t ee LOS The Wadihar U.S. Weather Bureau Ferecast Warm, Humid, © , Chance of Showers ; — Page 2) . ‘| * i | E PONTIAC PRE Saiith YEAR xkkk«k eee MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1959 —44 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS They're Building a Home PIONEERS AT WORK—Two of Michigan’s 59ers peel logs as they build in the Susitna River Valley of Alaska. They and Ray are Erik Eklund (left) f their new lives in the Alaskan Kula. The of * 6s 59ers look forward to.the day when they have finally established a thriving rural community wilderness. Writes of Alaska Visit With Michigan’s 59ers {Editor's Note: This is the first of a two-part report to The Pon- tiac Press from Howard Shelley of Pontiac who visited Michigan's ‘59ers in the Susitna. River Valley, _ Talkeetna, Alaska. Shelley, a former secretary of the Oakland County Sportsmen's Club, assists Mort Neff in his TV program, “Michigan Out- doors.’ He was accompanied to Alaska by his wife. By HOWARD SHELLEY TALKEETNA, Alaska — Today, we visited the 59ers. Frem the tiny village of Tal-| driven freight canoe made the keetna, an Alaska railroad whistle | stop and former gold mining sup-, ply center, we ferried across the the river on the ice and left there treacherous half-mile wide Susitna: River. We wore the Mae West-type life preservers, because the swirling undertow of the swift and onrushing water frequently | meant a ducking. the 22-foot outboard- | However, trip in fine style. | Cars and trucks taken across “Asks President for Protection ‘Weary’ of Brickbats, Bombs and Bullets LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) — Gov. Orval E. Faubus said today that if Little Rock police had failed to eontrol anti- integration violence at Central High School Wednesday, he “was prepared” to take over with State Police and the National Guard. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. w—An in- tegration leader whose home has been the target of bombs, bullets and bricks has appealed to Presi- dent Eisenhower for protection. But integration of two high schools here continued peacefully. « * * Mrs, L. C. Bates, president of the Arkansas chapter of the Na- tional Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People, sent Eisenhow- er a telegram Thursday. She said her pleas for aid from local au- thorities were futile. Asked what form of protection she wanted, Mrs. Bates sald, ‘‘I don’t care how they do it. They can set up a machine gun in my front yard if they want to. I'm just tired of all these harass- ments.” At Gettysburg, Pa., the tem- porary White House withheld com- ment on the telegram. Acting Press |:; Secretary Wayne Hawks said it had not been seen by the President. * * * Hawks said the telegram was ad- dressed to the White House in Washington where it was not re- ceived until this morning. If the usual procedure is fol- : lowed, Hawks said, the telegram| © will be referted to Atty. Gen. Wil- liam P. Rogers. COMPLETE WEEK Four Negroes return to Central ~ and Hall high schools today to|: ‘round out the first school week. Their attendance provoked no in-|:; cidents Thursday and no disturb-| ; ances were reported inside the po-|: lice-patrolled schools. rs, Bates has led the inte- gration movement here for the past three years, Her plea for protection came after her Kouse |. guard and two other Negroes were ‘arrested by state police. Mrs, Bates, at a press confer- ence, related list of incidents| which have occurred at her home in southwest Little Rock, bombs (Continued ‘on Page 2, Col 6) | Woman in Little Rock. | about her bust. Very Rude, Says Miss Universe to Bust Rumor _ TOKYO » — Miss Universe returned to her native Japan to- day on the tail of a typhoon and in the midst of another storm “Very rude,’’ snapped Akiko. Kojima in denying a report of a Tokyo surgeon that he had inject- ed her with a cupful of plastic to enlarge her bust and help her to a 37-23-38 figure. x * * “I would like to confront that doctor in front of everyone in this room,” declared the 22-year- old fashion model, the first Jap- anese to win the worldwide beauty contest at Long Beach, Calif. Goes Faster, Deeper PORTLAND, England (#}—The cemmander of the Skipjack said today this newest U. S. nuclear submarine “went faster than any other submarine has gone sub- merged and went deeper than any other sub’? at one stage of her recent trans-Atlantic ,cross- ing. Cmdr. W. W. Bemrens, 37, declined to reveal either the sub- merged speed or the diving us about, to haul * * * bo First we called upon Mrs. Mar- last winter were used ino Sik and her one-year-old daugh- ter, Linda, Marino, president of the ’59ers, had departed with a ‘group of men for Canada to pur- chase horses. HAVE 160 ACRES The Siks reside in their com- fortable house trailer, with their 160 acres fronting on a reason- ably good gravel road that leads to a distant gold mine — but no where else! All of the homesteads, each a quarter-mile wide and a mile deep, adjoin each other and front on this gravel road. Outside the trailer home, Mrs. Sik uses a wood-burning cook stove — come rain or shine— on which all their food is pre- pared. Once a week six huge loaves of bread are baked. Considerable assistance in home- stead living was obtained from’) the Alaska Extension Service in: the way of first hand advice and. brochures and pamphlets. Supervised by his mother, a will get next year’s schooling course.» The women have become expert berry pickers and each has al- ready canned dozens and dozens of jars of jams and jellies for next winter. Wild strawberries, high- bush cranberries, rose hips and currently an abundance of wild of fruit. A luscious crop of blue- berries will be harvested in the near future. TO CAN SALMON in July and August, and already, great quantities of the tasty red fish have been canned. The impending big game season is near at hand (Aug. 20) and depth. By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG Seventeen - year-- old Edward Nickel qualifies as a “thinking “man.” : He's not only : sizzling wires, but with sizzling . skillets, too, and he recom- mends it. * The girls will tell you. Although Fd’s specialty in 4-H Club endeavors are elec- trical projects, he beat the i females at their own game in the Oakland County 4-H Club Eair baking competition, The only male entry, Ed's © pineapple upside down cake took a first place ‘blue ribbon - and a trophy from the Oakland = County Farm Bureau. * A member of the West Bloom- * field 4-H Club, Ed says, ‘‘I just ~ follow the’ recipe a lot of cooking at the Nickel home, 5965 Middle Belt Rd., Birmingham. He likes tq. bake mostly, but has prepared din- ner for the family, his 2 parents and a younger brother and sister, | e Beats Girls at sharp with ~ = The young chet says he does ° LEEPER GLEE ELLE LAR. LES AN, SOOM IIL (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Their EP) NICKEL “My parents really taught me hew to cook,” says Ed, “and I attended a weekly cooking class for a year as a 4-H Club project. young pioneer, Junior Rubino, 10,' from an accredited correspondence | raspberries offer a wide variety) Alaska's huge salmon run occurs | _ because I like to eat. —+ Air Force to Try Nose Capsule Catch in Pacific Discoverer V Launched}: Yesterday, Will Eject Cone Today VANDENBERG AIR |FORCE BASE, Calif. (?— A fantastic game of catch will be played thousands of feet above the Pacific today if all goes well with satellite Discoverer V. The object: to snare the |satellite’s ejected 300- /pound nose capsule. Discoverer V_ blasted off its launching pad at noon Thursday. | It is circling the earth every 94) minutes, sending back loud, clear signals. to Rep. Robert P. Griffin (right M. Landrum, for final action on their ported by SNES Fisenhowe Eight C1i9 Flying Boxcars are | -poised on Hawaii for the attempt | to catch the instrument-packed | capsule as it floats down under a | parachute near the islands. The Air Force says the chance of success is about 1 in 1,000. * * * Here is how it proposes to the capsule out of the air: Cc sales “an Senseless As Discoverer V makes its 16th Slayings pass, a tracking station in Alaska | ISLIP, N.Y. will trigger the ejection mechan- | ism. On the next pass, the satel- | lite, repositioned by compressed | Henry Bloeth, t il it fo eet te SD ne ‘teens as an inc es psychopath downward. Al the Gésigniied Gnoment, ex- who strangled cats for fun, con- plosive springs and bolts will sep-|fessed last night that he had killed | arate the capsule from its vehicle, two men and a woman for no more reason. “If I had had more bullets, I would have shot more people,’’ Suf-! ~|folk County District Attorney John’ second stage of the rocket which/P. Cohalan Jr. quoted Bloeth as_ bore it into space. The vehicle is) | Saying. expected to continue orbiting for about 10 days. RADIO GUIDE The capsule will be slowed down by a retro-rocket, A switch operat- ‘ed by forces of deceleration will! irelease a parachute. 7, diagnosed in his ~~ LPAI OPO Picture on Page 2 PAPA AA flies on Bioeth’s hand,’’ Cohalan said. “He just rapped them and killed them, just like thabw all killed within Bloeth’s victims, Guided by radio signals from the descending capsule, the Fly- ing Boxcars will move in to try | to grab the parachute with tra- peze apparatus suspended from the planes. They have about 10 minutes to make a catch. i * * * j If they fail, the Military Sea, ‘Transportation Service ships Ha-. \waii Victory and Dalton Victory) will attempt to pluck the capsule from the sea. Labor Controls Bi Wins in Shock Vote HAPPY SPONSORS — Smiles come easily after the House c¢ “These people were just like an eight-day period, were all night} * ! AP Wirephoto ) and Rep. Phil by organized labor. Griffin, a Republican from leared the way Traverse City, is a former Pontiae factory Jabor-reform bill, sup- worker whose parents live in Pontiac. Landrum r but opposed is a Georgia Democrat. + A Former Pontiac Factory Worker Rep. Griffins Star Rises A former Pontiac factory worker has been catapulted ED — Francis into the headlines by the success of the labor reform: comparatively bill he sponsored. There was little doubt. that the personal prestige of Rep. Robert P. Griffin (R-Mich) would take a ‘sharp upturn in Republi- We're Having can circles as a result % gq Heat Wave; ‘tentative passage yesterday, by the House of the Lan- Rain May Help | daim- Griffin bill. 6am. ....11 10 a.m. 52... RA Son of Mr, and Mrs. J. A. Grif-; g aim. ....76 Noon ....... 