_ China coast, PONTIAG, MICHIGAN Autumn Weather Sneaks in Early, Footballs Ready? Tt will be fair and cool in the Pontiac area tonight with a low of 4 to 50 degrees. Continued cool with a high of 72 to 76 degrees is the prediction for tomorrow. There is a possibility of scattered showers late in the evening. . * * * Temperatures will average about 6 degrees below normal for the next five days. Rainfall] will aver- age near‘ one half inch in scattered showers Saturday or Sunday and again about Wednesday. The lowest temperature pre- ceding 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 50 degrees. At 2 p.m. the thermometer registered 72 degrees. Find Wreckage of Navy Plane No Trace of 16 Aboard, Britain Urged to Ask Reds If They Know ' TOKYO W—Search planes and ships today found wreckage and two empty life rafis presumed to be from a U.S. Navy patro] plane which disappeared after radioing it was being attacked off the Red * * * : First reports of the finding said there was no indication of what happened to the 16 American air- men aboard the missing plane, a four-engine P4M Mercator the Navy said was on a routine patrol and training mission fram Japan. Navy offictals refused to specu- late on the possibility that Com- munist boats had picked up at least some of the men. The State Department has asked Britain, which has diplomatic re- lations with the Peiping regime, to find ‘out if the Reds have any in- formation about the plane and its crew, NEAR SHANGHAI Navy spokesmen at the huge said the first /people” in the fall elections. as. ome & ledges Best Pol Efforts FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1956 —40 PAGES or - Victory \Nixon fo Carry GOP ‘Crusade’ fo the Country Convention Goes Wild as Unanimous Choices Accept Challenge SAN FRANCISCO (#— President Eisenhower has sent the Republican party into battle with the confi- dent prediction that its pro- gram “will be decisively approved by the American He got a tumultuous re- ception yesterday from thousands of Republican National Convention dele- gates and San Franciscians to hear him formally ac- cept his party’s renomina- tion. He pictured the GOP as forward looking—“‘the party of the future” —and, by implication, accused the dent Eisenhower drew came in response to an invitation for ‘ cerning Democrats” to pitch in with the Republicans, tices to be erased, still enough needless sufferings to be cured, to provide careers for all the young crusaders we can produce or find. was firm. His bearing had the old- time military erectness. His voice Democrats of looking backward. He told the convention he was accepting its standard again “humbly but confidently.” And, he said, “| pledge you my best efforts te bring victory to our cause next November.” One of the biggest cheers Presi- ‘dis-| It was an inte tion Kisen- hower put into text of his speech as it had been distributed to newsmen, In the text, the speech read: “There are still enough injus- “We want oom all.”* * * To this, the President added: “Republicans, independents, dis- cerning Democrats, come on in and help us!” Ike's color was good. His step who packed the Cow Palace ‘4,282 Thwarted by Solution Fruitless Hunt for Winner’ Drops Pall on Pot-O-Gold A mournful wail came forth from the Press’ judging room early this morning, crept along the hallways and hung heavily over the heads of gloomy staffers. Some said it began deep within the crape-bedecked pot in the corner where 500 crisp dollar bills lay in jumbled misery. IKE MAKES FORMAL ACCEPTANCE—Here are three studies of President Dwight Eisenhower as he formally accepted the Republican presiden- Ike ie Brave, Shining N ew World tial nomination lead them into promised the American people he would try to “a brave and shining new world.” AP Wirephoto Mints Ta 'Seit Predaloce He But others swore it came diner the judges who calmed themselves down long enough to say: “No Pot-O.| Gold winner this Sao 4, i revivals in nea es might been ndeed in one But then a ray of light poshed the bloom aside when someone re- marked: “Next week we'll be able to give away $600,."". Putzle No. 11, despite the elu- sive nature of its words, was almost conquered by six read- wag strong and resonant. ‘GREAT SATISFACTION’ Mrs, Pat Nixon. When he arose hefore the throng, the 65-year-old Eisenhow- er said he wanted to express his “great satisfaction’ that the vention had decided to keep in- tact for this year’s race the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower, in roy- al purple hat and dress, carried a big sheaf of red roses, as did ers who came within one each of coming up With the correct solution, Several others missed it by only two words, ‘In adding another $100, the Press makes it possible for a winner of eon- jour Current puzzle to carry home up to $625 in prize money next week, The extra $25 is a bonus “that goes to a regular Press sub- 34 Days Spiral to 180 © Underpass Delay Puzzling =: We're puzzled. Others are, too. . ___'The half million dollar Telegraph Road underpass + at ‘Orchard Lake Avenue has been delayed SIX MONTHS by a 34 day steel announcement by an unnamed —— Highway Department spokesman.” *. * ‘Ai nihil aaa aight: Wh tage ve ealeratnnd,. If it were delayed 68 days, which ‘allows for a one hundred per cent lag, we'd be ~ unhappy but might comprehend vaguely. But The Press doesn’t DRED. AND EIGHTY DAYS delay because of a 34 day setback. x ® f If this “unnamed highway spokesman” knew what he was talking about, we are respectfully requesting his superiors to “explain”. thousnnid mystified and irkih ‘people tn tils general area can understand—at least in part. : ££ Se We are speaking to the Oakland County Highway , to and to the State As it. stands’ i Werke recur Le strike. At least this is the understand ONE HUN- so a couple of htindred tor at Orchard Lake-and.| " “Will you please t tll us, how ome?” -s ow cae tela’ work. will, soon | \ ~ COME TO A HALT ONE NEXT FEBRUARY. — | : er a ee scriber. Readers who have found them- stig owsiy urge tt tony or Gold challenging, | And if--this—wasn't your week, turn to Page eight where you'll find the last copy of Puzzle No. 12. Pick all 16 words, send them to us by the deadline, and we'll week Ask Adlai fo Speak - ‘Democratic Presidential Nomi- nee Adlai E. Stevenson has been invited to speak at the Labor Day celebration in Pontiac, Albert Wil- kinson, chairman of the event. an-| nounced yesterday. Wilkinson sent a telegram to Ste- venson at Libertyville, Ill., request- ing him to deliver the main speech jat the Sept, 3 Oakland County CIO Council - sponsored festivities Murphy Park. He said he expects an answer by the weekend and added he thinks the chances of Stevenson's accept- ing the invitation are “good.” The Democratic standard bearer has announced he'll address a La- bor Day rally in Detroit, at Britain Firm on Terms for Cyprus Surrender. NICOSIA, Cyprus # — Britain stood firm today by her surrender terms for Greek rebels on Cy- prus, The colonial government re- 9 to back down after the KA underground flatly rejected the British conditions and threat- ened to call off its week-old truce Delegates Sampling e |New ’Punch’ at Meeting ST. LOUIS # — The 775 dele- gates to the national. convention of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union punch-a time clock each time they enter the meeting room for a convention session. The attendance record will be forwarded to each délegate’s up-end our gold pot with its $600 right into your pocket, home town local, which pays his in County Labor Day |” {Sen, “Patrick McNamara. = State Democrats in Convention Incumbents Seem Sure of Keeping Ballot Spots; Oakland County delegates in their ranks, opened their two-day con- vention in Grand Rapids today and planned“ an appeal for the farm vote, 7 © ® At today’s informal session, they! picked R. M, Evans, an lowa farmer and former deputy‘ super- intendent of the U, 8S, Agricultural Department, to deliver the keynote address at a dinner tonight, His speech will be followed by campaign planning which is ex- pected to overshadow the main business of the convention— nomination of a state ticket for the Nov, 6 election, Barring unexpected opposition, the four incumbent Democrat state: administrative officers will be .re- nominated. They are Atty. Gen. Thomas M. Kavanagh, Secretary