ee eC i | = ee a Witinos venn Peckeant Partly : Details Page 2 | 114th YEAR * e x* * PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1956—36 PAGES ke Puts Dis 7 ies | * + Contl in Civilian - Recess Marine Trial Defense Counsel on Mysterious Flying Trip Asked for -Cancellation of Session to Gather Evidence, Testimony PARRIS ISLAND, 8.C. —A mysterious trip by de- fense attorney Emile Zola Berman left the court- martial of Marine 8. Sgt. Matthew C. McKeon in weekend recess here today. McKeon is on trial be- cause of the tragic night march he led into a swamp here April 8. Six of the 74 recruits on that march drowned. . Berman asked for and got yesterday a cancella- tion of today’s scheduled session because he said he had to make a flying trip in connection with the case. A defense. spokesman declined to say where Berman was going and whom he will see. He did in- dicate that the mystery trip is in connection * with potential testi- mony or evidence in the case. The story of the tragic march that McKeon led was unfolded from the stand yesterday in the command-crisp voices of marine combat veterans and the hesi- tant tones of youth, — The session saw McKeon's sen- HEARS THREE CHARGES Specifically McKeon is charged with involuntary manslaughter, oppression of recruits and drinking |ly (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) English Blonde Causes Kinsey Hospitalization BLOOMINGTON, “Ind. (INS) — Dr. Alfred Kinsey, the sex expert, admitted today-that-a blonde Eng- so much he landed in a hospital. * * 8. Dr. Kinsey . confirmed reports that Elizabeth Cowley of the Lon- don Gazette beseiged his office at Indiana University so doggedly she got tossed out by school guards and he went into the hospital “to rest for awhile."’ The incident, said Dr, Kinsey, occurred three‘ months ago short- ly after he returned to his sex re- treatment for a heart ailment, . Miss Cowley, he said, ignored his refusal to grant her an inter- view and arrived at his office any- way. She didn't get past the outer office, but insisted on waiting un- til he appeared. . * ° Five hours later, guards on the Bloomington campus were sum- moned and escorted Miss Cowley from the building, he. said. Prince Rainier Hires Swiss Gynecologist LONDON (INS) — The London Daily Mail-said today that Prince Rainier reportedly has asked a prominent Swiss gynecologist to consult with Princess Grace as soon as possible. * e* The Daily Mail reported in a dispatch from Zurich that it was has requested Swiss Professor Rodolphe Rochat to meet with the princess. The Daily Mail also said the tioning as to whether she i @©/rael pecting a baby. * * © Rumors that the blonde film beauty is pregnant have repeated- ly cropped up, but have not been officially confirmed. lish newspaperwoman pestered him| search at the university following (jjon understood the ruler of tiny Monaco) Plan Weekend Steel Bargaining First Such Session ‘Just to Help Remove Obstacles’ PITTSBURGH w&—For the first time since the nationwide steel strike began July 1, union and industry negotiators called a weekend bargaining session today in an attempt to reach a contract settlement, However, the negotiators quickly pointed out that the Saturday meeting in itself was no indica- progress, They said it would be just another effort to eliminate obstacles, Neither David J. McDonald, no ‘change in positions held ome 650,000 steelworkers struck 90 per cent of the nation's steel producing mills. MeDonald has rejected an in- dustry offer “of a 52-month™ con- tract, saying it was “too little and too long.” The industry valued the hourly package proposal at 17 2-3 cents during the first year. Me- Donald said it amounted to 14 | cents. The strike has idled more than 100,000 persons in related indus- tries, chiefly railroads and coal mining. Dag Talks in Jordan to Avert Israel Clashes AMMAN, Jordan (INS) — U.N. Hammar- 'S'Secretary General Dag skjold arrived in Jordan from Is- rael by plane today and quickly ‘held talks aimed at preventing Is-/ raeli-Jordan border clashes. He conferred with Jordanian For- eign Minister Awni Abdelhadi and Permanent Under - Secretary for Foreign Affairs Ihsan Hachem. ‘Miss U.S. A.’ Now’Miss Universe’ LONG BEACH, Calif. ®—A tall, trim Iowa girl, who came here a weck ago with ambitions of be- coming a school teacher, was ac- claimed today as Miss Universe of 1957, For Carol Morris, 20, the award complete an unprecedented sweep of top honors in the international beauty ‘contest. She was first named the most popular girl in the opening day parade and then! Went .on to win the title of Miss United States, Last night the dark-haired blue-eyed beauty from the Mid- dle West: matched her charms against those of 14 girls from other nations and again came final judging. Sweden was third, Iris Waller, . fourth, and Rosanna Galli, Italy, fifth. . The only previous winner of the , Miss USA and Miss Universe ti- tles was Miss Miriam Stevenson of Winnsboro, 8.C. in the 19%4 con- test. Her father, the Rev. LaVerne Morris of Ottumwa, Iowa, who) flew in with his wife, disclosed that for three weeks he has been carrying a penny in “the toe of his shoe, “} found it on the street,’ he said. “And at the same instant a picture of Carol flashed in my mind.”” Among the prizes won by the new Miss Universe is a six-month motion picture contract at $250 a week. Rev, Morris made it clear he is not too keen on his daughter entering the movies. He said he wanted Carol, a jun- jor at Drake University, to com- plete her ‘college education and go on with her plan to become an elementary school teacher. Miss Morris, a champion swim- mer, is 5 feet 7 inches tall, weighs 129 pounds and measures 36-25-26. In addition to the movie con- tract, she won a three-month per- sonal appearance contract with a) bathing suit manufacturer at $250 a week, a convertible coupe, a white fox stole and several lesser prizes. ‘to Mrs. Lussier: 'words that seemed to fit each clue A few baffled skeptics said it would never happen. But it did—to a pretty Pontiac mother of two children who spent half an hour to choose 16 words. Yesterday, each of those words was worth about $45 to Mrs. Norma Lussier, of 2007 Henbert Rd., whe was awarded q check for $725 as her prize for solving the spmmer’s seventh weekly Pot-0-Gold puzzle. “TI was just lucky,” the 23-year- old winner said after being told that her entry topped those of 9,414 other contestants while giving the Press its first solution since the word game began eight weeks ago. When told about her achievement over the telephone Friday, Mrs. Lussier first gasped, tried to speak and finally said: “I don’t know what to say.” HUSBAND DIDN'T KNOW But she had much to say. later when she told her husband Robert, a former jet pilot and now a pat- tern designer for an automotive firm, who didn't know until last night that his wife had even en- tered the contest. First to know were her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Jeror, of 360 Resslyn Ave, “I was so excited that I had to tell some- bedy right away,” Mrs, Lussier said afterward. The young housewife will use the 1$725 (the extra $25 is a bonus for being a Press subscriber of record) 'to help her church and to buy presents for her husband whose birthday is next month, * * * The Lussiers were married short- ly before her graduation from Wa- terford High School in 1951 and are the parents of a gifl and boy: Jean, 444; and Kurt, 3. HAS NO SYSTEM volved in her triumph, according “I just chose the the best. But I never would have entered if the Press hadn't printed a list of words that week.” The attractive contestant spent only about half an hour away from her household chores to complete the puzzle. She used the dictionary only once—for a word No system or “secret” was in-| she couldn't even remember when she stopped at the Press to receive her check. Mrs. Lussier struck “pay words” turned in several weeks ago; never even came close. And, like most top prize-winners, she has never before won a content af any kind. * a But failures were far behind as the Press’ first “word wizard” Second Try Breaks Pot-O-Gold Deadlock BRAINWORK PAYS OFF — Fingering a symbolic pile of cur- Assisting her with the stack of greenbacks is rency is Pot-O-Gold puzzle contest winner Mrs. Robert Lussier, tion Manager John A. Riley. after she was named winner of the $725 offered for the right solution, Mrs. Lussier has*submitted Mother of Two Wins Pot-O-Gold_- Half Hour Nets § tucked the $725 check into her! (reprinted purse and headed home to await another thrill—that of telling her mehaed. wn bp meneet Bem work. ont euert-ts bo ceypeteett” the « exclaimed, And he waa. * * «- Pot-0-Gold contestants who turn in thelr solutions to Puzzle No, 8 winning entry was the a (Order Unveiled During First Day iof Defense Test Millions of Americans ‘Killed’ as Enemy Planes Stage Nock Rod President Eisenhower Chicago Fights Polio Outbreak City- -Wide Salk Serum Innoculation Started to Avert Epidemic CHICAGO “®—Chicago, hard hit by an early outbreak of polio, struck back with widespread” ino- culations with Salk vaccine today in a dramatic effort to head off an epidemic. Health officials expressed con- fidence the Salk vaccine — could keep the outbreak under. control if enough people receive the shots. “] would like to see a half mil- lion. children vaccinated,” said Dr. Herman N. Bundesen, prest- dent of the Board of Health. With the reporting of 19 new cases yesterday, Chicago's total for the year came to 245—includ- ing five deaths. At this time last year, only 38 cases had been re- ported, with two deaths. Of the 245 Chicago cases, about half have come‘ from a relatively small tenement area on the West: Side, The Disease has stricken particularly children under five years of age. The city has four fulltime in. oculation centers operating. Of- ficials estimate that since July 12 about 20,000 children have been given the Salk vaccine. Two more centers will be opened Monday. Bundesen eaid of al] the cases, reported in Chicago this year,| lonly 19 had received Salk : shots. '’ a Opposition to Courthouse Rests o on One Point — | | limits of Ponttac. ty By LAWRENCE 8. MARTZ, JR. This is the last of a two-part. series jon the pr@sent status of the proposed | inew Oakland County Courthouse, now |slated for construction on the County | Service Center site at the western city Opposition to the proposed new Oakland County Courthouse is cen- tered now on one point. : In order to build the courthouse | as planned, county officials. have asked the Pontiac City Commission Mrs. Gurneth Laminack, Lightning Strikes Woman! While Fishing at Lapeer | A Flint woman was killed by a bolt of lightning yes- terday as she fished in Davis Lake 2% miles northwest of Lapeer. Four others in the boat were unharmed. 