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U.S. Weather Bureas Forecast 
Partly Cloudy, Scattered Showers 
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n17th YEAR 3 -PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 27, ees Pees UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 
ASSOCIATED PRESS 
  
  IXON, xkxke«x 
} 
  ikita Agree   
Castro Howls 
Warning at U.S. 
as He Returns 
HAVANA (AP) — Hoffa Accepts 
Challenge to Sue 
Robert Kennedy Teamster Head Plans 
| to Bring Libel Action   Fidel Castro, swept back into the | Against Senate Counsel 
Cuban premiership as expected, by an enormous popu- | 
lar demonstration, served notice Sunday night he will 
be friends with the United States only if the United Teamsters president James. 
States does not get in his way. WASHINGTON (UPI) — 
'R. Hoffa said today he 
The spectacular.crowd estimated at nearly a mil- would accept a challenge 
lion cheered wildly as he told them he would’ bow to. \to sue Senate rackets com-   
Two Accidents 
Claim Lives Drayton 
Drowns; 
in Area Plains Youth 
Detroiter Dies. 
Auto Mishap ‘and resume office. 
| The demonstration again under- 
i scored that the bearded, 32-year- 
| old revolutionary leader is Cuba’ S| ‘ 
strong man. 
| The vast sea of humanity sent 
up reverberating cheers as Cas- 
tro by implication told off 
eritics in the United States. 
| He asserted that Cuba is not, 
(a protectorate or colony of any! 
‘other country but a free sovereign! *“the will of the people” mittee counsel Robert F. 
‘Kennedy for libel. 
' Kennedy hurled a half 
‘dozen charges at Hoffa on) 
|a nationwide television pro- 
igram and then challenged) | 
‘sue for libel. 
Hoffa told United Press Interna- 
of ‘tional he had ‘ ‘every intention” 
‘bringing libel action against Ken- 
inedy for these charges and for 
An auto accident early Sunday in nation and “‘we have to account jaccusations he made last Wednes- 
Farmington Township claimed the! 
life of a Detroit youth and a Dray- | 
ton Plains youth drowned in 
Lapeer County Sunday afternon. 
Dead are Wesley E. Smith, 12, 
of 2861 Deland St., Drayton Plains, 
and Michael T. Warden, 19, of 
14932 Aubrey, Detroit. 
S The Smith boy, son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Wesley Smith, drowned 
in Big Fish Lake just over the 
Lapeer-Oakland County boun- 
  dary line, shortly affer 3 p. m. 
He was riding 
in a motorboat : 
with Charles Oaklanu 
Rockwell and his | Highway son Charles Jr., | Toll in ’59 
14, and Charles 39 
Christensen, 15, all 
Clawson, when the 
boat overturned in ws ee ne 
the wake of an-       
yther watercraft. 
The boy’s body was recivered by | 
Oakland County Sheriff's Deputies 
Medward. Tessier and William 
Jackson in 60 feet of water at 
5:30 p. m. They were assisting a 
peer County deputies. ~ 
Fast action of another boater,| 
was credited with saving _ the 
others. Deputies said Baldwin saw 
the accident and sped to the scene 
in his motorboat to pick up the 
three survivors. 
AUTO DEATH 
Warden died at W illiam Beau- 
mont Hospital shortly after 2:30 
a, m. after his car went out of con- 
trol and’ ran off the Grand River 
avenue exit of the Farmington- 
Brighton Expressway. 
A passenger, James L. Barber 
Jr., 19, of 15006 Summer, Detroit, 
was in fair condition at William 
Beaumont Hospital with face and) 
head injuries. 
Farmington Township Police said | 
the Warden car traveled 969 feet 
after leaving the pavement before 
smashing into a ditch. 
U.S. to Try Out 
a ‘Paddlewheel’ 
Satellite Soon 
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The 
United States plans to launch a 
“‘paddlewheel”’ satellite from Cape 
Canaveral, Fla., around Aug. 7 to 
test feasibility of using solar 
power to operate radio equipment 
aboard «space probes to be fired 
later-at the planet Venus. 
Reliable sources said today that 
if the paddlewheel shot is success- 
ful that National Aeronautics and 
Space Administration. (NASA), al- 
so plans: 
~To launch a 375-pound payload 
toward the moon in early October 
with the hope that it will go into 
a lunar orbit. 
~—To fire a deep space probe in 
November into a trajectory which   
-would take it to the. vicinity of 
Venus if the planet were in a 
favorable position. Actually, Venus 
won't be in shooting distance of 
tlie earth again until 1961. 
  
Begin Subway Study 
~ NEW YORK ® — The city will 
move the working hours of half 
  ito no one.’ 
* * * 
| 
| friends with all nations but can! 
inot. be with those ‘“‘who offend us, 
| who insult us and who exploit us’”’ 
nor with any vested interest which| 
tries to “impose itself on the des-| 
tiny of our people.’’ 
But in 2!, hours of talk, Cas- 
tro failed te mention communism 
by name at all. He referred to 
it only obliquely, when hitting 
at his critics, but apparently did 
not feel it necessary to deny 
| their charges that he is letting 
meant. 
    Uptown Havana's vast 
laza was packed with the shout- 
ig, Cheering throng. Castro told) 
'it emotionally that from now on) 
the “symbol of our revolution will, 
be the machete,” the long, sharp: 
  FURIOUS RESPONSE 
| The announcement provoked fu-| 
irious response during which some) 
400,000 campesinos ~— farmers— 
the demonstration clashed| 
William D. Baldwin Jr., of Flint.|their machetes in unison to add to the general uproar. 
enemies should ever think of com- 
ing back fo Cuba,” let them con-| 
template for just, about five min- 
utes those machetes.” | the Reds influence his govern. | 
Castro whipped up another oVa- /Teamster 
tion when he added that ¢f his} would not be day on ‘The Jack Paar Show."”’ He 
the 
| Castro said Cuba wants to be jnetwork that carried both pro- isaid he also would sue NBC, 
| grams, 
The Teamster chief said he, 
union attorney Edward Bennett 
| Wiliams and other lawyers 
| would go over a transcript of the 
first program today to decide 
which portions to cite in the Hi- 
bel action. 
Hoffa said the suit would be filed 
)@S soon as the necessary legal pa- 
jpers could be prepared. He said 
iWilliams would 
lodge the action and other details 
of the suit. 
Kennedy charged on the program 
Civic; yesterday that the rackets investi- 
igation had shown ‘‘that Mr. Hoffa 
has made collusive deals with em- 
ployers, that he betrayed the union 
membership, that he put gangsters 
and.racketeers if important posi- 
| knife used for cutting sugar cane. tions of power within the teamsters 
| union, (and) that he has misused 
‘union funds.” 
* * 
Kennedy challenged Hoffa to sue | libel so (Steel strike today. 
‘Grotight fr6m the provinces to that a jary chah decide the ue-\their 45-mainete 
icusations were true, If Hoffa were President him “immediately” for 
jfound guilty of any of the charges, | 
‘Kennedy said, he should resign as/ 
because he 
“worthy” to hold president 
the job. 
Hoffa said he watched Kennedy 
|immediately following his own ap- 
)Pearance on “Face The Nation” ‘the peppery union leader to) 
decide where to   
WATERY GREETING — 
Negotiations 
in New York Today 
From Our News Wires 
      Labor James P. 
to President Eisenhower 
was ‘particular! 
ment. 
    Negotiations were resumed at 
| Castro made it clear that such On the CBS network. He said the) New York today under auspices 
(Continued on Page 2 _o 3) 
  
Automation Hits Religion 
CHICAGO (| Automation 
has come to religion. Choir, or- 
ganist, altar and prayer books 
were replaced by two slide pro- 
jectors, a motion picture pro- 
jector, a spotlight and a large 
| screen at a hondenominational 
worship service Sunday. An 
Episcopal minister preached the | 
sermon. The service was held 
at the Audio-Visual Assn. con- 
vention.   
work, Kennedy, Paar, ‘counsel “acted like a small kid 
jagain.’ 
Kennedy, who also monitored 
Hoffa’s appearance, said it was | 
“most unfortunate’ that 
Teamster president was 
asked to make some accounting 
for his acts and fhose of his 
chief Heutenants. 
Hoffa notified NBC president 
‘Robert Sarnoff last Friday that he! 
‘had instructed his attorneys to pre- the 
not | of the federal mediation service 
| in an effort to reach an agree- 
| ment to end the 13-day old strike. 
‘agreement, Mitchell replied: 
‘ing to negotiate is, I think, hearten- 
‘ing. Certainly both sides are well 
‘aware of the importance of a set-| 
tlement. 
“T would hope for a settlement) 
1! 
in the reasonably near future. Nixon for a motorboat ride yesterday. 
Prime Minister didn't _— a secret lake. Bathers swarmed around 
WASHINGTON — Secretary of} 
Mitchell reported 
on the 
He said afte 
meeting that the| 
they will continue to negotiate con- 
stantly in an effort to get a settle- 
Asked about the outlook for an 
“The fact that they are continu-| } 
  Nikita Khrushchev took Richard 
Apparently the Russian 
Resumed | 
With Federal Mediators | Pontiac police today began an 
all-out manhunt for the killer of 
le 71-year-old city doctor who died 
of pistol wounds Saturday night in 
Pontiac General Hospital. 
* * * 
| Lit. William Nesbitt, 
islim. 
Dr, W. Carleton Warrick of 268 
Chippewa Rd. was shot by the 
Y| gunman around 7:45 p-m. Fri- 
\pleased’’ that negotiations have! day. He was found a few min 
been resumed. | utes later by a long-time 
The President, he said, thepcice tient, Lioyd Tunnel, 53, of 1355 | 
Williams Lake Rd., Waterford 
Township, 
A police guard had been sta- 
tioned in front of Dr. 
room Saturday morning after 
ihim: “I'm going to kill you.” 
LEAVES $1,365 
    him up, 
  After the shooting,.the gunman 
fled without $1,365 the doctor 
was carrying in a back trousers. 
pocket. 
About $100 in bills was found on 
pare libel action against the net- ,wouldn’t want to venture a guess."’ the floor of the doctor's office. 
the Sponsors | 
( Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Joseph F. Finnegan, director of | 
‘and others connected with the ear-|the Federal Mediation and Concili- | 
| (Continued on Page 2, » Col. 5)   
ENGINE FAILS — Two men 
in a wooded area near Spencer 
  injury when this two-seater Cessna plane crashed 
afternoon. The field is off Pontiac Trail near 
Wixom. The pilot, William E. Ramsey; 58, of . 
Farmington, told Refiford State Police, he applied’ 
for engine power as he brought the plane in for: i bs serious 
Field Saturday 
ao \ ‘Plane Crashes Near Wixom 
  " Pontiac Press Phots 
a landing but there was no response. He was 
treated for facial cuts at Redford Community 
Hospital. Also in the plane was Leon H. Samp- 
son, 44, of Detroit. He was uninjured and walked 
away from the plane, which flipped over when it 
crashed. oa ee 
et Donald E. Kaiser. *- * * 
| The doctor was shot twice by; 
|the gunman, once in the abdomen. 
~~ |The other bullet hit his left thumb.) 
| Police found four shells from) 
‘what they believe to be the mur- 
jder weapon, but so far have found! 
|only three bullets. 
They*were to return to the doc- 
tor’s office today to continue their 
search for clues, 
“The threads we're working on 
are slim,” said Nesbitt, “No one 
apparently saw the killer enter 
or leave the doctor’s office.” 
Nesbitt said, however, 
  
City Stores Revive 
Month-End Sales 
Pontiac area retail- stores 
today revived month-end sales. 
Most stores are featuring 
month-end values tonight and 
tomorrow, announced Ge or g € 
Richman, president of the Down- 
town Merchants Assn. 
Similar two-day sales are 
planned for the next three 
months, said Richman. They are 
scheduled to begin Aug. 24, Sept. 
28 and Oct. 2%. ~ 
MOTO AIO i EEE, 
  ad 
In Today's Ss hse 
  ee ee es 
ee ee Se 
eee ee 
ee eee ee 
ee ee ee 
sb enwe 
  detective | 
bureau commander, said clues are|44, and daughter, Carole, 5. 
Warrick’s| 
he| 
jtold officers the gunman said to) 
Dr. Warrick told police Friday | 
night that the gunman had held! 
that po-; the boat to shake hands with the 
chev seems more concerned with fa 
x * * 
  ar whiepleate 
American vice president. Khrush- 
the efforts of some swimmers to 
climb as Guess bag wasn't in a smo to get wet. 
ilice would press the investigation, 
hoping for a break which will lead 
\them to the gunman. 
* * * 
The doctor's office is on the sec- 
ond floor of an office building at 
|24%% E. Huron St. 
He is survived by his wife, Joan,   
Mitchel Hope Launch Full: Scale Manhunt 
on Steel Strike tor Pontiac Doctor's Murderer 
Lodge and Pine Lake Country Club, 
iDr. Warrick also is survived by 
three brothers. 
They are Homer, of Osceola, 
‘Ind.;- John of South Bend, Ind.; 
iand Bert, of Elkhart, Ind. 
Service will be held 
p.m. Tuesday at Farmer-Snover 
Funeral Home with burial in W bite   Formerly a A member ot the Elks Chapel Cemetery. 
- Scattered Rain 
- to Keep Humid 
Temperatures 
| Pontiac area weather will vary 
somewhat during the next five- 
day period. More humid tempera- 
tures and scattered showers are 
|predicted for tonight and tomor- 
‘row. Tonight’s low will be 68. 
* * * 
Temperatures will average near 
the normal high of 84 and normal 
63 low this week. 
Tomorrow’s high is expected 
to reach 88, but cooler tempera- 
tures are forecast for Wednes- 
day, followed by a warm trend 
about Saturday, the weatherman 
says. 
      Precipitation will] total near one 
half of an inch from scattered 
ishowers Tuesday and Wednesday 
and possibly again Saturday. 
* * * 
The mercury dropped from a 
| high of 8 at 5 p.m, yesterday 
Ito 63 at 5:30 this morning. At 
'2 p.m, the reading. was 88. 1 
Bay City to Launch   at 1:30| Would Settle ll 
at Parley Table, 
Not Battlefield Vice President Given 
Warm Leningrad Hello 
After Leaving Moscow 
rem Our Wire Services 
LENINGRAD — Vice 
President Richard M. Nixon 
flew here today and said 
he and Premier Nikita 
Khrushchev agreed during 
their talks that “differ- 
ences between nations = 
must be settled at the con- 
ference table and not on 
the battlefield.” 
“So my message to the 
people of Leningrad from 
the people of the United 
States is peace for all the 
world,” Nixon told a large 
welcoming crowd at Len- 
ingrad Airport. | 
Nixon flew here from Moscow 
with Mrs. Nixon, Soviet first Dep- 
uty Premier and Mrs, Frol R. 
Kozlov in a Russian TU104 jet 
SOON 
  she and four other 
close to six hours while 
yesterday. 
“It's the first time I’ve heard 
of any serious conversation at a~ 
dinner table,” 
ee rene 
airliner. They made the flight in 
one hour and nine minutes. 
A crowd of between 1,000 and 
1,500 persons gave the Nixons and 
the Kozlovs a cordial. welcome 
at the sumdrenched airport. 
’ NixOh in fespofise to an official 
welcome from Chairman I. V. Spi- 
ridonov of the Leningrad Commit- 
tee of the Communist Party, dis- 
cussed his five hours and 45 min- 
utes of “‘frank and complete talks” 
with Khrushchev. ad eta cea a te ee ce aac 
  Second Missile Ship 
BAY CITY (UPD — The 
second of four guided-missile de- 
stroyers will be launched by Defoe 
Shipbuilding Co. here tomorrow. 
* * * 
The ship, the Lynde D. McCor- 
mick, was named in honor of the 
admiral who served as supreme 
naval commander from 1952 to 
‘11954, the first boss of a peacetime 
international navy. 
The ships are being built by- 
Defoe under a $63,000,000 con- 
tract with the Navy. The first of 
the four missile destroyers was 
launched April 22. It was the 
Henry B. Wilson, 
10 more guided-missile destroyers 
after the 13 under construction 
throughout the nation are com- 
pleted. 
Because of its work on four of 
the original 13, Defoe stands a good 
chance of getting some of the 
additional jobs.       The. Navy contemplates building,   NO ONE CONVINCED 
“Tt had yesterday a very con- 
structive and full discussion on 
some of the problems we have 
between our two countries,"” Nixon 
said. 
“Tt can say that we had some 
differences with (Chairman 
Khrushchey on points of issue. 
I-would say it was not a case of 
his convincing me or my con- 
vincing him, 
“But there is a point on which 
we did agree—that differences be- 
tween nations must be settled at 
the conference table and not on 
the battlefield.” 
* * * 
Spiridonov told Nixon in his wel- 
coming speech that ‘“‘our people 
\want to live in peace and friend- 
ship with all peoples, especially 
Americans.” 
“I hope your visit will serve 
for better understanding between, 
‘Russia and the American people, 
which we all ardently desire,” 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2)     
No Names, Lots of S miles “=   
By PETE LOCHBILER 
Some of the Pontiac area’s heav- 
jest drinkers of former years got 
together Sunday — over coffee 
and doughnuts. 
There weren't any hangovers at 
the first district meeting of Al- 
coholics Anonymous ever held in 
Pontiac. 
More than 400 persons—mem- 
bers of AA’s Eastern Michigan 
District — gathered at Pontiac 
Northern High School's Little 
Theater. Most were from the 
Pontiac area and Oakland Coun- 
ty. A few came from as far 
away as the Thumb area. 
Getting to know each other for 
the first time, AA members were 
impressed by- the force of their 
numbers. 
joo Wei ee 
“The feeling of unity with other| 
AA members who are successfully 
battling the same kind af drinking 
problem helps give an alcoholic 
        Women’s Pages ....... 1 
    AA members usually get together, 
once a week in relatively small, 
autonvmous local groups. 
the emotional troubles that in 
less happy days would have led 
them to drink. Each group stands 
ready to put in long, difficult hours 
helping obsessive drifkers who 
want to conquer the habit, - but 
can’t without help. 
~*~ * * 
_There are 14 such groups in 
the immediate Pontiac area, with 
meniberships running from about a 
dozen persons to as many as 50. 
“Tt is hoped that getting the 
various groups together at big 
meetings like this will spur AA’s 
rehabilitative activities in this 
area,” said the chairman of the 
He; like. other AA members, 
prefers to remain anonymous, The 
AA's wore identification tags, list- 
ing their home groups and first 
;; names, but hot pom St names, 
© #£ 
“It was easy for them to get 
acquainted, though, for AA's greet Area AA Members Get Together Here about their homes, families, ae 
vacation plans. Most of the AA's 
we i ed > There they deal together withi re eee Sar = there were a few -younger couples 
and they brought their children. 
With an outsider, the AA talks 
about his biggest source of pride 
—the fact that he is not drinking. 
They like to say, “I've been five 
years sober,” or six. years, or 
whatever length of. time they've 
successfully belonged to the AA 
program. 
* * 
Drinking was not a bothersome 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)   
Russians Show Love 
|for Cliburn With Candy 
NEW YORK (UPI) — The Rus- 
sians, who first proclaimed him 
@ great pianist still love Van Cli- 
burn, he learned yesterday, 
At the Soviet exhibition here, a 
Russian official handed Cliburn 
a box of what he said was Russia's 
best-selling candy. It was shaped 
  each other traditionally with a big 
“Hi, Ld 
Among themselves, they talk |It's me eS like a grand piano amin Pacis io: * 
| | smile, firm. handclasp and friendly | portrait “ 
  *   
   : a &. : ee r a, , 4 mS oe as BS Sate Te es Mes ae : oe weet : oe : Ree he fe Pa oe 
         ki i, a - ‘ ee ee i 
us TAR pide PRESS, MONDAY, JULY.27, 1990, EA tar eae | = mM bie th Birmingham r oe 
Bloomfield Police Charge 
5 With Reckless Driving 
at the Bell Chapel of the William 
R, Hamilton Co, Burial will follow i Raglan nd Park Cemetery, Royal 
Mrs, Kandt died Saturday im an automobile accident near 
fe 
She was supervisor of the Bagley 
street AAA office in Detroit, a 
member of the Birmingham Gar- 
den Club and of the Redford Pres- 
byterian Church. : 
Surviving are her husband, 
Ralph, her mother, Mrs. Mary Mc- Auto Workers 
to Get Raises 
August 1 and Average 
6 Cents an Hour ain ' in; —_ ‘ : agZ 
Fenton Split 
on Proposed 
Race Track 
FENTON (UPI)—A proposed 
_< $3,000,000 horse race track, the 
‘hottest issue to hit this southern 
; Genesee County       
        
