The Weather ¥. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast Warmer \- Details Page 2) _THE PO emg mr an, f 1 Toth Y BA R- ceceas PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER : 29, 1958 —80 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS ga ONITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ata eg Chief Red Feather _ SYMBOL OF EXCELLENCE — White, right, Women’s Division chairman for the Pontiac Area United Fund drive, and Mrs. Noel Buckner, Pontiac area chairman, admire the seven-inch statue of Chief Red Feather. The Mrs. Donald year’s United Oct. 21. He’s Chief Red Feather Pontiac Press Photo Indian Oscar will go te Women’s Division district chairmen who do outstanding jobs during this Fund campaign which starts UF’s Oscar Award Unveiled A seven-inch high Indian Oscar, depicting Chief Red Feather, the “official conscience” for the 1958 Pontiac Area United Fund drive, was unveiled today at campaign headquarters. The Oscars will be awarded to Women's Division District Chair- men and other campaign workers who-have excelled at their volun- teer jobs during the . three-week campaign scheduled for kick-off on Oct, 21. Mrs, Donald White, Women's Division chairman and her chief lieutenants from Pontiac and Waterford, Mrs. Noel Buckner and Mrs. Robert Giroux, are helping Supreme Court Asserts ‘No State Shall Deny . WASHINGTON (®) — The Su- preme Court declared today the constitutional rights of Negro py- pils “are not’ to be sacrificed or yielded’ to violence and dis- order, ; The assertion was in the for; mal opinion setting out the rea- soning back of the court's-Sept. 12 decision against any delay in intégration of Little Rock’s ‘Central High School. With the justices assembled in a special session, Chief Justice Warren read the court’s 17-page printed opinion. It said that-vio- lence and disorder in the Little Rock situation ‘‘followed upon the actions of the governor and ‘ the legislature.”’ “The command of the 14th Amendment is that no ‘state’ shal] deny to any person within its jurisdiction the _ equal protection of the laws,” the opinion said. ‘ It cited. an earlier Supreme’ Court opinion in another case that no agency of the state, or the officers er agents by whom | its powers are exerted, shall deny such equal protection, Anyone who by virtue of public position under a state govern-° ment denies such equal protec- tion, violates the Constitution, the earlier opinion said. This opinion was cited with approval in today’s, ‘In short,” Warren said. for the unanimous-tribunal, ‘the con- stitutiéfal rights of children not to be discriminated against in school admission on grounds of race or color. declared by this ‘court in the Brown tase, the 1954 decision outlawing race seg- regation in the schools can neith- er be nullified openly and di- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) X-Ray Unit Permits TV. Heart Examination WASHINGTON (UPI) —A new X-ray unit, which. will “permit doctors to examine the heart on |. large television screen, was strated to the American Roent- | gen Ray Society. It would make Mworoscopie examinations for possible heart. disease easier, faster and safer, aoa to its LITTLE ROCK, Ark. @® — The Little Rock School Board Ex- ecuted a lease — for four closed high school; buildings turn- ing them over to’ private group for operation as private, segre- gated schools. Wayne Upton, school board . president read to reporters 4 resolution making the fina] de- cision to lease the $6,000,000 high school buildings to a recen- tly formed private corporation. 4 * * . The resolution declared the four plants as surplus property, f technicality. to conform with an 1875 law which permits leas- ing property not in use. * * * Apparently orily action of a '-federal court session in Omaha, Neb., could prevent the schools from passing into private hands today and opening as segregat- ed institutions later this week. Members of the School Board and officials of the Little Rock Private School Corp, met with - Arkansas Atty. Gen, Bruce Bennett in closed session until after midnight, As negotiations -for the trans- fer continued, the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People moved swiftly to block the action. tomorrow,’ commented Dr, T. J. Raney, president of the private school group, in reference to the NAACP. move, oes * * + The court session in- Omaha will be conducted by two jus- tices of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, They will hear the NAACP petition presented by Wi- ley Branton of Pine Bluff, Ark., seeking to prevent any transfer of school property without court, approval. . There was § iom here that the School Board delibér- ately delayed consummation of © the school puilding. transfer un- ‘til after the judges rule, to be identified said that court ordered the board But without such an “order, the board showed a’ readiness to ety with the public mandate of Saturday’s referendum — in near 3-1 majority. { “We might be out. of business ‘A Schoo! Board source who de- 2 lease the facilities, the |. - which segregationists polled a their eight area chairmen recruit District. chairmen to direct the actual door-to-door solicitations. “We'd like nothing better than to see each of our District Chair- men receive an Oscar, how- ever, some districts in both Pontiac and Waterford are still without chairmen,” stated Mrs. White. Districts 30 through 32 in Pon- tiac are included in this group, ac- cording to Mrs. Buckner. All three are situated in an area bounded on the north by Featherstone ave- nue, on the east by Perry street, on the south by Auburn avenue, and on the west by the city limits. * * * * “We don't even have a solicitor for this area, so we're really look- ing for women to volunteer a por- tion of their time for this great community-wide effort,” stated Mrs. Buckner. She further pointed out the re- organization of the division since the 1957 campaign has lessened the individual-work load, but in so do- ing necessitated the recruitment of almost twice as y workers. _ “This % Women’s Division campaign will be restricted to a ten day period, and no worker will be asked to make more than 15 calls,”” Mrs. Buckner added. In addition to doubling the num- ber of workers to enable the) Women’s Division to solicit every home in the area, the number of districts have increased from 40 to-95._In 1957, 18 districts handled the Pontiac solicitdtions—42 are needed this year. Similarly, in Waterford the number of districts has jumped from 22 to 53. * * * Mrs. Giroux reports that Dis- triets 3,-8 and 47 in Waterford Township are still lacking District Chairmen. Districts 3 and 8 are located south and east of Eliza- beth Lake, and District 47 is situ- ated north of Walton boulevard in the Wormer Lake area. Anyone wishing to volunteer their services and join the nearly 4,500 volunteers working on_ this year’s Tenth Anniversary Cam- paign, has been urged to stop in at Fund Headquarters, 132 Frank lin Blvd.’ Shame on You! DETROIT (UPI) — Unethical bandits were on the loose in De- troit today, Burglars took about $350 from the safé of St. Johns Lutheran Church yesterday. Comics VPeeee peer ewe et roe 23 County N@WS .....s.escecres 18 ‘Editorials + eladent Peewee 6 Markets ......- saFvertcees . 24 Obituaries * eer eeeee * oe 4 Sports ..vciccccccsees ve 19-21 Theaters re Pee eee a 2 TV. & Radio Programs ... 2% Wilson, Barl ........... ore Wortten’s Pages .......,. 11-13 Strike Date Now Thursday GM Deadline = Can Pontiac Leader Blackwood Dies of Heart Attack Appraiser Stricken While Driving Auto Near Romeo A long-time Pontiac civic leader, Harold L. Black- wood succumbed to a heart attack yesterday at age 65. A realtor and real estate ~-appraisér here since 1927, Blackwood suffered the fatal attack while driving on 32-Mile road three miles west of Romeo in Washing- ton Township. * *. * The medical finding was made by the Macomb County coroner aft- er Blackwood's body was found in his car by State Police at about 12:45 p.m. The car had left the road and crashed into a tree. Relatives said Blackwood had suffered a heart attack Friday, but felt better Sunday and went for a drive to inspect some real estate, . Blackwood devoted more than a decade to active public service in various capacities, He served on the.Pontiac Board of Education continuously, from HAROLD L. BLACKWOOD 1937 to 1945, and again, briefly, in 1949-1950 to fill an interim vacancy. * * * He was board president twice, in 1938-1939 and 1944-1945, and board secretary, 1941-1944, Blackwood served the City of Pontiac twice as its representa- tive on the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, in 1937- 1938 and 1940-1941. He served as the first president of the Pontiac Housing Commis- sion in 1948-1949, *x* * * During World War II, Blackwood was chairman of the Pontiac draft board. He.also served as chairman ofthe blood donor service for Pon- tiae under the Oakland County (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) State’s 1st Big Chill Not Too Bad Here Michigan has had ‘its first taste of topcoat weather, with heavy frost in the central portion of the state and a freezing temperature, 32, at mien a overnight. Loéally ie weather picture! is somewhat brighter. Partly cloudy and warmer is the forecast for to- night, low near 54 degrees. ~ Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy and a little warmer with a high near 72. An extended weather forecast, however, predicts temperatures will average five to eight degrees below the normal 68 high and nor- mal 49 low for the next five days, with scattered showers and windy as the outlook for Wednesday, * + * The lowest temperature recorded in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 42. At 1 p.m, the met. "| cury stood at 66. Truman i in Detroit Oct. 12 WASHINGTON ‘ — Former President Harry S. Truman is igoing to visit Michigan as part of the Democratic election cam- paign. The Democratic National Committee says Truman~will speak in- Detroit Oct. 12, il ; 4 smiles Saturday, Both seemed A standing room only crowd of well over 500 people heard Post- master General Arthur E, Sum- merfield dedicate the new Pontiac Post Office, at 735 W. Huron St., E igot under way at 2:30 p.m. Summerfield assured the large crowd that our new post office was no “ornate edifice built as a costly and mistaken monument to civie pride.” . He asserted that “it is, instead, . designed in an architectural style compatible to this community, It is functional so that mails can be handied efficiently, 2 Summerfield said that support of postal facilities has changed “Now the people who use the mails are paying the cost, which is as it should be.” He emphasized that the cost of carrying the mails is now being paid “through the stamp window rather than through the tax win- dow.” a ; Summerfield also cited The Pon- tiac Press, among others, who helped reduce the Postal Depart- ment deficit, “You have in this city a news- Link Murder fo Pontiac Area Body Found at Alpena May Be That of Texan Believed Slain Here The body of a man believed to be a Texas racketeer was found Sunday near Alpena. He may have: been killed in or near Pontiac and half buried in a swampy wooded area in Alcona County, according to Michigan State Police. Insp. Jack Warner, of the State thought to be that of George Kean, Worth, Tex., since November, Warner said the fact of the mur- der and the approximate location of the body was supplied Michigan authorities by the Texas Rangers. He said the Rangers eard from an informant that Kean was murdered in. near Pon- tiac and buried near Alpr aa. ‘The slaying is said to have re- sulted from efforts by Kean to seize control of Fort Worth’s re- ported million Sunc a resounding personal triumph and a strong constitution for a new Fifth Republic. The Fifth Republic will be pro- * claimed in the official journal next Sunday. The most sweeping referendum). in French history today gave him * DeGaulle Wins Battle for New om, more powerful system of government so daring that many Frenchmen gasped et the con- “ception while they voted their approval by a landslide Sunday. Voters of continental France ap- proved the new constitution by a margin of almost 4-1. Complete official tabulations in France showed 17,666,828 ‘‘yes”’ votes and 4,624,475 ‘‘no” votes. ; There was a record cleat of 84.9 per cent of France’s regis- who sent to the polls; including some who cast blank ballots, the new constitution was approved by 78.5 per cent. s * * * With one exception — French Guinea in West Africa — the over- seas lands of the erstwhile French And France will enter inte a of the Pontiac Post Office were PAST POSTMASTERS—Three ex-postmasters ored guests at Saturday's dedication ceremonies. eee 0 ee er ee Some b- Stockwell, — among the hon- Pontisc Press Photo |. W. Jackson; and Leslie H. Dean Sr. Each was commended for. playing- an important role in the past postal service to the Pontiac area. : | Ravages of WILMINGTON, N. C, (AP)—Up ‘MAe\/44 ~~ | sands. of conch shells, more sou- sinted Pree, |Venirs of the weekend's Hurri- ‘ © ress ‘led cane Helene. the Eastern half|DAMAGE IN MILLIONS 4 f gz # F E ¢ 4 Ue Febe y E dedared @ dienster = the Virginia Capes, well off- with winds up to 140 miles hour. civil defense ‘spokesman said people ‘‘gave us no argument”’ e Mi : injuries, The Red Cross said 4,- _southeast-j959 persons were cared for at 65 western Tex- | shelters. Spinning shoreward Saturday morning from the ‘southeast, Hel- WaS lene passed up most of South Car- “iolina's lush resort area. She damaged two more piers in Cher-| “Temperatures | “$nto the|ry Grove Beach. 