28, was struck during an the Lapeer area about 6:30 p.m. Knocked from’ the boat, her body was re- covered immediately. She was dead. Fishing with her were Mrs, Wal- lace Washington, 32, also of Flint; her sons, Gerald, 14 and Wallace Jr., 12; and, Mrs, Laminack's son by a previous marriage, Charles Brannon, 8. The Brannon boy wag treated for shock, but not hospitalized. Mrs, Washington and her son Wallace Jr, retrieved the body, which was taken to the Brown Fu- neral Home in Flint, . Sunday to Be Warm, but Partly Cloudy Partly cloudy and cool is the forecast for the Pontiac. area to-|™¢ night with a low of 60 to 64 degrees. The prediction for tomorrow is partly cloudy with little change in temperature. The high will be 76 to 80 degrees. The lowest temperature reading! in downtown Pontiac preceding) 8 a.m, was 62 degrees, The ther-| »,,. imometer registered 80 degrees at, I p.m, electrical storm which hit- Burkemo in Front. Against Bob Zander spot of a rainy morning which saw Masters champion Jackie Burke, Freddie Hass and Fred Hawkins come through as expected, Defending champion modem, Ford of Mahopac, N. Y., took a two-up lead over Mike Dietz of Lake Orion, Mich., led Robert Zander of Fay- etteville, Ark., two up, at the sixth. mnstulte of today's 18-hole 2nd round Charles Harper, Colimbus, Ga. de- feated Jim Browulne, Weston, Mass., 2-up. abe Lichard Bound Brook, gist SS a4 ayer, 6t. Peter 8. Pred Haas i, New Orleans, deefated \gone Thoren, South Hamilton, Mass., Jack Burke Jr., Kiamesha Lake, ¥.Y., defeated Bill Collins, Grossinger, N.Y., and | Pred Hawkins, Bl Paso, Tex. defeated Marti, Houston, Tex., 6 and 5. , Pocono Manor, Pa., de- * Moore, Fairfax, Calif., NJ. sburg, ry ne 4. Defeat of Mayer provided a high Hi i : ; ? F i ; is 2 Lins! FFs tary areas wherever needed to per- (Continued op Page 2, Col. 6) county Board of Supervisors | missioners, the Commission's op-| munity of moving the courthouse April 17 in a roll call vote. Six position to mov ing the courthouse from downtown Pontiac.” Pontiac supervisors voted no, City commissioners have listened, to the request atone informal, meeting and one formal. session. Both times it was deferred, “pend- ing further study.” In asking the action, supervisors | offered to relocate and pave the | street at their own expense. The lstems from ithe economic impact on our com- In Today's Press “our concern about) In addition, he says, “The voters of the county have never been given an opportunity to ex- press their opinion on the pro- pesed courthouse site.” In 194, Rowston says, county voters twice rejected extra millage to pay for the courthouse. However, voters authorized a to vacate a portion ef West Boule-|new route would run around the; vard which would cut off part'new courthouse in a loop to the’ of the six-story ‘central court east. . itower”’ planned as the first stage of According to City Commissioner | ‘the building. [Philip E. Rowston, speaking for | The request was voted by the |six of the seven Pontiac city.com-; | Building News .......-+0.+ 13-24 Church Ne@ws ....66 cs cceeees 8-9 County. News ...... bescencose 12 Editorials .......cccsesensneees 4 Mystery Story .....0:ecceses Sports .......cseees bosessecese P Pheaters 0006600 ewe eee TV & Radic Progranm seceeet Wilson, Eart ; Women's Pages . eeeeeee % 2g bond issue for the building while 36 | bonds. . | The question of where the pro- eben * & ee ee ee eee) a ee ee ee ee Oe es eo ke ee 10 | ‘rejecting the tax to pay for the) . q7 [posed courthouse should be built did not appear on any of the three ballots. The “further study,”” Rowston explains, is an investigation by City Manager Walter K. Willman inte marketability of title to he present courthowse site. Willman has asked Abstract & Title Guaranty Co. for an opinion whether the title is insurable, To date, he says, he has received no reply. Officials of the company say they have “no comment” on the question. opposition to moving the court. house is fourfold. First, he says, he opposes losing | “the multiple services the present site offers to citizens, courthouse employes, and attorneys bn Gis community.” Second, the present site Is available to citizens throughout — the county by established publie transportation. é Third, 18 tenetiie Gowitons tel: nesses, now patronized by court- (Continaed: on Page 2 G1 According to Rowston, his own | Didi Mitith_M Mime ae we A Sh A te oe i Na Mg i é i 4 : DWIGHT D. a President, United States MANUEL PRADO Peru ALBERTO ZUBIRIA Uruguay | Pact to Cement Economic Ties Heads of American By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL PANAMA @ <= ‘The chisty ot state of 19 American republics, a convalescent President Eisenhow- ference called by Simon Bolivar 130 years ago. is still recuperating from his June 9 intestinal. operation, but the White House has pictured him as able and eager to go on this good- will mission IKE SPEAKS SUNDAY The U.S, president is to make a forma] speech tomorrow—the first since his operation. He. boarded the presidenttal plane Columbine III three hours * ahead of its midnight takeoff time in Washington in order to get some extra rest, — American presidents. Only 15 or 16 were expected at first. Now the| meetings number is up to 18, leaving only Expect Ligh Primary Voting Total Registration Set | at 245,692 for County : ; Elections August 7 S Piciey (raid igen 0. Allen esti-| ‘mates total registration in Oakland) County now is 245,692 of the esti- oe, ee. Aled sage 2 %5 por cent turnout} bor the Ane. 7 T primary election would be “very good.” * Registration by cities and town- ships, as reported to Allen's office, Joliows: sees 10,462 + 12,320) reves: OOS 200 St Sse Seaes | ie rey ‘em 804) bua ot ‘ ¥ me ba: +. 1681) + 2,087 To! , 21988 Ferndale Woman Killed in Smashup A Ferndale woman was killed in a three-car accident which ended : in a Center Line parking lot yes- terday. : Mrs. Cathrine Bennett, of 343 Hazelhurst, died in*Holy Cross Hospital at 10:10 p.m., three hours qier the secident. t * Mrs. Bennett was a passenger in| the car driven by, her daughter Joyce, 19. The Bennett car stopped for a light at 14 Mile Road and Van Dyke, according to State Po- lice. A car attempting to enter a gas! station was struck by another car, which careened into the Bennett vehicle, Other drivers were Leland Pheips, 60, of Highland Park, and Richard Helmrich, 22, of Detroit. No charges have been filed pend- ing investigation of the accident. Loss ever, with | N. ds 1 cmelting o 6 +H breath. “It could have been beer aoa eit erriment says it was vodka. McKeon ‘|Precedent-Setting Benefits: to Pass Sena ‘Security bill carrying precedent- isetting benefits for women and dis- labled workers was headed today |for almost certain passage by Sen- ate and House, " But there was a question as to whether President- Eisenhower oe sign the measure in view of Weekend Recess for Marine's Trial (Continued From Page One) on duty. He is not charged, how- drunk, If convicted, the 31- year-old | ings father of two—and his wife is ex- ga Pecting a third—could receive a $s6| maximum sentence of perhaps six! pe years ‘and g dishonorable dis- The first of the survivors of that grim night in the mud and water to take the stand was Pvt. Earl Grabowski, 18, of Kearney, ™ cacamagpens told of coming evening chow and alcohol on McKeon's something,"’ he said. The gov- Expect Social Security Bill WASHINGTON i — A Social te and House Drowned Baby Not Weinberger his administration's opposition to several ot its major provisions. After Senate-House conferees finished work last night, Rep. Cooper (D-Tenn), chairman of the group, said it would be next Tues- day before.staft specialists could have the bill in shape for House consideration. Both branches are expected to pass it quickly and send it to Ei- senhower. One major provision of the com-. promise bili calls for a ‘% per cent increase in the Social Secur- ity tax starting next Jan, 1. This: would be split evenly between em- ployer and employe and would ap- iply on he first $4,200 of earn- h The tax ax boost is designed to fi- ‘nance the new program of bene- ifits for persons totally and perm- janently disabled at age 50. The first benefits would be paid next July. The new age 62 retirement for women acceptd by the conferees) involves little or no extra cost. Under the bill, widows would be able to get at 62 the same retire- FBI Continues Search for Kidnaped Gotham Child, Mother Prays WESTBURY, N. Y. (INS)—Nas- sau County police and the FBI continued efforts to solve the Weinberger baby kidnaping today after the discovery of. a dead in- fant in the Hudson River proved a false lead, _ * * @ A new born infant found floating off Pier 51, Manhattan, was at first conjectured to be the missing Peter Weinberger. However fur- ther examination has proven that the child, despite some similari- ties, was too young, being only a few hours old at the time of his death. The month-old Peter wag kid- naped from his fashionable West- bury home duly 4 by a still un- traced abductor whe left a note in the baby’s buggy demanding $2,000 for the baby’s return. ment payments to which they now are entitled at 65. But working women electing to go on the Social Security rolls at 62 would receive a rate of pay- When McKeon broke out the pla- sess toon for the disciplinary march, benefits to which they would be 3.87 Grabowski related, “he told us we entitled at age 65. Wives of fe- were going for a swim." “When we came te ‘C’ range . Sgt. said ‘watch “out for | sharks and snakes’ or something like that. . . he told us ‘follow | me’,”’ : Berman asked, “there was a considerable amount of kidding around wasn't there?” The baby- faced blond marine replied softly, ‘yes, sir.’’ Berman then asked: “A good one, sir.” The young marine also offered the opinion that the discipline among Platoon 71 ‘was not good.” Grabowski said the march went about two feet straight into the water, turned right for about. 30 feet on a course paralleling the i bank, There, he related, McKeon or- dered another column left and moved again on a course paral- Jel to the bank. “That's when I dropped into a ‘hole,’ he said. ‘“‘That's when the panic broke.” The khaki-clad young marine The Weather Fall 7 8. Weather Bureau Report AND VICINITY — see enh showers or iy « thundershower, ths afternoon, 74-78. 