of State James M. Hare, State Treasurer Sanford A, Brown and Aud, Gen, Frank S, Szymanski, OTHER PROBABLES Two incumbent Supreme Court justices—Talbot Smith of Ann Ar- bor, and George Edwards of De- troit—also seemed sure of renomi- nation. —— Party leaders salg this fall's platform will follow the national platform, with a blast at the State Legislature for failure to adopt parts of the ayrerene’s. program, ; The 1,380 county delegates will meet in formal ‘session at 11 a.m. ‘Riverama’ Parade DETROIT (INS) — A three-hour marine parade laced the Detroit River with 500 water crafts today as they passed before the ‘‘River- ama” reviewing stand. Spectators a wea eh lold_ monarch and her 45-year-old prince took a plane for a short saw hearly $3 million worth of| pleasure Find 10 Hungry. Children Alone ‘in Home at Keego Ten hungry children, one of them suffering from a badly burned hand, were found alone in a K2ego Harbor home last night during an the Oakland County Children’s Home. Ranging in ages from seven months to 13 years, the children had report tedly been left alone for two days with —————*-the oldest in charge while Officials Protest Sewer Project Allocated Cost Blamed for Halt in Progress of South Oakland Plan Progress toward a $38,581,000 drain project in. south Oakland County was stalled here yesterday as officials from three communi- ties protested the high cost. Troy, Southfield Township and Royal Oak Township officials said they could not afford to pay their allocated shares of the total cost set by the Twelve-Town Drain Board, ‘ Madison Heights said jt wanted plans to enclose Red Ran ditch included in the final project. No objections were raised by Bir- Campaian Plan Vital j{mingham, Royal Oak, Berkley, an g Vit Clawson, Ferndale, Oak Park, a Hazel Park, Huntington Woods Michigan Democrats, with §6/pjeasant Ridge or Troy Township. The Board will meet again at 10 a.m, Tuesday in hope of making the allocations final. * Ralph A. Main, county drain commissioner and a member of the Board, said yesterday, “Any delay because of costs just meats more basements. And that costs more than the drain would cost.’ The project is designed to hait flooding in the communities by di- verting storm water into the drain- age system. _| girl'e bedy during an examina- investigation by officials of the father, William Wyatt, had gone to Indiana to pick up a load of watermelons for a Dixie Highway fruit stand which employs him. The mother has been con- fined to a local hospital since Aug. 12 following an) operation. The situation is being investi- gated today by authorities of the Juvenile Court, with the pos- sibility the parents will be pros- ecuted for child neglect, | The injured girl, Sherry A, Wil- kinson, 8 the. woman's daughter through a previous marriage, is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac ‘General Hospital] with third degree burns of the right hand. Doctors have estimated the hand will require several years of treat- ment before it can be used nor- mally again, according to a Juven- lile Court spokesman, Several knife cuts and welts were also reportedly found on the tion, The wounds were believed to have been inflicted with a large stick or club, to be in good health except for suffering from the lack of food. Two other members of the fam- ily, Darlene, 10, and Diane, 9, have been staying Home. “They ran away from home and refused to go back last Fri- day,’ said James VanLeuven of) the Juvenile Court. | Detectives of the Oakland Coun- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Exit Faith Healer Juliana Looks to Future Atter Patching Difficulties THE HAGUE (#—Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard reported to the Dutch people today that they've patched up their “difficulties” and “now look forward to the future with confidence. The brief, joint statement was in effect the royal couple’s denial of rumors that they were heading for a divorce—or that the Queen Juliana’s close association with a 61-year-old faith heal- er, Miss Greet Hofmans. ‘An authoritative source said the Queen has ended her ” 4 might abdicate—because of association with the: faith? healer, to whom she orig-| inally ‘looked for treatment of her partly blinded youngest daughter, Prin- cess Maria Cristina. A few hours before their com- munique was issued, the 47-year- holiday oy the Greek island of Corfu with Greece's King Paul and Queen Frederika.- The statement made no men- tion of Miss Hofmans nor did it specify the difficulties which had arisen between Jaliana and Bernhard, married for 19%2 years. [mission had made a “very valu- lin June, The - ‘her to the palace in 1948 to treat It expressed sincere thanks to a royal commission of three elder statesmen appointed to advise the icouple after their rift became pub- lic. The statements said the com- | able_contribution to the solution of the difficulties which had arisen.” Details of differences between Bernhard and Jullana—whispered in government and royal cireles here for years — were published in a German news magazine early Queen reportedly came under the influence of Miss Hofmans after Bernhard brought All the other children were said\'® "at. the Children’s}. Under Bushes Near Parkway. Cabbie Confesses, Says. Debts Led Him to Act; FBI Cracks Case MINEOLA, N. Y. @—A debt-ridden cab driver, — seized: as the kidnaper of the Weinberger baby, today directed police to the lone- ly, overgrown spot where the dead child lay—aban- doned there in panic. The infant's decayed body was found beneath a tangle of honeysuckle vines and leaves, apparently swept over it by the wind in the 51 days since the child was taken. It was the tragic end to an in- tensive, painstaking FBI search through hundreds of thousands of But according to his account to authorities, he was - frightened away by police and ing the vicinity of the home of the Northern State peering It there, under the mantle of nature and time, that the remaing were said County Dist, Atty, Frank Gu. lotta, Kidnéping carries a maxi- of death in New family had been burdened by | debts, was seized at his home ear- ly yesterday by Nassau police and FBI agents. A cab-driver, who also worked at other jobs, LaMarca admitted | grabbing the baby from a crib in — the patio of the Morris Wein- berger home while the mother had Princess Maria Cristina, now 9. (Contingad on Page 2 O89 te. * > p a eee? , GOP Pulls Out All Stops When Ike, Neseet Appear States." The convention took off Nixon's address "quieted down some Chairman Joe Martin an- nounced: “The President of the United them. Then he called his son and| wife, and brothers and their wives) tured to come forward until the enji In Today's s pas pring oe anne ene the demonstration. County NeOWS. .. ..sceeseeces- 0 |) : Editorials dantne See eenneeane 6 Pag a + | Find Dead Infant LaMlerch; 3 wbeky, dubiaek whose shaken wife said their = dae WES ba Mice sah it THE PONTIAC PRESS, Saeoats AUGUST. 24. sane. J if 2 Jills Hite! z ff A | : i ‘i Uti! gf Ar Wirephete "REPAIRING CRUSHED BOW OF STOCKHOLM — The bow of the Swedish liner Stockholm, crushed in a collision with the Italian liner Andrea Doria off Nantucket, July 25, is being repaired at the Brooklyn shipyards of the Bethlehem Steel Co. Work on the $995,000 face-lifting job is expected to be completed in November. More than two score of those aboard the vessels died or are unaccopnted for in the crash which sent the Italian ship to the bottom, Ten Children Alone in House at Keego (Continued From Page One) e-lty Sheriff's Department and offi- cers of the Keego Harbor police department are aiding the investi- gation of the incident. The Wyatt home is located at 3216 Pridham St. “There was some food in. the house, but they ate a big meal at the Children's Home,” said Van-|* fs ETE iat never been to school, She explained that was the reason the other ee Fee “Wyatt is the mother of all; 12 children, six through the pres- ent marriage and six vious one, Egypt to Have Help — lf Suez War Flares MOSCOW W—Nikita S. Khrush- chev says the Arabs will have help by a pre- ispute, * “The Arabs will not stand alone,” the first secretary of the Soviet Communist party declared yesterday. “It will be a just war and there will be volunteers.” Utica Youth Jailed mate ON Larceny Charge One Utica youth was jailed