I 3-431* evenlnge, r
Platform rocker
Davenport and chair .. —-
Refrigerator ......... *4*.**
5 piece breakfast set - 14* 84
Table HUM aud 4 ah airs .. 441J5 Triple drasacr. cheat and full *>*• bookcase bed. walnut. $138.8*.
THOMAS ECONOMY
361 saginaw_____ FE 2-*ltl
USED APPLIANCES
Refrlgantora $4* aad up Waabar* *3* *5 and up.
Also aall out price* an all 1*61 Auto washer, wad dryer.
Consumers Power Co.
IA NO TUNING Schmidt. FE 2-5217.
- OSCAR
USED ftHUXio' l---------------
lk cu. fy with freeaer i
used 30 f*i gas water boat*: USED Phllco refrigerator. *3 RECONDITIONED Frlgldalre
Crump Electric, Inc.
3468 Auburn Ed. PE 4-3573
w CR U ;d. BRAND
ype with all at- LADY'S YELLOW
JENNITE M6
LONO-LASTtNO PROTECTION FOR ASPHALT PAVEMENTS ■top* treats thaw damage, a* wa as ioftanlhg effect, ef gas and ot Give# a smooth satin Hack flniel
5-Gallon Can $9.95
BLAYLOCK COAL * SUPPLY do 41 Orchard Lake Ava. PE 3-llt! kitchen cTWTWVTr~WfBT.
___ _____ ________ OR BPUf-
et piano to Oollagher ifato Co. Wo pay caah. Call FE 4-0668.
r U NI NO AND REAIRINO. 24-bour .errtce all work guaranteed by factory trained men CALBI MUSIC CO.
iu n- saginaw n *-■»
RELIVE BROADWAYS THRILL-
___ complete
a your favorite saaaah 17 50 par tooro with
scratched. 43-'rm#deV, *a* value; j DLC XfT *?7r
*44.50 while they last, ter{U£_va|.! MORRIS MUSIC
Mt*. Just t
ESi
r they last, .tentfle vaL A
____and **” models. Nnehl-!]4 S. Telegraph ______
Ffuereecehi, 3*3 ^prehard____________*£?*' From Tel-Haron^
.,„TT~r ■ .. ■* W xtUS H
KITCHEN WALL CABINETS, 30X15] tog twenties’ Is our Davie
_____ _ hpriWaT
»aler, lights for hedrpooa*. kltcn-*ns. dlntag rooms. hnUo. garden.. Priced not at dlacouht'.lm below wholesale. Michigan Fluorescent. 393 Orchard Lake **
Hoary Miller, j
guinea p!g57 rabbits all Pet Shop, 55 Williams. PK 4-0433.! MALE POODLE PUPPIES. BLACK I or brown. Must go. MA 5-1585, | PART POODLE, PUPPIES, fl malt Q8t 1-0437.
POODLES. 2 .MALE: old. reaeonable. FE ii-usar, PARAKEETS GUARANTEED TO talk. Cuarlea. cages and supplies. Tropical fish, tanks, and
Mi fw**
f DEERE MODEL 60 TRAC ter and model R John Done; tractor. Davis Machinery. Ph. MA I 7-3292, Ortoa Till*’ j
Wheel Horse Tractors j
Bolen* riding moveri. Orbit-Air
SkIb Motor ScooUrs 94
•57 CUSHMAN SCOOTER. 332-0622
69 CUSHMAN MOTOR SCOOTER. '« k#. ' “** -
4 ENGINE AIRLINER, NON-STOP-1 Dtog^'rMi. HawM^'tto’oo1 Mew! York, $19. Miami. *44. Perry L Sorvtca Inc_ OR 3-1I84. ,
Wanted Used Cars
$125. 1
1350 N. Woodward'
lot!
-d7 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE. -Power brakes, steering, windows. I 6wil electric state, beautiful emerald gr**> finish. 2I.M* actual piles- TM» car 1« abeolutclv spot- , lea*. NORTH CHEVROLET <5T 1*8* S WOODWARD. BIRM1NO-«iau if? vifioh *
BIRMINGHAM
Buy Detroit C*r| ' In Pontiac Detroit Prices ~
$25 MORE
HAM. MI ’4-373*
1950 Chrysler
CADILLAC. 1*6* 4 DOOR. HARD-1 e. n n • '
I top, full power. Call FE 5-4012.1 r uH Price , - CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE j
6 1st St., Rochester, OL
«.c
MORRIS' MUSIC
34 S. Telegraph PE t4Hf
i Across free* Tri-Huron t I SILVER ELECTRIC O UTTAR
j with amgMwj iUaoQ) sm.
condition: 41*6 3 TE4R OLD BASSETT BOUND,
rDlVVCT I ’C1* fenaaU ill. a H . «W«SkfPI
PARAKEETS GUARANTEED TO 'p*mSDAT
“,k HQUM.jg^g; MTOBUAT
EVERY SinroAY ...... _
OPEN T PATSiWKKK (V — ~ • —TAIL f-----
. 65 ;
. .r$ 95
.499
SCOTTIES. AKC. HOME RAISED ■ ■ ■___
L mala- ♦ lemalca, EM J-68M. I BUY - SELL - RETAIL DAILY L
TROPICAL FISH, CABINET S' X DOOR PRIZES EVERY AUCTION *' with 7 aquarium*. Phan* PE i Lunch Room Open Er— *■■■“*■
9 DIXIE HIOHWAY
Dogs T raineil, Boarfiefi 80 ■ Sale tlotittraWers
DOOfl .AND CATS BOARDED, 43* PONTIAC CHI
_ I___j
^S2S ’ diSSf ph 'KfSr ! Tfefp] help? help ,
i -^I&iSSt f^ru^’^utSSar power l'«» Price .... $197
TBL.LKB tffffV 1 Glenn’s Motor Sales | 1^-19*57 Ford .TlUl
TS&&& luHto. to. iSrmSSiTm^S *** W Huron at. PK ♦Till 19WT W 90©-! ZZ.. „ . ....
EffiiM Vn".............................®
)■■■ . „ S4S4 SOUTHFIELD '
front kitchen. Cost J! ^ l-rt< t*™* iIJLm s ^ 0 M$r, Mr P*rE$ ftt MI 1
quick Mlt. Dovtli iM 4-0324
1*88 MARLETTE. 1«KI», OCCV-
ftiL~
46.290, Will sacrifice
PE 3-7186 i 4 YEA
WASH HTlAUTOMATIC LATE LAVATORIES COMPLETE, 424 50 27 S flagl model. Maytag electrlfc dryar Hal. | value. *14.85. Also bathtubs. td-HHIBBub organ — l manual i v— -7--
tt-itamr week Vh4elr» MT 3-3ttl. I leta. shower ataTto/ Iwwgttiera. ter:) wUll .peaker tablnet Special i qurmuB_ Mtort . teqrud .
Jl'te. '1*16 T.a •irntxasr. I riflevalue*. Michigan Fluorescent] oniy tST Also H A MUOND , gTS****' CsU 1
. S2.T imoertai Maher atrifHy-1 - 393 Orchard-;Lake I. ■ SPINET. SpedaL 3745. -■ 1 iPfr' >■>* »*......
SP anTFI.rwrr'etfjL ?QUN-TYP» ^TON- LEW BETTERLV MUSIC CO. tile BKAidU. PHUaIB. 00®\
wtove^a**' '*8 KlglW* «frt«- a^mod.1 No,■ 475-i. Ilk* new.__________________Ml *8003 ,1 hunter, eaeeUowl uedlaree. *■*
Itotw, MO*. Oil *3tol UL 24593, s OPPOkfTE BEAM TBKATM 1 OR J4187 after «:8*7m. \
a'mT ijfoirrwEiolfT
Travel Trailer, flute 1833, Oner- . . anteed tor life See them end flat < JBf
. a demonstration at Warner.Trail-] .. v 1 2~J7**
ar Mat. jaaa W Hurtm. I Plan to] tr. WOLYK_____________________________
Jots one of Wally Byam'a exciting t 1957 Mark 25, W Elgin trailer” car*v«f*>. j A-X coadlUon, #478. PE - —■
lent condition. $5*. 1
^we,need:carst
5 ■wAB^^TTO’ijrj] SsaS? oifethSkSS ,;pMdS:l rttotow
Chevrolet. For too 1 these gtodrie aad aHtor.-
M &M MOTOR SALES
2537 mate Hwjr. OK 3-MK1
—-latoariilg, todlo^ind ’ heater, wltftowall nrej Silver-blue. This car to' Immaculate.
11.695 NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. 1*8* a. WOODWARD, ■rftMINO-HAM. MI 4-173*.
MOTORS
. -ABSOLUTELY ,. SCO CASH NEEDED Little u $6 ft Month ■.
THE PONTMl PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 24. 1961
.•for Sale Cara ,.10*i ■ ■ Par Uk Cara , Wl.
1*63 PLYMOUTH. RUN HUSO ' ***
' Utt POHD OALAXI* won. M. automatic. Power steeringand
;«Plfe^gg:
Bamwiii: m hS.
Van Camp Chevrolet, Ind
'asst- IgWMJ^/PBAHR;
Ff M> Cara IS REPOSSESSION
Low
wm
„ '" jwwt
m-toaudder _
REPOSSESSION
i rood Vuou, MW Ml price. — qi8y f .montT ----
i«M PLYMOUTH BUBURH4N STA-1 .r'--
w/^R%rmuP6haT "uiTwrliPM result baui^ne: , i«:
MINGHAM-R AMBLER. MI MW RENAULT DAUPHINE W OOOD condition, tun-roof, radio fend , heater. «« M.P.O. PE 4-IMT. /dONViri AUTO MART ■M or M Chevy. very food >62. ’M. M And 'St Pontiac*
■62. ’ll and (2) ‘M BuleU ■51 Ford. 4 door, like new ■46 Chevy, •« ton pick-up'^
TBit* Cooler Lk. Rd- W». W-73M '(lVee 8I1ICA CONVERTIBLE. A Meek 2-pasxenger convertible with
- -Far Stile Cara . 106
They Must Go!
•64 Buie k. eoovertlbls and 4 door 2 Plymouth*. >64 to 'M.9W7 to 42*1 I Cadillac*, jji to ‘St. Uiffi
6* PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR ; I V8. hydrantaue, radio, toator, whitewall*. PcrslAn sand finish. 1 •na viol *1-625. NORTH CHEVROLET CO I lfldO g; WOODWARD, BIRMINO-
I960 FALCON 2-DOOR. AtJTOMAT-i to iimdllilM full price only I S14U. Lloyd Motors. lFncoln-Met> cury-Comet, 232 8. Safinaw. rs. ’ Mllli
19*1 PONTIAC 4 DOOR HARD-top .HydraaaUe Radio Healer. Whitewalls. While with blue In-eert. Tear ■ I
LIQUIDATION
lUl rmd l denr. low payment jSkesIde Motow 33*T»i
INI LINCOLN cBSTININTAI. DEMO, 4.404 miles. Thla one U priced to sell. Lloyd Motors.
_ 4-speed transmission, ----------
heater, white sidewalls Has special leather top. A light green ---- green leather Interior,
Birmingham-Rambler *M S. Woodward I minutes from Pontiso
KESSLER'S
-o
larp
Oxford
Inside Used Car X.ot AH Inside — All Shari
10 N Washington OA 6-1400 Wl
HOMER
HIGHT
Smalt Totyn Trades:
1067 PONTIAC 4-DOOR, I OWNER
no cash needed and full pries le IMS Lucky Auto Bales, ill S, Saginaw. PR 4-2214 =r*7=C=ST7=-5B=S
REPOSSESSION . ■■■
146* Mercury Hsrdtop. UN *ull credit Mgr. at B1RM1NOHAM-prtce. pay only*** s month, let RAMBLER, Ml 9-3*09
ir.^1M^." 1 r\ l
! Buick Dealer
ieo PONTIAC yENTTJRA. LIRE
IM PLYMOUTH 2 dOOSS*-Radio aad healer Automatic transmit sieo. 4 cylinder. Sharp .... 471
PEOPLES AUTO SALES
______— ]«* Oakland _ ' FE 2-2361
y.Comet. » S. itJ3 PONTIAC SEDAN OOOD MO-
Good body No money^ewetj
Payments IS *6 p<
Will t
™ „_______.4 4-DOOR STATION 1
wagon. Automatic transmission. Radio, heater -** *— ”*'"t
FISCHER f
BUICK
pontiaP 784 S. Woodward, B’ham S*#f°i55rar MI 4-6222
er^Radle. heater. M.164. j tcMI| pRQM OREEHWELD9 I ;j 1044'TONifAC CATALhlA 4-DOORi_. , ^
I ^*ai^r •’SMi4 *K^:|Stop*Shop-$ave
OLIVER
BUICK
3-343>
S. j mm ' r^ow^OVERHEAD IUB PONTIAC 1-DOOR HARDTOP «***#».?TVee I -- Radio, heater, autoeaatle, no RAMMLER-DALLAS. I met. p»h pries, use 1041 R- main rochi8T» Birtningham-Kambler
DODGE-CHRY8LEB-&MCA j g JmuIn tom Pontiac
1055 MERCURY I PAB6eNOER[ R| HN>_________
r payments. MA -M PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP.
1961 COMET DELUXE 2-DOOR. RA-
ROLfT
WARD.
BIRMINGHAM-. MI 4273*
4-DAY SPECIAL
ft§7 Lincoln Premier bard to Pull price only gl»6. Lloyd I* *— »■—iln-Mercr— --*
*63 'MERCURY
;■ FE.6-1762_______
MERCURY 4-DOOR TWO TO
I M.J new. Pull price glpr - aad no cash eroded Lucky Ante . Ssjae. 103 “ 1
108T PONTIAC SAFARI WTATliON
Wagon Has all el------- -----
•orlfk Well kwt, 1
u W 8. iagtaaw. I (ERCURY 2-DOOB heater. High tn
-DOOR. RADIO
_________tgh tread white
Very clean family tm
ft&R MOTORS
NEW ECONOMY SPECIAL 1 ' et Madebeker Lark, heater and defroster Accessory ON. whlte-
-e Trade'1 ' j. Bird, at Saginaw, PR 4-0487 *060 NASH RAMBLER oDNVERTI-B1M. ABSOLUTELY RQ MONEY
• DOWN. Assume |-----*
|1>1I per mo. Call
. ppaar brakes and steering Sharp wad black BUBS full price. Lloyd ,'llSere. Llaeoln-Mercury-Comet. 1 3318. Saginaw, £E 1-0131.
r»66 dLDS 3 DOOR. VERY CLEAN.
NOW M
I OR 4-0120
10*7 PONTIAC 4-DOOR. HARD-• t. ITS* full price. Lloyd Motors, icoln - Mercury - Comet, 232 Baglnew. PI 2-0131.
CHEAPER THAN LOT 1M1 Pontiac Ventura Vista * door hardtop. Coronado red, hydramet-le, radio, heeler, white wells,
'61 PONTIAC WAGON
rory. Ml West Iroquois
S5 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, dean, new top aad paint. RM
AT
HASKINS
I* CHEVROLET 1MPALA CONVERTIBLE Wl engine. Powergljde transmission. Power •tteriDg Jg brakes! Radio, b—»-* *°,ld
white finish; YOU:
DOWN!!
i OLD C
'60 CHTVROLET BROOK WOOD tTATIOM WAOOII. w«b * «M saving t-ejrt. engine Standard transmission, radio, heater, light —* -X=I finish $121
SOWN!!1
iUrl*tran
eelon, gold I .DOWN 11
*41 CORVAIH MONZA 4-DOOR with M h.p. engine, 4-epeed transmission, radio, beater, solid red finish; 4126 DOWN 11
Financing No Problem
HASKINS
196* PONTIAC 9 PASS
wagon, power steering aaul___
luggage carrier, air eandlUoaed. TOUR CROSS ROAM TO SAVING* --------------- CLARK8TON
.. .-$ 845 ...61995 ...$ 895 ...$ 995 ...$1995 ...$ 59,r ...$ 895 ..$ 995 . .$1995
’59 Renault ,
60 MG .....
’58 Plymouth '60 Goliath . ,
’60 Chevrolet ’58 Opel . . .
’57 Buick ’58 Mercury '59 Buick '60 Buick Hardtop $2495 '56 Volkswagen . . .$. 795 ’60 Morris Minor ..$ 695 *60 Ford 4-I)oor ...$149! '57 Buick 995
'55 Buick ...’..:$ 295
’57:Buick .. ..... $995 ’59 Dodge Pickup .. $129! ’59 Buick Hardtop $2045 ’57 Buick Hardtop $ 895 ’55 Buick'Hardtop $ 395
OLIVER
Motor “Sales
210 Orchard I^ike Ave.
FE 2-9101
^FwSeleCwi
BUICK; 1959
FISHER BUICK
784 S, Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222
AfcaOBS PROM ORCENPIBLD'S
TRANSPORTATION
SPECIALS
■56 Plymouth, $67 ‘54 Chevrolet. $97 ’54 Ford- f97 ’55 Ford .Wagon, $97 ’54 Pontiac, $37 ’54 Plymouth, $77 ..’53 Buick Wagon, $57 ‘53 Chevrolet, $47 ’50 Chevrolet, $37 ’Si Ford, $37
109. Other* to choose from IMMEDIATE DEUYERY Mo Money Needed
. KING v
Auto Sales
ii b. saiinew pe irm
GIANT' . VALUES
Under $200
’56 Chevrolet 2-Door Runs Fine!
Full Price $179’
’55 Buick 2-Door Hardtop Century Full Price $179
’55 Plymouth Hardtop dean Throughout! Full Price $95
’53 Ford Stick V8 Very, Very Sharp!
NO MONEY DOWN 13 WEEKLY
’53 Pontiac 2-Dooj Beautiful 2-Tone
NO MONEY DOWN 41 M WEEKLY
...’55 Chevrolet
Red and White, Clean! Full Price $179
’54 Ford Stick V8 With Overdrive Full Price $179
MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM
Surplus.
MOTOR BALES
111 South Saginaw St.
FF. 8-4036
Bill Spence
RAMBLERLAND
. IS YOUR-.’•.
RARGAINLAND
FREE
1.000 MILES OF " GASOLINE FREE with each new or used car ’til Labor Day
1960 Falcon
2-Door Sedan
With delueo trim, eutometle ueiutiaisalan. radio and heater. Reel efiaip throughout!
$1595
'55 Chevrolet
4-Door Bel Air
With V-l engine, e atom Stic ------Out of state eat.
Save
'60 Rambler
Classic 4-Door Sedans
You base the choice of three! Automatic 1
$1296
'60 Rambler
American 4-Dopr
Sedan with a-cyllnder saglns rhls ear la raal aharp! .Alst gives real good mileage!
$1135 1958 Buick
Speqial 4* Door Sedan
With radio, hotter and auto matle traesmlesion. Sharp U
^ ' $1195 1958 Cadillac
Convertible
Pull power. Beautiful whit) with ' black leather interior Leather trim' PRICED TC SELL AT ONLY
$2295
'58 Chevrolet
la Convertible
. 3 engine, automatic imisaUm, _r<%4la heater.
$1495 v '57 Chevrolet
2-Door Delray
Sedan with v-g engine, automatic tranemlsston. radio and heater. A0 leather trim. A REAL NICE CAR I
$895
1957 Ford
Custom 2-Door
With a-cyltndcr engine, radio andheater. No fust aad REAL NICE THROUGHOUT!