60-64. Tomer - rew parily cloudy “wt eee atthe Me cnanee in tem ture, Mostly — te southwest winds ery miles per heur. Today in Pe in Pontiac aor temperature preceding 8 a.m Dewntewn Poeuperaterce 6 am....., 62 il am : 7 O.Miseseeees + 63 12 Mo. ccerceass sam soos. -+ 66 J pm : “3 Sam.... aeeces 70 10 a.am...... 76 8 amt Wind velocity Direction—Weast-southwest. Bun sete Baturday at & 4 pm. Sum rises Sunday @t 614 « — sets Sunday a t $:08 @ r joon rises Seruraay at 7:08 p.m y im Pi Pentiac (As Recoraed mutant i? m.p.h.! One Year Age i ee nent temperature tem ture .., _ 8) eeteeneeers ey and Lowest Te t Mighest Ke wot Femperatares Th 7. im 1006 BSsgersss for \right and swimming, The rest was a story of men grabbing each other in the dark- ness and struggling for survival. Raid by Vice Squad Results in 2 Arrests A vice squad raid on a house at 5 105% 2 E. Huron St. late last night has checked the “recruiting” ac- tivities of an alleged ring of sex ‘deviates, Pontiac Police said today. According to vice squad Lt, Wil- liam Nesbitt, the raid came after ia month of investigation by Pa- ltrolman Gerald Navarre, on spe- cial duty with the squad. The two occupants of the one- story frame ‘house, Richard W. Copeland, 29, and Lamberths H. Prins, 21, were arrested on war- rants. Copeland is charged with gross maccency, and Prins is held investigation of in- decency, ees Four men in the house also are \held for investigation. Obscene pic- tures and phonograph records were confiscated by police. Det. Eugene Hendren said the » house was frequented by men trom ‘Detroit, Royal Oak, Birmingham a coors 714 eee eee ee ee ee? ithe group. “What kind of a drill instructor! E. was Sgt. McKeon?” _|b istiltant to Pontiac Motor Division, said he next saw McKeon on his. ,and Rochester. Copeland and Prins § allegedly acted as “recruiters” for ment equal-to 80 per cent of the saying: “I know that is not my baby, I am confident I will get my baby fused to view, the dead infant back. I know he is alive." Chief Medical Examiner Milton Halpern definitely ruled out the possibility the newly found infant \tired husbands would get at 62 | The other major disputed provi- | sion involved a Senate amendment to increase federal grants to the| states for needy aged, blind and disabled. Famed Pontiac Motor Driver to Assist Police Ab Jenkins, a veteran automo- jbile race driver and safety. con- will instruct state highway patrols across the country in the tech- nique of safely controlling and braking a car at high speed, S. E. Knudsen, Pontiac General Man- ager and GM Vice President, said today. e *« ® The 73-year-old Jenkins, world famous for speed and endurance: records set on the Bonneville Salt Flats, will assist state police on a scheduled basis, Knudsen said. He will attend training schools to discuss safe driving and give dem- niques in emergency situations oft- en encountered by law enforcement officers. With fifty years of driving ex- perience behind him, Jenkins has driven over 3,000,000 miles without an accident. Jenkins does his high speed driv- ing on the Salt Flats and on race |with a Pontiac covering 2,841 miles in 24 hours. Knudsen said Jenkins is safety consultant because his wide experi- ence in this field of safety work fits in perfectly with Pontiac's pol-; licy of building safety into its cars and the school driver training pro- gram which Pontiac pioneered back in 1936. Exchange, Front Sts. One-Way Monday Two Pontiac streets Monday will be made one-way in the city’s pro- gram to reduce traffic congestion. Exchange street will become one-way northbound. Front street, which parallels Exchange, will be one-way southbound, Traffic Engineer Theodore M. Vanderstempel said the changes were to reduce congestion at Or-| chard Lake avenue and Bagley street. onstrations of car control tech-| tracks where it belongs, Knudsen) said. He recently set new records | Off could be the Weinberger baby after examining it in the Charles Street $21, Grabowski then recounted the only 75 per cent of the age 65| police station in Manhattan. - 15.987) ‘march across the rifle range. payment. 4 Die in Reno Flash Flood Six Others Are Injured; Highways Closed, Cars Wrecked in Rampage RENO, Nev, u—Four persons disappeared in the churning wa- ters offf;alena Creek last night following a cloudburst and moun- tain flash flood. * * @®@ Six other persons were injured as scattered floods covered a sec-, tion of Reno, closed highways and | wrecked automobiles over a wide isectioh of western Nevada and the California High Sierra... All the missing persons were lost when Galena Creek cut a ra- vine through the Mt, Rose road between here and Lake Tahoe. The flood also closed a nearby section of U.S. Highway 395, the main north-south route through western Nevada and eastern Call- fornia, * @ ® Elsewhere, heavy rainstorms in western Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia and Pennsylvania caused local floods and one death—a 5- year-old boy drowned after falling a water-covered bridge in ‘Charlottesville, Va. Matt Wachwoicz of Sacramento, Calif., was found only slightly in- jured five miles downstream from the point where Galena Creek washed his car off the road. The Nevada Highway Patrol said Wachwolcz sought unsuccess- fully to save his wife and two of their children. Another son, Fred, 10, was found near the scene with only minor injuries. Highway patrolmen and sher- iff's deputies reported the roads in the flooded areas littered with abandoned cars and huge bould- ers. At least three cars were flung into the trees in a ravine. BALTIMORE (INS) — Police re- ported today three persons were drowned and 11 others died in auto accidents as a result of drenchir rains and flash floods throug most of Maryland. State authorities were rushirig aid to 500 persons reported strand- ed by the rising Patapsco River, near Daniels, Md. hy Mrs. Beatrice Weinberger re-|month ‘born in Tennessee in Pontiac Deaths Mrs. Augustus D. Stevens Mrs. Augustus D. (Goldie Mar- garet) Stevens, 52, of 98 Pingree St, died in the St. Jeong Maney gust 23, 1903, the daughter of Ida Foote and Clarence L. Everett. The Stevens were married in Detroit July 29, 1924. They came here 30 years ago. Surviving besides her husband and mother are one sister, Mrs. Dorothy King of Pontiac; two brothers, Kenneth S. Everett of Ox- ford and William C. Everett of Encino, Calif. Mrs. Stevens body is at the Purs- ley Funeral Home where service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday. The Rev. Leroy W. Shafer of the Church of the Brethern will offi- ciate with burial in the Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. John Stanford Mrs, John Stanford Mrs. John (Tishie) Stanford, 74, of 551 Harvey St. died in the Pon- itiae General Hospital yesterday one Murphey. He was married to the morning after an illness of Mrs. Stanford, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John _ was . She came to Pontiac 13 years ago and was a member of the New Hope Baptist Church. She is survived by three chil- dren Mrs, Edna Baker, Ernest Stariford and Oval Stanford all of Pontiac. Surviving brothers and sisters are Roudalph Anderson of Louis- ville, Ky., Mrs. Zora Stevall of Pontiac, Versia Stevall of Scotts- iville, Ky., and Lillie Stanford of Franklin, Ky. Service will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the ‘Alpha Baptist Church in) Franklin, Ky., with the Rev. E. B.) Smith officiating. Burial will be in Pleasant View. The body will be at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home until 10 p.m. tonight. Joseph Edward Coyle Joseph Edward Coyle, 63, died at his home, 2675 Voorheis Rd., yesterday afternoon. He had beer in if health a year. He was born in Canada April 26, 1893 and married in Windsor, Ont. Coming here from Detroit, he had ‘been a resident of the Pontiac area 24 years. A pattern maker at the General Motors Truck & Coach Division, Mr. Coyle was a member of St. Benedict's Catholic Church, Pontiac Council No. 600, Knights of Colum- ‘bus and the Holy Name Society of his church. He leaves his wife, Catherine; five children, Barbara A., Helen M., John J., William J. and Leo F. Coyle, all of Pontiac. Surviving sisters and brothers include Mrs. Irene MacDonald of Redford, Thomas, Frank, Peter and Patrick Coyle, Mrs. Leon Eas- ton, Elizabeth Coyle and Mrs. Rose Cull, all of Canada. Recitation of the Rosary will be Smith Funeral Home. Service will be at 10 o’clock Mon- day morning from St. Benedict's Catholic Church with burial —in Mount Hope Cemetery. Murder Charge Set Against Flint Man, 22 FLINT ®—Parke L; Van Camp, 22, of Flint, today faces circuit court arraignment on a charge of first degree murder in the beating death last month of James G. Smallwood, 21, also of Flint. Van Camp, a freshman at Flint Junior College, was bound over yesterday at an examination be- fore Municipal Judge Dale C. Showley, Arraignment ‘was set for Aug. 6. Van Camp is charged with fatal- ly beating Smallwood June 21, cli- maxing an argument, The victim’ s bedy was found in the rear seat of a car parked near downtown Flint. Van Camp surrendered a week later, at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Brace-| Dr. H. Murphey Taken by Death Was Oldest Practicing Osteopath Physician’ in Oakland County Dr. H. Clay Murphey, oldest practicing osteopath in Oakland County, died suddenly last night in the Detroit Osteopathic Hos- pital, He was ill = hours. A graduate af Fenton High School and Kirksville Osteopathic College, Dr. Murphey had prac- ticed in Fenton before coming to Pontiac in 1919. He has had an office here since that time. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church, of both the Michigan State and Oakland County Osteopathic Physicians’ & Surgeons’ Association, Roosevelt Lodge No. 510 F&AM and Pon- tiac High Twelve Club. Dr, Murphey was born Jan. 1, 1891 in Sianey, Ohio and was the son of William and Minnie Staley former Ella Kraft Aug. 31, 1915 = '¢ oe Besides his wife, he is survived by his mother and sister, Mrs. Bessie Sherer, both of Maplewood, Ohio. . * * @®@ Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Tues-| day from the Farmer-Snover Fu- neral Home -with Dr. William H. Marbach, his pastor, officiating. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Ike Decrees Civilians Run Disaster Control: (Continued From Page One) form the missions assigned the armed forces. STATE LEADERS FRET In Michigan, eivil defense head- quarters whipped through the first phase of “Operation Alert’’ while officials fretted over the possibility that a bomb could destroy the nerve center itself, “We are in dire need of a con- trot center 15 or 2% miles away from Lansing. If a bomb fell here we would of course be com- pletely out of business,’’ said John E. Griffin, civil defense director. : The conduct of the national test, designed to train Civil Defense, military and government person- nel to cope with problems arising from a nuclear attack, varied in different cities. Some required public participation, some did not. * * * | The wail of the sirens turned New York City into silent, eerie immobility for nine minutes. All traffic, vehicular and pedestrian, halted. Most airport operations paused, - Over four million persons were assumed to have been killed by the blast in the vast New York metropolitan area. Police arrested 17 pacifists in Manhattan who refused to take cover. Serum Rushed to City for Snakebite Victim Donald Doran, 19, Detroiter bit- ten by a rattlesnake yesterday, as reported in satisfactory céndition today in Pontiac Osteopathic Hos- pital. State police relayed an ad- ditional supply of serum to the hos- pital to treat the patient. Girl, 4, Hit by Car A four-year-old girl escaped with when she was hit by a car as she dashed into the street after a ball. Beverly Ann Brown, of 130 Wesson St., was treated and released from Pontiac General Hospital. She was hit by Robert H. Wims, 27, of 160 minor ‘injuries yesterday afternoon’ The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — Several major ‘redecorating projects are in store for the Community House during the month of August, when the House will be closed. Details of the refurbishing. were discussed when board members met this week. Other decisions included open- ing voting powers at the Oct. 3 annual election to all whe de- nated one dollar or more in the annual Roll Call drive and epen- ing the House on Sundays. Nominating committee members were delegated at the meeting to contact candidates for the board posts. Election will be at the Oct. 3 meeting. Mrs. Anthony Daley, a board member who has worked especial- ly with the members of the Senior Activities Group, is leaving soon California. She and her hus- , whose job has been trans- ferred, will reside there. She has just completed ar- ranging for new groups to work Decoration projects of the House will include new draperies for the auditorium, first since 1923; carpet- Courthouse Opposed on 1 Major Point (Continued From Page One) house employes, litigants, citizens with courthouse business. Fourth, Pontac is ‘‘moving to- ward a solution of its parking land available for all county of- fices on the present site.” Rowston ‘‘wholeheartedly en- dorses” a recent proposal by the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce that a 10story courthouse and office building be built on the pres- sent site, Chamber advocates claimed the 10-story construction would be cheaper than the present county plan. County officials said it would be more expensive. Rowston admits the city would like to delay action on the request to vacate West Boulevard until a legal decision has been reached on validity of the 1954 annexaton of 111 acres of the County Service Center site to Pontiac. — Since only the eastern half of annexation city limits, he points out, the city might be admitting the annexation was valid: if commis- sioners assumed authority over the western half of the road. Harold K. Schone, chairman of the Special Building Committee of the Board of Supervisors, points out that the city already has as- sumed authority over the annexed land by issuing ‘building permits and a permit to erect a sign there. In any case, Schone says, validity of the annexation would not effect the building of the courthouse, since court functions will be housed in that part of the building to be constructed Inside the pre-annexation city limits, But Commissioner Rowston says, “I don’t believe we can act on the county's request to vacate West Boulevard until we have deter- mined that every possibility for rebpilding on the present site has been exhausted, and that the an- nexation is definitely valid.” As a last resort, Schone says, the county could condemn the dis- puted portion of West Boulevard. City Commissioners William W. A. Dugan, John E. Carry and Gil- bert W. Long have told the Pontiac Press they concur with Rowston’'s statement. — Dr, Roy V. Cooley said he had “no comment” on Rowston’ & state- Franklin St., who told police he was unable to stop in time. ment. ses and | problem, and there is adequate | West Boulevard is within the pre-| Close Community House for August Refurbishing ing to reduce noise on the stair. way; accoustical ceiling, cork tile and redecoration in the Gir] Scout room, and re-doing the auditorium floor’. Earl Wilson, interior decorator the new plan is the open house July 30 for the departing city man- ager, D. C. Egert. The Sunday use was suggested by Norman Weston, board treas- urer, who contended that the house’s use was being cut by one- seventh by having it unavailable the one day a week. William Ler- chen, board member, made the formal motion. A tight schedule and increased House activities was cited for need for Sunday meetings. Among programs planned previ- ous to the annual August closed- month are the Civil Air Patrol Dance, a Recovery, Inc., meeting, jand the Egbert Open House. Birmingham's approval of the city’s share of the Twelve Town Drain project is not expected until July 30, according to City Man- ager Egbert.: Officials took the share figures under study this week. Of cities involved, only Oak Park has ac- cepted its figures:. Birmingham's sliare in the origi- nal figures is‘being changed slight- ly, since they had been computed ‘with four acres being in Troy Township. The acres were recently annexed to Birminghara. Fight to Cut-Off Yugoslavia Aid Senate GOP Leaders Switch Their Position on Military Money WASHINGTON wW—The Senate's two top Republican leaders led to- day a fight to chop off all new arms aid to Yugoslavia after help- ing win the administration’s bat- tle for $2,300,000,000 in military assistance. Republican leader Knowland (Calif) and Sen. Bridges (NH), chairman of the Senate GOP Pol- icy Committee, joined yesterday with Senate Democratic leader Johnson (Tex.) in beating back attempts to cut military aid. But they switched position for today’s voting on proposals to cut off any more U.S. arms help to Yugoslavia. The Eisenhower ad- ministration opposes these anti- Yugoslav moves, ~ Sen. Ellender (D-La), spear- head of all the fights to cut gen- eral military assistance funds, said in an interview he would op- pose an amendment by Knowland, ‘Bridges and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R-Maine} to withhold from Marshal Tito all new military equipment, including jef fighters already in the pipeline, and limit future: help to maintenance and spare parts for equipment he al- ready has. Ellender said he feared such ac- tion “might push Tito into Mos- cow's arms." But Ellender, loser in three ef- forts to cut military aid by as much as 565 fmillion dollars, said he would concentrate today on at- tempts to cut defense supports and economic assistance by 10 per Donaldson, Floyd P. Miles, John|cent The bill, as it stood before to- day’s session carried a total of $4,110,500,000 in military and eco- nomic aid. This is $5,500,000 more than the appropriations committee recommended, and 68542 millions more than the House approved. RAGES eae © = oe ‘ Woe TN eg 2g ES eS ae bs ae = £y at 1956. _ QUICK SERVICE DAWSON & WATSON Seeeeceseoossooesooese % Jd *eeeeoeecoceoeosssooroes | ~~ have a woodland scene on them, The marble topped tables are “ Wood Frames Lead In the United States as a whole, |four out of every five new homes ‘built are of wood frame construc- ition, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports, Frame constructed homes) pjack and aqua in its design. The jare durable, some being in use! fixtures are all pink. The lighting which were built 280 years ago,! is indirect. Pink curtains with a but more important, they are very) gold thread hang at the high iflexible. Wood frame homes are| window. BREWER Kirbys Tear Down Outmoded Cottage (Continued from Page 13)" | Dark gray paper has white, pink, ter of gold on them, Chamois, a warm creamy | tan, is the color of the walls THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 21, PANELED IN CHERRY — The den is paneled in cherry which antiques. Like the other hooked rugs throughout the house, the one | makes a beautiful background for this informal room. Draperies in front of the sofa is handmade. | canned goods, as well as room for a freezer, and laundry ap- pliances, This well-thought-out room is the main reason why Mrs. Kirby need never go to her basement. A louvered door shuts the room off from the hall. On the lake side of the house, there is a shallow covered porch, flanked by rock planters. Red ge- ranijums glow brilliantly against | greenery in the boxes. Red and | green stepping stones lead to i Also helpful are brush holders— easily remodelled’ when families) The guest room has an ashes- | ‘De boathouse, built halfway jenali clampa that fasten to paint | 2-WAY RADIOS in trucks © grow and new additions need to be) of-roses rug, pink walls and a ~— vg gee tong-time (Pail rims. One of these will hold | * Rs F ery! = ——mmm| White ceiling. A white Colonial friend a the Kirbys helped peer viggel neatly inside the pall | ASTER DELIVER ogee | type spread covers the bed. The them . andy © pans, which con-| You for ee aS } put their plans into final |, | %& You con depend on us Willis M. | draperies are pink with a spat form, then built their house. tain just the proper quantity of QUALITY ss SERGE 3 The basement was. in last Au- gust; the Kirbys had a moving day on Washington's Birthday. And find out why this fine, modem furnace and top quality installation adds up to the LOWEST PRICE for your heating requirements. Goodwill Heating offers the finest quality mer- chandise properly installed to guarantee your heating satisfaction, ONLY A RICH MAN CAN AFFORD A POOR HEATING PLANT. GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING 3401 West Huren. Cor, of Elizgheth Lake Rd.) FE 2-7849 Dealer Inquiries Invited ORiendo 3-1224 Old Pails, Roller Pans Make Painting Easier Paint pails, available at your for mixing modern paints and | their wide tops accommodate all | size brushes. aw * * | paint for use with a roller, have | clamps that fasten to a ladder. SATISFACTION! | yl Broker Complete Real Estate Services and rug in the master bed- | room. There are twe large clos- | ets, The bedspread is rose taf- One of the functions of a good SAVE the Big Job furniture finish is to provide sani-| The homemaker who has a reg-| Otto A. Trzos | ATSMAN , ne wont Ng Rare feta, the flowered «draperies (tation and cleanliness. Unfinished ular cleaning schedule will not | 3101 Orchard Lake Rd. Contracts for Ranch T have a cream bac . In |wood collects and holds dirt, Be-|find it necessary to do a seasonal] TRANSIT. MIX “ne ype the adjoining tan and beige cause of its porous nature, dirt,|cleaning as the ~ old - fashioned ‘ | Homes e po ‘ . KEEGO HARBOR . S bathroom there is a stall show- (crease and bacteria become em- [housewife did. When used reg-| 1 55 N. Parke St. er. bedded in the wood and are diffi-\ularty the vacuum cleaner and its’ FE 20278 FE 4-5181 | | The utility room is a big one. |cult to dislodge. A well finished tools prevent the accumulation of | ' , : } ' Tt has ample storage space for ‘wood surface is easy to clean. |dust and dirt. " , . , ———— ‘ oo tastes TT . a‘ : ce a = . s cae ph ie SIE . i= % a : ‘ Res ma és Rose “s 2 . 