20a im parts of the yore PIERS, HOUSES HIT weather - reported -Moving toward the jutting North ae. footie —_— Carolina coastline, she smashed southward into the south |@ 300-foot pier at Ocean Isle’ Atlantic states and central sec |Beach, N. C., damaged most of! tions of Alabama and Mississippi. the houses at Holden Beach and They were in the 60s along the sent high water over the protec Gulf coast, but warm air clung to tive sand dunes at Long Beach, | southern Florida. damaging roads. This was in the | Sf we forenoon, She hit ‘hardest at Southport, tucked inside the elbow of the The Weather: iCape Fear, and Wilmington, 30! ; imiles north. She never came in- eas Meester, id pang tty (land, staving about 35 miles off-| #loudy and warmer tonight, tow near 34. shore. All communications were! Tomorrow, elo’ and a litthe Southerly w winds knocked out at Southport and the ‘town was in need of water until | auxiliary pumps were brought in. , high n to 16 fles decreasing silt ga ne tevin te to southwest er 14 | te ey / i ee | North Carolina Surveys Hurricane “was that the winds and the tide were working ageinstzeach other.” State Rep. James C. Boman of Brunswick County said he was “very anxious.to see if we get @ declaration as a disaster area,” adding that the poorer people had suffered the most. State Highway Patrol Capt. C.R. Williams estimated damage at Southport between $500,000 and $750,000, * * * Wilmington, the state’s biggest the highway patrol. Most of this coastal city, suffered an estimat- ed million dollars damage, said was to — oma businesses. Farther up the coast, Mayor Pro Tem George Kanoutis of Kure Beach estimated property dam- age at $250,000, beach erosion at $30,000. Mayor Glenn M. Tucker estimated Carolina Beach damige at 1% million dollars, but said no property owners were wiped out. Mayor Pro.Tem Richard Meier of Wrightsville Beach said all prop- erty suffered some damage, HOWLS OFF TO SEA By Saturday afternoon “Helene had passed the most densely pop- ulated areas. Her effect was felt several miles inland in rough weather .and rains, but damage there was not severe. Later that evening she howled off toward the open sea, : * * * Morehead City and Beaufort, port. cities, were .battened down. and shook off the blow with com- paratively little ‘damage, * * * Hurricane Helene probably was ‘nearly as strong. as Hurricane Hazel of 1954, But Helene kept her idistance at sea. Hazel caused 21 ideaths in the Carolinas and an " lestimated 145 million dollars dam- lage in the two-state area alone. ® Ready to Bomb Enemy—Chiang Nationalist Planes Set to Go When and If Big Moment Arrives . TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — Pres- ident Chiang Kai-shek: said . today his Nationalist air force will bomb the Communist guns ringing Que- moy when and if the “crucial mo- ment arises.” States would back him if that time came. He said this moment would come when the lives of the 130,000 troops and civilians on fortress afé in danger the effects of the Communist ar- tillery blockade or other military action. * * * : “When the crucial mdment aris- es I feel the United States will not fall back on its promises to help,” he stated. ‘‘But the crucial mo- ment has not yet arisen.” “But we will act on our own regardless (of the U.S. attitude) when it comes a question of life and death,” he said, He emphasized Nationalist China is under no obligations to the United States that would pre- vent it from taking action it feels necessary for its own defense. Chiang spoke at his first open news conference since Feb. 7, 1955. Alert and smiling, he also made these points: _ * * * 1, Nationalist China is following a policy of restraint in the face of heavy losses by Quemoy’s: ci- villians and soldiers, 2. It might agree to a United Nations debate on the Formosa icrisjs under certain conditions, 3. The Red artillery blockade has been rendered temporarily in- effective by air drops and sea sup- ply efforts. Mississippi Glider Crash \Kills One, Injures One WAL LS, Mi (U — | UE 5, glider eds carried their artillery as- i | crashed into the edge of a landing! strip near here yesterday killing} ;one man and Bi kirang another. Ed_ Szesepenik, \Te enn.. was killed. Dr. Joseph Bat- cadey in Poatie< ~ * * ‘tle, 40, 2 Memphis dentist, was Lowest sunperatere preceding 8 a.m. “The only thing that saved us,” hospitalized with chest and shoul- a6 © ik u.: Wind velocity 13 mp. b. isaid some Southport citizens, der injuries, Southwest. = EAS ay B ool Ww t 8:59 ie se ae ee 3 _|Find 200 More Bodies in Japan wo | Reaches 540) tr of known dead from the guard) reported a Downtewn — | h 6 O.1M..0+<6000-42 lla recxeseee T BM... cegeees 45 12 —_., sl BOM. .ic50.. 50 1 PM. nes. 66 pc ypnoon Toll 10 8... 45.5..-.59 Pine enmentd in y im Pontiae a * Highest tempere' OTe eueecenasecedeess 0 os eweet eee seeserrsT BS uve eee rarey “isi sent a oe | of ravaged Izu Peninsula, 10 miles southwest of Tokyo. | a et — This brought” the pumbe | Fighest cempucecate pies scsees- feeeor Ae weekend storm reported by the national police to 540. : : eel . na ‘Police said 976 persons are still missing—916 of them : _ in the Izu resort area, where the usually placid Kano so, River burst its banks and wiped out more — a dozen pene: $3; _ Villages. ~ ‘The death toll may go higher. oe Soyeet Sompeentares The Maritime Safety Board (coast : 32 in 1942) helicopter on mercy missions in the ‘resort area spotted Many recovered bodies mortuaries. The United States today spageseuseeeyee by U.S, Ambassador Douglap; \ Prime Minister Nobusuke Kish Yes wee c bodies —- in the Pacific off Izu Peninsula. x * Typhoon Ida’s damage was estimated by the Construc-, tion Ministry at over $277,800,000. Police said 535,307 persons were left homeless. * lay unclaimed at temporary formally offered aid in the “task of bringing order to ravaved areas. The offer was made MacArthur II hi. a. letter to ~ , in 39, Tullahoma, } 4, There will never be any need for U.S. ground troops to help de- | [fend Quemoy. Chiang spoke as the Chinese isaults against the Quemoy islands into the 38th day with a relative- ily light shelling. * * * By Nationalist Defense Ministry count, 1,009 shells were fired on the islands up to midday today, land 4,552 Sunday. Nationalist’s cargo planes \dropped supplies on little Tatan |Island for the first time and on leaden for the sixth straight night, correspondents reported Sunday night. Another Nationalist iconvoy shoved supplies to the is- lands by--ship despite Red bar- jms TOKYO. (AB) — Relief workers recovered the bodies of - ce = Chiang said the Red ‘| 200 victims of Typhoon Ida today from the mud and debris ‘blockade was now ineffective, cor- respondents on Quemoy said the 5,700 civilians on neighboring Lit- tle Quemoy were. beginning to run short of food and medicines, Two- thirds of their homes were report- ed destroyed, * * * The Nationalists claimed their Quemoy artillery sank 22 small jand damaged three others in an action Sunday Earlier, Rear Adm, Liu Hoh-tu, chief Nationalist military spokes- man, spelled out thé circumstanc- es under which Chiang’s air force would bomb Red gun positions on the. mainland. These were: It the Reds cut off food supplies to the offshore is- lands to the point where the peo- ple. and the defenders were facing plies were cut to the point, where the. garrison “did not have enough ineserves ~ cope with an invasion. | tered voters. Counting all those president, He added he felt the United]. outpost | * from Communist Chinese supply boats) te a C énsfitution empire also backed the constitu: tion to the hilt. This set them up stage as. a “French narra a sort of global confederation, wit commonwealth status and even “a dependence waiting in the wings. Even the ‘!no” vote of independ- ence-minded Guinea made little impression in the general massive outpouring of. approval that ex- ceeded even the most optimistic estimates. France announced today it is cutting off economic aid to French Guinea, the only oyer- seas territory to vote for inde- in Sunday’s constitu- tional election. A communique said French .ad- ministrators will be pulled out of the little aluminum-rich country in Africa’s west coast within two months. ° The landslide raised the prospect that De Gaulle, the 67-year-old World War II hero restored to leadership in a rightist uprising last May, -can almost. write his own ticket to cure the sicknesses of this long ailing country. Chief of these is the four-year-old Alge- rian rebellion. MAY BECOME PRESIDENT De Gaulle probably will become with powers that no French chief of state has enjoyed since Emperor Napoleon [II was overthrown in 1870. De Gaulle’s dramatic victory was the worst electoral black eye the Communists have suffered in postwar France. The Com- munists formed the largest bloc campaigning against de ‘Gaulle’s constitution. They said it would open the way to dictatorship, Gaullist leaders hailed the re- sults as a decisive blow at the Reds, who have hamstrung French politics with disruptive tactics and the biggest single vin’. bloc — Approval of the constitution au- tomatically rejects the old Assem- bly. De Gaulle now has four months of near-dictorial powers in which he will write a new elec- tion law to seat anew Assembly. The new law certainly won't fa- vor the Communists. Elections probably will come in late November or early December. GM Strike Deadline Changed by UAW (Continued From Page One) settle with Chrysler today if com- But two new strikes at Coryeler plants today boosted the number of idled workers at Chrysler plants to 8,200 including 2,000 idled at a | Plymouth body plant in Evansville, Ind., as a résult of a strike at the Evansville Plymouth Assembly Plant. Meanwhile; Ford Motor Co. which already had settled with the union, laid off 23,000 workers at plants throughout the nation to- day because of a shortage of parts caused by the strikes and model changeovers, The number of strikes at Ford plants was steadily dwindling, however. The nation’s second- largest auto company reported only 1,500 of its employes still on strike at its Chicago Assem- bly Plant. Reuther said the decision to at- tempt to get the GM employes back to work came from a meet- ing of top union officials and. a telephone poll of members of the UAW’s executive board. EFFORT ‘CONSTRUCTIVE’ General Motors Vice President Louis Seaton called the union's ef- fort to end the strikes ‘‘the con- structive thing.’ But he said he could see no rea- son for the union setting another strike deadline, “Whether the union sets an other strike deadline is up te them,” he said, “But 1 don’t think one is needed. We made an offer equated with the Ford r settlement, which Reuther said was fair, “If that offer was fair there, I can see no reason for a strike deadline. I think the union should accept the offer we have made them.” But Seaton said GM was “pre- pared to negotiate to conclusion” for a new contract. much” by any strike deadline set by the union. with France oh the world political] .He_said.GM_-was not impressed, Ask Broomfield About Donation Hudson Says Opponent Aided by $1,000 Check From Teamsters Democratic congressional cantii- date Leslie H. Hudson today asked his opponent, William S, Broom- field, to explain whether he re- ceived a $1,000 contribution in his 1956 campaign from Teamsters boss James R. Hoffa. wk ok O* Broomfield, Royal Oak Republi- can seeking another two-year term in the U. S. House of Representa- tives from Oakland County, was quick to answer. His answer was “absolutely not.” _ <<. * “At no time have I or any of my authorized campaign repre- sentatives solicited or accepted one: dime from Hoffa and his Teamsters Union," Broomfield said. i Hudson, Pontiac’s representa- tivé in Lansing for four years, showed newsmen a copy of a $1,000 check dated Oct, 11, 1956 which, Hudson said, was paid eventually to one Richard P. Blake. Hudson described Blake as treasurer of the “Broomfield-For-Congress Com- mittee” at that time. The check was drawn on the account of Detroit Teamsters Lo- cal 299, Hoffa's eg a It was coun made out to one Had wae oe venga, Hudson described as ‘a young Detroit lawyer.”" : * -£€ * Hudson said that two days after the date of the check, a record ‘of Broomfield’s county clerk’s office shows one for $1,089 from Wilson, “T do not believe that this is a coincidence,’’ Hudson, ee * Broomfield said he “assumed’ the. $1,089 deposited with his cam- fund were the collections from a $10-a-plate testimonial din- ner for him in October of 1956 held at the Pontiac Elks Lodge. He said Blake did make the deposit, but denied he ever was treasurer for his committee. Broomfield said he never heard of John Wilson. . “T was. invited by John Thorpe, director of the AFL in the Hear Attack Claims Harold Blackwood (Continued From Page One) +|\Chapter of the American Red Cross wood received his early education in Detroit public schools, graduat- ed from Pontiac High School and finished his education at Wooster College, Ohio, * *& * Before coming to Pontiac in 1927, he spent 10 years as a purchasing agent in the automotive field and entered the real estate business. From 1917 to 1927 he was en- gaged in the automotive business as a purchasing agent ‘and as a real estate developer in Cleveland, Ohio. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church, the Elks and Mason Lodges, and was a former president of the Pontiac Rotary Club. Professionaily, Blackwood was a -member of the Michigan Real Estate Appraisers Assn, He was active with the YMCA and the Pontiac Day Nursery, serving as chairman of the latter contributions in the |897 to a dinner for Michigan labor of” Born in Detroit in 1893, Black|, The e Day in ining ides for Children’ ‘BIRMINGHAM “~ Ticket sales are earting in peniidham schools The first of the plays, “Circus Day,” will oy presented Oct; 13. All will be ‘ staged in the Bir- mingham Theater with perform- ances at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. The holiday ‘special, slated for Dec, 29, will be “Broken Doll,” presented by the ee itlow-O Way a prentice Theater. On April 28, Wayne State Uni. versity Players will produce “Rumplestiltskin,” . A hearing on confirmation of a special agsessment district for pav- ing on Brookside alley will be 23 during the Birmingham City mission ‘meeting tonight. over oe last week, will be oh tributing “Handbooks for Emer- gencies’’ to al] homes, The project will be completed by Oct. 11. The books, published by. the Of- fice of Civil Defense Mobilization, list emergency measures for nat- ural or man-made disasters, Mrs, William. Christian be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton 4 Co., Birmingham. Burial will be in Saturday at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit after a short illness. She was a member of the Board of Methodist Chelsea Home in Chel- sea, Mich. Her interests in Chris- tian education resulted in the es- See Pontiac Link in Alpena Murder (Continued From Page One) and M71 in Caledona Township, 16 miles south of Alpena. Texas Ranger Capt. E. J. Banks is in Michigan to aid in the in- vestigation. ~~~ Texas authorities believe Kean, . an ex-convict, was active in Dal- las and Fort Worth rackets for some time. An attempt was made to kill him last November by planting a bomb in his car but he discovered it in time to avoid triggering it. Kean then dropped out of sight, telling his wife he was going to his brother’s home in Fayetteville, N.C, She said she last heard of him two weeks before Christmas when he called from somewhere in Tex- as and said he would be home as soon as he raised some money. A second public hearing, held} | Service for Mrs. William (Anna-} bel) Christian, 76, of 27349 Morn-|’ " jingside Plaza, Lathrup Village, will Kick Off Ticket Sales s Theater tablishment of the Rice-Allen Fund at the Metropolitan Methodist Church in Detroit, mia fy ‘Mrs. Christian. was co dent ‘of the Detroit’ Ni lew Century Club, the WSCS of the Metropolitan Methodist Chureh and Chapter I. PEO. She also served on the Board of Directors of’the Detroit YWCA. are her husband and two sons, J. Donald of bend William Jr, of Lathrup Burglary Rash Hits Oakland Thieves Enter. Copies in Orion, Avon ‘Home, Store in Highland A rash of breakcins and, tar and a clock radio plus $85 worth of pene tools taken, No Denial of Rights, High Court Asserts (Continued From Page One) rectly. by state legislators or State executive or judicial offi- tempted ingeniously or ingenu- ously.”’ * * * In the wake of the court's re- fusal to allow a delay in inte. gration at Little Rock Central, Gov. Orval E. Faubus of Ar. kansas closed that high school and three others in the city, Plans are under way to re- — open them under private lease and on a segregated basis, but this faces a lower court test, The integration crisis has deep- ened e ere since the Su- preme Court acted in the Little Rock case. In Virginia, three schools ‘tn Front Royal and Charlottesville have been shut down to avoid court-ordered. integration, And Sunday Virginia Gov, J. Lindsay Almond Jr. ordered six more schools in Norfolk closed for the same reason. In both Arkansas and Virginia, state anti-integration laws em- power the governors to take such action. Park Your Dog Here - STEVENAGE, England (UPI) out how to ban dogs. They de- cided to set up parking meters — a Se area. for many years, Besides his widow, Caroline, Blackwood is survived by three children, Thomas T, Blackwood, Richard S, Blackwood, and Bar- bara Anne Blackwood, and one granddaughter, all of Pontiac, Mrs. Blackwood and two younger children live at the family home, 31 Ottawa Dr, Thomas, married, lives at 91 Bloomfield Ter. Service will be at 2 p.m. Wednes- day from the Donelson-Johns Fu- neral Home with Dr. William H. Marbach, pastor of First Presby- terian- Church, officiating... Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery in Detroit, Black and White. ... Kodatolor ......... Kodachrome sdb bis Announcing New! Daily Service to Drug Stores and Camera Shops FILM DEVELOPING. and ee : Pee ri 1 Day rat peerage Days bok for . HITE PHOTO, Ine. | 4 "At Camere Counters— * Miller’s Offer More Than. 29 Nationally Known Brands of Home Furnishings Offe ng Greatest Sa ings in Our History “You always get the most for your mone he Miller's” Our Lower ~ Easy Terms, Too! MILLER | “Our ied Your ot Thi Same Location” Open Friday Evenings You the Makes the erence | FURNITURE COMPANY «i Al tes . ‘ a AL “se- action on a contempt of Congress THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 29, 195 58 - Consider lke in New Light With Adams: Due. to Depar By MERRIMAN SMITH WASHINGTO N(UPI) — The re- distribution of authority at the White House today led politicians of both to take a new look at the role of President Eisenhow- er himself. Maj. Gen. Wilton B. Persons (USA Ret.) was named over the weekend to succeed Sherman Adams as The Asgitant to the President. Persons, a 62-year-old Alabamian, is a veteran specialist , in executive liaison with Congress. He was No. 2 man to Adams from the start of this administration. * * * Adams, now arranging the ‘‘or- derly transition” of White House duties, resinged a week ago: be- cause of political repercussions from his relations with Bernard Goldfine, the Boston textile mil- lionaire facing federal grand jury charge. Adams was due shortly to de- Part from his White House desk with its big presidential seal, _—— behind a legacy of power a legend of indispensability re is now subject te re- appraisal, The President, by participating in the decision on Adams’ resigna- tion and selecting Persons as his successor, did away—at least for the present—with what long had been a favorite theory of certain national political figures—that Ei- senhower could not get along with- out Adams. * * * Administration insiders forecast little or no change in Eisenhower policy and. practice as a result of the former New Hampshire gov- ernor’s dep&rture. In fact they saw a strong chance the President might concern. himself more ac- tively with administration prob- lems formerly preempted by Pigs of Today Eat Much Better Meals em ITHACA, N.Y. (UPI) — A Cor- nell University study showed the average U. S. pig of today eats better than his ancestor. Three pigs from the same litter were fed rations commonly used in 1910, 1930 and 1958 as part of an experiment at the depart- ment of animal husbandry at Cornell. ah Mahi he Mh hn Me he de he he ei ie i i i ce Se eT ; Seas r Adams to avoid overloading. Eisen- hower with unessential detail. - Such an expectation, however, seemed to avoid the fact that Ei- senhower will be 68 years. old next month. In his remaining two years in office there might be an increase in the frequency and duration of periods away from his desk en- couraged by his doctor, family and staff. Eisenhower, with his global military background, has concen- trated much official effort in the past on foreign and defense pel- icies, His friends said however that recently he has been prob- ing-more deeply into other areas such as education and the do- mestic economy, One of Eisenhower's personal] roma es friends recently told United Press|Chairman Meade Alcorn, . International he was somewhat|House Press Secretary James C. surprised to hear that while the|Hagerty and Thomas E. Stephens, President was vacationing in New-|Eisenhower’s appointment secre- port, R.I., he was “keeping much tary who, with Hagerty, is one of closer tabs on the political battle|#e few veteran political tech- for control of Congress than shown by reports of his recently- announced activities. This fitted in with the plan of the President to take a major per- sonal part in the Republican cam- paign this fall, swinging from coast to coast in support of GOP|E state tickets. Some Republicans though earlier this year that Ei- senhower, in the sunset of his own|— officiatdom, would undertake no|— more than a fairly routine role in the off-year campaign. Thus a picture of Eisenhower- without-Adams began to take shape — a shape that may not be distinct. for some months to torical record is inrciadag: his private enterprise is better for the tervention. * «> * Administration figures in a posi- tion to forecast think life in the White House before and after Adams will differ in cagree. not direction. Because Persons does not have the political experience Adams brought to the White House, the change in “chief of staff’? might result in more direct influence on circle. Factory Representative Here WEDNESDAY—2 to 3:30 P.M. REMINGTON : Electric Shover RECONDITIONED =While You — Wait Service— 150 EXTRA come! @ OILED The President, as always, will © STEAnLieED be influenced heavily by persons|E » cLEANED closest to him. The weight of such advice applies particularly in tech- nical fields like science and fi- nance where his knowledge is less expert. His friends report the Pres- ident’s interest in his own his- ‘wwrT.,r,r YY NEW 8: ERVICE—Remin n factory representative wil) be hn our a every Wednesday of overs week, SIMMS Electric Shavers —Main Floor wrrvrVVVeYVYY Tonite and Tuesday All Metal ‘TRIM’ FINGERNAIL CLIPPER Reg. 25c As’ shown — nails cut presets — at the ad ‘Men's Wear Specials for rvwvvvwVVTVYTVTeVrerwrrrrYrYTYTYT correct an With T nd Tuesda nail file. Limit 1. onite and y p98 N. Saginaw Main Floor 4 The 1910 menu added 25 pounds to one pig during the 67-day test. The pig fed the 1930 ration gained weesseeseeseseseseeess a hp ep te tp bn int tntndndntnd nicians in the White House inner| Farmer Catches Deer jin Yard With a Lariat LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — It may never catch on as a deer-hunting tactic but John Scott, poultry farm- _yer near Lincoln, captured a full -}grown mule deer with a lariat. After lassoing the animal. which overriding hope to avoid war; his| had wandered onto his farm, Scott intense desire for a stable economy/and a companion threw the. deer to prove that relatively unfettered|to the ground and tied it up in e manner of a calf ready for country than extensive federal in-|branding. In short order, the deer became the newest addition to a Lincoln zoo. + | Whaling Outlook Dim crewmen that their contracts have} next season, been terminated. The cancellations | of’ the- uncertain outlook for whale| mains unseld and the market out- oil, all Norwegian whaling com-| look is dim. It is uncertain whether|— panies have notified officers andj any expedition will be launched "Open Tonigh at: Shop SIMMS. "til 10 PL Me EXTRA SAVINGS Tonight and Tuesday When. You. cs iw Exactly as Pictured MORE! Here's Proof! Helaricag 100% S-t-r-e-t-c-h Sizes 4-to 6% & 7 to 10 Made for lounging, dancing, or playtime in dress wear. w h — stretches to size. black colors. 39c Values knits, etc, Sizes 3 eet ex ALL WOOL Reg. 69c gr ormer sae * Child’s . 49c Value eer isshed Pattern and le Sizes Snap Front—Zipper Bottom Baby Sleep Bag $1.98 Value Washable cotton Bes RIVE Ma 98 N. Saginaw YOU Expect More From SIMMS... and YOU Get —Tonite and Tuesday — Nylon , Slim Long Janies For GIRLS and CHILDREN cae. CHILDREN’S Anklets 8 Pr. 1” gee ist quality, some frregulars, ogre fancy cuffs, English ribs, af to 7. pon Headwarmers 39° 97c te oe 51.89 Sete wool headwarm- |* ties : Styled as shown, No limit. Panties Ladies’ Panties 49c Value for $1 .00 |: Combed cotton with elastic waist |@ Le 9T' —Main Floor mcolor selec- tion, I The TOP SHELF Is a Removable es Serving Tray —FIRST QUALITY Lejaks deuidesbits TABLE wre dhoaee bated gauge steer Regular $9.95 List Price shelves, Ren on amet sy + | helf is Nittvout sr a senate Large aaxi4" shelves, . Use in ar A ning. room, nurse bedroom, etc. holds in tres-layawey, : 98 North Saginaw TT ho | NN Faris brand SS deluxe table == in limited == UTI 00 POO OO OTOL Mt MM ts or pom COUPONS YOU musT BRING ~~ COUPONS TO BUY aT THESE PRICES Every thei in this advertisement is guaranteed under-priced ’, even below Simms every-day dis = count prices... On sale from the = — minute you read this adv, unit” TUESDAY at 6 p.m, : RIGHTS RESERVED to Limit Quantities a2 —None Sold to Declers— Ex NONE SOLD AT THESE PRICES WITHOUT COUPONS wm Permanent Non-Evaporating—Genuine SB] Maker's $3.25 List— ry) = el Factory sealed FULL GALLON = By SLIMIT—4 gallons.) HARDWARE — 2nd Floor =) Prestone Anti-Freeze | ne can. Fill once for all winter, 12 Ilumbo ‘Spake _ 800 to 1,000 Yds. Box of THREAD $2.95 Value— 4 r‘weerTrrtTeeeereerererreeererereerrererrrrrrrrrrerTr eee Se ve ee ee ee ee Se ee ee ee ee ee ee Not $12.95... Not $6.95 ... Not Even $4.95 Now! Record-Breaking Low Price on GUARANTEED 3 “Electric MASSAGE “VIBRATOR” Pillows Time Only! : Tones Le museles, helps re- duce weig relaxes tense nerves, etc. Year guarantee. or via eae i sade act 4 $14.95 “WAHL” Deluxe . VIBRO AAAPAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA PAAR AAAAAAA vv" wrrewreveveeYrereerrerrrrrrrreeY ‘rTrrTrTTtTTeTtTerTrTT Tree Te ee eT ee 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 a . 4 4 PILLO + Of ene oe a 3 = Ws @ Sundry Dept ain Floor { 4 ‘TTrTtTTT TTT. + es BLACK, WHITE & ASSORTED COLORS ‘Mercerized, size 50 sewing rend. usualy oe priced 29c to 35c. (LIMIT—1I Box ‘ DOMESTICS — a 7 4 ~» a tn th dh ta th dh to de da ds te do, te, tote dos hdr Anctrctnr the ta dirt dia din he tin nthe Aad q 4 4 4 4 4 id 4 4 4 4 q 4 4 4 _erervrererereereereeererrerrererrererrrererrrrerrerrrerveereYTTeeee eee a $1 HOLDS IN ‘LAYAWAY Many Uses! For storace Steel Frame — Padded Top — Two Sizes TOY and CH ESTS $10.95 Value STORAGE 1$x27x15-Inch SPECIAL PURCHASE — Save half on this rugged, many purpose chest! Padded, hinged top, washable vinyl fabric covered, Big and roomy for. toys, sheets, blankets, clothing, etc, Housewares | All Weather - Guaranteed 50° Ansco FILM 3 ROLLS for— c Popular 620, 120 of 127 $4 : sizes, Unconditionally guar fH anteed. (LIMIT—6 rolls). | om CAMERAS — Mein Floor | Pyvavuasie COUPON aaa = PLAYING Ch Coated eae hs $1.10 Quality oY —Bridge Size— aap H Fancy backs in several designs. Stay ’new,! ihe long-lasting. (LIMIT—2 ya ~ ¢ Floor | Z —_— cou PC Most Popular Brands m 5¢* Chewing Gum & & m Life Savers % Ac : a $1.00 Value 5 se \ pene s Mus Besinan'y, ie Bek = : mine \ CANDY — Main Floor OD wal | -\ VALUABLE COUPON ff re Self-Wringing—Long Handle | Sponge Floor Mop & .. Regular $1.50. Every-Day DISCOUNT PRICES on Fendi Brands Shote un — Always COMPLETE gu at Simms . . i You'll find all gauges in all wanted shot-sizes . what we advertise, no switching to ‘off-brands.’ Remington ‘Shur-Shot’ or Western 'X-Pert’ FIELD-LOAD SHELLS Reg. to $2.95 List— 99 Choice of 12, 16 or 20' go. ..+ 4 to 9 shot-size. ox of 25. * Ld e 44 pounds, but the pig with the|$-PHOTOGRAPHY FANS! $ modern menu put on 105 pounds. ; Don’t YOU Pay Regular ° 1 ¢ Prices—Look to Simms . Willd! 221 Tons for Each Foot |g for the LOWEST PRICES oF 1 .-..cSETEECE LINED NEW YORK — The per$ MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS RY { a ts _ average e son in good health weighs about|$ : Swea Shir 140 pounds and walks about three ° ° . miles a day. Figuring the average |$ ~ Irrs - c step at 30 inches, this gives a total|e e of of 6,336 steps a day. Multiplying/$ 2 reals" inthe total” of 87.00 ] results ,000| $ e\—s2.59 ZIPPERED $459 Rat ae cre be Lats A$ ESweat Shirts ....... .*] : ® EStrong cotton knit, crew neck, ries per day—more than 22] tons. r4 ! 4 sieve style. Variety of colors.? ‘7 >4 @ Sizes S-M-L-XL. Collectors’ Stamps Net /$( "WF = S EPoputar VERTICAL STRIPES |Z * WASHINGTON — The United|s ot Pertect Movies & Stills °F Men's Flannel Shirts States Post | Otfice's | nilatelic| ~Famous ALPEX 3 ee Agency sells about $3,000,000;worth|¢ e Sg , of stamps year to eotlectrs|3 EXpOSUre Meter ; “4 29 Local ices also a huge number of-stamps to philatelists.|$ “30:95 87 : , ee Since the stamps aren’t used for|¢ Fd @ mailing letters, the Post Office De-/g Value ° PHALA2 for $2.50 partment nets a nice profit from‘ ® e @ For reflected or incident | light @ af / Sanforized, col- their sale. @ rea Compur system for @ orfast in’ blue, @ color or’ black and white. Includes @ red, or gold @ case and $1 holds. . colors. Sizes 8 GS eocccccccsoesovosooces MeL. Limit g See Tow Slides TV Sirle SiR EW DUTY TWILLS ° ° * | ; Slide Viewers :F Bo Reg. $7.95 @| Men’s Work Pants : e a $ 4” : - $3.49 Val 3 . aiue : is As shown, ~ ° cle window view.- 5} 59 e er. See 35mm »@ \¢ slides. With © or 4 . batter: 3, . [\@ e Glass Beaded ‘METEOR ¢|E* fOF $2.50 * e Radiant Screens ° Sanforized, tipper Values to $15.00 Efly. Khaki or srey _ 30 x 40” 81 @' £29 to 42, leg lengths Movie 8 4 ees - 40 x 40” e Slide - e @ $20.95 Jumbo 50x50” $12.87 $ : Pirst quality glass 0, a e for movie =. s. @ © Setal tripod stand. ng e Secseccsocccsccneceees 98 N. Saginaw ~—Basemen Se ® “ . e babieni and Cotton Blend” 52x72" LACE Table Cloth 2 $1. 98° > Value. 4 ms any table — Ince . : ps tah bo an. Tyory color 4 eS ss low price. Limit two.% ess Save Nearly $30 on— ARGUS C-4 CAMERA, FLASH, CASE $99.50. 88 ‘Value — Pi ns lens a : fast shutter to. 1 sec, ‘synchronized — a4 b gman posures . . nes holds in agaven. N. Saginaw Tonite & Tues. oF anc ibssnseh esssssossssvescseses? Geeessoececeoccesesos ELECTRIC Clipper Home Barber “5-Pc. Set Regular $10.15 Value 69 Set Uncludes: \@ Electric Heir Clippers - © Barber Shears ® Attachment Comb: ® Barber Comb ® Rubber Guard Keep the entire score A a Ce trim and trim your oe tee Complete with ghouiens guarantee. Tonite and ‘Tee. r +g REMINGTON ‘Express’ or WESTERN. ‘Super-X'... Regular to $3.40 LIST— 2” pers loads in 12, 16 or 20 5 fox or es to 7% shot sizes. me Outers Long Rifle. . CLEANING KITS a Cal. Shells for shotguns c and rifles .. . tae 68 SAVE. “$20. 00 on ores ‘ithaca’ REPEATER SHOTGUN - Regula: $94. 