. $795
1958 Buick
“75” Roadmaster
Ibis Is the kind you hear of but never aee! PULL POWER ON THIS BEAUTY!
$1445 .
'58 Rambler
Custom Wagon
Real clean Inside and out! Radio heater and a 4-cyUnder engine! Priced to eell at
$895
'58 Ambass.
Station Wagon
With V-t_ tpglne, automatic
nowrr^steerinf *and brakes.4 A REAL CLEAN LOW MILEAGE CAR!
CdSf L
$1095
Bill Spence
RAMBLERLAND
32 S. MAIN ST. CLARKSTON
WE’RE LOCATED IN A LITTLE TOWN — WHICH KEEPS OUR OVERHEAD DOWN! MA 5-5861
YOU'LL BE , PROUD TO SEE THE WORLD
Through These Windshields
— A*1 USED CARS-STOP IN TODAY AND SAVE
1960 FORD 1958 FORD
STAHUNER 4-DOOR
Raaio. heater. whKOWall liras and autom sue trans* Radio, heater, automatic transmission and whktwaU
. $1895 . U’M $895
1960 FORD 1959 FORD
FALCON COUNTRY SEDAN
4-Door with radio, heater, whitewall Urea and deluxe Radio, hantar aad whitewall tires. A real sharp ear.
$1395 $1495
1960 FORD. 1957 FORD
2-DOOR COUNTRY SEDAN
Radio, healer gutamatie transmission and erhltewall t-Passenter Station Wagon with radio, heater, Whitewall
$1595 tires., power ttftrinf, suto- "‘“’$995-
1959 CHEVY 1957 FORD
2-DOOR
Radio. - heater, automatic ■ transmission and whitewall WAGON ,
^ $1295- Radio, heater, whitewall
' tires add automatic trans-
1959 FORD “““$695
2-DOOR Radio, beater, automatic 1957 Triumph
transmiaaioti aad padded TR-3
$1395 $995. .
FREE PARKING on the
Rear of Our. Lot
CLOSED WED', FRI. AND SAT. AT 6 P.M.
John McAuliffe
^ PONTIAC’S ONLY FORD DEALER
630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101
4 PONTIAC CO! MO. HBATCR.
___________MMoiiOtELT!
MO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay-1 minis of Mi ls per mo Cal Omm M*r., Mr. Paibs at M] 4-7609. HarUld Turner, Ford
RAMBLERS
a used Rambler — Please ti
Birmingham-Rambler
Ml. Woodward S minutes from Pontlta
.1 OK USED CARS
wss-'SJH Suburban-Olds
. Ful* price $I4pCall Mr. O’Brbsn.
. credit Mgr. at imi':-----^
» RAMBLER, MI S-39D9.
_______________1. RADIO.------
ER. H YDRASSATIC. ABSOLUTE
* r RO MONEY DOWN. Aeeunse
---------a at 114Jt par mo.
_____ Mgr.. Ip,. Parks at
*7940. Harold Turner. Ford I960 OLOSMOBILE 96 4-bOOR. HY-
• draw--- ----- “—
; braki
power eteerln* and ..jee. radio, haatit, whitewalls, eautlful blue Ubltn, *2496 IORTH CHEVROtaFoO., IBM WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM.
LIQUIDATION
1M7 OM* Hardtop, low paymew
555 S. WOODWARD
. dem6 ciiutttANcF
-srpffis^^p.4"
TOM BOHR. IRC.
M> a. *TT‘~ — MS 44ltt
RUSS
johnsonI
’ LAKE ORION i
Clearance Sale) : '61 MODELS
Pontiacs — Ramblers
: DONT BUY; TIL
YOU GIVE/US A TRY
FIRE-ENGINE
RED
With baaatlul contrasting red and Mack Interior. 1*51 Bulek Special tdnr hardtop, radio, heater, Dy-naflow. power steertng, power brake* and whitewall tires. Mf price, 41.3SI. r
FISCHER
BUICK
784 S. Woodward, B’ham MIA-6222
ACROSS FRQM ORBRNFOCLD g
FOR A FINE
/Selection of Good Used Cars /SEE OURS AT
JEROME
“Bright Spot’’
Orchard Laka at Case
FE f-----
Our Pleasure to Present
l>. ISM rdtop 7
i Mast,
*11*°*res
FISCHER
BUICK
» |784 S. Woodward, B’ham *. 3P PICKUP -MI 4-6222 •
*#ord Pickup ...$ 595 1*m I—™**"
r. as w* Bdm. rah I STOP! BUY! SAVE!
8S r«» its*
SUM its** 41“
i!
r Chief '
ja RUSS I^HNSON
f .LAKE ORION &IY 2-2871 MY 2-2381 I BUICK, 1956"
ftp*KRAL CONVBRnBLE. ASPM|m(B far?WefST.m
pptp wHR_.pew„wMte top Radte,Lp» ofis 9Door .TuB
>is|M»4, Mr**. Standard ip** Quick 4-Door I 441
■ f. trsaeseleef fwa price; MM. ,i»ee Reerm star Chief .... t is;
ii 1056 Meseury, 4-Door, : * SM
- FbuiScR ! SHELTON
ML- ! PONTIAC -BUICK *
® ham;Rochester, OL 1-8133
ACROSS PROM tMUDUPIBLDS Clseed Wed. m find *Pat* I p.m.1
1447 Chevy pel Air . ’*** -----42 Air ....
i [hg
1**7 Pontiac Super .... U*f Pontiac tSmr ■ ■ ISM OifC ttdaa nlekup 1*« Pontiac Calafifaa Invicta..............
BEATTIE DOES IT AGAIN MORE FINE CARS AT LOW, LOW PRICES
1961 FORD/ Galaxie Town/bedan.
Crulse-O-Mstlc and g-cyltn-dsr. smttawaU tires Magic air heater/ push button radio. WttpalM washers, back-up l 1 a h t a, electric clock, /air cleaner aad ell filter/ All taxes and license transfer included.
/ $2562.86
1961 FOI© Fairlane 2-Door
C-ryllnder engine, Magic -Air beater, push button radio. . windshield washers, air cleaner aad ell filter. Price Includes all state and
$2208.52
1961 FORD Falcon 4-Door
and llcenaa transfers i
$1986.07
1961 FORD Country Sedan
9-paaaaaaer with S-eytlndar angina. TorddMMtUe transmission. Magic Air baatar,
-shield washers, air fllete and oU cleaner, all taxes and license trnasfera.
$2850.05
1961 FORD Fairlane 500
> Mafia Air baa* fak
cleaner am „ta a real ear.,. All 1 transfers.
t-Doar w
oil filter Here sharp feyllnder ties aad license
1961 FORD Thunderbird
Mr. Beattle'i personal ear. DEMO. Movable eteerln* column, whitewalls, power is tee ring, brakes ud windows. Mkgic Air heater,
$2205.09
1959 FORD
2-J>r. Ranch Wagon, 8-cylinder engine, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Ilert is a real honey for only $1395
1957 CHEVY
210 4-Dr. Station Wagon, '8-cylinder engine with Power-glide transmission. Another honey for $895
BEATTIE
MOTOR SALES, INC..
“Yoitr WATERFORD FORD Dealer Since 1930” 5806 DIXIE HIGHWAY 1 \ OR 3-1291
Service and* Parts ifept. .Open ’til' 9 p.m.. Daily
BIG
DEALS
ON
New 1961 OLDSMOBILES
AND
RAMBLERS Clearance Sale
Don't Miss This Great Money Saving. Event
WIDE SELECTION TERRIFIC Values
Don't Sign Up Until You've Seen Us!
—Used Bargains-
'59 Chevrolet
CONVERTIBLE
'58 FORD
WAGON .
'60 OLDS
HARDTOP
'61 OLDS
CONVERTIBLE
You May Match sOur Deals, But (We Think) You Can't Beat Our SERVICE
HOUGHTEN'S
OLDSMOBILE - RAMBLER
Take Advantage‘of Our 25 Year» Experience-in Customer Satisfaction and. Service ,
ROCHESTER
-OL 1-9761
WHY START MAD EVERY TRIP?
TRADE YOUR OLD “CLUNKER" WITH US FOR A SLEEK, NEW, USED CAR FROM OUR WIDE SELECTION*
'60 PONTIAC
Cats I Ins 3-Door. Radio, hsstar, Hydrsmsttc. power brakes and
”"$2395
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- -Today's Television Programs--|B|
>*ofr— torehhsl by rtstUas Mated la this roiuma are sabject to -ttiip without notice > *—wwj-t
-rWXT*-TV rkaooel o—CRLW-TV Chaaari so—WTl’S
TOVKiHT’S TV H1GHLHWT8 I f:ot (2) Movie -(cant.)
(4) Broken Arrow (7) News, Weather <9) .Pattern (56) Sculpture Today HU <7) News l:t» (4) Weather « 3* (2) l*?** • m (4) News
(7) Superman (9) William Tell (56) David Copperfield I lf (2) News Analysis (4) Sports l:tf (2) News (4) News
r.M (2) Summer Sports Spec-! . tacular. . - j
. (4) Michigan Outdoors (7) Deadline (9) Huckleberry Hound -(56) Northern Michigan 7:33 (2) Sports (cont.)
(4) Outlaws ' (7) Guestward Ho!
(9) Movie. “Navy Blue and different walks of life enter! U.S. Naval Academy and
(4) Groucho \
(7) Untouchables (cent.)
‘ (9) News
10:19 (9) Weather 10:80 (9) Telescope UAW 10:00 (2) Project 2 (4) Jim Backus (7l Silent* Please . 19.) Golf Tip 10:16 (9) Sports ll:|0 (2) News I4> News ' (7) Manhunt-(9) New*
11:16 <2» Weather
(41 WeatheR '
(9) Movie. "Persona],
English; 1953) Teach.
0:30 (4) Consult Dr. Brothers 9:(Ml (4) Gateway to Glamor :0tS0 (7) News 10:60 (21 I Love Lucy I (4) lay w>n
(V) Jack LaLanne 10:00 i2) Video Village
(4) (color) Play Your Hunci (7) Jackie Cooper 10:M i9> Billboard 10:46, (9) Kartoon Karnivat 11:00 (2) Double Kxposurr
<4) (color) Price Is Right. (7) Gaie Storm . *
(9) Romper Room 11:00 12)'My little Margie (4) Concentration (71 Love That Bob!
AFTERNOON
er in small English town is: accused of murdering one ofj . bis students. Gene Tierney, j
Leo Genii, Glynis Johns. i 18:00 (2) Love ol Life 11:80 (2) Sports ! <4* Truth or Consequences
<41 Sports O) Camouflage
11:86 (2) Movie.. “Battle Hell.” Frontier Justice FRIDAY MORNING
(4) Bat Masterson
(7) Real McCoys 6:60 (2) Meditations.
(9) Movie (cont.) 0:86 (2) On the Farm Front
9:60 (2) Gunslinger 7:66 - (2) Spectrum ’61
(4) Bachelor Father (4) Dave Ggrroway
(7) My Three Sims (?) Funews
(9) Wrestling 7:88 (4) Today on the Farm
9:30 (2) Gunslinger (cont.) - 7: SO (2) B’wana Don -
(4) (CMor) Great Ghos t) . (71 Johnny Ginger
Tales 8:15 (J) Captain Kangaroo
(7) Untouchables 8:30 (7) Movie..
'(9) Wrestling (cont.) 0:09 (2) Morning Show
10:00 (2) At the Source (4» Ed Allen
Will Hollywood Success Win Red 2nd TV Show?
(7) Number Please (9) Susie ,
18:46 (2) Guiding Light 18:66 (4) News „
(2) Star Performance ij '(4) Journey
(?) Seven star Theater (9) Movie 1:86 (7) News
1:00 42) As the World Turns j (7) Life of Riley 11:66 (4) Faye Elisabeth 2:00 <2) Amos V Andy I (4) (color) Jan Murray (7)-Day in Court 8:06 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (9) Home Fair 3:00. (2) Millionaire j (4) Young Dr. Malone <7) Queen For a Day j (9) Movie 10:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) From These Roots . (7) Who Do You Trust?
4:00 (2) Brighter Day
(4) Mfdce Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand 4:15 (2) Secret Storm
:Work Instead of Dance
Whot are Kttte children afraid of?
IS#
! PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. “(AP> — If there’s•> anything in rain dances, this area is going to 'con-jtinue on the dry side. Only two Fort Saint James Indians turned up to perform their ancient ceremony this week. Almost all the I tribesmen have been hired by the I Forest Servkfe as fire lighten!
They are afraid of mongers. On tv. they sometimes meet 0 lot of them.
fare afraid of boredom, ato frustmtkM. \ f mant to know what Id do...
CONDON’S
Salts and Sarvica | Radio and TV 1 Color-Black and White §
VISIT US IN OUR NEW 1
These monsters can became their constant comp antes*.
GUIDE FOR MOTHER, DAD—Here are two of the cartoons from the book called ‘‘Pogo Primer for Parents (TV Division),” a booklet published under the sponsorship of the Ufl. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The picture book, written by
Wait Kelly, who draws a cartoon aeries called Pogo, featuring a wise opossum, uses drawings telling parents the doe and don’ts of child guidance in regard to television viewing.
LOCATION
730
WEST
HURON
F
|U»S. Publishing Primer for Adnltw
jPogo Tips Parents on Tots' TV Viewing
By J. W. DAVIS | pogo is an opossum. He is very j On its yellow covers are pictures
WASHINGTON (AP) — A pa- smart. [of Pogo and a friend, Albert the j
rent is a father or a mother. i Pogo tells you in the primer] Alligator, who poses as "a pa-Are you a parent? {What lb do and what not to dojrent,”
It you are, the United States about letting your child watch TV. loppiffAL SPONSOR Department of Health, Education] He uses pictures (o teach you!
|and Welfare has a,primer for you.]what to do and what., not to do.] It is being published under aus-A primer is a small book for:He says the parent should guide picious and official sponsorship, a beginner. (the child. He says the most im-j Welfare Secretary Abraham A.
★ ♦ . ♦ portant thing to do is to love your Rjbicoff timed its formal an-
This primer is called Pogo!child. He says it twice, Love .your robincemenl to a general news Primer for Parents (TV Division), child. I conference this morning.
I It was written by Walt Kelly, ] > * * • Soon parents everywhere can
| who draws a cartoon called Pogo. i Pogo’s book is 24 pages long. I read Pogo a questions and an-
I -—'.-----; - ......... ;r——■---------■■ —..........—1iwers.
‘What are little children afraid
4:36
By EARL WILSON
HOLLYWOOD — Hootin’ around Hollywood, I found , that Red Buttons' camp followers, believe he’ll be up for an Oscar again in ’62. They say he’s magnificent In “Hatarl,” the John'
2 ) Edge of Night <4) Here's Hollywood (9) Adventure Time (2) Movie
(4) (color) George Pierrot <7) Johnny Ginger 19) Jingles in Boofland <361 Discovery (7) Rin Tin Tin (56) Reaching tor the Stars (56) New* Magazine <9> News
Wayne picture made in Africa; that he’s a s:so Jewish Walter Brennan.” Wouldn t It be re- ' markable If Red, who fhst burst on most of]5:45 the American public as a TV star, were to be-:5:so
come so great in pictures that they offered his! __________
own TV show—again?
Polly Bergen gave me a big kiss when she Fira Chief Was Taken came into the Beverly Hills Hotel Polo Lounge, for a Rida by Youth She was happy, I think, because she and hus-!
Viewer Can't Resist Lure of Soap Operas
of?’1
“They are afraid of boredom,] also frustration. They want to j ]know what to do,”
{ “They are afraid of monsters.] On TV they-sometimes meet a lot ] I of them.” .
j “These monsters can become;
' .. .... , their constant companions."
By RICK DC BROW .Nancy asks that he doesn’t 'ac-‘ -Monsters are not as good as HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — I don’t;company Dick.” 'parents to learn .things’ from.” j
know about you guys—but wheP |^. ORLEANS , "Except In matters of -destruc-
I’ra home alone around lunchtime. , 'unn”
land I’m sure all the doors are,,®u* an old.hand fill you ta.pSU--- . . tilx; . J
locked and the drapes drawn andM u P‘avin« ■ P«™> » New A,.thl* po'n,1 ,s
inobody’s watching, I flip on the TV]™*** b«r He married Penny couple of monstp bk.wmg’up M»e
set to see “As the World Turns’’ ibrrausP shp was beautifu>- young, world. * ..........
and "Young Doctor Malone.” J Intelligent and well olL But Jeff; “What
s-mjijijiijl irijiijij. i.-.* AZTEC, N.M. 'AP)—While Fire! The soap operas have me hooked. 1
band Freddie Fields hadjiutbought a beauU-^^ Bill ^ and hil men ,ike a look ,, the!>
____ M home here. PoUy said she’s sad about leav- vestigated a„ to a truck:back of somebody else’* postcard. |aw“-v-
... WH^|ON,, log -To Xell the Truth.” hut «he fljjA thought jflvg miles east of Bloomfield. a But most of all. It’s a mental! Well. Penny, Kitting at home-
about that. With Moss Hart and Kitty Cariyle due het^h~tKe!yanlr~dreve-ofLinJJie Aztec fire rhallenge to keep up with the] wondering where Jeff t* tdnee I fall, why doesn't “To -Tell the Truth” move out here? Then, engine. !FdQnTle*r-t><^ saLls-jtlin narade >■«»< nM a year ago—tell* h(
isitive boy and wanted!then?" i know- kids. So be ran] "He wants j wants guidan {rents to sha
figures Polly, she could have’ her Hollywood and her TV, too.
Bless Jerry Lewis for helping keep the world laughing in these days. A big sign on the Paramount set where he’* shtoting “Errand Boy" announces “This Is NOT a closed set. Come on in!” It's about an errand boy who becomes head of “Paramutuaj Pictures,” and one of the pictures he then shoots lists such stars as “Ima Halfshot,” “8ir Tod Liverall.” and “Sir Celdom Hartburn," with “screen play by Joseph Levitch,”
‘T get it ail but Joseph Levitch,"I said to our guide who said:
“That’s Jerry Lewis’ real name!" ,
Smith gave chase in a fiVeman’sithrough these Serials without car. When the truck was forced!——-—T to stop, the youth hopped out and *ndle day after day, walked away. Smith was so sur- year prised he forgot to get the boy’s: Like, take. CBS’ «ynop«l<
mother ( \miic> ) , ‘T JiikI hart this ,f|„r feeling all day long that some-r thing terrible wi« going to happen.” Ymf get to expert that line about twice
TV
Features
As the W or I d ’ the soap* are la season.
^*lrm* * . •» j Sure enough. Chris comes home
"Frank goes to Dick Baker with and says tp Nancy privately.
be loved. . . . He! He wants the pa-tlungs with him.] Maybe even TV, radio, comic! books, broccoli."