      
     
    maaan i i} 
  
BIRMINGHAM — Despite warn- 
ings of a crackdown last week by 
Capt. Walter Sluiter of the Bloom- 
field Hills Police Dept., five driv- 
ers were charged with reckless 
ing on Woodward avenue in 
Bloomfield Hills during the week- 
end. 
Picked up for reckless driving 
Saturday at 1 p.m, were Gerald A. 
Friedman, 22, of Detroit and a 
juvenile from Troy unidentified by 
police, 
The two had engaged in a race DETROIT @®—More than half a 
million hourly rated auto workers 
will get pay increases averaging 
six cents an hour Aug. 1. 
The raises are provided in three- 
year contracts negotiated with the } 
industry last year by the Unitéd!’. 
Auto: Workers union. 
Those agreements specify that we ie 
The township zoning board for- 
. warded the proposal to the board 
without recommendation after 
deadlocking on it twice. 
  tween Fenton and Linden, about : 18 miles south of Flint near the an automatic annual improve- on Woodward avenue hear Lone Sween of Detroit, and two sisters, 
' y. per cent, whichever is greater, $50 before Justice of the Peace . ek ; 
The area has split into two| shall be paid each year for the A. J. Richardson and the juv- BI mfiel d Woma 
enile was referred te the Oakland duration of the contract. 
County Juvenile Court. The raises will go to 330,000 camps, one favoring approval be- 
cause of the revenue it would 
  bring to the area, and the other 
opposing it on moral grounds. 
B. F. Gregoric, Wayne, spokes- 
man for Grand River Amusement, 
said the firm has an option on 
200 acres for construction of the 
track if it can obtain board ap- 
proval. hourly rated employes of General 
Motors Corp., 120,000 at Ford Mo- 
tor Co., 65,000 at Chrysler Corp. 
jand 23,200 at American Motors. 
In most instances workers will 
get the pay raises in checks for 
jthe first pay period after Aug. 1. 
The pay boosts are in addition 
    At 10:15. p.m. Saturday, Bertrum 
Green, 20, of Lake drive, Waterford 
Township, was arrested on charges 
of reckless. driving which involved 
cutting in and out of traffic on 
Woodward avenue near Opdyke 
road, : 
* x * Succumbs in East The Rosary will be recited for 
Patricia Ann Power, 23, daughter 
of Mr, and Mrs. A. F. Power of 
420 Dunstan Rd., Bloomfield Hills, 
at 8 p.m. tomorrow at her home, x * * ; ic- said to anything the employes receive Green supplied personal — bond x *& * 
Ri ap ya a ard —— under cost-of-living escalator and will appear this-week in the; Requiem Mass at 10 a.m, 
other a half mile. clauses which gear wages to fluc- Bloomfield Hills Justice Court. Wednesday in Holy Name Catho 
The smaller track would be en-| ‘tions in the cost of living. __ AP Wirephote A second: pair of racers were) lic Church, Birmingham, will be 
closed under . : - : . ° abbed Sun t 2:15 a.m. on) said her uncle, the Rev. John a transparent plas- HAIL CHIEF’S RETURN — This tightly packed crowd is only __ cation of the true size of the crowd, a throng as large as the one 5 Sage ad oe tee pa met Py of Springfield, a Burial 
horses and parking for 10,000 cars. 
Break in Liquor 
Laws Maine-ly 
for the Tourists 
AUGUSTA, Maine (UPI) —Tip- 
pling tourists will probably get a   Deny Townships 
Liquor License Fees 
LANSING ® — Gov. Williams 
today signed a bill providing for 
the return of 85 per cent of town- 
ship liquor license proceeds to 
shriffs’ departments unless the 
township maintains a full-time po- 
lice or ordinance department. 
* * * 
The Michigan Townships Assn.| 
last week urged the governor to 
veto the measure, contending it (Continued From Page One) 
mammoth demonstrations will 
be held whenever it is con- 
sidered necessary to demonstrate 
That of Sunday, officially cele- Castro Returns to Oftice 
With a Warning for U.S. _ part of the throng that heard Fidel Castro speak at Havana's Civica 
“Plaza yesterday after he returned as Premier of Cuba. As an indi- pictured jammed the other side of the monument in the upper 
left of this photograph. 
- road, James M. Howard, 18, of 3643 
Rockingham St., Royal Oak, and 
John W. Maclver, 18, of 24935 Way-   
| into making the rally the spec- 
jtacular thing it was, Gimmicks 
included the release of a thousand 
doves as Castro made his appear- 
ance and release of hundreds of 
red, white and blue balloons trail- 
      Lone Policeman 
Nabs 2 Pair Admits $368 Theft 
From Waterford Dairy cies to the point where “no signifi- cross Ct., Pontiac, were both re- 
leased on personal bond to appear 
today in Justice Court, Religious Bias   
qd 
Birmingham Police have report- 
in U. S. Colleges ed receiving complaints — five 
iduring the weekend — of raccoons 
Burglars Shows Decline . |tipping over garbage pails on N. 
| NEW YORK (UPI) — Religious Voodward, avenue near the city discrimination’ has declined in ts. 
American college admissions poli-   So far, police have been unable 
to catch any of the culprits, will follow in Holy Sepulchre Cem- 
etery, 
Miss Powers died Saturday 
night at Cape Cod Hospital, Hy- 
anis, Mass., after a long illness, 
She had been taken to the hos- 
pital from the Power’s summer 
home at Dennisport, Mass. Her 
father is assistant general counsel 
for the General Motors Corp. 
Surviving besides her parents 
are a sister, Mary Eleanor, and 
a brother, John, 
Her body will be at her Bloom- 
field Hills home this evening. 
  : 7 ~e”’ ni xis : Holden Effective Jan, 1, 1961, after ia red Sealine ten ‘ of his |2& the black and red colors of f \cant evidence’’ of bias exists, the’ Harold C. H 
dicted approval by voters in a laws in many townships. a saad 26th of July revolutionary edhe the 26th of July movement. Store S ‘American Jewish Congress ‘report-, Rosary -service for Harold C. f 
November, 1960, referendum, ma-|they could not rr ment, was called I Planes and helicopters zoomed ed yesterday. ‘Holden, 68, of 683 Emmons Ave., H ff P| § 
ye a ee ore bistiang (OW overhead dropping small,| A Madison Heights policeman * * + Birmingham, will be beld at 9 pa, €O a Plans 10 Jue jor restauranis may serving 
aia igh tell oae coe “hard liquor” drinks on a local 
    
ham or fresh roast pork. 
The Weather 
von E* Weather Bureau Re 
and 
Teed abounes tomight A. temerrew, Le : 7 
oA Se a Tedey in Pentia 
Lowest temperature Dreceding 8 am. 
At & a.m.: Wind Velocity 3 m. p. ht.   
ee 
pers eather—Sunny. 
" @ne Year Age in Pontise : ome Lone naam Ps asp ivcinns s nee 
* 
. 
. 
x “Weather Cloudy 
  A. Herter, 
‘however, a farewell meeting was 
s0|Vice president and the premier did 
{not arrive at the dacha until short- 
Ried after noon, A U.S. reporter 
}and photographer and a Soviet re- 
belligerent. forcement, — 
The Michigan Sheriffs Assn. 
backed the proposal, About 3% 
million dollars in license fees is 
returned to local governments for 
enforcement, more than two mil- 
lion doliars to townships who will 
lose their share under the new 
law, Backers said, _ 
“Many townships were using 
these moneys not for the intended 
purpose of enforcing liquor control 
but for general purposes such as 
the purchase of street lighting, 
sidewalks or fire engines,” Wil- 
liams said, demonstrate support for his land 
redistribution program. 
Castro claimed it was only the 
will of the people that persuaded 
him to resume the premiership he 
left nine days ago to force the 
resignation of provisional Presi- 
dent Manuel Urrutia. 
‘The first announcement of his 
return to office came from Presi- 
dent Osvaldo Dorticos, Urrutia’s 
successor. It set off a wild, jubilant 
ovation, with the campesinos joy- 
ously throwing straw hats into the 
air. 
Enormous               showmanship went   
(Continued From Page One) 
Spiridonov said. “From the bot- 
tom of my heart, welcome.” 
It was a far bigger and warmer’ 
welcome than Nixon received on 
his arrival in Moscow. In the crowd 
were two American tourists who 
held up placards reading “Nixon 
welcome.” : 
KOZLOVS SURPRISE 
The Kozlovs were added starte         newsmen a jovial good morning 
and announced to the newsmen 
turned to the U.S. Embassy resi- 
dence Sunday night and drafted 
a detailed report on the conver- 
sation for President Eisenhower 
and Secretary of State Christian 
“There naturally were major 
differences of opinion,”’ he said, 
“but the discussions at all times 
were calm." 
* * 
The meeting, sixth between 
Khrushchev and Nixon since the 
vice president arrived last Thurs- 
day, may be their last. Klein said, * 
not ruled out when Nixon returns 
from a five-day visit to Leningrad 
and Siberia, 
The two leaders talked during a 
long Sunday dinner on a grassy, 
Moscow River. First Deputy Pre- 
miers Anastas I, Mikoyan and 
Frol R, Kozlov and their wives, 
and.U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn 
Thompson and President Eisen- 
hower’s brother, Dr. Milton Ei- 
senhower, also were at the table. 
Aides said they sat silently as the 
the talking. 
* * * 
Mr, and Mrs. Khrushchev did 
porter were admitted to report 
the preliminaries, ' 
The two leaders agreed that 
their rough and tumble debate at 
hard hitting and frank — but not’ 
Turning to Nixon, 
      Jase 
    
  ‘RENgEsNsEsssesusee 
sore pe ee 
  asked, “‘Were you of- 
“Mr. was the 
reply. 
- \ings and said, ‘‘We should have a 
knoll overlooking the| 4% ‘Nivon, Nikita Can Agree “I agree,”’ Khrushchev said, 
x * 
Before lunch Khrushchev and 
Nixon went for a motorboat ride 
on the river, stopping eight times 
to shake hands and talk with 
bathers, 
* * * 
“Captive people?” Khrushchev 
would say in a reference to the 
U.S. proclamation of a_ special 
week of prayer for those in Com- 
munist countries. 
“No, no, Peace and friendship,” 
swimmers’ standard 
“Peace and friendship” the vice 
president would echo in Russian. 
At the last stop Nixon turned 
to the premier and said, ‘You 
know, Mr. Khrushchev, I must ad- 
mire you. This is the eighth time 
you've stopped, You never miss a 
chance to make propaganda.” 
“No, no, I don’t make propa- 
ganda,’ Khrushchev said. “1 tell 
the truth.” 
* * * 
Standing on the grassy knoll in 
front of his dacha, Khrushchev 
pointed to his restful surround- 
summit conference here, instead 
of sitting in Geneva many months 
eating so many pies.” 
Search Grand Canyon 
for Priest, Youth 
GRAND CANYON, Ariz. (UPD— 
Searchers transported by helicop- 
ters scoured a remote area of the 
Grang Canyon floor today for a 
Roman Cathalie priest and his hik- 
ing. companion. A third member of 
the hiking group was found yester-   
y. 
The body of Walter J. Mahany, 
16, was located in the rugged heat- 
scorched canyon, He apparently 
was the victim of heat prostration 
and exposure, rangers reported. 
Ranger Vincent Hefti said tracks 
were found leading away from the 
body and believed those of a Fa- 
ther Gavigan, and Manson Owes, 
16. The three hikers were believed 
from Savannah, Ga. 
  
‘Iron’ Was Explosive 
ADA, Okla. (#—A hunk of iron 
J; T. Robinson had observed par- 
tially covered behind his service 
station turned out to be a fully- 
armed 155mm shell. It was 
hauled off by an Army demolition 
team. 
It Left Bad Taste NEW YORK (UPI — Gerald 
S. Kennedy, chairman of the 
board of General Mills, said 
yesterday that the phrase ‘fluffy 
white’ frosting’ was ed 
+ from his firm’s cooking exhibit         ing candy. 
| evidence of recovery of 20 mil- | 
lion dollars in cash and 51 mil- | 
from collaborators of Batista. | 
| The Rochester, N.Y., Red Wings, 
jof International League refused to} 
|take the field for their scheduled | 
Sunday contest with the Cuban} 
Sugar Kings as a_ precaution) 
against shooting. Spent   bullets | 
which hit.a player of each team| 
broke up their Saturday game in| 
a 44 tie in the llth inning. 
There were reports that 17 per-| 
sons had been injured in various) 
parts of Havana. A number of} 
army officers were arrested for) 
unauthorized firing of their guns! 
to celebrate. 
AA Members Meet   multicolored parachutes contain- alone on routine duty surprised and The report, based on a question- 
| captured two burglars within hours naire filled out by more than 1,200 
| Before the speech, a Cabinet |2fter they admittedly took $368 high-ranking ‘high scliools seniors: 
| minister presented Castro with | from a Waterford Township store jn the state. said there was a 
yesterday. 
Arrested in the safe burglary of'since similar surveys in 1949 and 
lion dollars worth of property Richardson’s Farm Dairy at 7350 1952. 
Highland Rd. tonight at the Bell Chapel of the. 
William R. Hamilton Co. 
Requiem Mass will be at 10 
a.m, tomorrow at Our Lady 
Queen of Martyrs Catholic 
Ckurch in Southfield, Burial will 
follow in Holy Sepulchre Ceme- ‘marked decline” in discrimination 
were William D. * * * , Kennedy for Libel 
(Continued From Page One) 
lier ‘‘shameful abuse of national 
television time.” 
In both his TV appearances, Ken- 
O’Guian, 35, of 327 W. Otis St.,) It said not. enough replies were 
Hazel Park, and J,.F. Crampton, received from Negroes to deter- 
32, of 32328 Brush St., Madison mine whether - racial prejudice 
Heights. |exists in college admissions offices. 
1 
On patrol duty at 5:30 a.m. | 
yesterday, Sgt. Hauston Cod said |; he notieed avcar parked back of Lions Trade Ken Russell 
a dirt stockpile on 13 Mile road to Green Bay for Spencer between John R. and Dequindre. | DETROIT (UPI) — The Detroit j 
Cod ‘said he found the two basi Lions today traded defensive tackle | removing coins from paper wrap- 
pings and putting them in cloth Ken Russell to Green Bay for! 
bags. The officer ordered the men   tery, Southfield. 
Mr. Holden died Saturday at St. 
Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac 
after a long illness. 
He was employed by the Michi. 
jgan Livestock Exchange and was 
la member of the Senior Mens! Hoffa maintained in his  televi- 
-,sion appearance that the picture is Club of Birmingham, American Le nedy generally repeated the 
charges against Hoffa made by the 
_ Senate rackets committee during 
Hits investigation of labor and man-   . agement corruption. 
x * * 
gion and was a World War I vet-|not as black as has been charged. 
eran of the U.S. Marine Corps. | He conceded there are “some 
sons, Dr. Harold J., of 1001 Worth- Said union officers accused of cor- 
ington Rd., Birmingham, a nd ruption would be ‘taken care of” 
from the car and called for an- 
other car. 
The men, wanted in four com-| 
munities on charges of breaking 
and entering, admitted the Water-| 
ford burglary, police said. They| player deal. 
a a. | 
Coach George Wilson said there 
Was no cash involved in the trade. 
* * * 
Both players are 6 feet, 2 inches 
itively young. Rescued by friends, in Pontiac School 
(Continued From Page One) 
problem with them, it was over-| 
whelming. - 
“If it weren’t for AA and the fact 
I can lead a profitable, happy life | 
now, I'd blow my brains out,’’ was 
the sincere statement of one dig- 
nified gentleman. 
“Alcoholism was the hardest 
profession 1 ever practiced,” 
said another. “It wasn’t a 9-5 
job, five days a week with a 
vacation once a year. It took me 
almost 24 hours a day, 365 days 
a year for years and years.” 
The main speaker identified him- 
self as Jack, then went on tell 
how he cured his problem drinking 
through AA. 
Now a highly successful busi- 
ness man in Saginaw, Jack hit the 
skids early in his drinking career. 
He described three years on De- 
troit's. skid row while still rela-   
  Jack got a job but didn’t give up 
the bottle. 
“Seventeen years I worked my 
way up in my company until I 
was nearing the top. Seventeen 
years I went on drinking, trying 
to kid myself and my bosses that 
I wasn’t an alcoholic.” 
In and out of hospitals several 
times, Jack finally drank himself 
out of his job one weekend. That’s 
when a friend from AA found him 
and helped him. 
Like most AA’s, Jack believes he 
got his chance to beat the bottle 
through the help of God. 
Virtually all AA’s are church- 
goers and when they get together 
they bring their faith into the 
meeting in a non-denominational 
way. . 
Sunday, they recited the Lord’s 
Prayer together. No mumbling 
over the words, but with loud, 
firm voices in almost-perfect 
unison. were turned over to Waterford Po ae Boy both weigh about 250   ham, and eight grandchildren. 
Gladys M. Kandt 
Service for Gladys M. Kandt, 44, | tackle Oliver Spencer in a straight. James K. of 5845 Forman Rd., |after the rackets committee ex- 
‘Birmingham, a brother, Kenneth, | Pires this year. 
of 1700 Maryland Ave., Birming- * x * : 
He said 14 Teamster officials ac- 
cused of corruption remain in of- 
fice and will be accorded due proc- 
ess of law with the right of cross- 
of 2279 Penibroke St., Birmifgham ‘examination in their hearings be- 
will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday!fore international union officers.   lice and held for investigation of} 
burglary. | 5 
* * * 
Police said entrance to the dairy ‘JP Makes Profitable Protest   ! 
was made by prying open the back) 
door of the building. The safe in a 
rear office was opened with a cut-| 
ting torch. A sledge hammer and) 
crow bar were also found on the| 
floor. | BRISTOL, Pa (AP) — ‘“There's| 
Police said more than $1500 in| more than one way to skin a cat,” 
change in a box in the rear Of fioured Justice-of the Peace Earl! the safe was overlooked by the B. Dougherty, That, he said, is 
burglars, \the theory he applied Sunday to| 
|Pennsylvania’s Sunday blue laws. ! 
Mitchell Hopeful nt   
Daugherty spent the day driv- 
{§ | A d ling through Bucks County, just 
0 tee ccor north of Philadelphia, handing out 
'159  conviction-on-sight _ notices. 
(Continued From Page One) /The- recipients included actress 
. . . his w .|Peggy Cass, two toll booth collec- 
ation Service, reiterated his wart'tors, a radio announcer,. numer- ing that no early or easy settle-| : ous plant guards, a druggist, a ment of the 13-day-old strike ap- . = pe likely. newspaper editor, adn the report   ers and photographers followed 
him. 
“I'm actually against the Sun- 
day blue laws,” Dougherty said. 
“They're chaotie and outmoded 
and if they were strictly enforced 
would strangle Pennsylvania's en- 
tire economy, 
‘I'm a justice of the peace and 
it’s. my duty to enforce the law. 
So | did.” 
He reached fhe Bristol Play- 
house, a summer theater, during 
the first act intermission and 
asked to see Miss Cass. 
  
Finnegan, who arranged the 
joint talks last week, said on his 
arrival from Washington Sunday 
night: “They can’t settle this 
strike by not talking.” 
He said he received no indica- 
tion during the weekend. that ei- 
ther side had changed its position. 
Finnegan had held separate meet- 
ings with union and industry rep- 
resentatives since the strike 
began. 
Heading the negotiating teams 
for today’s talks are David J. Mc- 
United 
Conrad Cooper, executive vice 
president of the United States 
Steel Corp, 
The strike of 500,000 members of 
the United Steelworkers has shut 
down plants that produced almost 
90 per cent of the nation’s steel. 
The stoppage has idled an esti- 
mated 78,000 employes in other in- 
dustries, with railroads the hard- 
est hit. 
The union’s demands include a 
15-cent-an-hour package increase 
          They talked of God in their daily) 
lives, -of practicing the kind of! 
brotherly love which Christ called 
charity. " 
‘We try to keep our lives simple, | 
‘free of emotional problems,” ex- 
iplained one AA, 
4 For that reason we try to be 
direct, hdnest and sincere ~ with 
other people, friendly, understand- 
The alcoholic paused, then said 
with emphasis: 
“This is a very successful, happy 
\Wway to live. In: fact, most people 
would like to live like we do. i 
“In a way, alcoholism cured has.     at the American exhib in 
Moscow because the Russian 
      translation was ‘‘angora fur.”’ ’ many rewards. Our greatest curse. 
‘turned out to be our greatest bless- ing.” 7 ws ing and, above all else, humble.’ _i. 
at nearby Oak Ridge. in each year of a new contract, 
plus fringe benefits. The industry, 
rejecting the demands, contends 
that an increase in labor costs 
would force a rise in steel prices 
and thus help spur inflation. The 
union contends that industry prof’ 
its and increased productivity, 
make a wage rise possible without | 
a price ihcrease, Prestrike wages! 
averaged $3.10 an hour,       
  Rebuild Clinton High 
CLINTON, Tenn, @ — A $662,- Foo: 
000 construction job has = =e 
started to rebuild Clinton High” : 
School, dynamited last October CuIMY after being racially integrated. 
Pupils have been going to school 
    4 We e 
    “Are you worldly employed?” 
    Serves 159 Blue Law Notices ,he asked, after introducing him- 
- | self. 
“Yes,’ said Miss Cass. 
“Are you being paid?” 
“Yes.” 
“TI hereby convict you on view 
for violation of the Sunday blue 
laws.’’ He handed her a notice, 
“Why I’ve never won a thing, 
and I'd rather not win this,” the 
actress joked. 
But, like the others, she must, 
according to the notice, appear 
today before Dougherty and pay a 
$4 fine plus $9 costs. 
* * * 
The same thing happened at the 
Levittown Times, where employes 
per, and at WBCB, Levittown, 
where ‘announcer Mike Mayo  al- 
lowed him to state his question 
on the air. 
Then there was a taxicab driv- 
er, a Bell Telephone Co. main- 
tenance man, bowling alley and 
golf driving range operators, and 
guards at a“half-dozen factories, 
including a Radio Corp. of 
America plant and the struck 
Fairless works of U.S. Steel Corp. 
serve the workers in some of the 
plants, but he couldnt get by the 
guards, 
Y& & 
Two toll collectors at an inter- 
change of the Pennsylvania Turn- 
pike referred the notices to high. 
er-ups. A spokesman said — the 
Turnpike Commission’s legal de- 
partment was studying the case, 
but the commission felt the turn- 
pike is a necessary function, 
“The toll collectors are being 
paid, aren’t they?’’ said Dougher- 
“They're worldly employed, 
laws.” 
    were working on the weekly pa- — 
Dougherty saidhe wanted to . 
ty. 
and that is prohibited by the blue   
{sider the $4 fine a business ex ee pense, f an “ ; 
SA ee 
For years, the blue laws were 
oT almost never’ enforced, but 4 
= fee to @ considerate visitor to the jected, tO A nearby discount hotse Paignton, Eng. zoo, Chumley, an 18-month-old chimpanzee, beats |yoing 'business on Sunday. Since 
. the heat in a conventional human manner. The savoring simian |then arrests have. been made 
never had it so good in his, native Nigeria, oo “ x |throughout the state.” : 
1 ‘ : ° ' i a ‘ get i i \ \ 
ahd ee e | " ! } ] : 2 ; itz ~ 
= eqs EL he oS igs hic bceyee ee   
  cen a als Mica 
    rc RDB: 
   
  nt lh te RES 
  ‘United States, but that “‘they had . * 
i 
  | 
Toren Ee Renee 0 q 
j 
FOR FIRST ATOMIC CARRIER — Nuclear power for the 
world’s first atomic aircraft carrier will be generated within the 
walls of this ring. It’s the top section for one of eight reactors 
which will be installed in the USS Enterprise. In the background 
is the lid for it. The two steel alloy forgings, made by U. S. Steel 
in Pittsburgh, Pa., weigh over 55 tons. 
  