and fear others fined after avenue fruit market. mittee, and Daniel T. Murphy Jr., — of the Speakers Com-| | The Weather, | Se reaper ate gd Wind ‘ye 16-18 m.p.h. wae Tomerrew ine ig change te, tom- Sy te so ew ee td eee Cee eee Hee EET e Fee ee ee eet ee er ee totaling $25 ; Mound Ra., Raymond 19, of 4820 25 Mile Ra., Clit. in Cottage Arethine war starts over the Suez Canal|) 9 E. Griffiths, 17, of 11411 + as sentenced to 10 Oakland County Jail to pay fine and costs oy wma geese? pes R. Mayes, 17, of Win- Township Justice t W. Hodge on simple lar- charges. Red Cross Offers Advanced Course in First Aid An advanced first aid course will be offered by Oakland County Chapter American Red Cross be- ginning Sept. 5 from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Chapter House, 118 Frank- lin Blvd. One three-hour session per week will be held for four weeks, Ralph S. Forman, chairman of first aid jsays that trainees must hold a standard first aid certificate that has been issued within the past two years, Registration information may be obtained by contacting the chapter = 3,000 Votes Gained "iby Sparks in Canvass The official count by the Board of Oakland County canvassers gives incumbent County Treasurer Charles A. Sparks about 3,000 more votes than anndunced in unofficial totals after the August 7 primary election. Sparks, a Republican, officially received 31,718 votes, compared with the 28,753 votes listed in the vote comparable to the totals re- ceived by other incumbents seek- ing re-election to county offices. The official totals did not change) ‘any of the nominations already jannounced, ‘Receives Fine of $100 on Cruelty Conviction Charlies Kelley 53, 580 Brook St., was fined $100 and given 30 days ‘in jail by Judge Cecil McCallum Thursday on a charge of cruelty to animals. Kelley was charged with the beating of a dog belonging to Mr. The Bentons said that Kelley tied the dog in a shack and beat it with a hammer killed eo of Kelley's chickens, police sai Teenagers Next The official total makes Spark's. « L. Benton of Davis- after the dog allegedly bar in Triick’s for Polio Serum Commercial Vaccine Use’ Opens Eligibility Ranks to Older Children Next in line for Salk Polio vac- cine in Oakland County are the teenagers. : eo: * * * : - Dr, Frederick N. Adams of Bir- mingham, chairman of the polio committee of the Oakland County Medical Society, said that county physi¢lans are now able to pur- chase Salk Polio Vaccine through commercial channels, This vaccine can be used on any teenager pr cc ata cena eaas sa All parents of teenagers are urged to contact their doctors and make arrangements for thelr teenagers to start the se- ries of three injections agninst | paralytic polle, Dr. Adams said. “This age group is our next tar- get. There is a high incident rate among teenagers, according to na- tional statistics, ‘and with the re- mercial sources, we want to stress. the imiportance of getting these young people vaccinated as quick- ” * to teenagers as it is to younger children, Much crippling due to paralytic polio will be prevented if parents make prompt arrange- ments to have their older children receive the protection the Salk vaccine gives," Dr. Adams said. Jail Pair 20 Days in Soliciting Case: — of soliciting, Paul Baity, 28, and Eddie May Yates, '29,. both of 502 Branch St., segs day were jailed for 20 days b McCallum, * ” * They face an additional 20 days if they fail to pay $100 fines. Both Baity and Ray Yates facé ar- violate state narcotics laws, Steal Outboard Motor A $75 outboard motor was stolen’ from a boat anchored at the Mill sometime ’ He said the committemen were \volve-a suggested site, architectur- | leasing of the vaccine through com-) Found in Bushes lot of money, only what I need, ae I am very serious about Pontiac Municipal Judge Cecil|§ "penned the note. same ag the script in the note. 1 (Charge Detroit Red Ranta With Transporting Liquor | plus $100,009 home in suburban Detroit, - le tans gpl gern gs see 1s. GH. Kimball Succumbs at Age 86 Mrs. George H. (Alicé Maten) Kimball Jr, of 5875 Andersonville) _ Rd. died at 6:30 this morning in Bloomfield rn seer ee h veddenk:-ol “Posing way years, she was the daughter of the late George A. and Mary Lov- bronght im about #2,00 of whisky. for Varga, but pevsndt sald = the was “silly,” He said, “we think they brought in only q few botties.’* Recccimenintion on Civic Building Expected Soon Be recommendation as to the type of “Centennial Auditorium” best most impressed with the buildings in Lansing and Midland, the new- est of the four inspected. The forthcoming recommenda- tion, Hirlinger reported, will in- al design and type of financing for the building hoped to be construct-| ed in connection with the city’s | 100th anniversary in. 1961. Weinberger Body (Continued From Page One) gone inside the house for a diaper. Arrangements later by the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, Pontiac Deaths Mrs. Frank Bogard Schiven tet. on April 17, 1872 Mra, Bogard came here from Hudsonville, TH., and was a resi- dent for ten months, She is survived by three chil- ee ee Dix of Hudsonville, uation be ceaa a hom Cham-|Donelson-Johng Funeral Home to Pullman Funeral Home, Hudson- ville, “Tll., today. ee E. Lucile Brown E. Lucile Brown of 111 Oneida Rd, died at 11:30 last night in McLaren Hospital, Flint. Her body will be at the S riffin Fu- neral Home after 7 o'clock this evening. Funeral arrangements ‘| will be announced later, Rosa Linda: Gomez old daughter of Jessie and Mary Ponce Gomez of 405 S, Main St., Capac, died Tuesday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a brief ill- ness. She was born in Imlay City on, May 4, 1952, and brought to the Pontiac hospital two weeks ago for treatment, Rosa is survived by her par- ents, a brother, Jessie Jr.; two home, He left this note: “I hate to do this to you, but 1 am in great trouble. Don't notify | the police. I am not asking for a The funeral will be at 10 o'clock Saturday morning from St. Vincent de Paul Church with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Rosa's body is at the. Pursley Funeral Home. The note asked $2, vith structions where ‘to. pl : signature read: “Your baby sit- ter.’ It was this handwritten note, de-| scribed as containing a_ telltale characteristic in the script, that gave authorities the eventual so- ution, With little more to go on, FBI men had checked more than two) million handwrting specimens —public records of all kinds — .|in the hunt for the man who had Finally, digging through federal court records in New Yorle City, agents came across the signature. of LaMarca, in a 1%4 bootlegging case. He had been put on proba-) tion with a 90-day suspended _sen- tence, Laboratory technicians - identi- fied the signature as precisely the LaMarca, confronted with the evi- dence, confessed, Health. Department Answers Questions answers about the Salk polio vaccine: 1. Is the Salk vaccine safe? use of the Salk vaccine in be- “tween 30 and 40 million indivi- duals has proven it to be one of the safest vaccines now in use. Stringent tests insure this safety, ceived. the vaccine. Yes, Experience following the The vaccine was approximately 80 per cent effective in prevent- ing paralytic polio in 1955, The unvaccinated ‘child is five times more likely to get paralytic polio than is the child who has re- 5. What is the fall schedule of vaccination x emt oe es the late David and Harriett Lewis =e © 4 She leaves three sons in Oregon Oakland Health .jand a sister, Mrs. Price Hil] of ment, 1070 N. Telegraph Rd., . . Pontiac. Fridays: 9 to 11 a.m. . pee South Oakland County Health| Jacqueline Irene Taylor Department, 2401 § ci Mrs. Vernon O'Connell _ Vernon: ( (Helen Margaret) Connell, 50, of 125 Commerce Rd., Walled Lake, died this morp- ing in the St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital after being fll seven months. She was born in Royal Oak, February 14, 1906, and attended Royal Oak and Rochester High School, An occupational therapist, she was an executive housekeeper at St, Joseph Mercy Hospital dnd a member of the American Hos- pital Association, Surviving besides her husband, Vernon Thomas are four children, Mrs. David Stansberry of Rock- ford, Ill, Mrs, James McCollough of Chicago, Donald of Clarkston ; and Harold in