In summing qp, the primer: says: /DcP not be afrakf of your1 child/He Is not' here ttf stay. He j is/ precious visitor. Do not wind: dp Your r child and srt him to j watch the TV, unguided. Love! your child ... j
NEED M IDANt E
information about Dick’s' missing want to tell you something very! "Il is no* necessary to censor, son Jeff. Dick asks Chris, father;important.” But in cnlnes the 11 is necessary to guide. Other of Jeff’s wife Penny, if he’ll w-|organ music, a fadeou/five com-jchi,d activities siphon off energy, company him to an address Frank mercials, and when we come back;bu* *bbi energy can be used bad-has given Dick In return for $5,000. Nancy is still standing there snd ly a®er bad ^ exposure. Above * * ♦ Isays, ’‘Well, Chris/ what is it?" ]*“• *ow **** child.
“They suspect another girl is in- * / * ’ , You can order Pogo’s primer
volved because Jeff has been gone h„_ htlt - _an,t]from the Government Printing
i„ .______j ..._____________.__i ((e staits to/teti her, but he can t 2s DC. It
By United Press International th.( je{j ^ been ugin_
SUMMER SPORTS 8PECTACU-;gumed Mlw. TVy don’t want» tbat- ^ ^ « must be wt>rth it. because! LAK, 7 p.m. (2) (Rerun) Zany pen , in case there ,g'tells h/ail. And the rest of the the chief of the Children's Bureau
Harlem Globetrotters play Wash- ^,^,. Wjje *b«w>* about how Chris and Dick jn the Department of Health. Ed-!
POLLY
ington Generals in White Plains,
N„ Y. Bud Palmer comments.
GUNSLINGER. 9 p.m. (2) Town.> Q J; . f__i_ caught in border dispute between rlGQICl jDOTS
Mexico and U.S., is overrun with h r
lawless gunmen who take advdt
Lightning to Strik
THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK ...
fliltii Gsynor, fresh from her Las Vegas Flamingo triumph, tage of confused jurisdiction, is considering a David Merrick offer to do a one-woman Broad- i ntoichabi.es, 9:30 p.m.
way show . . . Jack Paar’s in LA to appear in the Joey Bishop (Rerun) Two-step master counter-! SACREMENTCL CaliL/tUPU - q*,, ^ nawk
series (for the same $320 Joey gets on Jack's show* . . . felting plan is carried out by crim- sute and U.S. forest/nre fighters
Tab Hunter’ll-duet with Connie Francis on her 8ept. 13 inals. 1 can reasonably predict where light-jj* ^Mt cstcbcr
spectacular. ; *T T"® mVMCZ, 10 p m. (2| ^ ^ wiU ^
i ★ ★ 121"^' cloud Biography, j gi
" EARL^ Ertcj weather gl^-^k-..
thing, except a telephone booth. iSevatred and Howard K. Smith --------------------* --------- ^
WISH I’D SAID THAT: The trbuble with antique shops isjhi)l pa]aCf, that their prices are so modern. silents please, 10:30,
Danny Thomas lells of the fellow who met his wife at. a Ernie Kovacs is host with a ” dance. He’d thought she was home with the kids That’s cliff-hanging collectkxi of aerial 8 . # .. . __ _ « cSiToilL
earl, brother. {thrillers from Pearl White to just tracked, indicating where the fire m b*inf
(Copyright, 1961) * before the talkies. —“ 1ann --—-■ ■
.{trytd make (heir wives’promise tojucation and Welfare, Katherine krep their trap* shut about the/ Oettinger, lays in a foreword:! proole thing to Penny until .they. "Pogo Primer for Parents >friver *1 Decorous
il ’Greek war g IS Small valp U Hodgepodge
44 Italiin city
NEIGHBOR’S TV-----------------
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News? Music
j ''wroN^MuilcaTR*Mh . MdMij ^SSodf'Trade
11:00— WJR. Health Con*. *:*o-WJM, Mu.lc Hall
• AO—WJR. At Tour Roqoe< WXYZ, Prod Welaa WPON, Auburn Height*
W*7*. Wolf _ ^
CKLW. Rene, Toby David WCAB, News, Sheridan I WPON Rowe. Cart; Mora
awi, w.*a, Lynker WXrZ. McNeeley CKLW. JM Van WJBK, Boot. Mold WCAK Mewt WPON. Mental Neight
WXTk, Winter CKLW, News, Do WJBK., Music. Le WCAK. News. SI
j The death rate from tuberculosis continues to drop. In 1960. it was estimated at 6 per 100,000 u! population.
R Range -W Time gone IS OthorwUt IS Venison aeurce 3t Threatened .
Id Lebanon’s trees, as Pence opening*
IS:gO—WXYZ, J. Sebajtlan l#:Sk—WWJ, World Mtwt
: g^S—WJR. Rows. Own .wwj. News. Roberta WKYR'W* . .
i CKLW. New*. David i WCAB. New* r WPON; News: Musical N
WWJ New*. Lyl WXYZ, McKeelej , Joe Van WPON".
WJBK. NeVa. Retd
Han on si . Music
WWJ. Music tit Dawn
WCAR. Maw*.
I- ae-wjR gnie WXYZ.. McNeeley, Re* WPON. .Music, Hew*
1:00—WJR, New*. Clark WWJ. News, AlttMH WXYZ Winter, New*
CKLW. Sparta *' ]
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THE PONTIAC PRESS.
i
She’S beetk nearly crushed by parade-watching crowds. She’s tak-i en a back seat to new cars parked on her sparse lawn... .
, • * wY.'ft
Her home’s Beeh ridiculed as] ugly, hot as an oven, and cc>ld as an igloo. But she’s - shared her
To Join NATO Forces
I Truck Local 594 | Votes to Strike; \Pontiac Deciding
CJMC Truck & Coach Local 594 I members'1 today voted 1,508 to 301 in favor of a strike if local and tuitions) issues are not settled by I Aug. 31* contract deadline.
] Less than a third of the mem-j
to the Western with Berlit) in ; lished today.
Tho Weather
THE PONTIAC PRESS
VOL. 119 XO. 170 t ; ;J** * ** PONTIAC, MICHIGAN/THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1#(J]—56 PAGES ainT*ao<-al 653 begaa Contracts End in Week] V*1** •* * **• May and polls
Demands Seen ax Try to Separate City From the Motherland
dose at‘5 p.m. tomorrow .
My first command was the Pa
DETROIT (ti — ueneraiimembers voted 2,168 to 119 tor] Motors, Ford and Chrysler strike, with more than 85 per cent
i-v.— the gunboat which theistood pat today bn theirj^J1* __ .
Japanese-later sank, but the ex-| iahor contract offers tr» the <*own
iSpanish, gunboat which I had in| J^r contract Offers to theCoach turnout, Donaid Map-11906. I was a midshipman at the United . AutO Workersley. recording secretary of- Local time: Midshipmen then served six! against mounting pressureTbrre JVit [years before becoming ensigns - from the union that the 6 000 cligihlc t0 V<*C
Annap° '* two|companies come up withl in 1506 i was captain of the! something better or facei ] Panay, with 31 men'aboard, and strike action.
efhere1w?rce S| Pre*n* contracts covering al-J at Mloc. ^ o« fod Tst 500 000 workers at Bi* Threei | ashore and W at SJa. ^ to speak. I Pla"ts ^ Thursday night j but i lived aboard the Panov. t'AW leaders centered their
n.v« | fire on i.M and Ford — the like-
(.BEAT DAIS .. Kent enndidajes for strike tar
I Those were great days. We had [ gel(j lhe VAW
no radio, no (nail and no* fresh I food. We did a .lot of hunting. One ^
j of the seaman sa«d_ ^
: “couldn*t look a duck in the beak1 again.!*
•Cites U. N. Right s in Berlin Crisis
j President Walter Reuther bargained under a lid of secrecy n Motors dorp, on rompany’s profit-sharing of-
Dag Declares WorUi Body Should Be Heard if Peace Threatened
MOSCOW W—The Soviet government posed a threat Allies’ links i note pub-
it said Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's West German government is inter-' fering illegally in West Berlin’s affairs, and demanded that agitators bfe kept from using air corridors into the city.
In London, Britain said-the Soviet charge that the Western powers are misusing air corridors to West Berlin is an extremely serious matter "if this is intended as
* Early in 1MT 1 scare. The story we heard was that President Theodore Roosevelt had called the Japanese am-i bassador fhto the White House : and told him: “If your country wants war, we’ll give It to you.”
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (API j— Secretary .General -bag Ham-• mar.sk joid declared” today the j UAW Vice President l-eonaraj,United Nations is an interested j Woodcock filed unfair tabor prac-'jparjy jn the Berlin problem and right to make its voice I
- - LEAPg TANK rORCK-€apt. Jack U. Davis, 31. of Tahlequah. Okla., Wears a field uniform, complete witiv hand grenades, as he checks a map in West Berlin Wednesday. Davis is the commanding officer of a U.S. tank force which was moved near the East-West Berlin border near Friedrichstrasse crossing point in reaction to new Communist restrictions on entry into East. Berlin.
NEW DELHI (UP!) - Prime Minister Jawahaiial Nehru will go to Moscow Sept. 6 for con-with leaders of the 8o-
Meef Negotiators, Page 18
ADMIRAL NIMITZ
Tank Truck-Traifi Wreck Engulfs 3 in Fiery Death
DETROIT (UPI) -
• said union t
Ton-prices and profits. Woodcock * accused GM of failing to bargain i good faith. He said the union s needed information bn the com-s pany’s prjee-profit formula hrcounter company claims the union's „ jf - w " , bargaining goals' were inflationary.
I I moored the Panay and dressed UAW Vkje pj^ident Ken Bannon
1A seven-car Wabash Railroad pas- ^J ”*
senger train slammed into a tandem gasoline tank truck, He was very stern and typical of at a Taylor Township crossing today, killing two trainlour Navy commanders of the time.
3 . .. . vs J ® He told me I was to take oom-
crewmen and the truck driver, Sind of a destroyer, the Decatur.
The crash occurred at the Smith-Holland Road grade which had been out of commission, crossing during a dense fog. Police said the crash for some time, and get it in dry touched off a spectacular fire with flames dancing the dyeir immediately. •
entire length Of the train,*—---------:------7----:-----~----- When •I said something about
which was bound for D6- going back to the Panay for my •"***• ***** »» M’sl* V* aBd
troit'from St. Louis. Has Plan to Scale Down gear, Harris said in no unrertain 4. »» no.
A deadmans throttle device, . * ■ ■ u * terms I was to board the Decatur I
which applied the brakes when the v*OST TO ,n v-on9° without returning to the Panay ana gotiators would recommend its
engineer let go of the throttle, LEOPOLDVILLE The Coneo IB have that old four stacker in dry jection by the UAW-Ford National bright the train to a halt two andlnr ^U^r rSurSfrom^ at 0lan^ within * ^Council, which has been called to o*-hal. miles imm the scene oiL^ “S Jch™ - "»«■<*»" “,dl .» T““^'
the accident. plan for scaling dbwn the size and y°u’ he sald- ! The UAW’s executive board
About 50 passengerN, aside {cost of U.N. operations in the NOTHING ON BOARD . I wilt meet on the same day to
from the crew, were aboard the |Congo. His launch took me to the De- pick a target In event the union
— - ■- a buoy out leadership decides to back Up
1 heard if the situation becomes threat to peace
. .Hammar'skjold said, however, {
, that at the present time Hie world
.. I was ordered to bring the Panay - . . .. ' organization, With its'large mem-j
back to Cavite and report to Uriah j tice charges Wednesday against! bership, cannot aspire .to be Rose Harris, the commander of qm with the National Labor Re- cal point in efforts to solve the lations Board here after the com-) problem. He indicated that the
pany for the third time rejected first step in solving problems] __t Tir ._____________ . . ._____ .
a union demand for information [such R&lhismust to>h'iflpnwpr! BERLIN (AP)—American officers handed but
negotiations. tear gas grenades to a U.S. detachment guarding the
the naval base. ‘;Uriah Heap” we used to call him.
There had -been so much talk of wnr with Japan thet proached Manila Bay, I almost ’ f "Isent a landing party ahead to see lit we still held the place. I was an ensign by then,- and 22 years oh*.
pis Given Tear Gas I After Border Row
day. The announcement of Nehru's visit came only M hours after he told parliament that the Soviet position on Berlin Is “legally’’ right.
itheae views „• urv whuuvivumi wi. , . f . . ..____.
his annual report to the u.n. Gen- loosed a stream of water against photographers, era! Assembly. He touched brief- A witness said two American soldiers were hit
ly on the Berlin question dutjtog
ly on the Berita question. durtogUjy sriray and the water was quickly turned off when a .discussion of how to baiaice J r . , * . .
the weight of the big powere!%d one reached for a grenade. Western troops have orders
tuin oemieii.. ‘ HisPoarfipH FVio PoH urarn.
their security interests, against the rights of the world commu-l
DETROIT IB — The United Auto Worker* reported ' today1 General Motors hourly employes, were voting ,tj per cent id favor Af- strike action if necessary in current labor contract ’gotiatton*. The UAW gave the
Expect Showers
He ettbd disarmament and thei _
Berlin issue as the type of quer SOff 111007/ EVeU tions in which the major coun-j-^ . £-r - . '
tries hbve such special interests! COOl©r WGCffilGf that agreement among them is r essential to a solution.
'Direct negotiations - between those countries," he said, “are an essential'first step to the solution, through the United Natk>ns, of the disarmament problem, and do not in any way derogate from the responsibilities or rights pf the organization."
May Resume Talks
train and all escaped injury- The head of the U.N. Congo oper- tatur. which was tied to They were brought to Detroit in [atjon told newsmen h? would die- in the bay. It put me aboard, white <™trect demands with strike buses. * cuss the plan with the government!uniform and sword, to be *'oli*
PaUpp said thp victims have heen Of PjUfie Ministpr Tyrilla Adoula by two Fllipim WftldUHMt.~ There) Lfllljs G B.iUtv. -C.M Vlpp presi-identified as E. Rydilinski pf De-!befofeljNrtosijtg details. i (Cretinuod en^Pwge 2, GflT. Al I (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)
troit, driver of the tank truck; Wil-1 ~
No showers are’ predicted tonight or Friday but skin expected to be partly cloudy. The low temperature will be neaf* 64 tonight. Tomorrow's high wil‘ climb , to about 82.
The outlook for Saturday is i chance of scattered showers o thundershowers and temparature turning cooler. Morning variable winds will become southerly at 10 to 20 miles per hour 'tomorrow.
From 10:15 a.m. Wednesday
to disregard the Red wam-I ing for everyone to stay 100 [yards back of the border.
The incident at the Friedrichstrasse checkpoint, which ended without further Red action, came (as diplomats disclosed a Soviet -(large that the Western Allies are abusing use of their air corridors to Berlin.
liam du Vail, the engineer, .and Earl Bushway, the train fireman.
Officers said the jrain was going about 70 miles an hour wllen it ap-| proached the crossing apd visibility was about 50 feet.
The truck, carrying 11,000 gallons of gasoline, plunged into a ditch after thp crash and
scribed as "a abal] of fire" by ttye time police arrived.
CREWMAN INJURED One other train crewman, brake-man Richard Johnson of Penh Ind. suffered burns of the hand and was treated at the scene.
Johnson said he saw s sheet of flames along the entire length of one side of the train after the
rra*h-
Police* bt, Carl Lang said pat sengers told him they heard the train whistle sound ks the t approached the crossing.
Rychlinski’s body was found at the crossing, Bushway’s about half way between the crossing and the spot where the train stopped, and Du Vail's, was pinned in the of the locomotive,
A 6-by-8-foot piece of sheet metal from the truck was fmbedded in the front of the locomotive.
News Flashes
WASHINGTON (UPI) —Sens. Pst McNamara, D-MIch., <-and Philip A. Hart, D-ftfich., announced today that Rep. ,Thad-d.-us M. Maehrowicc, D Mich., will he appointed n U.S. District Court judge in the Detroit arra.
WASHINGTON ft —The government ha* decided, to launch nil manned tanar flights ; and other missions requiring giaai , boosters 'from Cape Canaveral, If was disclosed today. The decision involves a vast ffiOsnillion - expansion progrsm at the missile test haw.
TOKYO (API — Japanese anai _____________________________| ___
South Korean officials were re-1 tif the 'MiM ho«r 4M» monftng 75 P°rt^ to^ -have agreed foggy (Ajinches of rain fell in the dewntown resume taHts on restoring normal .area. The lowest temperature be-relafions between the two toun- fore 8 amt. was 68..degrees. The ^eg- \ treading at 1 p.m. was 74.
Snubbed and Deserted, Alii- Old Courthouse Weeps
Mora Stories, Pictures on 2, IK 21/23, 40, 47
By GEORGE TRUMBULL JR.
Her back’s turned aAd you can’t blame her. She’s been snubbed, the victim of the continual growth of Oakland County. \
She had stood there erect, left arm upraised, 112 feet above the constant go-go-go of Pontiac humanity for 57 years—slightly tarnished, in her weather-beaten garb, bt^t still the quiet symbol ^ justice that prevailed beneath her.
Today they deserted her. \ ’
They said the building beneath her is too small and can’t take the rapid pace of the years ahead.
In spots, the building shows more than half a century of use: cracks in some ot the walls, a dirty gray Cleveland sandstone complexion.
^But the 26-foot pillar s^ ~T made it through Wind, home witb thousands of pigeons lightning, thunder and the tbou»trt 3>f'va8 tops ■[ roar_of traffic
S The Lady of Justice nev
The Soviet government bunded eompluli-tH to IIS., British and French embassies In Moscow Wednesday night. Diplomats said the Western powers were accused ot ferrying military agents and spies of West Germany to West Berlin* via the three corridors set aside in postwar agreements for air traffic from the West «m Oumwmiitol tM Germany.
The Informants speculated that this complaint may herald some Soviet tampering with the corridors. The Bieriin air control sys-m is the only four-power agency which the Soviets still cooperate with Western authorities. ILLUSTRATES FIRMNESS . The brush at, the Friedrichstrasse checkpoint illustrated the resolve of the Western Allies to make a military show at every point where Communists tamper with the bor-jder. The checkpoint is the only one through which the Communists are now allowing foreigners to enter East Berlin.
A U.S. tank stood guard there. A crowd of about 300 curious West Berliners milled about.
forum (or every! p conceivable topic R — a sort of mini-JBature U. N. and Blown' meeting rolled into one, if Some times a
> MOVING MADNE88—Mrs. Florence’Allen, a county clerk, was nearly lost to the shuffle of Moving from the. old downtown courthouse yesterday. She continued h^r work as cartons of
v .//• rmllz^ rrm Ph*M
.files formed mountains ^ahout hpr., It .was >a " partjcularly ^sad day^orMcs. Alien] as her late hugbarid, Lynn, served as county qlerk for 25 years in the 'old ^tiding.
LONDON IB — The war office said’: today that B r 11 a 1 n’s 36th surface-to-air guided weapons regiment will be moved: to,Germany in September, to strengthen NATQ (wees, ’rtteiceglment is equipped wit) Thuhderbird 1 rockets.
track was picked bn the steps.
] Gouged out by JILTED Va half - century of traffic, 6k steps have been the path to happiness and sorrow for millions. W
Today, (hey pulled from the -depths ot the tonple the births,' the . marriages, 1 the naturalisations, toe deaths, the divorcee, . (Continued on Inge'S, Col.. 3)
The Communist water-armed armored car moved up after Western cameramen closed in to photograph the Eaot Berlin ocene and ignored a Red policeman’* rignal to move back. The water gun did a bit of apraylng — nothing, too serious. But at that point the American troops
"In our view,” said a statement issued by the foreign office, “the West Germans are not conducting the (provocative and revenge-seeking) activities attributed to them in the note."
