LA ° ry -of 10 Added fo 7. ’ been an explosion of the fie! tank 19 Die as State’ +>: Ss. x * * ummer Arrives Drowning Toll Traffic Deaths Claim Mother of Six, Five-Year-Old Boy From Our News Wires Nineteen persons died over the weekend as a rash of accidents heralded the;— corning of summer to Michi- - Traffic accidents resulted in seven deaths, 10 drowned, a mother of six children died in a house fire and a Detroit boy was crushed be- “neath a tractor boom. — ‘Summer bowed ih Saturday aft- ernoon. * * * ° Two of the drowning victims died yesterday, a young Indiana girl drowned Saturday and seven persons lost their lives in two boating accidents Friday night. James D. Kendrick, 21, Flint, fishing HELPING HANDS — Neighbors of Alvin Horen, 4079 Rich St., near Maceday Lake were busy yesterday painting his house, screens, and even the mailbox _and lawn chairs. More-than-35-of — partially + blind, during their community clean up campaign. of ix Paint Blind. Neighbor's Residence fel] ffom his boat while ‘yesterday in Bigham Lake, La- peer County. James Samalis, 38, Detroit, . drowned while piloting a speed- boat in Island Lake near Brighton. Sheriff's deputies in Macomb, County were forced to stispend the) search for the fi victim of a) boating accident fn Lake St. Clair late Friday. * * * $till missing was Air Force Sgt. Milton Kroll, 36, asgigned to West- over Base, Mass. as, 15, and Ralph, 12, and Krell’s son, Michael, 10, were found Sat- urday morning. The two fathers and their three sons drowned Friday night or ear- ly Saturday in what may have on their 21-foot cruiser. COOL WEATHER HELPs _ State Police credited cool weath- ly er with holding the weekend traf- fie ‘fatality count to seven. This weekend’s traffic tol] was a vast improvement over the same period a year ago. State Police records showed 21 persons (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Smashup Kills Drayton Man Victims of Two Earlier it Area Auto Crashes Die in Hospital A Drayton Plains man died Sun- day on Woodward, south of East Long Lake road, Bloomfield Hills. * * * Howard D. Harrington, 34, of 4360 Cheeseman St. drove into the Commerce road. Alex Eoumas, 27, of Flint, died fate Saturday at “Pontiac General. He was seared early Friday in a collision on U. S. 10 near ee Plains. Battimere Orioles and ener Seon jebritie ests of the Oakian oo 7 Table Topeers at their annual ke at Warsaw Park, Wednesday, Mows Down 90 Count 10 Dead, 80 Hurt as Engines, Cars Hurtle Into Mexico Station (amd perhaps 30) persons at Maltrata Point, near Orizaba. iwreckage, and some 25 persons were reported unaccounted for. The electric train, on a regular | sun_from._Orizaba_to—the—Guit- ly was stopped by a power short- Officials of the government rail- way said when power returned, the train started up automatically and raced three es out of control. Preliminary stigation indi- cated the brakes failed. Witnesses reported the crew tried desperate- to dump sand on the tracks in an effort to halt the speedirg train. Passengers leaped from the cars as they hurtled toward the station:- : The seven-car train and its two. electric engines caromed crazily | for three miles down a 30 per cent! grade from the mountain peak Bo- tas: station to Maltrata where it swept waiting villagers off the plat- form, tore through the rear wall] of | the station and crumbled to a stop against a freight warehouse. The leading engine was crushed against the warehouse. The second : engine, a mail car, a luggage car and three passenger cars over- turned in the station. A Pullman sleeper and empty: dining car re- maine dupright on the tracks. Chance of Showers Tonight, Tomorrow Following a cool, pleasant week- end that brought- sunny skies to HIALEAH, Fila.- (UPI) — The of Commerce reported today that someore stole ifs flying purple- people eater. A ‘seven-foot paper- mache monster with a green nose, wings and one eye, the “people-eater” “ith. the for-a special banquet . wi ie theme {This . “Out 0 World.’ Runaway Train. BY PETE LOCHBILER ABOARD THE PONTIAC PRESS ORIZABA, Mexico —At least 10) THEATER SPECIAL — The 1958 were Pontiac Press theater party was) ‘kilied and 8}-injured When a run- winging its way eastward today, $0) aoce Scene uande by The Press. away electric train crashed into a, begin five days of theater pleasure | crowded railway station yesterday and Manhattan fun. | Most of the folks were aboard) jplush Viscount airliner which left |Willow Run Airport at 12:30 p. In each of its 44 seats sat a Pon-| +tiac—aret- -person, eagerly “Tooking ‘performances plus many extras) ithat will make this third annual’ trip memorable . x *« * About 15 minutes behind us was another Capital airliner, this one holding 13 mere theater-goers. Four others in our group had de-! cided to make the New York trip by train. Both flights were scheduled to Sullenberger Case to Be Aired Tonight The fir: ~ in a series of hearings 'to decide whether Dr. Neil H. Sul- |lenberger will be reinstated to practice at Pontiac General Hos- pital will be held tonight at the city hospital. The ll-member Board of Trus- tees of the hospital and its at- torneys will meet at 7:30 to air the first of 12 charges brought against the 42-year-old chest surgeon by the hospital's medical staff. None of the charges involve pro- fessional incompetence. The staff, which urged his suspension last fall, has charged the doctor with actions ‘detrimental to the effi- cient operation of the hospital.” The trustees plan to continue the hearing on every ofher. week night in three-hor-long meetings until its conclusion, dividing island ; the Pontiac area Sunday and most and hit a tree. He of today, the weather bureau pre- ply step Oakland. dicts considerable cloudiness with Women Go lfers neace dcosmi Highway] * chance of scattered showers to- Harrington, a con- night and tomorrow. to Compete Here) "struction worker, Toll There will be little change in _ . fell asleep at the | 158 temperature, with a low tonight Pontiac, with 35 golf wheel, _ near S5-and an expected high ‘0 | courses within an 18-mile palsy scars oo 39 satel wampantae sean radius of city limits, lays. cident victims ” day ranged trom a low of 51 to| claim to being the golf died over the —— capital of Michigan. This womens: Winds were calm at 8 a.m. to-| week another big tourna- . * * day and the forecast is for light t. th Nationa! Howard J. Moore, 38, of 620 Car-| variable winds ‘of 6 to 12 m.p.h. ment, : e line, Milford, died Sunday at Pon-|ipis evening. Women’s Open, takes place Se ak set gg salen at, Forest Lake Country suffered June 10 near his ome |Purple People Eater ?? | Club, adding an additional -| notch in the golf restige |v -Miami-Springs-Hialeah Chamber | of Oakland County. See |° ~~ page 15 for stories Pontiac yo 0g and ie Women’ 's Open Something different? Mere It Is, Oak- fand County Table Toppers annual clam Yoake at Warsaw Park, Wednesday, June port between 3:30 and 4 p. m., | to be whisked by special buses | to the pew Hotel Manhattan, | where reservations: for everyone Press Theatergoers Off to See Shows | land at the big La Guardia Air- buffet scheduled in the beautiful baliroom of the Manhattan. And | between then and the time the trip heads back to Pontiac Sat- urday, there's lots of other treats : in store, | The hotel's location on Eighth, avenue between 44th and 45th Sts., Searchers combed through the this Capital Airlines Flight 64, a is only one block west of fabulous Times Square and two blocks north m. |of the 42nd street theatet district. visit to _The theater distriet-is-where the Pontiac folks will be four nights. _ Ceaei port of Veracruz, apparent- | 'forward to five top-notch theatrical | ithis week. They've got tickets to jsee ‘‘Music Man” tonight, ‘‘West) Side Story’’ Tuesday, ‘‘Two.for the | Seesaw” Wednesday afternoon, | ‘“Oh, Captain” Wednesday evening. | and “Who Was That Lady?” ‘Thursday. | Before tonight’s show there's a | get- SS ‘cocktail party and hundreds Special arrangements have been made for an after-theater supper party at -Leone’s Restaurant, a a—fashion show at B. Altman & Co." s store, a tour of the New York Stock Exchange, and last but not least, lan excursion to the statue of! | Liberty. *- * * In addition to the planned events, theater-goers were deciding on of other things they) would do during their free time in. colorful New York. f the Radio City Music Hall, | Fifth avenue department} ‘Economy | Heads for New High’ NEW YORK (UPI) — The recession has touched bot- tom and the economy will soar to a new all-time high by the end of 1959, Fortune Mazagine economists predict- ed today. x * * The magazine, in an 18- month outlook, said the gross national product would jump ‘by 50 billion dollars to a rec- ord 470 billion dollars by the end of next year. The magazine predicted that, within a year’s time, the economy would be ex- panding ata rate of 6 per cent annually as compared with 4 per cent prior to the current recession. “Its no longer a question of whether the bottonm will last 3 months, or 6 months, or twelve, but how fast the recovery will spread,” For- tune said. The forecast said that in the last two months, “not only did defense outlays ex- pand and public works ad- vance, but housing starts also rose 14 per cent. “Sales of new and used cars increased nearly 10 per cent and machinery orders were up by the same amount in April. About twice as many industries increased production in May as cut it” Employment alse in- creased in May for the first time since the recession began . . .and unemploy- ment declined,” the maga-. zine said. “These gains will prove mutually sup- porting, and together they covery.” (Since the Fortune predic- tion was made, the Labor Department has report i that the number of persons drawing jobless benefits fell for the eighth straight week in the week ended June 7. But -the decline was less than in previous weeks. Police Trampled in New York Demonstration tried to crash through police lines.) They trampled several police-| men. | SMASH 3 WINDOWS The demonstrators smashed three windows of the Park Avenue build- ing. - Seven policemen and a number of pickets were injured, none se- riously. The