the U, §. Navy. The body is at Allen's Funeral Home in Lake Orion. Funeral ar- rangements will be announced la- ter. Mrs. Freely Simmons Mrs, Freely (Estellar) Simmons, | 52, of 39 Elizabeth St. died Wednes- day in Pontiac General Hospital. | She had been ill two hours. She was born in Fairfield, Ala. Pontiac. Two sisters are living in Alabama. Service will be at 2 p.m. Monday trom the New Hope Baptist Church with her pastor, the Rev. Ford B. Reed, officiating. Burial will be in. Oak Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the Frank Carruthers Bu- neral Home after 3 p.m. Sunday. Mrs. George Smith Word has “been received of the} iyear-old Lake 'Martha Little. Rosa Linda Gomez, four year). Hartrick named two psychia-| ithe Day in Rireiucham printed up for other clubs, e The Musicale is planning a series of national music programs, - ning with a re ee oe rogram by Mary se aoe mage on the second |Thursday of October. All members. who didn’t per- | Matthew ark the by program chairman, ‘are ~~ old Walker, French composers will be starred as in the November meeting, English! in February, North American in /March, Latin American in April, and in May, all folk music, Christmas program will have varied music, and the January re- sort and fashion show. will feature light opera and musical comedy. part recently in the be at the Willoway Playhouse. The show was termed “most suc- cessful’ by Mrs, Syver K, Thing- Judge Orders Test for Moore Sanity Examination spree for Accused Sex Slayer of Child Circuit Court Judge George B. Hartrick yesterday ordered a sanity test for Howard W. Moore, accused sex-slayer of his. three- Orion” neighbor, trists to conduct the examination of Pontiac State Hospital, and Dr. L. Jerome Fink, of Pontiac, . for- mer Assistant Superintendent at the hospital. The examination will determine whether the 23-year-old furnace re- pairman will stand trial at the end of next month on a charge of first- isisters, Eva and Annie, all at degree murder. If judged insane, he can be committed: to a state in- stitution, murder charge if ever released. Moore has repudiated his con- fession that he beat the girl to death after driving her to a lovers’ lane eleven miles from home, Ground Breaking Set "Hee for Miracle Mile Formal ground breaking for the Miracle Mile Shopping Center at Telegraph and Square Lake roads, for Sept. 5. Developers of the 35 million dol- lar project have set the ceremony for 11 a.m. Numerous business and civic leaders are invited to partici- pate, Actual preliminaries to construc- tion on the SO-acre site have been under way for some time, with heavy equipment preparing the sar will include some 100 stores, de- cars is included in the plans, in circuit court Sept. 11. They are’ Dr. Ivan LaCore, - Superintendent) but will still face the! Bloomfield Township, is planned An early 1957 completion date has been set for the center, which velopers say. Parking for 5,000 Clubwomen’ s. ee Slate Concerts, Operas ma of planned events ate te be issued soon, - ' I A move from their present shop at 141 W. Maple to a new bullding at 178 E. Brown is. planned tor Parmenter’s Florist. The business will probably close for several days while the move is made over Labor Day weekend. Opening of the new building is ex- pected about ae. 4 or 5. miasiatlone ini ‘a in store for the 40-year-old structure of the Chapel The board of trustees plans tuck-pointing of the. exterior of the church. From the church, 18 young peo- ple are attending the Camp Tal- ahi Pligrim Fellowship confer. - ence, along with the Rev. Robert D. Dewey who is conference . dean, The ‘week's session starts» Sunday, Edith Whitcroft Bolton Mrs. Edith Whitcroft Bolton, who has resided with her daughter, Mrs, Edward F. Delahunte, 2098 Dorchester; died suddenly yester- day. She had lived in Birmingham six years. Born in Cramton, Ont.,. in 1885, she was a member of the Methodist Church of Aylmer, Ont, A widow, she leaves her daugh-— ter, a brother, Claude, of Wood- stock, Ont., and ‘a granddaugh. ter, Mrs, Jo Ann Snyder of Hunt- ington Woods. Service will be Saturday at 2. p.m, at. Hughson Funeral ¥ Ayimer, where the body was sent from Manley Bailey Funeral Home last night. Only 6 | Days Left : Save *10 | ON YOUR NEW | | ke TOPCOAT | Home Lake PEACHE NOW READY TO BE PICKED Jacobsen’s ORION GREEN HOUSE Grown Orion = We are completely equipped with men and materials to handié any plumbing repair job — Saving you time... trouble and money. Call FE 3-7195 — © EAMES & BROW seems T LUMBERS — 55 £ PIKE ST. \ Li ' is @ | ‘ oN te \ é f , & oe 4 Bi t4 peas we be 1 : v) Ay * , sd : j : 2 ‘ \ hae a V nye 4 z a j 4 "4 : 4 o| , pe / j Loy / : | | me : i \ j * ' vy ; ‘ i I “4 ; ” M ‘e ! ce A f . rm : ee . : e : i h : \t + ' i x V Hed Se TAS, = | _ THE, PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1958 wo Dp nn j | d & $100,000 chamber building. Off-| | a : eet Some Suspect Food Additives ‘4 « end se nel Sal be pained Buliding Plans gabe ay een ~ open tonite — Vnited States). a Scientists S plit ‘Over Causes of Cara Huger, pnd ot tie Commer ne eprved an map Sirreivoforop and Soe fr night. ‘til 10 o'clock’. - "atAdik lahctoil “deimetopsadit-lden ‘tains seated sonnets va wey set, coine kinds of mineral es AS cane tives and foreign substances added |peated a re Nee St eee ee ae an waiter ts ates some “ to foods cause cancer? of those various (carcinogenic)| arsenite, radioactive materials, |chemicals might become harmful, Repeat Sale! nk Pa a \ \\ PRN ys {products can at length lead to] dulcin (a synthetic sweetener) ‘carrying danger with them. eask Uke we often Man i Be “ase dibe from 21 na-|harmful risks.” hose,-we sold out 3600 pairs Jas < tions have just finished trading in one week... ask opinions on that explosi Dr. W. C, Hueper of the Na- Shan Foakueit aad tea arant tional Institute of Health at Be- and have been wary about telling thesda, Md., » Warned that ehser-. ‘ newsmen what was said, - vation hes shown that “a - Delegates willing to talk reported net inconsiderable number” of majority agreemen chemicals similar to those intro- - pongo A a duced into foods possess cancer- * ” f ompare These Anywhere a LOW, SALE <7 rie AND SATURDAY! Astonaile 1 Pes-Ue- TOASTERS Former $17.95 Value 13.86 * Lote New Model : strol ve Eileciric toget Se aceee betas oi Save $15. 07 on This a Bid DORMEYER Electric Mixer — Regular 34.95 Value Oss Another 3000 Pairs “NO-SEAM lone it py ewe by Hg re at Leqst $1.00. NOW ONLY— M39 3 PAIRS $1.00 Choice of Regular or MICRO-MESH _Any chemical, dye or additive | A more reassuring view was shown by laboratory tests to |presented by Dr. Arnold J. Leh-, have a tendency to produce can- |man, chief of the Division of Phar- § cer in any other living animal |macology of the U.S. Food ‘and cannot be considered entirely Drug Administration, with Dr. Ar- safe for human consumption, thur A, Nelson of the same organi- “Even the smallest trace of a zation, They: said the U. Ss. Food proved carcinogen (an agent ca-|4% Drug Administration is effec- pable of producing cancer) is tively protecting Americans from) dangerous,” reported Dr. E Boy-|4#ngerous additives. land of Britain's Chester Beatty A delegate said the experts split) Research Institute. roughly into three groups — the Lehman-Nelson group, felt present! FRENCHMAN SPEAKS safeguards generally are good. The | France’s Prof. Rene Truhaut,|Boyland-Hueper group, felt real) chairman of the Committee on|dangers exist since so little is | Causitive Factors of Cancer, said:|known about the subject. A center | “From a hygienic point of view, a took a position between A number of cancer-producing agents were identified by name: Cigaret smoke; coal tar, chim- Tonight and Saturday speslel Discount Back-to-School SALE of BALL POINT PENS Choice of WHITE ALL SIZES . @ Form-Fashioned 8 to 1 POWERFUL I "Catasce ca Pemees ge cong aay ; © Perfect Fit yore q iz whole SKIL’ | PAPER-MATE | ao ee 5 a 1248 Door Mirror je teinforced ot Hee wie and Toe % supply, fF @ Wanted Colors it f The same make and quality hosiery that ae broke all reeords in our hosiery department. ; Because of minor imperfections we offer the same low 39c price. E Sanforized - Builders’. Line’ Retractible VY4-INCH || Ball Point Pen jj Electric Drill $1.69 Value j 2 16" |1.29 | stand for portable use, too. Regular $3.50 Value Full length view mirror with choice 2. 