The United State* I* expected to reject the Soviet charge opeedtly and completely. The White House said toe UJS. government would comment on the new. note later In the day.
The 700-word note was delivered o the U.S., British and French embassies in Moscow Wednesday. It said the three countries, "uti-
lizing the lack of control over air communications, are clearly abusing their situation in West Berlin.” *
“There has been s flagrant branch of the agreement reached In 1M6 under which air corridor* were net aside for ton three Wcatooa powora, on a temporary bast*, to Insure the Mads of their military garrisons, a for mbvcpiw i revenge-seeking parpoacs < Went German militarism,”
e note wad quickly interpreted by Western diplomats here sign that one of the demands to be made by the Soviet Union af future negotiations over the Ber-» situation will be the banning (Continued on Page 2, Got. 2)
Echo Schedule
The U.S. space veteran Echo I will appear over Pontiac at about p.m. today. The balloon will come up over the southern .horizon and travel in'a southeasterly direction at 66 degreef.
In Today's i Press
Another incident was reported] when three U-S. Army buses loaded with about 100 American sol-i diers thrust past Red guards into East Berlin after being delayed over an hour at the sector border.! (yThe buses were assigned’to a] sightseeing tour of the' East sector* test of whether the Communists would respect Allied rights of! entry.
NEW RESTRICTION A new Communist restriction of travel from East Germany was disclosed. Foreigners living in East! Berlin and. East Germany have been barred from leaving the Red-ruled country since the Communist clampdown on refugees was launched Aug. 13.
Spokesmen for the Swedish and Norwegian consulates in West Berlin said the Communist authorities had informed the consulates it was not possibft for tHelr nationals to’ travel to the West in the pn circumstances.' - Hie Communists indicated the restriction was temporary but did not say how long it would last.
* I ./■ •
Guessing Game
I Will the new cars cost j more?—PAGE IS. _
Anti-American?
| Mexicans protest any red ! labeling—PAGE M.
Space Advance
{ Ranger "failure" proves j : stabilizing system work ; PAGE St:
In Chicago
| Ex-policemen found guilty I 1 in .burglaries—PAGE 16.
* : . ■'
j Are* News ............15 |
: Comics .............
Editorial*
| Food Section .......30 *4 j
t Markets
I Obituaries .........
.Spofts......^...,.,,..4
] Theaters ...........4
‘ TV A Radio Programs . Wilson, Ebri ........
V
mm.
the pontiac pees^ Wednesday, august 23; mi
- -Today's Television Programs- -
Program* taniM hp eRsMaee Mai fta Mb Mian asa aahfuetai to ohaage wUhout hMn
S:«i (I)
* (7) Newt, Weather i (9) Popeye
■ (56) Anfcrtpoiogy
•lit* (7) New*
DU (4) Weather •ill (2) New*
» (4) Neva
(7) Silent Service .
\ mxm Bear ~
\ (51) Ordeal by Fire c:«e (2) New* Analyst*
<4) Sport*
W4K (2) New*
(4) News
dill ») Baseball
(4) Dangerous Robin (7) Brannagan Boy*
(I) Pioneer*
(51) Biblical Masterpiece*
7: J# (2) Baseball (coat.)
(4) Wagon Train (7) Hoag Kong (9) Movie. ‘The Big Boodle." (1957). An adventurer In Cuba get* mixed up with a counterfeiting ring when a girl paaaea him aome counterfeit money. Errol Flynn, Pedro Artnendariz, Gia Scala.
- (56) Philosophies of Educa-
tion
(56) Musicale S:ea (2) Baseball (cent.)
1:11 CD Baseball (cent)
(4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) (Me and Harriet Sin (I) Boys' Golf Tourney StM (2) Baseball (coat)
(4) Mystery Theater , ' (7) Hawaiian Eye
(I) Superior Sex •til (I) Football Highlights •:W (I) Baseball Scoreboard WsW (21 Steel Hour
ag
Features
By Halted Frees international
TIGER BASEBALL, 7 p m. (2). Detroit take* on the Cleveland Indiana at Municipal Stadium.
MYSTERY THEATRE, 9 p.m. (4). A cannonball-weighted body in die well and two reporterab hostage in a crumbling castle.
NAKED CITY, 10 p.m. (7). (Rerun) Lonely spinster Fran Burney finds out her lonely hearts boy friend is married.
STEEL HOUR, 10 p.m. (2). Glenda Farrell and Ruth Ford star in a new hourloog drama, live. Small town ndghboriiness transferred to a New York City apartment bouse.
WEEKEND, 10:30 pjn. (4). Tour of Holly, Mich., emphasize* ■muan meat facilities tor children, (color)
*iw 4* Twvrttm Fanl*
(4) (Odor) It Q»ld Be You (T) Naked City (» ‘ l :•• (9) News
am
i (3) 1 (2) On the Farm Front i (2) Spectrum '61 (4) Today (T) Funews (2) B’wans Don.
1 (7) Movie.
I (2) Movie.
(4) Ed Allen
I (4) Consult Dr. Brothers I (4) Gateway to Glamour > (7) New*
M (2) t Love Lucy (4) ley Whan (7) Jack LaLame B O) Video Village (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Jackie Cooper IS (I) Billboard It (9) Junior Roundup N O) Double Exposure (4) (color) Price Is Right (7) Gala Storm (9) Roomer Room B (2) My Little Margie (4) Concentration (7) Love That Bob
THURSDAY AFTERNOON 13:19 0) Love at Ufa
(4) Truth or Consequence* (7) Camouflage.
(9) Tower Kitchen Tima 12:20 (9) New*
13:33 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (color) It Could Be Too (7) Number Please.
(9) Susie 13:41 (2) Guiding light 12: *5 (4) News.
(2) Star Performance (4) Journey (7) Sevan Star Theater. (BJHwrie.
1:24 (7) News
liM (2) As World Tumi.
a) Ufa of Riley, ltd • (4) Faye Elisabeth 9x99 (2) Amos ’n’ Andy
(4) (odor) Jan Murray.
(7) Day in Court 3:33 (2) House Party.
(4) Loretta Yeung.
(7) Seven Keys
Lincoln-Mercury Shows Models
In • Between Meteor Model Is Previewed in 1962 Line-Up
DETROIT (D—Uncoln-Mercury Division of the Forf Motor Co. took its turn on the new car preview circuit today, displaying its 1912 model line-up which include* new in-betwaon-aize Mercury1 Meteor.
The Meteor will be built on a| 116%-inch wheelbase, two and a half inches longer than the Comet and three and a half inches shorter than the Mercury Monterey!
This rnekoa It fractionally longer than the sew Falrlaae series, the ia-betweea model at Paid. For the first time since its introduction in March 1960, the Com-t also will bear the Mercury une.
This wiO give Mercury a three-size line-up — Comet in the compact field; Meteor In the new in-between field, and Monterey In the full-sized field.
♦ ♦ • dr..-
Styling changes are very modest on, all of the Lincoln-Mercury offering!. The division promised last year it would make no radical change in its then-new Lincoln Continental.
UNOOU SALES VT Ben Mills, general manager of the division, said Lincoln sales are up 35 per cent over last year, while divisional sales are up 8 per cent.
Mills predicted total Industry sales In lies will approach U tnllUoa salts lnofudiag Imports. This estimate compares with 7M million by General Motor* sad about e million for tho calendar year 1M.
Jack Wolfram, general manager of OldsaobUe, delivered the GM prediction Tuesday night as showed oft his 1962 models. ft w.' *
The Olds line-up includes two new convertibles in, the compact FS5 line, a new luxury Starfire coup* and a new Holiday two-door sdan In the 96 aeries.
Olds is dropping its 88 two-door sedan and super 88 convertible.
t Ma* tntrsao*
•u**eitlv*ly
4 MMt recent t lisle child f Pitcher
V french heedi t Army officer
5 fetsiea post
1* Citrus fruit U Selesae . IS Conquer* o ■porta contest
si n£ *ort
IS Wrestling place 41 W«xy 4T auditor •ntrsnesi
Financier Sells Empire State for $65 Million
NEW YORK (UPD—The Empire State Building, Manhattan’s pride owned by a Chicago financier, was •old Tuesday to a New York lawyer for |65 million — the highest resale price ever paid for a ‘
The world’s tallest skyscraper waa sold by the Empire State Building Oorp., headed by Col. Henry Crown who left school at 14 to work as a 94-a-week (hipping qjerk.
The buyer area Lawrence A. Wien, head of aa Investment syndicate who apparently thinks tall. He once almost bought the Chrysler BaMag — second tallest skyscraper la the world.
The contract signed In Newark, NJ. if effective Dec. 27.
- - Today's Radio Programs - -
wxii (trio wcab -inti wrox*a***) wm n
l o*—w jr, vote* of Asm.
w%|s.%
ass-
Bibli
7:te-WJH, Revs. Uusie WWJ, W*w». Roberts
WXTZ, Writ, Mm CXLW. Me* toby Dnll
W J, Dm 1 , Mews, Well
>ws. Roberts w**s. Wolf, Reiss CKLW, MS*, BOfM WO, Heirs -WHO*. nova, IMS
■fW-WJIA .Murie am wm, W*if;^*Wt .
•:**—WJR, Ren, Momp WWJ. Mew*. Marten*
a»«w"
WCAR, N*ws, Mnrtyn j WHOM, CUT MaU, Music
.»:**-WtR. Kart Buss WWJ. Km Marten* WXn, Broakteat Club CSLW, Jan Van WJBK, Maws, UoJMd
11:00—'WJR, Stealth WWJ. Manx Ljrnber WXTZ. UeHeetey cklw, jo* vans
11!**—WJR TUBS For Musts WPOII. OlMB. MOWS
wxtz, Fawors. k*«<
TMOBSOAT AFTEBNOON
a
Mcn**i*t. Mm
WKM. Mows, Low
I’JS—WJR. Tlau (or Must: CKLW. News. Darld WCAR. Hew*, fun WXTZ. McM*s!«y. M«*( WFOM. Lowu. MOWS .
'Jfc’iS.:
CKLW, Jo# Van
. lw. mm
WJBK, H* ?l. ■_
WCAR, Haw*, fan*
Site—WWJ. Hews, VltxweH WXTZ, Winter, it*ws
cklw, paste*
WJBK. Mow*. Music WCAR, News, Shertdsa
WFOM, carrlaa* Trad* Kite—WJR, Music 8*U WXTZ. New*, winter CKLW. Mown, Ontiss WJBK. Muds WFOM. Sum
WJBK. Music
11**—WJR. Mown Jbn cu WWJ. Mow*. Allison WXTK Win tor, Ibin
CKLW, Sports, Dsrles WJBK. Now*. Traffi* .WCAR, Hew*. Bborldn WPON. Carring* Trad* »:$•—WJR. Muslo Man WWJ, AliBIBM.. ------
AT FlMUfftl
NO ONE WOULD TELL NM-Slr Winston Churchill takes a last puff on his familiar cigar, then drops it (drde) from the ramp before elitering a plane at London Airport. Airport rules forbid smoking near the fuel-heavy jet but no one would remind Winnie of the regulation. He was on hit way to a Riviera vacation.
*Sund-up* Comedian on TV
Is Newhart Brave w-foolhardy?
> Bt cynthia LOWRY , Newhart believe* that as timeitahfers must be able to knock the
AP TV-Rodlo Writer ' goes' on the viewing public will audfence out .of its chairs every
HOLLYWOOD — Eighteen; have to make aome aUa«nuioas|teMiL" . '
rrinnth* ago, nobody had everjigr its entertainer*. Fm==Sim*mm
heard of Bob Newhart, comedian.! “There jute isn't enough mate- AIR CONDITIONER
Next mouth “The'Bob Newhart Show” bows in on the NBC net* work, which automatically makes the young monologiat the fastest-moving, the bravest or perhaps the moat foolhardy—performer of the approacfaing^elevizion season.
- * . A .A
Over the years the mortality rate of the "atandup” comedian! has been frighteningly 'high. Last season there was only one left in weekly TV, Red Skelton.
The stand-up comedians, xtrae, are still winking, but many of them are making only occasional appearanoes on television.
rial, particularly comedy material, to supply the enormous demand,” Newhart said earnestly. “And I just think the public la going to have to settle lor 'lees. It must get peer the idea that Its enter-
*199** “J
SWEETS f
Transatlantic Surprise Party Given Mrs. Cullen
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK — BUI Cullen tricked his wife into probably the slickest birthday surprise ever perpetrated.
Bill didn’t pull it on her-birthday—you'll see why.
I _____ “Let’s have a terrace party this weekend,
he said a few days afterward. He phoned,the » . - W guests-to-be right there, with Ann helping Htefc him, and Invited them.
Next day from hie office Bill phoned ■| them, "There’s no party — but keep your K mouth shift.” -* •
An uncle from Pittsburgh phoned Ann HH that he was arriving. That was phony, .too.
BUI mads a Friday dinner date with Produeer GU Fates and Mrs. Fate*—also WHAON a fake. Fate* later phoned Ann that he wae called to London to open "To Tell the Truth,” there wouldn’t the CuUens come to IdlewUd, have dinner, and see them off?
•3111 would never drive in that Friday-night traffic," Ann said. ’ ' '
But next day BUI told Ann: "Hey, I think we can aee Oil off—a guy’s putting a helicopter at our disposal.”
•’ ★ ★ ★ . .
The helicopter pilot flew them over theiy terrace where they were having the party next night. They were soon having dinner with the Fates at the IdlewUd Oolden Door.
'How I’d love to go to London!” Ann said. “I can’t wait to see that new hit, ‘Oliver’.”
A BOAC representative stepped up and said: "Mr. Fates, your flight is ready"
They all walked out to the bearding area, Fates carry- I ing a new briefcase, Mrs. Fates carrying an airline hag. |
As Fites was handing over the tickets, he suddenly shoved the briefcase at CuUen, Mrs. Fate* thrust the airline case at Alin, and Fates exclaimed, “Get on the plane, Ann! It’s your] trip!"
★ A A '
"What?” shouted Ann—and a BOAC representative said,]
'Now Mrs. CuUen, you sure going to London—come along.” Bill’d reserved a bridal suite at the Savoy, and obtained two excellent seats to "OUvsr,” and, just when Ann wm worrying about dresses a porter brought a bagful that BUI had purchased in New York and aetn ahead.
They went out picture-taking in London next day and were sabn near London Airport. Ann found herself on a plane for Parisi pre-arranged by BUI as a second surprise.
They left here on Friday night and returned on Monday night. Ann had to tell the story to an English paspenger sitting neir and he said:.
"Oh, I say now, your husband must be from Texas.’
* A A
EARL’S PEARLS: Description of a wealthy Broadway
ticket broker: “He hasn’t even spent his ‘South Pacific’ money yet.”
TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: "Those Jet planes are fantastic,” says Dick Gregory. "You hoard a Dallas-bound plane at 3, and by six you’re to Havana."
AAA
WISH I’D^SAID THAT: A henpecked husband is a guy who •«i« his boss for a raise—and finds out he got one weeks ago.
Comic Joey Adams, who’s taking an entertainment unit to Asia for the State Dept-, says jokingly, “I think it’s insulting that the only Aay I can serve my country is by leaving it." That’s earl, brother.
((Copyright, 1961)
Newhart apparently is neither; frightened nor deterred by the ex-j periencea of other comedians who, after a few seasons, have retired from weekly comedy programs to: nurse bad cases of overexposure,
W A A-
The closest analogy I ca think of is baseball,” explained quiet-spoken, ratter shy young mpn. ‘.’If you’re a good pitcher, you want to play in the major league. You’ro not content! with send lots or the minors. In show business today, television the major leagues.”
♦ * A' f
Besides that, Newhart believe* that TV, more dun any other place, GT right tor fata style of j comedy.
‘TA not a broad comedian." he axpiained, “and . I find that in televhrion, with the camera dose, I can do little filings that an loot on a night dub floor or on a stage. I found that I wasn’t getting laughs when I was doing a concert tour because the people sitting in the 12th or fits 20th rows could not aee those UttR things, and 'l had to make everything larger and more exaggffated. AVOID FATAL BUT J
Ha also believes that, by haF | ing a flexible format tor the weekly show, he can avoid the fatal rut of predictability. h A A
The whole basis for comedy is unpredictability,” he continued. "So one week we may do two monologues and follow up the! next week, with a comedy sketch, then maybe a show with a guest star, and after that a musical." i
j
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Says Cars Maim More Children Than Disease
EAST LANSING (ft — Cars k and cripple more children every year than any disease, says Michigan State University safety official.
Yet police and safety officials have enly limited eueceee hi pereaadlBg motorists to watch out for children and drive alow, ly la school anas, reports Lawrence Bar 11 director of the MSU law enforcement program. To help aohre the problem, the MSU school of police administration and public safety will sponsor a conference ort school safety education for police^Aug-Sept. L ~ M
Also cooperating in die preschool confermce will be state police, the state Department of Public Instruction, the Automobile Club of Michigan, the Michigan Sheriffs Association and the state Association of Chiefs of Police.
Dozes in Car, li Killed
KALAMAZOO UPV—Robert Bean, J, of Freeport, Hi., was killed Tuesday when the car he was driving left the road S miles east Jot here and struck a bridge abut-‘ ment. Police said Bean apparently fell asleep at the wheel.
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OVER Pi
THE PONTIAC PRESS-OHrCdl
VOL. 119 NO. 170
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
PONTIAC, MlCHIGAN.^najUlf^^^^^Y^rmi—50 FACES
Reds Threaten West Link to Berlin
Lpius G- Se,attw*i'Glvi vice presi* (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)
Van Lines
Her home's been ridiculed as Ugly, hot as an oven and cold as an igloo. But she’s shared her
The Time of My Life . . . Adm. Nimitz
Big3HoldFimeSS
7 'IF Never Forget the Decatur' if0 Qffers.
Not Satisfied
SrMlMt Mtlifaclio rate’ at : • dtftott It fftve Adm. ant
By ADM. CHESTER W. NIMITZ (Written for AP)
The happiest day of my life, of
when I married my| It was most satisfactory because j I (die war hail seemed interminable I at times. In fact, there had been 1
course, wife.
Satisfactory moments that I
Pontiac Deciding
Charges Allies Abusing
remember, quite naturally include (occasions v
the da/ on the Missouri when we had been somewhat stood cfti the deck and watched tin*
Japanese come aboard to surren- ]
doubt. | A naval officer naturally en-Joys great satisfaction during \ moments when he Is aboard ship. ; sailing Ms own ship, Ms first command.
GM, Ford and Chrysler Defy Strike Threat; Contracts End in Week
DETROIT (if) General
My first rommand was the pa-!Motors, Ford and'Chrysler nay, not the gunboat which the stood pat today On their
CMC Truck A Goad members today voted in favor of S. strike if lot tional issues' are not Aug. 31. contract deadline.
Less than a third of the bership voted.
Pontiac Motor Local 663 began voting at A a.m. today and polls close at 6 p.m. tomorrow. Monday, Fisher Body Local members voted 2,168 to 119 strike, with more than 85 per cent Ot the membership voting.