Status of Legislation 
WASHINGTON (AP) — Following is the status of major 
legislation in Congress at the end of this week. (E means 
enacted or awaiting Presidential action; PHemeans passed 
House; PS means passed Senate; CH means in House Com- 
mittee; CS means in Senate Committee; HC means on House 
calendar awaiting action; SC means on Senate calendar). | 
Emergency unemployment compensation — E 
General labor legislation — PS-CH | 
Airport development aid — E ; I 
Foreign aid —E 
Housing — Vetoed 
School construction aid — CH-CS 
Civil rights — CH-CS 
Draft extension — E | 
Statehood for Hawaii — E 
Aid for depressed areas — PS-CH % { 
Increase in international monetary funds — E REA Reorganization — Vetoed 
Wartime tax extension —E 
Debt limit increase — E 
States rights — PH-CS 
Wheat controls — Vetoed | 
Tobacco controls — Vetoed 
  
Soviet Censors | Life Sentences Go 
Still Plague to Child-Stranglers U.S. Newsmen 
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)—Mrs. 
MOSCOW ® — Russia has hit/Wanda Brogdon and her former on @ neat system of applying its lover, Archie Merriam, were sen-| censorship to resident foreign! tenced to life imprisonment for, 
correspondents covering the Nixon Staneling her two young sons. | 
visit but extending complete fhee:| avn preg ly shen, pais 
dom to file to those who came|jast Thursday. The same jury over with the vice president’s' fixed their punishment Sunday. | 
party. ~e« & Merriam admitted he strangled, i B : | Just why such a twist in censor- | 3 = ry ca slid be pores ship seemed logical to the Rus-| at their mother’s instigation. She sians was hard to understand by denied it. : 
either group of correspondents./ The prosecution sought death Here is how it works: |for both Mrs. Brogdon and Mer- 
A newsman coming from Wash- | ‘iam. 
ington with Nixon could put in |_ “I had expected to die," Mrs. a telephone call, dictate his |Brogdon said. I wanted to be 
story, or file in by telegraph, jwiths the boys. | without passing it through the | . 
censors. | Indians Would Never 
But not, so far, the resident Beat Custer This Way American correspondent who cov- . , 
cco on agrandy ass HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Warner even though he might write 8D | arnie Williams to Monument Val-| almost identical story. lle Utah, at th nt | The - censor often cuts great | oy Grads Sohn Foun | chunks out of the story and al- Ford wired the studio Wiliams | 
mmost always delays its move-lwas needed to give bow-and-ar-| 
ment by 30 minutes to more than|row lessons to Indians hired for three hours. Protests were ig- the director’s “Captain Buffalo,” | 
nares. on location in Utah. Ford said. most of the redmen 
have never pulled a bow. 
Sees Big Difference aes 
in Russia, Poland cet sia ot ronches and ante wien 
TRENTON, N.J, (UPI) — Gov. |No-Reach is on sale at Cunning- Robert B. Meyner said on his re-|ham’s, — pg nog nin turn from behind the Iron Curtain |Cloonan’s Natie rug, that the difference between Poland |$t0re- Dist. by National, McKesson. :. é Kerr, Wetherbee, and Russia was “like day and 
night.’ ” 
      
} 
{ 
  
  
    
      * * * 
Meyner, who recently visited 
both countries, said that while the 
Russians appeared ‘thoroughly. 
indoctrinated,”’ the Poles seemed 
“more prone t6 criticize and have 
not accepted the same extremes 
of communism." 
* * * . 
Meyner, who toured Russia with 
seven other governors, said he 
found the Russian people did not 
“have a clear conception” of the MIMEOGRAPHING 
SERVICE 
Bulletins, . 
; Letters, E 
FAST SERVICE! 
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DEPARTMENT TORE a: NI. Saginaw Je .  
        ' 48 West Huron Street THE PONTIAC PRESS / 
  ‘MONDAY, JULY 27,. 1959 
Owned and rote ety ha ee Pe cone \ 
Howsnp 3. Prseorsate I, Joun am Oe jouw A.  . President and Secretary and te ‘Treasurer 
Sotenes Monaser > Advestising 
Bax Rugs. Jon! Qeoacs C. Inman, 
=< Circulation Manager Local Advertising Classified Manager 
  Other Nations Question 
Castro’s Know-How 
As The Sunday Graphic says in 
England: 
“The art of governing is 
rather more difficult than the 
art of growing a beard. Fidel 
Castro has made this discov- 
ery — but too late in the day 
for the health of Cuba.” 
x * * 
Well, Castro may not be quite that 
far gone, but he’s on the skids. 
They’re greased, 
too—and lightning 
fast. 
His resignation 
was purely an act 
to impress the 
world and it prob- 
ably did. The de- 
mand for his re- 
turn may have 
been synthetic in pet but he still has 
an immense following in Cuba and 
his loyal supporters were found on 
every hand. They answered the call. 
x * * Castro was a dashing world figure 
when he visited this country at the 
invitation of the American Society of 
Newspaper Editors. He was wined, 
dined andthe red carpets ran in all 
directions. 
  x * * 
That was three short months ago 
and in the meantime he has discov- 
ered that speaking in faltering, 
broken English and “meeting a pay- 
roll” are light years apart. Cuban 
* economy has been belted amidships. 
Castro’s world standing has beer 
greatly impaired as he has played 
footsy with the Commies — or as his 
aides have. He himself may stand 
relatively clear, but he breathes an 
unhealthy atmosphere. 
x *k * 
Great nations are losing faith. 
He must bring about a sound 
economy in his country irrespec- 
tive of his grand flourishes and 
his political pyrotechnics. Speeches 
and histrionics won’t cut the mus- 
tard any more. It’s time for 
constructive action and sound 
thinking. Are these within 
Castro’s ken? They have evaded 
him so far. Time is running short 
and now he must produce. His 
great belief in himself, his popu- 
larity at home and his “way with 
the people” are all interesting, but 
x *k * 
In the end, we must have first 
things first. Castro, the curtain has 
fallen on the sword waving, and the 
old order changeth. 
Home Rule for Capital 
Given Senate Approval 
For the fifth time the Senate has 
voted to give home rule to the Dis- 
trict of Columbia, that is the City 
of Washington. The bill provides for 
an elected mayor, a nine member city 
council and a non-voting delegate 
to the House of Representatives. 
x k * For the past 85 years the Dis- 
trict has had no voice in its own 
affairs and its people no elec- toral vote of any kind. They can 
vote only for delegates to the 
Republican and Democratic Na- . 
tional Conventions, for the party national committeemen and for members of the local party 
committees. The new measure 
would give them about the same 
rights as Alaska and Hawaii had under territorial rule. 
~*~ *k * As things stand now the three 
  the price of dog licenses, Home rule 
advocates contend that this is ridic- 
_ ulously petty work for a national 
legislature. More important \local 
[' — \ problems also are neglected because 
House and Senate cannot take 
enough time from national affairs to 
act as a city council. 
x * * 
The injustice of the situation 
has long been recognized. Presi- 
dent Eisenhower has repeatedly 
requested remedial action. It is to 
be hoped, therefore, that the 
House will pass the bill and that 
Congress at long last will give up 
its control of the people of the 
District and grant them some of 
the privileges enjoyed by other 
citizens. 
  
“AMERICANS are geiting fat and 
dumpy from sitting around too 
much,” says a Boston physician. Yes. 
They should keep on their toes far 
more tharf—er, that is, they should 
keep on their toes a lot more. 
      
  
~~ a 
“One thing that will cause the hair 
to turn gray is a lack of vitamins,” 
says a physician. Another thing is a 
lack of youth. 
    
The Man About Town 
Brown Speckles There’s a Bonus of $50 
for Them at 4-H Fair 
Freckles: What can have a 
monetary value.   
  
This column’s freckle contest at next 
week's annual Oakland County 4-H Club 
Fair already is assured of fully as many 
entries as last year. Then the judges had 
the difficult task of selecting the winner 
from among 34 boys and girls. 
The Pontiac Press again gives a $50 
U.S. savings bond to the youth of 18 years 
or under who displays the best assort- 
ment of freckles. It costs nothing to enter. 
You may win the $50 and be the champ. 
Watch this cdlumn for the time and 
place, and in the meantime be grooming 
your freckles. The judges will be selected 
by the fair management. 
  Bunching his hospital experience, 
Herbert J. Strohkirch 
of Clarkston, had an operation at Pontiac 
General, and without even leaving the 
building, registered for another. Both were 
successful, and he again is in good health. 
  
Celebrating his 92nd birthday today, 
Joseph Clements 
of474% West Pike St., received from 
“President 
Dwight D. Eisenhower 
a birthday card. 
  Two Pontiac area villages whose limits 
are less than three miles apart, Holly 
and Fenton, are getting chummy. A ten- 
lane bowling alley midway between them 
is being erected. by 
Stan Gmelich, 
and an adjoining 12-business trading 
center is in prospect. 
  Gas in limited quantities was found 
near the surface in Royal Oak a few years 
ago, and used to heat the home of the 
late 
3 Harry J. Merritt 
and others. It probably was seepage from 
& deep vein. Gas and oil companies now 
are investigating its possibilities, and a 
well may be sunk there. 
  The Stephenson Highway extension out of Detroit may take the place of the Dixie 
Highway as Oakland County’s main 
street, going east of Pontiac. State High- 
way Commissioner 
John C. Mackie 
states that one-third of the money spent 
for through highways in Michigan dur- 
ing the next few years will be used in Oakland County. John inherited a diffi- 
von job, but he appears to be doing it we 
  The parakeet in the home of 
Mr. and Mrs. Eber Colchester 
of Keego is an inveterate rounder. It spends a night out every time it can es- cape, then sleeps “ of the next day. 
  With television at its lowest ebb in its caréer, and the lovely 
Alice Lon __ 
no longer appearing, why does 
have a TV set? 
Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Ida Kanze 
of 950 Spence St.; 92nd birthday. 
Joseph. Clementz 
of 174% West Pike &t.; 92nd birthday. 
Mrs. Frank Crocker 
of 644 Riverside Drive; 82nd birthday. 
Mrs, Jessie Kessell 
of Oxford; 87th birthday 
a ® anybody 
      Widening Ripples .. . Service, Ing. * 
  
David Lawrence Says:   
Union Lock-in Tactics Rights Blow 
WASHINGTON — The biggest 
scandal in local government in 
Amerita today isn't attracting 
much attention. 
Is it generally 
accepted that 
American cit i- 
zens can be de- 
nied police pro- 
tection when 
they are pre- 
vented forcibly— 
upon the orders 
of a labor union 
—from working 
at their jobs? 
This would 
seem to be a violation of the Con- 
stitution of the United States, which 
guarantees the ‘privileges and im- 
munities’ of all citizens. 
Two big steel companies have 
been told that their supervisory 
personnel would not be permitted 
te enter and leave the plants 
without the consent of certain 
labor unions, 
Thus are ‘civil rights’’ lost. If 
the right of entry were denied at 
a Little Rock School, there would 
be demands for a return of federal 
troops. 
But in northern states today the 
local authorities which are sup- 
posed to preserve law and order 
and punish anyone who intimidates 
another citizen or threatens bodily 
violence, look the other way and 
let organizations continue their 
threatening and intimidating tac- 
tics. 
  LAWRENCE 
x * * 
Last week news dispatches tell- 
ing of what was happening in the 
plants of two large steel companies 
were transmitted -throughout the 
country by the press associations. 
But not a single protest has come 
from Congress or its Civil Rights 
Commission, nor has any public 
official of the states or counties 
where all this has been happening 
explained to the American people 
why they ignore the loss of ‘‘civil 
rights’’ in their respective locali- 
ties. 
TRAGIC STORY™ 
Here are extracts from two news 
dispatches from the United Press 
International that tell the tragic 
story of how American citizens are 
deprived of their right to work. 
One is from East Chicago, Illinois, 
dated July 24, and says: 
“A dispute over an ‘open gate’ 
policy at the Youngstown Sheet 
and Tube Co.’s Indiana Harbor 
Works seemed likely to delay the 
issuance of pay checks to 
striking united steelworkers 
there today. About 600 members 
of the United Steelworkers Local 
1011 voted last night not to allow 
non-union personnel to enter and 
leave the plant.” 
It so happens that pay checks 
for a period just before the nation- 
wide steel strike began are due 
now. The Youngstown Sheet and 
Tube Co. has several hundred 
supervisory employees who are not 
unionized, and they are locked up 
voluntarily in the plant because, 
once they leave, they would not be   
The Country Parson 
  “A man, like his car, needs, an 
overhauling when he gets to 
knocking,”’ , tion, which, allowed back into the office build- 
ing by the union pickets. 
* * * 
The unions had proposed that 
some union personmel needed for 
the issuance of the pay checks 
could go back into the building long 
enough to write the checks, but 
immediately after this task was 
finished, they would not be allowed 
to return, and the supervisors also 
would be locked out once they left 
the plant. The company refused to 
make such an agreement. 
ANOTHER CASE 
Another dispatch on the same 
kind of dispute came from Pitts- 
burgh on July 21. It said that an 
agreement was reached to allow 
the free passage of personne! to 
and from the Pittsburgh and near- by Aliquippa Works of the Jones & 
Laughlin Corp. 
But the agreement was made 
only after the company’ had applied 
for an injunction in the local 
county courts. The joint statement 
of the union and the company read 
as follows: 
“The union and the corpora- 
tion have agreed that all super- 
visory and salaried employees in 
the corporation having business 
in the Pittsburgh and Aliquippa 
Works will pass freely in and 
out of the Works, 
“The corporation will promptly 
discontinue the injunction proceed- 
ings which it commenced against 
the union in the courts of common 
pleas of Allegheny and Beaver 
Counties."” 
  
Dr. William Brady Says:   
Avoid German Measles, 
Expectant Mothers Told, 
In 694 cases of rubella (German 
measies) during the first 16 weeks 
of pregnancy, reports Dr. Julia 
Bell in British 
Medical Journal, 
412 of the wom- 
en bore defec- 
tive children, 
some of the chil- 
dren having 
more than one 
defect. 
Cataract was 
noted in 491 of 
the children, 
deafness in 263, DR. BRADY 
congenital heart defect in 210. In 
many cases the defect became ap- 
parent only when the children were 
five or six years old or older. In 
most of these cases of congenital 
defect, the mother had rubella in 
the early months of pregnancy. 
Formerly doctors regarded 
German measles as a mild ail- 
ment of no particular signifi- 
eance, Prior to 1940 standard 
medical textbooks said nothing 
about the effects ef German 
measles in pregnancy. 
I can't believe the doctors of 
yesteryear were so unobservant 
that they failed to notice the as- 
sociation of German measles in 
early pregnancy with the birth of 
defective children. However, I am 
not at present prepared to advance 
a plausible theory to explain the 
apparent discrepancy. 
I suspect there’s some error—it 
doesn’t seem reasonable that such 
a mild illness as German measles 
in the expectant mother can so 
gravely mar the development of 
her baby. This doubt has made 
me reluctant to say anything about 
the effect of maternal rubella on 
the unborn child. 
I know of no evidence to sup- 
port the theory that injection of 
serum from rubella convales- 
cents is advisable to immunize 
the pregnant woman against 
German measles or to minimize 
the effect on the unborn child if 
the expectant mother has Ger- 
man méasles. But it may well 
be that this treatment or some- 
thing like it has merit. 
Anyway, it is well to remember 
that rubella is a respiratory infec- 
like measles, diph- 
whooping cough, polio- 
myelitis, chicken-pox, small-pox, 
scarlet .fever, meningitis and 
the other respiratory infections, 
spreads via the moisture spray 
given off from nose and mouth 
  theria, 
“when the one who has or is com- 
ing down with the disease coughs, | 
sneezes or talks. 
The germs or Virus of the dis- 
a) “I lead a lonely and palpable or invisible and im- 
palpable droplets of moisture in 
the spray. Therefore no one pur- 
ports to have a “‘cold” should be 
permitted to get closer than five 
feet to an expectant mother. 
* * * 
Signed letters, not more than one 
or 100 words long pertaining to 
personal health and hygiene, not dis- 
ease, diagnosis, or treatment, will be 
answered by Dr. William Brady, if a 
stamped, self-addressed envel is sent 
to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. 
1959) Voice of the ea 
¢ ommends Spo 
for Coverage 0 f   
    rts Staff of Baseball   
¥ dae Ge ide olenid cuecticamt your very tie pects Staff — 
very excellent 
Day held in Pontiac July 19. 
; x * 
It was the second largest baschall 
oor goal of lighiedasctall (hardball) dlamond for aight 
* Guy Moats, Chuck Abair and Bill Cornwell — for the 
coverage and reporting of the réceiit Amateur Baseball 
* 
* The above was made possible through your cooperation and the excellent promotion of The Press. 
Pontiac.” Yours for a “Bigger and Better 
J. H. Patrick Giynn, President 
Pontiac Baseball Federation 
  
Mutual Destruction Likely 
if Big Nations Test Might 
By ELTON ©. FAY 
AP Military Writer 
WASHINGTON — Back of the 
sharp exchanges between Premier 
Nikita Khrushchev and Vice Pres- 
ident Richard M. Nixon and the 
calmer but deadly serious diplo- 
matic discussions in Geneva is the 
belief held by. each nation that it 
is dealing from military superi- 
ority. 
There can be pitfalls in follow- 
ing this philosophy. One of them 
could be wrong. Or worse, both 
could bé almost. right. Mutual 
destruction of both nations could 
be the result. 
* * * 
When Khrushchev says Russian 
rockets are better than American 
weapons and Nixon says the United 
States has good ones too, each is 
relying on what his military scien- 
tists and strategists tell him. 
Neither Khrushchev nor Nixon 
is a military professional. 
Khrushchev was a political gen- 
eral in World War I, Nixon a 
reserve commander in the Navy. 
In their ‘‘my-brother-can-lick- 
your-brother” arguments they 
must depend on the evalutions of 
their respective military profes- 
sionals, And the enthusiasm of 
military men for things they create 
or plans they devise can over- 
reach actua] attainment. 
NEVER TRIED 
The two men tossed words about 
their missiles at each other. But 
except for the primitive, short- 
range weapons used in the closing 
days of World War II, ballistic 
missiles never have been tried in 
actual combat. 
And the V2 missiles used then 
were German, not Russian er 
American. 
There is considerable difference . 
between launching a ballistic mis- 
sile under the carefully arranged 
conditions of a test and firing one 
in the frantic atmosphere of war. 
An enemy wouldn't wait for long 
countdowns. 
* * * 
Nor, at this present stage of the 
art of missiles, is launching re- 
liability the only problem: There 
is the matter of hitting what you 
aim at, 
American experts express be- 
Nef that while Russia may at 
the moment be ahead in propul- 
sion, it trails in the field of guidance. Again, this is the 
opinion of one group of military 
men. 
This may explain, in part, 
Khrushchev’s loud demand for re- 
moval of U.S. bases in Europe. 
The importance of accuracy in 
guidance lessens as the range 
shortens; it is easier to aim an 
intermediate range ballistic mis- 
sile (IRBM) than to hope to hit a 
target at 5,500 miles with an in- 
tercontinental ballistic missile 
(ICBM), 
FEW IRBM UNITS 
But Khrushchev’s concern over 
American bases in Europe ob- 
viously isn't confined to missile 
launching pads. The United States . 
is only beginning to deploy a 
comparatively few IRBM missile 
units abroad. 
These aircraft would work with 
the long-range B52 bombers, and 
probably would be called upon to 
make the first retaliatory strikes 
before the B52s could reach Rus- 
sian target areas. 
x * *® 
To the long-range and medium 
bombers must be added the nu- 
clear weapon planes of the U:S. 
Navy, with carriers in the Med- 
iterranean and Eastern Atlantic. 
Portraits 
By JAMES J. METCAIFE 
Minto died some months ago 
. The dearest friend I had... 
An: understatement it would be 
.. To say that I was sad .. . His 
name is always in my prayers... 
Each morning and each night. . . 
A man who did his best to 
do .. . The things he thought 
were right .. . He made mistakes 
from time to time . . . As most 
of us all do... And yet those 
common errors were . . Compar- 
atively few . _ Everybody loved 
him, and . : His sister most of 
al... Katie who was always 
at . . . His every beck and call 
. . . Katie who presented me. . . 
With cuff links that he wore 
. . . The dearest of momentos 
I... Shall treasure evermore.   
  