2 ELON Dordt : on on © PAVED STREETS @REDDY WIRED tS gtr ew 2. re = we ice : ot a, ea oi aoe piss : ‘ eee © CEMENT DRIVES, WALKS © CITY SEWER © CERAMIC TILE BATHS - © CITY WATER © ALL BRICK EXTERIORS — © ROLLING SCENIC AREA © SELECT OAK FLOORING > © FULL SIZE BASEMENT oDINING AREA (him since August, 1951. It also was the eighth victory in 11 games with St. Louis this season for third place Brooklyn. Milwaukee retained its two- game edge with Bob Buhl tossing a two-hitter for his 12th victory and Hank Aaron pumping across four runs in a 10-0 frolic against \Philadelphia. Runner-up Cincin- nati, scoring all its runs on hom- ‘ers, beat Pittsburgh 6-4 in 12 in- NATIONAL LEAGUE Wen Lest Pet. Behind Milwaukee 51 31 86.622 my ee ee | reokiyn «6 wm 54 6 .. Louis 41> 42 488 il 3 4 43 «2 3 067s 37) 4B 31. SO 383 19% TOPAY'S Langer “a (+9), pm.—Craig (94) tiac skeet {Shoot over Oakland County Sportsmen's Club's _ fine |skeet fields at Waterford. Many of event, registered shoot, : winners, Trophies and cash awards go to | . . { | wre" Chief Pontiac Test Today y TUBE on ye Conley es | | innat 3 pm— Firing was under way today in Anton. thie Sth annua) fwo-day Chief Pon- | championships Include the high | over-all and team titles, | Both defending champions were back today for another shot at the ) the state’s best shotgunners were titles, They are R. V. Thomas of Atwell did the same in the second expected to take part in the eight- Akron, Ohio, individual winner in —in his first at bat since being (1955. and last year’s team from. \Detroit Gun Club, DGC team fas) ij | Im each of the eight classes (Chet Crites, Tom Tomlinson, Floyd Gran Hamner in the third, and there will be six divisiond; AA, |Gilmore, Ames Borslum and How- one by Richie Ashburn in t A, B, C, D and E. Top coveted . jard Confer, hings on Smoky Burgess’ two-run shot. The Chicago Cubs whacked the last-place New York Giants 7-4. In the American League, Whitey Ford tied an AL record with six straight strikeouts while winning his 12th as the New York Yankees defeated Kansas City 6-1. That raised their lead to a high of 11 games over Cleveland, rained out at Baltimore, Detroit stomped Boston 96. Chicago and Washing- ton also were idled by rain. * * *® Stan Musial was the only Card to give Newcombe any trouble, lining his 17th home run and a single in three trips. Newk got the first of four third-inning singles as the Dodgers scored three to beat Tom Poholsky, Pee Wee Reese had four hits—including his fifth homer * * * Aaron, upping his NL leading average to .337 with three ‘hits in five trips, socked a two-run hom- er in the first off Stu Miller, Toby picked up a8 a reserve for injured catcher Del Crandall, The Phils got only singles off Buhi—one by f° ee RE eer ees . ; ed & OPS DE UPPER I Ire es — eae | 2 64 Yachts Begin 333-Mile Race Seven Detroit Boats in Chicago-Mackinac Run,, Starting Today CHICAGO ® — A near-record fleet of 64 yachts set sail today in the 49th annual Chicago to Mac- kinac Island (Mich.) race, a 333- mile, voyage. * * @ The race can end anytime from early Monday to Wednesday, de- pending ‘upon winds which the weather bureau indicated today will be light during much of the race, * * ®@ Fifty-eight yachts competed last year when the sloop Revelry, ~lowned by Norman Sarns of De troit, took 5 of the 12 trophies of- fered with a best elapsed time of 77 hours, 32 minutes and 15 sec- onds. . The all-time high list of starters was 65 in 194. The biggest sailing ship on the Great Lakes, the 87-foot Sabre, owned by Roman C. Brotz of She- boygan, Wis., is favored to cover the course in the shoftest elapsed time. a * * ®& . The race:began at 1 p.m. (EST) with the craft going off at inter- vals according to class. * * 6 A A AO a, it jpark, Drayton Plains, over the DISGUSTED BOLT—Tommy Bolt (left) of tional PGA Championships at Blue Hill Country] aiong with Revelry, there are 4 Houston, Texas, manages to congradulate Club yesterday. Prentice defeated Bolt l-up in six other Detroit entries including Charles Prentice of Columbia, S. C., as he dis- one of the upsets of the’ tourney. | Vitesse, Querida, Meteor, Tamara, 1 gustedly leaves the 18th green in the 38th Na- jLast Straw and Tigress. ‘d Maxwell Leads 15-Hit Attack | { Tigers Outlast Red Sox, 9-6 In Boston today, he’s known |can League’s list of leading bats-| Yankee’s. Gi] McDougald, with ay the man who ruined the Joe men. He has a .354 average and 53. ..| Cronin’s Hall-ef-Fame night at |has collecetd 92 hits in 260 plate : But If the 29-year-old Detroit Fenway Park. . trips. New York's Mickey Mantle iacy night rm also alarm: leftfielder maintains his heavy *| Maxwell led a 96 Tiger rout of is leading the American. League five Red Sox eles Virgil Trucks hitting pace, Paw Paw may lose his former teammates, punching with a .366 tally. 'won- his 4th victory against ‘as out. Maxwell could go down in the out three hits in four offtcial trips. The two runs Maxwell brought | many setbacks. He gave up dive of record books as the Michigan Mar- He also had a sacrifice fly and home last night were his 52nd Boston's nine safeties before being vel, the Wolverine Wonder or the drove in two runs. . and 53drd of the campaign. Im | relieved in the 5th by Walt Mas- | Wizard from the Water Wonder- | The performance tightened his that department, he's headed terson, who was followed to the land. jhold on second place in the Ameri-| only by Mantle, with 78, and the hill.by Al Aber and Steve Gromek, | The Tigers scored single runs in Hitters Have ‘Ball’ [Heavy Track Day ers scored ng in Exhibition Tits |Fytyrif 5th and settled the issue with a A total of 37 hits was marked; . ° four-run assault in the 6th. The Holds Spotlights "=" th, y () Q Maxwell's double in the big sixth up for two exhibition softball) By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [three major Eastern tracks is the inning provided the final run of games Friday night at Beaudette| Two and 3-year olds race for $25,000-added Bellerose Handicap BOSTON ut—Charlie Maxwell is| billed as the ‘‘pride of Paw Paw.” the frame by scoring Trucks, who had singled to score Frank House, Park, The hitters really had & the richest purses on the Ameri-|at Jamaica, a mile and one-six- peraorr sosven “ball” for themselves as N. S.'can turf today with seven ju- teenth affair which has attracted xuennss “2%, Goodman x82 BB Merchants dumped Pontiac State yeniles named for the Arlington nine fillies and mares, Torgeson.1p 3 0 ® Kisus.3b. b : ° 3 i ’ well, . Hospital and Allen Park defeated Park Futurity and 11 sophomores: - +s IKainert, $3 2 Bryepcio.se 2 0 3 North Side Auto Parts in a girls jeligible for the mile and one-quar-. Blue Sparkler, New Jersey sen- Boone. 3b 3 292 Vernonib 2 1 0 P ’ ouse,c - game. ; eto 208 0. 1 40 , et of the Westerner at Hollywood sation from Amory Haskell's Tuttle, ct 31 Remucin oo 8 State Hospital ........ 0 204 t j vic 7 : * , eg s ride’ser.2b 4 2 2 Piersall.cf NS. Merchants ....123 313 x—12 10 §/Park. Both are 575,000-added | We i Ee shapes up st e | Bride serz> ¢ 2 2 Prersailet 3 1 1 act Zite 204 Graycrott; DeRousse, An- events, pro able favorite over suc op Masterson.p 0 ° ° Radda ss 3 3 $ jer . \ io i . " ; xon, Alien Park ........ 025 100 O—8 12 5! _7. 8 ___|flight distaff members of the turf Gromek.p 6 8 @ Doruhp 00 8 N. 8. Auto Parts ......101 000 0—2 38! If all of the overnight entries,as Searching, Manotick, Parlo, | A-Gernert 010 ont and Salicfta; Bender and parade to the post for the 6 fur- Open Sesame, High Voltage and| Kiely > 0 4 8 longs for the Futurity, the winner) Rico Reto. ¢-Bolling bo ¢ ; H will pick up a net of $84,410 from) * * oe : ees Third Inning Blast the gross purse of $140,850. The) Five stake winners are among | Tolls ikea fon 8 aa een 32 6 8 ° ~ { - “ * ; uJ $ le Nails Drayton Win value of the Westerner figures at)15 of the 3-year-old fillies named) B—Singled for Klaus Bs ish. H ss ne '$87,250 with 11 starters with $48,950 for the 6 furlongs of the $20,000) 5—Waikea for Vermon In eh - leaded Mise Woodford Stakes at Detroit ......... seve 4 GOL 124 100—9 Drayton Drugs took a 10-2 win last night at Waterford Recreation | | ing to the winner. | Fred W. Hooper’s Greek Game, | ( a fleet son of Olympic unbeaten Phipps’ Glamour, Baylor O. Hick-| 9 Tuttie. Trucks, Torgesen, Thrifty Drug club. They nailed in three outings, is the stickout/man’s Lycka, Maine Chance) Maxwell. Williams, | 8_—Brideweser, | 8F— down the victory with a 5-run blast|in the Futurity. The fact that he’ll|Farm's Royal Lark, Helen Kel-| pp“ guenn Brideweser sand’ Torresen: man uddit Buddin and Vernon 2; and Vernon: Boon logg’s Dark Charger and Triple Jay from the Cardjnal and Gold Ranch. 