Ram held downthe CMC Truck and CSfich turnout, Donald Map* Work e r S|ley. recording secretary of Local about
Air Corridors
Demands Seen as Try to Separate City From the Motherland
• law. • Mi a midshipman at Auto . -
time. Midshipmen then served six against mounting pressureiX^^^f^'f1' There (years before becoming ensigns - from the union that the| eligibte tQ ***’ Annapolis and twoj ^ | . .
...Cites U. N.
from, the union that thei companies come up with! captain of the I something better or face; ” ! strike actipn.
Present -contracts covering al-j Big Three
fouf years . years at sea.
In 1906 I wi Panay, with 31
ncornniander of the naval base Polloc, Mindanao. There were 22j
EAtf onfaTt0onspefaS *"*•*". "ext Thu^ ***.
t 500,000 worker:
in Berlin Crisis
(but I lived aboard the Panay.
UAW leaders centered their fire on GM and Ford — the likeliest candidates for strike targets. In the meantime, TAW President .Walter Reuther bargained under a lid of secrecy , , , . . . | with American Motors Corn.
■couldn’t look a duck in the beakj |hf> (
|GREAT DAYS
I Those were great days. We had| no radio, no mail and no fresh j [food. We did a lot of hunting. One I [ the seaman said one day he
Dag Dedqres World Body Should Be if Peace Threatened
* profit-sharing of- j
ADMIRAL NIMITZ
| Karl* la IN?
! scare. The story We heard was ) that President Theodore Roose- ! veil had called the Japanese am- >
[ bassador Into the White House i and told him: “If jour country j wants war, we’ll gwrll tbe you." j I I was ordered to bring the Panay i hack to Cavite and report to Uriahl^
[ UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) J— Secretary General Dag^Ham-rharskjold_ declared today the DAW Vice President Leonard [united Nations is an interested Woodcock filed unfair labor prac-party to the Berlin prohlem and
;.... - -. [has a .fight to make its voice
heard if the situation becomes a threat to peace.
Meet Negotiators, Page 18
at rkiOiu
LEADS TANK FORCE—Capt. Jack C. Davis, 31, of Tahlequah, Okla., wears a field uniform, complete with hand grenades, as he checks a map to West Berlin Wednesday. Davis is the commanding officer of a U.S. tank, force which was moved near the East-West Berlin border near Friedrichstrasse crossing point in reaction to new Communist restrictions on entry into East Berlin.
charges Wednesday against
Tank Truck-Train Wreck Engulfs 3 in Fiery Death
Rose Harris, the commander of GJ^ with the National Labor Re [the naval base. “Uriah Heap **1 tot ions Board here after the com-
ilch talk of j
'used to call him. j There had been so war with Japan that preached Manila Bay, I almost sent a landing party ahead to see
pany lor the third time rejected a qnion demand for information prices and profits. Woodcock accused GM of failing to bargain good faith. He said the union
still held the pkto*- I w*s|needed information on th* coman ensign by-then, and 22 yearsjpany’s price-profit formula to coun-
however,
imarskjold' said,
that at the presenLiime^he^vorld i with its large mem-1 bership, cannot aspire to be a focal point to efforts to solve the problem. He indicated that the first step in solving problems such as this must be big power negotiations.
The secretary general advanced! these views in the introduction to' his annual report ta the U.N. General Assembly. He touched brief-jter company claims the union's ly on the Berlin question duijpg discussion of how
&ls£iverrTedr After Border Row
DETROIT (UPI) — A seven-car Wabash Railroad passenger train slammed into a tandem gasoline tank truck iHe was very stern and typical of at a Taylor Township crossing today, killing two train our Navy commanders of the time, crewmen mid the truck driver. In. * me ! *■ .. com-
j| my White uniform and sword. ' | Then I went .over to see Harris, s vet1/
• dock immediately.
He told me I was mand of a destroyer, the Decatur, The crash occurred at the Smith-Holiand Road gratae which Md been out of commission crossing during a dense fog. Police said the crash for some ttote^wtd get it m dryj touched off a spectacular fire with flames dancing the] entire length of the train,*j
which was bound for De-i „_______I—I
troit from St. Louis. Has Plan to Scale Down | gear, Harris said
A deadman’s throttle device, ** *1ii aj
which applied the brakes when the VO*t to U.N. in Congo engineer let go of the throttle, | lEOPQLDVILLE, The Congo UR]
DETROIT » — The United Auto Worker* reported today General Motors hourly employes were voting 9g per cent lit favor Of Strike action if nee*** wary In current labor contract When I "said something about I negottotlow.. The UAW gave the
Wile - - — e ______ Intamt «»«»■ om KR «!• orul
going back to the Panay for my •«*»««* total t (I Lear. Harris^ said ta no uncertain A1» no.
55,318 yes and
terms I was to board the Decatur J #
'without returning to the Panay and gotiators would recommend its ro-
have that old four, stacker in dry Ijection by the UAW-Ford National
brought the train te a halt two and _Dr sture Ljnner’ returned from **k' at 01an6aP° 48 houre^ Council, which has been called to the scene ofLS vnTw^^nfntehf JM ‘‘Your clothes WH1 catch up tol meet here next Tuesday.
te-ludf miles from the the. accident.
[New York Wednesday night with a [plan for scaling down the size andj^T1’ About M passengers, anidc [cost of U.N. from the crew, were aboard the [Congo.
tun during to bajpee the weight of the big powers,, and their security interests, against the rights of the Awrld community.
■ited disarmament and the j Berlin issue as the type of ques* tions in which the major countries have such special interests that agreement among them is essential to a solution.
‘Direct' negotiations between those countries,’’ he said, "are an essential first step to the solution, through the Unitai Nations, of the disarmament problem, and dqanot in any way derogate from the responsibilities or rights of the organization."
he said.
operations in the | NOTHING ON BOARD
HU launch took me to - the De-
The UAW’* executive board *411 meet on the same day to pick a target In event the union
train and nil escaped Injury, i The head of the U.N ..Congo oper-jeatur, which was tied to a buoy out I leader* hip decides to back
brought to Detroit to ation told newsmen he would dis- in the bay. It put me aboard, white contract demands with strike ac-
[cuts the plan with the government uniform and sword, to be greeted tion.
Police said the vicilms have been of Prime Minister Cyrille Adoulalby identified as E. Rychllnski of De-|b*fore disclosing detaflr 1 '
troit, driver of the tank truck; Wil- HMBHM
Filipino watchmen. Were)
) (Cqgfinuad dn^Pwge. 2, Cof, 4) | -
BERLIN., (AP)—American officers handed out j tear gas grenades ,to a U.S. detachment guarding; the West Berlin border today after Communist forces loosed a stream of water against photographers.
„ A witness said two American soldiers were hit by spray and the water was quickly turned off when (me reached for a grenade. Western troops have orders fto disregard the Red warning for everyone to stay 100 yards back of the border.
The incident at the Friedrich-strasse checkpoint, which ended
J Expect Showers j Saturday, Even Cooler Weather
May Resume Talks
TOKYO (AP) — Japanese and South Korean officials were reported to have, agreed today to resume talks on restoring normal relations between the two countries.
liam du Vail, the engineer, and Earl Bushway, the train fireman.
Officers said the train was going about 70 miles an hour when itsap-HMfiJ
preached the crossing and visibility was about 50 feet. t, i
The truck, carrying 11.000 gallons of gasoline, plunged into a ditch after the crash and was described as “a .ball of fire" by thej time police arrived.
Crewman injured
One .other train crewman, brake-man Richard Johnson of Peru, Ind. suffered bums of the hand and was treated at the scene'.
n said be saw a sheet of flames along the entire length ol one side of the train after
\ Police Lt. Carl Lang said passengers told him they heard the train whistle sound as the train approached the crossing.
Rychlinski’s body was found at the .crossing, Bushway’s about* half way between the crossing and the spot whet* the train stopped, and Du Vail’s was pinned ip the cab of the locodotive.
A 6-by-8-fool\piece of sheet metal from the truckywas embedded the front of the locomotive.
Newsflashes
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Sens. Pat McNamara, D-Mtch., and Philip A. Hart, D-IVflch., announced today that Rep. Thad-deux M. Marhrowicz, Deficit., will be appointed a U.S. District - Court judxe to the Detroit an
WASHINGTON m —> The | eminent has decided to launch all manned laaar/ flights and other missions requiring giant booster* from Cape Canaveral, It #aa disdooed today. Ike decision Involves a vast fMMmilHon expansion program at the missile test 'base.-.
No Showers are predicted for tonight or Friday^ but skies expected to be partly cloudy. The low temperature will be near 64 tonight. Tomorrow’s high w climb to about 82.
The outlook for Saturday is chance of scattered showers or thundershowers and temperatures turning cooler. Morning variable winds will become southerly at 10 to 20 miles per hour tomorrow.
From 10:15 a.m. Wednesday until the same boar tots morning .35 inches of rain fell to the downtown area. The lowest temperature before 8 a.m. was 68 degrees. The reading at 1 p.m. was 74.
Snubbed and Deserted, Alii' Old Courthouse Weeps
The informants speculated that this complaint may herald some Soviet tampering with the corridors. The Berlin air control system is the only four-power agency which the Soviets still cooperate with Western authorities. ILLUSTRATES FIRMNESS The brush at the Friedrichstrasse
By GEORGE TRUMBULL JR.
Her back’s turned and you can’t blame her. She’s been snubbed, the victim of the continual growth of Oakland County.
She had stood there erect, left arm upraised, 112 feet above the constant go-go-go of Pontiac humanity for 57 years—slightly tarnished in her weather-beaten P garb, but still the quiet symbol of justice that prevailed beneath her. \
Today they deserted her.
They s«id the building beneath her is top small and can't take the rapid pace of the years ahead^
In spots, the building shows more than half a century of use: crackk in some of the walls, a dirty gray Cleveland sandstone complexion.
But the 26-foot p i 1 l a made it through w i n d^ lightning, thunder and the roaf of traffic.
The LtPdy of Justice never cried unde.
Shq'i been nearly crushed by parade-watching crowds. She'* taken a back seat to new cars parked on her sparse lawn. .
of the Western AlliesJto make military show, at every point where Communists tamper with the bor-The checkpoint to the only one through which the Communists are now allowing foreigners to enter East Berlin.
A U.S. tank stood guard there. A crowd of about 300 curious West, Berliners milled about.
ime with thousands of pigeons lio thought she was tops.
The steps of her jgreen-trimmed mansion have
To Join NATO Forces
MOVING MADNE88—Mrs. Florence Allen, a cowty clerk, was nearly lost to the shulfl* of' moving from the old downtown courthouse yesterday. She continued her work as cartons of
.files formed mountains about her. It ,waa a particularly sad day for Mrs. Allen as her late husband, Lynn, served is county cleric for 25 years to 'the old Jhuilding. > -
said today, that B r 11 a i n's 36th surfaoe-to-air -guided weapons regiment will be moved ta,Germany in September to strengthen NATO forces. The regiment to equipped Wjjgi TJiunderbird 1 rackets'.
Riorum for every, ■conceivable topic I— a tort of mini-la tore U. N. and ■ town »meeting Broiled into one.
B Some11 met |winner af threj-J track was picked on the steps. Gouged out by half -century of
traffic, the steps have beep the LONDON IB - The war office 4“^ .to happiness and sorrow for
Today, they pulled from the depths of the temple ’the births, the marriages, the naturaHsa-tlons, the deaths, the divorces,
. (Continued on Page 2». Col. 3) s
without further Red action, came is diplomats disclosed a Soviet charge that the Western Allies abusing use of their air corridors to-Berlin.
The soviet government handed complaints to |IA, British and French embassies in Moscow Wednesday night. Diplomats said the Western powers were se-eused of ferrying military agents and spies of West Germany to West Berlin via the three corridors set aside in postwar Sto*' meats for air traffic from the IM twt Gmsmstat fM tor-
MOSCOW M—1The Soviet government posed a threat Western Allies’ links Jerliq in a note published today.
It said Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s West German government is interfering illegally in West Berlin's affairs, and demanded that agitators be kept from using air corridors into the city.
In London, Britain said the Soviet charge that the Western powers are misusing air corridors to West Berlin is an extremely se-ious matter "if this to intended as
NEW DELHI (UPI)-Prime Minister Jawaharial Nehru will go to Moscow Sept. « for conference* with leaden of the Soviet Union, It was a anon need to- ' day. The announcement of Nehru's visit came only S4 hour* ufter he told parliament that the Soviet posltlop m Berlin Is “legally’’ right.
"In our view," said a statement issued by the foreign office, “the West Germans are not conducting the (provocative and revenge-seek -.tog) activities attributed to them to the note."
The United States Is expected to reject the Soviet charge speedily sad estnpiefely. the White House said the UJS. gov
new note later to the day.
The 700-ward note was delivered
to the U.S., British and French embassies in Moscow Wednesday. It said the three countries, "uti-
More Stories, Pictures on 2, 11, 21, 25, 40, 47
lizing the lack of control over air communications, are c 1 e a r 1 y abusing their situation in West Berlin."
“There has been a flagrant breach af the agreement reached la IMS under which air cnrrtdsrs
The, note was , quickly interpreted by Western diplomats here as a sign that one ot the demands to be made by the Soviet Union at future negotiations over the Berlin situation will be the banning (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2)
Echo Schedule
The Communist water-armed armored ear moved up after Western cameramen closed In to photograph the East Berlin scene and Ignored a .Red policeman' signal to move back. The water gun did a bit of spraying nothing too serious. But at that l! point the American troops were ] Issued the grenades.
Another incident was reported ) when three U.S. Army buses load- , ed with about 100 American sol-): diers thrust past Red guards intoy East Berlin after being delayed ) over an hour at the sector border. [ The buses were assigned to a| sightseeing tour of the* East sector p in a test of whether the Commu-f nisfs would respect Allied rights ofij entry.
NEW RESTRICTION A new Communist restriction of travel from East Germany was' disclosed. Foreigners living In East Berlin and East Germany have been barred from leaving the Red-ruled country since the Communist clampdown bn refugees was launched Aug. 13. ’
Spokesmen lor the Swedish and Norwegian consulates in West Berlin said the Communist authorities had informed the consulates it was not possible tor their nationals to travel to the West in the present
The U.S. space veteran Echo I will appear over Pontiac at about p.m. today. The balloon will t. 5, accord- publicity basics, braining and Ing to Myra Showman,'director of: advanced Russian and seaman-adult education. _ j »hip
ar ruMu
Kyederas of Brooklyn, N.Y„; Lt. Dan Hayes of Long Island, N.Y.; Capt. Jack Davis, Tahlequah, and Lt. Col. Howard Cooksey of Manassas,
Va.
I Recalls the Decatur
> water, i
provisions, not one pound of coal aboard.
The Decatur, a bare hulk, was expected to be in Olangapo, 60 ' miles away — at the. end of 48 |
MILO D. McLINTtR K
A painting and drawing course There will be if subjects of- ] for young people also will be sched-fcred in the, series, she said, vy this year. ’
ranging from accounting and art it . it' it______ J
appreriation to sewing and sU- | Mrs. Andrew C. Maler ver work. Mn. Andrew C. Maier, 73, of
A total pf 814 enrolled in the 14835 t)ov*T Road- Bloomfield Town-j fall series last year, 17 per centj ®hip, died yesterday at St. Joseph] more than in 1959. There were 548 Mercy Hoepltal. Pontiac, following] enrolled in 1958. a brief Wness.
—.. * * . * ' " ( Mrs. Maier, an area resident j
The classes, open to all residents] JT yrars, coming from Ecorse, | iri Birminghanf, Bloomfield Hills was a member of the Unity and adjacent communities, vary in Church.
cost from $3.50 to S20. Surviving are her husband, a]
Payment of the fee Is required son, James G. of Allen Park; four] at the time ot registration. An sisters, two brothers and four { additional tee of $1 will be j grandchildren. , ’
charged those not living In the j * * .■* * -
area served by the Community Her body is at the Bell Chapel I House. No telephone registrations of the William R. Hamilton Co. ] will be accepted. —4---------— 1 1 j------------------
j The classes range in duration; Rod Leaves Geneva j from five td 12 weeks and will start . •—
the week of Sept. 18 or shortly [_ GENEVA (UPI) - Semyon K.
| thereafter.
GENEVA
]Tsarapkin, chief Soviet delegate to the nuclear .test bon conferences
yet no „ crew. There, was where the fittings for the l^ttur j creative pottery, ballroom dancing, rival of U.S, Ambassador Arthur!
Promosed t0- send exercise tor women, first aid, flow-H. Dean, bead of the American mem out to us. Ter arrangement and gardening. ‘delegation.
By the time I got back to Decatur, another ensign, a class-]
|mate, J. Morris Smeallic, had i
___ rived with five more meij. ]
| wanted to he the chief engineer,
As I stood there/ wondering what I made Alien executive office^, to do, a launch from the Galveston We went right to Work. Barges! approached. Out stepped an en-l started to arrive with equipment,1 sign and four seamen. The ensign coal and. water. Eyery once in * Hugh Allen, who now lives in j while Smeallie would bring up'
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Allen told me he'd been ordered]Decatur*had been run, t Wp to death before it had been left for ' jjunk.
restraining the International Typ-i ographieal Union (ITU) from picketing merchants who advertise in the Ypsilanti Daily Press.
Pickets of Ann Arbor Local 151 of the ITU, involved in a member-"khip drive at the paper since 1958, appeared during prime evening shopping hours at several stores and shop* in June and July.
District Judge John Fei-
now had a compliment of four seamen and two officers, but no guns, We finally grit up steam In one torpedos, supplies or provisions of boiler, but hadn’t had time to any. kind. ] test the engines.
Six hours before
Gambler Invokes 5th Amendment in Hearing Before Senators
’Last" Day at County Courthouse
. ___ , .____. W -- , - Some "lasts”' were recorded to-
kens, in issuing the restraining or-jthc old cotinty courthouse yester-
der, ruled the picketing of advertisers was * a secondary boycott, illegal under the Landrum-Grif fin Act.
NLRB Preparing Court Petition in Press Strike
DETROIT (AP)-The National Labor Relations Board today was preparing a court petition aimed at baaing’ Miami (Fla.) Herald pressmen Iran continued picketing at the Detroit Free Press.
Thomas Roumell, regional director of the NLRB, said the board will go into U. S District Court
day — the last day of business.
John Poliskie, a 51-year-old salesman from Hazel Park, and Helen Vivienne Tate, 21815 Wheeler St. Farmington, were the last to apply for a marriage license in the old building.
"iBig 3 Hold Firm
llg. »
•Clerk Mrs. Lota P. Weir filled out the application for Poliskie, 3M W. Otis St., and Mim Tate at 4: SO — to minutes before the 87-year-old edifice was to close for the last time.
There was very little business overall as the clerks and court employes scurried for more cartons in Which to store equipment. They move to the new courthouse in the County Service Center today.
Veteran Pontiac attorney Milton
President of Baldwin Rubber Co. for the past six years, Milo D.
McLintock has announced his res-] ignation.
McLintock, 56, of 1084 Wadding-
ton Road, Bloomfield Village, had i’ A(fAr.
with Baldwin Rubber for 18:J0 LOnilClCl 1/116(5 i years. .»
In his letter of resignation to H. M. I’r.vale, chairman of the. company’s board of directors,
McLintock said he was leaving his position because! of ill health.