8 8 | fs of white or natural wood frame. s Dustproof backings — glass. S Many decorative uses, t Lerge 16x60-Inch Unframed Mirror. .. $4. 88 | ~ i ‘ : | | E 7 BE 98 North , -< Just Arrived! | Sagi Fleer #536 electric drill with barden-|] BAzs*iercat Jw DEEVLPAD srcrices ie JIMM 9: BROTHERS PLISSE NEW FALL od steel gears, trigger switch! won's smear, fi » saiaabdlialdih § Lace-Trimmed ' on soa p rip handle, no load|| skip-smooth writ: 9 7 hci . Maternity 2 chuck, not as pictured. re ee Oe NEW! JUST UNPACKED | | @')) omci| JE §©Men's $2.50 and $3 sa S Flannel Shirts Big Lot — Over 500 at This Low Price Gives direct setting data In- § stantly—with no figuring. Full range of readings—for both in- cident and reflected light. With case, SHSSSSSSOSSSOSSHHSHHSHSSHOEHESOES - Full Lifetime Guarantee—Famous| ~~ BELL & 8 ) MOVIE woweLL OMIM camera ~ Former $49.95 9 5 NOW ONLY ROTHERS SALE! Tonight and Saturday— Save on MATCHED LUGGAGE Simple to use—drop in film, set dial and take auoies. You'll get beautiful color movies every po gore a Brass | : time. Camera is lifetime guaranteed. $2.00 holds. plated locks and hinges. #3" eae \ = TrrritiTereeT TTT schectcodlh Rodis — : For COLOR or BLACK and WHITE 21 ‘neh sam igs , : i ' Ti Ao : eee cory sous” | box aay b Weston Master Ill Meter Train Case O’Nite Case Palas S28 ii¢¢ @ Cloth’ : re Sem ifte | . a Newest 2385 $3.79 Value $3.98 Value. Rem (ee te | bis : eee eS pe on "She 99 ce 37. re Sade 3 oe ky at and curacy. for of ssleres. still or | Ample for complete : in td ‘pain de aim: movie. — speeds to 3200 for future 98 North ~ ; siiitin Saginaw » —~Main g cael — 3 aaa 4 BROTHERS edu : \ | \ ) | . : / ps 4 4 j ¥ ( ' \ Bea te ee 1 ee Bi cian! Sy oS ies Bec! Las i ij ee { i*\ . mea Pe , pif \ ¥ ' : Be a . ree at \. | ; Ay ey es ) THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, Aveust 24, 1956 i | Inusband Nicholas stttered M fe | | but « peother enlisted in the Union ee ce Report Says Novikov, sprained H hirhelas Eisevsikov, Lincoln’s Pity ‘Has Birthduy cima tratfi¢ re The report says that Mack 0. |, of 188_W. Ypsilanti tre Aug. 31. MAM MMMM I 1a i, Sedge i Hite SELLETITEIED OE. Fj | ae ; j ce Sas : = Le If You | Want More Than Your Money's Worth Here It Is! SPECIALLY PURCHASED from “KROEHLER" for OUR AUGUST SALE! THIS SMARTLY STYLED SOFA AND CHAIR IN ONE OF KROEHLER’S FINEST HIGH PILE MOHAIR FREIZE COVERS _ Here’s furniture of such fine quality we guorantee it will amaze you! Sofa and matching lounge chair both chosen from Kroehler’s new “Savoy” group to give you new sloped welted arms... trim Lawson backs . , . modern brass ferruled legs . Practical, reversible cushions . . . famous “Cushionized” construction . . . plus the mony other fine features that make this furniture truly one of our finest values ever! SAVE $ *65 OPEN FRIDAY AND ! MONDAY NIGHT ‘TIL 9:00 ' SOFA and CHAIR YOUR CHOICE OF THREE “COLORS IN MODERN, TEXTURED FRIEZE / EVERYTHING in OUR COMPLETE STOCK -REDUCED for THIS STORE-WIDE SALE! ONLY EXCEPTIONS ARE A FEW PRICE - ESTABLISHED ITEMS x Dogs: wd AUGUST SALE REMBRANDT LAMP SPECIAL Nature in her gayest mood and out- door living at its peak .. . just the time to brighten your home with a new Rembrandt Lamp ensemble, product of master designers and skilled craftsmen. These lamps are in harmony with to- day's outdoor living trend. Not only are they at home in any living room... _o they also bring new beauty to patio end porch, Bases of polished brass; birds in black, brown, stipple aqua and stipple gold enamel. Shades are glasschop impregnated in vinyl. Heights: Floor lamp, 59", bridge lamp, 55"; TABLES two VIKO ARM CHAIRS for | WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY FOR TWO FOR 18.99 9.95 EACH These stunning Viko nubian steel captain's chairs are really low in price! Contemporary design, solid construction, black tubular steel for great strength and light weight; wipes-clean, rugged plastic for long wear; smart bright brass drum on arms and legs; easy maintenance; non-scratch plastic tips on legs. Use them in the Living Roor, the Den, as hostess chairs in the dinette. ‘ rH Your choice of charcoal, turquoise and beige 73". swivel, chair to match .. 2 for $26.00 ® D ies tou Hake Mac 2 ny Matored Parking Lot ot Auburn by ramous LAN CLASSIC MODERN TABLES With Tapered Brass Legs ‘and Parquetry Tops” Tops beautifully inlaid with figured limed oak parquetry create a striking color effect with the tapered, satin- Se err of Sein ¢ “ mahogany. cs SPECIAL VALUE! PICTURE WINDOW ‘TABLE to Match Above Group, 18” x 46” with planter USE OUR CONVENIENT CREDIT PLAN AS LOW AS 10% DOWN—LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT-NO INTER Mit PAID IN 90 BAYS EST OR CARRYING CHARGE CORNER TABLE $59.50 a | Opposite Auburn Avenue: a er aa THE ae \ Ay : 4 AN ee ae . uo fea \ C4 5/ 4 We : Be vee Wee Ry Lop a ; | ( \ ¥ % ha ( \ i 4 gf a \ _ ey , f ; \ \ By \ | ' \ ‘ j \ t | z \ \ ) al 16 Puraling Words Mi Make eUp Solution sengpan generally worth playing as even the draw, or te ay “she regard $ are unlikely to deal you a better quences, as indeed he must‘ each - hand or improve it, 3, KING is right. Royalty, used lenger. To act like one, to remain as a collective noun. here, as shown a CHAMP, by the words * ‘Royalty . the persons connected by ties. with the royal family, dukes, duchesses,| princes, etc. Because of this col-\until too. late, Being less than rule out Kind for they all would not be peculiar in such kind, for|turies, can still hold its,own, For that would be having the same kink, also. It must be KING who is peculiar, for he alone has the| power to impose a standard of be- havior on the royalty he controls. as KING. 4, TRAP is right. A person who has had a successful criminal ca- reer is one who is done with it. His Past as a past, cannot hurt him except if it be used by some- one, as with threats or blackmail on grounds of exposure, and this would be the equivalent of a TRAP. A TRAP must be set and sprung by someone, There is noth- ing #he man can do about his past, it is unchangeable, so there is no use watching out for it. 5. TANK ig right, Surmounting, or passing over, most (the majori- ty) of unsuspected obstacles is just what a TANK is built for. It can- not pass over every such obstacle, but nobody expects it to do so. A Bank can surmount many ob- stacles, but we-can hardly say they are unsuspected (unimagined obstacles. banking, including runs, robberies, mergers, etc., is a known factor: Centuries’ of banking experience make all financial possibilities and disasters the special study of bank- ers. Since a bank’s obstacles can, in the most important form, be only financial or related troubles, they cannot be “ 6. FRANK is right. If a smaller force is in a “tight situation it is in such a poor position that it cannot maneuver freely to come around and strike the Flank or side of a larger force in a better position. Tight means constrained or restricted, unable to move free- ly; or else it means desperate or critical. In either sense, the only) hope for the smaller force is a FRANK, unequivocal,’ attack. As Jong as the situation is tight, there is no time for maneuvering into a more favorable position, and no room to do so, Printers Observe | 500th Year of | Movable Type Extensive ‘plans to commemor- ate the 500th anniversary of print- ing were launched this week with the formation of a coordinating committee made up of national leaders from the graphic arts in- dustry, labor ond related groups. = “The October observance will mark the completion, in 1456, of the 42-line Gutenberg Bible, the first known date for. the completion of a manuscript through use of mov- Z Por is right. Player whoje usively’ Mstorical. But if yous liste tc boi ce ee ay decline BG Lae gic current term, you cannot say his winning chanee by some foolish!" °o hold iis own (compete ‘sic- move. Because he loses the money |jcessfiilly against) other wines involved, you can be sure that the|prevalent today. It is perfectly next time he has a POT and ajsafe-to say a wine CASK can still similar chance try jhold ite own, for wine is still _put ‘to be more wholin casks. and; 10. DEOK is better. A clean control|DECK gives ample evidence of a enone any number of things be- & CHAMP is tight. A CHAMP sides