Case Records of a Psychologist:   
Marriage Helps Men Live Longer 
Men notoriously tease their 
wives about being a “ball and 
chain”, but this is malarky: As 
soon as a husband becomes a 
widower, he is usually eager to 
marry. again, for marriage is 
wonderful. It actually adds 
years to your lifespan, lessens 
your chances of peptic ulcer 
and heart trouble, and even 
puts more zest in the taste of 
food. See the proof below. 
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE 
CASE C-401: Hank G., aged 39, 
is a bachelor industrialist. 
* * * 
“Dr. Crane, I 
suppose I ought 
to get married,” 
he ‘admitted, ‘‘for 
life, especially 
after I quit work 
at 5 p. m. 
“And I notice 
that my married 
friends seem to 
be less tense. Few 
of them have ul- 
cers. And I sel- DR. CRANE 
dom hear of a married man with 
excessively high. blood pressure. 
“But several of my bachelor 
friends at the Club are constantly 
nursing ulcers or taking pills for 
high blood pressure. 
* * * 
“So please send me an Applica- 
tion Blank for your Scientific Mar- 
riage Foundation.” 
  ‘HUSBANDS ARE HEALTHIER 
Happy marriage. is a wonderful 
aid to a man’s morale and also is 
good insurance for longer life, 
You can always make your 
    longer than bachelors. So please 
explain just why this is true.’’ 
x « * 
First, married men can unload 
their troubles verbally when they 
get home. 
And this act of exploding, re- 
lieves inner tension; hence, the 
married man is-less likely to 
have a peptic ulcer or continue 
an elevated blood pressure. 
Second, the married man eats 
proved, for eating is a sociable 
event, starting when the baby is 
first able to sit in a high chair at 
tthe family dinner table. 
* * * 
As a result, in later adulthood, 
a vital part of the dinner situation 
is lacking when a person must 
dine alone. We subconsciously 
crave human companionship with 
our meals, and married men have 
this. 
WIFELY NURSES 
' Third, a married man is coddled 
and nursed by his wife when he 
has the flu or any other malady. 
Even though males are regard- 
ed as the strong, superior sex 
they know they have a dutiful 
wife to serve as nurse. 
Millions of bachelors and om 
sters become “worry warts” over 
their health after bor ter pass 40. 
“Suppose I had a heart attack,” 
they imagine, “and were all 
    Married people likewise keep 
more regular hours and thus get 
more sleep. 
And their love for each other is 
a wholesome extrovertive force 
that takes their attention off their 
own epidermis and their “‘in- 
nards.” 
Unmarried people tend 
more about their inside 
=| BACHELOR CLuB   
  
      
and thus worry unduly about heart 
or cancer, gall bladder ahd con- 
stipation. 
If you bachelors or widowers 
sincerely want to be introduced to 
congenial, charming women of 
good looks, high morals and jolly 
dispositions, then send for an Ap- 
plication Blank for tthe Scientific 
Marriage Foundation, enclosing a 
‘stamped return envelope, plus 20 
cents (non-profit). 
Pee sh hg A Dr. “g ted Af Omer 
Michi gan. ne long "4c stamped, 
(and, doe to cover 
send 
ge Bh oy and pam- 
            
      
    
  
  
  
  
  
      
       / a 2 j | . \ . 
THE PONTIAC P Lisa, MONDAY, JULY\ 27, 1959   
  
L q 
PENNE) LWAYS FIRST QUAL Thomas Jefferson, third pfesi-; 
' dent of the United States, “=i ressmen 
greatly interested in music, He j \ 
q asked a friend to find him ‘a gar- ; 
gener and a stonemason ‘who could 
Eayvoe at ne oe ot DP QIC® NIXON Both Sides’ Members 
PAYDAY Feel Vice President Is 
‘Mey-¥ i ‘| Matching Red Boss 
WASHINGTON (AP)—Vice Pres-| | 
: ident Richard M. Nixon is proving} 
himself a match for Soviet Pre-|   
  
        
  siiatanlalaaiiiesdeinilsii " — 
i mier Nikita Khrushchev, in the. opinion of several Congress mem-| 
bers. 
x *« * 
Sen. Mike Mansfield of Mon- 
tana, the assistant Democratic 
leader, said Nixon is “‘making the 
best of a very difficult and deli- 
$5 O for 2 are cate situation’ during his visit to 
Moscow. 
| ... only 70¢! kok 
) 
  “He is rolling with the punches’ 
other loans to $500 thrown at him by Khrushchev,” 
. Mansfield said, ‘‘He is also send- 
with 24 mos. to. repay ing ‘back some good punches.” 
| CASH YOU | REPAY IN | REPAY IN Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R- 
RECEIVE | 2 WEEKS | 4 WEEKS (iy), a former ambassador, said 
$25.00 $25.35 $25.70 in a separate interview he thinks 
|Nixon has matched Khrushchey in « i ve 1.40 } r 
| = Ll : \‘directness and toughness’ in     
  
    
      
            
        | ee ee ‘their informal, caustic exchanges. | 
$300, end’ 34% per month on ony romeintes | “Nixon is doing exactly what is| 
needed,’ Cooper said. ‘‘He’s talk-! 
ASSOCIATES ing the only kind of language) 
LOAN COMPANY Khrushchev can understand.” 
Rep. Richard M. Simpson (R- 
in DRAYTON PLAINS: Pa) said in a statement that 
| 4494 Dixie Hwy. Nixon’s verbal encounter with 
| . Khrushchey was ‘‘a superb ex- 
CALL: OR 3-1207 ample of courage and_intelli- 
| in PONTIAC: eS eee 
| 125-127 N. Saginaw Pi eng = Dirksen ane : é the nate ‘leader, to. a 
CALL: FE 2-0214 television audience he thinks Nix- 
on has helped both himself and the 
2255 S. Telegraph nation by his actions, and added: 
| Mich. Miracle Mile “Frankly, I’m quite proud of his’ 
| CALL: FE 8-$64]1 performance in the Soviet! 
! Union.” 
Tax Probe 
| Doesn't Worry 
: Affable Long (Advertisement)   
    
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J 
       
    _ SIXTEJ 
and Mrs. Mr. 
regatta ball, too. Mr. 
Area Personals   Elmer 
‘Sylvan Lake enjoyed the 43rd annual 
Fezze), Fezzey of , 
a past ber of THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JU yi 31.) 1959 4 
|   
  70Ut WADI H 
Photes Pontiac Press 
commodore and the oldest living mem- 
the club. still enjovs dancing. 
Plan Caribbean Dance 
“Caribbean Capers” is the 
title of the dinner dance to 
be held at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 8 — 
at Forest Lake Country Club. 
Everyone attending is expect- 
ed to don a crazy hat and vie 
for a prize offered for the 
most unusual one. 
In charge of the event — 
which will be complete with 
South Sea decor — are Mr. 
and Mrs. Donald Hacker. As- 
sisting will be Mr. and Mrs. 
John Baker, Mr. and Mrs. 
James McGuire and Mr. and 
Mrs. Eino Nurme. 
* * * 
Born July 21 at St. Joseph 
Mercy Hospital to Mr. and 
Mrs. Roger .A. Maison (nee 
Karen Tollenaar) of South 
Rosejawn drive was a daugh- 
ter, Kim Marie. 
Grandparents are Mn and 
Mrs. C. H. Tollenaar of Starr 
avenue and Mr. and Mrs. C.E. 
Maison of Illinois avenue. 
* * * 
Recent visitors to Western 
Michigan University Campus 
for a two-day get-acquainted 
visit were Shirley G. Hutchi- 
son of Lakeward lane and 
Douglas Voydanoff of the Mark 
avenue. Both plan to be fresh- 
man at the University this 
fall. 
* * * 
Mr. and Mrs. Max A. Evans 
(nee Dorothy Cadieux) of 
Dwight avenue announce the 
birth of a son, Mark Alan 
born July 11. 
Grandparents are Mr. and 
Mrs. A. J. Cadieux of Berk- 
_ley avenue and Mr. and Mrs. 
  
  
    943 $. Hunter — Birmingham TO PLEASE A MAN, 
CALL CAREFUL DAN 
FOR FLAWLESS — 
DRY CLEANING 
  Not only his 
clothes but the whole 
family’s deserve Pontiac 
Laundry’s gentile care 
and -expert workmanship. 
And it costs no more to 
have finer dry cleaning. valuable 
Call Careful Dan at 
FE 2-8101 
Enjoy Insured 
Mothproofing FREE 
DRY CLEANERS 
7-Hour Service at Our 
2 Locations 
540 $. Telegraph Road 
2682° West 12’ Mile — Berkley   | their daughter, 
| Eugene L. Sawyer, Claude A. Evans of Johnson 
avenue. 
* * * 
Mrs. Raymond LaBarge and 
son Ricky, Lawrence Beamer, 
Charles Beamer and son Larry 
have returned home after a 
motor trip through Ohio, Penn- 
sylvania, Maryland and New 
Jersey. 
While there, they visited rel- 
atives in Lancaster, Pa. and 
Robert Beamer at the Naval 
Hospital in Philadelphia, Pa. 
They also attended the USA- 
USSR track meeting at Frank- 
lin Field in Philadelphia. 
* * * 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roach 
of Pine street have just re- 
turned 
where they 
neral of Mr. from Traverse Cify 
attended the fu- 
Roach’s sister 
  MYRNA J. LANGDON 
Announcing the engagement of 
Myrna J., to 
are Mr. and 
_ Mrs. Harry Langdon of Airline 
‘avenue, Orchard Lake. Parents 
of the prospective bridegroom 
are Mr, and Mrs. Loren Sawyer 
of Farner street, Drayton Plains. 
No date has been set for the 
wedding. The Rev. and Mrs. A. L. 
Chester of North Parke street 
were honored Friday evening 
by a surprise party to cele- 
brate their 25th wedding anni- 
versary. 
The party was given by their 
children and friends and rela- 
tives were guests. ,; 
* * x 
Carole Gene Smith of Bir- 
mingham has been accepted 
as a student at Christian Col- 
ege, junior college for women 
in- Columbia, Mo. 
Miss Smith, daughter of Mrs. 
Marjorie W. Otto of Birming- 
ham, has been accepted for 
the 1959-60 school year. 
His and Her’s 
Shower Honors 
Pontiac Couple 
Mr. and Mrs. Ariel B. Davis 
of South Roslyn drive honored 
Carol Young and Wayne Pyke 
at a “His and Her’s shower’ 
Sunday afternoon. 
Miss Young, the daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Young of 
Riviera Terrace and Mr. Pyke, 
son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. 
Pyke of State avenue, will ex- 
change vows Aug. 29 at All 
Saints Church. 
Guests at the shower were 
Mr. and Mrs. Young, Mr. and 
Mrs. Pyke, Mr. and Mrs. Lay- 
mon Young, Mr. and Mrs. Mel- 
vin Smail, Mr. and Mrs. Lin- 
nie Young, Mr. and Mrs. Da- 
vid Grover, Mr. and Mrs. John 
DeVine and Mr. and Mrs. 
George Pyke. 
Keep Hands Clean 
An expert frum Pennsy!- 
vania’s state virus diagnostic 
laboratory, speaking of a high- 
ly contagious virus, says that 
most viruses are transmitted 
by personal contact, And, he 
adds, just about the best pre- 
ventive known is old-fashioned 
(and frequent) hand washing— 
same as we were taught in 
_first, grade: I Boat Club Ho The Oakland County 
Boat Club held its 
43rd. annual regatta 
ball at its Sylvan Lake 
clubhouse Saturday 
evening. There were 
200 members and 
. guests present for din- 
ner and approximately 
350 attended the dance 
later. 
Commodore of the 
club is John A. Benson 
of South Tilden ave- 
nue. Cochairmen for 
the affair were Donald 
J. Kelly of Club drive in 
Bloomfield Hills and 
Maurice Wilcox of Wil- 
liams Lake road. 
Bare Toes 
Are Taboo 
in Office 
BY EMILY POST 
“Dear Mrs. Post: Is it bad 
taste for young women. to go 
without stockings to a business 
office when the legs are deeply 
tanned?. Does it matter that 
the toes show through the 
shoes — which in fact would 
be the only giveaway that 
stockings are missing. I am 
not comfortable in close-toed 
shoes, particular in hot weath- 
er.” 
  
Answer: If you wear open- 
toed shoes, you very certain- 
ly must wear stockings. With 
close-toed shoes and deeply 
tanned legs, lack of stockings 
would not be noticed and there- 
fore is permissable. 
  
“Dear Mrs. Post: How 
should one address a wedding 
gift before the wedding day? 
And how should the card be 
signed by a husband and wife: 
Mary and John Blank or Mr. 
and Mrs. Anthony Blank?” 
  
Answer: A_ wedding gift 
should be sent to Miss Mary 
Maidenname, and if you have 
a Mrs. and Mrs. visiting card 
you enclose it or write ‘Mr. 
and” before the engraving on 
your own card. 
As a rule, ‘Best wishes’’ is 
‘written across the top of the 
card. If vou have to use a 
plain card, then merely the 
name Mr. and Mrs. John 
Blank should be written on it 
or else, “With all best wishes 
from Mary and John Blank.” 
  
“Dear Mrs. Post: I gave a 
surprise shower for a friend 
of mine who is soon to be 
married. ‘I did not invite the 
bridegroom’s mother to the 
shower and have been severe- 
ly criticized for not doing so. 
I have been told that both 
mothers are always invited 
to a shower. Will you please 
tell me if I was wrong?” 
  Answer: If the shower was 
limited to the bride-to-be’s 
own young friends, it was 
certainly not necessary to in- 
vite the bridegroom’s mother. 
But if other older people were 
invited she should have been 
too. 
Bridge Club Holds 
Its Masterpoint 
Pontiac Bonneville Bridge 
Club held its masterpoint game 
Saturday at Hotel Waldron. 
Winnegs were Mr. and Mrs. 
Ernest L. Guy, Melvin Smail 
Jack Gordon and Mrs, Smail. 
Others were Mrs. Bernice 
Dawson; Mrs. Norma Keller 
and Mary Malchie. 4 
Ids Regatta Ball > 
  Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Stieve, left, were guests 
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Kelly at the Oakland 
County Boat Club dance. Mr. Kelly is a member 
He apie ait otiny Shiba a 
Mr. and Mrs. Dawson Baer, left, are enjoying 
a few moments of conversation with their guests, Mr. 
and Mrs. Harold S. Jacobsen Jr., before the dancing 
Family Dinner 
Honors Couple 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. 
Buckley 
sary. 
Held July 19 at the couple's 
home on Cedar Island road, the 
affair was given by their six 
children, Mrs. Stuart Fournier, 
Mrs. James Vallier, Mrs. Clar- 
Danny and Nor- 
both of Berea, ence Pizzala, 
mand Buckley, 
Ohio. 
Guests 
East Tawas, 
Lake and Livonia. 
the greatest distance for were present 
Caro, Wal 
William Cutsinger 
apolis, Ind. 
Better to Blot 
Lipstick stays on better and 
longer if allowed to set for a 
is ap- 
plied. Then you may blot the few minutes after it 
excess gently with a tissue. were honored at a 
family dinner in celebration of 
their 40th wedding anniver- 
from 
loon 
Traveling 
the 
occasion was 87-year-old Mrs. 
of Indian- 
  
    
"JULY 
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99¢ 
Group of Summer Cottons 
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1 Group of Dresses 
I, off 
1 Group Late Summer Dresses 
1/3 off 
Group of Skirts from $10.98 
$3.99 — 
    
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BEAUTY JOD ‘‘siop Saginaw Street 
FE 8-3560   of the board of directors of the club, and served as 
program co-chairman for the evening with Maurice 
Wilcox, 
  A 
Pontiac Press Phote 
begins Saturday evening at the Oakland County 
Boat Club. 
directors. 
Honeymoon in Miami 
After Evening Ceremony 
Baskets of white gladioli, 
chrysanthemums and carna- 
tions with palms banked the 
aitar of Lake Orion Methodist 
Church for the Saturday eve- 
ning wedding of Mary Eliza- 
beth Hunt and Richard Lee 
Scribner 
The Rev. John H. Hall of 
Central Methodist Church, Pon- 
tiac, officiated at the double 
ring candlelight ceremony be- 
fore 300 guests. 
* * * 
Parents of the couple are 
Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Hunt 
of Lake Orion and Mrs. Nellie 
H. Scribner of Baldwin avenue 
and the late William E. Scrib- 
ner 
The bride’s gown of embroi- 
dered English ‘organdy over 
satin featured a Sabrina neck- 
line accented with sequins and 
seed pearls. The bouffant floor- 
length skirt of four tiers of ruf- 
fles formed a chapel sweep. 
Her fingertip veil of pure silk 
illusion was held in place by a 
lace cap trimmed with pearls 
and she carried a cascade bou- 
quet of pink rosettes, white 
roses and stephanotis on a 
Rainbow Bible. 
* * * 
Susan Kay Hunt was her sis- 
ter’s maid of honor, Brides- 
maids were Jean Huggins, the 
bridegroom's sister; Ann Tall- 
man and Bobbe Chambers of 
Lake Orion, 
They wore identical ballerina 
length gowns of velva ray over 
aqua taffeta trimmed with 
aqua cummerbunds and match- 
ing hats. They carried cascade 
bouquets of pink roses, carna- 
tions and white pom pons. 
Flower girl Janet Felkins 
wore a short white nylon dress 
with a pink rosette headpiece 
and carried qa basket of pink 
rose petals. 
Frank Gingell was best man. 
hers were Dick Chambers, 
mes Arnold, Larry Miller, 
aymond Parker and Keith 
Spear. 
A reception was held at 
Gingellville Community Hall. 
Before leaving for a honey- 
moon to Miami Beach, Fia., 
the bride changed to ‘a black 
sheath dress with white acces- 
sories and a corsage of white 
gardenias, 
The couple will live in Lake 
cymbidium 
_ orchid corsage for her daugh- 
    
  ms fi ter’s wedding, Mrs. Scribner 
was dressed in beige lace with 
matching accessories and a 
corsage of pink rosebuds. 
* \   MRS. RICHARD L. SCRIBNER 
Closeup Peek 
at Skies Offered 
by Cranbrook 
James A. Fowler, curator of 
education af Cranbrook Insti- 
tute of Science, has announced 
a series of observatory demon- 
strations for Wednesday even- 
ing, Aug. 12, when the skies 
may be viewed through a six- 
inch refractor telescope. 
° x ke we. 
Demonstrations are offered 
to Institute members, as well 
as the public, and will be 
scheduled at half-hour inter- 
vals from 8 to 10 p.m. 
Bookings are made by ap- 
pointment only and are limited 
to 15 people per half hour 
period. Members will be ad- 
mitted free, 
Calls concerning cancella- 
tions, should overcast skies de- 
velop, will be received at the 
Institute. 
* * * 
Additional public planetarium 
demonstrations are scheduled . 
' for July and August as follows: 
Tuesday, Wednesday and 
at 3pm. Wednes- 
day at 4 p.m.; Saturday and 
Sunday at 2:30 and 3:30 p.m. 
_ Velvet Cover-Up 
The little black velvet jacket is the ideal: cover-up for sheath 
  Mr. Baer is a member of the board of 
Citizenship 
Group Has 
Dinner 
Forty-five members and 
guests of Janice Antona's cit- 
izenship group who went with 
her to Washington, D.C. in 
June met for dinner Saturday 
evening at Devon Gables. 
* * * 
Slides and movies of the trip 
to Gettysburg, Yorktown, 
Jamestown, Williamsburg and 
Washington, D.C. were shown 
by members of the group. 
* * * 
Honored guests were tour 
leaders Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert 
W. Lindstrom. 
Trays in Various 
Sizes Are Handy 
Trays of various sizes can 
serve many an unexpected use. 
A large tray can be useful near 
the ironing board, to hold small 
laundered items such as socks, 
handkerchiefs, napkins, or 
dishtowels. 
These can then be carried en 
masse to drawers or shelves, 
in one easy trip—exemplifying 
the modern homemaker’s way 
of making the washing-ironing 
cycle quite painless! 
  KAY OBERLEE 
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Oberlee of 
Lansdowne _ street, Drayton 
-Plains announce the engage- 
met of their daughter, Kay, to 
Robert E. Shell. He is the son 
of Mr, and Mrs. Elden Shell 
of Cutler street, Drayton@ 
oul aia saa 
      
  
     
  
  
  
  sd Rae ‘a, Band 
} 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, J ues 27, 1959_ 
      