1, ; ; 1 i * * * SO— Aber 1, Nixon 1, Dorish 1. HO—~ Narragansett Park closes aut its| T7Ucks 5 iP Sis, Masterson | in %, A summer meeting with Sam -Tu- ; ), Doris fano’s Wise Margin favored to make the $15,000-added Governor's Handicap his third New England in the 3rd frame. Game was a makeup of a rained-out tilt origin- ally set for June 26. Thirtfy scored single runs in the ist and 3rd, while Drayton ‘had two in the Ist and three in the 6th, along with big five in the 3rd. Art Hockey gave up five hits to\for the Arlington meet to 59. Drayton while Jack Nelson was . * « be ridden by Willie Hartack, Arl- ington Park’s No. 1 jockey, doesn’t figure to do any damage to his prestige at the betting windows. Hartack, who also leads the na- tional standings, booted) home 3 winners yesterday to runchis total 3 in 2% é ifaced 3 batters im 6th), Hurd 2 tn 1%, y 1. R-ER—Troek Aber 0-0, Gromek 1-1, Hurd 1-1, Kiely 0-0, Susce 0-0. —Nixon 2, Trucks. PB—White. Trucks (4-4). L—Nixon om t~ ] sixth, It was Milwaukee's 10th vic- stake victory. lak, Soar, Hurley. touched for seven by the losers. Richest of the features at the t . / I } \ , | | . . / | “Tah Fe Ae nin Mie At Silver Bay, N. Yas 1 En a snl recommen merger will take pace and the General ism Religion Almost Dead] War on Juda TURDAY, JULY 21, 1956 is | effect in| Hy He iBrant propaganda a terrible church, one God.” there have a latent which cannot be de- HET fie - 21,466.39 Tal « ere tee eh eee phe __THE PONTIAC PRESS it ti LA a3: Lee rl Lee is Hil hapa a) Se wil aa aaa shire mm . bad b+ * ese eee Pere etree ees * : . By A Tan Ht sitsf|: : vie rife : be it 3 cial |e Hig te et) cae a a 13k By i lit Hee Bee a reiatlt as le Hf alaftit ey LY ibtesaus ; a a in 3 625,000 Common Shares Canadian International This is not and is under’ no circumstances to be construed as an olfer to sell. or as oR otfer to buy, or az @ solicitation of an offer to buy. any of the securities herein mentioned. The olfering is made only by the Prospectus. Growth imi Fund L > JACK E. HARNED, State Manager, tt & Co Price $8.00 per share 850 Pontiac State Bank Building, (or less im single transactions involving anene, ne ts auare flap and borin an tan Weemmeaten) Copies of the Prospectus may be obtained from the King Merri Inc. Telephone: FEderal 4-4577 " % g than j,i (es Leo bed 470 Clergymen Meetin Oak- and = Huron Waterford in, Mich’ Bini Bection "3 mercial 17 through 31 Inclusive from rey sent teen Ses. te Township, Oakland County, Sate Yy Michigen through 306 inclust of Lots 32 and 33 of vision, Section 14 Oakland County, t. * change sabmmapetels ox "ips to be A with Let 31, Sunn: Gardens Subdi Lots 200 if a Cit Tair Oe upre i be ‘csamined | a, the of the on file in the office of ‘% ; Bri f ri PEMEREL ELH Seexsaese RRESEZ SRERGERESEE a i gs saeaaaae aes 10,966. +H 8,555.08 Sgtte EESCRERRE SEEIEZESEGSS=SSZRzSS a8 < ae Aaa se oO z . SS5SEARhs jsasenseeesesage: fete a 34,871.48 Ee 4,067.56 83,603.42 cae 7 sganacuecstcsats i : 3 Hunn 4,098,861.90 894.425.90 3, 144,426.00 EXPENDITURES 100,000.00 * 330,000.08 $3,430.000.00 COMMIBSI! REVENUES 1986 * * Lad 900.00 19$i1—Act 51 Motor Vehicle Pund....... o S19 61, TT PPP rere) ovens 1955—Act 87 Consiruction Pund...... at aE P.A. 1948. .oece0 fe a voted for HAMLIN daly ss wasp ee bes jority ha thes AS 2 sine ma: Bee — | SRC i a MacDonald "Sibee 106,140.63 Total Equipment Expense. Rel ar a ee er ee ee ee ee eee ee ee re ee ae 2 ‘ * See Sa sa 3 ‘ 2 i s ] . 7 z of seeeeee® eeeeeee oereeeeere ee ) ed seen eereeee * orreeeoeeeee er ee See eet eeseet tee “ES Ee ee ee (as, tLaber, Account . PTE e et ee eee Accounts and Parts Purchased......... Operations (Cost of Gravel)......-..+ ‘Total s FS ee ed “— eee ae 2 m . sty _— te ony - . i i ‘ Oe ee ee . ee Net Administration Expenditures....... Sinema aici ae Pe — = | ara 180,538.97 as ma 700.80 900 90 * eevee eeree Expenditures...., Payable of Accrued Accounts .. a at sutticieat majority having voted/ eazy” Local Reval Gut Township 3 ee — r | ‘ic Bloomfield Total Townships... .cssey..ceees. $288,071, 105 $ 631,029,428 39-43418 ‘therefoz, the report was soenea ty ge- oer Local we hip 3 Berkley “Ste ORE THER SORE ee seen ees eses 21,020,028 40,5350,873 Sager mann the Board adjourn, 3, aa Ponting Tenieig, Terni Hi poeteseeseeeresccessesvs 56,730,940 85, 748.488 6. A sufficient majority having voted for/% 7s Local Avon 3 | 8,184,200 17,211,483 108)85 the motion, the motion carried. cas , Local Orion : CUBWION . oe eeieirecetecerecscecsccese | DLABE 299 , 873,352 4 LYNN D. ALLEN, DELOS HAMLIN, — Sil at s oseme Clerk Chairman oon sdiny “us? shows how the disease’ scrimus We Parks... : : : 698, 3.36241 JUNE 25, 1956 se hase only four (&) a, Woods: 2.22050. eis 12936, a1.4T1 06 72909 ealled to order by Chairman ¢ Boards have “bose uRrortam Suter eS INTEIIN canes 13:374,A08 Delos Yamiin. nit, sore ees . eesescsesssceacsscese 26,198,725 33,741,1.0 2.06141 (S| refused to continne *y : ’'D L. according to gseercasnenee 1. rr sat lee.ete Balding belyen, Menon Bowes Sone: Act Mo. ans Materials and Parts in Stock............ 191,511.60 BT ameaaa’aao 4 «1.31581 | Brendel, Brewer, B pardon, Ce- conditions The PRIMARY ROAD CONSTRUCTION Fixed ene OUNe: ose eeeeeesececssacees Aor and 1a, etch te tet nata common contribution Mahips, ver And Mite to Ten 2.00 $2,000.00! Cash on ‘Hone January 1. 1 % Setiiss fami Bat RES Sah Stele MPa Gand me tiseae Nate oun] BOM. M ts Pen Mle wan xing prmens m Sstr"Weicle Migneey ‘and “ ot paki iris tH Twelve hate Reet a tine vot|Commlastre Reine “contract with ma] eatire n with Clty ot aiavey tumious concrete. In Total Cash Balance 372,122.96 San i ie eas th tooer = “east aid’ “Soman iy |Gveal veat aly 1a enee, He Project No. 118 Ycompiciedy Natt! Park. County share som, ~ | Total of State Funds! 2000000000000 asinseen eases Seeeenenteatnns eres ce ane, gn rbeee tee 1 2a Menvar i ae erates ie of Beepbeneat Tite contract Ba ante (2, OK 141-00 or Cakwoos head to North County Li o or 1.00 30,726.60 Total of all Available Punds........... . —- \ @BNOe81eF deiideidd hikkt Lee oF - ’ - ied e * rade ainage nein. Matted Steabesesisbesscseree — & $08 9,971,670 62021 way ent and Sowa as sreet mileage added ect eurtace with §” compacted gravel 13° ioc’ , cineedomnaene seeceeeenescnseeses.s 6.588720 BS. 11640932 M716 | Highway M150; thence to our local avetem in i965 | PFovect No. 176 (50% compieved) Sxrexorronss 4p SE ore aerate } ; $2.78 ; pugezn 1 the conker ite miles high ton arty? 1M 04 mile. The incorpora- Meee peed er te 3.37 82,873.92 , COUNTY, HIGHWAY TAccoustinn _99.en0.0a — 20008 8+ ewe ee tense 5 1 aanetey 4 Mw f. . 4 Keego and Pad q 4° Grade, drainage , Construction Reent ee gc Aceounting 944,087.44 64,776.46 pigterecensnapecece “Tata ie Stas Mean ae “Jonze ihe, maid, north line Bingham Farm ora Feltesd ae ied No. 177 "eompleted) * Srevel 31 Ps . "| Maimtenance—Roads and Structures... 1.380.929 asd'aseae a Rona . ioe ihe 395337! act ncrens, the pethion , MILEAGE ort At intersection of M-t9. Rridening of 27 pavement to ax ° 2 = 14.338,30 me Me Dalian a nond Expenditures pendituress nese 996,487.47 ary} at Bb OSS Hibacor —MaTGst |e ot isag. as ay OTATR TRONK Lie monwars, | Pye rs ee say Department Net Debits or Creaits Beara, Aecoune ) SBe sa 34 m the that said s 0.04 1,236.39 ° Townships. -o++.0+....$208,871,15 84.94 © 891,000428 30 Butea pa wale off Suriase Treated Graver Mtg, Miles Woodward “Ave. to, Bermuda Spt; 72” Bituminous Con- Sos aepenaitares cece MOQSRaT i Lestteccscensnaccece SLAM 51.20 40,530,873 2.80767 | fais rp th tighing ea pee ee boa Mixed Bitun <> gg Project Ne. 182 ve Cy of Ferndale, Total Debt Service Expenditures...” Lies st * wes ee ee ene riwes Tistaee b- 3 | nto § Sloss detttcty designate themselves an Deing Mixed Bituen -ssesce 19.08 est ny Ugke Reed ‘ 2.72 61,639.77, Reimbursea! reese ereeee . i 63.35 20.813 See L.3imi9| sents of the City of red” qasetts.| Concrete Base... 93 “3 Bituminous concrete contractor ears Concrete "| Total Expenditures... fess wa 4.302,213.91 2 . T1377 = 80. 38 14.120:203 - '89154| urmeretore Resolved | that | ne t Concrete...” 73.69 'L Products ° Accounts Payable or Accrued Accounts 371,608.24 + 48.202) $3.38 90.294. 139 $.99754 tition atlall “ber haa, Pureuant to seid pe- ee pany. Total of Cash Dusbu enaeaees 3,880,503.07 eo 21,236,’ 8 40,498,252 2 . ; / en Road Cash on December 31, 1. > ies «868 21.471 48 139 note! Tesohitionn’"? %e Sdoption of ach MARY COUNTY, ROADS Street, South Lyons trom Warren Street to Hagedorn ° 24 *.002.01/ Motor Vehicle Highway y : tines |G 13594 508 ‘banee POL, CA RTTEE [Gravei’ areated Crore SS Aesreaaten ries share ment with 2" Bituminous . Total Cash Balance. ecceves a 620,948.60 : seecseeseesce 26,108,725 80.02 32,741,190 2.06505 ° airman |Mixed Bituminous— re. 985 Total of Road By: Funds... ....... 2,513,116.02 996, eer.47 5 toda Cbs serésconce 84.71 508.190 03207 HOWARD Cc. Minea’a Base ....... 177.58 FEDERAL AID SECONDARY ROADS . 3 bisa $5.40 6.833.373 4 sisi FRED Conetennunene— Contracts awarded by Michigan State Highway Dorceument. , 7 vesccanecescrs 319 “4.4 11,888,123 78013 CLAYTON G. LILLY concrete Base ..,.., 165.25 Ret! Total of Ex, wares and Unexpended— . chesteresepsceccncce 230,406,275 68.98 247.166.676 =. 21.90600/ Moved by Ewart su by Litty|Cement Conerete.....° 101.00 mated | “Balances ..... tees eee cceess orn sees 4,510,451.67 : SAE I gaa at IMES44 1134088 ene renoutlon i ~ an — yoo.ss| Pplest No, PAS. (84) Caea-0a — oo oa Lt ee ee ee . ‘ ly 'v v ¥ ‘ ceive i ad ¢ ed) . 4. . . ESS He Ho fee a nd ance SSS ee | RETESET macaag opine a pape (MM + 00 pr cataar Yar 58 ; . Se a. “Iiinitenicsts: “line “421 5,823,020 36743 ravel Surface ....... 1739.54 Bituminous concrete Lake iam oh WERT by, Board of Coun-| Mixed Bitamineas county share wee ans cop one A. & A. Asphalt Co, ary Read Pund....., ; cB —eeegneneaneee 1 27] 42.50 $1,584 801.800 a Concrete...) “1.48 Project Wo. Tearpa Sie cans 63 oasis! Ensineering Servic , ARD v _— com ) 6.28 17,826.23 na vee | State Tax ot : 1700.13) Prom rd Lake Road to M218. Widen to 22° and Tow of Deduction ior Leen’ Payateni — Total Mies... 2,689.04 nn ator — street ettuminous Conerete. Contractor— Net Receipts for Primary Roads 7 SOtIES-OP a8 MEETS i you for consideration ail mone: weight “te permind epartment concerns Fenty, chere ee $31 038-33 “Ameen of Allocation § 7 Members of the Oakland County Board “nay” vote can be construed y 8 \of-way ace done ire ieecking, Activities on County Roads Project “No. 16—PAS— BS toe? 25% of Deduetion for Loan ; of . cehkeee with ne effect ne the rt of Vehicles and examined 830 Prom ws 2.30 34,436.40) Highway Construction Fund q Zadies and : upon Tepo: Warning violations issued 130 west ts of Village of Milford to Hickory Ridge are heréby notified that there the State Tax a. af, % outa Total amount of actual violations 208 Goad. Widen to 22° and Tesurtace with 2%" Bituminous Total Net State Raised Revenue 3,141,888.38 aig JS opegal necting tthe, Ouks| Mt, Charman, T move the adoption ot| thf oste &. Kuceaavs speeaing'e Uaee7e i] Concrete, Contractor-"Detroht Concree Pradics omnes 7 ott Sates 3 . . acessiv ; 8356. | 1 3980 at 930 8m. Sor RQUALIZATION comMerrren {3° ClT* of g- Posted. reeds during restrictions 44| Federal share 50% asc innit sess County Reval, Raised Revenues........, _ 3,141,888.36 : t of the state ZAPP, . ; - Vebicles traveling without « Property Taxe and Soanty tance the several assess- irman e Dolce ive safet aipment a LOCAL ROAD CONSTRUCTION a General Highway Use (Mileage)....., 80,000.00 ing in spengconse wan ee Lovp 1. ANpensow a Overweight violations 103 Miles Rotimoted Delinquent County Road Tax........ $949.42 Sion 1886, the fepert ckaa a WATERS the| Total amount {2 fines, conte S708] odes, Me 0.663 200n13/ TOM! Property Tax o.oo 85,040.43 An ASE ‘L. CASTLE ; , Sounty Clerk's Office April Moved by Zapt supported by Castle *| RAND ToraL "$10,807.80 Surface Treatment Metin OUen Lake Road. Bitum Products "From: Gentingent or" General Fund... 740,006.08 Ps Rage mesting, fs, required ty | statute wasion followed. By Taw meeting and published as required on nenene re 3 “investigation Weare Project io “in* LAk® Township share ioo%. Other" Participation TUePAHon «+... ieee 6 FA tty ae Rennes Bower nore: ‘Brighens cone. Mr. Chairman. on behalf of the Road|and” violators "sare eae er “ee Orpecent Late, Reaa 0.825 7,338.77 atiotieininianianciie ———_ a) Pod te net an three .' Castle, “Clark, avson, Cum: panies, arhgee eqinaturee appear. be. such messes and in sone cases “were Bituminous Asan Rend 20 Mie een need. 2” Total County Raised Revenues....., 271,885.09 wot ‘the said Teport of the State Bavurds Riss, Deskst.,gbatie, tekman, (OT. 1, more th ait sreauents “wee granted to weign| projects erodes Core. Wate Township share 100%. Total Raised Highway Revenue......... 3.413,103.38 Commission. cock, Hill "holmes Holway, Hudson, ROAD Co! and examine vehicles to determine legal| *"yect No. 183 Miscellaneous Receipts. teeeeees 413, truly, Hughes, Lilly, MacDonald, McKinnon DON R. MACDONALD, axle loads allowed on county roads Prom wove reet 0.02 1,149.00) “Earned Income LYNN D ALLEN. Mengies. Clarence Miller, Moberly. Quin. LLOYD L. ANDERSn man at merous complaints wee Drestigated B rocklawn” pent, of 2 consonant Pye a ate Interest Earned? ....seeesscsecessee 1,838.00 Oakland County Clerk. mn Rela mann te gtoberts, behock, JOHN a wake Yat n facet end “Neichigas Sete ies Samar ncgor—Oak Conetr Co, Troy Township and Total Earned Income 1,535.00 Zapt +s W. Smith, Staman, | : ’ n ; |goncerning iegal vending on county and ! share . . + se cenecsceccecse 538. w Chairman and Members of the Waters, Webber “Weinburges Weve LLOYD at FERGUSON right of rend: the m iy jPPOJect 5 eS a ; Bales of Materitts wees trreecreceeeess 180,675.45 . of mi Yockey, Zapf. ($3) , * . of these were on week 8 and holidays. e Ros 0.838 20,127.22 Baly: of Equipment..../!: : 2.585. 00 _ Last year, as the result iy FE ro O8CAR ECKMAN We escorted eight special moves of foce wang at Riminous Agurega oe esate eed. Bure . Sundry Refunds ees. posi 33 from of our Detroit. Concrete Prod ce Watetiong rae , Work Orders... seine bi - ucts Corp, aterford Township _— our entire County. “fhe least REP. Assessing Valuation 10 Haaliate’ * cote? 0, Equeliting Brudteng rep | - At 100%. sees Total Sales and Refunds............ 246,018.17 ee eet Ss 1988 meeting of | “® Townshina’ As Assessed Valuation Bre Pactor a rss No. PROPOSED CONSTRUCTION PEDERAL AID PROJECTS Total Miscellaneous Receipts . re 983.17 the BR A, Board of Super-| } Addison 2,087,859 $ 281641 * : Estimates seepeees 247. 82.11 whee Oy Wrieh was ent: 3 otter eeieceereeenecece, o w Resu: as) -_ Birmingham —~ 7) ||’ beerepetd 3.s87e7 1.927298 = 2.040003 (26 Class 1 Bituminous Concrete. Comtrasie one Gon. Total Cash Punds on Hand Janu- ; Bloomfield Hills : 17:211.483 Tossee 4883 oeves al pe ..ttacting Co, ary 1, 1988, 372,123.86 Sa woes 20,873'353 1.31710 1 erases i seses? is | Lancer Men 7.00 161,000.00| Total of all Available Funds... 4,510,481.67 Ferndale Senet eeseseeees . b0.208. 798 seoree leriase i pectag 2% From West Maple Road to Eight Mile Road. Widen to — " Schedule—B F Hazel Park Lotteceeee ee! 40,698 252 2. 1.916403 = 1.927471 33 22" with gravel and binder Resurface with 2%” Class I Township Participation by Townships Untington Woods..,. |. eee mere cees 27,477,146 +4 ‘ Bituminous Concrete. Contractor—Detroit Concrete General ot Keego Harbor .('))"”’ 3,972,426 ae iim igi 3 Proferoducts Company. Aceemnship , Contingent Pung MP ten tite cteeee crete EEE 7 197 ‘ ‘oject No 191 . son . 181.78 Madison Heights seek 26.198 725 ee stone ieee | Secees 38, Quarton Road ; 9.98 3.1 Northville toe, 278,020 ‘508’ 190 y? } ph 44863036 From Woodward. to Lahser Road. Grade, drain and gravel 11,762.78 pak Pa 42,565,820 16,833,373 4.84814 1 805040 1.78007 3. Project ‘No. i93""%* * compacted. 30.579.4 “1 ggB-318.250 ; 1908. 123 78013 7230035 2.286633 30 ‘Hadley “Rony i 2:000 170:432°449 178-140-434 11.24085 L'pasaag « panta’é «49, Prom Oakwood Road to N. County Line. Surface with 3.30 — 2,614,475 4.588.203 28951 1 teen29 paises a Project Riiuminoys Aggregate 20° wide. 2,004.40 reves 2469200 4.648.815 20334 1.008173 1813169 «43 ; ’ ee IER eben 12,675.7 ; Parkdale Road . 1,500.00 . Walled Lake .; rf ele cceens : 28143 7133. ae ee +44 Pe tid Tie “4 From E. limits Rochester to Fr. County Line. Surface with aaa 7,831.32 ——_ OES . 6 4% 2” Bituminous Aggregate 20° wide. 5 2.472.93 Total i recesses, $701,870,708 — §1,053.972.47 Project No 195 . ; 7,191.53 471 68. 49238, Parmi Road 2'597.13 Grand Total . "poen aan aia Fare puseeeesaed ee 2.00 seer. TPP O eee eee ei eeee ccc eee $990,442,414 1,584 . Grade, drain « 000. : tM. .08 ienome Bar tes BMGS2 fF Mim neat Orne, cram ang 9 : EQUALIZATION COMMITTER Project "No. ive compacted. 2.441 19 ‘ Street, Chirch Street, Mill Street 1.30 402.45 a Chairman Village of Ortonville, Resurface with 2%" Bituminous one 7 Project Ne. 197 . . , wacbdscencecs 5,920.80 . Prom Clarkston Road North. Sotl cement stabitization 21° °° Tore-ce ) wide with double surtace treatment.” ; (Continued on Page $y" $ \ f } 4 ” 4 s ‘ X - im pong PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY al, 1950 vee 30 Yin. ge lin. ixte-@. ©. 0. Fs. we to at ao 0 geod sis eulict ont P28 News, and eich wr en te 8 Se oem eoktnice, cay. or Fase W, Voles of ‘Propoeey ; excavation will be done previ- : , $:30-—-WJR, Pop Concert : we. inane & om $1:80—WIR, Time for M eus to the seasion , 4 ~ ieee 11:00—WIR, Hews, Weantngtes Rows. Sun: Bost ware, . |. The use of Dalapon for control ss wars it's Time SRL, Postina. Baptist * ion home wean, tor a Day ee pant oe ae Permits Brando Type of Players 23" i Se oa = ER [ata i cect ut eh Credit Union Prefe ed b ° 6 . wxvd WaYe, ‘Bun. CKLW,. Dr. oe Pt Fes across the road from the Malburg |‘! of 57 permits in a four-da y for you! y Tr 'y ; Studio One > fst You cKLw, Gee | Wiew — WATE, ‘News, Curl farm. _ $682,488. amounting to ! Soot eee | somwar armaioon | "ya conare man | am Beck tanage| TOO Plot, has, alrendy | been soa eB Union Sore for the JACK O'BRIAN ~ Jan Murray Gulw: Lomberdomed 12:00—WJR, News Wi. News wer sprayed and results of the granted the for $137,248 was years were PAID past 3 NEW (INS) — Studio|recent show last night, is a| WPON. Don Zee, Dance oe em eas F% Tomorrow World PA - a gg G chem-| new Board of education for Se ties “matin ot Lave m import... | MumGMiRaee ry | Waals ee Witte Kewa Werne aww” KEES Reve lace atthe existing site at 200 W. Huron, 4% INTEREST types. “Incident of Love”| We've seen chic in WAYR, Top of Town WCAN, News, Bpincrame | 2:30-WJR, Pan CHEW, Bud Davies It will be one-story W. Huron. Get the Detaits coming up has four Brando-brand| bat ie Se Se CRLW Warne ing |p 5g wan, Ue Ss ecett Lanett” | WrOst. Lancheoe ‘suse few nan Pennies Coven, Federal players — Jack Lord, Michael] the flowers with Melch ade |S =. CEL, Singing Americans Wwron. sea os "Wr. Ma htolbeand src walla he eer el Strong, Catherine Squire, Pierce, production assistant WPON, Saere WJBK, Tom George im Blue yeaa? i. E. Beyster eos Leis on "High. Finance,” tures her |U:0—-wsR, J viet pa pg wes, Meater eo Inc. of Detroit. : __. | elestromie earphones into some- WXYZ, Dance 1.40—WIR, Woolworth Hour Tare pean Baers LmPOn Neve, Patter § -A second permit for - $ust Petersen, who joined thing out of Lily Dache’s ..+| Qp6w tievt "en me Wath, “Mews, Gun. Best Wuse, Revs Waste Hew Toung Dr. Malone McCarroll School to be Canada See hagemaezes om” | Se Se St | Sera ak toes tos tahangs oe ' OKs Budget ster trom last season wit turn WAYE, Top of Town RiOw Nebe, Pater Pacer wba” Baptist | ro Muna by 24 feet and the other up as a rerun series, maybe woeK + lah hoo UD above? | 2m hewn by 11 feet high. for Defense Needs [™_ ae Gy Be | Seat ata | “momar moe | Set ae The third. permit 42 ; ory weg Se a ee Pha ee schol at 88 Bevery, ‘ , O Maxwell wW, 4 OFTAWA @—Cannds’s House of watch “The Lone Ranger” than cxuw. Fee ae tee Wak Gem? sssttie Paster | CREW: Resster Chu Ware hers Winter wil be’ 13 by 403 by 30 youngsters . , No, Junior, not WHOR, Bows Sed Wion, Country Muse a Ten permits wore ins pauls delinguiats . . - sunpay momma =| Goan’ of nirsine, | O20 —WIR, Voice of Agriet.| CEL. ne Be seal y inna le Sarnott’s Soth annic| “Seem form Review | Sae—Wak. sunday Wenn, Cotive With wae Siae—WIR, House Party family “36 by 24 rsary in electronics will be wron, we ww, Meher ne ahi: ATE ews, Mekenste Pee Fax ine Sept, 30 at a huge ban- Percy €: Win. Decision Roar reecwan dim Winall eon rode of Bands tiac’s east cg honor of the RCA “WXYE, Amarices Ceo—WJk Nowe, Sun 2, ewe, WW, Weman te Diy. Mowe : by all odds the i. aa cay. Ww. Meatier | wane” mre, Capen | nae Wattrich, Aperes magical field ae es Sten CKLW: Episcopal service | Wr News, Sotiee WK. News, Don ‘Mcleod ***! gee WCAR, ews aoe ’ WCAR, News, — secwim rece pone | rSkadp chert tose | "ware Seo tees Saas from other med 1 Ya, sundey's Bes “CxLW, Alen oe Saxe Bere. Graves bs Music Hall plug their movies, CKLW, Teberucie See Wik. News, Symphony wae — & WTR ‘News, McKense, etc., they seldom wae pow wae, Me ters 6:00- Colfee with Clea WCAR, Caravan of Musie ) oe te iver ith ty |e wicra, | ER Hoowete™ | “wes. Bee Magra” Shee Southfield as ‘ $:00—-WIR, News 5:30—WXYz, News, Wo. News ot 0 . s Police Hold ee WW, Choirs of America CKLW, Bands | ad ee on oe ee Se : RESER Pair in Gasoline Thefts | _ *t Allen ts sbout tho only wiBk. ei rahip, Rowr wGUNDAT EVENING fews Geliee | WCAR Newe manene A | SVERYWHERE ee ee our respect whe has | WCAR, Tour Gone Moar) WAYS Drew Feareon Wasik ¢ wet omc rrest Youth, 17 Cant ms Fro So Bom yr erent — 1 WaBK. News, Clare Reid | WAR Caravan. of use . ‘ Finn Michoels re Senge ‘as suspects in a|_ Think your phone bills are high?