demonstratien was to protest the execution of former Hungarian Premier Imre Nagy and three of his associates, announced in Mos- cow last week. : x * *& ‘ Nagy and the others were lead- ers of the Hungarian revolt of 1956. The violent oubreak came, po- lice said, at what appeared to be a prearranged signal. It turned into a melec between 350 pickets and nearly 100 police- men. Nine pickets were arrested. The demonstrators had been peacefully marching and handing out leaflets of the Federation of Former Hungarian Political Prisoners before the violence erupt- ed. “Several firecrackers were ex- ploded- as.about 50 pickets tried to force. their way past ae to the building. : SECOND OUTBREAK This was the second outbreak of violence at the Manhattan building ver the weekend. Anti-Soviet pick-- ets a wae two windows: Saturday and three arrests followed. In Ottawa, Canada, about 320 Hungarian refugees splattered the Soviet Embassy with red ink as they paraded in protest of the executions of ‘Nagy and his as- soriates. . ‘consulate atfire. * * * Hungary Protesters Erupt: NEW YORK «—Hungarian refu-; In Buenos Aires, police last night eral hundred Russians stoned the gees demonstrating outside head-\drove off about 300 Hungarian|West German Embassy in a noisy quarters of the Soviet delegation, refugees protesting the executions|demonstration today, according to to the United Natioms yesterday as they tried to set the Soviet|/reports reaching London. Two American newsmen at the scene were pushed around and one And in Moscow, a crowd of sev-|suffered’ mirior bruises. 4% a — . ap Wirephete SLU GGED BY DEMONSTRATOR — A New York. mounted policeman, Sgt. Charles Marklin, talks to a picket and detective - outside headquarters of the SoNet.delegation to the United Nations. The officer was struck by, a picket's placard pole as some 350 Hungarian refugees swarmed around the Soviet building. They \ were protesting the execution of Hungariap revolution leaders. ¥ ~add up to an all-around re-— Hospital Official Pontiac General Hosiptal to cut the pay of all hospital ‘other positions at the main aries over $8,000 annually; (2) $6. 500; land: (4) Periace WARREN W. SIMONDS Asked to Resign Lists Several Reasons for Assistant Director Simonds’ Removal A fourth person in top manage- ment at Pontiac General Hospital Warren W. Simonds, assistant directer — today resigned his post. Harold B. Euler, who is acting as administrator between the hos- pital’s Board of Trustees and management, said Simonds was tion of reasons.” during the past month. , In Today's s Press _ “There- was a disagreement between the board and Simonds as relates to construction, man- agement and personality prob- lems ever since the start,” said Euler. The 31-year-old Simonds who took over the assistant’s post in October of 1956, said he resigned to ‘accept another position.” Asked what this was, “there are prospects.” He said there were no hard feel- ings between himself and the board. ing what they believe is in the best interest of the hospital and terest on the present hospital ithe hospital today. . * “asked to resign for an accumula- | he said) Pontiac General Acts to End Bulging Deficit . Board Orders Pay Cuts" for All Workers; 100 Jobs ‘Will Be Eliminated By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. trustees yesterday took a giant step to erase a mounting deficit when they voted employes and eliminate 100 hospital and annex. The eight trustees gathered Sunday during a three- hour closed session and handed down the following four- ‘point plan to attack a $57,000 six-month deficit. (1) A 20 per cent reduction in all ‘management sal-. A 10 per cent reduction in all salaries above , (3)° A five per cent reduction in all other salaries, Removal of 75 fulltime and 25 part time posi- tions at the main hospital and annex, the old Oakland County Contagious saree Reduction of all salaries will become effective July 1. It was emphasized by a spokesman for the Board of Trustees that the pay cuts ‘would be a “temporary re- lief” lasting only until the on qeeereph road. end of the year, while the elimination of the 100 posi- tions would be permanent. To be effected by the economy squeeze will be 647 (566 fulltime and 81 part time) employes, said Harold B, Euler, liaison trustee between the board and manage- — ment of the hospital. The trimming of salaries will amount to a Savings of $65,000, he said, The present wage scales will be restored to those employes on the payroll Jan. 1, 1959, he added. * * * “The board feels they: will be able to go back to the present wages then because of several - tors which makes our financial p ture look a little brighter at & time,”” Euler emphasized. He mentioned that the city of Pontiac will assume payment of in- -con- struction bond issue after the first of the year, and that the addition is expected to be completed then, providing more beds. MOVE UNANIMOUS Euler said the economy steps were approved unanimously by the eight trustees Sunday who he said he called to ‘‘consider the serious financial condition at the hospital." Missing from the 11 - member - board were Edward P. Barrett, Harold S. Goldberg, and Re v. Theodore R. Allebach, Euler explained to those present that there was a $57,000 operating deficit through May 31 of this year, and another possible $25,000- June deficit in addition, based on the present number of persons using * Euler, who has taken over the temporary post as, director since Carl I. Flath, former director, was fired May 20, indicated today fur- ther steps might be taken to bring in“more revenue to the city hospi- ital treasurer. - One of these moves has already been approved by the board, *he said. This involves. closing down the 87-bed- annex by Sept. 1. - A big share of the 100 positions _ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Cotton-Picking “I'm sure the board is t-Grandpa to Steal Elvis’ Thunder its patients,” he said Simonds joins Carl Tf. past director, Miss Shirley Dovre. administrative assistant, ata, James Corbett, office manager, in departures from the city hospita] Flath, i Fiath was fired, Miss Dovre resigned, and Corbett left when -his office was combined with another. Euler said Simonds’ departure was not a part of the salaries cut (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Se ee Ng gerne acres Comics ....... hacia celene -. 2 County News ..... hessaeeiaea © Editorials 2.0... ....eececee 6 Markets ......:.0..005050 Obituaries ..........6.... es 8 Sperts sec eeseeeenseeet ean 18-19 Theaters 2.20... . cece ees 20 TV & Radio Programs ..... 27 Wilson, Earl ........<¢.......%7 Women’s Pages ...:. 9-10. u t a LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP) ~ Elvis Presley's grandfather, who doesn’t like rock and roll, was under contract today to record an album of gongs he learned as a Mississippi cotton — in his youth. Jesse Presley, 62, a crate re- pairman for a soft-drink bot- tling firm here, said he feels his famous grandson may be sur- prised at his new career. “The grandfather made it plain he isn’t trying to cash in on Elvis’ name or success. “I don't want. to ride in on Elvis, I want to:-make it on my own,”’ Presley said, The former cotton farmer has been signed to record an album of southern folk songs for Legacy Records, Inc., a new firm here. Presley, who said his only previous singing has been “in the bathroom and around the house,’’ commented with a grin, “I guess I'm about the oldest “man who ever started off to be: ~ a singer.” A i ¥ * \. 4 ; & - _ Mean temperature s Vieie)) -'* 4 Pickets Hinder Missile Work UAW Blocks Gates at ‘Incorporation Vote a) t a. ; 2 + ps Sag tu Chrysler Plant, Barring Workers From Jobs (AP) — Produc- tion was slowed today at the Chrysler Corp. missile plant—in suburban Sterling Township when United Auto. Workers’ pickets blocked parking lot gates. — DETROIT The plant makes: Redstone and/ Jupiter missiles. Some 3,000 workers were due on the day shift. Police and union sources said only a+ few entered the plant. _ The picketing caught the com- pany and most of the workers by surprise. The UAW represents only about 490 of the plant’s 8,000 employes. * * Company spokesmen said a sub- stantia] number of employes failed) to report for work. Milan Matich, UAW president,. charged Chrysler had been discriminating against UAW members to keep down, member- ship. He said the company has been doing this by giving all over- time work to nonunion employes. The shutdown followed inci- dents of sabotage which af- fected General. Motors’ plants at Kansas City and Chrysler’s Dedge truck plant here. The union disclaimed responsibility. The missile plant dispute arose as Chrysler, General Motors ‘and Local 1245) - worth St., the Community Activities Center Township. in . Ferd entered their-fourthi week of operating without UAW pacts. * * * All three companies resumed bargaining on new contracts to- day, Agreement on only a smat- tering of minor issues has been the only progress reparted to date. Walter P. Reuther, UAW presi- dent, has said repeatedly he has no intention of calling a strike. The) reason is the tremendous backlog of unsold cars. Car makers could go a month or more without mak- ing a single car and still feel no Pench * * * But Reuther is keeping a sharp eye on the backlog as it dwindles. When the contracts expired last month the industry had about 850,- 000 unsold cars. Now, with produc- tion curtailed, it has less than 700,000. ‘trict Judge Thomas F. Murphy "| Teamsters, and two others. ‘the jury of eight men and four More than 15,000 people visited the Waterford Township Communi- ties Activities, Inc., Fair Friday, Saturday wirid Sunday, concluding one of the most successful projects Hoffa’s Trial Jury Charged by Judge NEW YORK — Federal Dis- today charged the jury in the federal wiretap-conspiracy trial of James R. Hoffa, president of the International Brotherhood of The case was expected to reach Set in Farmington Incorporation elections for two areas in Farmington Township! were scheduled today by the Oak-! land County Board of Superisors. The board unanimously voted to hold special elections in con- junction with the regular