- Lions’ Rookie Sohne: inial   
Hard Court Tourney 
DENVER (AP) Ramanathan 
Krishman of India and Mrs: Bev- 
erly Fleitz of California were fa- 
vorites to win the National Hard 
Court Tennis Tournament which 
opened today,   “ ee 
  
EVENINGS 
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             "AP Wirephete 
INDIAN HEROES — Cleveland's Jim Perry (right), the rookie 
pitcher who hurled a two-hit shutout in the first game against 
Washington has a word of thanks for Woodie Held (left) who hit 
two home runs and drove in four runs as the Tribe won, 9-0. 
Perry, a 22-year-old, made his second Major League start a bril- 
liant one.   
‘Golf Club. 
The three-time State Publinx,   
Soldier Holds Lead 
in Pentathlon Trials 
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)—A 
twelve hour test of stamina in 
epee fencing put Pvt. Paul Pesthy | 
in first place at the National Pen- Andonian Wins Publinx 
Medal Title at Morey s Shooting a one-under-par 213 for champion was the only entry able, 
54 holes, Pontiac Central teacher to break par although his three. 
'Mike Andonian captured the Mich- closest rivals were only a single 
igan Publinx Medal Play tourna-|stroke behind. 
‘ment over the weekend at Morey’ ‘| They were George Catto, the 
| Central Michigan star who like 
Andonian was representing Syi- 
| van Glen, Bob Evans of Brae 
Burn and Wally Smith of Sunny- 
brook all had 214. 
Andonian had 14 birdies during 
the two days for scores of 105 and 
/108. He pulled away at the finish 
|with two of the birdies on the last 
four holes. 
* *® ® 
Catto had been the opening day 
leader at 101. He bogied two of ‘Two Veterans 
Split OB Duties 
in Sunday: Drill Big Defensive Tackle 
. Is Second Newcomer to 
Leave Camp 
Detroit Liew head coach 
Wilson today described as ‘“‘typi- 
cal” his squad’s first. scrimmage 
of the season, 
The club's rookies and several 
veterans in camp at Cranbrook 
yesterday underwent an intensive 
scrimmage for slightly more than 
an hour, 
“It was a typical first scrim. 
mage,” Wilson said. “There were 
an awful lot of rough edges.” 
Rookies comprised the major- 
ity of the offensive squad, The 
defense, which had three or four 
veterans, far overshadowed the of- 
Jerry Reichow and Earl Morrall 
shared quarterback duties. 
: * * * 
Dave Holden, a six-foot, seven- 
inch top rated defensive tackle, 
became the second player to leave 
camp yesterday. Wilson said Hold- 
en decided to return to his home 
in California. Ben Donnell, Van- 
derbilt, left Saturday without giv- 
ing any reason. 
PRO CAMP NOTES: ... ... .»<. 
WESTMINSTER, Md. The bal- 
timore Colts have less than a week 
of 1959 training behind them, but 
Coach Weeb Ewbank is already 
hesitantly comparing rookie Jerry 
ae with all-pro end Ray- 
mond Berry. j 
“He is already farther ad- 
vanced at this period than Berry 
was when he first came up 
here,” sald Ewbank yesterday 
after watching Richardson ‘ drill 
with his National Football 
League champions. 
“Shucks,"” drawled the 185-pound | rookie, “I’m just ‘plain scared.’ across the finish line today to| The Kowloon, a class B boat 
Where I come from, Wofford Col-| 
lege — we only have an enroll- 
ment of about 500 — we'd tell the 
quarterback, I'm going in that‘ di- 
rection, Here I got to learn 20 
  
  routes,” 
* * * 
LAKE FOREST, Ill. — Walter 
tathlon Championship tryouts at the last three to miss out: Smith Wolfner, general manager of the 
Fort Sam Houston Sunday, 
* * * 
Pesthy was high individual win-' 
ner in the second day’s event with | 
32 victories. He was awarded 1,- 
032 points, an almost - perfect 
‘score by fencing standard 
the compete in Pan - American 
Championships because he reo 
U.S. citizenship, is overall individ- 
wal leader at the end of two days 
SP4 Les Bleamaster, winner of 
the riding event Saturday, 
dropped to second place in the 
overall ratings after gaining only 
872 points in fencing, His points 
now: total 2,016. He ranked fourth 
in the fencing event. 
  
Title to Britisher 
HAMBURG, Germany (—Ken 
Bousfield of Britain Sunday won 
the 72-hole German Open Golf 
Ee ae with a 72-hole score 
of 271. 
Edward Brently, an American 
serviceman stationed in sgomred 
was the best amateur, 
‘lin 14th place with a 282,   
      
    MR. TRUCKER      
          
            
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JE 0.0424, x eliminated himself by missing 
He was defending champ, 
  
fect Russell Sent 
‘Hungarian refugee, ineligibie toto Packers for 
Ollie Spencer 
Oliver (Ollie) Spencer today 
returned to the Detroit Lions 
squad in a straight player deal 
with the Packers for Ken Rus- 
sell, Both are offensive right 
tackles, 
Spencer returns to the Lions 
from Green Bay to whom he 
was traded in 1957 after start- 
ing his pro grid career with the 
Lions in 1953. That deal brought 
Tobin Rote te the Lions. 
The Detroit club also an- 
nounced this morning that rook- 
ies Jerome MacArthur from Mor- 
gan State (Kentucky) and John 
Bradley from Lincoin University 
  (Lincoln, Neb.) had been fre- 
leased. ; 
  
finishi® Byerly Joins Giants 
“SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Vet- 
eran right-hander Eldred Bud 
Byerly joins thg San Francisco 
Giants’ pitching staff tomorrow 
night. ‘Chicago Cardinals, has spiked ru-' 
‘short putts on the final two holes.|mors that his club is interested in| 
quarterback George Shaw of Bal- 
timore. - 
“We are not interested in 
Shaw,” Wolfner sald yesterday. 
“We have six quarterbacks in 
our camp, including three veter- 
ans, and we think we are in pretty 
good shape a that spot.” 
* * * 
RENSSELAER, Ind. — The Chi- 
cago Bears are concentrating on 
their running and will not begin 
contact work for at least another 
week, 
x* * * 
CALIFORNIA, Pa. — Coach Bud- 
dy Parker trmmed seven rookies 
from the Pittsburgh: Steeler squad 
Sunday at the club’s training camp. 
* * * 
MORAGA, Calif. — A freak in- 
jury in the San Francisco 49ers 
first pro football training workout 
Sunday put rookie Bill Curtis of 
Texas Christian out of action for 
the season. _ 
~* * * 
WINOOSKI, Vt. (#—Frank Gif- 
ford, who will make an all-out 
effort to win the quarterback job, 
and regular quarterback Charlie 
Conerlyarrived with the rookies 
Sunday night as the New York 
Giants prepared their National 
  Football League training camp. 
  
   
           
     
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FREE INSTALLATION! 
20,000 MILES or 1-YR. 
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me *    
   
  Pal 
‘ 
scene, Sunday, of what may have 
winner.   MARINE HOTSHOTS — Oak! County Boat Club was the 
season's only big motor 
boat regatta in the Pontiac area, Above is the start of an early 
outboard hydro event on Sylvan Lake, with eight speedsters kick- 
ing up the spray. In the smaller photo is the hottest hotshot of 
them all, Sunday. Margie (S-1) was driven by Milford Harrison of 
Vermillion, Ohio, who won two events, the regatta’s only double Outboard ri Get Fill. 
of Thrills in Outboard motorboat racing fans 
converged on the Pontiac area, 
Sunday, with the focal point the 
all-outboard regatta at Oakland 
County Boat Club on Sylvan Lake. 
* : - ® 
Approximately 4,500 enthusiastic 
| followers of the thrilling sport ful- 
ly enjoyed the six-class. regatta in 
which. between 75-90 of the spec- 
tacular little speedsters performed. 
Out of the welter of spray 
kicked up by the 60-80 mile-per- 
hour hydroplanes and runabouts 
emerged an Ohio pilot as the 
day’s leading contender. He was 
Milford Harrison of Vermillion, 
who won the Class © and Class 
F hydro events, the regatta’s 
only double winner. 
Harrison drove his Margie (S-1) 
to victory in the two heat C-class, 
beating off hot challenges by Ca- 4   
87-Foot Yawl Ineligible   
Sabre First a 
  speedy 87-foot yawl Sabre zipped 
become the first craft to finish 
|in the annual Port Huron to Mack- 
inac Island yacht race. 
The Sache, owned by Roman 
Brotz of Sheboygan, Wis., toured 
the 235-mile course in 40 hours, 6 
minutes and 34 seconds. She left 
Port Huron at 2:15 p.m, Sat- 
urday and arrived here at 6:21 
this morning. 
Although first in, the Sabre ts 
ineligible for the championship. 
Both she and the pintaij are rac- 
ing division craft and not eligible 
for the crown since all the others 
in the 85 boat field are cruising 
division vessels. 
x * * MACKINAC ISLAND (®—The! t Mackinac the sabre. The Dyna was favored 
to win the Hudson trophy. 
owned by Nick Geid of the Chi- 
cago Yacht Club, was a few 
miles behind the Dyna, Other 
boats trailing close behind the 
Kowloon were the Gypsy, 
Apache, Great Lakes, Hilaria, 
and Tamara, 
One entry, the 40-foot sloop Wind- 
quest, pulled out of the race yes- 
terday after colliding with the Fria 
Via, a 39-foot sloop owned by E. J. 
\'Garmhausen of the Port Huron 
Yacht Club. 
W. J. Hoover, owner of the Wind- 
quest, said he would file a pro- 
quest suffered damage to her bow, 
but the Fria Via was not dam- test with race officials. The Wind- Free Net Clinic 
at PCH Courts 
Has Top Stars 
The free tennis clinic and 
demonstrations sponsored’ by the 
Pontiac Press and the Board of 
Education featuring Mrs. Jean 
Hoxie and her troupe of — 
tramck stars will 
Persons desiring to enter the 
two week tennis clinic sponsored 
by the Recreation Department 
will have the opportunity to 
register tomorrow. 
  
  aged seriously. 
  Dyna, a 58-foot yawl owned by 
Clayton Ewing of Green Bay, Wis., 
  was sighted about 10 niiles behind) the Black River at Port H A record number of 85 boats 
started in the race gery, | rol 
  
2 Players Hit at Havana   
Play Halted 
HAVANA (AP) — The Havana 
Sugar Kings and the Rochester 
Red Wings are far from this trig- 
ger-happy city today, and the 
Red Wings, at least, couldn't be 
happier for there are no bullets 
flying around their ball park. 
The Cubans are in Montreal and 
the Wings at home for the open- 
ing series tomorrow night against 
the Royals and Richmond Virgin- 
iaps, respectively. In fact the 
Ww have been home since yes- 
terday. . 
YY. €..8 
They couldn't get out of this 
celebrating town fast enough fol- 
lowing the hitting of two players 
by stray bullets, the calling of 
Saturday night’s game after 11 in- 
nings with the score tied 4-4 and 
the cancellation of yesterday's 
doubleheader, ; 
Yesterday's doubleheader was 
              
  
        by Bullets 
sary of the beginning of the cam- 
paign to overthrow former dicta- 
tor Fulgencia Batista. 
2 « ® 
Shaughnessy. said he was in- 
formed that some of the fans in 
the stands Saturday night had 
tommy guns and were firing them 
into the air. The stadium is less 
than a quarter of a mile from 
the square where thousands of 
armed men from Cuba's hills 
were whooping and _ vigorously 
supporting Castro in a day-long 
celebration. 
x *« * 
Verdi had replaced Rochester 
Manager Coot Deal as the team’s 
third base coach after Deal ear- 
lier had been ejected from the 
game by the umpires. 
“As I lay on the ground I 
thought I'd been hit by a thrown 
ball,” a shaken Verdi said after- 
ward. But he wouldn't compro- 
mise his luck: 
“Look, I've a wife and four 
kids at home,” the 33-year-old 
Bayshore, N.Y. player said, “As 
far as this town is concerned I've 
had it. We came here to play 
ball, not to be shot at.”   Babe Ruth District 
: Play Starts Tuesday | | The crucial part of the season |, 
starts tomorrow for Babe Ruth 3 ora 
baseball teams in this area when |# 
district tournament play begins at 
Birmingham and Walled Lake, 
* * * 
the Walled Lake All-Stars and the 
defending champion Northwest De- 
troit Americans at Walled Lake. A 
one game is held at Birmingham. 
Thursday. 
* * 6* 
The two semifinal games will be 
held at Birmingham Saturday 
starting at 1:30 with the title de- 
cided there Sunday. The winner 
will advance to state tourney play 
next week at Ypsilanti. 
The schedule: 
Tuesday—-Wailed Lake vs Northwest 
Detroit Americans at 2:30 and Southfield 
ry the Northwest Detroit Nationals at 
at Walled Lake. The Birmingham Pio- 
neers vs Northwest Detroit Internationals 
at te _ B remo ham 
sday—Birmingham Satellite team 
vs Teaition at Birmingham at § 
Bier Roo ham aubenp clash 
at 1:30 and Walied Lake winners at 3:30 
at ‘| in sem 
Syadar —Championship game at 1:30 
at Birmingham. Opening the event at 2:30 will be | Ze 
2nd game will follow there while|mpn 
A 4th contest is set for Birmingham |Mich OCBC Test nadian John Dertinger of Dethi, 
Ont., and Dan Kirts of Elke 
hart, Ind, a 19-year-old pilot, 
* e. .@ 
Harrison's victory in the Class P 
was the day’s most exciting per 
formance, He gunned his bouncing 
hydro up around 80 m.p.h. to take a 
first and a second in the two heats, 
with Lee Kratzer of Edwardsburg, 
Mich., and Bill Wells of London, 
Ont., chasing him all the way. 
Kratzer finished 2nd in the thrilling 
clashes, that saw John: Maypole of 
Chicago flip over in the first heat, = 
: é 
a a ee H 
i 5 
ahi BE 
yg as 
we et ae te ak 
only one requiring first aid was 
Ralph Dowling of Cleveland, 
upset in a fast brush during the 
Class C racing runabout first heat. 
He had previously won the Class 
C service runabout event. He suf 
fered bruises, 
Paul Switch of Warren, Mich.,! 
was another who gave fans ® 
thrill, when he was thrown out of: 
his Class C service runabout.’ 
None of the craft was damaged 
beyond a thorough wetting, Chop- 
py water was responsible for 
, most of the spills, 
The regatta was sanctioned by 
the Racing Outboard Drivers As 
sociation of America, whose Mich 
igan division commodore Ken 
Saunders of Detroit, declared “we 
are coming hack here next 
mer with an even bigger 
‘ter regatta.” 
A regatta ball was held Saturday 
night, with about 200 attending the 
dinner that preceded the event af 
OCBC, . 
> 
erg recnseareony 
ie ay ghrespe—~t- Mal vermlen. Thomas, mas Baill Vermi 
coe thee eee 
mt Pastest heat, as 
  
  : Herbert 
* pastest heat, ert Tonks 
Cinss F yor Vermilion; Milford Harri 
Lee Kratzer, Edwar ure 
Bills, London, Ont. 
heat, Harrison, 80 mph. 
  
New Skating Champion_, 
BOSTON (AP)—A stocky speed. 
ster from Manasquan, N.J.,: today 
holds the 5-mile race title at -the 
American Amateur Roller Skat 
ing Championships. 
John Drewry beat defending 
champion Richard Edwards of 
Wichita, Kansas,, by half a lap 
last night at the arena, 
Drewry, 21, 53, was timed In 
15:20 as only 7 of the 18 starters 
finished. He took the lead with 46 
of the 70 laps to go.     
  RAMMLER- DALLAS. For a BETTER DEAL on ‘59 Dodge 
Dodge, Plymouth, Chrysler, Imperial, Dodge Truck 
1001 MAIN ST, ROCHESTER OL 2-9111 
  
    
  NOTICE | During REMODELING SALE | 
WE WILL RETURN YOU UP TO $1,000 CASH WHEN YOU TRADE 
-YOUR CAR ON A NEW ONE! 
E OLDS- CADILLAC. 
290 Ss. “Saginaw — FE. 4-3566   
rc eSadita 
  
      
  
  Cite © SP SS a eee 
 ‘. : | , : \ 
_THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JULY 27, 1959_     ———————————————EE   
  _ MAKEOVER Pay Mrs, ate’ called for the town! Candy With a Kick proof—in | help latest candy recipe. 
jrooms and washing-machine rooms| _ambulance, It wasn't available, so ‘So far, the“Women have sold 40 
NEW YORK (UPI) — Not all may be a good investment. ‘| GRANBY, Mass. (UPI)—A son- everybody pitched in to locate al BOONTON, N. J. —They, may/|boxes . the bourbon-flavored | 
summer heat comes from the sun. | lic boom and three ambulances ac- substitute: ibe changing the cocktail hour to| candy. 
Heat-absorbing moisture from in-| Cork trees grow to about 30 feet ‘companied the birth of a son to! They were so successful that the candy hour. That’s the latest | 
Up to 90 per cent of all the wool door cooking, washing and bathing|in height and their trunks often Mrs. George Roberts, ‘three ambulances rushed to the from the Ladies Auxiliary of River-| Most of the islands of the south 
The boom was apparently caused| Roberts home, By that time, the'side Hospital. And if you want| Pacific were formed by volcanic 
proof you'll om plenty of it—86| action. ) Getting Cold Feet? | |Exhaust fans jn kitchens, bath-iHeragld Baby's Birth | 
| NEW YORK (UPI) — The num 
-ber of marriages in the United 
1 | States last year declined by about 
4 per cent to 1,456,000, according | 
to ‘the Metropolitan Life Insurance shorn in Australia 1s sold at public wil] send temperatures up, accord-| reé ach a diameter of three or more’ 
Co, This represented a rate of 8.4 auctions. ing to the Allied Chemical Corp. | ‘feet, since 1932. The biggest statewide 
irop, 45 per cent, was recorded in| ee 1,000 population, the’ lowest Can‘t Get Away ot All 
  
  Indiana. 
  
  |by a jet bomber flying over as baby had already been born. 
  
            
      SOME OF THE TASTIEST 
BARGAINS EVER! DURING 
Our LEFT-OVER Clearance HURRY TONITE! 
Quantities are Limited SORRY! Not All Left- 
Overs At All Stores PRICES SLASHED TO COST & BELOW 
  
   
         
Hundreds of Un-Advertised Left-Overs— OPEN TONITE & NITES Until 9—Sunday 9 to 6 P.M. 
| WOMEN and GIRLS’ LEFT-OVERS |   
| MEN & BOYS LEFT-OVERS | 
Only 154 Men's Woven cottons. 
knits, rayons   
  axe. Sport Shirts 4° 
Only 216 Men’s \/25* Sport Shirts Wash & wear finish. Reg. $1.98 Reg. $2.95 to $3.95 
99° Need little ironing ea 
47 MEN’S West SUMMER SHIRTS $756 Short sleeve, Reg. $2.95 co. 
cool weaves   
ONLY 64 PAIRS 
MEN’S SUMMER SUMMER DRESS 
Reg. 2.49 
ote 10 795 - Short sleeve, 
* knee length. SLACKS  sep4aga PAJAMAS 4% 
il summer weaves. 
  Only 52—-Men’s SWIM SUITS |. . Wash G wear finish. S to XL Values to $2.95 
T WIM SUIT a. Only 65 Baye SWIM SUITS... Qt Boxer G brief styles, S-M-L 
Only 102 — Men’s HOBBY ote Pr. Boxer G brief styles. 6 to 16 Reg. $2.95   
  
  
216 Boys’ Short Sleeve SPORT ald Ea. 
Wash & wear finish. Sizes 6 to 16 
| LAWN AND GARDEN LEFT-OVERS | 
ROBOT GARDENER KIT kes, $5.95 $933 Complete with chemicals, takes work out 
OF UWE BAI on ook oc ce te see e ee ee Ss   
  
16” AMERICAN HAND 
MOWER $4 87 BIG 24” ROTARY 
Rubber tired, 
easy roll bear- 
ing wheels ine 
Sturdy metal 
housing. 
Handle controls. 
Cape Cod. Picket FENCE oe 
Painted gleaming white, easy to install . 
60 Ft. Plastic GARDEN HOSE 
With brass fitting, guaranteed ..............+. 
3-Cubic Foot WHEELBARROW = 
All steel construction, rubber tired wheels , 
24” Riding POWER MOWER Sturdy channel frome, auto type transmission ... . 
Steel Garden HAULER CART —_ copecity, steel construction, rubber tires... 
Revolving LAWN SPRINKLER ree, cirtculer sprey 5... "20 
*] 79 
$ 4°?   
  
  
~* 
  
  
   : Scotch ally JUG 1 Gal. 
    
   | PICNIC LEFT-OVERS | 
ee ICE AEST a 
| 11 
28° i he   
  
Attractive = des! sted, 
insulated . 
on ne CANNED I IGE coolers cold without 
Metal PATIO TABLES Round me tal top, 
folding legs   
  
Aluminum Telding 
CHAISE LOUNGE FOLDING 
LAWN 
Fea frame 
PORTABLE PIGNIG GRILL 
7 2T Attroctive plaid design ..... 
| Th WICKER PICNIC BASKET 
36° Hinge cover and folding handles. 
PATIO UMBRELLAS 
4 Gal. Round Picnic Cooler $481 
49-ne. Picnic Tablewear Set - AO: 
Complete setting for picnics............ Large size, colorful fabric. . . 
Disposable BAR-B-Q GRILL 
Just light it, use it, throw away. . 
Sporting Goods Left-Overs | 
BASEBALL GLOVES 9% GENUINE LEATHER 
wy he 
BASEBALL BATS 7° Fine quality woods and workmanship. : .. . 
4-PLAY BADMINTON SET 5497 
Complete with rackets, nets, shuttlecock and 
poles 
7-Ft. Laminated Water Skis 1 3° 
Fine fone ieetltl heavy duty construction. .... 
RUBBER SWIM FINS 78° Increases swimming efficienty .......... 
88° ares $ 88 
aluminum 
“tr ame- 
    
  
  
  
m large capacity. Keeps food hot or cold. . 
  