“The resignation will become effective when it is officially presented to the board at our meeting next Wednesday,v said Pyrale.
late today to ask a temporary in- F. Cooney went down in history as junction against the pickets. jbeing the “last lawyer to file new legal Action there.
In addition, Roumell said, the NLRB will schedule a trial board examination , to hear the Free Press complaint that picketing which has halted its publication tor four days is illegal under the ■econdary boycott provisions of the Landrum-Griffin Act.
He filed a divorce suit shortly before the closing hour.
Betty’s Weaving Shop, 1005 Fern-wood Road, Royal Oak, was the last to transact business in the assumed names department of the county clerk's office. The shop renewed its application.
The Weather
Fall 04. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy with occasional showers today. Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. A little warmer today and tomorrow. High today 78, low tonight 64, high tomorrow 82. Light variable winds becoming southerly 16-28 miles tomorrow^
I l ia: Wind velocity l a
Direction—Variable. On Mil Thursday a San rises Friday at
i. Highest tamper Lowest temperatui >• Mean temperature Weather-Sunny.
Tear Age In Fentli
Mora flats Thursday, at d:IT p Downtown Temperatures
WASHINGTON W) — Seriate Investigators produced evidence to-j day that gambler Angelo Rossetti
f, . . « s^ ■ s . __ I, T" thieLf Boston runs a race wire news)
RnriUfin n,.LLAr I took AUen s lauirhjrom the]in dry dock the flotilla commanderJgervipe serving illegal handbook Da uWHI KUDUCI ®dve^Dnu a^ore and » approached in his flagship and]betting places scattered from Mon-j
» iimmmvi through the blue waters of Manila shouted through a megaphone. He:(refl) t0 yfiHmi and Steubenville !
- Bay I looked out over those green said we had to be under way atiQhio ’
jungled hills and |y W18 bel"g C°m' IHAD NO c9MPAm I Wire servW operation^ of fid, i
missioned for service. We hadn't tested the engine tele- type are legal. The Henate In-
In Cavite, these same half dozen [graphs. ] vestigations subeommittee which [
Head Resigns
McLintock Cites III] Health in Letter to] Board Chairman
» warrant officers gave
ie| Neither did we have a compass.! dug up the • “Don't worry about a cornpass, ' |ng whether I the flotilla commander called. { needed “Follow us.” Wa then saw our crime, binnacle and compass on a tighter ]arid,had it brought to the bridge
•vtdence Is explor-« federal laws are curb organised
Jerome S. Adlerman, subcom-
Thad plann^ m tuick away from I ™iUae c“,"se!- ^PP*1 ■*» a n»P, [of the United States illustrated
It will then be up to the board to choose a successor.
Mclintock, a graduate of Pontiac Central High School and the University of Michigan Law School was a practicing attorney]
Pontiac for 12 years before joining Baldwin Rubber ih 1943.
He was assistant prosecuting attorney for the county in 183S-S4. After holding the position ot secretary of the company for three years, he was named secretary-treasurer ia 1M6.
McLintock then became vice president-treasurer and director of Baldwin Rubber in 1949, executive vice president and director in 1950 vas named president in 1955.
the buoy, but when I rang up one. ... _____, .. • - , .,.
.quarter speed astern, the Decaturl^1”1 ff" ,nWi *P *how, he said, (Continued From Page One) drifted forward., ^ *he w‘* run"in8]
• roughly north and south from Bos-
dent, called a news conference to: When I rung half speed astern, [ton serves these points: •
defend the company’s contract of- she moved slowly ahead. Then j Montreal, Manchester, L a w-! fer agaiQgt a barrage of union I ordered full speed astern and. Irence, Providence. R. I., Philadel-criticism that it was •’’woefully in- the Decatur shot forward. The ]phij~*Wilmington, DfeL, Atlantic! adequate." engine teiegraphs had been re- CityrN. J , Baltimore and Miami,]
ACCUSES WOOlfcOCK versed. with offshoots to Worcester, Hart-1
Seaton accused Woodcock of I w« other ship out|[o«i, Pottsville. Pa.. Steubenville,]
the facts M I of the bay and up the coast of uiuo, Cincinnati and New Orleans.i
Woodcock, 'in a union news con-1thp Peninsula, but before * * * '
.jrence that followed immediately <■“* a rain storm came hammer- . R^otti who has served timej ■aid he stood by what he said and down on us. the way they do »n federal prisons as a gambling: suggested that the company and in the Philippines, and I couldn’t]stamp tax law violator, sat im-j - - - see the lead ship. passively at the witness table as
So, just inside Subig Bay we Adlerman used a schoolroom type dropped anchor for the night. TTie] pointer td trace the lines, next morning we took 'the Decatur into floating dry dock. Two weeks late she was unabt'keri. We thovightj we were ready for war with Japan,
EAST LANSING (Br-Traffic acd-i_______________* * *__________:
dents have killed 945 persons in] Yes, I’ll always remember the Michigari so far this year, provi- Philippines, the Panay and the sional figures compiled by state time we had getting the Decatur police showed today. The toll for back in commission, the same day a year ago was 927.] Next: Richard Rodgers.
(As recorded dovntawo.
Iflltiaat temperature ...........
Lowest teatperatar*' ,
' i tempsrsturs
■I M Phoenix »o 56 Plttxburgh
He has been active in many civic and fraternal circles in Pontiac.
M cLintock, served several terms on the Pontiac Board of Education and is a past president of the board. . .
---------past president ot the Pontiac Manufacturers Association, a irector ot the Clinton Valley ouncii of Boy Scouts, Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and has Ven active in Masonic groups, onceYserving as commander of P o n t i a c' Commandery No. 2, KnightkTemplar.
In 1947 he headed the Pontiac » ,0 Community Chest’s industrial cam-JJ «i]paign division.
■■ McLintock and his wife Louisejra
union air their differences before some public body and determine the facts.
State Road Toll at 945
SHOES
giRLS and MISSES Fall Styles ^
Spat Gnm Drops and ^ ~ Ballerina flats ^
Weather—Halo.
JJ have three daughters and one son.
:|Snul
[ Deserted, Courthouse Weeps
(ContinQed frond. Page One)
the convirtions, the acquittals and the Judgments of Oakland -County. ' V
They left the stillness of death
“Dfaken only by the mournful j
* cooirig of the pteeons.
"" KH Thp AnklnnH Pminlv
The Oakland County ctdurthouse]^
and its little neighbor to the west, the prosecutor’s offices, be destroyed by demolition
t • ■ AP rbatafax
NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers ape expected Thursday night to the Atlantic Coast stattis except Florida, the East Gulf Coact Mates and the EsMmi Ohio Valley as well as in the Great Basin area. It wty he wHhrr in the Central and Southern Plains, the Antral Mississippi yalley and Lower Michigan; cooler in Eastern Washington pnd Oregon.
I
e west, O Maoon Ira crews.] to 91 * *• . | J
Supervisors of another day called V the fourth county courthouse a] to “beautiful temple of juMtee” when they moved into it Nov, 2, 1905. «
cost $113,008. ij
" * ,*•'*. . %
Today’s county officials cast it to
] into history — a trade-in on a m
Iniewer, cleaner 83.5-mHlion ma|4el.]
.A Y * i . ~ A
Leather Loafers ^
and Oxfords y
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Value "l 07 J!
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THE PONTIAC TRESS. THTRSDAY. AUGUST 2Jr 1961,
Electronic Road Being Studied
Sec. Hodges Describes! Future Sleepy Highway | ■ to Engineers'
WASHINGTON (UPIi- Commerce Secretary Luther H. Hodges today sketched a vidan of accident-free highways on which cars speed! a i >ng at 100 miles an hour while theif drivers sleep.
Electronic devices would steer cars and regulate their speed, tually eliminating the danger of accident from driver error, {lodges told 9 meeting of highway engineers from 16 nations. s
A greater volume of /traffic could be handled saely, he said, “and the human drivers could relax, sleep and enjoy truly carefree motoring."
If studies now lihder way show such an electronic highway to be "desirable and economically feasible," Hodges stated a test strip will be built between two major cities as< pail qL the interstate highway system.
Ohio and Illinois .have been mentioned aa states in which a tryout electronic highway might be . built. No decision on whether to build or where has been made by the government. -
WWW'
Hodges discussed the possibility of an electronic highway in a speech prepared lor the first worlds ■ traffic engineering conference here. | He urged foreign officials “to institute effective control of outdoor advertising” along their own countries’ roads to preserve their natural scenic beauty.
As a mass form of transportation, Hodges said, the passenger car has "opened a hew era of human mobility" in the United States. It has given Americans "greater freedom to choose where they shall work and where they shall live."
'County Clerk-Units Business on Moving Day
.» Only necessary legal transactions will be handled In the county clerk's office tomorrow while the office relocates in the new court-» house.
No hu«lna«f-. »H w*m he transacted today—moving day, declared Daniel T. Murphy Jr., county clerk-register.
“Tomorrow we'll accept only papers that must be accepted because of legal deadlines,”
' Murphy said.
The office will be opened fully Monday in the new quarters' the find floor of the building in the County Service Center on Telegraph Road.
Persons desiring marriage 1U censes, pistol permits, assumed names applications and other papers handled by the statistics section of the clerk’s Office, must wait until Monday, he said.
it it ★
“Everything’s packed away and we couldn’t give them to them if we wanted to."
Marriage licensee that become due Friday, and are already typed up, can be picked up at the new office tomorrow, he added.
House Committee OKs Cabinet Post
WASHINGTON UR - The House Commlttec on government operations Wednesday approved a bill to establish an 11th Cabinet post.
A Negro is in line for the job and would be the first member of his race to hold Cabinet rank.
The Mil would set up u new executive department of urban affairs and housing.
Robert C. Weaver, a New York Negro and present head of the Housing and Home Finance Agency, is President Kennedy’s re ed choice for the new and larger job.
* * *
The new department would in* elude the Housing and Home Finance Agency, the Public Housing Administration, the Federal Housing Administration and the Federal National Mortgage Association.
Latin Cat Back After Adventure in Sioux Falls
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. ean-ulw«* planted to trees in the SO karicago's traffic engineer. 7 ‘states in 1960. ,
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END LOT"CLEARANCE
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dividing line. The sign says: “Attention, sector border." The 10km sign indicates the speed limit of 10 kilometers an hour.
SHOW OF FORCE—An American tank parks near the East Berlin border on the Friedrich* straase ^sector Wednesday u Western allies moved men and war machines up to the Berlin
Details pf Johnson Berlin Trip Revealed
Handy Andy—Briggs & Stratton Engine
22" ROTARY MOWER
lin Mayor Willy Brandt, who opposes Adenauer in the elections.
Johnson carried a reply from Kennedy to Brand's demand , for
Also among the Intimate details of Johnson's trip last weekend that came to light Wednesday wqp the- ticklish handling it required due to the impending national elec* tions in Germany.
NO FAVORITES It was decided that Johnson would politely but firmly tell Chancellor Konrad Adenauer that * he must not accompany him to Berlin.
On the other hand, Johnson was not to appear to be meddling in the election In behalf of West Ber-
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson has told President Kennedy he should including heavy tanks, to Berlin if the Communists exert more
Berlin situation. The reply was described as “p r e M y hot.” Brandt avoided accepting it on two or three oecasloas before finally taking It;
Brandt was much chastened by the time Johnson saw him, and
Johnson also recommended that Kennedy ask the British to increase their maiqfower commitment in Germany and call on France to bring troops from Algeria £o Germany.
Mi f» West Ber-
During Ms ; lin, Johnson _ i that the United Mates expected I them to take a bigger part la i NATO.
While there, he made a spur-of-the-moment decision not to go into East Berlin. Not wanting to do anything that might seem provocative, Johnson declined aa West German official's invitation and Instead talked with him through the open door of hls limousine.
Later, members of Johnson’s party, including Charles (Chip) Bohlen, went across the border to look at the Rusalatrzone, which they found an armed camp.
the letter indicated a far harsher attitude than Brandt actually felt.
Johnson called oh the Germans to do more in their own defense. One thing they probaby will do is extend their military conscription before it expires next month.
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Report Tribal Warfare Has Killed 46 in Africa
KABALE, Uganda (UPI) - Reports reaching here from missionaries and traders said today that 46 Africans have been killed in tribal warfare in Ruanda-Urundi.
The reports said the deaths came in fighting bytween the Bahutu tribesmen and their tormer svw-lords, the Batutsi. Ruanda-Urundi is a Belgian trust territory adjoining the Congo-
; Fargo Fond of Maris
i FARGO, N.D. (AP) - The City , Commission went to bat for a ! home town boy, voting to name > a two-mile winding park road - ‘‘Roger Maris Drive. ” -The- New 1 York Yankee home run bitter, a| • native of Hlbbing, Minn., grew up lin Fargo.
Says Businessmen Afe Not Cooperating
Reversible, Room Size 9 by 12 Ft,
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NOW GOING ON
WASHINGTON (AP) - Atty. I Gen. Robert F. Kennedy says the I business community is not coop-1 erating with Justice Department I antitrust investigations.
Appearing before, the House an- ] titrust subcommittee Wednesday, ] Kennedy was asked what the ] trend has been since a number I of electrical manufacturing com- ] panics and executives were con- I victed earlier this year on crim- ] inal antitrust charges.
Kennedy replied "The situation is getting steadily worse. We are just not getting cooperation from the buqjness community of the United States."
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Newsman Ordered .Out
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BONN, Germany (Ap) — The West German government has ordered Oleg A. EnakieV, Bonn correspondent for the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia, to leave the country. It is the first tiipe the West' Germans have expelled a foreign newsman, No reason was given but it was believed Enakiev was expelled as a reprisal for the expulsion of a German newsman from the Soviet. Union.
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Sherry wine and butter. — two ingredients used lavishly in gourmet cooking — bled deliciously into a savory sauce in the Sher-I ried Shrimp described in the! recipe below from the Shrimp As-| sociation of the Americas. The zest of garlic also adds to the continental ftevor. Even amateur gour-i met cooks can serve shrimp this!
fbroiler^Topped witfr a grind off peppercorns and garnished with crisp parsley, Sherried Shrimp] makes a perfect palate-pleaser for summer meals.
Sherried Shrimp
2 lbs. fresh or frozen shrimp
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST
g4, mi
KING CRAB HONEYDEW DELIGHT —, Hem is a different combination of flavors. Pink and white pieces of canned crabmeat are served honeydew melon bowls. A hint of ctnry is de- ■
Smooth Curry Dressing for Crab Melon Salad
During these hot summer months When appetites lag and the homemaker is hard pot to think of What ta serve^suRgestions for new and different dishes are eagerly' welcomed.
' Unusual combinations of foods, little exotic flavor touches, appetite-appealing color* — all seem so important in summer dining.
Japanese King Crabmeat Honeydew Delight is a sophisticated change for your hot weather menu — delightful as a main luncheon dish, when entertaining your bridge dub or for dinner on the patio* with your husband!
The delicate sea-fresh flavor of the canned Japanese king crabmeat ia complemented beautifully by the cool sweetness of the honeydeW, while the crlap almonds give added texture. The fluffy mayonnaise dressing Is sparked with curry — and the cool green of the melon contrasts pleasantly with the pink and white king crab chunks.
HMMRL *1 stick)
O C?P till sherry wlne
~ Peppercorns-—--A-,-.......... I
P»rsley sprigs 4 slices bread, toasted
Use large shrimp, if possible. Clean, but do- not cook. Wipe dry, and arrange in shallow baking dish. Melt butter in small saucepan; add sherry wine. Pour sauce i over shrimp, and add garlic salt lightly to taste.
Place dish in preheater broiling compartment 3 inches below flame; broil 5 minutes, or until
shrimp turn pink. Remove from
heat; grind peppercorns over
shrimp on toast, garnished with parsley sprigs.____
Banana Topped Toast Makes Good Breakfast
i, _________ - ... ,„I Seafood and wine are such tmnJ When you want a different way
tea, jaded summer appetites will7 , *^To start the
writ no In « hurrv* j companions they deserve to hel“ tae day just rignt. tty
perx up in a nurry. i * “ , , , j Banana Maple Toast. Eat it out-
combined more often than they ^ if the weather lVi
make ovebm^
tected in the dressing, while slivered almonds add another texture to the salad. Just the meal for a hot night.
Wine Is Good
When you serve this interesting! j seafood and melon salad with hot rolls and frosty glasses of iced
perk up in a hurry!
King Crab Honeydew Delight 2 6'4 ounce cans Japanese King Crab-
- 2 small honeydew melons 1 cu^ chopped celery ^ !
4 tablespoons slivered almonds 1, cup heavy cream, vhippad ■4 cup mayonnaise or salad dressing Vs teaspoon curry powder Vs teaspoon salt
Remove' Cartilage from -crab-! meat gently and reserve large chunks for topping. Cut melons in [half; remove seeds. Scoop out[ centers and make -melon balls or 1 cut into bite-size chunks. Scallop ledges of melon shells with knife [or scissors.
Combine melon pieces with crabmeat, celery, minced onion | and slivered almonds. Combine whipped c r e n m, mayonnaise,-curry and salt to make dreasing. Fold about half of dressing Into crab-melon mixture. Pile Into melon shells.
Garnish with large crab chunks.
are. In this easy shrimp-and-crab casserole, California Sauteme adds the distinctive flavor. To accent it still further, poyr glasses of the same wine, well chilled, when the casserole is brought to the table. .
Just Scrape Mold Off
“When a slight mold develops! over cheddar cheese, it can be cut or scraped from the surface, Home economists at Michigan State University say the cheese will not be materially affected.
Baked Seafood Sauteme H cup Bauterne, Chiblli or o rhtt« dinner wine Dkih Tabasco
l (1014-ounce) can cream of chicken
all.
To make this tasty breakfast dish, toast 1 slice of bread—either white or whole wheat. Slice 1 ripe banana over it, cover with 1 teaspoon maple syrup and sprinkle w|jth cinnamon. There wilt be no more “breakfast skippers" after you save this exciting eye-opener!
. > Stir Sauteme and Tabasco sauce into undiluted soup. Chop onion, including part of top. Combine onion, parsley, drained shrimp, crab and mushrooms with soup and mix lightly. Turn into a shallow baking dish or individual baking shells. Sprinkle with topping.
Rake in a moderate oven <350
Topping on Beans
Mix chopped-onion, pickle relish, sliced olives, pickle chips of cheese with baked beans before heating. Or mix pickle relish with mayonnaise and put small mounds on top of heated beans. Run under broiler just before serving.
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Place remaining dressing in serv-jdegrees F.) >unti 1 thoroughly ing bowl to pass separately, heated and browned on top, about Serves 4. 20 to S5 minutes. Serve at once.
(To serve, two, use one can Jap-j TOPPING: Melt 2 tablespoon* ]an«»e King Crabmeat, one melon j butter and combine .with 1 cup and halVe amount* of celery,[fine soft bread crumbs, 2 fable-onion and almonds called for.[spoons grated Parptesan cheese |Dressing may remain the sairie:)jand a dash of dried dill.
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And in others, it concerns tpe-i old fashioned, or Impatient. And I
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Some West Berliners Keep jobs in East Zone
Some MO® of the commuting workers are acton, singers and musicians in the Reds'' heavily subsidized theaters and opera houses.