Nov. 4 election on proposals to incorpo- | | 'j ‘women late in the day. * * * Hoffa's co-defendants are Owen TOKYO (UPD ~ The dete bride of Willian’ 8. Girard is not with her married Pontiae Press Photo WATERFORD WINNER, — Rosalie Pollina, 16, of 6991 Long- Waterford Township, was selected as the new queen of last night. In second place was Barbara Miller, 16, of 3251 Warringham Ave., and third place was Sharleen Peters, 16, of 3345 Homestead Dr., both of Waterford cording to general chairman Don- ald Hickman. Proceeds from the annual fair will be used for operation and maintenance of the CAI on Wil-iboard then liams Lake road. Membership in- cludes more than 8,000 residents. One ‘of the biggest attractions of the fair was the beauty con- test, the winner being selected by votes in the form of money placed in. canisters throughout the community. Collections from this project totaled $1,439 with Rosalie Polina, 16, of 6991 Longworth St. the win- ner, and Barbara Miller, 16, of 3251 Warringham St. the runnerup. Sixteen-year-old Sharleen Peters of 3345 Homestead Dr. placed third in the field of 12 contestants. ~x~ * * Each of the money-making proj- : oo, . i in the organization’s history, ac-| . |Bernard Brennan, -president of e¢ts of the fair more than doubled last year’s total and gross collec- tion was over $6,000. The Waterford Township Fire De- | Teamsters Local 337, of Detroit, ‘and. Bernard Spindel, professional wiretapper. partment collected $553 from its This is the second trial for the {projects compared to last year's| trie. The first ended in a hung ($150 total, and 17,000 tickets were jury last Dec. 20. ‘sold for the 16 rides outside the ton Woods. - The Weather ture. rate Clarenceville and Farming- | The present trial began May 20. The government ¢alled 17 wit-, nesses and the defense 32. — ° * * *- i convicted on the charges of tapping the telephones of union * * * ‘subordinates in the Detroit IBT Farmington Woods lies between! headquarters for purposes of 10 Mile road and 14 Mile road, and ‘eavesdropping, each of the de-| includes all of the northeast section |fendants could be sentenced to a of the township, except the villages /five-year term and be fined! of Quaker Town, and Woodcreek. $10,000. ‘ Clarenceville is a portion of the township between Eight Milé road and 10 Mile road, east of the pres- ent city of Farmington. . — Tornado Noses Kansas City Rains Deluge Texas DALLAS, Tex. — Downpours air set off thundershowers over ranging up to nearly 7 inches most of the state. brought new flood threats to south-| Nine persons were rescued by ern Texas today as a mass of cold firemen and police from flooded streets of San Antonio, after a vio- ‘lent. storm dumped 4.5 inches of rain on the city. * * * Driving rains and winds up to | 80 miles an’ hour carved a path 10 ‘miles long and s¢veral miles wide through croplands near Runge, 60 miles southeas{ of San Antonio. Trees weft uprooted by the storm, which dumped 3.5 inches of rain in the arta, » The heaviest rainfali—6.25 inches —was at Orange, but caused no ap- preciable damage. Near Leakey, 5.5 inches of rain fell sending the vest prong of the Frio river on a 7-foot rise. * * * Flood warnings were issued by| -, the U.S. Weather Bureau for the} Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Consider-. able cloudiness with a chance ef scat- tered showers tonight and tomerrew. Lit- tle change in temperature. lew tonight near 56, high tomerrew 70-74. Light vart- able winds becoming southwesterly 6-12) miles tenght. Tomerrew night partty clewdy with little change in tempera- Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am at 8 am: Wind velocity— Cain Sun sets Monday at 8 12 pm Sun rises Tuesday at 456 am Moon sets eta at 12 ie 8 m Moon rises Mor A Dewnteun Temperatures 6 a.m 2.58 ‘1am : : 7am 6 12 noon 7: rough hill. country west and north | = pee vem ef San Antonio—an area in which 19 am 72 hundreds of persons were ma-| rooned last week after torrential) Sunday in Pentiac rains Highest temperature. 78 Lowest temperature reared 1 A Mean temperature 45 . Wieetne: (8050) : tornado cloud: twirled its deadly snout above metropolitan Kansas City yesterday in full - view of thousands, Oe Year Age in Pontiac Highest témperature F Lowes: tempeature Mean lémperature Weather—Sunns Passing fram west to east and _‘slightly south, the funnel swooped | near the ground in Kansas City. One Year Ago In Pentiac Highest temperature 2 se It lifted-and passed above the Un- Lowest vember acure »-o+-+ €2 ion Station, the baseball park and ‘on above the Harry S. Truman Li- brary in Independence. Then it dis- Highest a Lowest Temperatarts 1 e ‘his Date te in 86 Years ~— appeared. 95 im 1923 42 in 1877, Weather—Fair. * * Two tornado funnels were spot- ited in the Houston Texas area yes- a . fnday’s Temperature Chari Alpena 62 $6 Marquette 69 $1 Baitimore |building. ‘Most Wanted: Man Sought in Mountains EUREKA, Calif. (AP)—Sheriff's \deputies from four counties ‘and FBI agents cinched a c n to- \day around a mountain area be- lieved to be the hiding place of George Edward Cole, one of the ination's 10 Most Wanted Men. A helicopter and a light plane aided the search of a 10-square- mile timbered site about 70 miles southeast of here, . * * * Cole, 31, is sought for the fatal shooting of San Francisco Police Sgt. Joseph Lacey during a tavern holdup Dec. 30, 1956. Deputy Sheriff James Boyer chased a car he believed was driv- en by Cole for 40 miles early yes- terday. Boyer fired and tried to lock bumpers with the fleeing car before it vanished on one of sev- ‘eral logging roads, *« *« * The deputy had received a tip hours earlier that Cale was at- tending a dance at the Carlotta Grange Hall, 18 miles south of Eureka, Cole’s former home. Hospital Making Drastic Finance Cuts. (Continued From Page One) HEADS WILL DECIDE Both agreed it was too early to list which positions would be elim- inated at the main hospital. Euler explained this would be left up to the 20 department eee, Conferences have been called the month with these persons “to review personne] complement and ‘|work load with the idea in mind of reducing personne] wherever pos- sible.” ‘ However, Brewer pointed out | that the board will continue their search for a new director to fill Flath’s old $18,500-a-year post. pital administration because the present operating budget was based on having a per cent of oc- cupancy at the main hospital of a board last Thursday night, sult in a savings of roughly $3, to $5,000 a month, Euler told the at the lannex, which was approved by the will re- 00 * * * As of early today, the pay cuts and personnel reductions taken by the board had not been taken up with officials of Local 100 of the American Association of Federal, State, County and Municipal Em- ployes, AFL-CIO, of which a ma- jority of the — are mem- bers. Ask Hospital Official fo Resign Position (Continued From Page One) and personnel reduction announced itoday by the board. “‘That’s be-| - Robinson cause we just might have to fill the post in the future,” he said. * * * After Fiath’s predecessor, Miss ‘Lauretta Paul, was fired in May of 1957, Simonds moved up from his post as assistant to temporari- ly hold the reins of the hospital while the board looked for a re- placement. - * x * fused to name” Simonds fulltime idirector either following Miss Paul's or Fiath's firings. He the reason. Ten days prior today’s resigna- tion, Simonds had been assigned by the board to take leave from his operations side of managing the hospital, and concetitrate én- tirely on construction of the new wing and its equipping, Euler said. Simonds took the $9,500-a-year post after serving as former asso- ciate director of the Barnes Hospi- tal in St. Louis. He lives at 1209 Alhi St., Waterford- Township. Could Have Been Worse CHICAGO (UPI) —, Leon Groce, 21, tried to elude police by jumping into Lake Michigan, but instead his pants-leg caught on a piling and he dangled half in and half out until reseued. Groce, arrested on suspicion of tampering with telephone coin boxes, admitted he made a mis- take when he tried fo jump in between Wednesday and the end of| Which, Girard and his wife lived The deficit is plaguing the hos-| Over 15,000 People Flock: = to Fair in Waterford tagica, said one visited the Girards spoke “of the apparent poverty in and the difficulty with which-they conversed with each other. But she ed” flat in Ottawa, Ill, with two THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1958 oe ae we 1GI’s Japanese Wife Interviewed — \Mrs. Girard ‘Ready to: Die (Wants fo Quiz | "Ike" 5 Counselor, Urge President to Use Powers: Judge Lemley as a bid “‘for pub- licity.”’ Run Over by Car, Tot Js Unhurt in Cushion of Sand_ Euler said today the board “‘re-|——_____ Soft sand saved the life of a two-year-old White Lake Township re- Sunday when his father acci- iferred to, the “disagreements” be- pried : ‘ tween Simonds and the board as dentally backed the family car over him. Robert Clifton, of 851 Ernest St., ties that he was backing out of his unpaved drive at noon, when he felt a rear tire go over something. When he investigated, he found his son Larry, lying on the ground with tire marks clearly visible on his stomach. The boy was rushed to Pontiac General Hospital, where he was pronounced uninjured except for a smal] cut on his upper lip. ‘All he needs is a diaper change,” a nurse) told the distressed father. Deputies said the soft sand of the drive apparently cushioned the voungster, These Spikes Are Sharp City councilors complained today that women’s high-heeled shoes are piercing road surfaces, the lake. ‘‘] can’t swim,” he told. police. making it easier for the sun to | melt the tar layer underneath. Waterford Will Air Sewage Agreement An agreement between Water- iford: Township and‘ the City of Pontiac concerning a sanitary sew- er hookup will be the main item. to be discussed when the township board meets tonight. The city now bills Waterford Township for 730 connection units, and the township collects from the users living’ south of Ejizabeth Lake Road, according’ to Clerk James Seeterlin, __ In other business, Fire Chief Ed- ward Smith is expected to present detailed specifications concerning a new fire department truek for station number 2. The present truck is 18 years old, and will still be used with the proposed addition of a new vehicle, Developers of the Pleasant ‘Lake | Woods subdivision located on Eliz- | abeth Lake Road near Williams! Lake Road are expected to pre- sent a plat for board. approval. ‘1 Won't Run’*—Adams HNAOCKC, N.H. ® — Sher- man Adams today declined an invitation to seek the Republican gubernatorial nomination in New 73 Memphis 8 99\terday but apparently did not touch . Bismarck 14 49 Miami 88 4 Brownsville 96 a Mowaukes 33 63| ithe ground. Another, which did no Buffalo 72 inneapolis 7 6| report Charieston 66 67 New Orleans 71 74, [REPO ed damage, == sighted west Chicago , ul 4 Rew York 3 61 of Beaumont. Cineinnat Ana $ Cleeviand. 