  
  
  
LIFE PRESERVE BOAT 
CUSHIONS Kapok Filled 
  
  
  
  
  
HEDDON PLUEGER, PLATFISH, 
JITTERBUG ETC. FISH BAITS:          Floating FLY LINE 16 A good, easy to handle line ... 
81/2’ 2-pe. FLY ROD* 444 Cork handle, flexible ..... 
Open Pace Spin Reels) 86 Bailer type, smooth action ... 
Level Wind CASTING REEL $477 
100-yd. capacity, anti-bocklash 
2-Pc. Fiberglas SPIN ROD 4" 
An economical rod with lots of snap. 
50 Yds. Nylon Casting “hae 
i i 50 yd. spool, braided nylon. ... 
Fiberglas Extend FISH 
1 78 
BOY SCOUT 
    
              
       
        
        
    
     
        
    
         
              
    
RODS 
c Galvanized maven meena! 
2-Pc. floating type ........ Durability built, long length 
        
          
     Garcia Mitchell 
        
     Amazing left-over 
price of . . 
             
  GREAT LAKES SPORTSMAN 
CASTING REEL i2222% 
HEDDON 2-PC. SPIN CASTING $487 
ROD Durable Fiberglas 4 
Wilson Official SOFTBALL $927 
Regulation size and construction. .... Ree 
FOLDING GOLF CARTS 
Tubular construction, rubber tired wheels. . 
Liquid Ctr. Golf Balls {4 Fo: 97° 
Long distance, tough cover balls. . 
RIGID PLASTIC 
SWIM POOL OR         
           
       
         
    
     
    
       
      
     Backyard SWING 
& GYM SETS 2- Pe cog 
           
  construction, ] §° 
oksota: “wa 
better : ee 
    with seats     
          
  Tols’ Backyd. Wading Pools 1 67 
Durable, inflatable. plastic ..........°.. 
9"             
       
  Folding BOAT SEATS Sturdy construction, soft, 
plastic covered seays . Aseria sc ceeba oo 
51 S. SAGINAW        
   
   
  she" , 
NEXT TO WRIGLEY’S    
    
  
LADIES’ DRESSES , 3 *h 
2 BIG GRouPS Vy WV .,   
  All Sizes 
Wom. Baby Doll PAJAMAS c vee sented cottons Lees ai es. 
Women’s SUMMER GOWNS | Plisses and =? dry batistes ....... aa: 
GIRLS’ PEDAL PUSHERS 
SLIM JIMS, JAMAICA 
SHORTS & 
SLEEVELESS GIRLS’ JAMAICA & 
PEDAL PUSHER 
~ SETS Sizes.7.to.14 47° 
    
  
  
  
  
  
  BLOUSES 
WOMEN’S PEDAL PUSHERS *] A variefy of left-overs to spice any appetite........... 
LADIES’ SWIM SUITS , 3" Closeout on all left-overs .............. as. 
GIRLS’ SWIM SUITS 1 33 Cottons—plaids, printS oe... dene hence , ow: 
GIRLS’, SHORTS C 
Cottons, denims, twills.. All ages ....... (8 
BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ CABANAS SETS 66° Sizes 3 to 14. Out they go.................000005 
WOMEN’S SKIRTS 1 33 Light and dark tones. 10 to 20.............2...... 
Girls’ Sleeveless Summer DRESSES Tr Sizes 1 103, 4 10) GX etek eee se ee eee 
TOTS’ BOXER JEANS 47° 
Denims, twills. 2 10 6 <ccacccdswanseeecewws wware - 
TOTS’ BOXER SHORTS 19° Dritk, SOW: “SOE 2 166). os i ete eeu   
  
65 TOTS’ SUNSUITS 19° t Washable cottons. Sizes 2 10 4.........ceee eee eee 
SPORTUS FLASH BLUE ENAMEL 
Camera 
Outfit Takes fine 
pictures indoors 
or out. 
Complete with flash attachment. 
  LADIES’ CANVAS PUMPS Sizes 4V% to 10. Blue, red, ee 
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING             r | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 27, 1959   ws oa 
Report 2,000 Killed 
in lraqi Massacres The General Sherman tree in) is said to be the oldest living 
Sequoia . National Park near here| thing in ‘the world. 
          
- st SS ae Ee etl   
  STUTTGART, Germany @® — CAIRO, UWiA.R. (UPI — The 
Damascus newspaper Al Jamahir 
reported yesterday that ‘about 
2,000 persons’ were killed in the 
“Kirkuk massacres” in Iraq two 
weeks ago when Communist ele- 
ments rebelled against the gov- 
ernment. 
The newspaper said the death! 
figure came from an “official 
source” and that the figure was 
arrived at by a commission sent 
to Kirkuk to study the eauses of 
the uprising. Previous death tolls 
estimates ranged from 20 to 500. MRS. FOREST BADGER 
Mrs, Forest (Lenore) Badger, 
64, of 20519 Asbury Park, Detroit, 
died Saturday in Mount Carmel 
Hospital following an illness of one 
week, 
A former resident of Pontiac, 
she is survived by her husband; 
two daughters, Mrs.’ Vyron Riddle 
of Pontiac and Mrs, Kenneth St. 
/Orge in California; two sons, Oris 
iC., Robert F., both of Detroit, 
lone sister, Mrs. Delbert Wygent   also ‘of Detroit; and 12 grand-| 
children, 
Service will be held 2 p.m. Tues- 
day at Fenkell Chapel of Ted C. 
Sullivan Funeral Home, Detroit, 
with burial in White Chapel Ceme- 
tery. 
HARVEY 8S. GRISWOLD 
Harvey S. Griswold, 78, of 12 
Gingell Ct., died Friday_in Stock- 
ton, Calif. where he was staying 
with his granddaughter, Mrs. Net- 
tie Sain. He had been ill for a   
OF THE PORTABLE    RATED BES RADIOS TESTED BY 
LEADING INDEPENDENT TESTING LABORATORY long time. 
Mr. Griswold had been a painter 
and decorator until his retirement 
at which time he became an active 
supervisor in YMCA youth activi- 
ties. He was also a member of the 
Golden Age Club here. 
Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. | 
Edith Pruden of California, four! 
grandchildren, and several great-, 
grandchildren, and three sisters. 
Service will be held at 2 p.m. Home. Burial wil] follow in Mount 
Pleasant Cemetery here. 
Mr. Harrington was a former 
local merchant, who owned a gas 
station and meat market. He also 
was a’member of the Methodist 
Church and the Adult Bible Class. 
He died Saturday in Lapeer 
County General Hospital following 
an extended illness. 
Surviving’ are his wife, Gladys; 
two sisters, Mrs. Cora Bell of 
Pontiac. and Mrs. Lillian Bird of 
LeRoy, Montana; five nieces and 
four nephews. 
GAIL DENICE JOHNSON 
WALLED LAKE — Prayer serv- 
ice for Gail Denice Johnson, nine- 
month-old daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. Willard Johnson, of 119 Char- 
lotte St., was held at 6:30 p.m. 
yesterday in the Walled Lake 
Chape] of Richardson-Bird Funer- 
al Home. Burial will be in John- 
son Cemetery in Whitley County, athe | lan [Public Administrator|™°H Hib, Pioneer Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas ji care pan cites 
EAST LANSING 
O’Brien, 58, state public adminis- 
since 1955, died at his home after) 
a stroke. 
recovered. The attack came Sat- 
urday night. , 
A native of Laurium, O’Brien 
came to the Capitol in 1939 and 
was with the State Highway De- 
partment for six years. He be- 
came an assistant attorney gen- 
eral in 1945, holding that  posi- 
tion until his death. 
He attended Ferris Institute ‘in| 
Big Rapids and took his law de-| 
gree at the University of Detroit.) 
* * * |   
Survivors include the widow, 
Jane, two children; his father, re,| 
tired Judge Patrick H. O’Brien, a| 
brother, Daniel J. O’Brien, a sis-| |Wolf Hirth, 59, one of the fathers) . lof the modern gliding sport, was) 
wr D'Arcy! ined Saturday in the crash of a| 
trator from 1948 to 1950 and again/S*lf-built sail plane. 
| WILLIAMK.COWIE      
  Police said the internationally) 
own sportsmant-industrialist was} 
mountain range, | 
Hirth thrilled hundreds of thous- 
ands with a spectacular glider 
flight over the skyscrapers of Man- 
hattan during a visit in 1930. 
    
  
Custom Upholstery 
25 Yrs. of Practical Experience 
205 Voorheis Rd. FE 4-28579) Between Telegraph & Orchard Lake 
Cockroaches |     
       « 
       
     = 
  
  HOME FINANCING — All AGREE, 
WHEN WE EXPLAIN, 
THEY SAY */ SEE”   
cot REPAIRS Axo MODERNIZATION 
  
  Authorized Dealer for _. 
“MODERNIZATION LOANS” 
for the 
  COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK © 
@ MA BENSON conc: oe ME LUMBER « Bikes SUPPLIES FUEL Th baby died yesterday in Uni [ae ery Nertney of Detroit; and) of eas res . -|a stepbrother, Jack Ingram, Lake! MRS, ANDREW W. NEIL __ [versity Hospital, Ann Arbor. Worth, Fla.” — | 
Mrs. ‘Andrew W. (Clara) Neil,| ene a ane S| 
68, 13 Bliss, died Sunday at her|are four brothers, Rondall of Ken- : | 
home following an iliness of two| tucky and Vernon, Verlon and Lae ee 2 paige sen 
months. lie, at home; and the grandpar-| a a? da sitios = ey re-| 
She was a member of the First ents, all of Kentucky. Les elr various Ueids, in-| ) ‘irs cluding correspondence and trade | 
nce Chureh and First Philai-| PAUL SCHMALTZ publications. | 
Surviving are her husband; sou IMLAY CITY — Service for Paul) ey 
daughters, Mrs, Edward Henry of See be beat of sre Norman Re) 
Grand Rapids, Mrs. Charles An-|‘ ae a Li ae ce 
derson of Waterford, Mrs. Lloyd|at St. John Lutheran Church, | 
Whittaker of Rochester, and Mrs.|Pac. Burial will be in the Imlay 
Henry Katip of Pontiac; two sons,/ Township Cemetery. 
Clifford of Pontiac, and Rolland |. on Schmaltz died Saturday at 
of Rochester. uncrest Convalescent Home, La-| 
Twenty-six grandchildren, nine peer, after an extended illness. He} 
Fe cea ee eee vr, Schiaslix’s oly will beat ters, Mrs. n Joseph of Lincoln,) Mr. 
Mrs, Harriett moa ot Birming. Muir 1 protbers eel Home, ae 
ham, and Mrs. Amidi ssi of lay y, until noon tomorrow at} 
Eveleth, Minn. also survive. which time it will be moved to 
Service will ped are at plan ne church. a i: 
Tuesday at Voorhees Siple pel) Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. 
with burial at Oak Hill Cantey | sen a Imlay City; a) 
. 7 son, Harold of Capac; a sister, a) 
GLENN B. ROBERTSON \brother, a step-brother and seven 
Glenn B. Robertson, 63, of 2600 | grandchildren. 
West Walton, died today at St.| oe ; 
| Joseph Mercy Hospital following! WESLEY EDWIN SMITH 
an illness of two months. | DRAYTON PLAINS — Service 
| A former employe of Matthews-!for Wesley Edwin Smith, 12-year- 
| Hargreaves Chevrolet dealership,|old son of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley 
ie is survived by his wife, Opal;|Elmer Smith, of 2861 Deland St., | 
|one daughter, Mrs. Richard (Jane) /will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday 
| Cheevers of Chicago, Ill.; one son, at the Coats Funeral Home. Burial |Bruce at none ae granddaugh-' wil} follow in Crescent Hill Ceme- \ter; and two brothers. tery. 
| Funeral service will be held 2) The boy drowned Sunday in a 
pm. Wednesday at Baldwin Ave- boating mishap in Big Fish Lake 
nue Evangelical United Brethren jn Hadley Township. The body can    
   Tuesday 42.Stockton, Cullt Written Guarantee 
From Houses, Apartments, 
Groceries, Factories and 
Restaurants. Remain out only 
one hour. No signs used. | 
Rox Ex Company 1014 Pontiac St. Bk. Bldg. FE 8-4558       
          
  549 N.SAGINAW ST. Pontiac 6, Mich. Tee FE4-2521 
             
      
   
           
         ZENITH ROYAL 750 
all transistor Portable Radio. Sis” 
high, 8” wide, 3° deep, weighs 
3 Ibs. 12°% ors. with batteries. 
     Complete with Zenith 
Batteries & Earphone Sei! E-Z TERMS 
AL ; ; 
yeeros Church with burial at Perry Mount pe seen at the funeral home after j 
CIRCUITRY | Cemetery. 10 a.m. tomorrow. 
FOR | RICHARD C. ROLLISON | Surviving besides his parents is 
Richard C. Rollison, 44, of 465 a sister, Lydia Virginia, at home. 
| Riviera Terracé, died unexpectly 
ore at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- Deaths Elsewhere 
| Formerly a city fireman-engineer. SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. ® 
at Station 3, Mr. Rollison was a.—James Hazen Hyde, 83 retired 
| member of the Fire Fighters Asso-| insurance company executive who 
ciation, the Metropolitan Club and became a self-exiled Parisian and 
St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. promotef of Franco-American 
| He is survived by his wife, Ger- friendship, died Sunday. He was 
{maine, three sons, Gary, James the son of Henry Baldwin Hyde, 
‘and Daniel, all at home; two sis- founder of the Equitable Life As- 
‘ters, Sister Ann Charles of Monroe, |Surance Society, one of the world’s 
lend of Pon-|largest insurance companies. He ‘and Mrs, Dorothy Marks = ; d : 
tiac, and two brothers, Harold Rol-| 2S born e nee te 
i i ison, both of ; 
and Archie Rollison, both off EW YORK w-—Alice Woods A Rosary will be recited at 8 Ulman, 89, an author, died Fri-   
EXTRA VALUE FEATURES 
RF Stage—3 gan with flashlight batteries _ 
° hoo Counce to Shes e “Pin Point” Vernier Tuning 
is mere stations hom e Zenith Wavemagnet® An- 
© up to 300% More Sensitivity tenna 
e@ 400 milliwatts of maximum ® Zenith 4° Speaker 
tad a e Provision for Earphone ; 
® up to 350 hours of listening Attachment 9 
BUY THE BEST... BUY ZENITH QUALITY 
Tr STON PLALNI PONTIAC DRAYTON PLAINS 
Geed Housekeeping Shop Keasey Electric 
+4 W. Heren 4620 Dixie Highway 
Phone: FE 41555 Phone: OR 35-2601 
SWEET’S RADIO & APP. 
it? W. Huron 
Phone: FE 4-1155 
Lyan Jewelry 
    . Wayne Gabert 
1ti N. Saginaw 
Phone: FE 5-6189 
Condon's Radio & TV 
36 8S. Telegraph 
Phone: FE 49736 
ORCHARD LAKE LAKE ORION 
Lake Orion Appliance 
158 8. Broadway 
Phone: MY 2-571! 
— } 
Phone: FE. $5731 Peer Appliance | Crosp miosis p.m. Tuesday’ at the Pursley 2 beatae heeiaae nde ae mame 
i Phone: EM 34114 + og neral Home. Funeral service will e Woods, pag . 
77@ Orchard Lake ene: FE 6-357! & Ved els and many short stories for the 
Fete Stefanshi LOSER. a ry SF%FPscisen & Ave. St, Bevedlct's Catholic Church with 1 Smart Set, Pearson's and Mc- s ochester ° _ Oxford Television pp. |St. Benedict’s Catholic Church wi es y it W. Hi 430 Main st 10 N. W r en, e: FE 2-696? Phone: OL 22161 Phone: OA 8-503 burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. j Clare's, She arae txen at “Com 
| MRS. WILLIAM J, COMMON jine - -~ & 
| DRAYTON PLAINS — Service) CONNEAUT, Ohio w—Earl C. |for Mrs. William J. (Dorothy Mae) Hankins, 54, business manager of 
|Common, 46, of 6464 Monrovia St.,'the Ashtabula Ohio Star-Beacon | 
|will be held at 3 p.m. Wednesday,| for seven years, was fatally shot} 
from the Coats Funeral Home} Sunday, Police said his wife, Ar- 
|here. Burial will be in Ottawa Park|leta, 49. was arrested and held 
|\Cemetery. | without charge, They said she ad- 
Mrs. Common died today in St.| mitted the shooting but gave no’ 
Joseph Hospital, Pontiac, after a motive. Hankins, former manag-' 
brief illness. ling editor of the Conneaut News- 
Surviving besides her husband is| Herald, was born in Conneaut. 
her mother and one brother. * * * 
. SAN FRANCISCO (®—Herbert) 
BURTON HARRINGTON haites 67, Philadelphia municipal] 2 DRYDEN — Service for Burton) judge,. the first Negro jurist in 
Harrington, 71, of 4108 S. Mill) Pennsylvania, died Saturday. He) 
St., will be held at 2 p.m. tomor-| suffered a heart attack July 11) 
irow at his home under the di-| while he was vacationing here with ¢ 
‘rection of Muir Brothers Funeral! his wife.   
  
WORRIED OVER DEBTS? due, see 
you ¢is     If you are unable to Bay ig Boa. debts or bills whe 
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS and arrange for paymen' 
afford regard) of wi much or e. ess ho how many you ow   
NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED 
ONE PLACE TO PAY 
rt 4 tation of Credit Counsellors we me a   
      
“Let 14 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” 
Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 12 Noon. 
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS Bldg. FE 8-046 Tt Pontiar State Bank   Still Going Strong! The week end response to our Scratch and Dent Sale was so great that it was 
impossible to wait on everyone. So we are extending the Sale for a few more 
days. If you were one of the people who couldn't wait, we invite you to come 
back and let us show you the many money-saving buys: still being offered.   
  
  
SPATTER ASPHALT This i 's Te- s is not a dealer's re TILE 4c EA. 
duction but is factory 
authorized . . . which 
means that all stock will 
be retagged from $5.95 
down to $2.98 for 30 
days only. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED 
D eSB % 
cs an 
    
         
  
ARMSTRONG 
REAL CORK TILE 
9’x9” 1 2¢ Ea. 
Slight Imperfections Mean Tremendous Savings for You 
at Thomas Economy! Up to 50% Off Our Regular List 
Prices! All One-of-a-Kinds! First Come, First Served! { 
nee cent tetgpioemmnmcae ancestor eee EES 
  
  
  
V3 off Mica, Vinyl YOUR CHOICE OF 
ALL FINISHES   
  COUNTER TOPS | 
  
  
      
      CLOSE-OUT | 
+a aR oon 21 | PE . $2. iat. $2.98 7 | e 
eo Ze|/L24 1 OPEN TONIGHT ‘til 9 Siecan anaee want : efi | * AMPLE FREE PARKING * FREE DELIVERY : 
  
  
If You Don't Buy Your Tile From Us We Both Lose Money! 
50% Off Reg. 2c ....NOW Ic Reg. Se ..NOW 2% 
Reg. 4c ....NOW 2c Reg. Ge .... NOW 3c PLASTIC WALL TILE. 
     
  & 2      
             PXicicany oie erteta ese at Ht TILE OUTLET & 
1055 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 8-3717 
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. ‘til 9 — Tuesday, Wed., Set. “til 5 
       NO IMMEDIATE ACTION 
  ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 27, 1959 | 
| 
| 
    
  ROMANTIC COMEDY—Deborah Kerr uses Tom Helmore as 
a pawn in teaching her playboy husband, Rossano Brazzi (right) 
thut two can play at the jealous game in “Count Your Blessings,”’ 
now Pe aving at the Comfherce Drive In. Maurice co-stars in the 
SO wphis ated romantic comedy. 
  