9 Value-—Now 7 4 8 8 models, Walnut stock SPORTS Fe ag «2nd Tag Bg od sights. Py Serene Nate paler _— ss no substitutions, we sell 3 HOUSEWARES — ed Finee a \ VALUABLE COUPON Ay ? Choise of 2 of 2 Products by. ~ ij RICHARD HUDNUT| Creme SHAMPOO or Hair RINSE $1.75 Sies ci = | Famous RICHARD HUDNUT sy hair-care products at biggest gai savings. (LIMIT—2), COSMETICS — Main Floor E\VALUABLE COUPON Py Rapid New Cold-Wave Pin-Wave Permanents permanents. As advertised y ig "i on TV, (LIMIT 2), 2 for atl aa COSMETICS Main Floor $1.50 Size New, 15 to 40-minute home SOUPON (A = ‘ . All Rubber—16x15% Inch Drainboard Tray - $2 Seller: nye duty, built in self drain. Ist All colors * quality, {LI KITCHENWARE — . tnd Floor Py 98 N. SAGINAW St. ® ft THE ‘PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1958 | jfastditch pleadings on this score fa Health: foes een he ‘Have Left |Milee Day fo most 50- years. He left with -a ederal Circuit Court at Balti- STAMFORD, Conn. (UPIY —|year and a halt of unused sick vg : ‘Postal officials in Stamford have|icaye to his ‘credit. _ we * Fortune Behind proot that a brisk walk every day|. - , Just a few hours after adjourn. ant the Circuit Court handed keeps a man healthy. Postman)’ down its unanimous decision deny- Pare eo = Public Schools ouiieh sls oui te senda bs _ 10,000 Children Start Indefinite Period of The most important idleness in Virginia NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — Ten thousand Norfolk secondary: schoa} children began an indefinite peri- ‘tod of idleness today as the state closed white public schools rather than acquiesce to federal court- ordered racial integration, ing the appeal ~~. a stay, The Norfolk School Board went into session immediately and ‘carried out its plan to assign 17 Negro children to the six schools, Al- mond’s action closing the schools eame on the heels of. this move. Urge U.S. Set Up Space Launchers “Vanishes After Failure Edward O’Connor, 69, retired ‘aft-|word, it requites the er having walked an a muscles.” : TRUSSE + $EBS0 aod up Thrifty Drug Store - 18 N. Saginaw — PRIVATE FITTING BOOM ven a Near Sears isd to Market Device for HOLLYWOOD (AP)—A missing engineer may have walked out on an interview worth a fortune. Elmer C, Meukel disappeared ken and. discouraged by long, un Air Collision Prevention |. from his home here June 22, bro-| ~ Along Equator jrewarded effort to market an ee ae electronie device for preventing DALLAS (AP)—Some scientists | airplane collisions, re urging that the United States x * * establish facilities along the Equa-| Now an engineering firm that tor soon for launching manned|Meukel contacted before he left -|space craft; says the government is willing to x *« * ars tive — dollars ~~ de- * of potential | V¢ loping the device, with 3 per ms see bees palin They in- cent; or $150,000 going to Meukel. clude Christmas Island in the Pa-| Parts of the prototype he built cifie, the Marshall Islands, a Brit-;have been as oe oe of island of Africa and the|a friend, They have turned caught up in the struggle between pF aad. a over to police for safekeeping. But state authority ‘and the This information came from |Meukel took other parts with him, A formal order declaring Gov:; J, Lindsay Almond Jr.'s seizure of six junior and senior high | schools was delivered to city |* school officials in the port city Sunday, thing about BAKING We the halante of inaredients baking governs ; *, *- * The action does not affect the city’s Negro high school and two junior high schools, The number of’ children affect- When you can’t be with her because she’s miles away, the next best thing is a Long Dis- tance call. You can call places — «a day’s dtive away for less | ture in the oven... That's the aa jgovernment on the boiling school issue. : _ The Norfolk. School Boarg dis- 1 patched ‘@ request to the gover- not asking that he move to re- open thé schools as soon as pos- James R, Dempsey of San Diego, vice president of Convair Astro- gover! namics Corp., at an informal ident of Polaris Engineering Corp. nautics Division of General Dy-|of Los Angeles, said Defense De- partment officials have expresséd meeting with newsmen attending |keen interest in the invention, Dr, Fred Haglestein, vice pres- ~ than a dollar, Michigan Bell Telephone Company the Air Force Assn. convention here. sible, i oe ; x + << ee Pil will see shir approach- | While the closings in Norfolk} .» . : an aircraft from any quarter were certain to cout the first|,. He Said launching directly ny or and will automatically divert the wholesale test of public sentiment | Equator would make possible] aireraft to avoid a collision,” he establishment of an orbit that al-|..iq «Jt is imperative that we toward the state’s no-surrender . ld trace the same path ” school policies, a private segrega- i - ‘cig id. re. [tind Meukel. eh _* The story of Meukel’s struggle tionist group in the city was pre-|. = paring to soften some’ of the im- quire a miniowum warnbet of com-| vainst debt and discouragement : was told by his wife Jean, mother of three. children. “Things just piled up on him a and he couldn’t stand seeing his | . ( pact. : The Tidewater Education Foun- a dation claimed more than 2,000 ot|Link Flu, Encephalitis the affected pupils had signed up| . ivate classroom instruction} LONDON — An article in the! family go without,” she said. “He in advance of the actual school|British Medical Journal reports) .aiq he was going to San Fran-| | shutdown. The private educational |that encephalitis ay tes cancel to look for work.’ system was expected to swing in-|Complication. in one in 10,000 f are vo ee why cometan Gereegae ee ee She has traced him from San : * * * an Asian-flu outbreak Dundes,|, S00 bas traced him Wash., aN 4 been |Scotland, four patients developed rte : had Reno, Nev., ‘where the trail ends. Norfolk. closings encephalitiy connected by Vitus) 4 yi other “Melvin Meukel of Spo- * impending for several weeks. openings had been post-|#nd antibody studies to the Asiat|),5 said Elmer wrote him.three poned ¢ weeks ago from Reno asking for la legal fight to stall the court in- : : money, which he sent in care of tegration directive, at least for) North Carolina has producedigeneral delivery, } three million pounds of pecans in “y haven't heard from him The defense peheeneys madeja year. pe abet Sa S FOOD-0-MAT I BONUS: ‘COUPON: [PET MILK . Tt tz GOOD ONLY AT-PEOPLE’S MARKETS Coen sin Si OcT, 1 CANS PER re, i, . ne Lo f i i aa ee a aa ON. and FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M. _ FREE DELIVERY E OF ROOM OUTFITS || PIGS FEET Cr rackin’ Good - ‘SALTINES 19° 1-LB. BOX mK See DVAAAAAA COUPON EXPIRES OCT. 1 t FOOD-0-MAT BONUS COUPONS SUPER VALUE lg (eZ (=a | CUSTOMER GOOD ONLY AT PEOPLE’S MARKETS GIGI BANQUET ARMOURS COLUMBIA SLICED N € & « s ¢ ’ Foam Rubber | BED PILLOWS . 46-02. CAN oe * wae e Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY ORCHARD “164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE + PONTIAC FURNITURE ‘PICTURED TYPIFY ‘SIMILAR SELECT IONS © 1465 E. Pike Street Corner Sat UbER= 700 Auburn | Pr 9, ’ Reg. $7.95 la’ ve, ford Street © Chicken ‘eee © Turkey © Beef "™ JUICE FOC Dr OMAL.J POT PIES for ost SMR EEE EE ee a ae Oe a oe ew ee i ce “THE P PONTIAC PRESS, MC Day. SEPTEMBER 2p. 1958 | Be Genial | Pay Call | Buy Gitt By EMILY POst rancis ‘Larkspur CAN ‘s A s x ‘ends Oct, 4th! | 16-Piece Service for 4 wy 8499 Reg. $16.95 Sed includes 4 cups, 4 saucers,. .4 dinner plates, and 4 bread ‘n’ butters. Buy two setsand have 8 place- settings in genuine Franciscan Ware for just $25.90! ‘Choose any one of Fran- ciscan’s famous open stock patterns .-. « Starburst, Desert Rose, Duet; Ivy, Apple, Autumn, Fern Dell — and the “brand | new” Larkspur. Order by Mail or Phone * FE 4-1234 WIGGS: 24 W. HURON Open Tonight and Friday ‘til 9 P. M. PERMANENTS © NO DOWN white butterfly roses, feathered | and brown accessories. “So let's quit making compari- PAYMENT carnations and stephanotis. - ; cree ae Be / | . Luana Mehlberg was maid . . ° of honor with junior brides- Cileow : “a FULLY AUTOMATIC 2 YEARS maids, Katherine Jackson, the AS COU NTRY AIR i TO PAY @) bride's sister, and Lora Lynn “ 2-CYCLE ‘58 Norge Washer “188 WITH TRADE \ 58 NORGE _WASHER- wwe Hot or Warm Wash Warm or Cold Rinse Automatically were invited to a friend’s house to play bridge. Before I left I told my daughter that if a ‘Mrs, A.’ ‘called to tell her to call me at this friend’s house, and I left the number with her. “I was expecting a call.from ‘Mrs. A.’ and thought she might call while I was out. My husband thinks it was not right for me to do this, I would like to know if it is wrong to receive calls at another’s house ?"’ Answer: If it was an impor- tant- eall and you could not have reached “Mrs. A.” later: it was quite all right to leave your hostess’ telephone num- ber, but under ordinary cir-- cumstances you-would not do this. “Dear Mrs. Post: What are the duties of the bridegroom's pargmts before the wedding? They live in the same city as the bride’s family but they are not personal friends.”” _ . Answer: There are no special duties beyond the visit you are expected to pay to the girl’s family when the engagement is announced, and to buy the — bride as nice a wedding pres- ent as you can afford. It is always very friendly on the part of the man’s relatives who don’t the girl to invite her (and if possible her fam- ily) to a gathering some time before the wedding. “Dear Mrs. Post: When a man and woman are. leaving their seats in a theater,\does it seem rude if the man goes out of the row ahead of the woman if he happens to be sitting near- er the aisle, or is he supposed to stand and let her. pass in front of him so that she may go out first?” ~ Answer: They go out in the order in which they are seated. When he gets to the aisle he stands aside and lets her go first, but if there is room they walk out together. Bologna varies greatly in qual- ity. Find a brand you like! Have Several By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN In our grandmoather’s day we always could tell whether she or Aunt Mary had just left the room because of the fragrance which lingered. Perfumes -were highly fume wardrobes whieh tebade a couple or-maore scents to be used on different occasions. It is about as inappropriate to wear a heavy, sultry perfume in the office as it is to wear an evening gown to work. Daytime perfume should be spicy and light. You should save the more provocative odors for evening or for very special o¢ca-|. sions, - Of course a woman should also consider her personality when se- lecting perfume. Some women do not enjoy wearing a heavy fra- grance at any time any more than they would be caught dead with a balloon hairdo.--You~ should be happy with your fragrance, Many women make the’ mis- take of buying perfume without first trying it on their skin. Al- eoholic gases form in the neck of the bottle. Therefore, when you smell from the bottle you miss the true overtones and undertones of a well-blended scent, There is another reason for try- ing perfume on your skin. The chemistry of. the skin affects the odor and the body chemistry of each person is different. There- fore, the same perfume will smell a differently on different people. Try out any perfume you buy on your wrist before making a final choi¢e. One more warning—it is fatal to dash into a store to select perfume when you are in a hurry or in a Daytime perfumes should be spicy and light. U tractiveness and hand give time and thought to their selection just as you would when choosing a cos- tyme or a hat. Today perfumes are not with a great luxury as they once were. Perfiinds Choice scnieeis One# reach of the average pocketbook. | Take advantage of this very fem-| inine beauty aid! ; * x * Tomorrow: runs to three cents a kilowatt it con he xeed 6 owt energy at the generating gorce,” wins co crs PaPesaig yi age | WILLIAMK. COWIE Custom Upholstery 25 Yrs. of Practical Experience “The Tables Havel] 252-8. Telegraph FE 42857) Beta Sigma Phi Meets at Home of Mrs. De Voe Mrs..-Donald DeVoe of Center street opened her home to the Alpha Omega Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Wednesday. Zeta Lambda Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will be cosponsors with Alpha Omega Chapter in -the an- nual *Sno-Ball” dance. Chairmen chosen from the Alpha Omega Chapter include Mrs. Michael Gol- logly, hall arrangements; Mrs, Mil- ton Ott;. decorations; Mrs. Ralph: Marriott, publicity; Mrs. George Pudduck,’ patrons, Plans were made to attend the state convention of the sorority to be held in Traverse City Oct. 19 and 20. The group’s next gathering on Oct. 8, will be a Model Meeting with new members invited, held at the home of Mrs.. Ott. White gladioli, snapdragons, pompons and palms banked ning wedding of Nancy Lou Jackson and R, Kenneth Dav- cent bouquets of mahogany pompons, wheat and wood brother’s best man, Ushers were James Green of - Berk- group? good managers and plan- ners. “But: looking around my neighborhood I can also see wives who don’t earn a nickel neglecting their families for sorority meetings, club meetings, morning coffee klatches, afternoon bridge sessions plenty of working wives like my- self who_have the energy and the family cooperation and the . thereby helping to pay for homes and send kids to college. idson. The Rev. Paul Hart of- ley, James Wickman, Paul | — “PH giadl a F iy admit, of course, ficiated at the ceremony be- yeoman, East Lansing and that many full-time’ homemakers fore 250 guests. Parents of the couple are re-embroidered with | seed pearls and iridescent sequins. Her fingertip veil of French illusion was held by a cap of Alencon lace and seed pearls. Her chapel] bouquet was of Sparks, and Kathleen Rouse as bridesmaid. All attendants wore leaf green taffeta dresses. Crowns of matching velvet and sequins held their circular veils and they carried cres- Following a reception held in For her daughter’s while. Mrs. Jackson wore a sheath dress of beige lace over taf- feta with beige accessories. Mrs. Davidson was dressed in a brown sheath dress and green do an excellent job, too, But there just isn’t any ‘average’ poor homemakers and. mothers whether they escape from their duties by taking on a job. or by filling their days with outside ac- | tivities for which they are ml nothing. (Charm Chats Your Haircut by Rowena Wilson Find a hairdo that is most flattering and easy to manage. Remember__not to let hair length and weight, thickness of the new growth, spoil the style. A chic coif requires good basic ‘cutting and shaping. To avoid | the look of being long overdue at | the hairdresser, have your hair cut in a pretty |shape and maintain the cut with regular beauty appoint- -USE OUR FINER Consider Individual Not Whole Group By RUTH MILLETT “I’m.sick and tired,” writes a working wife, “of| 3 having the ‘average’ working wife compared with the ‘average’ stay-at-home housewife. . “Just who is this average —e of each “I know there are working wives wie neglect their children, because the aren’t + | sons. Let’s just have a kind word| for the woman whose home is| happy and whose children are well cared for whether she works. or doesn’t work outside the home.” Rule for salad decorators: Try | to have your garnish look as if it} belonged to the salad and wasn’t ' : : ue " - Block South of Voorkels ff cee oa ea eee individualistic, me hectic mood. You are buying these|There are many lovely fragrances == Men Now Look Older, “ Today most .women have per-|to enhance your pleasure and at-'on the market which are within the — 2 patra $1.50 ANKLETS JHeel and toe reinforced 39¢ 3 pairs $1.00 Sises 7-11 Girls’ SNOW SUITS © COAT SETS PRAM SUITS © BUNTINGS Infants to 1-3 and 3-6x “LAY AWAY TIME! and Boys’ - “ Neumode a eye BON ae Trifari Be Ready fr Fall. | $ | D0) com N —- _ sory FH 8-0 r~ 50 “els Be: . child more neglected naam : ; ; . o App't Necessary Nancy Lou Jackson Wed because his mama is earning -f HOSIERY | _SUNENILE - : « | LOUIS 5S NSHOr , Same oe Jewels by 82 N. seals St. : ‘FE 2-7730 | ite esinneslih More net te twa rms || Miss Wohlgemuth Feted |r ans 1 snow : Pe Special Permanent *5 Other Machine, Machineless and Cold Waves live action control! PETER PAN Zax For the first time...you're free as the wind— ~ lithe as a tiger’s leap. Firmolastic™ control stripes are actually woven into ‘the stretch fabric! No overlapping seams, ‘no bulky panels, no sewed-in tapes. Sheer power! the altar of First Methodist’ roses. how to combine a career \with Jewelers © ae “ee oe Fully Automatic Geach Ace tae: Sanday ave: * + % —— lrunming a home. Tt can be Yone| with an f James Davidson was his (and a lot of women are doing it, Annaliese a A Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Jackson ae Lsepiaha pen career housewife or stay-at-home LUNCHEONS Styled Hair Cutting from $1.50 . of Argyle avenue and Mr. and : — housewife. There are only indi- ee ; = With Dispenser Wheel Mrs. Quentin Davidson of Ar- | imported silt sheath dress with | siduats Sealtest Ice Cream Annliese Beauty Shop Reg. 249.95 Now Only gyle lara t chid from her bridal bouquet | ‘Some can be of most use by Popular Prices _. (Over Tasty Bakery) | for a honeymoon in the Smoky |being full-time homemakers.| RIKER FOUNTAIN 8014 N. Saginaw St FE 2-5600 ae The bride wore a princess Mountains and Fort Lauder- Others can serve ‘their families Riker Building Lobby~ : | style gown of antique taffeta dale, Fla. ~ best by combining a job and home- ae | appliqued with Alencon lace ar a 3 -|making. And some are going to be ” ‘ Let Our Experienced, Corsetiere Advise , ments. Haireutting is not a : More control per ounce than any other gi girdle! * E = NE GABER | "rstocks" | COMPLETE "Tiger girdle, pouty ~ only 1.56 ted Help Youre 0 Peete 2%, : TM poy U ‘ y | Your little firt ean. have an \ Tiger Cub™ girdle, panty— only 3.95 The seoret's in the. Tiger atripeot | the ‘advantage of voice | SHIRT CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED aS nder a | 121 i ‘Saginaw TE 561897 [32 years ‘ie can receive 8 a SERVICE ™ : . no body is perfect...every body needs Peter Pan mie pcatitore ) wher ees | BOBETTE SHOP. |. = OPEN 1 MONDAY and. FRIDAY } Dire Wighway. Drayven ion Plane || 719 W. Huron FE 4.1536 | H | a et ‘TIL 9 P. M, a stor. MA S-1000. 