74 57 Peilsten 75 39| While the mercury rose to 107 at Denver 78 86 Phoenix 103 #1 Presidio yesterday, temperatures 28 nae se May og € £, Over-most of Texas were generally - Ft. Worth 13 6] B. Francisco 75 & é9|in the 80s, far below usual late Roeameen : My 5} Tre city is 8 61 June readings At Amariilo the Jacksonville 90 72 Wash 73-62 thermometer did not rise — 73 Kansas City 75 27 Seattle -#1 id ‘Los Angeles €) 67: Tampa a8 7! egrees, * . ' et Hampshire's Sept. 9 primaries, > \ , \ ae} Kee Le LOWER Savings You Can’t Afford PRICES - to Miss: We okie it our Saiinaba to furnish your home beautifully and save you money. pe Our lower overhead makes the difference. Come make us a fr Decorator advice. , “Our 23rd Year at — Same Location” “MILLER FURS oa | Open Friday Evenings M4 OAKLAND AVE, iendly visit, Free ® Careful Free Delivery told Oakland County Sheriff's Depu-| — : died Saturday when his car was | CARSHALTON, England (UPD | 19 Killed in Michigan as Summer Arrives - (Continued From Page One) died on the comparable week- end in 1967, including 15 on the same Saturday a year ago. The victims included: Thomas Roland Thompson, 20, Allen Park, died yesterday when his car ran off a western Wayne County road and struck a tree. * * * Howard Harrington, 34, Drayton Plains, fatally injured in Bloom- Jield Hills when be apparently = asleep at the whee) and his struck a tree yesterday. Patricia Kontowski, 6, Detroit, dashed into the path of a car and was killed near her home. ‘Alex Gouman, 27, Flint, died yesterday of injuries suffered Sat- urday in a two-car accident in Waterford -Tewnship, RUNS OFF ROAD John Drummond, 81, Elkton, was when his car ran off Elkton County. Walter Fiyak, 27, Bridgeport, hit by a train near Saginaw. gis Saturday when his car smashed into a tree. - John Carmichae] Jr.; 5, Detroit, sitting beside the tractor eating an ice cream cone when another youngster accidentally pulled a lev- ‘er which dropped the boom. ville, burned to death in her frame home early Sunday. Her husband and six children escaped. Bis TE road in Chandler Township, Huron) Edward A. Gatiss, 26, Sturgis, |E lost his life on M78 north of Stur-|E was crushed to death Saturday |— when a tractor boon was lowered|E on him accidentally. The boy was\E Mrs. Gladys King, 34, Browns-/— i 47228 é Selection to Girls State is award- ed on ike Wants Six Reactors - WASHINGTON u — President Eisenhower today called on Con- gress for swift approval, of a multi-million-dollar international agreement providing for con- struction of six major nuclear Factory Representative Here WEDNESDAY—2 te 3:30 P.M. REMINGTON Electric Shaver | RECONDITIONED {| —While You. $n 50 | NEW SERVICE—Remington factory representative will be in our store F every Wednesday of every week. 5 ames E Electric Shavers. —Main Floor 3 STORE SORRY! You Had to Wait to Be Served! We Never Anticipated Such an_ ‘Overwhelming Response to Our BIG -*100,000.00 WAREHOUSE SALE REMEMBER | You Can Still Buy Nationally _ Advertised Goods for Your Family—At Cost—Below Cost. --Monday until 9 p.m... Tuesday until 5:30 p.m. BGEORGE’S - NEWPORT’S| 74 NORTH SAGINAW ST, iene OPEN— + Girls’ Shorts the basis. of excellence in — power reactors in Europe by /EGan a) 1963. | | UNIVERSAL Coffeematic of # oe +> i Lee Colortul Sheen Cotton $2 Quality Cr Sizes 3 to 6 Cuffed style, ou Ue enw —- ba zipper styles. ized mai terials. pomemon 9 alee Girls? illustrated, Sizes 3 to 8 Wash ‘n’ wear cotton plisse in eolorful prints. Nalues $3. Boys Play Shorts K fie 1" to Stripes & prints in machine-wash- able ‘CONE’ fab-* Tics. Color-fast. N. Saginaw —Main Floor Electrical Appliances "SALE Tonite & Tuesday Dominion “ADJUSTO-CORD” : AUTOMATIC IRON Regular § 499 $9.95 . Seller Simple to operate, easy to use. — in chrome with mafoon Bord handle, and control. d is adjustable for right or hand use. Lightweight, con- cretion heat for no scorching. Brand new, guaranteed Coffeemakers a “All Sixes 2 to 8——- Better thas, | cant apisiprgnnass niga ’ ape aeRO. ny gaat ‘ ’ ees i Lie, j , ae Ge, e. i Oy kh : : a % i tr f Xi and Conmeticr Tol Falher ls (Mon. de Tues.) *—LIMITED TIME OFFER— Bring In Your Favorite 5x7 INCH Enlargement | Why Pay 39¢ to 65e? wee } a if Lilt eat Nationally ad- Fae ee yet tiga 3 now: Wee. Sake © Nistine. high gloss 6x7 oe "SUPER-SIZE. ‘Black and White | ‘Snapshots | a & chemi- rint on any mm) negative. you ather ‘purchase nocsseery — pey ONLY lic. No limit—order as many as you wish. ., : ee L | : é a HAT LE 16mm ONLY AT SIMMS Hite sk parine"prnts 0s son genuine EAbraAD CAMERA DEPT. —Main Floor | . Tonite ond Tuesday i) BRYLCREEM HAIR GROOM e GALVANIZED STEEL © $3.29 oy J 27 Quality steel box Limit 1 per person Famous Push ush Button TOOTH PASTE : Reg. ¢c 98c Your favorite brand of tooth paste in this mew & disperiser at this new low price. For All Raral Mail Boxes Wrought Iron Mail Box POSTS: = __ $2.85 Value, = =] 48 Por mounting rural mail boxes Heavy gauge 1%4 inch car- bon steel turd’ o¢ Over 5 foot hag. All size rural mail boxes n fit » Pal injector Biades a For.- 69c Package of 20 blades. Fits all in- jector razors. Gives you a closer and better shave. SIMMS Buy now ai SIMM).A*. 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor 98 N. Saginaw F Rural Mail Box| U.S. Post Office approved. J Weather - resistant galvanized } with signal arm flag. DE —ind Floor | FE. se becenpecsss capes ystesssesescceessedocssessses Win a FLORIDA eo for 2 Nothing to write — just guess the number of DEX-A-DIET tablets in the jar on display in our drug department. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY Ask for Complete Information on New DEX-A-DIET Reducing Tablets Learn about this new Wweight~- ~eentrol for women and men and enter FREE Plorida VACATION without spending a single penny. Ask any salesclerk in our drug department @ 000890888988 HHH8HHHHHHHHHHEOHTHHHHHEEEES Coeoeseceoccreseseesesoeeesesscoocsconeooers Yatee t foind $129 * LIMITED TIME Nteé Torte THE SHAMPOO WITH CHOLESTEROL=THE HEART OF © 000 000000000009000000000000000000000000008 | @ CREME SHANPOO | ae | = 98 North = : ees ae —Mai mit mV wD sroriers Mame Street + 7 2D |_| ___ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1958 - 3 OPEN A Oo on. Every MON DAY = tn You’ usually find enough ne bargains to make a shopping-trip worthwhile ~ any time here at SIMMS .. . but the first-of -the-week bargains can | double your savings when we offer a like these. 10 ‘DEPT. VALUES Pn BINOCULARS | Powerful 7 x 35 binoculars with center focus, B G L style. i He 9 includes Fed. Tax. — ' i ' i | ' 1 iz i i t | ‘ for fences, ances \e¥ " New! Choice of Colors: BROWNIE “STARFLASH' 4 Camera Outfit 4 Regular $9,95 $6, 97 r Value : Takes afi three slides: B&W snaps or Sarit flash, film, bulbs, 3 choice of red, white. or ; coat application. White and colors. ~ , 1 eeeceeoseoesoseeseeeeseeeeeeese ot M ALL EXTERIOR & Pait Walls Guaranteed Ist Quality of Exactly , i ; \ 6 © 6b ” Masonry Faint F eas “Playwelt” & “E-Jay scree a Ft © Fun Bi poo mae eee ee cee 5% _ - Nationally Advertised Brands sawren ViEWHiASTER | VIEWMASTER Se Bo s” & Girls’ SHOES St ns 4 _ Theater Sets teeccececccescececcccecesescccsccocceecsoees y : ereo fewer | pester Big 9x12 Foot Size . ° $2 Viewer 99 + $1.25 Pack aro Drop Cloths : 6.FT. STEP cAbnens VALUES to *4.98 - _Your_ Choice. $2 Light | $13.20 87 | $6 Value A $4 Velne ¢ Palen | 6 ees PAZ 3 Ettore Sroted-te Ontords All Fo: ’ s Sawyer reels in 2-D. Ideal Toes ra ; Like « real ee se stage with : 4 * pening and Boys’ =) | 8 ret’s birthdays, or ny j Sreen—Viewmaster projector shows @) * Girls’ White Leather nse mas. Reels extra. hundreds of new reels tn color. Pack of 3 reels es a i Sturdy hardwood ACCU RAFLEX Reflex Camera Regular $43.95 — Now only 24 wake slides or B&W snaps. 12 pictures per roll. CAMERAS 98 North for SAaNd_-7amCoh GANG Etc. ‘GENEVA’ WHITE. Tested —— compares to — A Seal deen Limit 4 gallons. Enterprise ODORLESS OIL-BASE GALLON Enterprise oil base paint for all walls, Brush mark free — JIMM): This lot is an accumulation of exactly 2 668 pairs. of higher - priced, first “quality footwear at this low $1.87 price to offer’ super-savings for thrifty parents when active .youngsters give Outside Paint GALLON ms Seema oulagee Flat Wall Painté $5.95 Value 497 fully washable, one % Odds and Ends in Limited ladders. gmooth- Selections ty- sanded, rein- foreed steps and pail platform. Sizes 3 to 12 and 12'2 to 3 I Yes, you can buy long-wearing quality shoes for boys and girls for ONLY $1.87 at SIMMS. Better hurry for best selection— it's first come, first served while stocks last. <0) fal a.) P3.5 coated lens, 1/300 sec. shutter speeds. Auto- wind stop. —Main Floor ‘a aj Simms." dda had ddd dd ted dad add bi dha ddd dtd did dahate MONDAY & TUESDAY ONLY! lf Perfect ... You'd Have to Pay the NATIONALLY ADVERTISED °2 PRICE “Famous-Name” Brand © Ladies’ Girdles 5 YEAR Guarantee SPONGE MOPS JUMBO SIZE—50% Larger Head $3.95 List ial onight and Tues. head, long wood handle, ceilings, etc. Limit ], COMPLETE RANGE ALL SIZES ni : We carry this $2 line of girdles in regular stock 3 "7 but because these failed “© @» to pass maker's rigid in- spection you may buy at HALF PRICE. Knitted lastex—so light, so com- fortable, so easy to laun- der, Dries in a jiffy, Limited stock—buy yours now with certainy of complete satisfaction. F waterproof and stain-resistant. 