efficiency, And many work- or'or champion could have a fine dis-jers at cluttered up desks are high- for disastrous conse-|ly efficient. Tl. SWAIN is right, Girl who is trying to keep a trim SWAIN is making a worthwhile effort to hold’ time he meets a dangerous chal- a nice beau. Girl who is trying to keep a trim Waist is greatly con- cerned over staying slim, but that doesn’t mean she takes the same care of her general appearance as human, we can’t say a Chimp has a girl will who feels that a poor ; appearance can make her SWAIN 9. CASK is right..We cannot depart. claim that Sack, a dry white wine| 12. WORTH is right’ If a gam- popular in the 16th and 17th cen- _may do this with a fine display ol \sangfroid, A Chump or blockhead, is usually unaware of consequences honest, it is perfectly easy to esti- one thing, the term is now almost|mate. Just add up the spots on well-run vessel. A clean Desk mayjhave the he must expose his'on to a fellow who is really quite they would not definitely be mak- . could title te danger, and a reat CHAMP) bler’s Throw, cast of the dice is/take this phrase in another sense: |dog. It would be absurd to put up| el = ’ swers to 11th is -- Pot-0- Gold| si It te the honest WORTH other words, they KNOW very well the personal integrity or value he how they make their money, where has) that would be hard to esti-!it comes from. mate. Gamblers are not the easiest} 15. 5. FAIL is right. Students who characters to interpret correctly. , Fall in their averages may easily 13. HAUNT is right. Snobs whojbave fallen from excellent aver- “lyse Hencoamy as out of They are ta the ote FAIL.com- acquaintances should have a some-jsaid that they don’t what better chance of breaking in. rend a chance, © we know that they, 14. KNOW is right. We can/still have a chance, So itis FAIL neither say that the things (hob-|that is right, for students have the’ bies, skills, pleasures) people Privilege of taking a failing sub-| ‘KNOW or Work very well would ject over again. ibe their sources of income, That is;| 16. PRIZE is right, It is per- fectly possible that a mongrel with special training (a performing dog) Some people would, but if mos¥of|can be put up for a good Price.) us did so, it would mean.that most|Indeed; mongrels are noted for of us have the ideal job, This is cleverness .and trainability. In the | obviously ‘untrue, Many people'offering of a dog asa PRIZE, it have jobs for several reasons: The/is consistent with good sense to amount it brings in; the availabill-|offer a fine example of a popular ty of such a job; the necessity|breed, as this will be an incentive for a job as such, So we mustito all who hope to acquire such a ing their money from such things. mongrel as a epee especially a good PRIZE People KNOW very well what ~~ sources of income would be. - 4 PONTIAC PRESS, vunivy Av 2UST 2 1956 | SHOP TILL 9 P. Bri R SBF reg. 5.50 REVERE TEAKETTLE Holds-2 3 quarts — whistles when it boils—-smart, snug fitting cap. . . all parts welded, will not loosen! 3° , | REVERE SAUCE PAN . comp! Holds 1 42 quarts—copper clad stainless steel . with cover , . reg. 5.95. | | @®eeeeeesee#eeese ® 21-In., 4 Cycle, 212 ct é M. TONIGHT AT WAITE’S! Save up to 2.26 on Famous REVERE WARE at a New Low Price! happened to your kitchen! Stainless steel, with gleaming Copper Bottom. This offer is for a limited time only, so buy and save now! Remember . . . they make a wonderful gift. HANDY ANDY POWER MOWERS: ghten up your kitchen with famous evere Ware! The nicest thing that ever ete Waite's Housewares—Fiith Floor H. P., Clinton Engine No Down Payment! you save.....$33.95! regularly .....$99.95! = $66 @ Cuts huge 21” swath @ Trims close and clean to walks, walls, @ Recoil starter (no rope winding) © Adjustable cutting height—1-3-in. @ Sidegross ejector chute @ Bollbearing disc wheels 6.50 per month Semi-Annual Famous Name | bas reg. 3,98 Blouses Complete your back to campus wardrobe with an assortment of pert and pretty blouSes— . made by the Best! Because oss of slight irregularities, how- . ever, we are selling them for /3 their original price. Cotton and Pima cloth, aa completely washable, white, navy, and stripes. Sizes 28-40. la soe A. worldly-wise a broadcloth 4% sleeves are brief, French- | cuffed, “pearl - linked . . & collar’s convertible . . . pock~- et's flapped and buttoned, B. french-cuffed Americen beauty. | fine fitting long sleeves, flip- flap pocket, a collar that's an open and shut case, C. Italian-collar broadcloth interprets the Italian look with a delicately rounded collar and roll-up sleeves, ‘Print du Jour’ Polka-Dot Jersey : a as by Gail Byron Celanese Acetate Jersey—o dress that is astonishingly practical! Crease them, crush them, pack them in a bog—- they shake off wrinkles and stay ‘trim as a pin, and they wash like fine lingerie. Elastic waist bond to be worn with or without belt, 9-15, 12-20, 14¥2- A 24%. Black, navy, brown, green, eee ca oe Highway Commissioner Zrecter. ty should be shown by everyone else ~ come to naught. ; Reclamation Bill Fault bers of the White House staff in a se j ' ‘ % Wl { . . le ‘ - ; * ae ve § : iy ee PF NOR j : ‘ iy + +4 ai, 4 sity : clearly disruptive. Surplus Food for India ‘s¢ Within a short time our’ Govern- ment for sale to that country of a large amount of our surplus farm products. Involved is about $400,000,000 cotton. Delivery which is to cover a period of three years, Face Substitute “Our toll road is dead. will provide India with some wel- This newspaper believes in the ex- come famine insurance. ; pansion of all roads that carry auto- ok. * Payment with interest is to be in mobiles, Thus things that contribute rupees and will begin in three years area is based upon the sale of auto- “Yhobiles. These things that contribute and cover a 25 year period. Part of the money will be used* to support U.S. services in*India and some will be loaned to the country, So far the subcontinent’s agricul- tural expansion program has. been working out well. Government lead- ers indeed are proud that India now is self sufficient in food grains. Yet, it is good business in a country where squarely in his lap. To this num- a crop failure may mean disaster, to ber youcan add the huge ‘have warehouse stocks of food. unknown total of visitors who eS: drive into Michigan. They would From our standpoint as well -yisit us more often if we were as India’s this looks like a good not handicapped by an out- deal. Not only does it offer a way moded system of highways that of reducing our crop surpluses, has fallen far behind the times. —§ = put might enable India to save We believe in:better roads in front many lives in the event of a na- of the Pontiac Motor Division and in tional food emergency. front of the GMC Truck. We believe in better roads in Idaho, Utah, Ver- to automobile betterment are a pri- mary objective. : _Now the entire problem is up to koow Oe His opposition killed the toll road. The several million Michi- gan ‘residents that would have been served by it now rest It ovont to be against the law for - mont and all intermediate points. anybody to sell, rent, lend or give a The Press will everlastingly support power lawn-mower to'an early riser. good-road programs wherever they - originate. We believe this same loyal- The Man About Town A Champ Canner We're Seeking Woman With Best Area Record Vacation: Sometimes what you take when you can’t take wha you've been taking. z —— whose living, past, present and fu- ture comes from automotive successes. * * * The expansion of the automotive trade will only come as the nation provides the roads to handle a larger number of cars. This applies to cities, villages, townships, counties and states. Today, we can’t even handle the current supply of automobiles, look where you will. * * * Oakland County is the second uargest county in Michigan. We deserve roads commensurate with our size and the fact we're a gateway both north and south. We lack them now. The only advances in the past few years have been abortive, piddling and child's play.” “ ..