1216 Baldwin, || ee - j | 14 North Saginaw Be : fe 2.6921 ~ . - —— _ be smart-look smart re ; { — — —— ee —— 4 cS * i i & i 2 : - * * . , # a ’ < - | i re i . ° ' é = . ay ee ee ae =, pee & a 7 ae a A F -twaffic and and the pa 0 catch’ formed oe Pom greah cgepge i eatameh ri fun, especially during a nice weekend like the past. But it also involves taking extra seat, Pemnayee nd. Jats of ant ork. The : 1,100 Oakland and Macomb counties ‘who participated in the annual Fall } Milford. Pontiac Press Photes will attest to this. Filling their buckets with water for dishwashing chores are members of Milford Troop 33 (from left) Edward Stoughton, 1736 Pettibone Lake Rd, Robert Crawford, 323 Hickory St.; Fred-Heil, 524 General Motors Rd., and John Heutebise, 242 Lone Tree Rd, all of aay passe departmental chapeau a ££. ¥ -79-Year-Old Physician “From Lansing Honored _by State peel is 79-year-old Dr. Fred J. Lansing, a 1907 gradu- of the Detrait College of Medi- z ter rE 3 7 | a mare named Molly. The ay * Drolett has delivered more babies, including Lan- baby of 1958 at 12:01 Year’s Day, served as chief of obstet- at St. Lawrence and Sparrow Hospitals in Lansing and as chief of staff at St. Lawrence. a : j PebRRy 2 FoRe Four Persons Injured. PS | emnrnay | pre as Car Hits Pole, Tree Four persons were injured early Sunday morning when a car driven by Booker T. Newcomb, 34, of 540 Arthur St., ran into a light pole and tree on Wésson street east of Maple. . .k Newcomb stiffered minor head injuries and is under observation sat Pontiac General Hospital. His —" is described as satisfac- * * * o injured were Fred William- t 488 Arthur St., who was contusions of the left ‘Joseph Mercy Hospital “Elloré Owens, , who was treat- i ae “| quickly ‘after a Boy Sets Straw Pile ) ng the Town (for Awhile | with $176. He spent al] the rest, Johnny said. - Discipline followed, and so to bed. Saturday Johnny was gone again, But he was sent home s hotel clerk called police when the boy tried to cash a $100 bill. Johnny explained he had hidden the bill as a reserve before setting out the previous night. Johnny stayed home yesterday. His parents made sure of it. Afire on Area Farm WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP — A $year-old Romeo boy yesterday admitted setting fire to a stack of baled straw Saturday on the C. W. Couch farm, 64250 Camp Ground Rd. * * * The youngster told Romeo State Police he got a match from a friend, set fire to the stack and then attempted to put it out. The fire, however, got out of control. * * * ‘Romeo volifiteer firemen fought the blaze several hours Saturday evening and were called back yesterday when it started to burn again. Finds Wife Dead in Car Inside Garage at Romeo ROMEO—Mrs. Charles H. Con- ally, 59, of 2835 36-Mile Rd., was found dead in the famity car in the garage by her husband, a De- troit dentist, when he rettirned home, from Detroit at 10: 30 last night. Romeo State! Police said Mrs. Conally died of carbon monoxide poisoning. There was a tube from the exhaust pipe into the car. re was no evidence of foul play or violence, according ‘to po- lice and Dr. Raymond G. Markle, Macomb County coroner, who pro- iBurglars Strike 6 Times in City Pontiac Police Receive “Reports From Victims of Weekend Crimes Dr. Burton Ross, owner of the Pontiac Veterinary Hospital, 817 S. Saginaw, reported Saturday thieves broke into the building and took $70 in cash and $175 in checks after ransacking the office. The entered by removing a screen from an unlockd window. The City Side Market, 1716 Joslyn Ave., was broken into and $3, six cartons of cigarettes and several old coins stolen. Thieves broke into Kennett Lunch, 52 E. Kennett Rd, and: took three cases of beer, cigarettes, gum and $2 in change. Burglars broke into an apart- ment at 6244 Sylvan Court and stole a television set, Mrs. H. C. Green- wood, ownr of ‘the apartment, re- ported. Saturday. The home of A. Charles Price at 74 Kinney Rd. was burglarized Saturday evening. Thieves stole a television set, radio and a 16-gauge shotgun, Girl, 4, Hit by Car, Hurt Only Slightly WASHINGTON — A 4-year-old Washington girl was injured slight- ly when she was struck by a car Saturday afternoon near the incin- erator in-the Washington trailer park on Van Dyke, six miles south of Romeo. Ben — Ablers, son, first demi chapeau; Mrs. Hugh McHugh, Birmingham, second demi chapeau; Mrs. William Kramer, Royal Oak, secretaire; Mrs. Roger Dean, Pontiac, cor- respondence secretaire; Mrs. Claude Casteel, Milford, treasurer; Mrs. Joseph Stout, Royal Oak, le superintendant. sergeant-dt-arms, Mrs. Norman Wiseman, Royal Oak, pariia- mentarian. Mrs. Charles Larson, Birming- ham, le marechal; Mrs. Carl Shin- ‘dort, Pontiac; Mrs. Ruby Howard, Birmingham, and Mrs. Rose Lar. son, Farmington, executive board; and Mrs. Lottie Kurchenko, Hazel Park, le chapeau passe. The installing team was com- prised of members of Wayne Coun- ty Salon’ No. 10. +. &£ € a Distinguished guests present for the occasion included Mrs. Agatha Schutte Eight and Forty national vice president; Mrs. Lillian Carter, passe. departmental chapeau of Missouri; Mrs. Frank Lavis de- partmental vice president of Mich- mental sergeant-at-arms of Michi- gan; Mrs, William Bryan and Mrs. passe department presidents of the American Legion Auxiliary and their husbands. Others were Ron Frundell, chef de gare, Oakland County Voiture 811; Ernest Reinke, Michigan’s ritual activity chairman and his ten ritual team members from Oakland County Voiture 811. * * * Installing officer was Mrs: Pear] Trudell, passe departmental chap- eau of Michigan. Sergeant-at-arms was Miss Doris Nealson of Grosse Pointe. Entertainment was furnished by the Ravens of Pontiac, Mrs. John Benedict, president of Royal Oak unit, and Mrs. Joseph Stout were in charge of the buffet held follow- ing the installation. Area Housewife, 16, Hurt in Two-Car Smashup ‘She is Patricia Ritter, daughter | of Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Ritter, | residents of the park. | * * * Romeo State Police said another park resident, Mrs. Victoria plumber, had backed her car up to the incinerator and was dump- ing trash when several children seated themselves in front. of the vehicle. All except Patricia suc- ceeded in getting out of the way when she started the car without realizing, they were there. She was treated at Selfridge Air Force Base Hospital for' cuts and bruises on her leg. i lst Ball-Point Pen in ‘88 WASHINGTON — The first ball- nounced her dead. A 16-year-old Waterford Town- | housewife was injured in an auto- mobile accident at 8 p.m. yester- day. i: . * * is ! Mrs. Patsy Hook, of 4274 Dixie Hwy., was in a car driven by her husband Leon, 20, which smashed into the rear of a car driven’ by Norma .L, Slahta, 33, of 5800 Cam- brook Lane, Waterford Township. The accident occurred on Dixie ‘at Andersonville road. Mrs, Slahta told, police Hook’s car-hit hers in the rear as she was waiting for a red light, * * * Mrs. Hook was admitted to St, Joseph Mercy Hospital with cuts and ruises and suffering from’ point pen was patented in 1888) shock. She is in satisfactory condi-ito the United States rose from by J. J. Loud. \ ” tion today, ; igan; Mrs. Joseph Phillips, depart- Jor their doctors release them. Also present Mrs. Showen’s fath-| er, Carl Shindorf, Department of Michigan Child Welfare chairman; her, brother and his wife Mr. and Mrs: Russell Shindorf and son Michael, of Adrian. ’| finally walk again. Mr. Waterloo, a LIFE IN THE FIELD — Heating water to clean eating utensils at Camp Oakland over. the weekend are Boy Scouts Richard McClurg of 6740 Commerce Rd., West Bloomfield Township; THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1958 Roundup. Mike Zechar of 3961 Clubview Dr., Orchard Lake; and Gregory Kanir of 2966 Orchard Lake Dr. The scene was the — Clinton Valley District fall By LEE WINBORN Romeo Correspondent ROMEO—Two little girls, who And it won’t be long now because both youngsters recently had simi- lar muscle transplant operations which will enable them to walk again soon, their doctors say. Lerraine Dietlin, 8, of Romeo and Yvonne Waterloo, almost 7, of Richmond, suffered severe at- tacks of polio five years ago. Both were patients in Herman Kiefer Hospital, Detroit, at the same time, and that’s where their mothers met. Dietlin, 192 Bradley St., Romeo, would sit in the waiting room and compare notes on her daughter's progress with Yvonne’s mother, Mrs. John Waterloo, 36344 Divi- sion St., Richmond. Before the girls were allowed to . }come home, the two mothers were sharing the ride to the hospital, but it was not until Sept. 18, 1958— just about two weeks ago—that their daughters met for the first time. * *« * : A week or.so before that date, Mrs. Dietlin made her regular tele- phone call to Mrs. Waterloo and found that both girls were facing surgery only a day apart. Lorraine was operated on Sept. 11 at Grace Hospital, Detrait, and Yvonne, the following day at Port Huron General Hospital. Both had muscle transplants on their left feet. It was when the girls ceterae’ home again that the meeting was finally arranged at the Waterloos in Richmond. Lorraine and Yvonne found their lives had paralleled for both had paralytic attacks of polio| siste in 1953, are eagerly awaiting the|time| since she was jhree day when they will be able to use|°ld. (Members of the family in-/mas hula hoops like other children their | clude ages. Lorraine’s mother, Mrs, Joseph = chanic at Ford's Michigan Proving a grateful and joyful family when p can join her brothers and in active play for the first years Polio Siege Nearly Finishod for Two Little Girlfriends Grounds, mother Phyllis, ine brothers, Hugo, 5, and Joe Jr. 10, and sister Yvonne, 11. “Lorraine’s always wanted a bi- cycle, and it looks like this Christ- she'll have one,"’ Mrs. Dietlin father Joseph, an auto me-!said mippiully. aide Tella rit eee lo git: Seon: SII SH. BE. oe Pontise Press Phote SHARE EXPERIENCES — Two little girls who suffered para- lytic attacks of polio five years ago met for the first time recently after undergoing surgery that would enable them to walk again. They are Yvonne Waterloo (left) almost 7, of Richmond, and Lorraine Dietlin, 8, of Romeo. They now meet frequently to com- pare. notes on their experiences from iron lung’ to the promise of complete recovery. hospitalization was longer, 14) months to Yvonne's three. * * * . They both:have been able to at- tend school on crutches during their convalescence, but they have missed classes so far this fall be- cause of their operations. They are being tutored at home by their mothers until their casts come off “It wil} only be a month now before both girls will be able to walk without the aid of braces or crutches,” Mrs, Dieltin said with a slight catch in her voice. All members of both families are well aware of the approaching joy they will’feel when the girls can Detroit Edison employe, Mrs. Wa- terloo, and little Eric, almost 2, say they can hardly wait. And the Dietlins say they will be Safety Demonstrator Stopped by Accident RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) — Tele- vision station WRAL-TV was film- ing “a farm safety show which featured demonstrations by exten- sion ‘service experts.. bd * * ing about safety as he approached the mechanical husker. Suddenly the cord of the microphone about his neck became entangled in the whirring machinery. The cord drew him closer and closer to the de-husking blades. Horrified cameramen leaped to. his rescue just in time. Station officials name of the expert. The scene was deleted from the film: *” Venezuela Exports Up CARACAS — The-value of Vene- zuelan. petreleum products enter- ing the United States increased from $587,800,000 in’ 1956 to $757,- /600,000 in 1957, ‘Iron-pre exports several years, although Lorraine’s¢ A corn-husking expert was_talk-|- withheld the! . $61,841; 000 to $87,714,000. 1 \ Missile Crews Get Protective Garment WASHINGTON (UPI) — A new garment offering more protection for missiles-servicing crews has been adopted by the Army. A suit, made of rubber-coated cotton fabric, has been designed to protect the .crewmen against highly corrosive _ chemicals used round missile sites. * * * . Developed by the Quartermaster Corps, the new suiting covers a crewman from head to foot. It consists of a coverall, hood, gloves oxygen, hydrogen, peroxide, red fuming nitric acid, and the other chemicals employed as missile fuels. Cash in Shopping Bag Is Short-Lived Bargain HARTFORD, Conn, (UPB—Ben- jamin Oxenandler of New Britain figured it was bargain day when he returned home and found. his shopping bag contained $230 in cash, While-he was calling authorities, store manager Carl Legesky of Middletown was on another phone reporting the loss, Legesky got his moriey back. Train Hits Car, Killing 3 Girls Edith Sutton of Holly Dies Following MB&hap in Indiana A 20-year-old Holly girl and two com: were killed early Sun- day morning when the small for- eign car in which they were riding darted into the path of a freight train in Hammond, Ind. : * * * The Holly girl was Miss Edith Sutton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Sutton of aad Davis- burg Rd. A student nurse at the Hins- dale (Ill.) Sanitarium and Hospi- tal, she and three companions, all on the staff at the hospital, were returning from an outing at Emmanuel Missionary College _ in Berrien Springs, Mich, Other victims were Daniel Phil- lips, 24, of Jackson, and Florence Dippold, 23,- of Hinsdale, believed to have been the driver. ‘ * * * The fourth passenger, Lois Bray, 21, of Lebanon, Ind., was seriously injured. She was asleep-in the back seat of the car at the time of the collision, according to Hammond Police: ~ ¥* * * Miss Sutton died about 2 a.m. Sunday at St. Margaret Hospital in Hammond, about an hour after the accident, Her body was brought to Dryer Funeral Home in Holly. Missile Battalion Formosa Bound U.S. Nike - Hercules Outfit Will Beef Up Island Defenses WASHINGTON (UPI) — A USS. Nike-Hercules missile battalion is en route by sea to beef up the de- fenses of Formosa, the Army said today. * * * For security reasons the Army could not say when the 2nd Bat- talion of the Tist Artillery set sail or when it would arrive, It did say . the troops were aboard the Navy transport Breckenridge. An ad- vance from the battalion- flew to Formosa last week. Launching sites are under con- struction on the Nationalist Chi- nese stronghold for the deadly The battalion was sta- tioned at Ft. Bliss, Tex, It is com- posed of four batteries of about 140 each. The battalion is com- manded by Lt. Col. Bernard I. Greenberg of Wilmington, Del. Each battery is equipped with 12 rocket launchers. ‘oo * * The 27-foot long Nike-Hercules can be equipped with either con- ventional or nuclear warheads, An Army spokesman said the battalion was not taking nuclear warheads with it to Formosa aboard the Breckenridge. But he said this did not rule out the possibility that atomic warheads could be shipped in later, The Nike-Hercules is directed to enemy planes as far away as 75 miles by an electronié guidance system. ° Arrest AWOL Sailor Seaman Jerry D. Lawson, 17, of 26 Cress St., was arrested this weekend by Pontiac Police on the request-of U.S. Naval authorities _ for being absent without official leave since Sept. 2. His station is the U.S. Navy small craft facility at spatevcile, Maryland. and boot. It is impervious to liquid s Watch and wait for Ar KOUR LOCAL 4 \ FRIDAY, | ORIZED QUAL e 2BER 3 D EALER' s Ct a 1 PON! SEPTEMBER 29, 1958 = L All. but 82 ‘aia of St. “Fred! erick’s rushing total in Sunday's erushing victory over Center Line St. Clement was compiled by the style of former Spartan star, Billy x * *. y St. Clement’s ace left halfback, Bob Fortin, was taken to a city |P hospital after a 4th period tackle laid him low. He was later ré- leased after examination showed - an eye injury was not serious. * League defeated the New York Rangers .4-3 in. an_ exhibition ‘game Sunday. Andy Bathgate, son Dean Prentice and Bill Gadsby scored for New York. Budge Patty took two hours and 55 minutes to defeat Mike Davies of England yesterday in winning the singles title in the Pacific Coast tournament. Christine Tru- man took women’s honors. Joe Conga tag the South- eastern PGA tourney while Al Besselink was setting a record- breaking 64 to. win a Westchester event yesterday. , PRESS. BOX Bears Roll Over Packers. sociated Press Geares Peis Bear” Halas, one of professional football’s founding fathers and its chief in- novator, today had made a suc- cessful return- to the coaching ranks after a two-year absence. Taking an outstanding batch of players like Willie Galimore, an unknown picked off the campus of little Florida A&M; quarterback Ed ; brilliant end Harlon Hill, a sturdy forward wall, Halas has mixed well and ap- parently has a winner, Oe eae son opened toppled Green Bay 34.20 to con- tinue their outstanding play which saw them compile a 60 exhibition record,. In other games, Frank’ Gifford scored three times as New York trounced! Chicago's Cardinals 37-7; Cleveland overcame Los Angeles 30-27 on Lou Groza’s field goal with 25°second left in the-game; Baltimore upended defending champion Detroit 28-15; Washing- ton beat Philadelphia. 