Oil on Beaches Ruining 
West Michigan Tourism 
LANSING (UPI) — Oif onjties were not affected, but 67 
beaches is driving some tourists/Miles in Oceana, Mason and Man- “e istee counties showed ‘‘severe N away trom: resorts on Lake Mic spotting”? ‘pasaiily! Gem the aseae 
igan in the southern part of the source. 
state. 
It's also costing motel and cabin 
owners money to have stained fur- 
nishings cleaned after " has been} ce an an .) 
tracked in. 
* 
“Our guests... oaty stay one 
day and then go away disgusted," 10 uy iS 
said Mrs. Tony Angelo Sr. in a! 
letter to the state attorney general. | d 
“Not only are we losing .room | Frozen Foo Experts 
rentals, but our towels, rugs and = Visit NATO Link; Are bed linen jeft in a deplorable | 
condition pe some - them oe Favorably Impressed 
not fit to use again,” said Mrs. | 
Angelo, operator of the Sunset REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — 
View Motel at Benton Harbor. Iceland has fish for sale. If it has 
The oil, apparently from a barge its way, the United States will 
that sank last November at Gary, | buy a lot of it and thereby help 
Ind., is difficult and expensive to|this nation, a link in the North clean off the beaches, and resort Atlantic defense system, built its 
owners are looking for somebody |€conomy and diminish any depen- to pay the damages. \dency on the Soviet Union. 
A group of frozen food experts 
here from the United States agreed 
An assistant attorney general that the Icelandic fish is fine tast- said the state plans no immediate ing food. 
guton. “We'll buy all we can get, just 
But Jerome V. Maslowski, at- freeze it right, package it right 
tached to the conservation see- (and make the price right,’ said 
tion, has contacted the parties (Walter Meier, frozen food broker 
involved in the barge sinking from Milwaukee. 
oo ee Bieler teficated that the flow 
oe. qa | of Icelandic fish to the United The thick black fuel oil belonged | States may be stepped up con- 
to Standard Oil Co. of Indiana. | siderably. The government in- 
ols * somo cal Tet eee, Dave Ehren ot There were nearly A 
lons of the stuff in a barge that, Orlando, Fla., and others to in- 
belonged to Pure Oil Co. but was, vestigate the possibilities. 
ee ee As it stands ow, the United Co. of Berwyn, Ill. Some 20,000 states seems to have won the bat- gallons were recovered after the tip for Iceland’s political support 
barge sank in a storm. |but the need is to cement the thing 
- A Coast Guard investigation from an economic viewpoint. The 
reported that no federal laws fishing industry, representing 97 
had been violated. iper cent of Iceland’s exports, is 
Oil drifted ashore and “‘serious- | ihe ty. 
ly affected” beaches for 26 miles| Government people say the for- in Berrien County and spotted 12/ eign reserves accruing from work 
miles of beach in Van Buren |" the NATO airbase are useful 
County. |but they want American support 
~~ |for the island’s principal economy   
  
- ‘SEVERE SPOTTING’ land the one it will have to live on Seventy miles of beach in Alle-|under all circumstances, cold war 
gan, Ottawa and Muskegon coun-lor peace.     
  
  29c Plastic Sand Pail and Shovel.... 19c 
49c Metal Sand Pail and Shovel .... 29c 
Many Other Items Too Numerous to Mention 
Complete Selection of Sand and 
Water Toys. and Outdoor Games 
2 NN. SAGINAW in the — Downtown 
  60c 3-Pe. Garden Set............... 39¢ 
1.00. Sand and Water Toys.......... 69c 
2.00 Sand and Water Toys......... $1.39 
2.00 Shuffleboard Sets .......... $1.29 
3.00 Large Swim Fins............ $1.98 | 
4.00 C.G. Approved Life Vests, S... $2.49 | 
4.50 C.G. Approved Life Vests, M. . $2.98 
5.50 €.G. Approved Life Vests, L... $3.98 
5.00/ 2-Play Badminton Sets ....... $2.98 
7.00 Tennis Racket .............. $4.98 
7.00 4-Play Croquet ............. $3.50 
11.00 Baseball Pitching Machine ... $7.49 
14.00 6-Play Deluxe Croquet........ $8.49 
14.00 Comb. Badminton & Volleyball $8.49 | 
20.00 7 Ft. x 14 in. Pool........ $13.98 | 
25.00 8 Ft. x 18 in. Pool........ $15.98 | 
37.00 10 Ft. x 18 in. Pool........ $22.98 
65.00 12 Ft. x 18 in. Pool........ $37.98 
TOYTOWN wos. |               
    
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RED-RIPE, JUICY 
SOUTHERN GROWN 
FRESH PEACHES 
4- 49 MIX OR MATCH 
Cereal Sale 
PKGS. $ J 
Wheaties "hxc" 
Cheerios ‘9327 
Alpha Bits "337   
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes Axo" 
i Kellogg’s Rice Krispies ">xo" 
Post's Sugar Crisps PKG, 
Lesser Quantities Sold At Regular Retail 
  
Special—Save at A&P! 
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12 it 69%       5 Bee ays 
D in. 59907) j oa rd Fa ( 7 
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ICED ON THE FARM—FRESH, TENDER, HOME-GROWN 
ey Sweet ern 
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AND 
TUESDAY 
ONLY 
: SAVE 20c ON THIS HOT WEATHER FAVORITE 
Crestmont Orange or Lime 
| HALF C 
erbet & 
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= ) -L5. 
Nutley Margarine .. 6 :: 89x SAVE 9e—NEW PACK—RED, SOUR PITTED 
A&P Cherries ...... 5 3% 89% 
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SALAD OR COOKING OIL : 49 
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seit a: 
 Poe Ae ee, a ry { f 
  la a es a a OE ae ae RS ee es Se Se ee 
{ | 3 Se FS. fi 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘MONDAY, J ULY 27, 1959 { i i 
  
Appeal Death Sentence 
of Nazi Mass Killer 
WARSAW (UPI — Defense 
‘lawyers for convicted Nazi mass- 
killer Erich Koch have filed a/for- 
mal appeal against the death sen- a 
Tincun give: kink ley. Pula toast 
jlast March, 
Koch was charged with responsi-| 
bility in the wartime executions of! 
376,000 Poles’ and Jews in the eccu- 
pation area of. which he was 
  gauleiter. é   
tt i { Ls 
i 
  
“The world agrees ees please’!” 
‘ 
Gilbey’s Distilled London Dry Gin. 90 Proof. 100% 
Grain Neutral Spirits. W. & A. Gilbey, Ltd., 
nati, 0. Distributed by National Distillers Prod. Co.   Cincin- pt. 
      Add Overseas 
Phone Cables Pair Will ‘Handle 36 
‘Conversations at Once 
Under the Sea _| 
WASHINGTON — Giant metal 
threads stitch America and Europe 
ever closer together. 
The latest’ addition to ‘the grow- 
ing underwater network is the pair 
of telephone cables being laid un- 
der the Atlantic from North Amer- 
ica to the coast of France, the 
National Geographic Society says. 
When it goes into use this 
fall, the facility will be able 
to speed 36 conversations under 
the sea at one time, One strand 
will carry voices eastward; the 
other, west, 
The new link is being created 
because of the success of the first 
transatlantic telephone cable, 
placed in service iin 1956. 
The American Telephone and 
Telegraph Company will own the 
jJcables jointly with the French Min- 
istry of Posts, Telegraphs and Tele- 
phones, and the German Federal 
Ministry - for Posts and Commu- 
nications. 
The western ends of the-cables 
surface at Clarenville, Newfound- 
land, They will tie in to a cable 
that will cross Newfoundland and 
the waters of Sidney Strait to con- 
nect with an existing 575-mile ra- 
dio relay route extending south to 
Portland, Maine, to join the Bell| 
System's nationa] network. 
In Europe, the lines end at Pen- 
march, on the Brittany peninsula 
of France. Thirteen of the 36 cir- 
cuits will terminate.in France and 
13 in Germany. Belgium and the 
Netherlands are alloted one apiece; 
Italy, Switzerland, and Spain, two 
each. Two spares can be used 
in any of the countries in the e.:nt 
of a circuit failure. 
At present, there are one cable 
and nine radio telephone circuits 
between France and the United 
States, and two cable and 12 ra- 
dio circuits between Germany 
and the United States. 
Sign Language Handy 
NIAGARA ’FALLS, N.Y. (UPD 
—Fire Capt. Martin Ruopp assured 
Gregory Gudz, 48, a deaf-mute, 
that everything would be al) right 
after Gudz collapsed in his home. 
While his men operated an in- 
|halator, Ruopp calmed Gudz by       | using sign language he learned 40 
lyears ago.     
  
Terrific Buys for Our End-o-Month 
Sale ... . Everything from vacuum cleaners   A. to home freezers have been reduced 
in price .. . Floor Samples... 
Demonstrators . . . many only one-of-a-kind 
but each and every one a famous name. 
Save dollars and dollars by being here 
tonight and tomorrow re some of 
the greatest buys we've ever offerpd! 
of. PONTIAC 
Open Monday and Friday ’til 9. 
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Cor. W. Maple Rd. Open 9 to 9 Open 9 to 9 Open 9 to 9 
Walled Lake Thurs., Fri., Sat. Mon., Fri., Sat. Thurs., Fri., Sat. | 
5060 Dixie 45 S. North Hill 
Highway Telegraph Rd. Shopping Plaza 
Drayton Plains Tel-Huron Rochester 
Shopping Center Open 9 to 9 Open 9 to 9 Open 9 to 9 
Mon. to Sat. Mon. to Sat. Thurs., Fri, 
Completely Cleaned,Whole 
YERS 
    
piv ¢ dj wv 3 ¥ 
gs Del Crest-Vanilla or Neopolitan 
— a - 
ICE CREA an Sliced or Halves 
>EACHES Siemon Solid Light Meat 
    SAVE 8¢ 
24 Can 
25° 
19° Extra Faney 
SAVE 4 
Plump, Tender 
ged hn Ears Break O’ Hay Golden Sweet 3 Qe 
with coupon below 
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We reserve the right to limit quantities. 
           
        
            
             
      Prices effective thru Tuesday, July 28. + Vide Caepen Gobd Thre Tout. dity 28 This Coupon Good Thev Tuer, July 28 
: : d Del Crett Venile ot Neopeliton «AQ Wigley 93 Score ‘AA i» BQ 
“pee ’ _* dl ICE CREAM BUTTER : Get F: tnér Gifts Li aster P| Limit One With This ‘Coupes | Limit One With This icouah 
With Gold Bell g| Settle Sn chca Yor Sant A |S er beta Choc aor vy ¢' Gift Stamps 
  i     
    
 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 27,\1959 / 
  
    
Modest Gains [MARKETS |Grains Show 
Dominate Mart erecta re Firming Trend brought to the Farmer's | 
NEW YORK @® — Most ae by growers and sold | CHICAGO Ww — The grain fu- 
‘them in wholesale package lots. iures market was mostly steady 
|Quotations are furnished by the today during the first several min- 
utes of transactions on the Board} 
|Detrait Bureau of Markets, as of of Trade with wheat showing a market prices eked out modest 
gains in moderate trading early 
today. 
    May Birth Rate 
Lower than 58 
WASHINGTON (®—Births during 
  time this had occurred in 1959. 
An estimated 338,000 live births 
were registered«in May, 1.5 per 
cent less than the 343,000 in May} 
|1958, the Public Health Service| 
reported today. 
  May dropped under those in the 
‘comparabe 1958 month, the first. ‘Asterisks, Asterisks, hank You’   
By EDMOND LEBRETON 
  . wt H * WASHINGTON (AP) — Here’s a sporting tip for any | 
First Time in 1959, Martian spies that may be lurking around: 
Figure Below Same Take a look at page 250 of “Space Propulsion,” a tran- 
Month Last Year « script of hearings recently put out by the House Committee 
on Science and Astronautics. 
* * * 
Oh, it’s censored all right; enough to be incomprehen- 
sible to mere humans. But the committee left something in 
| —a name and three asterisks on each line, and there are 
| lots of lines. And who knows what a cold, alien intelligence 
might be able to do with what’s left. 
Chairman Overton Brooks (D-La) starts the exchange 
by asking Dr. Robert I. Strough, “What is the extent of the 
research and development program of the United Aircraft Censors ‘in Field Day; About Berlin bys 
West " AKIN 
U.S., France Hold Out 
to Ease Demands Against British Effort P ; : ‘aed 
a ‘Cinderella’ 
at Record Dance™ 
A “Cinderella Night” datice will 
be held by the Sylvan Lake Elks 
|Lodge 723 from 8 to 11:30 p.m, 
Tuesday. 
Elks Temple, 114 Orchard Lake 
  | 
| GENEVA (AP) — The United)   Ave. = 
Highlight of the evening will - 
States and France were reported! be the selection of “Cinderella”. 
‘holding firm today against Brit- 
‘ish pressure to cut down Western) 
terms for a Berlin agreement | 
'with the Soviet Union and clear | 
\the way for an early summit con-| 
| ference. 
As the Big Four foreign minis-| — the girl whose feet will fit, 
a pair of glass slippers and who. 
comes close to certain specified 
measurements, 
‘to dinner at a Pontiac restaurant. 
| Dancing will be to records, 
  The dance will be held at the 
She and her date will be rected ; 
        
    
      
    
  
  
  
      
  | , . ‘ters conference moved into its} 
Advances were limited to less' Friday. continued firming trend in all: however, was 1118.00, up 18 Der Corp.? ninth week, U.S. and British offi- 
than a point for the most part. Al Deiroit Produce errno 4 to| cent from the 1,679,000 tn the sim. As printed, Dr. Strough’s reply is “...” cials sought to play down the dif- ‘Who Has Biggest Bang? 
| number of. losers dotted the list. | : Domlors yeni? here |appecred oi ilar 1958 span. * * *% |ference and deny any threat to. i 
) ; FRUITS be a berter pore of ead by ar e 4 The transcript continues: jallied unity. ‘Cartoon Doesn’t Care savieninesaeeasd n ur mill account and that, ? } hii agian A Bhi Ge kee bed te city aS on a ai Soinewhat light. | Since the nation’s portation “The chairman... | ~ * * | LONDON (UPI)—The Sunday around opening levels. Little en- | appies, Transparent bu. me 3-20 Be 4 & increased between May 1958 an “Dr. Strough’s...” Some privately conceded, how- E s b a 
thusiasm developed to push them Blueberries, No. 1. 1d pts. -. 4.25 er than expected. May 1959, the birth rate for the | . look | ; eri has, Express commented by cartoon Cherries. sour, 16 uw vos . $0 = | Jt like that for 7 ever, that the maneuvering —_ higher. |Gherries pcre ary bare soe month this year was 22.6 per. goes on e that for 72 more lines. | enk:| yesterday on the public politick- 
- UETAnts, ‘Ted, iB gta. soll) 63s) Trading was influenced some- | Or you might want to tackle D 's or! created an appearance of weak-| tae of vice president Richard . i; | 1,000 population as compared | ackle Dr. Strough’s original - : ng P Most steels, motors and aircrafts Raspberries, Red, 24 qts. . 625| what on both sides of the market : jness under Soviet hammering on) M. Ni ad Soviet Presta 
tepped h higher. So vaecuvaesne by the government report of last | With 23.3 a year earlier, a drop Prepared statement, as published by the committee: jcritical Berlin and German issues.| i444 "i sok a ‘ r 
: Se repem a nce higher. Some ey ea ee $225, Friday showing stocks of grain | of 3 per cent. For the five months | “Statement of Dr. Robert I. Strough, project engineer, | Associates said Secretary of lees ew 
| cially situated issues ran ahead. | Bean,’ green, round. bu. ..........2.75| im all positions as of July 1. | Im each year it was 23.5. Canel, United Aircraft Corp. State Christian A. Herter is still} The cartoon showed the two 
Electronics, metals, chemicals! B¢at, 8g, Wonders. bu. ------------ +3! Most interest appeared to center Marriages held steady during “Dr. Strough ... determined to try to get an agree-| — aan on euch howe 
and rails were narrowly mixed. {Beat® ,¥8%4 RAL _siseindhinicehininesiss 2.92) om the figures for corn and soy- | May with 116,000 reported in each | “The chairman... ‘ment from the Soviets’ Andrei A. | rca bp te pate aotch, The 
: Beets, No. 1, doz. ee anennee 320| beans which some dealers said | year. For the five months they “Dr. Sheldon Charles S. Sheldon HI, committee techinca] ‘Gfomyko to protect West Ber =) caption: “Ha! 1 cas ee nee 
New York Stocks Cabbage, bu. ....... 235, Were of a slightly bullish tinge. {totalled 507,000, up 2.8 per cent director...” [ie i= reported egeally Cero | ae alee io bigger bang (Late M { @ ti ) Gebbane: guy. oe . ii Wheat was 14 to % cent a bushel over the 1958 figure of 493, 000. “Dr. Strough . {nor to a rr aoe ales etal than 7 can blow us all to bits 
| e orning Quotations ut a deadline 
| Figures after. decimal point are eighths | Carrots. aes “ : a35| pleher poe pe Eee aie | eran aterm preaete “The chairman: Thank you very much, doctor.” there: ° | wie. arrots, doz. s. we 5 4; \% to igner, oe 
ao ete: 2 as Celery. pascal, 2% dos = 335 Sy, 20%: oats \ to % higher Sept | |Since that month the number of, | Br sn ap — er : ° Allied Ch 25 5 Lo ee Oe baanay, spoczact a ; 5 who conferred wi 
Allied ‘Strs ‘Ses Goegel Br = 4 Cucumbers, ill’ Pancy aa! 85, hi Le pout ayele to|divorces listed Jig wade| Slated at LeBaron School | Pr ime Minister Harold Macmillan News In Br ief 
Alum Ltd 373 Goodyear | 1425/Cucumbers, Pickle, bu. 6.00) 78 higher. Sept soybeans | or th kend, tedly be- . Alc Cucumbers, slicers, Fancy, bu: c..... 3.96 the figure for the same month mn over the weeke repor ry: 
fn Arta ‘Be oi ae $43 Resplant, te bu, = nied to 6 higher. Sept preceding year. Niewea that limited assurances al-| Two cartons of cigarettes and 
EE cee cae ae Mine 2 aes evinated sx LOCO Time for Bicycles ste comvko a th wo cae of pvcages mere slen | Au Mech 25.1 eren once 1088) Kohira green, os ae | divorces during May, which was! |best the West can hope for and, by thieves who broke into Stew- 
| Am N Gat... 622 Hooker Ch ce ‘erie. curly. a peo, seao2os2 HT: t d H b d 10.7 per cent more than the 14,698| ‘should be accepted conditionally. art's Diner, 3315 Auburn Rd., Pon- 
| Am smelt 435 Indust Ray tees a § range us an ia year earlier, For the first five! Bicycle safety and fun are be-|and races will dominate the rodeo, | tiac Township, Saturday night, ac- 
Am Tob. a4 6 73, Negro -2|Beas. fo. 2 months, this year the total waS/hind an experimental program the! Buz said. | The condition. British an te cording to Oakland County sher- nacon¢ Inspir C 39.2 Peppers, hot, bu. .... 3 a jants said, is that the U.S.S.R. for 
Armco StL, Je! interlak Tr... 30.6 Peppers, weet, bas 020.000. . 2 Held i in Shooting (72,568. or 7-2 per cent more than Department of Parks & Recreation SERIOUS SIDE TOO lies tae (Seine) drop ha demand nai : atchicon 29.7 Int Bus Mch . 438.2) Potatoes, New. 5@ Ib. beg ......... 1.90 the 67,714 in 198 and 1 per cent wil) stage Tuesday for children’ in} But th g A The Food or, Tide veo Corp . 15. Imt Harv . $4.6 /Radishes, red. doz. ................ 19/ an estranged husband was held more than the 71,851 in 1957,” u ere’s another event in for agreement on direct unifica- Clarkston Locker, Radishes, whit ee : ; eld h way , ait acon 46.4 Int Nick 103.6 B, White, 408) sso ce a: 1.00) ng |" e LeBaron School area. ; t bet the West Clarkston Rd., Independence Town- 
Bee ee Sea ie, Ear Bae ghee rector eee, bebe #0 for investigation of assault with kok * Which the serious side of bicycling (oan and. Communist East(ship, was ransacked by burglars chacAlum) . 12 e hi Deliet Mbw int nr he ill aq |G ’ Bohn Alum 32.2 ie he 48 saunas eee rn nu oats ito Sahota. quate: fle aa atter he | . . ' | It's a bicycle rodeo in which“! be stressed, he emphasized. | Ge erman governments, AN three| Saturday night and a flashlight and 
Borden 85 Is) Crk Coal. 40 Squash Summer. 4% bu. a e frien iS wife in | Skill, endurance and knowledge: of Contestants will be required to Western powers were reported| two .22 caliber rifles were stolen, 
Brices) Mtg ie Jones @ Lea Toinatoes outdoors. ee - 133 a trailer park at 229 E. Walton |Safety rules will play a part, said) demonstrate their knowledge cf agreed that this price demanded according to sheriff's deputies. ist My ~~ Kellogg 34.4 Turnips, toppe u. 1 50 Leonard T. Buzz, recreation direc-| ‘safet recautions, rules of the ; 
Buda co ‘te hers ? an BEERIDS POSS RE oes “289 Arrested by Pontiac Police was ' s | tor. | Weed, Genvech bicycle lighting and | (ames SeigLicn taieect Aime Winsberger, 9¢ Pingres urroughs 5 c = « ire | § | 5 . 
| Cal soe 30 Kresge, 88 ay Casbage) Na. raids aes a Scott, 29, of 229 E. Walton M issiles Weak There are 25 youngsters en- one ats safety cocneen ee, he ex- lable. am ee Ne ean = 
Cambp Soup 506 Tor Glass a0 Collard. No. 1. bu. ............-.. 1.75 . tered in the contest so far and | P/® ; - %6 
ead Tbe 4 Lib) McN&L i ‘Mund wel he ee Hed Police said Scott entered the . at least 50 to 70 are expected by “If mole eo | aes cota, 94 Licg @ M , du. . : | the rodeo is successful at Le- > 
Carrier Up. agg beck Aire 30.1 Bpinech ou 2 TIT 7%) trailer of Hayes D. Cornwall, 22, U.S. Defense Secretary the time the first event begins paon we will consider holding it It's Hot, Humid; _ | vm ber bon Case. JI 72.2 Sole fal Swiss chard. bu 175 and found his wife there. . 2 p.m. Tuesday on the school | Vicki Davis, 114 Center 8t., re- “ate ree 3 Lone 8 Cem 31 Che x i Lone 8 Gas 41 5 Turnip Weare I | Gorriwall pulledloul a 22 caliber Says Russia Incapable playground, Buzz said. jat other play arounds sinless but Christmas ported to Pontiac Police Saturday 
, Cittes are $3.1 1/Miack” ae 6.7) Citery Ciitings. 00 aerEN® 27 automatic pistol and fired two of ICBM Offensive | Trick riding, an obstacle course the elty um a pun said. Comes i in July eg $35. a bananas eed 
| Coca Cola). 150 Martin Co 495 Endive, bu. .......... Dit ]ili1.15..°2 00 shots but missed Scott, police said. | | : er & . | Colx Palm 43 May D Str .. 503\Escarole, ou. ............0-.- | | Besides a 25-lap race and 200-| Colum Gag . 21.2 Mead CP 483 Lettuce. Bibb, OK. ..........-0-., Scott wrestled the gun away WASHINGTON (AP) — The So. | MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPID—It was| Best Carpet Cleaners. Owned | Con Fdis se eek a Bef Lettuce ‘Boston | bu. spaoosecedcoos: 235 from Cornwall and shot him in the yiet Union has fewer than 10 inter- Hawaii a V { yard dashes, the rodeo will have hot and humid outside Whitehaven |#24 operator by Jim Bradford, ce 
: Con Pe @6A7 087 Mint wen 146 Lettuce, leat, Bi. oe ..eece ot iote. 2.00 Knee. continental range missiles capa- | n 0 ers | another racing event that prom-, Methodist Church here Sunday. In- — —— Cleeaane carpet 
: Con aes 41.3 Monsen Ch 563 pe BSCR IGE OSGCCOr 1.50 eae ans was in satisfactory ble of hitting the United States, \ises amusement, Buzz said. side, air conditioners labored to cleeae: Quality cleaning of car- 
Cont Cop & 8.146 Mot Wheel 192 | condition this morning at Pontiac Secretary of Defense Neil H. Mc- t FI t L k Th : : coo] the air and keep the wreaths one, rues and furniture Free 
Cont Mot 113 Motorola. 1364 Poultry and Eggs General Hospital. Elroy_says. 0 CleCl LaWMaKers fh showent Flee wi’ vs declared (ot bolty toga. ete ae poe 543 Mueller Br 296 i slowest rider will be declared © y iresnh. a Jim, FE 2-2442 nis fone, Bee. 23 Mur ray Cp _ DETROIT POULTRY | McElroy’s statement Sunday | HONOLULU (UPD ¥ : fa the winner. | al Ca Ode We 
Curtis Pub ib oN 61 DETROIT, July 23 (AP)—Pri [contrasted with his news confer- | — voters wi | + ‘ 3658355-15 
Deets 64.6 Nat Seiry |: $$ per pound ¢.0. b. Detroit for Nov a : when he 80 to the poils tomorrow to elect! The rodeo is open ‘only to young-. De Se PUBLIC SALE Dot Edi 434 Net Gre ol ily uaaipeaitts e es axes ‘ence views six months ago whe: At a.m. on August 3rd, 1950, 0 
Sa pe ta. Nat Lead 1304 Heavy type hens 17-18: ligh isaid “We do not believe that Rus-|the men who will represent Hawaii) sters who have city bicycle i) see _wereiippers: save Mite Dire era! oan te eke oe oe ble ale 
Du Pont ie Ne Peasy = 10-11; , heavy type bret st | fry ‘sia has an ICBM capable of oper- in her new role as the 50th state censes, Buzz said. thought to the heat. They lis- D/ a ae 4 ae ae, ha doo se eae 
. eae go Nor Pac . 033 /81-44: capenctiog wadce b Tee mei Ah di St t tation against this country at this i the United States of America} po,, | tened attentively as the Rev. |Mich, that address being where Pathe Beis Ko 962 Ohio po ry eed Aponettes under 5 Ibs. 21; over un Qa in a e lime.” g country They will elect two senators, one| FOUR AGE BRACKETS | Dr. F. A. Flatt read the age- vebele, is stored may be in- 
a ae eae Owens ike 1033 pETRorr £ccs | LANSING a — Sal ae owe | member of the House of Represent-|, pie and eee be grouped old Christmas story. — = Emer Raa 196 PacG & — Sales taxes on _atives, a governor, and 62 mem- !” four age brackets for the ¢.n- STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- 
EIS GE RRME St OOmPOT on mithictae fait me vehicles sold in Michigan are MOEIY made cat Sindy Seno the nate legate, They (084° Agee 6, B10, 1122, and 1 didnt Devin tet the feeling wt ie Cuny't‘Sad | Faird Me aram Pict a = _. runnin s ; . 
Fe sone igs cee U8 ee iargsl 4543, lange Gr enaey Grohe year, Seay, ent eae ae aL over-all American weapons “could to the gr mm ead enn alti brunette Tommy Seacat, 15. “But Se © ee Some Sa sae Ford Mot 73 Be RR 81 small bas 2 7 erede Siar Inge wees Hare reported today. jmore than match whatever the) |to the ongress. today did seem like Christmas. It| ,Te © Orville and Valarie White, parents 
EGCRF ERs ct a ee one totaled $2447 a02 in RUSSIANS Will have, In nlercont-|» OF the ax candlatee runing Chicago to Defend wes cere — Dato len. san reg Rove Nae The , | ~ * ”» ir = 
: Gen Dynam — $1.8 Phelps D 594) Commercially graded: ‘the first six months of the year, |°Tt2! ballistic missile capabil-| for the two Senate and one gee jing at all. Coente “ot tap porentn of seed Guna? 
oe tah ie era | Sef xg Ve Orace 4 jumbo 39 extrs large an $8,015,196 increase over the none ee a ee “The main purpose of having| child er ween the oe igo ceppert, | Gen Motors 566 Pure Oil 40.6 ~ Grade" A” Jumbo 90: Ia 31-38; brew x k& *& two are heavily favored in thatr | a e Diversion Need [ane in July is to get awayjanu that said child should be placed G"trl @ EL 74 RCA er prete tris j 39; large 33; medium mtb Eso at ied we said. | McElroy said during a television contests, e commercial aspects, the under the Jurisdiction of this Coers. i jen Time | | OF kane “(ransac- interview with Sen. Kenneth B.| y ind peered Bereby noti- | tions rose from 372,696 to 485,505.|,--,. nes ‘| The race for the governorship is) WASHINGTON Officials of at ne We want to remind|state of a you's “pre ye 
Vivestock | Lapland, above Sweden, Finland) Last year, the average sales tax Keating (R-NY) the United Stafes| 4, only contest in which both can- Chicago’s Metropolitan Sanitary people of the real significance of| NS We pais. at the On Oakland oy 
ivestoc jand Russia, has two months each on new vehicles amounted to ules (catalan ebisy is destroy Gidates are Caucasian. |District defend themselves today, ‘the birth of Christ.” eee ie“ the ip of ie Summer when there is no dark- $45.23; this year it is $5123, indi-’ eo kee! sel ee Seat) Dr. Flatt said it should not tiac in said County, on the ah day 
    