90 ifin, 987 Argyle St., the young con-) g a.m.-....80 1 p.m. . 92 | | gressman worked in Pontiac to put _ |himself through college. Pontiac continued to swelter in | Just 35 and serving only his hot, humid weather today, with the! third year in Congress, the Trav- mercury soaring to 9 atl p.m. | erse City Republican has already | More of the same is forecast for | won close attention from) big- tonight, although there is a possi- |. wigs in his party. bility of showers. The bill he’ cosponsored was per- It will be partly cloudy and sonally backed by President Eisen- hower and, reportedly, Griffin was; S. Weather Bureau To warm, the U. reports. Low tonight will be handpicked to write it by House) ; GOP leader Charles A. Halleck) Saturday will be another scor- (R-Ind) icher with the high reaching 87 and * * * the low again in the 70's. Generally | Griffin and Phil M. Landrum fair and cooler is the outlook for (D-Ga) are both lawyers who work | Sunda) hard behind the congressional! For the next five days tem- Scenes where important legislative | peratures will average about three | decisions are made. idegrees above the normal high of | é é hl. ELECTED IN 1956 '81 and normal low of 61 ‘Many Return to Homes TAIPEI, Formosa «® — The | governor of Formosa said today that 147,305 of the 248,184 per- | sons driven from their homes in | last weekend’s flood disaster | have returned to the damaged dwellings. | FRANCIS H. BLOETH Cae Game “But to tell the truth,’ he says laughingly, ‘'I like to cook I like to make cupcakes the best, also good German food, and I can |. x eat rhubarb till I get a belly | He was arrested tianday for a ache." ‘non-fatal * ‘Russian roulette” hold- It took Ed an hour and a half up and as a “‘prime suspect” in to bake his prize winning pine- the killings, but he insisted he was apple upside down cake in his innocent until last night, when his mother’ s electric kitchen. \wife and his attorney pleaded with “I do the dishes and I'm very ‘|him for more than an hour to tell neat in the kitchen,” he says. . the truth they suspected. “But you should see the mess “I felt all along he had done it,” my father makes.” Mrs, Jane Bioeth, 25, told news- Asked if the rest of the men as she and the attorney, Sid- . -iney R. Siben, made the first an- Nickel family enjoys his cook- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) ing, Ed replied, “They nae t | complained yet.” i. The. Birmingham youngste e Show" winner this In Today’ s Press workers on duty alone in eating} Long Island towns, | the | slayings. Police found one in ‘Lake | Ronkonkoma just after daylight to- iday, 80 minutes after Bloeth stood on a road by the lake and showed | ‘how he had thrown it < the dark. | ex is a “State Show” winner this year with his electrical project. He likes to read and dance and © | **)*))"#Mynhenes wes = does a soft shoe routine with Comics «peel od yore 8 another boy and two girls at ~| County News ... ........ +» 43 ° the 4H Fair. They will enter | Editorials =~... saa their act in "State Show’’ in. Farm and Garden ........ 24 September. — Marketa oi3.ececaes esses 36 A graduate of Birmingham — Obituaries ...... Se neideGnute 15 High School, Ed will enter the . | Sports ........... ssivaisie's 29-33 University of Michigan's col- Theaters . 2.20.0... 5.000. 26-27 lege of engineeririg this fall. TV and Radio Sarees .. 43 5 Wilson, Earl ....... Scns OS oe ad Women's Pages eervessaes 19-21 pre MERIC LEE BER > isubcommittee iserved places in three different eastern| Bloeth said he threw away both | 32 caliber guns used in the) will be a= hittle cooler jhower landslide, Griffin became a- lWednesday > > ‘top GOP member ot we labor py recipitation will total about one- which held three half inch as showers fall tonight months of hearings on reform bills. nq ApAUT About Mond. A former infantryman who the temperature dropped overseas 14 months in, high of 90 degrees at 4 Wowk War iI, Griffin is married yesterday to 7] at 4a and has three children. from py it: nm. Landrum, 49, of Jasper, Ga., is expected to be on the joint House- Senate committee on the final , Jabor bill, but Griffin won't be. | Landrum, serving. his fourth | term, is chairman of ‘the House | subcommittee on labor reform, Griffin thought his bill would have a chance in the Senate if it is | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Typhoon Georgia Rips Through Honshu Humphrey Plans to Win WASHINGTON «® — Sen, Hu- bert M. Humphrey of Minnesota said today he plans to enter the Wisconsin Democratic presiden tial primary next April 5 and ex- pects to win it. Chinese Reds Geniecing TOKYO ®—Red China's gov ernment and military and parts leaders are holding a_ top-level conference,, Peiping radio closed today, LJ TOKYO i—Typhoon Georgia i i 5 | ° | ripped today through central ‘No Survivors Honshu, Japan's main island, leaving 102 persons dead, -112 missing, 618 injured and 177.104 driven from their hones. | National police said the storm flooded 95,000 acres of farmland, | destroyed 1,814 homes, sank 11 ships and cast adrift or damaged 23 others. They added | figures were incomplete. * * * i . col _, , interview Thursday. Georgia cut’ a 150-mile-wide | "DENVER, Colo. (AP)—U. War II. . * their / path through central Honshur in| about four hours. She reared | out into the Sea of Japan but | weathermen warned the ty- phoon could veer and_ strike northern Honshy and Hokkaido, Japan's northernmost main land, greatest problems, adding: * —rveechnemmeinbeesleanlatt * There were no survivors in is- Sunday) with a. First elected in the 1956 ‘Eisen. 'warming trend Monday through, dis- | * Vice Adm. Charles Lockwood (ret.), former chief of the Navy's Pacific submarine fleet, made the disclosure in an Senators May Okay Measure in Same Form 229-201 Action Calling for Curbs on Racketeers Pleases President . WASHINGTON (AP) —The House today passed and sent to the Senate a bill to curb racketeering and abuses in labor-management re- lations. WASHINGTON (Pi — A |high-riding coalition of House Republicans and “Southern Democrats was ready today to wrap up and send to the Senate a labor controls bill backed by | President Eisenhower. _ Only a formal vote on passage, delayed: by a tech- nicality, was needed to send the measure on for Senate approval in its present form or for a compromise of dif- fering Senate and House versions. On a surprising 229-201] roll-call vole, the House. late Thursday vave all but final approval fo stringent —_ labor- management reforms that had been opposed by organized labor. and House Democratic leaders, Labor and House supporters of a middle-of-the-read controls bill were stunned by the unexpected margin of their loss. It gave President Eisenhower a -smushing triun®ph in the bitter month-long struggle over the ex- tent of curbs on racketeering and abuses of power in the labor-man- agement field, From his vacation headquarters at Gettysburg, Pa., Eisenhower hailed the House action as giving cause for ‘‘real hope that the Con- gress will ultimately pass a good labor reform bill.” said the House-passed bill would ‘deal effectively with abuses disclosed’? by the -Senate L.a bor- Management committee headed by Sen. John L. McClellan | (D-Ark.) * * * But AFL-CIO President George Meany said in a statement, “It was not a vote on the issue of corruption. It was a vote to punish ronest labor.” Meany called the House action “a victory for antilabor forces— the NAM (National Assn. of ' Manufacturers) and the Cham. ber of Commerce.” The administration-backed | bill, sponsored by, Representatives Phil M. Landrum (D-Ga) and Robert P Griffin (R-Mich), meets most of the objectives set forth by Fisenhower in a nationwide radio- TV appeal last week for ‘tough’ reforms, SWEEPING BANS ' Among other things, it provides isweeping bans on secondary boy- cotts and “hot cargo’ agreements. ‘prohibits ‘blackmail’ picketing to | force employes into labor unions, requires unions to report their fi- nances fo the secretary of labor, prescribes financial accountability for unions, -and sets up new rules handling ‘no man’s land’ labor disputes. for Secondary boycotts and “‘hot cargo’ clauses are sometimes used to apply indirect ey (( ontinted on nt Fase = Col. ‘ ‘U. S. Sank Own Subs’ S. planes and ships sank two U. S. submarines and damaged 31 others in attacks result - ‘ing from false or uncertain identification during World * * He said submarine identification is one of the ane ‘We are making great strides in this field, but we still have a long way to go.” Lockwood said the submarine Sea Wolf was destroyed by a U. S. plane and a-¢destroyer north of New Guinea. The Dorado was sunk by a plane in the Caribbean, x * either sinking, he sald. i bd } w as “a P.0. Politics | County Dems Charge) GOP With Manipulation of Postmasterships © ; Requests Probe Sen. Patrick V. McNamara (D- 'Mich) is studying a request from ithe Oakland County Democratic) ‘ Committee that he investigate “po-| litical manipulations’ of postmas- | terships in the county. } The request corhes on the heels; of Republican. charges that Me-| 'Namara was holding up confirma-) jtion of GOP-nominated postmas- liters — including Pontiac's Robert i 'C. Miller — hoping Democrats ‘could make nominations of their own if they land in the White House next year. _ The senator has been asked to | | look into appointment of the postmaster in Orchard Lake, the | dedication of new post offices in ' Pontiac and Farmington, and the need for an office in Lathrup | Village. i “AP Wirepheote THOR CARRIES SATELLITE — A modified Thor missile carrying the Discoverer V satellite leaves its launching pad here’ _'THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1959 | The committee charges the two, dedications “were Conducted and, ‘engineered as Republican cam-; ‘paign rallies.” | ““Announcement of these two} dedications contained the names of the Republican candidates for) Senator and Congressman. We strongly feel that investigation will | b show there has been a misuse of | C U d epor S ap ure post office funds to advertise and) ‘promote the Republican candiates| for public office,’ a three-page’ of Arms-Laden Plane snsr"""" * * The new Pontiac post office was dedicated Sept. 27, 1958, several ‘months before the November elec- ‘d with Gons. The letter contends former Or- chard Lake Postmaster Mary L.