1 assorted colors and designs. No beast: EE OLE ES ‘Special-Summer Summerwear * PEDAL PUSHERS & TEE-TOPPERS *JAMAICAS =, *SHORTS < Including Values to $2.00 = OU «MATERIALS mm @ Denims @ Broadcloths .@ Cottons All-Purpose BASINS 68° $1.29 Seller or mar finest china. Rustproof, chi plastic in assorted colors, 13x10¥ Your Choice at This One Low Price— @ Poplins @ Linens @ Sheens ~ “Regular: Slees: 10 te 18 Extra Sizes 32 to 38 Color-Fast and :_.. Guaranteed Washable White solid aor Tae gay stripes, Many tehing gIIMM).. King size f@sistant, " steel legs, ee Sagine Clothing aw mM iin BRC TAERS | Floor- Self-Wringing—Long Handle Exactly as pictured—large removable sponge For floors, walls, Be your own Decorator! Decorating Material Self-Adhesive STIX—per yard Regular 49c Per Yard Use on walls, closets, vanities, hampers, tables, cabinets, cupboards — a thousand uses in your home. Washable, Unbreakable ‘Soft Plastic | Fits into twin sinks—-won’t scratch the sink SE REG SR NO LIMIT—buy as many pairs as you want, | PRICES SLASHED Sale of Genuine ‘CANNON’ & ‘MATEX’ it Quality TOWELS 69: GROUP 1—Values to 1.49 Choice of big 23x46-inch colorful plaids or 25x44-inch solid color bath towels by Cannon, All Ist quality. GROUP 2—Values to 1.79 Choice of 24x46-inch terry in solid colors, 22x44: ee Shop as ) | Serve your guests refreshing drinks in this charming nd JIFFY : beverage set! -Includes one 72-oz. lipped pitcher and @ . FRESH GROUN D | six 9-oz. matching tumblers, all in this lovely “hob- Friday . Ae nail’ pattern. Ideal for shower gifts, too! Nights Brownie Mix Pkg. P | Phone FE 4-2511 or Come to Waite’s China .. . Filth Floor til 9 or Spicy Mix Pkg. BEEF | sein Died | SALE! BRASS FINISH DEVILED HAM =: PULLEY LAMPS KOUNTY KIST Whole Kernel Corn ‘--" 2=29 Loaves WITH COUPON ONLY Your _ 4 Smart Styles i in Either Wall or Ceiling. Types! k =e $10. 98 Values Now! Bright light where you need it! Feather- © Brass or Rice Cloth Shades touch, adjustable space-saver larnps by- Argo _@ Feather Touch Adjusting —give soft light, when raised, bright, close-up e@ Matching Ceiling Styles ~ light for reading when lowered, Easy to in-. RAYTEX WATERPROOF | BABY PANTS 2 "ws" 4Q° OPE Sen a ee Adjust Down to 54” stall. . . need no separate wall switches! Light up and decorate your rooms at ‘these -Waite’s Lamps... Filth Floot _. big savings! Oo Se Leben: Portion bar nagn Griffin Chapel. Mr. Fink died suddenly yester- day while ——s a daughter in tor Division. Tribell of Okemos; two brothers, and three sisters, aad oe ot ot 490 N. Perry St. wil be bellin ‘Brown cl il” 4 ash aa ee % We be oe NP RR ace eran cece ae aes ? a "ee 2° a ee i eo ——* | : PA ag ee ceatg é » == oe bee ee a ee 9 9 a em Se “eg ee: ae 4 .. r | { t his mother, Mrs. Florence Harring- ian Church. Service for Herbert R. Justman, Marjorie Lockhart of Rochester; 67, of 174 S. Edith St., will be held|two brothers, Cletus and Woodrow, Funeral Home. parsed eres nad Coe Gent Ere MRS, W. J. MORRIS THE INDEPENDENT INSURANCE gives you personal service and is~ your representative to the company. MAYNARD JOHNSON | the Perry Mount Park Cemetery. | Mrs. Morris died suddenly Satur- ,day at her summer home in Bay- ‘port. ‘of the First Presbyterian Church, Hollywood, Fla.. member of the Musical AGENT roe ‘Job See or Call ‘of Ashland, Ohio; a sister, Mrs. Surviving are his wife, Olive: Joslyn Avenue United Presbyter-| WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice children. Pontiac General Hospital following} Service for Mrs. W. J. .(AnnalAdm. Robert L. cmap ley, re a three month illness. He was a May) Morris, 60, of Bayport, a for-|tired, 74, commander of the’ Al- MRS. HANNAN E. HAIGHT paris purchasing agent for Cy|mer Pontiac resident, will be heldilied attack on the Japanese-held Service for Mrs. Hannah E.iQwens, Inc at 4 p.m. Tuesday at the Sparks-|Solomon Islands during World War | Griffin Chapel. Burial will be at/II, died Saturday. He had suffered from a heart ‘condition. . x * * HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Herbert Brenon, 78, a pioneer film direc- | She was a member of Pontiac tor, died Saturday of a heart ail-| |Eastern Star, president of Group 4 ment. He was a native of Ireland. * * * DURHAM, N. C. (AP)—John R.. y and_guardian of Hutchings Jr., 65, president of the ob's Daughters in Pontiac from American Suppliers, Ine., an. /American Tobacco Co. “subsidiary, + | Saginaw: a son, Morton Sprentall Jordan, 43, chairman of the IIli- nois State Harness Racing Com- pon hear GENERAL INSURANCE ‘Samuel Smith, of Pontiac and five mission, died yesterday in a trac- Displaying 807 Community Nationa] Bank ‘grandchildren. ltor accident. This Emblem Phone FE 4-4523 ~ * * | GREENVILLE — Harry D. ton of Montrose; four sons, Jack,| Surviving are his wife, Laura: |riet M, Sanborn, 60, national trap- Joseph, Michael and Dennis, all at|four sisters, Mrs. Ellsworth Lord.|shooting champion in 1921 and home, and two: sisters. : Surviving are her husband, her * Saturday. ‘father, Willet Hazard of Cass City; * * * ja daughter, Mrs. Mary Heasty of RD, Ul. (AP)—Evart. MICHIGAN cueorr afterd, regardless of hew mach or i | ROHLIN W. COLBY Rd. will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday/gan publications, died yesterday at! KEEGO, HARBOR — Service for|Lansing, former publisher of the Rohlin W. Colby, 62, of 2945 Moss Grocaniiie News and other Michi- at Trinity Methodist Church. Burial | \United Memorial Hospital after a will be in Pine Lake Cemetery./heart attack. He was 78. Funeral SELLORS and rey a how many yer owe. Funeral Home. =. » a ‘ NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED : _ONE PLACE TO PAY Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. of Credéit Counsellors Hours: Daily 9 to $ - #it; & Saginaw “Let 9 Years ol Credit Counsellin Wed. & Sat. MICHIGAN eereaall COUNSELLORS Harbor. MRS. MARY M. McGIRR TROY — Mrs. Mary Martha Mc- | Girr, 82, died at the home of her) Ex ce Assist Y to l- Evenings by Sipe’ t. Above Oakland Theater body is at the C. J. Godhardt! service will be held tomorrow at iGreenville. Lansing published the | Mr. Colby died Saturday at St. Greenville News (now Daily News) m_1930 to 1941. He also published’ _ Surviving are his wife, Neva, the Coldwater Reporter, 1919-29, and a son, Lawrence R. of Keego and managed McFadden Publica- |tions in Michigan, 1929-30. Prior to 1919, he published the Marshall |Statesman. Texas has about 6,500 oil pro- PONTIAC STATE BANK © NOTICE In order to extend a longer weekend to our employes WE WILL NOT BE OPEN All Departments Close 3:00 P.M. JULY 3rd Open Our Usual Hours on MONDAY, JULY 7th COMMU daughter, Mrs. Roscoe Woodward, ducing firms. _ Friday and Saturday | JULY 4and 5 & NITY NATIONAL BANK : - PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS slat 1 pam. Wednesday at the C. J.jboth of Drayton Plains; 18 grand-|a veteran of 30 years in Congress, | Godhardt _ shadow- -panelled! for fashion, for money you can't beat Penney’s fine quality Cannons. Multi-striped or solid colors... accented with 6 glittering gold mylar stripes. Strong selvages. Deep looped. - Face Towels, 15 by 25 In. ..... GOLD STRIPED RAINBOW - and solid CANNON TOWELS for 37 22x44 ..3 for $1 “SHOP and SAVE ~ Quality for Quality You Can’t Buy Better BIG 17 BY 25 INCHES! sity), ZIP-OFF COVERS! | ALLERGY-FREE- — =e —— FOAM RUE Fiilows Big values! You know what they usually cost. 17 by 25-inch solid Sensationelly . Priced of } Each mild foam rubber... always resilient, never mats down. White muslin covers are cord- edged, Sanforized. Wash Cloths, 12 by 12 In. ... .6 for $1 le 2 RUGS! 1 LOW PRICE! _HEAVY- QUALITY LOOPED COTTON SCATTERS r Two 30 by 50-inch rugs at one low, low Penney price! Sculptured! Non-skid! Take Sandalwood, White, Camellia Rose, Hunter Green, Dark Grey, Sable Brown. Machine wash in lukewarm water. *) for WE PRICED "EM SPECIAL! Touch? Terrific! Care? Easy! OUR NEW BLEND SLIPS Wherc but Penney’s could” you find these dacron-nylen-cotton blends, the newest fabled-soft S$ 88 slips priced like this? Cling-free, Fabulous buy “0 “Sizes 32 te 40 : | SAVE BIG ON FAVORITE PENNEY SPORT SHIRTS! Oe that See Penney’s carefree cotton prints and air-breathing combed - lenos! See elegant silk-touched “Nepokos” and_ frost-touched ‘Rakashans” from famous Dan River. $1 sizes small, medium, large 2 Today’s new in fashion nylons ~400 needle Seamless sheers _ “barely-there” look and double-loop, full-fashioned seamed sheers. (2 threads give | hs double _proteetion.)- ln ————— - fect quality. SEAMLESS DRESS SHEERS! DOUBLE-LOOP SHEERS __ peir _ MIRACLE MILE Penney’s Store Hours Open. Daily Monday Through Seturday — 10:00 A. M. to 9:00, P. M. i = | DOWNTOWN Pom $ Sire os om eee = 9; : ~ Howell- es ce Married Saturday afternoon in” Clarkston and Dr” Lynn Elmer Howell, Parents of the. couple .are Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Spohn and - Mr. and Mrs. Elmer B. Howell, MRS. LYNN ELMER HOWELL S pohn Vows Spoken at Clarkston Mary Ann Spohn and Dr. Lynn . Elmer Howell were may- - ried Saturday afternoon at First’ Methodist Church Clarkston. “The Rev. William Richards officiated at the 4:30 ceremony. Parents of the couple are Mr. afid Mrs. Ronald E. Spohn of Clarkston and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer B. Howell of Detroit. The bride wore a gown of white organdy — yee The po = : trait collar with a tore’ neck- line that extended over the shoulders. The ‘sleeves were- fashioned of lace appliques, and lace appliques also were at- tached tothe pleated hemline of the petal skirt. Her silk ilusion veil was held by a matching bow of organdy, and she carried f& bouquet of white phaleanopsis orchids and _ iy. leaves. = “~ Cynthia Morgan of Lincoln, Neb. >was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Nancy How- ell of Detroit, sister of the bridegroom, and Thayer Wil- son of Clarkston. The atiendenta wore gowris of white organdy over blue taf- feta with short sleeves and ~rounded-necklines outlined with Swiss embroidered garlands. The waltz-length” bell skirts were accented with the em- broidered garlands. Their headpieces were of white Swiss straw and they carried bouquets of daisies and. bache- lor buttons. , Phillip Dietrich of - Detroit was best man, Ushers were Richard Spohn, brother of the bridegroom; Dr. James Ker- math of Dearborn and Dr. Jack Cox of Great Bend, Kan. .. The reception, following the ceremony, was held at the bride’s home. Dr.