24-14, and San Francisco edged Pittsburgh opener in six tries. The NFL soph, who can run the 100 in 9.6, scored ori dashes of one and eight yeards and combined with Brown on a To yet yous shay Soe Mae oie pointer, Galimore’s eight-yarder Fumbling Bothers Duffy in MSU's Grid Opener By BILL CORNWELL EAST LANSING.— In almost every respect, Duffy Daughérty was highly sgtisfied coach here Saturday afte? his Michigan State football team opened the 1958 sea- son with a 32-12 romp over Cali-| fornia." The genial MSU mentor WAS! bles, College Scores 2 x} 2 27, Taylor (Ind.) 7 Michigan Tech St. Norbert (Wis.) 18 Adran 12, Olivet : Notre Pe 18. Indiana 0 UCLA Tilinois orihocsters ze aiogton . a! mio St 23, Southern ee 20 rake , West Ya. st. 0 Wheaton 48, Lake Forest 0, East Cornell 13, Colgate 0 ¥ 8, tieut 6 32;- Dickinson 0. n College 14 Amherst by ringtield (Mass. 0 Penn Vireinia Sues", Inet a Yianova 6 Semen og 17 Holv .c mbin 0 Maine Rhode Triend . Dartm Lafayette Ruffalo 6, Harvard 3 Colby 26, B els 2 Bates 27, Union ny.) 6 Army 45, Carolin: 8 Coast Guard Academy 30. Vermont 30 Boston U. 28, Bancachesetts 4 Gettysburg 6. Bucknell 0 Maryland 21, North Carolina 5t. 6 Citadel vs. George Washington, can- ealled, hurricane threat Vir reinis 15, Duke 12 Ch mn 26, North So 21 : have? 14, William te Mary 0 ‘ Mississipni St. 14, ride 7 - Maryland 8st. _ Thos ae og St. 6 naman 13, see 0 Louisville 20 “Eastern Sages 7 . Geo 4 Lous jana St.’ 13. Alabama 3 Seuthw Oklahoma St. 21, North = fas 14 Oklahoma 47, West Virginia &M 7 5, New Mexico 6 Towa State 14, sinens 0 ‘es Rice ze Stanford 7 . wrom ington 24. Minnesota 21 Hewat & San Jose ot 6 Oregon State 12, Kansas 0 re ane of Pacific 34, “Arison (Tempe) 16 ‘Brakes Young “14, Utah 7 Wings Skate to Easy Win in Exhibition GRAND FORKS, N.D. w — The Detroit Red Wings €rove in five ‘goals in the second period to roll to a 7-1 victory over the Winnipeg Warriors in an exhibition hockéy game here last night. i The teams battled on even terms for the first period, but te ylang hit.” ee ae "your age the: Qpartens Sit tened Indiana, California and Michigan in their ‘first. three games and never had the slight- et SS es ee so impressive beating the U, of M, that they shot to the top of the national poll, Then they came home to-friendly Spartan Stadium to face Purdue, a three-touchdown underdog, and fumbled themselves into a star- ~|tling defeat, It was their only loss of the season in nine outings, but it was a costly one, -t £2 After studying game movies, Daugherty: said that the spectacu- lar touchdown pass from halfback Dean Look to quarterback Greg Montgoniery. in the 3rd “quarter | mer should have been ruled illegal Look, standing in deep punt for- mation, passed to Montgomery for a 57-yard TD after the snap from center went high and wide. .. ‘Montgomery _ was = | eligible to receive the pass be cause “he wasn't on the end of the page Ml of sérimmage,” Duffy stated. MSU held a 20-6 lead at the time, It wouldn’t have made any difference in the long run. because the Spartans had touch. downs to spare, Mickey Walker, sophomore guard from East Detroit, per- formed impressively for MSU in his first collegiate action, Quarter- € : ti Mike tt: h ) rt] ] : cn was award a Or ene dling, pat. we Sone: SUR we wet Daughtery continued, “I’m not|] sure what the answer is, but at the/{ was ee dixtee. putting - the Bears ahead to stay in the second siquarter after the Packers had taken a 10-7 lead. * by. Alex _Webster._and - Charley Conerly along with an -alert de- fensive unit, made it a dismal debut for Frank “Pop” Ivy, the Cards new coach, The Giants con- verted a pass interception and a Chicago fumble into two quick TD’, both by Gifford and wrapped it up with the game barely five minutes old, Webster scored twice and Conetly quarterbacked flaw- lessly. in the first neutral city opener in HFL history, The game was played at Buffalo, ,N.Y. re. The Browns got off to a good start before 69,993 fans, the day’s largest crowd, at Los Angeles, coming from far behind with 16 points in the last quarter. Full- oor Jim Brown shared the hero's spotlight with Groza, scoring two touchdowns and gaining 171 yards in 24 trips with the - ball. Brown AP Wirephoto I's TED AGAIN — Ted Wil- liams was wearing a big smile after clinching his 6th batting ti- tle at Washington yesterday. He had a double and home run to finish at .328 and beat out team- mate Pete Runnels. weeeee een eee eeneee eabeae oe | ae oar enelin RESULTS 5 kngeioe’s 3, me seenesanhl BESsasal San Francisco 7, St. Louis 2 Only games scheduled. Cards May Name Solly Hemus Today ST, LOUIS (®— Solly Hemus was expected to be named man- ager of the St, Louis Cardinals today. The Cardinals scheduled a press conference for 10 a.m, EDT but gave no other details. Hemus, for- Cardinal infielder who played with the Philadelphia Phillies this season, arrived here last night and told newsmen: “I’m available.” ‘Stan Hack, a coach, handled the team in-the last two ‘weeks of the National League season after Fred Hutchinson was fired. Wilson, Sox Hurler, Will Quit Baseball ~~: CHICAGO (AP)'— Jim Wilson, pitcher, Sunday a retiring from il. \ The veteran right-hander had a 9-9 record’ this season after a 15- 8 ‘mark in 1957, when he cae * Movie star Gifford, ably abetted| ma |Loss fo Indians. sone Kalin bon * Calimore at It Again Groza tied it with the extra point’ with a nine-yard field goal, % ‘*® «& drives of 69 and 60 yards for a Eagles, Dick James and Don Bos- seler scored the deciding TDs. It was the first pro gafne played on the Ui y's of Pennsylvania's Franklin Eagles’ coach Buck Shaw | Brocklin, + * x? Sued Coach Frankie Al- bert went with alternate quarter- back John Brodie in the~- late stages and San Francisco rallied for 16 points, Brodié completed 19 winning three points came with 2% minutes left, Gordy Soltau supplying a 22-year field goal, NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE E . T Pet. Pis. 0 1.000 37 01.000 24 4 aeeenwes 38532 keene a iJ 2 : a | BENE xs er ed BESEEe eee G cent eee Cleveland 30 Las Angeles 27 THIS WEEK ULE SATU! are Chi -Bears a (m) Ww gion at (N) AC PRESS. MONDAY. scored the, last Cleveland TD,} and won it a few minutes later) come-from-behind victory over the newly acquired;passer Norm Van} of 28 passes. for 244 yards. The |’ ins Fe HIGH AND WIDE — Baltimore halfback L. G. i ad pia aevdind o Dupre (45) and Detroit defensive back Terry quarter of their NFL opener at Baltimore yester- + Bay ; _Barr really did some stressing for this pass day. age rallied in the last period to win | |New verk at Ae thrown Colt quarterback Jonh Unitas in the 2nd 28-15. AP Wirephots . Stuck With Sth Place After 6-2 Kaline’s Homer Averts Shutout in Last Game of 1958 Season - |fifth place finish for ‘the Detroit Tigers was just another record book entry today, 2. #& All that remained was an un- happy post-mortem following yes- terday’s season-finale 6-2 loss to the Indians at Cleveland in which the Tigers let slip their last chance for a first division windup. With the defeat, in which Detroit was the victim in rookie Gary Bell’s 12th victory, the Tigers lost out on about $500 | apiece in- fourth-place-shares-of World Series money. Their fifth place finish was one notch lower than last year’s fourth place windup. They missed duplicating this by half a game. * * * Bell held the Tigers to six hits % |while the Indians found starter and loser Jim Bunning less than himself after only two days rest It was Bunning’s 12th defeat against “14 victories. Jim lasted only until the fourth inning. * * * Victorious in the preceding Chi- cago White Sox series, the Tigers invaded Cleveland in position to take third place and the $1,000- each series money but the Indians spoiled it all. x & & In Kaline and Harvey Kuenn they had two of the five top bat- ters in the league. Kuenn finished third at .319 and Kaline fourth at 313. : * A. + Cold Finish for Tigers i EY in NFL ea Detroit Misses. Chonce. E EF ca j : sien i E Ss & ee i af (is EE - fh q ¢ z + #E ie it i iF ae J z ‘8 oe SP@ By CHUCK ABAIR ANN ARBOR — The Michigan Wolverines. went back to the prac- tice field today for the first of four rugged workouts to be held prior to their big annual debacle against powerful Michigan State at East Lansing Saturday. Despite some impressive play in the opening day 20-19 triumph over. Southern California, ‘head . coach Bennie Oosterban and his aides realize they have their work cut out this week in prepping for the highly-rated Spartans, The defensive line, which gave up 205 rushing yards to the Tro- jans, is certain to get a lot of at- tention, Oosterbaan aya he will not com- mit himself. on possible lineup changes until he can study scout- ing reports of State’s walloping of California and look ‘over the movies of his own team’s victory. * * * The ruining of big John Herrn- stein and all around play of Brad Myers were: the bright spots in the Wolverine triumph. Herrnstein, - sidelined by in juries most of last fall and part of the current practice slate, Myers tallied the other TD and was the ‘M’ defensive leader all afternoon. The climax came when he halted the final USC threat with.a pass interception at his own Archie Floored in Altercation SAN DIEGO: Calif, (AP)-—Light heavyweight boxing champion Ar- chie Moore was credited in a po- lice report Sunday, with a bus sta- tion knockdown. But William Samuel Ross, 38 told the San Diego Union he also floored the champion. Ross told police Moore owed him back pay as an employe at the champion'’s training camp- ranch at nearby. Ramona, The al- tercation occurred when they met at the bus depot Saturday, Ross received an eye cut that required several stitches, | Ex-Scribe Opens Series. = founders of the Baseball Writers’ Assn, $f America, will throw out the first ball at the opening game of the 1958 World Series between .\the Milwaukee Braves and New DETROIT CLEVELAND abrbbi . ab rh bi poling % 30106 ‘avila 2b $116 Kuenn cf 4120 Power 3b-Ib 4010 Kaline a 4122 inoso If 210606 Groth 00600 Colavito rf 323% Harris ib 1335 Sn ef 4101 Maxwell if 4010 Wertz Ib 4120 Martin 3b 4000 Harrell 3 0006 Wilson c 4000 Nixon c¢ 4032 Veal ss 30°00 Held ss 3011 ing p 1000 Bell 4006 aHazle 1006 Totals 32696 p 0000 Aguirre p 60000 ° Susce p 6000 bOs! e 10006 Lee 4 0000 Tota 33262 7 a—Flied out for Cicotte in Sth; be Fouled out for Susce in 7th. : Seaiairsas ois ccasases 900-2 | Cleveland en eres 0 202—5 wa the Pod Detroit’ sen Cleveland and, He ar Let Gevge 4 Gievelan land 7 vi H tS canes ing (Ly — 323 4 a Fs 8 310 6 0:86 432 -1°3°6 9 re ‘1900 8-00 s s 1206 f 6 pel WwW, nw 9/ 6 2.3 } $ ¥ Lee (Minoso), PB—Wilson ya) y, iL, cKin "+ York Tetkets here Wednesday. MILWAUKEE (AP)—James €.i Crusinberry one of the two living! Wolverines Back at 30 with only 1:45 remaining in the game, Bennie just beamed when asked about Herrnstein’s return to top form after the game but said there Was numerous occasions when the line did not opent up holes for the big guy. “go for two points by passing. < -* Southern Cal went for the two- pointer following its final tally aft- er bouncing back from a 20-7 def- icit with two last period scores in a span of two minutes and 47 seconds. x &« *&. Two successive penalties had set the Trojans back to the 13 from where a pass play fell short as Herrnstein made a key tackle, seemed to ease up | Michigan + ‘With Its 13-point lead before Rex | _ Johuston’s 66-yard gallop and .an | aerial score made it a new ¥. game. : Oosterbaan got a good look at his 2nd backfield unit of Stan Nos- kin, Darrell Harper of Royal Oak, Tony Rio and Al Groce, The unit performed well paced by No@kin's five pass completions. ay Herper helped set up the “nd hig Fate REF ia z i E Southpaws poe Series ‘at Milwaukee; Started in 1957 Opener, Too first game of the 1958 World Se- Ties here Wednesday, * * * The selection of the star south- paws to open the post season was taken for granted 3 Hurlers Added to Yankee Staff NEW YORK (AP) — Don Lar sen, Tom Sturdivant and M Dickson, three right-handed pitch- ers, Sunday were added to the New York Yankees list and: pitch- er Ernie Johnson replaced ailing Joey Jay on Milwaukee's foster of World Series eligibles, The Yankees’ original list in-{ cluded 23 men, After Larsen, Stur- divant and Dickson were added. The name of Virgil Trucks was time to conform to the 25-Man | 7, » iy + Millers\Go 3 Up - MONTREAL (AP)—The’ Minne-|2°" apolis Millers of- the- American Assn. took a 3-0 lead over the Mon- League with a 42 victory Sunday F UrTY| mitted only one run, Ford (14-7) treal ‘Royals of the International |™92* even before the official announce- ‘ments, scheduled to be — some time today. * * . |. Spahn, 22-11 during the regular season, warmed up for his im- portant assignment with a six- also turned in an ifmpressive per- formance for his lead-off role with a one-hit, six-inning pérformance against Baltimore Friday. Lions-Colts Statics Balt. Det. Pirsi downs-fushing ....se00. 