— Hawkes was “harassed by postal investigators for no apparent reason other than to force her | at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California yesterday. Now es- tablished as successfully placed in orbit, later today C119 planes based in Hawaii will attempt an air snatch of the 300-pound cap- sule when it re-enters the earth's atmosphere. Two Navy ships are also standing by in the Pacific to aid its recovery. Fal (right) smiles happily as she Alaska with the ‘59ers. The fruit Writes of Al HAVANA (AP) — Cuban Army of direct participation in the land- headquarters today announced the ing attempt. capture of an arms-laden plane} The announcement ende flown by the pilot who ferried ex- the statement that Castro would president Fulgencio Batista into te the nation about the ~ conspir- exile. ‘acy against his government by ra-| ‘The army said the plane was dio and. television tonight. It did captured in a battle in which four not give the time | | (Continued From Page One) persons were killed: | In Havana, the situation ap- resignation to create a vacancy | a x © * peared quiet for a Republican appointment.” there is every ‘likelihood that great The announcement said the’ Castro was belirved in the Trin. She later accepted a lower rank quarters of muose meat: will -be plane, carrying 10 persons and a jdad area. where caurlicr reports a8 postal clerk last year, the prepared for the long cold winter cargo of arms for anti - Castro hag said grouns of counterrevo- letter said. ; ahead. counterrevolutionaries, Was @M- jutionary holdouts had taken to AN Their cooperative vegetable bushed as it landed from the Do-'the hills after clashing with gov-! minican Republic at Trinidad, @ ernment forecs Sunday. town on Cuba's south coast. Two occupants of the plane and two soldiers of Prime Minister Fi- garden, of some three or four acres, should supply them with potatoes, parsnips, carrots, tur- nips and cabbages. Creation of a post office in the city of Lathrup Village is ‘'a need- less duplication of effort and un- necessary ‘waste of the taxpayers Suspect Confesses del Castro’s army were killed in) ‘money,’’ the Oakland Democratic’ Presently they are enjoying) the battle, the announcement said, | . 7 \Committee charged. ‘such fresh vegetables as radishes, r occupants of the lane f Th §| g | Further, the committee ‘letter onions, lettuce and peas. Each cal os y 2 | 0 ree ayin 5 ‘said, ‘This smacks very much of family will construct an adequate were captured. . ‘ : ns The oeny communique was the, ‘a political pay-off to heavy-con-'root cellar, insulated with marsh first official announcement of the) landing of any invasion force in nouncement of the confession. (Continued From Page One) tributors to the Republican Party grass. to protect the vegetables ‘by the Republican Party,” ‘from the frigid winter. A-RARE TREAT — Mrs. Bertha Donaldson fresh fruit she’s had since leaving Michigan for 959 Spence St., homesteaders in tastes the first was brought to’ aska Visit - With Michigan's ‘Odgers , We found Nick Rubino and 10- year-old Junior erecting their sec- ond-hand quonset hut, purchased, and dismantled 50 miles south of Talkeetna, Seventeen freight boat trips across the river were made in transporting the hut to the home-! stead. The Rubinos lived in a tent. ‘at first, but now are living in a! ‘borrowed house trailer. Within two weeks the quonset hut will be ready for ‘“‘moving in.” Bill Or-; chowski is also assembling a quon-| set hut for his future home a mile west of the Rubinos. : ‘ House turned down yesterday. DIG FOR WATER Without a doubt, the most back-/ breaking job confronting the men' the ‘59ers by Mr. and Mrs. Howard Shelley of Shelley is gn the left. a ‘anything more in our bill than iPresident Eisenhower had asked for, we'd win,’’ said Griffin. ;so far is that of digging for wa- Cuba: since the government re-| “7 plead : im t | g' I pleaded with him to spare fared ee ee ported a anti-Castro conspiracy | more innocent people from being a week ago. Unconfirmed reports had been! current. in Havana earlier that, anti-Castro forces had seized Trin- idad and its airfield. The town had been isolated for four days by a communication blackout. The army r plane was piloted by Lt. Col. An.|tPouble. He said Blocth replied: tonio Soto, who flew Batista to the Dominican Republic last New said the captured : killed,” Mrs. Bloeth said. | Both Siben and Cohalan said loeth appeaied without remorse. Cohalan said he has asked Bloeth whether he had any feelings for his family and if he didn't feel sorry to have brought them this “Tt wouldn't shoot my wife, my mother cr my daughicr.” School Board Tables New Pool at Central | The Pontiac Board of Education tabled a proposal last night to structure ‘into a modern, compet-| bucket. Finally, a well point -and construct the existing Central High) itive size pool at a price of $477,-| casing was installed with a pitch- Cohalan said: “I just couldn't erect an entirely new, regulation - , ee ac-\believe what this man told me size boy's swimming pool at Pon- 20 was tured down by ihe cused Generalissimo Rafael L.|as he talked, It was an absolute tiac Central High, but went ahead mer care fw aa be fan Trujillo, the Dominican: dictator,! nightmare.” ‘with plans to rehabilitate the pres- i : ' aa es cost | | The killings had proved a night. ent pool which has often been de- Breater al ir Wes oe | ‘mare for the residents of this east- Clared unsanitary by the State Hot, Humid Spell em Long Island county, an area of Health Department. The Board aneertee fe ee : lonely farms, small towns and_ Deciding that new pool costs of operating budget of $8,237,309 as; Sticks Around fashionable beach resorts. Many/ $350,000 were prohibitive for the Submitted by Superintendent a | : . late-night cating places shuttered'time being, the Board authorized Schools Dana P. ve a | East, Midwest their doors at sundown after it be-/the architect, William C. Zimmer-|though based on the budget sub- came apparent that a “mad mur-/man Associates, to complete plans | By The Associated Press iderer’’ was at work. Other night providing for a minimum recon-, Midsummer’s spell of hot and workers traveled in pairs. or with struction of the 46-year-old pool at. humid weather clung to most of guns. an estimated $160,000 expense. the Eastern half of the nation to- : | day. Some relief appeared possible! as Gee Sa ahem: i teag wa. | higher than the one presented for areas in the Midwest and New! Ps ; _ | in February. According to Whit- rproofed with new tile in- | a stalled. A complete new water | Mer, the increase ve boos OS i neler ee at pes another strike from) the senseless filtration and circular system | cea! the result of the pay western Minnesota into Washing- Stayer mane they ete See. ie he added = mew Binates | Under the new budget, the cost ton and Oregon, parts of the up-| Blocths victims were: Late on cotling; comatrected. _per pupil would be increased from per Great Lakes region and sec-\the night of July %1, Hans Hach-| Tentative completion date for $396 in 1958-59 to $406 in 1959-60. tions of southern California. |Mann, 34. owner of an Islip delica- the rehabilitation, if construction 4 few reductions were also made, The muggy weather baked and tessen: early in the morning of i- authorized, is July, 1960. The incjuding $32,000 less for main- nettled the millions of persons in| Aug. 5, Lawrence Kircher, 35. lone! pool would still not be fit for COM- tenance. which will help relieve the region from the southern counterman in a Sni‘hiown diner; petition, but acting Board presi- the impact of the new wage scale. Plains into southern New England about midmght Au. 7. Mrs. Irene dent Monroe M. Osmun indicat- | In other action, the Board ap- Thursday, The mercury climbed Currier, 50: on duty alone in the ed that a new pool will be con-! inted an administrative intern Year's Day. The army announcement tion contains the new wage and Even after Blocth’s arrest and | The new budget is $206,141 the announcement that, police be- lieved he was the killer, commu- nities remained on guard against to 92 $ e : i er she on 7 l § : its. - | : te) at Boston, edged near the Westhampton diner she owned with structed when the budget permits. 