-.and- Mrs, Howell left for Honolulu, where Dr, Howell will begin his se ss at Queen's * _~ Parents of the Married. . Saturday at. Christ Church Cranbrook were ~ Elizabeth Ann Ensign John - W. Cramer Jr. couple are Mrs. A. Dale Kirk and the late Dr. Kirk of Birmingham- and Mr. and’ Mrs. J. Warford Cramer of North Tonawanda, N.Y. MRS. JOHN W. CRAMER JR. Elizabeth A. Kirk Weds Ensign John W. Cramer Elizabeth Ann Kirk and En- sign John W, Cramer Jr., were married Saturday evening at Christ Church Cranbrook. The Rev. Robert L. DeWitt officiat- - ed at the 8 o'clock ceremony. Parents of the couple are Mrs. A. Dale Kirk and the late Dr. Kirk of Birmingham and Mr. and Mrs, J. Warford Cra- mer of North Tonawanda, N. Y. The bride, given in marriage by her brother, Robert Kirk, ; wore a pure silk peau de soie gown with 9 sheath-like panel in front which formed a. bustle in thé. back and-was held at her waist by a flat bow, Her mantilla veil was of Belgium lace appliqued on silk illusion and she carried a cas€ading bouquet of Eucharist lilies. - Matron of honor was Mrs. James B. Lawrence. Jean. Mo- riaty was. maid of honor and- bridesmaids were Ellen Flint, Sara_Kirk, gs ae y Roeser and And Defeat Deadly Superstition—Abby JANICE M. BENDIG Mrs, Walter Bendig of Jud- son court announces the en- gagement of her daughter, Jan- ice M,, to James PD: Miller,’son of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Miller of Detroit. An Aug. 23 wedding is planned, % Visiting ‘the Arno Hulets of F. ranklin oe road 3 : Sunday were their son and daughter-in-law, Dr. and By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN “DEAR ABBY: My daughter is expecting a baby at any moment and we are so upset don’t k now what to do. She receiveda Jetter’ saying she s hould send the chain- letter prayer to 13 other people with a vee dollar each, ¥ - and if she dfin't do it, ausY death would come to her home. “She doesn’t know whether to send’ it on or not and I _hope you will help us decide as it worries us something terrible.” ei V_S. DEAR V. S.: Chain letters should be tossed into the waste paper basket and promptly for- gotton: This one sounds like a scheme to get money. Report it to your local postal authori- ties, ; 3 “tre Chane tHilet and their family of St. Louis : Mo. They stopped here on their way to California where Dr. Hulet will accept an appointment as assist- “y ‘ant professot in the department of ne and Portue. " Break the Chain of Fear “DEAR ABBY: This is the -fhird time I am writing to you and if I don’t get any answer this time I wil know Catherine Curtice, They wore white chiffon dresses, ivy wreaths in their hair and car- ried bouquets of Gerber daisies. Robert Brown was best man | and ushers were John Kirk, Kendall "Gosch, James B. Law- rence, Clifford Colwell and Wil- - liam Raisch, A reception was held in the church’s parish house. For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Kirk .wore a melon col- ored chiffon sheath and a cor- sage of Eucharist lilies. Mrs. Cramer wore an aqua silk jer- sey dress with a white orchid corsage. The bride changed to a pais- ley print middy dress with a white silk crepe pleated skirt and white accessories for her going-dway costume. Following a trip to Bermuda, the couple will live in Green Cove, Fia., where the bride- groom is stationed with the U.S, Navy, - Car Peirce. “Parents of the couple: are 208 Se Pe ee lace cap held her fingertip veil - and she carried a cascade bou- quet of white rubrum lilies and stephanotis. SISTER IS HONOR MAID vid LaClaire of Grand Rapids and Marcia Peirce, sister of the bridegroom, of Mansfield, Ohio. All wore blue chiffon dresses with matching hats and carried bouquets of rubrum lilies and eucalyptus. * *e : * Best man was Millard H. A reception was held at Or- chard Lake Country Club. TO LIVE IN DENVER .. The couple wil) live in Den- ver, Colo., after a trip through Chicago and Estes Park. The Members and friends of the Pontiac Business and Profes- sional Women's Club met at the Cass Lake home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ran. ALL: ABOARD — These six children were, among: the first group to attend opening day of Frog Hollow Summer Day Camp held out at the Pontiac Lake Recreation Area and sponsored by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department. More than 500 children, from seven through 13 annual program which includes buses leave from the Oakland County Courthouse at 9 a. m. and return around 4:45 p. m. Monday Peatios Press Photo years old, have enrolled in the seven one week sessions. The through Friday. for Red Ties? Dulles, Macmillan Check Out: Report by Personal Visit chard Lake Ave.,, was poreiarized mooning at the Dunes Hotel, where Pinky Lee has been appear- ing since last May 1. and $200’ taken from the office, i was reported ‘Sunday to Postinc | police. Human Cannon Ball Says It Takes Guts CHAMPAIGN, Il. (AP) "— “It! takes a lot of what you call guts,|/id&i of the human cannon ball. Commission, said first . payments; nerve and timing to be a human cannon ball.’’ So says the’ man iis. was the| first one — Bruno Zacchini. ~‘All' the way in the dir you must think, you must have the reflex. An old man can't think like a young man. So I gave up the can- non,” seid Zacchini in his soft Italian accent. . Zacchini, now in bis 50s, stepped{ from his Spine-tingling Proteasions 11 years ago. * *x* * - Bruno's father originated the ‘Bruno became the first one as an \experiment. idea to the Italian government during World Wer I. He proposed that big cannon could shoot_ sol- diers behind the enemy lines. “This was before airplanes, and my father had the idea that the \soldier would come down in‘ a parachute. government was \polite but they said my father .was crazy."’ * * * With his wife and teen-age son} and daughter, he travels with a| carnival that closed a run this| weekend at the ‘Champaign Coun- ty fairgrytinds. He aiid” his wife, a Ringling Brothers performer before marriage, rQn the spook show and ithe glass. house. “So to show them,” said Zac- | chini, “I wes shot out of the cannon. It worked very well but the government still did not like lit. Sa my father had the idea about show business.— “Crazy or not, he was a man of \ideas, my father. a ——=—— Father Zacchini tried ‘to sell the! ' -purse strings. Poult ers. Slight losses were taken by = ery ~ |Allied Chemical, Du Pont and * perro ROrT, POULTRY Union Carbide, Ten U.S. Pigs rai no ert Steal Show at 18-1 a: heey Pon aee re New York Stocks Polish Fair as aie mal) et: = | Admiral ...... 1 Brie RR...... ; . | Air Reduc .... 57.1 Ex-Cell-O 35.1 POZNAN, Poland (AP) — Ten| | Livestock steel Gare 1. 488 Pel acs. litle pigs proved the star attrac) IV@sI0€ Alte Gia der Beet Bar 3 tion of the U.S. exhibit at the | peTROrr LIVESTOCK (Ales --+s+++ 68.6 Prueh Tra... 112 Poznan Trade Fair. At-times they OIT, June 19 (AP) — Hogs Gucee .. #4 Ge be GL won more visitors than the two ttle salable 250. Supply almost |A™ Cyan, ..... 43.4 Gen Dynam .. 574; giant Sputniks in the rival Soviet/entirely cows dagtinaty jam Wares": $34 Gen we ae ae io. canners and/am Motors... 11 Gen Mills .... 74 pavilion. cutters 14;50-18.00; slaughter steers 27.00- [Ai Mar "bby GeO MUS ss Ig More than half a million Poles poor ae wae Am News ..... AMS Gen Shoe 1 BR visited the U.S. pavion before. the salable 25. jabs 63 oon eo : 222 fair closed yesterday. They saw| Sheep and lambs salable 50. Am Smelt ..... 444 Gen Tire ..... 243, rc ye Yy- and prime spring slaughter Am Sugar _ ("204 Gillette | ..... 38.4 American production line methods lambs 34 0-25 00: cull to calee dinuaietes Am Tel & Tei amd Goebel Br : sit in ection and their first color TV. Pe ee 213 Gootvear 2. 00.2 leaning ena rall and Joking at| Beer 8, eee eaning on a ra a {M.P f Se 4a Greyh ve aE Stout agtnat ne'er |Ue-Of M, Prof Sees fcr Hf gikat ot vels of- science. Some snimal fans R : . | . laa Cet Line : 3 Homeste 2. : iis tl Refin ..... " Ti Cent .....: stood for hours watching one per RECESSION LESSENING frie %s ben chanical feeder and another fam- . ar Ohio MS Inbed ou... sts iy wih en oldie sow. | ANN ARBOR (UPD—A protessor Berney <7 4 RM? itd Thirty-nine nations packed ther|8t,the University ot Michigan sees| Bond gs, 334 RY Bun Meh 7 products into the 2-acre fair com that i! country MAY|Briees Mf... (7 Int Paper... $7. : round ading out of the recession. (5 : $48-Int Tel & Tel ..36 Swede exhibitors reported a! x“ * # : purrowans 3° isl cr Coal .: 8 definite slackening off in business.| Prof. Maynard Phelps, ending his|Gtium & #1.” 138 Johns Man... 38 Unofficial accounts said Polish year as president of =o ania Dry. int Kaloey ay... 313) import-export agencies cut turn-| Marketing carer said country Gan Pac ...... #3 Kennecott .... $2 | over with the west by up to 40/S€€ms to be taking the first stepsicose jr... 187 Kresge, 85... 28.7) per cent as compared with last |Out of its economic troubles. He Cater Trac... 17 Kroger +... 304 yeaf. Businessmen blamed the na-|84id the crucial test will be thejcnrysier ...... 48 LOF Glass... 82.2) tion’s hard currency shortage. {Public's acceptance of 1959 model Cities: BP a cee ay 2 - cars, ark Eouip .. € h Air Se he . ——- * * Cole Baim 2 BLS rene, 8 Gem A Pinky Lee’s Daughter =| “11 they're attractive and the in-|E20 BoA, --" 284- UNS > St * ° : 24) a rk woe Marries in Los Vegas [imive, "© ti is shone, anise "BH eR is ae oo. B LAS VEGAS, Nev: (AP)—This |i" the economy towards a » higher a a ui ea eee a gambling and entertainment cen-|!¢vel.”’ he said. pene pak... ES Meer Oe Os ter turned out to be a romantic} . ; _ [Sent Copae:.-313 Minn Mam’. 796 place for comedian Pinky Lee's ; “cont OlF 2... 524 Mont Ward 3-6. er : — (ereet Briere ot Patricia Bonnie Lee, 18, met.) yrs. Norma Enke Se aa Wayne Sits Pub’. = 10 Murray Cp’... 