|~ ~ T sos as Shooting Suspect Travel Bureau tei fs nk thts trom, «|The networks (NBC, CBS Ss i1eleyision Programs eimumonttifras, £28 oe" adi el 7 ~ Spytionmtiam tan Programs furnished by stations listed im this col -- DETROIT (INS) — Detroit police] fr ; . Hunter Bivé. Ope Be a Mi A sem —_—** Channel 2—WJBK-TV fave subjeet to change ettheut sstics, - wai cums Cope fon ote Tony Bennett is one of the Channel ¢—-WWI-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKI CROSLEY investigation ty Sl wt |gsemanyperiormers In show TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS wiv cthedtead Taree ethers have been bold since| $:00—(1) Wild Western. (9) Western Trails. | s:00— E es ger bag ending since lense Bill Hickok. (4)|!2:30—(2) Golf Show. (4)—Cartoon :@0—(2) Cartoon Classroom. (4) SERVICE scene by Southfield at the) Edye Gorme’s keeps iar Color) Hobbies in Action. “Sea| Carnival. (9) Open House. — Today. (7) Little Rascals. tiniae of Goltent Geenty * 8 ge [ange fromm pure Po ee | me 690." (2) Sports| ##:45—(2) Sports Show. (i) Color |8:90—(4). Today Gtastoeatye Gesectation uly Company at 26400 W rant os vane meee mlecse—c) Oeark Jubilee. (9) | greene) Baseball. (0 Sunday |8:45—(2) Ni .. = FE 4-1515 = Road reported gasoline val-iy..¢) Ranger. (4) Down owe Space| Matinee.. (7) World Adventure. |8:56—(4) News. , c &'V ELECTRO , Ved at than $600 had been Gets Cut Li Beat the Go, (2)| ._ ()—Sunday Show Time: 9:00—( MART : P Clock. 1:30—(7) Cisco :00—(2) Of All Things. (4) Romp- 158 Onklend parked in a gas supply truck When'Cycle Hits Cc 7:00—(7) Grand Ole Opry 9 $:00—(4 Kid. (9) Showtime.| ¢T Room. : : in the company yard. The aaa Temple Baptist Church. (4)|%:30— ) Dr. Spock. (1) Margie, |®30—(2) Arthur Godtrey. dour months, investigators said, caped with only cuts of the lip Joni James, Paul Winchell ) Foreign Intrigue. 9:55—(4) Professor Pet. a2 ——-_+~—©-~-_—-|When the motorcycle he was driv- guests; in country fair ,|3:00—(7) Campaign Roundup. (4) 10:00—(4) Home Power Commission ing struck the rear of a car and}, (2) The Honeymooners oetting.| | Frontiers of Faith. 10:25—(4) Window in Home. Rejects Rate want off the highway yesterday. (20—(®) Greatest Fight $:30—(2) Roy Bean. (7) Jumbo|##:30—(2) Strike It Ric ™ Schedule | Victor P. Jewell, 18, of 9624 High-| Century. Miller vs oon of the| Theater. (4) American Forum. | Home. » @ ames oe — Without\ee Pootine General’ Hoopleal Sot vs. Basham. stare ule Color) Zoo Parade. (1) C (4) [25S News. fp Federal Power Commission te ve wine accident. He spertomiy ‘Tharpe, guests of Tommy and 4 eer deiien Dollar Movie ther Your Nest. ) Story Studia, 4 Killed in Air Crash ° hd i: * . . reer a Sue Oe a ortan wen mele pee Te amie ue cawere cre en American-Louisiana by |collision. | Welk ‘|s:00—(2) Ti | . GRANITE . et Detroit. Pipe Line Ca.) ne (9) Country Hoedown, (4) Peo- Meet the Press. (7) Time. (4) “— Search for Tomorrow.|small planes that Il. @ — Tye Fg dhea werd was directed tol ing ga 17, of 7732 High-| , Money. ls:30—(2) You Are and Ricky. at Lakeside Airport schedules within 15 days Bowick told investigat.\°"2-() Million Dollar Movie,| (Color) Nature There. (4)/18:45—(2) Guiding Light. night, killing fou eae main, based on actual cost of service.|™& Township police he was struck| (4) Festival of Stars. (2) Russ] Oakley ‘Trails. (1) Annie) #1:5¢—(9) Billboard. ma two St "Louis eusnee, includ-| © thy ‘The FPC said eo items at] from behind by the motorcycle as nlorean Show. . . (9) Uncommon Valor. ‘ seoempay 6 oon tives Louis business execu- STATCIoiR |e submitted in support of the making a right turn from Masquerade SUNDAY'S FTERNOO} — . | AAR ES =r schedules appeared Williams Lake road into Hatchery Encore Theater. “the Bar wa 6:00—(2) bli Prep seen ge 12:00—(2)—Mid-day movie. (4)— alge sees were Arthur J.| A, GJ a smoke. ”@) Gun! Gilead Baptist Church. odack Costes. wipecky, 15, Albert Johseot ®: . 13: 25—(9)— » 49, ert Johnson, 41, Deputies Investigate She’s Beeman’s Queen = Jumbo Theater, “Wed-|*3—(2) Private Secretary. EPA post chief engineer of the Continental $ , Gas + ° March.” (4) Adven Frontier. W. ry. (4) Day. (4)—Hol-|Boiler Co > ; Station Thefts IONIA (# —. Michigan’s honey Theater. “Marri ; ture) by . Western. (7) Famous| lywood Story. (7)—The Erwins.| The » and his wife. 5 4 y 2 Oaktand detect! queen is 18-year-old Jean Hubbard| Crunch and age Trap” (2)| Film Festival. “Odd Man Out."} (9)}—Cartoons lal two planes collided at an|\% i “are investigating County detectives taday'|of Onstead. The winsome brunette Forty and Fight” "ly oan the UAW-CIO, | 1#:45—(9)—Myrtle Labbitt eaagdpetrevvivatiann 3 x was selceted Fri 10: 00—(7 : ; ) Ed Sullivan. _|1:00—(7)—Luncht * q _* prof ya bah Township gas|finalists at nitey net whips ved denel Nowcret t Bile USA. (9) Na-| The Ames Bros.; Ted Lew - ea wunchtime Drama. (%)|Wandals Damage School 2 That all important asset tha P . at the Mich ee ; Turning Point,| C- Jones; Elaine Malbin; 7 Ty Vv $ ma t is obtained only throug! 4 detent tae E. told gan Beekepers. Assn. Tenth the Hard Way.” (2) Big} Daniels and the re ary t:98—(9)—Shopper's Show: sewn wo broke into Bagley|% Ko me of experience, is available to you from Kinney : . . «ib —TV News. ul night $3. oun lectroni i ‘ eral times from the station at onl Block-printed 16:10—(9) Weathervane. preity Geddy Hnene Judy Holli-|1:30—(2) — Hert ; halls with a fire cnthguien tad $ No guesswork, Ho experimen Association members. 4 — => Road, He said he believes|in use all eS yon rahe won’ Business. Four Lads gern West the} Party. (o-Temane na** nae oil on floors, janitor $ prompt, professional service Call in stead, you get § were committed by/more than y 1400, Explorers, “‘Hud-| “Oh Suzanna.” . Western. |2:00—(2)—The Big Payoff. (4 Bray told Pontiac Police|@ S@'Vice Companies. Sav . ese reliable someone familiar with the station.|the Gutenberg. Bible miele pore ween” (9) Mr.|s:00~(2) G. E. Theater. Kathryn ee ete. (Afternoon as imavediately pon raga 3 © time; save money. : -| (4) Ina Ray Hotton. 2 .”| Grayson and John Ericson | Festival. tectives suspect juveniles. De-/% PONTIAC ‘ Fre h . wood Spotlight.“ (2) Tolly-| in “Shadow on the Hea | star|#:30—(2) Bob Crosby Show ¢ CONDON’S RADIO & TV 4 n 4 : rotessor ] nN d ment. t. ond Elope- (Color). Alcoa Hour. art. (® $:00—(2) Brighter Day (4) Queen Coffee ° > AUBURN RADIO & socceerevcees chee §. Parke, FE 4-9736 > P h 7 Ss 11:00—(7) Main Attraction Movie “ Amateur Hour, Ted whens : for pag my smear in a Tea Truck? 3 BLAKE'S RADIOS TY sco a1 W ‘sun, 4 ‘ “ 4“ ovie, PP fas Secret UKE { rt : oe « Huron. Te istoric Art In “Capt. Boycott.” (9) Movie Dat leer” ‘The Wreck of the|3:26—19) Storm. ler, a sale: E ® — George Zel-|? ¢ & V TV SALES & OP.........-. 84 Oskland, FE } ve Capt. Kidd.” (4) lith Howcl8: perus. (9) News, net sman for a tea company,|$ HAMETON ELECTRIC CO. ossseee. 158 Oakland, FE 4-1515 ‘POITIERS, France ® — A News. (2) News Final. :30—(2) Alfred Hitchcock. “A 3:30—(2) Edge of Night. (9) How-/fast police he was having break-\g SOHNE RADIO & TV.. ......770 Ore W. Huron, FE 4-2525 French announced Nougier and Romain Robert 11:15—(4) Weekend Bullet for Baldwin.” dy Doody in a cafe when a thief en-\$ 0 SON'S RADIO & TV. Lake Ave., FE 4-5841 ; the discovery today lident of regional society of pre. (2) Miss Fairwe Weathercast.|9:00—(2) $64,000 Chal 3:45—~(4) tered his truck and swi 2 OBEL RADIO & TV ........ . saa 08 Beaten Be oe west France Aa ts puntines bo historic studies. They a 11:20—(4) Texas er Man Against Crime amee. (4) ales yee n Romances. pounds of coffee worth ayy 51 $ ster cones tv tpageessees ne 1. rng 4 ae : a bd . : : '. ‘ocus. * —_ ‘our ’ at, > sy 1 prehistoric man by[Abbe Henri Breuil, Tyeer-old pra and Mary Ford. (2) Les|*30—(2) What's ty Line? (4) (4) Comedy Time. (1) Margie. » Big ET Di sec HIST W, Huron, FE 2-008 Its walls are lined with biack|historic man. The of pre-| Rita (2) Nightwatch Theater,| Kings.” oO Of Pigs and|, (9) Justice Colt. “| ROAD OILIN a3 WKC, Ino, SERVICE D EPT. seessecsees 1490 Joslyn, FE 2287 : ook ‘sek Aeeece ef mammnothe, A int Toso exploration of the| Hold Hayworth in “Hard to| “The Tourist ,, Jumbo Theater." sten. (2) Ae the World oe with G 3 we eee jenialy horses painted|*ave last Tuesday 10:00—(2) Stuc rs _G-Men. (2) As the World Turns. ' ; oo vewEnep , Haity HMO years sg The! | They : SUNDAY MORNIN Son.” (4) Badge 714, (1) More 5:00—(2) The Early Show. (7) ASPHALT OIL 3 MAC RADIO & TV ............1515 Union Lake : Se ace turn out to be a treas- dcawiegy af | Gi paintings or |7:55—(2) Meditations a Western. “The ais (7) Movie. Mickey Mouse Club. (9) Dance 3 avevan Rd. EM 3-3072 4 o of prehistoric art equal! son, 8 of mammoths, 12 bi- 8:00—(2) Christophers. 10:15—(9) Passerb ne Rogue.” &: arty. * 2 ace TV a . HEIGHTS > , ae demons Lasceax edema gore and ns Pee 10:30—(2) 1 Marvied ama. 4 :30—(4) Western Marshal. All Work i> RADIO SERVICE...... 3357 Auburn Rd., FE 3-1204 P ¥ * , > oe - trates ing of drawings of cumpedie a |$:30—~(2) Reporters? Western Marshal. (9) ener Vaccination Guaranteed > _ *Saeeonan b , Rene Nougier, protes- | Complex designs. Oral Roundup. (7)|,, Sanctum. “The Perfect Kill.” is among the few e 2 ELECTRONICS SERVICE CO : ‘ The paintings Roberts, 11:00—(2) News Ul. tan concessions made CA ) 2 PARK HILL ELECTRO .-0-++1287 8. Woodward, MI ‘ of ie News. Movie. “The M ad oe News. (7)|¢mm medicine. Smallpox. west- LL US TODAY $ NICS. Long Lk. ateWoeedward, MI acTie0 : Court a onster.’* .¢9)|Wibed out entire vill ; equnmeen ae et the ¢ 4) ney The Intruder” leven the. Dalai ribeaes, meet now AAA OIL CO. 3 LAATSCH’S TV SERVICE _™ Erwins Daca, Weather. (0 Weather, | Vaccination. mits to| 2 sccasceneceeee 6794 Dixie, MA 8-831 3 3—(2) This Is the Life. Ford. (4) Sunday and Marie : ba seen $ Big Picture. (7) Popular Sci (@) 11:25—(2) Playhouse, C4 TON RADIO & TV 1 2 10:00—(2) Detroit Pul ence.| raxi,” Movie. “They Met in all i$ vsceeesees 6 N, Broadway, MY 2-8211 $ House. (7) Faith for Today ej tt:60— OB-NOB S 3 vv... met $ 10:26—(9) Billboard. Today. - 60) News. HOP Iz PHELPS Et RADIO & TV. 3530 $ 10:30—(2) Cartoons. :80—(2) Weather, Meditations. MODELS | 2 5 RADIO & TV.......3699 Seshabaw RA. OR 3-258 3 : al Theater. (9) Cartoor. (7 Action MONDAY MORNIN: 6089 and HOBBIES $ oxronp mn. OR 3-n7 § ; a|10:48—(2) Cartoons. (9) T.B.A. |*8¢~(2) Meditations. (4) is V5 BLOCK W. OF aintone sane se $ oxrorp Rapto & TV SHOP . 3 11:00—(2) Sagebrush Shorty. (4)|g.ce 7 . Today's ROAD—OR 38-7112 ALS , -+-.40 8, Washington, OA 8-2032 $ . nture Ho. (9) Chris 52) On the Farm Front. ig ROCHESTER —— 2 tophers. 7:00—(2) Captain Kangaroo, rn ® = $ RADIO & TV SHOP 3 11:30—(9) Western Trails. Today. @ per Ba a { _. i> T TV @ RADIO SEAVIOR tee een Bt OF S-a10 $ . 7:28~(4) N rg msi— elevisio i$ ++o+ 106 W. Sth St, OL 2-4722 2 SUNDAY AFTERNOON > o46 News. H n «4 ws ve WATERFORD » $ 12:00—~ 4 : * Ss f . (2) Buster’ Crabbe. (4) Campaign. (1) Presidential 506 w AMPTON ELECTRIC ) « “nr. S69 Andersonville RA,OR 3-881 10) News. : : re 4.2525 1% TOWNSEND'S TV SERVICE tae Greenta 3 *eeeee 4 WILKINSON'S TV SERVICE. ... 3070 6, Commerce’ MA ¢-a0es ; ~~ P > * J ee area ar *