2+ Crofoot Elementary School and goose and gander, a flock of a|tion sent telegrams to Broomfield, a new administrative assistant for dozen white leghorn hens and aurging adoption of the Landrum-' 100-degree mark at Russell, Kan.,,her husband, A third proposal designed to re- and shot up to 106 at Presidio, ———— Tex: The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report | PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy, warm and humid today and to-| night. Slight chance of thundershewers tenight. Temerrew partly cloudy, tarn-, ing a little cooler, high teday 9%, lew | tenight 7%. high temerrow 87. Seuth- westerly winds increasing te 15-25 miles this afternoen, shifting te nertherly and diminishing temerrow. Central High. Lewis A. Crew, named Crofoot administrative intern, will work lunder.a supervising principal for ja year before taking over full du- ities as principal. Crew was a sixth grade teacher at Longfellow Schoo] last year. The Board appointed Donald Mc- 'Millen administrative assistant at Central High. McMillen, a Central High teacher last year, will take over immediately. He was selected ifrom six local applications. Finally the Board turned down a request from the Herrington Hills Homeowners Assn. to build a fence on the south border of Today in Pontiac ' _ Lowest temperature preceding 8 «am At 8 am Wind yelocity 15 mph Direction—West-soathWest Sun sets Friday at 735 pm Sun rises Saturday at 5:38 am Moon sets Saturday at 131 am Moon rises Friday at 4:28 pm Dewntown Temperateres 2000 wage tf 11 6 a.m 1 c= banc Tam. ipa oo ee the Herrington Elementary a6 ese Te 1B Seater. 92 School. The homeowners asso- 10 am 84 ciation claimed that a large em- Thursday ip Pontiac bankment and drainage ditch on hihat Gena ee | that section of the school play- Lowest temperature .°.............18 ground created a hazard for the Mean temperature 82 school children Wrather—Sunny One Year Age in Pontiac According to Donald L, Hearn Highest temperature . .. $8 eee : ibebg ‘ temperature . ......e0....- 60 | of 1149 rime va assoc rit 2 ean temperature ..0 o..-..... 14 e ive, i *n would als e Weather—Sunny < ‘ resenta children so stopped from playing in neighbors’ yards by a fence. The Board balked at Hearn’s re- Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in %@ Years | 08 in 1944 40 in 1883) Twentyfour-year-old Erik Eklund, ‘a single man, was building a sub- imitted Feb. 26, the revised alloca-! hence, they will work on the Kula salary adjustments adopted by the x« * * ‘Board June 11. land cribbed with’ logs. * * * A log tripod was erected and ‘rope used to lift a pail of the | sand and gravel which was picked iloose and shoveled from the bot- ‘tom — then hauled to the top. There a helper unloaded the ‘feet in diameter, had to be “<) ‘ er pump at ground level to ob- tain plenty of good fresh, ice- cold water, stantial log cabin for his home- stead home. Trading labor with Ray Kula, a good supply of 20- foot logs had been cut, peeled and was ready for laying. Two weeks cabin, The Siks contemplate erecting a ‘suitable lumber constructed room beside their house trailer, with their.cabin home to be built on an improved clearing next year. Hand washings — all old-fash- ioned washing board style — carry little appeal! They've all done their share. Recently, how- ever, an electric washing ma- chine was converted to gas en- gine use, What with diapers and baby. clothes, this pleases Mrs. | Sik no end. Two milk cows, three calves fone i O Pontiac, who are visiting the the Susitna River Valley. Mrs. | Labor Bill Success Boosts Rep. Griffin (Continued From Page One) formally adopted today by the} house in a roll-call cote. | I think it would pass the Senate | if we could get it out of the sin conference committee and put it up to a vote,” he said. | The Landrum-Griffin measure is| more stringent than another labor, bill already approved by the Sen- ate. It cracks the whip harder than} the Democrat - backed middle-of- the-road legislation which the: “TI believed that if we didn’t put Among those voting for the Landrum-Griffin bili was Rep. William S, Broomfield (R-Royal Oak), Voting against it was Rep. dames G. O'Hara (D-Utica). Broomfield hailed the bill as a weapon against corruption in un- ions, but O'Hara predicted a House-Senate deadlock would re- sult in no labor legislation at all a The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — William H. “Dad” Clemons, a retired farmer who lives at 24035 13 Mile Rd., Bingham Farms, is an unusual man on four counts. ’ A nonagenarian — he'll be 90 December — he has lived in the Birmingham area for 60 years and may be the area’s oldest long-tim resident, ; Although Clemoris never met the famous writer; he’s a cou- sin to Mark Twain, In the 1870's, while still a teen- ager, Clemons was one of -the lumberjacks who made the first inroads into the then-wild country in the Bay City area. But ‘‘Dad’s’’ chief claim to fame is as a “‘douser’’ or ‘‘water. wiz- ard’’, He's one of those persons who use a tree bough ‘“‘divining rod” to located underground wa- ter. - * * * “T've found over 300 wells in the last 40 years, probably more than that — I've never kept track’, says Clemons. He is well known in Beverly Hills and Bloomfield Township by people who have utilized his ‘‘dous- ing powers” after spending consid- erable sums digging dry wells. | Clemon’s mode of operation looks simple enough. He grips the ends of a forked beech bough in both hands, with the sharp angle pointing up. When he passes over a vein of water, the bough twists and dips, and the angle points straight down. - Others might try it and fail. “Some people can do it and some can't. I can’t explain it,”’ Dad commented. “ * * * | But whether or not he can ex- plain it, he’s had some grateful customers, including a man who spent $3,000 digging two dry wells ‘over’ 300 feet deep before ‘Dad’ found water running at 12 gallons a minute at 65 feet. i Robert C. Ellis, Texas-born ar-| tist who now lives and paints in Mexico, will exhibit a new group of paintings and drawings Aug. 18 through Sept. 19 at the Litte Gal-) lery, 915 E. Maple Ave., -in Bir-' imingham. * * * Ellis, who has studied at the University of New Mexico and in) New York City, will be in the Gallery during the first week of the exhibition. The Gallery is open from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Pontiac DeMolays Plan Their Annual Picnic Pontiac -DeMolay Masonic Lodge 21 will hold its annua! picnic Sun- day at Avon Park, in Rochester.) The event, scheduled to begin at 1 p.m., will be highlighted by’ Retired Farmer Claims ~ ‘Dousing’ Powers Fame Installed recently as new offi- cers of Birmingham Knights of Columbus No, 3869 were Chancel- lor, George Williams, ‘531 Kim- berly Rd., Birmingham; Grand Knight, Edward Rollins, 16968 Beechwood Dr.; Deputy Grand Knight, Eddaar Rollins, 16968 Madoline Rd., and Warden, A. G. Fuhrman, 31065 Stafford Dr., all of Beverly Hills, Tonite & Saturday Only! UL Approved—Best Quality Romex Wire 14 Gauge 2 Wire ; * 14-2 ROMEX ii Greend 4 Thin-Wall CONDUIT oD had \ynch — 10-Foot Lengths Thin-Wali CONDUIT %-Inch — 10-Foet Lengths ee 10¢ Romex CONNECTORS 6° — fer ‘4-Inch Knock-outs 1 oemeeennmendl G-E Mercury Silenf Switch No-click, positive ac- tion. For any circuit. $1.00 Value 19e HOUSE FUSEs 4° 10 to 30 amp. (limit 5) 0c Octagon BOX & HANGER 59° 4Inch. Complete with clamps V7 25e Toggle SWITCHES 18° ‘ Single pole. Brown enly....... a i 20c Duplex RECEPTACLE 13° Flush medel, Narrow ears 7. Receptacle BOXES ” a 38c in 28° Extension Cords 35 Foot 97° $1.95 Value all home commercial use. 3e Octagon BOXES 24° éinch. Clamp extra = 35e Ceiling RECEPTACLE 24° 4-inch. Keyless. Porcelain se Switch PLATES 9° Metal or Plastic 27° Heavy duty pur- e for or 35e Current TAPS Complete with pall chain 39c_ Romex STAPLES Box of 100 Light Bulbs 75c Value 3 for 68¢ All sizes to 75 watts. $2.95 Light FIXTURE For any room ‘sy voted according to party affilia- tion also, with the exception of Rep. John B. Bennett, Upper Pen- votes ‘‘for labor.’’ Bennett opposed the bill. Milton King, Michigan director of the National Small Business- this year. “ the annual lodge baseball game. | *x« *® * Soft drinks and hot dogs will be Other Michigan congressmen) furnished. The lodge has planned a variety of games for members and their families. | | insula Republican who usually|‘Levis’ Made in 1850 | . ! 1850 by Levi Strauss and Co. We Plastle TAPE Electrician tape. 39° Se TV Lead-In WIRE 3 300 ohms. Weatherproof. Ft. Sn ae manufactured in San Francisco in l ELECTRICAL - —2nd Floor | Per roll “Levis” or ‘jeans’ were first} men’s Assn., was ‘‘jubilant’’ over the victory. He was especially enthusiastic over one particular provision, which would give the state juris- | diction to hear labor disputes that the Federal Mediation “Board won't handle, “We've been seeking to abolish this no-man’s land in labor rela- tions for several years,’’ he said. bd * * “It is hoped that small firms will win the right to take their, labor troubles to local courts in instances where the federal gov- ernment considers the problem too} small for them to bother about.” King said more than 300 Oakland ‘to be butchered in November), a rooster, two goats — “Billy” and etal dogs, including ‘“‘Homer the Homesteader;”’ bark their friendly greetings. . * * * | The livestock was transported across the river in the freight ca- noes. The two cows were blind- folded and hogtied, then wrapped in huge tarpaulins and rolled into the canoe and moved to the. dis- tant shore. Horses will be brought in in the same manner — since the glacier- fed river is too cold and swift to permit the animals to swim | across. Labor Controls Bill Wins in Shock Vote P.1. Precede 5-96 6 Labor . to an employer through a third party not directty involved in the dispute, “No man's land’ cases are smail local disputes, usually with+ “Nany’’ — pet rabbits and kittens comprise the list of livestock. Sev- County members of the associa- (Griffin bill. Woman in Little Rock Asks for Protection \ BC he hd hd dh dik diuickdiede I MIP PBABA AA A dade dadaddda’ | JUST ARRIVED! In Time for School Wear! LADIES’ — MISSES’ — GIRLS’ NEW FALL STYLES | ‘GUM-DROPS'-FLATS-BALLERINAS Newest Styles and Colors a 1 97 to $3.00 Big selection at lowest prices! Por dress and sports wear. Smart styling and qualit workmanship. All sizes. —Bargain 98 North Basement ’ Add dd ddddddihhdhdbutd | (AMAL A bh dA ded de dod Lud (Continued From Page One) thrown