. A ♦ A "
The beet known is Walter Fel-senstein, director of an East Berlin opera houae, the Komiache Oper. His controversial productions, often wit^ a tinge at Marxist message, have won prizes amd prestige for the East German Communists.
USES A MERCEDES Felsenstein cresses from the American to the Soviet sector every1 day in a big blue Mercedes. Tlie Communists scratch up hard Western currency for a good portion of his pay.
Many of the artists get special advantages from the Communists! including part of their pay hi hard money.
Most of the daily commuters to! East Berlin are shop, office or factory workers. After the war they found the sector bonder to be I drawn arbitrarily -between their homes and their work* and in the tough times tost after the war they took bbth Jobs and housing] wherever they could, find them, j *' * *
The West Berlin city govern-1 ment helps them by changing! some of their soft currency earn-! togs tliW “West marks at the un-1 realistic rale of one for one. The bank* give only one West mark for five East mark?.
ThcSouJh American Hama, 'A traditional beast of burden, is also valued for its meat, milk and wool.
Sandra John
Dee Gavin
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AP Ph.Uf.l
RELATIVES TURNED BACK-A West Berlin woman consoles her crying daughter after they were refused entrance to East Berlin to visit the woman's slck mother. Man at the right also tries to calm the two as they walk away from the Communists’ concrete wall which divides the city at Bemauer Strasse. Some West Berliners have managed to hold their jobs in the East sector-but few Easterners can travel to the West zone.
By CARL HARTMAN
BERLIN (AP) — About 12.500 West Berliners were drawing their pay from East Berlin two weeks ago, but between 1,500 and 2,000 have switched to Jobs in ‘’est Berlin since Communist bar-cades went up across the divided city.
Ignore Feeler From Castro
HJLDiplomat V/n%. Qn|y
Being Polite in Hearing Guevara's Inquiry
HAVANA (AP)— Fidel Castro' regime has admitted sending out a feeler to President Kennedy for truce talks. The White House gave the brusholf..
Cuba's economic czar Ernesto Guevara made the approach to presidential aide Richard Goodwin last Friday- in Uruguay at a cocktail party after the Inter-American Economic Conference. * a *
Guevara told a radio-TV audience Wednesday night that he informed Goodwin, one of Kennedy’s Latin-American experts, that "Cdba is ready to talk” about solving differences.
Guevara said he told Goodwin, Cuba ‘‘wants to remain within j the hemispheric community.” But! he said he emphasized the Castro] regime is determined to maintain ' its socialist political and economic systems—systems branded by Washington as communistic, Goodwin told' friends he met Guevara by chance at a' party given by a. Brazilian diplomat.
White House press secretary Pi-! erre Salinger told newsnien the meeting "had no political significance.” Salinger said it was ‘‘Just j a case of two men meeting at a! reception and pne of them being polite enough to listen for a few minutes to someone he met at a party.”
over .without special passes required of other West Berliners. They are subject only to the to-j convenience of an identity check; and an additional transfer on the subway or elevated* trains.
★ * *
Walter Ulhricht, East German Communist chief, has invited Westerners working in East Berlin to move there. But a Western official «aid he has yet to bear of anyone taldng up the invitation.
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Finley’s briefcase, according to deposed A’s General Manager Frank Lane. :
Finley has blueprints of a prosed stadium with him," Lanfe charged yesterday. “Four or five of the players have seen the plans, and some sportscasters and sports-writers saw them in Dallas last reeft,”
Lane, fired Monday by Finley, said the Athletics owner contemplated moving the franchise to Arlington, Tex., which is located mid-ay between Dallas and Fort Worth.
gales, deiced he has any Eaten-Mens of shifting the franc hire to another city. v It had been'rumored'(hat Finley would move the club to the West! Coast if he were unable to find a suitable site in the Dallas-F 0 r ti Worth area.
tm,. Au.tr.lU. 10
'Btit you cant move a home 1 ere there is no house, and there's no place to play Major League baseball . jin Arlington,'
Lane said. "A stadium would have to be buiR .and that would take time. -If wiiley is thinking about Arlington as a site for his fran-|
chise, he won’t'be'able to move 'TONIGHT TH«U lllt.lt until after the 1962 season because I I vWIVllI it will take at least that long to build a suitable stadium."
‘No one has presented any proposals to move the franchise. Neither have I been Seeking any proposals. As for aft I know at the moment, we'll be playing in Kansas City next season,"
A’s owner added,,
Another Athletic official left yesterday when George Selkirk, supervisor of player personnel, resigned because he “wants to get out of baseball.”
Finley, contacted In Los An-
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TWADE NEEDED. — — - — — |
Opr. Dully I to S — CfewC Sunday — OftM IlMq ’ll t '
UNITED TIRE SERVICE
1007 Baldwin Ave.
WE’VE
SOT
CHEVIES
COMING OF
BOTH EARS!
WE CAN’T CAN
THEM
WE MUST SELL
THEM , i
OUR PRICES
ARE Low LOW LOW
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i
MATTHEWS a&wHARMES
r
NEW HOURS:
631 Oakland at Cass
FE 5-4161
T-T
TWrYKlGHT
THE PONTIAC ftRESS, THURSDAY, ^AUGUST 84, 1991
Big Battles Loom Ahead Over American Tariffs
DRIFT MARLO
Bar Dr. L fL Levitt. Tom Cook* and I
cKWk 'M pmmMmr i MwM.
By UN DAWSON
....AF BatoMap News Analyst
NEW YORK — Will the Ui State* be forced to join some of a common market to compeU with those who are climbing al this kind ot bandwagon?
B not, how cm It adjust to new threat to Ms trade abroad, markets at home?
MAY root MARKET A tew New York bankers specializing in world trade are betting ane will be forced to Join in some form of a common market within 10 years. H>ey point to atriktag economic growth of six Continental European that formed the dbtmnon In 1057. They note that Britain, first reluctant, now la finding expedient to ask for admission and that other European nations are moving in the same direct) eventual free trade among hers of the club.
and quota walls. Others tsh t; a. drive to get American pro-ofduction coats down to cut prices exports.
Many, perhaps most, .bankers and foreign trade economists fed the Untied States must meet the it at competition wjth a tost _ united European Industrial bloc by bargaining.
One of them, William F. Butter
____mist and vice president of
the Chase Manhattan Bank, New 'ark, wants America to seek con-abroad for entry of U.8. goods by offering in return to be more hospitable to European goods here.
at Mnr h
econom
tin yr<
..
£
* “*kt!m<
COMPETITION KEEN This won’t sit well with some American business already suffer-They must compete with from brand new European
______ with the latest equtp-
ient, manned by lower-priced la-.^>r, sometimes built with UA. in-" vestments.
**" P**1*
factories
They are clamoring for pore aon" protection here. They and their labor unions say U S. Jobs are at ■take es well as the health of whole UA. industries.
Other American businessmen have struck gold in the Common Market. A more prosperous Europe has meant a bigger market Sons want to fight—with higher for their goods. They see the proe-
Many American businessmen are dead set against Joining in any such pact.
pect of an all-European bloc and the growth of similar markets In other parts of the world as the best 'chance of disposing of an increased American production of materials and finished goods.
This school of thought bolds that the answer to our trade problem is bargabiing now for better trade terms, and developing more savvy in competition.
Some bankers think that Americans are competing much better in world mariwto fat the last year or so—and that Common Market competition has helped awaken them.
BRITAIN TO GAIN Britain's entry into the Oontinen-il trading pact would help its chemical, electronics, wool fabrics and steel industries to compete on the. Continent, these bankers hdd. Cotton textile and auto industries on ifae Continent would be aipong those gaining by Baer entry to British markets.
In all these Adds American industries would ‘find the going harder in West Europe—and elsewhere as European industries [grew.
* * '*
If Britain Joint the Continental pact, more, U.S. plants may be
there, Butler predicts. They would take advantage of the common language, similar laws and customs and still have full entry to the big markets dn ithe Coo-
UJ>. corporate investment in Britain came to 1800 mUlkm last year and to 8130 million in the Common Market countries of France, West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxem-‘ ourg. i ‘f ■
The total of such U.S. busl investments to all parts of the world was $32.7 billion, as Utt started. This is expected to go much higher as -more American companies decide this to the only way to meet the new competive threat
1.8. JOBS?
But others ask: What about US. workers who lose their Jobs If wo move our production overseas?
That is the big talking point for those who hdd we must bhild tar iff walls. It is also a talking p for those who argue Washington must demand a better deal for U.S. goods abroad.
It could turn into one of c liveliest battles—both on the home front and abroad.
OUR ANCESTORS
By Quincy
British Siren Teilt Beau H«'d Better Hit the Road
LONDON (AP)—-British Actress Joan Colltas sled Wednesday her engagement to American aetoi Warren Beatty fo off.
"K’m not saying anything mow about it," she said in an interview, "bat It’s definitely off. "
The 28-year old actress to starring with Bing Crosby end Bob Hope in the movie "The Road to Hong Kong" now being mode.
Births
The following is a list of births recorded recently at,the Oakland Comity aerie’s Office (by name af tether):
Alton K. Km. Ml Irwht 5m* e. Lloyd. MS Menominee Waller aTSrry. 1JOJ Colder WUUnm J. EUnert, Ml Seottwood John W. Martin, IMT Woodland
fipa Utl
• Alvtn A. Dunasan, IN CMT
ItMk C. Downey, Mt 8. Shirley Jr rtf Hawklni illAlton Stephen B. Erie. M HUlellff ,
Rooer B. Owen, Ufl PtopmmI Rtehnrd L. Smith. 31*1 H.rbZI paler! Oreal Ill Oranade rntu C. Humphrey, till Taylor Arnold XMhn. 110 OMiter Monrta O. Ufond, 7M Blnihem Trade B. Sehultt. ill a Paddock Heriin Tabor, 133 Sutler OUbort Trarlno, 71 Saadonah Antonio Anaaros, Ml IT Jeeeie Cheater Bartntk. n Oaar fiorO. Wheeler. 14M Orchtd Leon B. Tulkowekl, IPS Oneida Donald B. Moore. 17 Part Place John B. Nord, 1741 Cotrain |
Wilson J. Valfle, MB. BlrdS Bari R. Wleladt. J307 Mland View Delmo B. Chaprtelalaa. 171 Slocum Jamte Harden. 11M Henna Ktchard Slrint, 3733 Edsefteld Joseph L. Smith. 4M BAsaa
is?—
Alvin Bentley to Aid Education With Foundation
OWOSSO (to—Former Michigan Congressman Alvin M. Bentley Wednesday announced the creation of a foundation in hie name for ‘The advancement of education end charitable endeavors."
Bentley, a wealthy manufacturer, said he will personally contribute *150,000 to direct gifts to the foundation each year for the next seven yuan, a total af 81,000,000.
Bentley said hto purpose in establishing; the foundation is to "further my desire to devote my time, effort and fortune to public
He said the foundation will act i .as'agency to distribute gifts and grants to charitable^ educational 1 religious institutions.
"Maybe it’ll stand straight after the earth settles!"
HOARDING HOUSE
MAiNit. ICS fit. Clemen*
Willi urn 1. Sele.ky. 73 WM*M' I Euseae A. BjwMtoSP 8r.. IMS hrtftj Sytean Pnak. 170 California Hebert E. ifarlde, M0 Third St.
ESia t. m*. iwrnyier
Wallace L. Jobm, 17 E Hew York Jimmie D. Cooper. 314 E. Bird. JL Outer J. Jarrett. 313 S. MenbalT fjSfl OuemYn.' IOS CanteVbury gWfehlkRt 711 Gaatefea. twlni Charlet E MeWethy. INI Barkley Jmh T. Carpenter. 4731 Jamm Richard J. Klaeey. 3M Liberty
Brute*C
3 Octet L SMCtnooi
^&niur 04 Iilaod Park
rt D. Chrlaman. 3PM Shew nee Lei IE. CrwljjE M Wnodmoot
"•chert C. Root. MlT BrldfeLake Warl C. Leonard, *534 Oak Park Oeeil L. Warden. MM Pine Knot)
Mr L. Ploal 434» lfaybee .
"-rederlek HLewen. MR Drayton mEm C. Coe entry, 7041 Ttppon -*rbard M. Barry, MSP Norman 'teewand O. ftalay, ti7l Heats, tehert R. Morae, MM Bnoyapple
SiWtSK, L.k
V titai ^
Tuenum K. Halt 4*1 Whippoorwill
Bbjf
JSi ■1 . Robert M
JBWftggr w» i
----■ H. Lewie. 4P71 Cecelia Ann.
Refer IL .Pnrtln SMI Mb.
" Wfliert S. NovUn SSS4 Mohawk ‘JSarrtD )■ OetramUr, SI Miller.
.mnUdintoi
1 Chartea I. MoBmeh, Stf Plaher, Clyde. H Word O. MBchle 433 HardM. body.
* Prtd H. Wendt. M1I Joeeeaan. r—
* PraadiM B. RcyM, IMS M 1
*rid» B. Carpenter, 3334 Baldwin.
: Wmwt V. Athcrtaon Hit W
> The eruption of Krakatoa Is-fund, to the Bunds Strait betwen - •va and Sumatra to 1183, was /card 3,000 mflaa away,
irxrr
OCT OUR WAY
,rI-IGAVE
ADAM AMES
KteiDO'HGURED SOMETHING Vvfoff ,
PMH/—OONSfOERtoT ]
THAT BEBJW V&6 k THE BEST SWIMMER \ Vfl AROUND THESE
By Lag FI—
...90 I BEGIN' NOSIN'AROUND... FiHOIN' OUT RRST THAT THERE'S A NICE fW INSURANCE POUCy ■ WAfTIN' T7 BS CASHED IN. ^ KNOW WHO THE BENEFICIARY
THE BERRYS
By Carl Gnibcrt
rr?%
ALLEY OOP
By V. T. Hanttn
CAPTAIN EASY
By LmU* Turner
NANCY
By Ernie Bushin iHer
SORRV, FOLKS—'
[ THAT FOUL BALL
MORTY MEEKLE
By Dick Cavalli
TH»TOWN»NTWO 0K3U0H (ORTHO BOMfTIC woruwkx cnuMoea.
B-2V
GRANDMA
JOEY, PLEASE TELL „ YOUR MOM I WON’T
be ooiN-r ttbio
bargain gales,
C WITH HERT’DAY/
• By Charles Kuhn
HECK, f FEEL SWELL/ IT'S NOT ME THAT CAN'T ETANO A TRIP DOWNTOWN.
DONALD DUCK
By Walt Disney
HAPpy' oiRTHOsy/ 'V.
MOW you HAVE AUL. 1 ■
>txig reemves iN s. ^
ONE HANcy eoTTLe/j
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AUGUST 24, lfrei
'----------
Business and Finance
Groin Prices
141% Lard (drama)
MARKETS
Mrs. Monroe Cut on Face in Car Mishap
A 41-year-old Pontiac woman was injured early today after losing control of - her car which jumped the curb on W. Kennett Road before stuping on the front lawn of a home at 192 W. Kennett Road.
Mrs. Ruby Monroe, 474 Fourth St., was reported in satisfactory condition today at Poatiac Osteopathic Hospital where she was treated for face and scalp lacerations.
She told police another car passed her, ti)en suddenly cut in , front of her auto, causing Mr to lose control of the car Hie accident occurred at 2:15 a.m. on West Kennett Road east of Dewey Street.
News in Brief
The theft of *154 from the Na-Vision Optical Studio of Pontiac, 109 N. Saginaw St., was'reported to Pontiac police yesterday.
Ronald Bander, 494 N. Fast Blvd., reported to Pontiac police yesterday that painting equipment valued ait $83 was stolen from 546 Granada Drive,
Edward Davert of 286 Rlchdale St., Avon Township, told sheriff' deputies Wednesday that someone! had stolen $65 worth of tods from! the trunk .of his car parted in. his garage.
American Legion Hall for Rent. Parties, banquets, weddings. Contact O. Hjll. UL 2-4078. —Adv.
Rummage Sale. Friday, August 25, 9 a.m. to 1 pm. Italian American Club, 60 N. Tilden, Pontiac.
—Adv.
He Knows What
He's Doing—. Writes It Down,
LANSING Wt— The mobile travel information units of the State Highway Department ask tourists visiting Michigan various questions, such as:
How did you Uke the state?
How many miles did-you travel?
How much money did you ’ spend?
Generally the answers are in round figures. .
But one tourist from Bluffston, lnd., replied that he travelled 1.783.3 miles and spent $88.33 in four, and one half days.
- “I 'write it down," he explained.
Youngsters to Crowd Main Library Friday
Pontiac's main public library should be a pretty crowded place Friday. .
Some 125 or more third-through sixth-grade youngsters are expected at the apnual children’s party of the library's Summer Reading Club in the library auditorium.
Festivities, including movies, games, storytelling, ginger ale, ginger cookies and jelly beans, are slated to get under way at 2 p.m.
Certificates .will be awarded to nienibers who have read a pre-scribed number of books this summer.
GOP Duo Asks Firing of Bowles, End of Red Trade
WASHINGTON LB- Two Republican leaders in Congress called today for muzzling Chester Bowie* or firing him from the State Department.
They also urged a clampdown by the Commerce Department on exports to the Soviet ^loc.
Senate Leader Everett M- Dirt-sen of Illinois and House Leader Charles A. Halleck of Indiana framed both propositions in the form of "suggestions" to President Kennedy at their weekly neWs conference.
The following are top price* covering sales of locally gfown
Cjee by growers and sold by in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, i Tuesday.
Detroit Produce
(Automotive Line Aver# Slips
NEW YORK IB—The stock market continued to retreat in moderate trading early today.
Ask County Court Setup Replace System of JPs
PROPOSED PHYSICS HALL — Construction
Most- key stocks were off frit-1 of a new' three-story wing at tbs Cranbrook In-
tionally. Some took losses of point or so. A scattering of is showed .wider losses.
Apple*. Transparent .
Apple*. Wealthy _______
Blueberries. 11 pt. Blackberries. 41.......
Peacbe*. Oolden Jubilee Peaches mi* Hares . Peaches Rad Haras . Pbar*. Clapp* Favorite
Plum*. Bqrbaek ... . Watermelon ............
VEGETABLES
si. Aaatui
C*bb4ge, sprout, bu. , Cabbage, red. bu. ... Cabbage, standard vi
u baht. .
L be ha [ S
Eggplant, la Kohlrabi, d Leeks, bch.
Okra, pk.
Ontona. dry ... ___
Onions, green, dos. bch*. Parsley, curly,- (
Parsley, root. do*.
Peas, blackeye . .
Peppers, bu.........
Peppers, cayenne . Peppers, hot, pk. .
' ”—'----- pimento .
Hailshes. white, don. Squash, scorn, bu. .
------ Buttercup ;
Butternut . __. Delicious ..
Squash, sunnier, •'* b
Tomatoes —.........
Tomatoes. 14 lbs. Turnips, topped, bu.
Cabbafe. bu. .., Celery cabbage Collerd, bn.
_____ bleached .
Escerole, bn........,
Escarole, bleached. Lettuce. Bibb. pk.
; jS The automotive group still j- *-gj showed a lower tone on balance-100 aa eeaerro continued about the - J *® coming d ea d I i n e on a labor i'm agreement. Ford, down about a ;■ 3 So Print, was the worst loser, while 3*4 Ueoeral Motors yielded a free-3 00 tloa.