293 ed is ‘ 402 get! re ih Te alae i Sores remem rele ti Ht aime He é terday that someone entered her Bout Aire 4.5 $6.4 Nat Gye 7 | Las Vegas. unlecked apartment and stole $80 Bu’pont...184, NY Central 173 Miss Lee and Palant, 22 22, a Tuc- hidder in | Fast AirL .... 324 Nia M PW } | cae ml et Best Kod ’...,.109 Norf & West Pf ef 1| son, Ariz., realtor, were marrie n Mfg... 466 No Am AY 313) yesterday in the Jewish commu- Pursley’s Funeral Home, 151 Or-! Ee Mur | 7. 46 Nor Pee ae #3 j Emer Rad .... ‘Start Filing Today for New Idle Pay DETROIT ‘w—Unemploved Mich- ligan workers who have exhausted ‘their jobless pay benefits today started filing for. nee extra benefits. +: | Max M. Horton, director’ of the \Michigan Employment Seturity|' will be available within a week ibut later claims probably will be on a two-week reporting basis. About 50,000 Michigan uneni- ployed are expected to apply for the special compensation. The new payments were author-| . ized by the legislature two Weeks ago. They are expected , to total about 114 million dollars a- week. | Eligible workers are those with valid claims against Michigan em- iployers whose benefits were ex- hausted between July 1, 1957 and |March 31, 1958. Aged Buses Pay © Off (UPI) — The local bus company spurred its aged buses on to extra effort today to meet the‘ challenge of steep Sion Hill. The An atm you like the most discriminating palate ere io complete COCKTAILS. DINNERS ~ THE SPECIALTY _OF THE HOUSE ‘Dakiand County's Newest Most Beautiful Cocktail Lounge em, and a ee S and ~LUNCHEONS...__. ‘In Lampe pre cocktails the way dinnér menu to p! company, in a rash moment Sat- urday, answered repeated and prolonged protests by passengers by agreeing to refund a half- penny to every person on the bus if one fails to make the. very steep hill. R Pattsy in Trouble - TOKYO (UPI) — A.Canadian . Pacific Airlines stewardess not being quizzed by Japanese ay Open 11 A. | Miracle 3 ‘Shopping — 7 Businessmen’s Lunches ‘Served Daily e “Henry” ’s Miracle Lounge Edis Henty’s Bloomfield Inn) M. to 2 A. M. Telegraph a Square Lake Bond ‘lice for allegedly seeking smuggle 800 uncut diamonds int this country has hired a Japa- Kong, | was arrested at =~ Inter- All states except te have: laws |which permit women to serve’ on itheir juries. The ogre are Mississippi, South Caro- PARIS (UPI) — Reports that’ Gen. Charles de Gaulle is consider-, ing a “‘new look” in Franco-Soviet ; relations will be checked out in person by British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. * * * Macmillan is scheduled to. meet here with the French Dulles is due here July 5. Persistent reports say De Gaulle: ™e De Gaulle Bids [Duke of Kent ‘soldier-premier next Sunday and 5ked her to. dance. | Gets Hep With | Factory Girl CATTERICK, England (AP) — tO. The Duke of Kent, Britain's most eligible royal bachelor, got a jive lesson from a 20-year-old factory 'girl here over the weekend. The regimental dance was a pretty: frosty party until the 22- year-old duke and blonde Pat eau started the joint jump- ing. : * * * The duke overheard Pat com- plain she was bored. As any offi- cer (lieutenant in. the swank Royal Seo}s Greys) and gentleman (first cousin of Queen Elizabeth II) would, he bought her a drink and ° Then came the jiving. . “Let’s go,” said Pat with the ‘aplomb of a debutante. i may be willing to deal separately, “His skin-tight uniform made it iwith the Soviets on matters previ- difficult; but he picked it up won- ously handled on an Anglo- derfully,” she said later. American-French basis and that he imay soon extend diplomatic recog- nition to Red China. The British ganced with. already recognize the Peiping regime, although the U.S. does not.’ x * * Lending credence to the reports — North Branch Opens were De Gaulle’s recent state- meat that “France belongs to the West. without confining herself to it,” his friendly relations with Soviet Ambassador Serge Vino- gradov and the current visit to Moscow of formér premier Paul to have given Soviet leaders a julty, report on De ie Gaulle and Vinogradov, who are. ‘far include softball, ‘old friends, had a meeting just door basketball, * * ¥ Pa t was the only girl the duke| “He told me I had the a, wonderful blue eyes,” she Said! ‘with a sigh. Recreation Program NORTH BRANCH—The summer recreation program is under way ‘at the North Branch School play- Vinogradov returned last night ground for children, ages 9 to 16. from Moscow where he is believed Bernard Conrad, of the school fac- is director. baseball, out-) badminton, kick-! jbefore . the ambassador went to ball and horseshoes. There will be Moscow last week. SS. Aquarama Sails “Through Labor Storm CLEVELAND (UPI)—The luxury) bor troubles for two days, arrived here last night after—making its scheduled sailing to Detroit yester- day. x «> * Detroit yesterday morning after settlement of what was termed a ‘misunderstanding’ between the national Union. _ The Michigan-Ohio Navigation Co., operators of the ship, said it was seeking assurances that a series of work stoppages would cease. They said the latest stoppage oc- curred in Buffalo harbor June 14, when three winch operators report- edly refused to work and deck hands joined the stoppage. * * * Officials of the union: said the stoppage as defined by the con- tract. But they added that there has been a dispute between the union and the operating officers over. what grade of seamen should operate the winches when the Officials -faid the ship left for] Buffalo incident was not a work; reached a record high at the start | \" BS facilities will be available The eight officers and a sergeant) nothing relevant and new in this! liner S. S. Aquarama, beset by la-| company and the Seafarers’ Inter- in swimming as. soon as a lifeguard is available. * * Hours are Set 9 a.m. to noon jand from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Monday ‘through Friday. _Swimming hours | bee pa 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays Thursday. | Flier Murphy’s Writings Found — | NEW YORK (AP)—The Justice Department has documents in the handwriting of Gerald Lester Murphy, an American flier, con- necting him with the disappear- ance of Dr. Jesus de Galindez, The newspaper said in a Wash- ington dispatch that State Depart-' ment consular officials found the! Reds Send Bill | for Holding Gls East Germany Wants $3,095 and Diplomatic | l | BERLIN (UPI) — The East Ger-) man communists are de manding $3,095 “room and. bdard'’ money,’ las well as diplomatic recognition, | for the release of nine American) isoldiers held prisoner since June: \7, diplomatic sources said teday. The U.S. is willing to pay the money, the sources said, but is determined not to take any step that could be interpreted to mean that the U. S. recognizes East Germany as a free and independ-| ent state. The sources gaid the commtu- nists demanded 13,00@ marks | ($3. a5) for expenses during talks: German government ne gotiators | last week. In 1951, the U. S. paid a $123,- 1605.15 ‘fine’? to Hungary for the irelease of four airmen forced down], ‘by the communists while on a flight from West Germany to Yu- goslavia, The four Americans were) iheld prisoners for nearly six weeks. | * * * New Clue in Galindez Case ‘theories advanced by Ernst. newly disclosed documents in a steel file in Murphy’s apartment in Ciudad Trujillo, capital of the Dontinican Republic. WRITING VERIFIED tw pbumber Sta, 304+12.55 to da diudonce of 4108, 4 ra aD gverage depth of the construction of said drain the ing _auanti and character of ” 6 required and con- . &. a" 244 = 7 ir seem oe " storm 4 each Manholes cae 4 each Catch basin e 75 lin. ft. _—— ; mh one section, in socerarnee with the plans and speci- fies on file with the othe fr be ey by all rested, and bids will be made and Teceived ithe "fowes Centres a with responsible adequa’ Pgecede a for the of the work, ., the sum there to be fixed by me, re- to myself the right tq vated any bids, and to adjourn such letting to such time and place as I shall publicly announce. The — for the a ‘of such tr the of payment therefor, shall and atte “pe eueamnced at time and place. of letting. Any 2 é enter into contract and — the re- quired bonds as prescribed by law. De- posits of all unsuccessful bidders will be returned after contracts are awarded. 2 The payments for the above mentioned 3 work will be made as follows: 6o™, eu per cent) cash yment 0% f cent) Dr Orders maturing’ Jay st; of each of the years 1959-1963 «both exclusive), and in five ($) equal installm Notice is fariag poe <= that county Service Bidg., §50 South gtaph Road, in the City of Pontiac, County of Oakland. or at. such. other time and place thereafter, te which 1, the County Drain Commissioner afore- The Times said the documents have been verified to be in Murphy's handwriting ang were found after his own disappearance | Dec. 3, 1936. The documents include a small notebook, a pilot’s flight logbook’ ard a single cryptic sheet of paper) ‘with notes * * * Galindez, a Columbia University; lecturer and a critic of Dominican’ dictator Rafael Trujillo, disap-' peared in New York City March) 12, 1956, Charges have been made! that he was kidnaped, and later. Recognition for Release flown to the Dominican Republic. jb y Murphy. * Murphy vanished in Ciudad Tru- jillo. Later, the Dominican govern-| ment announced that he had been) murdered by a Dominican pilot,' iwho then committed suicide. Morris L. Ernst, a New York lawyer, was engaged by the Tru-: jillo government - to” investigate Galindez's disappearance. Ernst and a colleague issued a i ‘report that- rejected the charge that Murphy had flown Galindez/ ito the Dominican Republic. In ef- fect, the report cleared Trujillo of, jany part in Galindez’s disappear- jance., The Times said the documents offer apparent contradictions of * * * Last night, Ernst stood by his report. The Times reached him on vacation in Nantucket, Mass. ‘Ernst said: o this materia] in our report, all me which was reviewed in the in-| ivestigation, carefully examined land appraised and controverted jby the clearly proven facts. Any- jone reading our report will find) lfor use by high school boys from. ifrom the U.S. Third Armored