on the lawn, shots fired at the house and bricks hurled through windows. “In the face of all this,” she ‘said, ‘‘wé have begged for protec- tion by city and county law en- forcement authorities — but to no avail..In all the assaults on our) jhome there never has been a sin-| gle arrest of any offender or sus- pect.”” One of the Negroes arrested was Ellis Thomas, 48, father of Jefferson Thomas, a 16-year-old | senior and the lone Negro at Cen- | tral. The arrest of Thomas and other | Negroes, Isaac Mullens, 43, house nd Dr. — E’ GAD! SLAYBAUGH'S BIG AUCTION. _ IS TONIGHT! wat 7PM —— | YOU GOT TIME, POP! | — JUST BE SURE YOU DON'T MISS IT LOTS OF GOOD USED BOATS, MOTORS AND | , é a ; Z a a : f: . a Se * : a Soe Thursday's Temperature Chart | quest because, “‘it is not only a out interstate implications, which charged carrying Biltmore of fo Menbns” oot matter of safety, but one of dollars the National Labor Relations| weapons and released on $200 bond ' Bismarck 67 50 Miami B. “88 13) and cents.” Osmun said that the | poard declines to handle for prac-/each. ott Bufleio. & 67 pabanespetia 4} 6s budgét could riot handle such 4|\tica] reasons and which the states State Police Lt. Paul Mc Coprienen a 2 New Orleans 86 36) ; project. are prohibited by law from han- said officers took three pistols and Cinctnat as or york H | AP “Winégliate Hearn contended that fenceS|qing an' Army carbine from them. velan ' aston 2 60" =) ig oe : _ ¥, ' lqwane’ arated ' ne : sl at 'Long- dnd * * Denver 85° 58 Phoenix 100 78 MICHIGAN'S CHOICE — Posed for her official Miss America -| “Te lpia aeey ; b Detro 88 73 Pitteburen \¢ $¢ Pageant photo is Ann Marston of Wyandotte, Miss Michigan tor fellow School. Sid that dus to Oe) Sex, Juin ¥, Meimpdy: (ate, Can Parachute Crane ~ Fort Worth 03 74 8 Prancisco 67 84 1960. The | : safety factor involved a fence WAS|chief sponsor. of the labor bi ‘ ' mS haptes 01 0 GO Marts 13. 66 ¢ blue-cyed blonde will be a contender for the beauty. a) must put up at the Herrington |passed ‘by the Sensin Maat April,| The U.S Auvay hee had ere. B.S Grail pS crown on the strength of her national crchery championship in | School. He called for more prac-|told reporters a compromise by| which can be parachuted fi eo B Aa, Habe % 33 additién to her TEE. attributes. The annual competition will be \ tidal School. cofistruction to include | Senate and House conferees mighi| air and can lift more. ees . * o | held in Atlanuc @ity, N.J., Sept: 7-12. . fences. Bo be. difficult, os lows weight <> which ig GOOD SPORTING : | EQUIPMENT WILL BE |: AUCTIONED. : } AND REMEMBER | f 4 es on : ee $ . ' * ) 4 in 4 . ; aeeaeeealiae isn on ee ‘ % BOBBY FISCHER AT WORK — He speaks only chess. 16-Year-Old Chess Champ Needs Odd Reassurance By WARD CANNEL ‘example, offered to send him to NEA Staff Correspondent | the Paris Exposition last year. But NEW YORK (NEA)—Despite he turned them down with a flimsy warnings from writers, photog-|@Xcuse that there wasn't enough raphers, publicists; TV personnel,;™oney in it for him. editors, publishers, tourists and|- South America has tried, too. just plain folks who said it couldn't And while they actually got him be done, I have successfully seen) down there, it was all they could and talked to Bobby Fischer. do to keep him feeling secure And so I can report that Bobby; and not afraid that he would be is a typical American 16-year-old) done out of his prize money. kid with typical teenaged needs : . On his return, one of New York's, and typical porridge crumbs on i /most venerable chess clubs held a his typical sweater. reception for him. But even they x * * had missed the combination to his It is only by Providence that|secret heart. He did not show up. he happens to be the U.S. Chess} So, it has been left up to the Champion, and the youngest In-|newsmen and photographers to ternational Grandmaster of chess/break through the boy’s insecurity of all time. and tell him that he can trust in Well, you can imagine what |America because we Care. it is to be a teenager, when life’s uncertainties begin to loom over you, and find yourself matching strategy against men two and three times your age — and beat- ing them at it. everybody has tried. But , invari- ably, the formula has been wrong. t’ And it would stagger your mind to total up the number of “ newsman-hours lost over chess games with people guaranteed to be “Bobby’s best friend; they se? each other every afternoon.” In the first place, it’s a terrible Strain on a typical gangling kid. One false-move and you can knock all those little chess pieces on the floor. . rter shrugged at me. ‘You And in the second place, it’s y be the lucky one. I came an unfair attack on your sense of| pretty close myself. security, having all those full-| ‘I had an appointment to meet grown players trying to outwit you. him at a big resort where he had It’s the kind of thing that turns peers invited pinee 1ot change )be- other, weaker kids into hostile |C@USe he was a champion. delinquents er juvenile rebels. | He had left long before I got And Bobby would be the first |(Nere: of course. But I did have to admit it But unfortunately [the good suck fe be alloned a Relepenke cals Te “* itake his suitcases back to the city ° : “ |with me.” Unhappily, most recent efforts to| Well, what nobody knew was: reassure him have bogged down./there is a secret ritual you have x & & to go through before you can see The U.S. State Department, for! Bobby. It works this way: “But who knows?’’ a magazine FOR MATTRESS ECONOMY with FLOATING AcTION COILs Just Za Night g Simmons guarantees » this luxury mattress for 10 years. That brings the price down to a thrifty 2¢ a night! Choose either Standard or Extra-Firm model. 6 ef $79.50 MATTRESS a pin a some aii 99am | $79.50 BOX SPRINGS d 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH ( OR EASY TERMS TELEPHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED—FE 5-9474 CLAYTON'S OF KEEGO HARBOR , 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor FE 5-9474 || OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS ‘TIL 9 Free Parking tn Front of Oer Store—Come in for Meter Pennies eres eatemenaers FURNITURE APPLIAN At one time or another, almost]. . 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, ‘AUGUST 14, 1959 ‘ e ERAL stores Vo vt ots’ reg 1.99 fall dress-up togs 2 $3 ; 2: B Charge ue Ch OY i - ’ & ; cian gl Orlon Sweaters: girls & . houf boys’ suite tat Pastels or plaids Petticoats, OYS’ suits, 1-3, 3.6x, 9.18 ; S, White, pastels, P cotton. Misses’, " Men's 2.99 cotton pajamas 2 for $5 s] 5 et Federel’s! ° Sanf. washable b cloth. Fitted or loose, newest Cuffed sleeves, legs; fall styles! Many pile elastic waistband. But- lined. Coat sets 4-6x. ton or pullover. ABCD. 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Gs tuted “ es: te Fi ro. y baa Der ar | es BO” ee rf Ve . 6 a ns a Back-to-school new Reg. 69c zippered Reg.7.99 Women's Reg. 59c percale Gay plastic drapes— 16x56’ fullview Eye-stoppers! 19.98 white collars, just pillow protectors Hack ®Ripple soles pillow cases. Sale! low, low price! door mirrors curio cabinets | 254 2 $4 5.00 2 $4 1.00 3.88 | 418 Snowy white rayon or Fine quality broadcloth. Black, brown, wltite or Choose florals, novelties, Brighten a window for a Natural wood: frame. At- Mirrored limed oak, ma- cotton. Many styles—Pet- Bright white, size 21x27. caJors, soft glove leather. stripes! Long- wearing, buck! Sparkling patterns! taches to any door or wall. hogany, walnut, gold or er Pan and platters! Hurry! While they last! 4-10. N-M-W. Shop now! with wide hems! 42x36”. Firm heavy-gauge plastic. Head to toe view. Hurry! black frames, sbielvas. fie | ; sii _ ae aie I L a: 4 oe “— as “ Ro a ine 5 ti Wide ees « - \ ne é xo ae a i : New fall skirts! Men's long-sleeve Boys’ reg. 10.99 Reg. 1.69-1.99 Tots’, girls’ 2.99 Grand slam! 3.98 —Limed oak 19.98 Regularly 2.99 2.99 sport shirts washable parkas - tots’ play togs _ @asy-care dresses bridge chairs, now _— occasional chairs 255 255 $10 Zw $3 Dw S5 Lws7 418. | Slim sheaths, pleated Washable plaids, ging- Polished cotton, quilt-lin- Snap crotch crawlers, box- Plaids, stripes, soljds! Easy-fold, comfortable Decorators dreams! Dur | plaids, others. Wool, ray- hams! Jac-shirts, gabs, ed. Zip hood. Tan char- er-longies, slim jims, o’alls Full skirts. Wash-easy cot- padded plastic leatherette. able plastic, stunning _on. Tweeds, stripes. 22-30. Some permanent collars. coal, antelope. 12-20. 12-24 tho., 2-4, 3-6x. tons. Sizes 3-6x, 7-12. Colors a-plenty. Buy now!. shades, limed oak frame. ‘Men's Waldorf cotton - Boys’ reg. 1.39 sport Women’s lingerie a- AUGU ST Tots’ pj's, reg. 1.69 a underwear, reg. 3/2.50 shirte—sizes 6 to 18 plenty! Go on a spree .- HI E ALE to 1.99. Now only. T & A shirts, briefs: S-M-L- Summer clean-up sale. Short- Nylon, cotton, plisse. Misses’ WwW T S Flannelette. Prints, stri XL. Boxers, 30-44, 3//$2 © sleeves; novelties, now $] |. women’s in grp. 2/$3 Now in progress! Hurry, lace trims. 4-8. ros o Same : . . } a | er A : ] : oe. a . , z ; , @ } : 3 ee ‘ , ° / , , \ P. ay ey Fup . THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAYS AUGUST 14.-1959 7 8 TWENTY-THREE - } _ "Pe aes ae ee ea ¢ ss at Ward's 48 N. Saginaw Bob Considine Says: - Time for a Relaxing (2) Vacation 4 s P =] NEW YORK—This is the last of;miss me." He apparently felt so he goes to some fellow truckers, make enough to pay for what these pieces, for ,a spell. I'm insecure on $250,000 a year. (No'—named Biff, Zeke, Knuckles,) he wrote when he wasn't. That taking that long chance again of wonder!) ‘Muscles and Alfred—and says,| answer your question H. K.? (If being picked up as a vagrant.