1 3 First downs passing ..cccs.:0+ 15 8 ‘otal first GOWNS ..ecceserves : 26 phi be © oe eecese de ewes 1166 3 Yards. passin: rtopeeeet Tot yardage pevevvenees 416 Passes attempted seoshsecvenne'43 | Passes oe gerereens 5 7 erceprveg eee etre hee ws eee P cies * oe peeens eetee Aj a tee oeeene FYards ‘penelieed ‘.2°000200227° so 8 ee ere eee e 2 ' SCORING SUMMARY eS eee neues 717) Me see 8 9 EC Baltimore-—Moore, in the Little World Series, (2), Dupre! Bera Cony ersions: Myhra (4) . opener, will face each other in the | at final quarter started the _jleft in the game. Myhra again con- verted. Midway in the 4th quarter a play Field goals; Martin (31 yards) i ~ * on * a & THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20,1988 icine honice. f | | BENJAMIN, YDIA M. (HAWLEY) Ter euer ss and Mrs. lah W. Bhellenberger: 2 dear sister of a ohn Hatch y Cole, Frances , Eliza. Witten. , ' ‘ Pattern Is Varied Arieice’ Nation. er loans in August and September showed a definite increase and collections have improved great- tions, tt. reports some customers worrying about coming inflation and talking of borrowing to buy . Fia., e lags ‘behind stock miar- says consumer confide ket activity, with borrowers still tee» Albion “iwnaciel 1 Gardens Ceme- Prices on Grains} Down Slightly May Collide taking a wait and see attitude. | now ‘to beat price hikes. ly. The average customer is buy- . ia . , : ; Alb In the Middle West; Jackson, Chicago reports improvement .in|ing more freely and able tp make : or ; Pry CRW OOD. SEPT ia ibeh Mich., reports collections in that) the credit worthiness. of applicants larger down payments, us 0 Ta Ing beloved 1 hi 3 otiny e ‘cafoiing : Helene and Ilsa : Black kwood: dear father of * * * In the ‘Far West: Los Angeles thinks the worst of delinquencies and a steady if moderate improve- ment in cash collections, Across the Mississippi, St. Louis state still a serious problem, but customers more optimistic now. In Columbus, Ohio, delinquencies Thomas T., Richard 8. and Bar- bara Anne Blackwood; also sur- vived by one granddaughter. Fue neral service will be held Wednes- Boosts Stocks | are higher, following the.,pattern| says collections are improving.|and losses is passed and confi- O ‘ day, Oct. 1, at 2 p.m. ~ |of 1950 and 1954, but loan demand) pes Moines notes a rise in loan/dence seems to be improving. A Sa Out In Atlantic Deen ons uncen) Homs is rising now—though more to buy| volume in recent weeks although] Bellevue, Wash. finance company ha cence: ee ace CHICAGO (®—Prices for grain NEW YORK Ww — The stock services than durables. many customers are still very|reports employment improving MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Hurri- { _ Honslont- Solas Benes toes. x * * careful to avoid over extention of|and customers showing willing-|futures were mostly a bit lower|canes Helene and Ilsa today gave|market moved higher in heavy) CHRISTIAN, ABEL, SEPT. 27, Evansville, Ind,, sees some, indebtedness. ness to spend but definitely de-|in ay See: on the board of| strong indication of merging into|early trading today. ieee; wits of William oad. and ' , ‘ , ; ‘ ; “ , . i William Christian ‘Jr.; measure of 16an volume upturn x * manding more value, particularly |trade today a violent “extra tropical’ storm| Key stocks rose fractions to mother, of Dou, ¢ ALS n om about a point, with a scattering of losers and unchanged prices. * * * The market was higher at the start in a rush of trading that put the ticket tape behind transac- tions for a period of 10 minutes. Prices held and in some cases| improved as turnover moderated. Douglas Aircraft leaped about 2 points following publication of a report that its Thor missile had been chosen over the Jupiter for mass production. American Telephone fell more than a point at the start, then Transaction in wheat were fair- ly active at the outset with prices ranging from a fraction lower to a fraction higher in 4 mixed trade. There was only a small amount of demand for the bread grain. Export demand, expected for ~ |sometime, continued absent. * * * Corn eased in a rather light trade. Several brokers repre- -senting northwest: interests were on the buying side at the start but a heavier wave of selling offset purchases. Christian. Funeral service will be held at Bell chapel s the piven = Hamilton Co., 0 E. Maple Ave., Birmingham, a _at 2 p.m. n Tuesday. COLEMAN, SEPT. 28, 1958. SADIE B., 154 Coleman; age 78; dear ' sister of Mrs. Helen McGau; dear i aunt of Mrs. Margaret Olds. Pu~ | neral — will be held Wednes- day, t 11 a.m. from the Secaiesa-Jetne Funerél Home | with’: armen) in Oak Hill Ceme- ay tery. rs. Coleman is at the | Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. aaa SEPT. 27, 1958, EARL far out in the nerth Atlaritic. Courses plotted by the Weather Bureau 2 would bring the hur- ricanes together possibly in the next ‘two or three days, said fore-; caster Rollo Dean: Helene today was losing hur- ricane_ characteristics but re- mained a severe storm. Ilsa was expected to decrease in strength from 100 m.p.h. top winds to around 75 m.p.h. 5 At 5 a.m., Hélene was located about 500 miles east of Portland, Maine, It was moving northeast but little improvement in collec-) -CutRate Schoo! Buildings = Off Give 2nd Rate Training NEW YORK — In the guise of “economy,” misguided foes of new school construction are depriving In Denver demand for consum-j|in autos. Small A-Bomb Exploded Over Nevada Desert ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev, (AP) —A nuclear test weapon exploded with shattering impact today over the atom-blasted sands of the Ne- vada proving ground, The device, packing half the is es one of the many examples cited in the feature, The battle against good schools dail. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, Oct. 1, at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon Puneral rung ‘ ri a vital need . power of the A-bomb that leveled e Ss t ph. ith Rev. J Deeg officiat scene way ry, (ch a, ig ot a © mh cd oe | eo ea are The startling fact that a tre-| item, confused with “frills and detonated while hanging from a) a+ in fairly active early transac-|. Ilsa was located 360 miles east = — Pas ; "cas tbeen Boece ints ante peneral Home. northeast of Bermuda. It was traveling northeastward about 25 balloon 1,500 feet in the air. : SEPT. 28. * . + = Wells, 1719 Mechanic St.; age , beloved daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Wells; dear mother of tions. Oats followed the pattern plushiness.”” In some communi- set by corn. Rye-was down frac- ties, this outlook has become so mendous trend towards cut-rate education is endangering the qual- away as. optimistic reports on greater benefits to stockholders ity of public school programs was| acute that one architect quoted |. The explosion outshown the ris-|,. ally, m.p.h, . , re. LeRoy Jones. Mrs. Licyd Rinses te on cities so cocemt! bs the article says, “I not only ing ely eek nent a heavy eos a ae The term “extra tropical,”| Were, discounted. (Maude) Staicup and Roger and national magazine. Dlustrating this| have to build-cheap schools, they |W@V€ = across the eo Near the end of the first hour|Dean said, is applied to storms} Busines’s News remained favor- here sevice wlio eld Weaner: fact, the article points out that} must also look cheap.” Newsmen clustered on a 10| heat was unchanged to % higher,/generating in temperate zones.|able on the whole and the market day. Oct. 1. at 1 |e wor treat the tle s-Gri apel with Rev. while general construction in the "|United States has increased 275 per cent during the past 20 years, work on school buildings has gone up only 150 per cent. tibictaiois the “economy drives have hit hardest in areas where greater school facilities are needed most, Influenced by the lobbying of uninformed citizens, Many communities try to placate irate taxpayers by cutting back on the Soratied “educational frills.” Schools without libraries, auditoriums or sufficient labs be- Ld of the School Facilities * Things. like painted window The story asserts that dollar and cents economies can definitely be planned so that education is not jeopardized, It takes foresight, in- telligent purchasing and the basic understanding of the differences between a ‘‘plush palace’’ and an attractive school properly equipped to teach children. : Until most of America’s com- munities come to, agree with the theory that superior school build- ings are able to provide superior education, today’s children, and to- morrow’s are the ones who will suffer. ‘|Clear Neil Watson on Burglary Charge Neil Watson, 23, of 4404 Clinton- ville Rd., Waterford Township, was released Saturday from police cus- tody on orders of the Oakland miles away felt the jolt. ‘‘Light winds carried the fallout from the mushroom cloud directly toward the observer's post. Fore- casters had warned of this. The test was the second in the current series being conducted by the Atomic Energy Commission. It has been postponed twice. - * * * President Eisenhower has pro- posed a one-year ban on nuclear tests after the completion of the current series next month. The devices being tested are smal] as atom bombs go. Today’s was rated at 10 kilotons. The em- phasis on smaller devices is seen as an attempt to develop nuclear weapons With a wider range of mil- itary uses, The test site is 90 miles from Las Vegas. December $1.95%4; corn % to % lower, December old tyle contract $1.4%4; oats % to % lower, Decem- ber 63%, rye %4 to 5g lower, De- cember $1.32%; and soybeans % to 1% lower, November $2.18%4. News in Brief Bruce A. Gregory, 21, “i, 116 N. Johnson Ave., pleaded guilty to a charge‘ of reckless driving mate morning before Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. He was fined $25 and his driving privileges suspended one week. : Floyd Brewer, 33, of 2900 St. Clair St., pleaded guilty to a drunk driving charge before Pontiac Township Justice Grant B. Gra- ham, Saturday, and paid a fine of $100 plus $10 costs. — . They sometimes are as violent as hurricanes, x *€ Both hurricanes threatened ship- ping in the north Atlantic today and the southeast portion of New- foundland was told to prepare for winds of hurricane force within hours. A line of gale force winds stretched some 1,200 miles be- — the storms today, Dean Six Persons Die on State Roads 2 Car-Train Collisions Claim Lives of Michigan was once again moving forward just below the latest record high. Coppers, electric equipments, air- crafts, rails and drugs were .gen- erally higher. Chrysler was firm but the other big three auto mak- ers were off fractions. U.S. Steel’ was up about a point. Other steels showed little change. Kennecott and Phelps Dodge were about a point higher. Higher price expectations for copper were reported. ‘Merck rose about 2. Gains of about a point were made by Balti- more & Ohio and Du Pont. Smaller gains were made by Boeing, Inter- national Nickel, Lorillard, Pfizer and American Smelting. Losses were taken by Montgomery Ward, Southern Railway, and Goodrich. New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) Figures after decimal point are eighths McCAUGHAN, SEPT. Daniel Wallace officiating. Inter.- rv in Imlay City Cemetery. Mrs. Lawrence will lie in state at _ Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. 28, 1958, &D- ward, 2100 Woodward Ave.; age 72; dear brother of Mrs. Flossie Arnott; dear uncle of. Mrs. Irene Funeral arrangements be announced later by the _ auntess Punsral Home. NICHOLS, 27, 1958, JOHN Edward, 44 Ww. Rutgers 8t.; age 58: beloved husband of Mrs. Martha Nichols; dear brother of Charles Nichols and Mrs. Dean Wilson. Funeral Sy Pd te be ac E} Cod ) Ss “3 ba) £ on as< “< of 5 e: ie oe 3 on 8, wo? 27, 1958, JOHN Burt, i Franklin Rd.; age 73; dear mother of Berci' Takalas. Puneral service will be held Tues- day, Sept. 30. at 10 a.m. from St. Vincent. de Paul Church with interment in Perry Mt.. Park Cemetery. Recitation of — ee Card of Thanks 1 frames, cheap materials and in-| County Prosecutor's Office. . ferior plum will eat more i i MSU Professor‘to Head ‘ _.. 66.7| WITH OUR DEEPEST GRATI- schoo! doll ~~ tely "thin yore Watson was believed implicated Dale E. Salswedal, 25, of 395 Residents on Weekend SS gy ee a “ pol tude, we wish to thank everyone ped, One example of this talse| rey, snare wae Reker A Tran |Portiand State College jcranger Ra., Oxford, _ pleaded tied ea HE Eee, pov aa] Bas Selb, ein uh saved, example o arceny along with Robert A, Gar- Ity ns sa lncs ee lg one : : : : It reckless driving Saturd Allis Chal .... 28.4 LOP GI 962 but doing as well as can be ex- economy was revealed in a New/rison, 22, of 274 W. Brooklyn St.,! PORTLAND, Ore. «#—Dr. Bran- See Gun tein Tastiee By the Associated Press ; Alum Lid ... 316 Lib Aesop eee pected. Gra.t Davis and Family. a there : York City community, Cutting $6,-/ and Robert A. Putnam, 23, of 244|ford Peter Millar, 44, an English Fidmar G. Stanahack and peid a) cee tate crashes killed) Amare 1133 E,@ My --- B8| WE wis TO THARE EACH AND to 000 off an initial price by using}W. Brooklyn. professor at Michigan State Uni- fine ct $40 lus $10 t P six persons over the first weekend — oan Hates oa joew's, 5 ; ee ness and help in our recent loss oan de fiber Statements taken from the three| versity, has been appointed presi-|“"® so of autumn. - Am Mla Pay 5.7 Lorillard mss 6 George Lamson, “Specia ent gency 2 by the prosecutor showed that Wat-jdent of Portland State College. William L. Burks, 27, of 3707|. The victims included a Gary,/Am N Gas -. 603 MaUSares? °° 29 the Voorhels-Siple Puneys! Home. , hopes son was not implicated in any of} Millar’s appointment was an-/ Covert Rd., Waterford Township, Ind., youth who died in a head-on|4m Te) & Te] 1914 Manning. : 26.3) | Mrs. Edna Lawson &. Family. e in the the crimes although his truck was|nounced Saturday by Dr. John fined $100 plus $10 Sat.|crash near Hil]sdale in which sev-|Am™ Tob .... $8.6 Matis fo. --. 10.) I WISH TO THANK OUR Mi MANY , - 2 : was plus $10 costs ae Anaconda... 55 ay rs Friends, neighbors and relatives 2 used in the larceny without his}Richards, chancellor of the Oregon urday after pleadin ilty t en others were injured. Armco St! .... 59.7 Mead Cp ..... 46.4; - for their many acts of kindness Ss a knowledge. ay r pleading guilty to a ; Armour & Co 18.6 Merck... . 714 and floral offerings during my pee : System of Higher Education, who | grynk driving charge before Pon-| Two Michigan residents were | Atchison... 3.1 Mergen Lino . 446 recent bereavement of my _be- _ It's already there is Washington, hollow doors buckled under| Warrants were issued against the|said Millar will take over the post ; fe ete say MMT CD BS. 166) = loved wife, Mrs. Charles M. "eThe. ., with the e er showing . Over-all, the article tiaec Township Justice Grant B.| killed in a car-train collision | 8* nd Mpls Hon . 94.4 ora R. Barker) Joki A special D. C., with the consumer other two men for grand larceny.|next February. He will replace Graham seth Steel... 484 Minn M&M ... 924) thanks to the Pontiac Police Dept. more confidence and willingness the attempt to save|They will be tried im Pontiac Mu-|John Cramer, who resigned be- . . near Mammend, Ind., in which 2. | Beers 9 ee 33} and Fontiac Fire Dept. Also Rev. Ai de ae far This Ww a companion also died. They were | Borg Wa ™ |. 976 Monsen Ch... 35.1 Tom Malone and Pursiey Funera! to incur debt, money was far more costly. nicipal Court Wednesday at 10 a.m. cause of health earlier this year./_ Rummage Sale Wed, Oct. Ist.) Pa et. Holly, and |Srsee Ml... a7 Moot Ward --. 22 | _Home. Charles M, "Joti, ———— Congregational Church’ of pirm. Eth Sutton, ag L Teckson, [Brak Bolte |. 322 Motorola ..0:: «7's Funeral D ee Doors open at 8 a.m. ood-| Daniel Phillips, 24, of Jackson. | 5044 Co"... 37, Mueller Br ... 303 unera irectors A i . a - Murra 6. 29.2 : — ward. adv.| The small foreign car in which [Burroughs /-...544 NTR? °- i76| a HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE” j : re : they were riding collided with Campb Soup : 444 _ —* orc 78 COATS ) ‘ : * . * oi ry... ee : eee ye ‘Hard to Pin Him Down __| a freight train. Gan Pec". det, Nat Qype". |) =) FUNERAL HOME | z ; | pita Tl .. 177 Nat Lead ..... - 2 a Drayton Plains OR 3-7757 ee ES. KETTERING, England (UPI) Another traffic death was that of sete oe Be noe peor He al | | Ly ore eek Be Gan Leslie W. Mayers, 26, of Jackson.|Cater ‘Trac || 3 Nor Sta Pw .. 206/ 4), SPARKS a ae oe me 2 @ied Sunday in Univers! _|Ches & Oh .. 625 Ohio Ol] .... 40.6 & c He di unday in University Med-| Ghrysier 373 e : council nine pounds ($25) for |. Chrysler ..... 82.3 Owens Cng_ .. 55 fos : ical Center, Ann Arbor, of injuries; Gites Sve... 58-2 Owens Ill Gl 72.7 ee) : | parking his car in a downtown i Clark Eoulp .. 