Di-| ‘confusing and conflicting materi- to 8:30 p.m. and Wednesdays. County Calendar Orchard-take St. Elizabeth Guild of Our “Lady Refuge Parish will held its annual luncheon car dparty beginning at cae 30 p.m. tomorrow in the Parish Hall Four Towns = first summer dinner will be served 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday in the ori aa of the Four Towns Methodis Church on Cooley Lake road. raul Circle will be In as: The afternoon of Fellowship of the Almont Congregational Church will hold a luncheon meeting at 1 pm. Friday in the church. Mrs. Mitehell Currey will be in charge of the program. “Between the Bookends.” fellowship also will meet at 8 Wednesday with Mrs. William Bristol in charge. . Mondays group the Women’s TE Italy’s Savings Reach Record of $10 Billion ROME-—Savings deposits in Italy ef this year, $10,030,000,000" a one- year rise of 11 per cent. Increases were registered in all sections of the country. Ravenna led all other cities with an 84 per) cent gain. Ae Back in Lake Erie Lake Erie. Sea Lion Turns Around. TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Phil Skeldon, director of the To- ‘ledo Zoo, said tonight that a wayward sea lion on from the London, Ont., zoo. apparently had gone back into the loose x wk *& a ae The sea lion led Skeldon and a police harbor patrol a merry chase up the Maumee River Friday, but’ it has not been seen here since the chase was abandoned at Walbridge me/Food Fair Will Open ‘came to Detroit yesterday to see ‘vision -fell into communist hands cle when their big Army helicopter strayed across the West German, frontier while on its way to ma- neuvers. The East Germans insist that | | the Army negotiator be author- { ized to deat with “the German Democratic Republic.” . But the American colonel deal-: ing with the German foreign office received his authorization from the U.S. Army high command in Eu-| rope and the Embassy in Bonn, not: from the State Department. Utica Store Tuesday Food Fair Mar- kets announce » EVIDENCE DISCLOSED The Times said the Murphy pemnene included these Pieces' | of evidence: Galindez's name written in two places by Murphy — the first writ-' -{ten reference by the flier to- Galin-| Ma" dez that have-been—disclosed. An apparent chronicle of events connected with Galindez’s disap-| tt pearance. A timetable of a flight to the Dominican Republic that corre- sponds precisely to the alleged flight with the kidnaped Galindez, but dated one week early. ee, see * The Times said the Murphy documents have been released to! the flier’s parents. opening of anoth- er store at Utica. at. 8055 Clinton River Road, Tues! | day. Jerry Stand-| ish has beer ap-| pointed manager) of the new Unit.! He formerly was) co-manager of the con Eight Mile | STANDISH Road. Watching Tigers Lose Costs Visitors $2,300 DETROIT W — Mr. and Mrs.| John F. Schmuck, of London, Ont., the Tigers play- baseball. “The Schmucks said they were afraid to leave behind fhe $2,300 East Detroit store. . i n.War Between Sexes PHILADELPHIA ® — A Phila- delphia miss who wanted to be a ‘Senate page has lost her first skirmish in the’ war between the S€XEs. is for males only. She wrote U.S. Sen. Joseph -S. Clark, (D-Pa) last week.and asked about. the job. Clark wrote back the appoint- ments are only for boys. He added: “There are numerous reasons for this, including the fact that many times when pages must round up the Senators, it is neces- sary for them to go in places where a sepia’ is not permit- ted.” they had saved sp they put it in) a suitcase and “brought it along.' They left the suitcase in their car “I think they're being perfectly fair about it. f can-see their point,”’ said Noma today, ‘Park, eight miles up thie riv ver from the Maumee Bay area. Skéldon said the seal apparently had gone as far as the rapids near Perrysburg, about 15 miles from the © river’s mouth, and then returned and went into the lake. we * ® | Alabama, lina, West Virginia, ff ee = Maumee. | es ea saa eee The 100-pound sea lion escaped Tuesday from the Lon- don Zoo, where it arrived before its wire enclosure had been completed. It made its way 200 yards to the Thames River and then to Lake. St. — the Detroit Biver, Lake Erie and which was parked ofi the street while. they watched the New York Yankees whip Detroit 15-0. When they returned the car had been broken into and the suitedse and mohey were gone, The news that Henry Clay had been nominated for president by the Whig party in Baltimore was the: first dispatch to be carried by telegraph. The date was May. 1884. “Maybe in the future, if more! women get elected’ to Congress, they might be able to accept girls as pages, I sure hope so,” About two-thirds of ali-newly en- listéd. marines get their first taste! of service: life on. Parris Island,, South Carolina. A major Marine |; Corps post since 1915, the island lies on the Atlantic coast between “Reference is made |< Girl, 13, Loses 1st Battle Noma Shaw, 13, found the 00 ne said, may adjourn the same, the appor- ‘ ‘Monment for benefits and the lands com- rised within the “Ward Orchards” rain Special Assessment District.” and jthe apportionments thereof will be sub- peed -~ review for one day, from nine k in the forenoon until five o'clock lin c= afternoon. At said review the eo of costs fer seid Drain will _ be open for inspection by any partis interested. ? The following is a description of the jseveral tracts or parcels of land .con- ;Stiluting the Bpectal Assessment District j)of said Drain, viz : City of Pontiac Acreage f rr". :. Part of Section 31 4 50—Vacated portions of j Judson i els Washington Park Subdivision. Desc as: Beg. at a pt. in the SE‘ly. line of Orchard Lake Ave which pt. fs also the NE‘ly, cor. of Lot , dudson Bradway's Washington Park a te of pt. my tthe 8 \) of Sec. 31, T 3 R jo ‘Th BSEly aig. the iIND'ly a of L 49—100 ft. to the SB’ly. cor; Th. SWly alg ort rear of set [aee of Lots @ & 56 ly. alg. the SE‘ly, line lof Orchard Lake re to the pt. of beg |Exe. that portion ef the above described Iretay. lying NW'ly. of a line which is 15.2 ft. dist. from ‘and parallel to or SEly. line of Orchard Lake Ave loriginally platted in Judson Brad eon Park Sub’n, Liber 44, ee That pertion of the following desc parcel lying SE‘ly of Orchard Lake Ave ‘M-218 Hwy) and iying NE ly. of M-3 Huy Lots 61 to 60, both inc. dese & pt. in the SE’ly. line of Orchard Lake Ave. which pt is also the NEly. cor of Let $1, Judson Bradway's Wash- ington Park a sub'n, of pt |of Sec 31, TIN. R IGE B'ly alg, the NE ly. line of Lot 51-100 ft to — SEly. cor. of Lot 51: Th 2 the rear lot line of Lots 51 te the 8 line of sd as: Beg sub'n y line of sub'n. to of Lot 60: Th. NE}y | ine of Orchard Lake Ps pt ef beg 446-468 ‘imc ) desc alg Ave to the Lots Wo as beg + tint 6 (form - erly Bouth’ Blvd.) - which 1s che the BE corner Lot 445 of Judson Bradway's Washington Park Sub, a sub’n, of pt of 8% of Sec. 31 T 36. R10 E; thence N'ly. along the E‘ly. lot line of sd ict (445 to the NE corner: thence E’ly. along |the rear lot line of Lots No 446-465 fine } to the NE corner jot 465: thence SEly. to the NW corner: Lot 468: thence NE’ly. to most N'ly corner Lot 468 on the SW'ly. line of Roland Rd; thence 'SE ly ane the SW'ly line of Roland to the intersection of Golf Dr. . thence Wiy. along the N'ly. line of iGelf Dr to the point ef beg | T IN, R10E, of part of Section 31 Judson Bradway *s Washington Park Outlot “BB, Exe. that part in M-88 Tats 40-45 ‘ine ) That part of ao ‘s 46-48 (inc.) lying [SE'ly. of M- 218 Hw Lots 61-82, (inc y | The B'y of Lots 83-99, (i The Bly of Lots 442-445, essigy D abeh pacaa | 0 of part of N% of Section 6: Ward Orchards Subdivision Lots 1-25 (ine.): Lote 52-76, (ine) ots 89-91 ‘inc ); That part of Lots 92- 96. ‘inc.) lying SE‘ly, of M-218 Hwy.: That part of Lot 97 lving SE‘ly. of 18*Hwv., and lying SW'ly, of M-58 That part of Lot 98 lying Biv of -54 Hwy: That part of Lots 109 & + 410 Iving S'lv. of M-58 Hwy.: Lots 111- | 120 ‘inc 1; The se p21. -149, fine): exe. that wart ir- of Lots 158 & ne.) fine) =oi-Lots 121 & 122 | Lets 13 2 Bt M-58. Hwey,; That part 165 lying NE‘Ty. ot M=s@- ‘wy.; That part of Lots 171 & 172 lying 18W'ly. of M-58 Hwy.: 7 Lots 228-258. (inc.): fine.): Lo’ Lots 296-299. ‘inc.): Lets 349-360 Lots (ine.): (ine): R 10 E, of Part of N% of Sec- ¢< Supervisor's Plat Lots ; <8 10 & 11; Lot 22: Lots 100-218, it Lots 255-269, (imc.): That part of 4 & 17 ro ail Iv of M-55 pi part o 12. 13. 71, 23 ra fall p of M-58 ey That per 0! ts 198, (ine.); lyin ‘NES, ‘M58 Hw ying ¥ or vacated alley beg. at N line of Sec. Th. SE to the NW'ly. line of Desiax Atee bounded on the NE by lots 151- 153 (ine.) an the SW bv Ents 1 and 2- Vacated allev bee. at the SE'lv line of |Desiax Ave: Th SE to the NE‘iv ‘line jof M-58 Hwy. bounded on the NE bv ‘Lots 140-150 the BW by vets 2 and 17 ated allev beg. at the S line of aot “Dr, th “SE to the NW'ly. Hne of | Humprev Ave., bounded on -the NE hv Lots °69, 268 ‘267. 265. 264, 263, 261, 260 and 258 and bounded on SW by Lots 156-204 fimc.), excent those portions of above described Alley lying inside of pecehester. Wagener and Leinbach Ave- rive ly. ™ of vacated alley beg. at te (SE'ly. > of Humprey Ave.: Th, SE the NW'lv. line of Kise Ave. bounded on the SW bv Lots 205-216 ‘inc.) Oakland County—at large; City of Pontiac—at large: Bloomfield Township —at large. Michigan State Highway Department ‘Now,—-Therefore, All unknown and non-resident persone owners per sons interested in the above described lands and vou Poi d ‘County Clerk SOL LOMERSON. Chairman, .Oak- land ‘County Road Commission: JOHN C. MACKTE, M'-higan State Hughway Commissioner: WM. W, DONALDSO? Mayor, City-of Pontiac; fine.) and on ts and the ard Orchards Dra’ ing My Ticmemiak Dis- ‘ere ee be ‘sehjont to -review, And you and exch of- you, owners and persons interested in the aforesaid Jands. are hereby, cited to-ap “gt ra = and place of- such 4 ord : ti id, an ~ 1 = ft ype @ My reape specia senvepenes atid FE a in relation thereto, | Dated *ehis 12th of to An. ross NIEL W. BARRY, | Charleston and Savegeah, Georgia. . | ee : ‘\ At Comsty of Oakland County pe Commission ér | dime 23, 24, 528’ 5°