| Durling finally was conned into “Chums, I’m knocking off for a) that’s your real name.) That's always a risk if you're al iaktag le Vacation after years couple weeks but I'd like to keep | Ah, there'll be sports galore, of |) reporter on vacation. A plumber or! and years, and promptly de- hat there-groove of mine open ON wurse, This year I hope to get|< a nuclear physicist on vacation’ yeloped a brain tumor and died. Route $3, Be: How, ‘ about you 8UyS things better organized. Last -makes sense. They get tired of He would have died anyway. of jaaving my old EEL fon nae ies summer I was going to take off a| wrenches and Roentgens and need course. But it so happened that free while I'm gone, hey?” Last 19 of weight by playing tennis. | a vest. But who can get tired of iq hit him during a vacation he | , truck driver said that got kilt. ‘Great workout, tennis” You can}® news and. still call himself a news-! didn’t want. The only thing worse than @ have your polo, eight-oared shells, | « ” > 4 or om ¢ arewe . e. . | ee en fs _.__ | Lots of people who write Fr cig ik _ and farewert (hurling, sume Ee omnes popular) admission of weakness, . piece, peo} ‘sports. Give me (1 kept’ saying) | = failure of sorts. Brisbane would = 455, varous: celebrities 10 even Know he was ever on siice ‘the thrill of a smooth court, a) never take a vacation. Neither do pieces for them while they’re is the columnist who comes back ‘tightly strung racquet, fresh tennis would E. V. Durling. Brisbane loafing. I've always been uneasy {rom vacation and burbles, “Well, ‘balls, a ‘stiff wind at my back! 4 once was asked why he didn’t about that. I keep thinking of, here I am back, all full of sun’when I serve, and an opponent |” knock it off for a while and he'let’s say, a truck driver who has and vitamins and ready to SiV€ over 70. But alas, never played. | said, im effect, “they might not-a, two-weck vacation coming up, ™Y millions of readers that same 4 Kid named Dennis had grown |, a d = —— old charm, that same old penchant jjt9 my old tennis shoes and had for’ exclusives about the latest sone off boating on the Bosphorus stamps, and the low-down on what a someplace. 4 the prime minister confided to the " Golf? lve civea that ap. 1 pe chancellor of the exchequer at 10 = - : : Downing behind locked sok with played Bid wh Fools per no one present, including the prin- cod sis le OG os. pale : -The game must be crooked. I * é A don't want to be caught in the ‘police dragnet that is bound to) @ “What does a guy who writes follow such a performance. ies a lot do when he goes on.a vaca: re A * ie tion?” asks H. K. of Dés Moines. |. _. se oa ck Glad vou asked that. H. K. If tae ‘k semcone has suggested | he writes a lot, and it gets printed, va a ie ion : the ithe thing he does on his vacation esa. aé far “as Sverdiovsk and) = ee a ot Oe ie. oe a Novosibirsk, but, plainly, that’s ae Foe a a lot at his ree. Ut of the question. Matter of fact, made sé « : ae , ; ; r ? ular job. This, in turn, requires a ea Chae a ene y| <a him to go back to his regular! ine other day, *‘What you're riot ee ee lanes tematic enone ne in Russia this season? Everybody made during his vacation writing (ne OS ee abate “he - enough to pay the taxes on things a Helaus time getting OUT of he had written while regularly ! pica, Why should I try to get x : i, 7 = employed earlier. jack ine” . “Ais ey “i eet . = | { Eventually, he'll have to go on | So it looks like a quiet week or . | vacation again, to write enough (two for me, with the writing in-| | to pay the taxes on the money terrupted only by occasional fit- he made from his regular job, | tings for the suit of armor I've STRONG BALL — Student stands within “discontinuous | tg which he returned to write (ordered to wear while covering enough to pay taxes on what he | the visit of Khrushchev to New sphere” at Carbondale, Ill. school. None of 270 parts touches an- Complete 3-piece 'York, Detroit and Chicago. other. 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NEW HOME BUYERS’ - wer |, SPECIAL! =. | ns | I BR cess | RR a Sofa and Chair wy KROEHLER s *299 e@ Smart biscuit backs! e Deep innerspring comfort! e Famous Plus-Built construction! e Fashionable brass-tipped legs! e Choice of latest decorator fabrics and colors! “Promenade” a Only a Small 36 eas Deposit Is Required Months | 2&°) to Hold Your Carpet to gp “Till You Move Into Pay we Your New Home @ NO FINANCE CO. TO DEAL WITH USE : “THE WARD-WAY CREDIT PLAN @ MAKE PAYMENTS AT OUR STORE , at @ 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH OPEN Mon. and Fri. 9-9 Tues., Wed., | | ! | Thurs. 9-6 : | a Saturday = = 9-5 :30 = 4528 Dixie Highway Drayton Plains OR 31200 - OR 3-4109 and FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL NINE. & x | _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, ‘1959 —_ JF et : \ rs eee & ¥ rwwvvvvrvrevrevreYrYeYeeeYGeYTYYY. ~wereereervrereeeY. srt Tower Mokiolie Tis suddenly 1® timed ai targe-as if J was, thanks to a favorable annex- U. $. Must Stay. Its Size Sixteen Times loach vote by residents of unincor- | SARALAND, Ala. —It was like porated areas surrounding’ the! rwwwwy* wey PAPPPPPPPPPPSPISPSSPSSS LS SISSSSPSP OTOL $ stants SUN DAY STARTS 3 $ FPUC CCC CCC CCC CCC UC CCC TCC C CC CCUVCCUVUVTOCT TITTY. = the minnow eating the shark. This town. Population grew from 300 ~»«Stron Nixon small south Alabama community'5,000 because of the vote. g.. President Should Talk See to Red Premier With! Doors Open 10:45 A.M. Power Behind Him —The isiand of killer SPRING LAKE, NJ. (AP) —! seein s coread | Vice President Richard M. Nixon eagle’ torture! --- ADVENTURES OF ,. says that a strong America is —The hypnotized THE SCREEN’S oe necessary before agreement can strangler! ‘ MIGHTIEST be reached at a summit confer- —Spine-chilling native ee. “TARZAN”! ence table. ; - blood rites! fa Sal ' For this reason, he warned|. Thursday, the United States should not relax its defenses because of the forthcoming exchange visits between President Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. * —Tarzan's beautiful mate attacked! * * “If we are to have a possibility of agreement at a (summit) con- ference, the President must be able to talk from a position of strength,’ Nixon declared, * % * The vice president came to this resort community to attend a US. Savings Bond rally,....... : Nixon stressed the challenge | that Khrushchev's policy of peace- ful competition presents. He added he thought it important that FILMED IN SAVAGE AFRICA! | M-G-M presents -+ in METROCOLOR Khrushchev see ‘‘the _ typical f » YY | America’ when he visits this! eli * * * : ; AP Wirepheto | ‘ ; Newsmen questioned Nixon| MOSCOW. BOUND Calind Unversity ship wom of a British scientist and Parker is from i v about his potential candidacy for| dents John Cochrane, \eft, and Carey Parker Pennsylvania. The bug arrived in Berlin. Wednes- “| the Republican presidential nomi-| Pose in front of bus they are driving to Moaerrw = day after a 110-mile ride through Communist . - nation in 1960. -.4~.from London. Here, they are jactured at London kast Germany, The young students say, ‘‘We : ¢ THEATER “T have consistently maintained) Transport garage just before their departure want fo meet young Russian people and find es starring GORDON SCOTT fm | that it is too early to make a deci-| with 38 other Oxford students CGxhrane ia the vut what they think about people.’ | ; with ision with regard to 1960," Nixon. —-————~ ~ —— + EVE BRENT - RICKIE SORENSEN - JIL JARMYN : replied and CHETA Fikes Up OldMine 4909 Housing Conterence When Parking Pony, warrsraste, engand crv WWil] Have Three Heads Use‘a Short Rein imishecman Victor Davis tugged in his heavy-laden nets last night and; i — : found he had caught a German| WASHINGTON, DC. — “We are “We've picked up valuable prod- LANDER, Wyo. um — Podnah, magnetic mine left over from) consulting the oracle again,” says yet information in the past con- when you park your horse in World War II. He safely tossed it;Bernard Hartung, vice chairman 7 Lander you'll have to use a short back. jof the Women’s Housing Congress, (Seences with women,” says Har- rein. : |— = Inc. and an official of the National | "8. “Now we are beginning to, , * +* * \Lumber Manufacturers Associa- S€€ &@ whole philosophy and socio-| | tion. “This time the oracle has 0gical picture shape up in the an- lthree heads.” |swers housewives have given us “When the Family Confrence on in the past. a Shannon Higdon, 11, tied her ‘horse to a parking meter and |deposited the necessary nickel.’ | When she returned her horse was merely have added two more; aware that e are gettin ; strong voices to the chorus of opin-| off wheels Lae back Sint the fie unnadie p nad contixcaled |ions. The husband and the teenager) home. Social life and recreation. |Chiet Fd Alen Caer aren Follce | will give us answers as well as the) are built now at the home level. las viclatin ie a ee pore ia housewives who have been con-’ Perhaps TV can be given some |on the Fidewile a a y walking ee _Sulted in Women’s Housing Con-; of the credit. Perhaps it is the |up two parkin Ben was taking jeneszes Ch Past yyears _ trend to attach status and mean- | He Jet Shannon otf with a warn | Delegates from forty to forty- ing to home ownership and home ling. five cities will be sent to Wash. | Management. ington by local chapters of the | “In earlier meetings we pal li . National Associaltion of Home | evidence that the home builders PO iceman Gives Chase; Builders for the conference Sept. | joh now is to give the consumer a | | 15-17 at the National Housing | home satisfying his aesthetic 2 Car Runs Out of Gas | Center. well as his basic needs. We're also| WASHBURN, Wis. (UPI)—Police | Their hosts in Ww ashington will| more than ever confident that this,Officer Charles Hudson surprised COMMANDO” be the industry members of Wom-! ican be done in a medium-priced|a gunman in an alley as he at- (en's Housing Congress, Inc., a non-| home if the manufacturers, sub-| tempted to break into a drug store. | Inspiring Adventure in Courage SATURDAY MATINEE ' profit group set up by manufactur-;|contractors, retailers, financial in-| | The man fired, ran to his car and OPEN 12:30 P. M. ‘ers and contractors to promote stitutions and homebuilders work. 