (4) Masquerade. (2) Viel Sag po datge ia ® -\¢:86—(2) On the Farm Front.