* President of Clinton Valley Council of | . Grorcs Hicarws labored long and the Boy Scouts, valiantly to bring relief to this sec- L. C. Churchill, tion. He deserves a warm round of has received a letter from applause for his efforts which have Mrs, Richard Beckhard, director of the recent national Girl Scout roundup here, thanking him for his wel- coming letter from the Boy Scouts. This column ts looking for The Champion Canner among its women readers. First nomina- tion goes to Mrs. Harvey Mannaford of Walled Lake, Her canning activities run up close to a thousand quarts every year. This season she already has canned 75 quarts of strawberries, 63 quarts of other berries, 100 quarts of beans, 75 quarts of corn, 60 quarts of peas, and now is working toward 250 quarts.of tomatoes and tomato juice. She annually does at least 100 quarts of peaches, besides some pears and apples, not to mention carrots and other vegetables. Wonder will any-, body be able to top the 1,000 quart mark? Mr. Road Commissioner, you stopped the toll road. : It’s your move. Congress to Eliminate My Oxford scout sends word that the annual ; Flower and -Vegetable Show of that enterprising village is this Satur- day and Sunday. I happen to know that this always is one of our county's biggest * events in that line. _ It is reassuring to learn that Presi- | dent E1sennower is alert to the need This column commends its readers to of resisting any-legislative attempt ‘He series on to invade the area of. administrative “What ‘Yeung Pospie Think.” processes. ; — » now running in this paper. Its author, Over the years there ‘have been — a he ot — across in an un- several examples of Congressional derstanding manner the findings: of his efforts to usurp Executive functions. own youth bureau research work. Latest of these was detected by mem- _ The 56-page issue of _ ‘The Lapeer County Press, -. @ommemorating the one hundred and | twenty-fifth anniversary of the settle- ~~~ ment there of the first white man, was a sto humdinger, and done up in the way on . That Myers Family pst- —has.a habit of doing things. The sunflower derby is going skyward. ___ Now in top place is one in the yard of of Rochester, 164% feet tall and still growing. It measures 13 inches round at its base. : Verbal Orchids to— "¢ Mrs, Ella Cleveland Profrock — of Clarkston; eighty-fourth birthday. 4 Sit" ment will conclude with India agree- — worth of wheat, flour, rice and __ PRESS. FRIDA ay y, AUGUST 24, 1956 They Came, The y Saw, They --- , David Lawrence Says: Acceptance Speech Hollow, Dull SAN . FRANCISCO — President Eisenhower's speech of acceptance was hardly the kind that clarifies the issues for the delegates and the party workers. It was too general and too abstract in its polit- ical values, It had some very good points and, if the address had been confined to some of the pithy The heart of the whole speech— the issue which the party workers could amplify—was expressed in a brief declaration: “Change based upon principle is progress. Change without principle becomes chaos.” BIG DIFFERENCE Whta does this mean? The big audience that listened to it thought it perhaps to be fine-sounding phraseology. But imbedded in it is the difference between government - by .demagoguery and government by tested experiénce. It means the difference, too, between the drive for state socialism or public own- ership which so many Democrats are supporting and the free enter- prise system strongly espoused by down of states he said that “geographical balance of power. is essential to our form of free society.” He spoke of the “heed- less stampede to Washington” “Our Founding Fathers showed us how the federal government could exercise its undoubted re- sponsibility for leadership, while still stopping short of the kind of interference that deadens local vigor and variety, initiative and imagination." ‘ HOLLOW MEANING This is good doctrine, well ex- pressed. But, practically speaking, what does it mean? The answer is that such statements have a Portraits ' By JAMES J. METCALFE Whatever things may slip my hist Each anniversary .. . first date that we shared . . . And then the night I told you, dear. . . .. Your hollow sound when it is considered that, in order to get votes, a mem- ber of the President’s cabinet is busily assuring labor leaders that “Ike wants to see the “right to work” laws of the states supersed- ed by a federal law that would render them null and void, It sounds inconsistent, too, when the recently proposed federal laws usurping the police powers of the states are acclaimed by the Re- publican platform itself as “‘civil rights." The passage which the prac- tical politi¢ians will not like is that which disparaged the argu- ment about “depression.” The President said that more than 20 years ago political victories were scored on that point and he argued that “obsession with - still blinds many critics,” This was all right as far as it went, but today the Republican party workers are . counting on the prosperity argu- ment—the opposite of depression. Ike’s speech seems to discourage its use on the stump. In most of the voting precincts all this will be regarded as “‘high- brow’ stuff. The simple issues are how to avert war and main- tain peace, whether times are good or bad, and whether it’s time for change or to keep on with the party in power. ‘Those issues weren't . sharply delineated in the accept- ance speech, but they are the core of the campaign. (Copyright 1956 New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Smiles Watermelon season is when kids don’t have much fun eating it un- less they get their ears wet. * * © Dry cleaners have no trouble at all getting in on the gravy. _ Dr. William Brady Says: Toughest Thing to Teach —Is Simple Nutrition “At the time I was teaching home economics in a small agri- cultural community,"’ reports Mr. L. V. H., “I had just discovered through your column Adelle Davis's Let's Cook It Right” (the cook book which rates space on my own bookshelf—published "47 by “Har- court Brace & Co., New York), “so IT had each pupil buy it and use it as a text. “I clipped and posted. your ‘ar- ticles on nutrition and read many . That is typical of the national malnutrition — Young America’s namby-pambyism. They don’t care for food, particularly natural food. It. take’ at least ten minutes and more or less undivided at- tention to eat an adequate..break- fast, whereas one can get a brief burst of energy from a glass or bottle of pop at any time with less bother or attention than it would take to go to the sugar bow! and eat a spoonful of sugar inet Glass of milk. . Rolled oats, plain wheat -or brown rice cooked as you like. Salt to taste. Butter and sugar, syrup, honey, molasses, jelly or jam, or saccharin, or other - artificial sweetener according to caloric ‘need. : Signed letters, not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diag- nosis, or. treatment, will be answered by Dr. William Brady, if a stamped self- addressed envelope is sent. to The Pon- tiag Press, Pontiac, Michigan, (Copyright 1956) © We, too, are parents with Martha Little's parents. We 7 a aes death penalty of fact, the i : kota, Minnesota, and Michigan, all of which have abolished capi- Other reasons against it are the sacredness of human life and dig- nity, which is cheapened by legal and appeals, are almost always able to evade the death penalty. Of the 31 bills for capital punish- a z Z 3 f z : of the above facts, to investigate - their stand on this serious:.ques- tion. : Betty and John Houston 1466 Glenwood, England and France See More Rows With Nasser By JOHN H, MARTIN INS Foreign Director Soviet Russia, in backing Egypt, has rejected the Western plan to “‘internationalize” the Suez Canal. @ 8S Moscow has said that instead it favors India’s vague plan to keep the strategic 103-mile waterway under Egyptian control, with an advisory body of nations that use the canal, ‘Both the Soviet Union and In- dia are against any plan that would not give Egyptian Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser a way of “face-saving.” This test of “face-saving” for Nasser came about perhaps some- what unexpectedly when he chose to defy the West by “‘nationalizing”’ an old internationntined company. The 38-year-old Col. Nasser meant to defy the West. But did he mean to do it with major reper- cussions? ' WITH LESS TROUBLE . . The usual answer is no, and this — fs generally agreed upon because he could have done it without rais- ing such+Western animosity and still gotten the handclaps of the Arab world. - a * But Britain and France are not the least bit convinced that Nas- set's action was as rash as he said when he took the Suez Canal Com- pany in retaliation for American and British refusal to finance his pet dream of a big dam at Aswan on the upper Nile. — The British and French, and even others, accuse him of out- right thievery. They alse accuse him with playing off West against Kast for the benefit of Egypt. Such a playing-off is not an uri- usual practice in this world—but Egypt's action in the Western | Opinion is vital importance. * * When the British and Vreach are accused of “toughness” in their relations with Egypt's Nas- ser, they point to some excerpts from his own book “The Philoso- phy of the Revolution.” DIRE PREDICTIONS This book predicts far more trouble for the Western peoples than is contained in the dispute over Suez Canal control, even though such control is the key to the ambitions of a man purportedly fighting ‘‘colonialists."’ * * * Nasser says in his book quite frankly that Egypt has the strength to control the crossroads of the in- ternational world, the Suez Canal. “There remains,” he says, “oll, a sinew of material civilization without which all its machines ; would cease te function se = He means the oil of the Middle East on which all Western Euro- pean industrialization depends. * * This is behind the “toughness of Britain and France. Looking Back ; 15 Years Ago BRITISH, RUSSIAN armies in- vading Iran. CHURCHILL PLEDGES aid to US, if Japs force war.’ 20 Years Ago ARMY OF one million planned in Germany. PUBLIC PARKING lot idea dropped by city. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Hear ye, © mountains, the Case’ Records of a Psychologist: Gives Answers for Mothers-to-Be Lillian’s questions show the unnecessary worry that still makes thousands of expectant mothers anzious and jittery. So scrapbook this case record or mail it to such young wives. And send for the booklet below, since it will help wives go through childbirth with less Many doctors give these book lets to patients to save them- . selves time. By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE Case S-347: Lillian B., aged 33. is‘an attractive housewife. — ‘Since the “Y” sperm cell is smaller and more motile, that may help explain why more boys are born than girls, As regards “marking’’ babies, that is an old superstition not borne out by facts. And you can see why, for there is no nerve con- nection between the unborn’ baby and-and its satier. F mit them. SEPARATE BLOOD . Moreover, the baby has. its own Her. thoughts can’t go across into. RET A23 rz al That's why female mammals may immunize their babies, be- cause of the immune bodies in the tract m fore birth if the mother then an active case of such disease. NO “BORN” CRIMINALS Criminality is a matter habits, These are learned, herited. So a can murderer for a father and an im- moral street walker for a mother, yet those criminal habits will not the “Yes, De Crane, but why do the childrer of criminals often become criminals?” $ Be 7 Hi 3 i i fy e! | é l i Be BD Bite a it t / yi be et re ONS ; } ¥ . ye ak aa) } ¢ ' %, 3 aes 4 if . , é , ‘ cam | i \ \! - Reminds Women of ‘Romantic Menace foes s Too Handsome to. Be. Well Loved By PHYLLIS BATTELLE. SAN FRANCISCO -(INS)— Everyone has his own theory as to why debonair Dick Nixon is often opposed by great chunks of American poliitcos, but it takes’ a woman with an honest memory to hit at the truth: * * &@ -Nixon, at 43, is the reincarna- tion of the “great Fomantic| menace” in the life of every teen- ager. He still has that wavy hair and those halfback’s shoulders Push Program Against Lamprey Attempting to Establish Headquarters to Fight the Trout Killer LUDINGTON ® — William E. Gaylord, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist today said two assistants from Marquette are join- ing him in establishing a sea lam- prey control headquarters. * LJ * Gaylord has been in Ludington since May 1, setting groundwork for installation of control devices in tributary streams which empty along the east shore of Lake Michi- gan, * * * The government service is ne- gotiating for a headquarters build- ing in Ludington. The invasion of the eel-like jor ere Gaylord has worked for the past three years in es- tablishing a contro] program in Lake Superior. Superior is a stronghold of Lake Trout, the lamprey’s favorite prey. * By protecting trout in Lake Su- perior, Gaylord explained, ‘“‘We will keep them alive and have trout for later restocking the lower Great Lakes."’ The. program employs electri- cal weir devices, installed ia streams below potential lamprey spawning beds, he said. They stop. all fish coming up the stream and divert them into traps placed at either side of the weirs. The traps are serviced daily with workers releasing the fish and re- moving lampreys to be destroyed. * * * Gaylord said about 150 weirs will be installed on the eastern shore tributaries from the Straits of Mackinac to the southern end of the lake. jand spend it on- himself. pearly grin which endl Pe to despair and boys to envy. To the voting man, he is reminiscent of the guy who got all the blondes. To the voting | woman, he is that handsome boy in high school who stopped calling after the first.date and took up with a socialite, * * * The woman of today was about 16 when the boy who looked roughly like Richard dropped her for another, and she was. hurt. "|Then her mother like as not com- mented, “Do not weep, , daughter, | for although he is smart and attractive, he is not your type." SHE KNEW IT He was, too, her type and she knew it. But mother love and rationalization conquer all calami- ties. So thereafter the broad- shouldered and wavy-haired male became taboo—unfit to be trusted, and not her type at all, " * * Until the handsome young lads! ot America stop leaving girls in this bereft and fretful condition, it is our considered opinion that any man in — who retains a trace of the handsome kid is never going to win the whole- hearted woman's vote. “He's a fine man, I’m sure, but there's someting about him I don’t trust.” Women said this about Thomas E. Dewey, who ran wavy-haired before him, and they are saying it again today. Nixon has an additional hurdle to hop, in that his direct oppo- | nent—earnest Estes Kefauver—is| the embodiment of a memory of the “rementie tenage martyr.” To men, Ketauver = the fellow who lent them money for dates because he was too shy to go out STAMMER OF LOVE To women, he is the boy who first stammered that he loved her and meant it. * ° * You can’t beat that sort of memory association, man, when you're out to get female votes, look which is so all-important in the battle for ballots (we once The solution gvas offered by a Mrs. John W, Funk; ile afc Muncie, Mrs. Funk, who is present at the convention, has spent the last 23 years studying the genealogy bg ui the vice presidential o tak eck ck cae hundreds of letters to Dick's “cousins,” a them to a family reunion their dis- candidate, | aul Soe BN 4 | Boe dae } | "THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1956 i ‘ earthed hundreds of relatives of. itingtished relativé—so that all the ; will change toward Richard Nixons in America will cqme to) Nixon. Dick's aid in November. | Two daughter and a wife are Surely, with several hundred not quite enough to make him, members of his family —how- look like a fireside fella, but a colony of Nixons should counter- Juliana, Prince to Visit Daughters THE HAGUE, the Netherlands (INS) — The Dutch Government jannounced. today Queen Juliana and- Prince Bernhard will fly to! ithe Greek island of Corfu Friday to join their vacationing daughters, Princesses Irene and Beatrix, The jcontirmed a report in sponsored by Greece's king and queen. oe The government the 1 , Dafly Express, which’ also reported Juliana and Bernhard are recon- celled the Queen has expelled faith Kealer Greet Hofmans, cause of a serious dispute in the royal family, The Dutch Government made no mention of this report. Italy is smaller in area than the latter are on a “blue-blood” cruise state of New Mexico. 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The word which you select for Circle No. 1; then would be fe» which you would print in the space to the right of ( 0 ow. Do the same in all the other circles. Suady ths dang