Chrysler and' American Motors ***J traded about , unchanged. Stude-. lu! baker-Packard dropped a fraction Jig in continued profit taking.
' i so ' was off more than a point,
; 1'as | while Mohasco eased as the mar-" 135 ret evaluated their respective posi-/ l.sojtions in. view of the proposed . ' .a? I merger, based on an exchange of • 1J* shares.
!: Its Du Pont, off about 3, continued "J to weigh heavily on the averages, io Losses of more than 2 points were o taken by such stocks as Phillips 5 Petroleum, Gillette and Zenith.
The Berlin crisis remained a disconcerting background factor but there wdre no biga* that business plans were being revised because of It.
| Merck and Pfizer were fractional Iso!gainers in a firm drug gre ; JFarm implements and airlines * M were mixed. Most other major . loo groups were in a downtrend.
j i* The opening of the market was J i ts fairly active but trading quieted J JS|soon thereafter, i l.oo Prices on the American Stock J;Js Exchange were generally lower. } J® Sherwin-Williams fell more than a t oo point. Other losers included Aero-J ^1‘JJjjet-General, Loral Electronics, Syn-.'l.oo it ex and New Jersey Zinc. Anken Chemical was about a point higher.
Boston. do*. . Lettuce, head, dor..- . ... Lettuce, bead, bu. . Lettuce, leaf. bu. ........
New York Stocks
Figure* after decimal pointy are eighth* Admiral ... 11,1 Int Tel A . Tel M.(
Allied Chtm . 13.3 ,
75 3 Kellogg
Poultry and Eggs
. delivered to Detroit ganllty 11 vo poultry:
Heavy type hens 14V4-17, light type
*aes. consumers grade including U.S. White—orsde A Jumbo 43-40: ext rge 40-40; large 40-44; medium 30-1 imall 33.
Browns—Grade A Jumbo 43-44;' extra large 41W-43; large 3X>4-40; medium 1943; small 30-31; grade B check* 37(5-
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT, Rug. 33 (API—Cattle—
slsble 400. Opening trade on slaught ..asses steady; short toad high choi 10*0 lb. yearling steers 13.00; few aba loads enrage choice yearling steei 34.35-34.*0; scattering good grade steer* 33.30-13JO; utility cows 10.S0-17.30; —
- - — cutters 11.00-11,M-
Butchers opening
------* HO. 1 190*
hoed
aiui^H : 1M Sitci^R Cempb Boup 133 4 {ft™*
steady; most * , 18.00-1* 75; I
300-300 lb*. 16 75-17.50: :
maw 15 00 .___________
5 00; standard 14.00-30.00; cun Utility 10.90-34.99.
Sheep—Salable 300. Slaughter 1
I Llgg a My 00.
Litton Indus 137. I Lockb Alrc .. 49 I Lorlllsrd .... M. I Lou it Nash .. 55.
BuS * Howell Ml
Can Dr) Cdn Psc Carrier Cp
i Owens III Ol
Clark Equip .. Sl» j
§SSf.r
stitute of Science in Bloomfield Hills will begin late this summer. At exhibition level the $200,-000 wing will provide three halls for illustrating the principles of physics. A series 'of offices, laboratories and shops will be accommodated
on the ground level while the floor above the exhibition halls will be equipped with another laboratory for the research staff. Funds for construction are assured by a grant from the Skill-mJtti Toundation. William E. Kapp -of Detroit designed the wing.
LANSING' UR — Abolishment of the office of justice of the peace and creation of a counjy court system In its place was proposed to-|day by a committee of attorneys.
The committee, reviving a pro-j posal rejected by tbe legislature some I| yearn ago. will submit It* plan to the Michigan stale Bar convention next month In Detroit. Endorse meet by the Bar could lend to n new, drive for legislative approval In 1882.'
000 residents, the county court also would take over the duties of circuit court commiaaioaera. Municipal. police, common pleas and other inferior courts would be left intact. - ■'
The legislature would make annual appropriations to finance county court oppratto—. but counties could supplement salaries of tbe Judges. Oalj attorneys would be permitted to sit on the
Republican Family Picnic Hurd Division Saturday at Ivory Farm . ..
ito Leave Almont!
jbor, urged the convention to on the constitutional convention I (hat will meet in October to abolish J the constitutional status of justices of the peace.
A report on Berlin by Congress-.the county') man William S. Broomfield, a'Mat. message from former Vice President Rjchard M. Nixon, and a talk by con-con candidate George W. Romney will be featured at t|>e 2nd annual Republican.family Fun Day to be held Saturday.
senatorial con-con
The president of American Motors Corp. from Bloomfield HUIs will dial a telephone number at random and urge the person answering to vote In the Sept. 12 con-eon election. Also, he will ask the person to call a ill be at the John F. Ivory! friend and urge him to
| Rest May Follow
ALMONT (UPI) — 'Hurd Lock Go. .. Service Division Manager Julius Clcvlo has confirmed that Romney will deliver the keynote |opera,ion8 wU1 ** moved from address on the forthcoming con. Almont to Greenville. Tenn. The vention at 2'p.ni. local P,ant <*npk>y« 200-
Republicans will also award Peter Ropp, president of United prizes totaling $1,950 in savings Auto Workers Local 831 which bonds. j represents the Hurd workers here,
The outing will include fa—[said-the union offered to take 40-food, swimming, games and a 45- cent hourly wage cuts to keep the minute diving exhibition by a team I service division in Almont of collegiate divers. The exhibi- Bllt ^ lion will be in the morning
farm near Union Lake. Registi lion will begin at 11 a.m.
“The fate of the free world hinges on the. outcome of the Berlin, dispute.” said Broomfield, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “1 think the ritlsena of Oakland County should be ns fully Informed on the facts ns our national security will permit.”
Nixon is expected to send greet-ings to the nearly two thousand frn'f rrPnf Oakland Republicans expected toj 1
attend the picnic affair. He will /ynr/
send the message either by trie- * UiiU
gram or* via a direct telephone CZ&ttinn W/zlfrrra cart from California hooked into v"*cruiiiy rV CTUUIC the public address system. said; ™ ... ,. _
County Chairman Arthur G. Elliott
swimming pool she won recently on a television show and still draw thd $400 monthly she gets in welfare aid for her nine children. I That w?s the verdict Wednesday of Michael F. Ettel, chairman of | the Welfare Board, who said, “Under no conditions would we allow her to take the pool and still retain the aid to dependent children
Barring this, it said, powers of justice courts should be limited by law to those set forth in the constitution, “thus permitting this of-, _ « ., , . , [flee to wither on the vine."
Lock Firms Service ^ .
, ' , The proponed, county court
Branch Going Soufh; | would be o limited circuit court
rather than “a glorified justice of the praqp court." the committee said. Ih. would take over all powers ann Jurisdiction of the Justice courts as well as minor rases now handled by the circuit
sorted that ‘'intelligent law enforcement" can cope adequately with the problems of pornographic literature without additional legislation. The committee assailed “vigilant committees intimidating local officials and book sellers," «
Army May Call Guard Units
October Could Bring Federal Summons, to Some Alerted Outfits
WASHINGTON (API - Indies, supply the demand for an inter-1 Hons are that the Army will be-* mediate appeal court betvwo ii^n ^ringing^into federal service« competent trial-court and the Su- by early or mid-October some of the 37 National Guard units which have been alerted for call up.
This, said the committee “may permit the circuit courts to partly]
e company gave ] no assurance that the wage cut offer would keep the service division here so the offer was
preme Court.”
OTHER COURTS INTACT In; counties with less than 250,-
Clears Officer in Sea Disaster
Only the service division ol Hurd's Almont operation is affected. Popp said Hurd has indicated the remainder of the local operation will ad so" be moved to Greenville if, the service, division move proves economical.
Hurd lock is a subsidiary of Avis Industrial Corp. of Detroit.
ebole* nod
Typhoon to Hit Formosa
TAIPEI, Formosa (UPIt — Typhoon “Lorna" with winds up to 130 miles an hour will batter Formosa with its full force early Friday if it maintains its present c-o it rie, the weather bureau said today.s, .
Until .1959, paleontologists lieved mankind to be 500,000 yean old. Then Dr. L. S. B„ Leakey reported the discovery' in Tanganyika of an egrlier man who lived and hunted on the shores of a loryg-vanishcd lake some -600.000
• 17.00-10.00; cuU to chotoc *1
American Stock Exch.
Inures after decimal point* are right!
C*1 El Pw ...33:3 CohU Eire .... 11
Cr«#l* P*t . 37, Dvnam Am . 13.1 El Bond R 8 34 orn Drvel .... 13.7
4 John . 173
OcnMills ... a»n Motor* . O Tel R Tel Gen Tire .... Oene*co . ..
Pacific Pet Ltd 19.9
. 24 #
imp ,,o o* .. **.* ota ui* i to* A Am ... 102 Techolco
Stocks of Local Interest
PI (tire* after decimal point* are elfhth*
STOCKS or ABEA INTEBEST
Bid Asked
ACP-Wrlgley Stores, Inc; .... 17.2 17.4 3*:2 3*4
ArimoMO Louisian* On* C Bald.-Montrose Ctiem. Co.
Borman Pood Stores _____
Curtlss-Wrljht Corp. ..
Davidson Bros., ............
Federal Matal-Bover Bearings SB.i
Great Lake* Chemical .......-. 3.'
Hoover 8*11 a Bearing .....30.
*^“ard Refining ............ 12.<
____ Mathleaon Chemical ____ 41.
fyopBol c “
10 4 10.S
OVER THE COCNTEB STOCKS The follovkig quotations do not necessarily represent actual tranaaC but nr* Intended ao a guide to tb proximate trading rjy^ge of the M
American-Marietta Co; Detroiter Mobile Homes ...<.
Electronics Capital .......
Electronic* international ___
............
McLouth Steel Co. .......
Michigan Boamleaa Tube Co.
Pioneer Plaaoce ..............
Shatterproof Olaaa Corp- ....
... M.l Republican .
12 2 Revlon .....
... 34.4 Rex Dm* , . 50 ReyMet 50 5 Key Tob . 37.1.toj»lDut ... .. 83 4 Skfeway St . . . 211.4 St Reg Pap .
., 35 Sear* Roeb . .103.2 Shell Oil .
of Neglect in Collapse of Texas Tower
NEWBURGH, N.Y. ifi - The law officer presiding at the court-martial of Col. William M. Banks, today found him innocent of neglect in the collapse of a Texas Tower in the Atlantic Ocean Jan. 15. His finding still is subject tol approved by the board of officers of the court.
The court recessed afte finding by the. officer,, Col. Jean Rydstrom, and was to resume this afternoon for a decision by the right officers comprising board.
The prosecution concluded its arguments at 9:30 a.m. The defense immediately moved for dismissal of the charge.
The collapse of the tower in a storm off the New Jersey coast cost. 28 lives.
‘JH Japanese Mayor Sends IjjPeace Bell to Kennedy
! lo.i TOKYO, Japan (API — Mayor 26*|Chiyoji Nakagawa of Uwajima
• J| { today ’ sent -a 6%-pound copper ! 74.0 j "bell of peace” to the U.S. Em-; S » bassy for president Kennedy.
- J® * Nakagawa, whose home city is ; io in southwest Japan, said he plans ; JJ 4 to present a similar peace' bell to
• ii j Soviet Premier Khrushchev.
! 25j The bell, made of copper coins [ from 66, nations, is 8.8 -inches high!
that some welfare funds might go into its upkeep.
Mrs. Sawicki said earlier she intended. to accept - the pool, won with other gifts on ABCs "Queen for a Day." She said if welfare aid was cut off she would go to wort, A divorcee, she'has nine children, 18 months to 17 years, home and a tenth, a son, 9, is a state hospital.
Says 'End' Will Come Within Generation
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)
The president of the International Watch Tower Society of Jehovah’) Witnesses has said, that "within this generation, society as w< it faces a cataclysmic end.
* * *
Nathan H. Knorr, who also is leading Jehovah's. Witnesses minister, said the end would come “to make way tor the millennial kingdom of God,"
An estimated 25,000 listeners gathered to hear 'Knorr describe what he Called final chapter of old world history. The religious sect is holding a six-day meeting here which ends Sunday.
* * *
Knorr said the "last days” of Christendom began in 1914 at the outbreak of World War .1.
Hope to Maneuver School Bill to Vote
WASHINGTON (AP) —" The House may get a chance to vote on the administration’s stripped down federal school aid package after all. Then again it may not.
The Democratic leadership decided Wednesday to- split the package into ttfo separate bills. The strategy is to try to bring up one or both of them two weeks from'now under a parliamentary oddity called calendar Wednesday. This would bypass the House Rules Comnjittep, where the administration’s original school program came to grief in a squabble federal aid to parochial schools.
* * *
Speaker Sam Rayburn ferred with President Kennedy Wednesday, then called . a meeting of Democrats most closely concerned with the aid to education program. Education Committee Chairman Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., said after the meeting two separate bills would be hammered out overnight, but all elements of the administration compromise plan would be tained.
Senate to Decide Fate of Funds /or Peace Corps
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presl-dent Kennedy's Peace Corps lasure faces the first of a series of Senate tests today, with the outcome of a move to cut its fund authorization by $l!j million in doubt.
Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois said te thought there was a good banco, the Senate would reduce the proposed over-all outlay from $40 million to $25 jniUioM,,
However, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, assistant Democratic leader, predicted In separate interview that the legislation would ride through the Senate without, substantial change.
Humphrey conceded there may be trouble in the House.
This seemed to be suggested In Army answers to question* today about possible methods for bringing alerted units up to full strength.
i) t W
Under the law, a member of a Reserve outfit or an individual reservist cannot be transferred involuntarily to a National Guard unit while that unit' is still under control of a state. He may b e assigned only temporarily for. training.
However, he nruty be "designated” in advance, a spokesman explained. This means' that he may he informed in advance that if and when a certain National Guard unit goes into federal serv-‘e—and passes out from under state authority—he will be assigned as a filler to build up strength of that unit.
NOTIFY BY SEPT. 18
The fillers would be drawn from Reserve outfits which thrin-selves have not been alerted tor, possible call.
Such notification to individuals, under the new program, must be made by Sept. 15, the Army said.
Pontiac Motor Holds Sales Meeting on TV
A Pontiac national sales meeting today was to be delivered to the division’s cross-country dealer organization in 26 cities by a
Mleca? TriKt?,ing tor Driving While Drunk
from Detroit s Masonic Temple. w
Getting under way at 1 p.m. the meeting was to (oca* on Pontiac naira objective* for 1862 with featured addreawe by S. E.
This appeared to indicate that the Army is shaping its plans to provide for summoning in the month following Sept. 15 at least some of the 37 National Guard units, and possibly some of the 76 U.S. Army Reserve units, which have been alerted.
Fined, Put on Probation
1/.S. to Witness Almost Complete Eclipse Friday
NEW YORK (AP)—Sky watch-rs will see an almost total eclipse of the moon Friday night —depending upon visibility.
More than 99 per cent of the
Gel
president and Pontiac general manager, and F. V. Bridge, Pontiac general sale* manager. Following the one-hour telecast' 15,000 dealers and salesmen were to preview the ntw 1962 Pontiac automobiles on display in each! location.
Pontiac Trill unveil its new-: line to the public in dealer show rooms on Thursday, Sept. 21.
James A. Stanley, 43, of 540-* Howland Ave., was found guilty of drunken driving yesterday before Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum. Stanley was fined $100, $10 costs,, and placed on two years probation —the first fodr days to be in the Oakland County Jail.----
OIL COMPANY
Will LEASE OR BUY Your SERVICE STATION
Write All Information Io
PONTIAC PRESS BOX 18
- Wild geese can fly as fast as moon’s disk-will pass through the and carries the inscription "Long 60 miles an hour and as high as earth’s shadow, , the American
Live World Peace.’
Goodyear .. Ot A 4c P ... Ot No Ry . Greyhound . GulfOU ....
DOW-JONES
£ J
MUTUAL FUNDS
At misted Fund .......
Chemical Fund
CommonwealtU- Stock .. Keystone Income K-l .. Keystone Qrovth K-3 . Mas*- Invasion orowth Mass. Innatert Trust .
Putnam OrowtO \.......
Television KleOtroklcs Wellington Equity .. . Wellington IW \ . . .
-Nominal OuataUdn*
list' 13.*o ...mao 30.05
.'•Vllto 3013
Hayden Planetarium
Astronomers at the planetarium j I said the eclipse could be visible from all parts of the United States, except the northwestern tip of Alaska.
♦ ♦ ♦
It will start at 8:35 p.m., Pontiac time, and the visible phase will end at 1:41 a.m.
Botanist Missing in Centralldabo
Out They Go!
1961
DEMONSTRATORS
Hert It Your Chonco fro.
SAVE!
Jerome Olds-Cadillac
280 S. Saginaw pi 347021
Castro's Son Sent to Russia for Education
MIAMI W - The 12-year-old son of Cuban Prime Minister. Fidel Castro has been flown tef' Moscow .to continue his education, the Miami News says.
' Fidelito was sent to Russia Tuesday at his father’s direction to set an example for otherw Cuban parents, the News said.
, The child’s mother, Myita Diai
IBalarf, divorced from Castro, was been:weeping a* Fidelito went aboard Castro’s turbo-prop ^airliner in Havana, report* said.
reports:
VISIT CENTER — Pontiac service training aids were the center M attention as four Pontiac executives visited General Motora Training Center classrooms between sessions'* of the Division’s 1962 National Service Meeting this week-- in Detroit, liripecthw-a Tempest propeller shaft and related parts were (left to right) Ji. P? Charles, assistant chief engineer; E. 'M. Estes, chief engineer; H. A. C. Anderson, director of-reliability;
featured a preview of 1962 Pontiac products and. service activities waa attended by ITS Poqtiac and GM field service personnel from the United States, Canada and overseas..., '
SALMON, Idaho (AP) — A botanist was missing today in the cliff-slashed crags area of central] Idaho’s primitive Salmon River country.
She is Dr., Anna Pechanec, 50, a professor at Clark College in Vancouver, Wash. ,
A full-scale - search Was sched-j ul.ed today.
Guide Gerald Ritchie said Dr.L Pechanec, a member of a party] of naturalists, went off by herself! Tuesday afternoon. Authorities be-l lieve she may have fallen and b£en hurt or may be trapped on ia diff or ledge. ; /
ft’* a truism — shiftless people
Wd.". *. Hate,, V* tmHUy pi-gron -Met,
ltd fake excuses to stay home,
NOTICE of PUBLIC HEARING
Tha Pontiac City Commission has schodulod public hearing iof Tuesday. . September 8. 7861 at 8 p.m. E.S.T. in tbe Conuniseron Chamber. City Hail an Intention to Construct Water ^(ain on the following street: o HOME STREET
hem existing main in Poplar Street te existing main in Home Street .
For further information see legal node*. < Inter#* owner* are urged to appear.
By order ol the City Commission Dated August 23. 1881 K-
OLGA BARKILEY
rr*r -
T1IK P6wT1AC PRESS, THURSDAY, ^AUGUST *4, 1961
IT’S A FAMILY AFFAIR
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THE SKIRT
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THE COAT
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Seart Infant*' and juveniles’ Went
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