DETROIT LIVESTOCK 
ee July 23 (AP)—Cattle ~~ 
; trade moderately ctiv   
‘ness and two months each winter | 
when there is no daylight. cating a $200 increase in‘the av- 
ierage cost of vehicles. 
    
‘should attack with large weapons. ‘| 
Rep. Chet Holifield (D-Calif) 
sid on anoier-progam «hat UAR President Tells 
    in a running battle over the dis-| 
trict’s sewage disposal methods. * 4 . —_ now. et 
A.D. 1959, at nine o'clock in t 
hereby Th 
personally at said — 
neg and you are 
manded to sppear seem strange to celebrate Christ- 
| hearin f eas MISE beet maa Uaty tee arze:| Sen. Paul Dou (D-T1D) a “Actually, Bible scholars don’t) "y, iS pang impractical to make personal ly slaught tity and. n. Pau glas an . pr 
erd ce end ster, sean atility cians Fifteen Di Michi Ree wT do not "believe that “ite E four district officials were ready know when Christ was born,” he series nero red by. publics arto " cfs ‘ ow ¢ steers 0; utility steers) t { W lk Softl ' sai copy one week prévious to sa r’ 
1g 00-1656) Clcuen kee’ eaten? ices] iftee ie in ichigan could retaliate to the extent that gyp 0 a ioe eeumpion ot hearings cai 8) The Pontiac. Press, a. newspaper 
par last week fed 
and heifers steady to 50c lower, 
heifers mostly 25-50c off: cows   
= Weekend Hi ighway Toll it would be an appreciable amount | 
of damage to a foreign country.""| ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (AP) 
    
House-passed bill which would per-| printed and circulated in said County. Honorable Arthur £. 
__|mit Chicago to take more water Flute With Both Hands =i socre “Suge of sald Court, in the City o 
      100 lower: bulls 80-1 00 lower: He is a member of the Senate-| Israel will be wiped from the map|from Lake Michigan. hye wey, Ab ee = steers 900-1150 Ib. 27.75-29 ew —— | The Senate public works -" Know how to flute a pie crust? | (geal) A UR E. MOORE. 
29.50: good a ow coerce  saee-27 |House Atomic Energy Committee. jit she attacks Egypt, United Arab fi { right, (A true copy) Judge of Probate standard to low good 23.50-26 00; me m Republic President G 1 Abdel comittee hearing was called to Put the index finger of your righ ELSIE J. VA NO, 
fied Seee-Sree vanced: Ghee es a € as e€mor la ay | [Ne ser told a cheeri yon: Sun. | Permit Chicago to reply to charges hand on the pastry edge, then Juvenile Division 
Yd 20 0-33 80; Bef cows Buh Lifeguard Saves. Girl 3: : si ‘raised earlier this month that the! pinch the dough the ne thumb uly 24, ‘58. 
18:00; utility bulls 22.50-24.00: cutters By United Press International oh speaking at a rally cele- | additional diversion is sought as and index finger of your left hand; | 
20.50-23.00; vealers salable none for the 
week vVealers steady to strong: 
and prime 34.00-38.00, few 38.50; 
30.00-34.00; standard  26.00-30. 00: 
and utility 17.00-2600. sheep salable 
none compared last week carte pase 
old choice 
od 
abst a 
14.00-17.00; cull to choice ewes 
7.00 
Hogs salable 50; not enough offered! 
early for an adequate test compared! 
week ago butchers 25-50c lower; sows 
steady estimates for Monday cattle 2700; 
calves 200; hogs 800; sheep 400; final 
hogs salable 100 butchers steady to 25c. 
wre No. 1 tos and (3, Zand 3 buted types of accidents during the nounced. in nie water at a park swim By FRED DANZIG to get the talk back to the subject ers 190-240 lb. 14.00- 
  
Rugged Training Pays: 
Princess Anne Is 3rd 
yesterday with a solid third place 
in an all-girl foot race. 
The Princess more or less dis- 
graced the royal family by fin- 
ishing dead last in the race last 
year among the sisters of boys 
at Cheam school, where Prince 
Charles is a pupil. . 
So far this year, palace sources 
said Anne got in some heavy cull, 
  Michigan recorded its worst 
;| the first week in May this_week- 
"| drowned and one was electrocuted | 
|in ‘the state, for a total weekend 
accidental death toll of 19—the 
same number as wal killed in all' 
Memorial Day weekend. 
One traffic accident accounted 
for three of the victims, and two 
| other crashes claimed ‘twe lives 
each, 
|Elizabeth, 65, both of Mansfield, | 
Ohio, were killed in an —o 
early Saturday on U.S. 31 in Em- 
met County, . 
* * * 
State Police said the Bogner 
car .swerved into the wrong lane 
jto avoid hitting the car in front 
of it when traffic slowed near 
Petosky. The auto hit an on- weekend on the highways since | 
  jin Van Buren Township of Wayne | 
county. 
  
\munist artillery today shelled the 
‘main island of the Matsu offshore | 
island group, dropping 263 shells 
on the Nationalist outpost in 49 
‘minutes, the defense ministry an- 
It was the fourth heaviest shell- 27° 
ing of the Matsus by shore bat-| 
teries since last year’s Quemoy) 
|crisis. The defense ministry did 
not say whether there were cas-) 
  
Plays Hob With Cars 
KENT, Ohio (UPI) — Ants so 
dearly love the aphid’s sticky se- 
cretion known as "honeydew". that 
tiny plant lice just to assure a reg- 
ular supply. 
But “‘honeydew,” which: the ap- 
hids obtain by sucking the juice 
from leaves and tender twigs of   they sometimes domesticate the’ Rete the seventh anniversary of, 
the 1952 Egyptian revolution that. 
|toppled King Farouk. at Homestead Park 
  Toes compared an ree se Chinese Reds Step U An alert lifeguard at Homestead! Nasser’s bristling, confident ° 
te AG otie Ms" dng CO when 15 persons were Kl Sheling of Matsy Park, im Commerce Township was spech was prompted by « sate. TV News and Reviews DANIELS AGENCY Sel pred ae tity iron are al in traffic accidents. | ° ing ° . eae can agente ne | cet ee Daye, atk Ga 563 W. Huron PE 3-7111 / HP 7.00-19.00- utility. and od In addition, three persons} TAIPEI (UPI) — Chinese Com- ‘iff's deputies with saving the life chief, Moshe Dayan, that his coun- : ‘of a Hazel Park teenager Sunday.'try should “‘return hostility for 
| Fred Honchell, of 2836 Rowan St., “hostility” with Egypt. 
| Waterford Township, said he no- 
ticed Lucille Rondan, 14, of 
Sturtevant St., floating face sown Deter mined to Pass     
‘a substitute for adequate treat-, continue this way right around the, 
'ment and disposal] methods. ‘cdee jf the pastry. FOR COMPLETE 
> INSURANCE SERVICE CALL   
  
    
‘Dick-Nik’ Talk Program ~ 
Kind to Long Remember| FAMILY MAN? 
| FAMILY PLAN!       
  | He rushed to her aid and carried : Housing Legislation. 
the unconscious girl to shore where | 
he revived her with artificial res-- WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate, 
\Piration. ‘housing chairman John Sparkman | 
She told oe she had fainted. (D-Ala) said today congressional |   { 
= Groucho handle him, | | A eee tcccae petal pier | Three out-of-state _ residents, walties. } [leaders are tocnioet to pass their weekend time to run off a) , 
| Ali i 1 - housing legislation this year, either gpectacular pilot film showing the) SHORT SHOTS: Operation. and some prerace coaching by ae Kostecka, 32, Chicago; R d Ch All pec P g | tho bolt te’ the tarens peld ott Frank Bogner, 67, and his wile, Honey for the Ants Ke ina ows by overturning President Eisen-|newest talk show to bemuse their Noah’s Ark on NBC-TV Sunday] 
jhower’s veto or by drafting a new 
Sermons on Streets Sosrizan made. tte statement \as his Senate housing subcommit- 
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) tee called Gov. David L. Lawrence 
— A churchman just back from|of Pennsylvania and mayors 
Communist China said today that/ Richard J. Daley of Chicago and 
religious literature can be distrib-|Frank A. Sedita of Buffalo to 
uted in the streets there provided | itestify on Ejisenhower’s veto of} 
it does not interfere with traffic.|the big * Democratic housing 
x* *« * ‘measure.   NEW YORK (UPI)—This is the of videotape and television. 
iyear for so-alled ‘‘talk shows’ on Since it appears that Khrush- | 
‘TV chev enjoys ad libbing on TV, I'd | 
: like to book him into some future | 
* Groucho Marx show The three networks used some of; x 
  viewers. 
This road version of Keep Talk- was an exciting and beautiful pho-| 
\tographed documentary about the | 
rescuing of wild animals from the ing featured Dick and Nik, better | izambexi Fiver i southern | 
known as Vice President Richard , Ansa 
ge oregon sive oie | When it comes to smiling, Team- 
oniansen a peat giv e-and- ster boss James Hoffa makes Arth- 
take that originated at the Amer- |“ Murray look like a Liberace. 
, , ‘Or so it seemed when Hoffa ap- 
Sacer sn scolar TV’ steal peared on CBS-TV's Face the Na-   
  ition, 
spring training behind the 
screening walls of Buckingham 
Palace’s garden. coming vehicle and two others | trees, also descends on automobiles 
crashed into the wreckage. Four, parked beneath the trees. To re- 
  other persons, all from Ohio, were move it from your car with damag-| The Rev. Edwin L. Williams, ito try to override the veto or to fascinating human doc mment. mittee, appearing on NBC’s Meet ‘ vith 
in critical condition in Little Tra-|ing the finish, tree experts recom-| principal of the Churches of Christ write a less costly bill. Eisen- | x * | the Press immediately following +" “Ae Got Car the Hoggy Way verse Hospital, Petoskey. : | mend washing with warm soapy Bible College in Melbourne, made hower vetoed the measute as’ The very thought of these two’ Hotta’s appearance, said he be- 
ALTON, Til, (}—Melvin Paschea 
of Granite City, Ill, believes in a P for saving, too. While cash ong | owlerville Calls Queen recedented, unforgettable TV : doing things. the old fashioned| were killed last night in'a two- Briggs Reports Profit Christian denominations. F lunprecedented, unforgettable TV) brought from Ted Ayres, || Values are rewlas, pews 
way. car, head-on collision on U.S. 23 FOWLERVILLE (UPI) — The ™°™’ ) He traded his old car—and 192 
hogs—for a new automobile. 
The salesman who handled the 
deal then peddled the hogs. 
He Couldn’t Read Latin 
BELLEVILLE, ‘ll. w—One of the “wanted” posters in the St, Clair 
County Courthouse says a man   
sought for child desertion has aj .. 
tattoo dn his arm. It reads: 
“Semper Fidelis’—always — faith- 
ful Gerhard Halseet, 64, and Otto 
east of Cheboygan. Five Persons 
were injured in the crash. 
Another head-on _ collision 
claimed the lives of Clara A. 
Reinke, 68, Detroit, and Gladys 
Kandt, 43, Birmingham. They 
were killed when Mrs. Reinke 
tried to pass a car on M15 near 
Flint and struck the car in which 
Mrs. Kandt was riding, 
er, 
was fatally injured last night fn a 
three-car crash on Belleville road!     water, 
  slhenh 
DETROIT ® — Briggs Manutfac- 
turing Co., reports a profit of 
$142,713 for the six months ended 
June 30. This compares with a loss 
of $204,140 for the same period a 
year ago. Sales totaled $10,188,054 
compared with $8,319,576 in the 
first months of 1958. 
  
Kansas City, Mo., combines with 
Kansas City, Kan.; North Kansas 
City, Mo.; and Independence, Mo.; 
to make up what is 
Greater Kansas City, with a ‘eal 
popalation of 720,000, 
a’     He said also that street sermons 
are permitted. 
a five-week tour of China and the 
Soviet Union with five other Aus- 
tralian church leaders of various 
Youth Found Starving, 
Unconscious in. Auto 
trition. 
Varice BL. 
as|sister, Mrs. Margaret D. 
  The subcommittee is holding! It wasn’t exactly fhe Lincdin- 
Inearings before deciding whether |Douglas debate, but it still was a) | Robert F. Keunedy, « chief coun- 
sel to the Senate Rackets Com-       | 
ourself, your You\gan cover 
  FLINT (UPI) — Police ‘contin- 
ued an investigation today to de- 
termine what happened to a Flint 
college youth who was found un- 
conscious iy'a car suffering malnu- 
Anderman, 21, was 
taken to Hurley Hospital when his 
‘Long, found him in a car in his garage; tor bids and 
" | members stand ‘inflationary”’ and ‘‘extravagant.”’ 
  
new Miss Michigan, Anne Marston, 
will be one of the celebrities ap- 
pearing at the 73rd annual Fowler- 
ville Fair, starting tomorrow and 
continuing through Saturday, Miss 
Marston will appear Saturday aft- 
ernoon and evening. 
The’ phrase “seat on: the New 
York Stock Exchange” dates back 
to the days when members sat   
  important world figures haggling | 
and exchanging cliches about their 
deeply-felt convictions made for an) 
Diplomatic and political reper- 
cussions aside, this Dick-Nik TV 
show was stimulating, vivid and 
filled to the hilt with the im- 
mediacy of today’s history, 
a burlesque comic with his Pana- 
shake, seemed to be having a ball 
during the impromptu powwow. 
* * * 
  down and stocks were called out 
\ offers. Today the about the propriety. of Nixon, apparently ar oie 
  Surely Khrushchev, looking like 
ma hat and groovy hipster hand- 
int      
        ginia Family Protection. Just 
one, low-cost policy .. . one 
budget-size premium. Great ~ | lieved the CBS panel had agreed | 
T| not to ask Hoffa any personal 
questions. 
producer of the CBS-TV show, the| 
following rejoinder: ‘‘Ridiculous; 
there was no such agreement.” 
x * * 
Kennedy also was asked how he 
felt about Hoffa's threat to sue for 
libel because of Kennedy's com- 
ments on last Wednesday’s = tected. Call me for facts and 
figures. 
             f “4 
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