'sped away. | EXTRA CARTOONS home ownership and quality con- as a team.’ Hudson followed. They exchanged. struction. x « * la dozen shots during a three-mile | Discussions of the use of lumber! chase. The chase ended and justice — SHOW STARTING TIME — -have at past Women’s: Hearing, lost when the police car ran out | Ci de hn i he he hi i Mo hi i hi hi Nin hi ti Li hi hi Mi Mi hi Mi Min hi Lin Mi Mi Mn dh hi i i he Me thi he nl wpENT PRIGE PERN LY HAVID NELSON > GILBERI ROLAND fi ae " | Housing opens here during Nation-| x *« * | gone. jal Home Week this year, we will “I'd say we have become kt *« t | THE BIG CiRcusS THE CIRCUS AT THE . 4 PONTIAC DRIVE-IN THEATRE PREMIER SHOWING THE BIG CIRCUS CINEMASCOPE - TECHNICOLOR Mighty drama of the tinsel and .. tanbark empire... the burning ambitions...the bitter jealousies...the. loves... hates... daring! intrigue sweep from the dizzy heights of the Big Top! ...Where treachery turns leese a caged beast...and one man's courage steed between it and terrer- struck thousands ! .;.where destruction is courted by a ~ human bullet blasted frem a giant cannon! Congresses brought out the fact/of gas. $55 MON. -TUES.-WED.-THURS.-FRI. — 7: :30 |that “‘women like compatible ma-| geeeesssssssssssssssssesnessmc only wood and brick, wood: opinion and other ideas across NOW! INTACT! UNCUT! the board, testing against the e : and outdoor EXACTLY AS SHOWN ON BROADWAY! | wont’. wc'se'sreasn's | Oscillating wall surfaces. | | teenagers. We are especially in- terested in a lead given us by a c 5 ae | t psychologist who is working at | Combines colorful beauty with extra resist- RODGERS § HAMMERSTEIN'S f? the Pentagon on problems of |. ance to weathering and wear. Bonds with ao aX military housing. | surface—seals up pores and cracks. No x = * , “wetting down”: or priming needed. Mix He has run surveys all over, and . . ° his conclusion is that the home : with water to increase coverage 50%. Now is more important as a. status for indoor on sale! symbol in the eyes of teenagers . a | than in any other group. Our Teen | Table will tell us more about this. | a all ue alii Produced by Directed by PAIL SB by. “We ses ro ave es deegn a an inside look at Washington an 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-1650 || BUDDY ADLER JOSHUA LOGAN ,MA.CSMR v=" an inside, ook at Washington’ PARK FREE REAR OF STORE In the Wonder of High-Fidelity STEREOPHONIC SOUND © __—a— = an entertaining stay here. What they give us can influence housing, tale ¢ . | ENJOY COOL COMFORT a AT AMAZING SAVINGS | wets . Say “Goodbye” to the discomfort ‘ = of sultry days and nights with this } powerful Eskimo fan. Switch. on a cool breeze when you want it, Deep Tufted wir: Se Box Spring 50 si raver —— Combination o ~~ Headboard | on, , > and Legs — : i A ‘COMPLETE == WEEKLY! | at the | | NO MONEY J’ MODERN SLEEP SHOP}) °°" | : 50° A WEEK! TELEGRAPH RD. — MIRACLE MILE— BAZAAR AREA FE 8-955 1 Open Friday Night "i g terials .., Gat _ SAT. and SUN. 1:30 - 5:00 - &:30 aa stone, wood and cement. Ac-, HEAVY-DUTY EXTRA MATINEE WED. 2:00 |cent walls, color, an air of serenity) id tant t - LATEX PRICES — NITES and SUN. $1.25 inc. tax |tnm Hartung points out | — COATING WED., SAT. — Matinees 90c, Children 50c “Now we're going to run this | AIR COOLED \ MOTOR EXTRA HEAVY WIRE GUARD Se Le SELF ALIGNING Cli IMPREGNATED REARINGS mer 7 ON OFF SWITCH BEAUTIFUL TIP PROO x 4 STREAMLINE BASE GUARANTEED ALL FANS DRASTICALLY REDUCED at WKC Window Fans! Portables! Floor Models! Table Models! Phone FE dora! 314 108 NORTH SAGINAW +i. f ee s ‘ €% 7 A : , THIRTY gk ; : * 3 poll bee 7 FR he! ‘hate . . j “| ‘i ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1959 - =, : ee — amt TTias D — , ¢ ( | oo N | M : | | : oo BD Fee anstattarion: F PAITINGS el for ounty vel Meet Teeing OF (F | a WRITTEN GUARANTEE | — By BILL CORNWELL 3 = Pontiac Central Site of Tennis. COMPLETE PREUISION INSTALLATION ST You’d find it hard to believe that a golfer who plays : the game for a living would be happy to be disqualified. " But John McMullin got the bounce yesterday in the first round of the Motor City Open golf tournament at Meadowbrook Country Club and he was the most de- BRAKES ; Action Saturday lighted young man on the premises. “I never was so glad tot if R E LI N E D | . be disqualified from a tour-|Detroit District champion, canned | Tourney This Weekend ney in my life,” commented a ‘yard wedge shot on the 10th . * | e * = p COMPARE THESE SAVINGS ! Hr. vol tes ot 3 | Has 20 Singles Entries the § 1 en d er 24-year-old An estimated 5,000 spectators at- i Make “us. Pal PY im | and 12 Doubles touring professional who|tended Thursday’s opening round. FORD |$30.80'$ 9.95 $20.85 | makes his- home in Fair|The thermometer hung around 90 CHEV. | 25.30) 9.95 15.35] é degrees and the humidity was in- ' 00. 9.95 17. * : Pairings have been set for the!/Oaks, Calif. tense. ad Piped sae 1.8 | ‘Oakldnd County Open tennis tour-| ty view of all the things that seapded | ge] eae ea an’ nament this weekend at the courts happened to the sophomoretproyes | NASH | 34.45 12.95 21.50 Wheels near Pontiac Central High School. |4PP® oh bi P a 13th Bad Da DODGE 30.85) 12.95, 17.90 Ford, Chevy, Plymouth A men’s field of 20 singles players terday, one cant ame him a bit. and 12 doubles teams is entered in|Everything went wrong for Mc- 4 ig ALL OTHER U.S. CARS ONLY ......... $12.95 the tourney which makes it the|Mullin and here’s the rundown of « largest in several years. events that eventually led to his Free Ford, Chevy j ificati i | | installation! V2 -ton Pick-Ups * * * _ disqualification for attesting to i ey or Panel Trucks Action in singles competition will|an improper scorecard. 1 SHOCKS BRAKES get started at 8:00 a.m. a He took a practice swing in a Ruth and LL Nines RELINED doubles play scheduled for 3:30 trap at No. 7 and ticked the sand $Q75 : Saturday, < « ¢ for a two-stroke penalty. Lose Tourney Games x ve aaeecona $ 95 Sunday, quarterfinals in singles = the 13th recs tried tor by 1 Run ¥ gremien pone le a.m. and conte tas ai atee his candy “a tre Two Birmingham junior baseball j ire power throuhg the finals. e quarter- ne ' iminated’ in sen. ' ears with power 2, ther truck ' Pontiac Press Phote : E 3 : 1 for another two-stroke nalt _ powers were eliminat in sep SS" ser eer extra ; slightly bigher. FINAL PLANS — Officials of the West Side ing Aug. 18 until Sept. 1. Looking over the setup finals in doubles will begin at 3:00 oe No. 14 endian overdrove arate tournaments on Thursday the ee BONDED BRAKES SHOPS Boys Club Pee-Wee- Football League recently for this year are, left to‘ right, Andy Wright, p.m. the green, then drew another two- 13th. 121 .WAYNE ST., Pontiac completed plans for their annual grid clinic Frank D. Thompson, the loop director, Dick SATURDAY PAIRINGS stroke fine for hitting the ball as oan o Hanes aL pioneers f, i | h wi f “ridays start- s and Jack King. ‘hols vs Men-|it moved in the rough. fed Aa CY ye = ; ; ———— behind Federais FE 3-7855 ny : which will be a cuesdays Bil Fradiys start SET Eee Farms = c ane ingttnvat Taylor Moyer Be teem, Mt 7 “ 1 - MaMutl was quarter-finals af the Ohio Valley : _ " ™ a ayone te vs. Barkiey. = - 0 top all off, ‘ nh Wa Regional Babe Ruth meet at Yp- 7 - 8 Mccaaneg. ; Coreen va Lute, Weasel disqualified for signing an erro- | cijanti. ties Gone cusia vs Nichols—Rich- | neous scorecard after it was dis- : : 4 ards winner Hibbs vs. Mennott~— Taylor | covered that he had taken only Gimicians daseliee vinte |winner, Scriven vs. Moyer—} ineweaser’ 9 one-stroke penalty for the mov- s 7 $ ; winner, mune ws Cayonerte—pernney ing ball violation instead of two. fe Mitpes wate eras bowed | ; “ ; . . 0 or WwW S J-5 e semi- ; ' | 356 pm: We enon ve Sane Every one of these TORTIE finals, Boon Tavlos Russell Ya *!Macadaeg Me. laos noting han a mene An unearned run in the 3rd stood : a ueinnee ho ples adaeg-Mc- Janse by the good-natured young- r 1 jrd s | sre non Hicks Gould e Clshin mesons ler and all were of the unusual UP until the 7th for the Pioneers ‘winner to play Mallory-Mallory), Rich-| |. ss \but Carl Kalocsay gave up a single ards-Corwin vs. Nichols-Andrews (win. Variety on the tour. lacat 4 inci le iene tt E: i F “ner to play Alle-Martusiewicz). | When the whole episode ended, | ouble and single to ose it. zach - |McMullin laughed and announced team had muffed numerous scor- ing chances. i “ Voorheis Drugs. They meet Russ’ !land, Fla., whiffed a shot yes- and Mrs. Earl Webber tied for See : - Country Store on Saturday at 10|terday. The ball was against aj/2nd at 38. : |A.M. AT THE WHS fvvESSES | tree and Cooper tried to hit it with; Low putt laurels were shared by e ) | Boys’ Club C team and Panky’s|the neck of the club. He fanned.|/Mrs. Webber and Mrs. Aubyn a ithat he was going to leave the tour for a spell and go home to lhis wife and daughter. ‘I think Title Games Sef Host Ypsilanti bowed to Eau Claire, Wis., 52 and Anderson, Ind., blanked Tiffin, Ohio 9-0 in From e e e e e e e jl heed a rest,” he quipped. | |MOTOR CITY NOTES t . for Junior Clubs lother games. Harvey plays the | jKentucky team while Eau Claire | Two Waterford Junior a lin on the sidelines yesterday, but final is Saturday. league title games are for tonight for physical reasons instead of the) - Birmingham's LL nine was down ‘as a result of yesterday's action rule book. |3-0 before rallying for two in the in Class D and Class E and an-! Pe c Goosie ir o ae a oe ee that = all. k tod lather: lass E ane ‘wicign after he injured his eft an try- arper vs. Hamtramck today at SUAS ET ES 8 (Orange division’ i,7 to make a southpaw 6-iron shot |5 p.m. at Eton Park for the Mich- takes place Saturday. from behind a tree. An attack of blanked Kalamazoo 5-0 yesterday. | Four other pros joined McMul-,and Anderson tangle today. The - Lakeland Barbers won a finals! spot in the Orange, (E division)! Pete Cooper, former Knollwood with a close. 7-6 win over Olson-|pro who now plays out of Lake- Grill play a title match tonight] Amateurs Mike Conroy of Bir- ‘at 5:30 o'clock on the Pierce;mingham and Bud Stevens of De- ‘Junior High field, They are Class/troit posted eagle twos, Conroy Mrs. Roland Gegoux and Fred Stimpert shared Ist place with 37s. Mrs. Paul Castleberry Coopes, each with 13. The blind hole event went to Mrs. Elbert Looney and Mrs. Garry Looney. * * hay fever forced Henry Ransom) a King -Smith Printers defeated to withdraw, George Bernardin “Lf e - > Kruchkos’ Plumbers 15-6. Charles dropped out with a hand injury | Share and Share Alike : , Lenenschmidt wss given an early|and an ailing back sent- Jerry In Silver Lake League ‘ F lead and went all the way for Ee to the sidelines. e easy win. Printers play Rocco’s| : ' There was a triple tie for low e Restaurant Class D (under 18) ee Mate tt fied an ay te |net honors in this week's compe- 1a years) at 5:30 p.m. today at Wa-| Royal <Oak sieatour "tailed to tition in the Women’s Silver Lake a terford High's diamond. | show up |Golf* League. Mrs. Phil Dorman, 5 . Mrs. - ie Be io, Sa E teams and the title at stake|sank a 50-yard chip shot on No.|both shooting a bogey six on ‘is the Black Division. 9 and Stevens, State Amateur and No, 3. -aROLET Biscayne ‘38 CHEV BW 4-Door. SO WE MUST SELL ‘EM!! ee ge ee ac TENTH . THE 195 CLUB _ 4 p Mainli _—'33 RAMBLER Station 4 05, _ a ‘54 FOR & ii.. ; geese Wagon, Overdrive, R. & H. | | LARGE SELECTION of iy - ‘53 MERCURY Cust. 2-Dr. *195 ; 1959 MODELS Eagan So -— Mere-0-Matic, R. & H..... , | | _ ‘53 FORD Convertible, 1 OF | "59 ID aN e170 o 7 1 95 1795 - MUST BE SOLD... YOU KNOW THE REASON WHY! | | IF YOU'RE SMART (and we think you are) | R.& H............. 2s Factory Heater, Deluxe Pack- YOU'LL COME RIGHT NOW! ‘54 CHEVROLET 210 2-Dr. ‘age. Undercoating ..... bes For the Largest and Best Selections Power Glide, R. & H..... The Prices, of Course, Are ROCK-BOTTOM' | THEY HAVE TO BE! | | BILL SPENCE-Rambler | | 211 S. Saginaw -\ FE 8-4541 ee ee coe eS ate A . es ‘ A Wherever You Live —Turn to Turner e , . | HAROLD TURNER FORD 1464 S. WOODWARD © BIRMINGHAM MI 4-7500 | \ * cS . : z a ” ’ / % : f a Lew e . % : / i i THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. AUGUST 14, 1959 : itle of St. Mihel shrapiel struck | . | Eiffel tower in,Paris. What's more , Lynchburg. There was also Jar Gets His Pur ple Heart | his left ear. Beware les Pickpockets C. A. Harrell, city~manager ot Me's Not Own Grandpa leen Campbell, 19, Pat's great | . A ; i _ booms : : . e After Long, Long Wait oe applied for the Purple | NORFOLK, Va. w—Mayor w_ Cincinnati eand former city. man-| LYNCHBURG, Va. (®—The Stone | Mece, and Eugene Stone, 33, of Heart three years ago. It arrived) p4q Duckworth says French pick-| #8° here, lost a key case to the Brookneal, Va., Pat’s pephew. VERMONTVILLE, Mich, (UPI) recently. | lsame set of nimble fingers: family reunion here brought some tii interesting comparisons. Patrick, : ea. | ipockets are pretty good at their —Forty years P2 ssed before ite! lrrade. One removed his waHet Fa | : | Edwin Stone, 8, of Sophie, W, Va.,| The Rio Grande supplies irriga- liam Mossman, 69; Vermontville,| Indiana has about twice the total taining $1,000 in travelers checks} Fwo-thirds of the world’s whales|found himself with a 67-year-old'tion water for about two million received his World War One Pur-|land area of. Denmark. lwhile the mayor was visiting the/are taken in Antarctic waters. lhalf brother, Harvey Stone, of/acres. ple Heart. | — — — ee Mossman, served with the 26th) : division in France. During the ond : * q BABY’S Ney SHOES BY EXCLUSIVE NEW | DUCTYL' PROCESS — REDUCED | 4 | | SEARS ' boy's new ‘> outdoor suit ~ 2 88 reg. 7.98 Charge It Your Choice! children’s #2 boxer longies, slacks or overalls y. "Charge It’’ . T 9g 8 each Water-repellerit 2-piece cotton sateen style with hood. Navy, harcoal, antelope. Hurry in today ... Save. Sizes 4-6X A UPI Telephoto HAIL THE HERO — ‘‘Lady” is a most heroic dog, say judges | f ; Lee : f | - A. Colorful print B. Corduroy boxer C. Washifast cordu- who awarded her a plaque for that distinction. Posing here with | | corduroy slacks Ideal longies. Bnght, sturdy, roy overall with her owner, Tommy Abel, 3, of St. Louis, the honored canine ends | | boxer style slacks for | washable. For boys, lined bib. Adjust- a three-day tour of Chicago today as the guest of a dog food man- girls and boys girls. Elastic Waist ante suspenders i] Sizes 2 - 6X Sizes 2, 6X drop seat: Sizes 2 - 5 _ D. cotton polo shirts E. boys’ bulk cardigans Long sleeve polo 4 N es : iow as Novelty knit 2 shirts, taped rein- ¥ 98 ufacturer. U. N. Members Puzzled — by Apparent U.S. Switch UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP);mand for parity and hat the —The United States has been put| British readily agreed. They say on the spot in the United Nations|the Ynited States, despite some by reports that the Big Four! misgivings. was persuaded to go foreign ministers have agreed the’ along. next committee to negotiate on} The U.N. Disarmament Com- disarmament should be. divided! mission has been unable to do!@ equally between, Communist and! anything for two years, since the ¥ Western Nations. imajor Western powers rejected a sweaters,~self or forced necks. Pat- contrasting color _ terns and -stripes 7 ¢ trim. Twor-styles in many colors injsizes O06 Sizes 3 - 6X \— boy's washable cotton hooded car coat only 3 3? \Why, a number of members/Soviet demand for parity and the ‘ ask, has the United stat agreed 12-nation commission was expand-| Style 45 Portrait Stand to East-West parity after vigor-jed to include all 82 U.N. mem-} Reg. $16.95 Bronze ously opposing Soviet demands for’ bers. | Charge ft it for several years? NOW $12.71 Styled with convertible * * * Silver $17.21 hood, handsome cotton quilt lining. Red, tur- quoise, navy. In sizes Repercussions in the U.N, fol. Garbage Gollection Neat, This and every other mounted style lowed _word from Geneva and}! an | in the beautiful BRON-SHOE line dre- . Paristhat the foreign ministers/*Tedericksburg has a garbage col-| stically reduced, order now for Christ- of the United States, Britain, | Fredericksture pas ; eoreane France and the Soviet Union had/lection system it believes. unique. | agreed to set up a 10-nation group] Paper aes laree enough to fill | to resunie disarmament negotia-| 10-gallon can are distributed and) tions deadlocked since 1957, \placed in the cans. Garbage ‘cok: oe Children’s-& Infants’ Department. Main Floor The proposed group would have |lectors take the filled bags and the Western Big Three plus Italy| leave new ones making it unneces- and Canada on one side, and the! Sary to clean the cans, which was Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslo-| formerly a part of the service. | -! vakia, Romania and Albania on the other. i H * * * Gives Canes to Blind Watch Repair Dept.. Main Floor U.S. nd British officials insist ‘TULSA, Okla. \P—A Tulsa busi-| - no final decision has been reached nessman, who declines to disclose | Saliefaction gumanded on makeup of the group. his identity to the public, makes) © yO &: Reliable sources say the Soviet|special canes for the blind and OF gow money Union at Geneva renewed its de-'gives them away free. : SALE ENDS AUG. 24 bring Shoes in TODAY shop Sears Friday and _ ruffles ‘n lace TE Sy ene , Monday nights until 9 cotton slips a "| | All the clothes your children need| reg. 1.69 ] , for their Back-to-School Wardrobe] .,....::.¢% iu -tip nor one ; 7 can be bought at Sears! CHARGE IT!) Weve ony Gat size” | ] ! i ee Soe oar hae PRA t aes girl’s hood car coat Honeylane® car coat with Orlon” pile lined zipper hood. Rayon lining. Charcoal, blue, gray or tweed in sizes 7 to 14 Will be 1295 nw 8.88 7 to 14. Hurry in today for this gigantic savings! at Pontiac Federal | __ Seve This Year by Sewing School and College wardrobes at low cost \_ pinwale | corduroy @ in 11 colors regularly $I yd. ou Wb yd . Ze x ox wg Current Rate on All © “Charge It” Rich, velvety corduroy keeps its gem-like col- ors through many tub- bings. Make jackets. skirts, jumpers, dresses and play togs. Amaz- ing buys. gay printed school cottons ¢ “Charge 23 yd. Lingerie Dept. Main Floor it”’ ® Endless variety ® Short lengths © Broadcloths, percales © Florals, moderns ® Stripes, geometrics —_ Savings | Yard Goods Dept. Main Floor Save Up to 1.01 on Specially . Priced Closet Accessories Door Hangers . .Reg. $1 Qa. we. .2 for 99c Pajamas, Baby Dolls "$4 bd 4 Conve-ient Offices to Serve You Gowns, or Jamaica's * ome each A. Gay new print on San- C. New Buttons and Row- forized cotton flannel shift crint on: warm cotton {lannel- gown, ‘full sweep skirt. Nylor ette with frilly lace and PONTIAC , Drying Rack .................5.. 99 lace, embroidery. S,M,L embroidery. Sanforized. 32-40 ; rs : B, N rint o San- D. Pretty Buttons and Bows . FEDERAL SA INGS Wall Hanger +8 Reg. $] CA. 2 0.0. 2 for 99c ; lorized- eotion ‘lannelete rift on Sanfonzed ‘ V ‘ with tros ylon broidery flannel. Nylon lace, em Skirt Rack eee Reg. 69c Ga. ssa: 2 for 99c wad ine Red. turquoise bicidery trim ° Red, . , : 32 - 40 ; turquoise S, M,L Skirt Hanger . .Reg. 3 for 1.47 . 3 for 99c Shoe Rack ... Reg. 69cea. ... .2 for 99c Trouser Hanger Reg. 3 for 1.47 . .3 for 99c HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huron St. ROCHESTER: 407 Main St. PONTIAC: 16 E. Lawrence St. DRAYTON: 4416 Dixie Highway a| * a } Wig | 154 North Saginaw St. a a | Saliofaction guaranteed OD YOU n0nty back. SEARS : Phone FE 5-4171 Just Say “Charge It” on Sears Revolving Charge rs . . 2 é : Fa : 4 t f » ~ = Ff f a so OU . Mm