524 pee G & El.. 573 a ae : 1 ; suffered Sept. 3 when his car skid-/ Cluett Pea. 43 3 P oe area, But the council probably KIG-'Goca Cola .114 Pan AW Alr.. 21 elso HOME oe : ded into a ditch. Col Palm |.) 70.6 Pan Epi ..... 52 “Designed for Fur erals™ ok : will never collect. The car was Gol Brad A.) 35.1 Param Pict .. 44 | parked in -Januery! The Associated Press fatality) Gclum ‘Gas 30 Parke Da ....1094 Voorhe Si ] ee | count began at 6 p. m. Friday and|€ Pls... $8 Penney, JC .. 90.2 €S-01ple : \ eee | NOTICE TO BIDDERS — Sealed pro-lended at midnight Sunday. Consum Pw 54.2 Pepsi Cola $f 23.5 FUNERAL HOME 4 |posals wil) be received by the Board of Con PwPf 4%4 94.6 Pfizer 854 Ambulance Service —P} cs A q —- — sed _ — * * * ont get aoe ss Phelps | "56 we rE 2a" or Motor a : ty o an chigan, at their o q : ‘ ‘on ‘an . @. | 2420 Pontiac Lake Road, Pontiac, Micn-| Mrs. Bernice Tompkins, 75, of Goat COPAS . 118 Pilsby Mulls. 34.7 =| | ee Scaard Time, Ocaber ibs and willlyhen ‘she’ was struck by a ear |Gonbcang’< He Paw Ol nc. Sti] meemeneey Rots S : when she was struck by a car|c Rng .. 28. re ‘Oil ...., 8 j =) pau ereeee oe ee ar = ko hil f Corn Pa ME G85 REA crane gia, PERRY MT PARR CEMETERY. all Steer at Fuga inbna? ‘Mm [nsag Ber home while crossing a Ee He Ret Bate | pyran ot ere oe oa rod. jg <° |Deere ....: sb 46a sees : Pi t No. TM-270: GRANGE HALL Reyn Met ... 64.6) ened ao ROAD. Cu aie on Grange Hall Road at}. Carl F. vcttare, 50, of Detroit, Det Bate : ors Rey Tob B .. 89.2| WHITE “CHAPEL, TWO GRAVES, ae a Wolfe Road 1.5 miles west of M-15. In : : Dow Chem "| 66 Royal Dut .... 45.1 $125 Three, $150 LI 2-2167 -of | : ‘ | Groveland Township. was killed when his truck collided DuPont ......199 Safeway St .. 33 oe. va _ as | Materials and quantities invelte con with an eastbound New York Cen- | East Air t ; Boy Scovilt aa . so —_ ie : pote 450 tons efi kiuadapae agg sake tral passenger train Saturday at a Eaton Mfg .:.: tea rs Roeb ,, 334 The Pontiac Press — spies Sous Een ee gag|Palroad crossing near Albion, | AMG “S224 Sinnott of” 7 rojec 6. = = . | @&mer Rad .... 87 teir; + 60 s es ROADVERDALE from Duck Lake to| _ dward-L. Sanders, 43, of St. jgrie RR .....: 12 Socony 1417 FOR WANT ADS + ig YY ‘Lester Louis (Mich.), was thrown 65 |Pr-Cell-o |... 442 Bou ta oe DIAL FE 2-8181 ; | imeree from Civeranks (¢ Jackson’ | fect aid injured fatally whee kis Pood Mach ... 624 Sperry Rd : 19.3 7“ | Total distance of 0.50 mile. car left M46 and rolled over five |Preept Sul ||. 937 «Sta Ol Cal || saa From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. fe In Highland Township. Prueh Tra .... 174 . 47, ~ "- } | agergine and > ager pe pes eral miles east of Saginaw Saturday * ee A ise Bed On rt] - or all errors should be re excavation, " [Tis cu. pao. af agategate curtase couree| J00n F' Hertler, 28, of Jackson,!Gen prngu 23. stevens. se” 83 ported immediately. The |1612 lin. ft. of corrugated culvert pipe.|died when his car hit a bridge|Gen Flee ..... 68.2 stud Pack .4 8.7 cathe te usta athe 1 frees to be removed, 3 catch besins| abutment. on. M60 about threejGen mins”. ste Sump, Sts than to eancel the charges an neidental wor d uther Pap .. 4 Z | Project. No. . TM-285: BUCKHORN , |Gen Motors .. 474 Swift & Co |. for that portion of the first ILAKE ROAD trom Fenton Road south miles east of Jackson Saturday. [Gen Tel .....’ 522 Siyy El Pd. 442 Soortion of the sdvertise : : 2 fe ae -1.00 mile in Rose Township. Billy M. Cobb, 19, of Gary, Ind., /Gen Eas . Hp} Texas Co .... 743 dered tipo ra on ren : “ e e |" Materials and quantities involed con-|was killed Saturday when the car Gillette uo a Tex G Sul 23 6 error. When” daneemanions ~ |Sist of 4173 cu. yds. earth excavation, 7 : Goebel Br.) 2.7 hextron 16.3 fre made be sure to eet a3 trees to be removed, 220 lin. ft. of cor-|ta Which he was riding collided Goodrich .... 667 ied Pg 56 vour “kill number.” Wo = f . ;Iugated culvert pipe, 2563 cu. yards of/with another on M99 two miles|Goodyear _..., 92.4 Edeempodh Ww neg 1G adjustments will be elven E | segregate surface course and incidental south of Hillsdale. Seven other per gree me ras ses 2.2 Pransamer 274 without ft. E . : ; . wo! 2d “|Gt No Ry .... 45.3 twenty Cen |. 322 . : Project No. TM-286: CONKLIN ROAD rex : Greyhound ... 15.6 == 34: Closing time for edvertis @ ifrom Paul Blvd. north to Forest Lake sons were hurt in the smashup. Gulf Oil ...,.. 116.2 Oe cntdc” hes ments containing sen cues = ; | Drive: @.36 mile in Orion Township * ke. * Hersh Choe ... 63.2 On Pac ae jercer than rexelar este inortheast of the age 0. 2 rion. |) UDO Rae [T2OMBUR ne eee p ype noon ie ars al a e or | The materials and quantities involved Donald Huber, 41, .of Mount/Hooker wi‘... 342 Unit Air Lin. zi day orevious to nublication. (~ \ leonsist of 3645 cu. yds. earth excava-|Pleasant, was killed Sunday when|!!! Cent. ..... > 44 ounit. Fruit “|! 493 |tioh, 40 trees to be removed. 362 lin. ft./his car and another aut llided — ey +++ 234 Un Gas PCp.. 337 Transient Want Ads may jof corrugated culvert pipe, 1200 cu. yds. 4 se eid) es A ee: Are 3 Rub (407 ne cancelled up to 9:30 a.m. ‘aggregate base course, 500 tons bitum-| head-on on M20 in Isabella County. |tnspir cop |’. 354 US Steel 79.3 ce as of publication after : 19 jews aggregate surface course and in- : Interlak Ir |. 24.5 Seadl 7 Ssisisie 26.3 @ first insertion. ‘cidental work. - ae : a al ..... : il S & e | Proposal bianks and specifications will Chi nis = oo eth Belen i: ne CASH WANT AD RATES |be furnished upon request. t a : el .. 25.8] 0 ij a 4 4 () ( , ne certified or cashiers heck dn = ivalrous Youngster aa Sooas ne Wests A Bk 25.1) Lines Day bDays tDave t e 6) « F . 5 Tenective bigs 8°". Gets Freeze Treatment jin: tee rai’: ara White Mot. 327 3 150 270 3-98 | Project No. TM reed Man 44.1 Woolworth 47.6. ’ 7 . , . . . 270, GRANGE HALL ROAD. $250.00 ; Jones & L .... 54.6 2 6 § 225 4.05 6.00 If you are planning to buy or build a new home or to ‘Project_No. LONDON (UPI) — Sever year-|Melsey May. 84 Yaregna Tin + 31s fer aa . . ; ; le a, DUCK LAKE ROAD, etc... 750.00'0ld Eugene Morey decided to be|Kennecott .... 95.4 Zenith Rad ...121.2 8 360 §=66.48 «= (9.60 7 . ry * ‘nca : s “ 4 Tojec A i i improve your present home, come in and see us today! | 285, BUCKHORN LAKE ROAD.. 600.004 gentleman and help the lady in STOCK AVERAGE 482 ee E ° Pigs ee — 150.00 distress, But all he got was a froz- uNEW YORK, Sept. 29.—iCompiled by P } siesels e ssociate Tess). treierane LiL... beets oe Fees ; a All proposais must be ‘plainly marked en mitt — his own. 30 15 15 60 -~_ ‘ ‘ ra aa Pag AOA Aa 7 ee, —} §§ as.to.their contents. . | The. Jady. had. put a. coin_in a Indust. Rails Util. Stocks ts . ME LOAN S O iT PI \" The Board reserves ihe right to Telect| street slot-machine to get a carton[Rrey, GY 3 MET Ie es irs fo Box s = I | 1¢ guy of all propeskls or th waive. de: geta Week ago .....282.0 1206 838 1919 At 10 | : Cg tetige gir e enlars tacary ety tia ire aS rege cae ‘in the opinion o e Board, is in the ' re) ven e 248. ry 165. \ ‘ as + |best interest and te the advantage of the milk carton didn t. . ee High ...... 285.1 123.2 84.4 193.7 seice ts the righ Al NTRACTS ie Sree ch cra] Rene careening pt Die Mee band tole aero ea te Gt — i 4 and of the County of Oakland, Micni ee He = it 22 the 1957 Low ..226.0 78.2 66.2 180.9 boxes: 12, 21, 25, 28, 32 i . ; een. refrigerator — and couldn't ge » 6, 12, 21, 25, 28, 32, & | BODMMISSIONSRS OF “cael it out, Eugene’s hand got colder . 35, 56, 60, 61, 63, 64, 74, 2 . . z | COUNTY | OF OAKLAND;jand ‘colder. The rescuers had to Dow Chemical Opens & 76, 103, 104, 105, 107, 115. ] 7 ERSO batter off the top of the machine * . acai rant npreaeeoescemstare AL) | ROBERT ©. FELT with 7. shovel "hes heave out, New Plant in Midland LEE 0. BROOKS , _Help Wanted Male 6 Sept. 29, :s8|dozens of cartons of milk before; MipLAND (UPI) — Dow Chemi- wt aha OTICE OF HEARIN freeing Eugene’s hand. cal Co. opened a semi-commercial "AD BOOK MATCHES - nds easter cesta at eee g UEene Seer ton And the Plant for pharmaceuticall EART-OR Fut, UME 1 Zi min, rar Bi i SY -lO-Ke ec oO a Will bold a public hewrtne ad tre Wibomt|20 minutes in the icebox. And the! and food chemical, aromatic and| — brings. fast. dally commissions! field Township Hall, 4200 Teiegraphjlady in’ distress, according to Eu-|cogmetic raw m aterials in Midland Show Posed Live Model Glamour J Road, on the 6th day of October, 1958, ene, got her carton of milk and Girls; four-color Tilustro-Ad, Hill- a. ty 8:00 o'clock pim., to consider the 8 are Ds off, without ever’ sayi today: . Bililes, dotene others; 205. i ’ \ Owing: 8 or ck sales, stomers Home Office 761 W. Huron Street _Moving a frame one-story structure . saying,| “A spokesman éaid volume pro-| 9c; tnt ett! Buft ee a6 “Thank. Lot 60 of Supervisor's Plat No. 2, focatea| you. duction of ‘four to six different = FAST TOPenOn knee _— L oe z : west corner e tenc = Downtown Branch Rochest B = and Rockwell Ave., Section 4. - [products can be “undertaken at one} - 8. Greenwood, Chicago 19, ester ranc : ae | Bloomfield Township. Last Word on Econora time at the new plant . persons interested are requested y Prodt . . . 16 E. Lawrence Street 407 Main Street : ‘° be JOOM# FIELD TOWNSHIP ZON- LONDON UP s ri for the first week A MAN oe fe i ING poaRD OF APP. : (UPI) — sign in an }was to include a new compound to wanted for cutsWe employment, CHA AD M. RITCHIE, | uridertaker’s window: ‘Pay now (kill the sea lamprey and a flavdr- Clean working conditions Hours Chairman unlimited. Apply 1064 A Huron lad if ) gept. 15,29, 58. — go later. ant and, odorant. between 10 and 11:30 a _PONTIAC, MICHIGAN ’ a : hii MONDAY, SEPTEMBER | 29, 1958 a -- Today's Television Programs -- iA Ln + Channel 2~WJBK-TV Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV _ * ag pee Cha..el 9 CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS :00 (7) Curtain Time, Comedy, (9) Popeye. (4) News: Williams. ' (2) Racket Squad. 10:45 (7) Sports Parade. 10:55 (7) Weather. 11:00 (7) Soupy'’s On. (9) Theater: Jeanette Mac- Donald, “Firefly.” ('45). (4) News: Westerkamp. (2) News: LeGoff. rt Oy, NR etre. epee ting , 5 6:10 (4) Weather: Eliot. 6:15 (4) Box Four. 30 (7) Comedy (cont.) (9) Farmer Alfalfa. Cartoons. alae (4) Life of Riley. * ye Ss. Comedy. (Re-run.) (2) Sports. (2) News: LeGoff. 11:15 (4) News: Eliot. (2) Weather. a A al i a 11:25 (2) Nightwatch The “ er. F >) W Jean Simmons, “Affair with a 6:40 (2) Weather. Stranger.” - (°53). 6:45 (2) Lion headliners. Budd . Lynch with Lions ‘coaches, players. 11:30 (7) Night Court. (9) Theater (cont.) (4) Jack Paar. Director John Huston. : (2) Nightwatch (cont.) sii ae EG et BE otto et Aes sini 7:00 (7) Mama, I Remember Ma- ma series with Peggy Woods. (9) State Trooper. (4) Death Valley. Lawyer must decide whether to de- fend man‘he hates. (2) Big Story. (2) Youth Bureau. Officers|’ halt teenage fight at rock and roll dance. (9) Million Dollar Movie. Henry Fonda, ‘‘Magnificent Dope.” ("34). (4) Haggis Haggis (color), — Quiz. (2) Name That Tune. Quiz. (7) Jubilee U.S.A. Red Foley |9 with country music. (New time.) (9) Movie (cont.) - - (4) Restless Gun. Orphaned boy seeks revenge. (2) The Texan. Rory Cal- houn in new western. In episode, he battles lynch mob leader (Neville Brand) to saye friend, who shot a - from death. nan TUESDAY MORNING _ (2) Meditations, (2) On The Farm Front. 7330 (2) Cartoon Frolics, (7) Cartoon Carnival. (2) Captain Kangaroo. (7) Big Show. (2) Cartoon Classroom. (4) I Married Joan. (2) News. 8:00 (2) Jimmy Dea:. (4) Romper Ruom. ss (7) Our Frietid Harry, 10:00 (2) For Love or Money. (4) Dough-ReMi, ~~ 10:25 (9) Billboard. 10:30 (2) Play Your Hunch. (4) Treasure Hunt. 8:30 (7) Bold Journey. New Zea- land. a4 (9) Movie. (9) Movie (cont.) 11:00 (2) Arthur Godfrey. (4) hia ghana are ts : @) Price Is Right. out people are willing to to gain possession of “‘The| {1:25 (7) News. % 11:30 (2) Top Dollar. Golden Owl." (2) Father Knows Best. Bet- ¢@) Concentration: (1) Ricky the Clown, ty’s attempt at “‘sisterly 11:45 (7) Noontime Comics. love” are regarded with sus- TUESDAY AFTERNOON picion. . 9:00 (7) Voice Program. Latin- 12:00 (2) Love of Life. American Night with Xavier Cugat and orchestera, sing- + Pagans ir -spctaiaas! ES Side Story” singer and | dancer Chita Rivera, Tito (4) Tic Tac — Guizar. 12:15 (9) Song Shop. (9) If Had Million. (4) Mr. Pete Gunn. Xylo- phone player is murder sus- pect. (2) Top 10 Lucy Shows, ‘‘Ten- nessee Ernie’s Visit’’ upsets Lucy, Desi. (Re-run.) | $30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) It Could Be You (Color). (7) The Erwins. (9) Mary Morgan. 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. 1:00 (2) Ladies Day. — (7) My Little Margie. (9) Movie. (4) Amos 'n’ Andy. (2) As The World Turns. (7) Topper. (4) TV Reader’s Digest. (4) Faye Elizabeth. * 9:30 (7) Polka-Go-Round. (9) Front Page Challenge. (4) Theater. Paul Douglas, Patty McCormack in fall premiere. (2) Frontier Justice. Home- steader cattleman split over land. Lloyd Bridges. “ 10:00 (7) Arizona Guns. “Bounty|::99 (2) Our Miss Brooks. Hunter.” “ (7) Movie. (9) News. (4) Truth or Consequences. (4) Playhouse. Marilyn. Er- _ skine, ‘“‘Odd Ones.” 2:30 (2) H Party. (2) Studio One. Nina Foch, py ieetle aoe ‘color). Lili Darvas, Rod Taylor in “Image of Fear.” Exiledi2:50 (9) News. queen and family find out revolution will restore them|3; 1 (2) Big Payoff. to power in native land. (4) Today Is Ours. (7) American Bandstand. 10:15 (9) Weather. (9) Movie, 10:20 (9) Film Fare. 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. ~ (4) From. these Roots. 10:30 (7) News: Daly. (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Charter Boat, aa ae? (4) Play (cont.) 4:00 (4) Queen for 2 Day. (2) Studio (cont.) _ (7) Bandstand. mie) (2) Brighter Day (2) Secret Stor. . (2) Edge of Night. (4) County Fair. (9) Time. (2) Susie. (4) It’s Great ‘Life. (9) Looney Tunes. (2) Bandstand. : (4) (color) George Pierrot. (7). Adventure Time. Bleachers Fall, 4:30 5:30 DANNY THOMAS Self-Seeker, Howl Accusers TV Star Goes All Out to See Hospital Built to ‘Pay Debt’ HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Sooner or later every movie and TV star who donates time ‘or money to. charity is accused of using his} altruism for: one purpose: Pub-| we anny Thomas is no exception. ‘ He's ‘stl still smarting from a news-|} paper dispatch written about him| ” almost a year ago, And the closer his St. Jude|* Hospital. if Tennessee comes into| =" ' being, the more vulnerable he| = —> becomes. , The upshot of it is that the dark- 10 Hospitalized Blamed in Crash of 200 at Football Game MOBILE, Ala, (UPI)—The Ladd Stadium maintenance supervisor said a portion of the field’s wooden bleachers collapsed during Saturday night’s Alabama-Louisi- “Every ambulance in the city, including one from Brookley Air Force Base, were sent here,”’ added Tuthill. Manint said he and police officers had tried. to evacuate the bleacher section before the collapse occurred after they noticed the stands were begin- ning to lean. He said they were only able to get a few persons to leave. A few minutes before the tem- porary stands fell, he said, 1,500 spectators were evacuated from another section which had also been sinking. British Answer jto Elvis Presley Tapped by Dratt LONDON (UPI)—British rock 'n’ roll star Terry Dene has received his army call-up papers. But unlike Elvis Presley, Terry doesn't intend to go peacefully. The Empire News Reporter quoted Terry Sunday as saying: “They haven't nabbed me yet.” “T can’t stand being shouted at — never could since I was a kid. I ran away from school when the teachers bawled me out and IT may do the same again,” he said, Dene went on, ‘Look, mate, I’m sick. I’m all nerves. If I go into the army I'd feel like a trapped animal. - “And I reckon that everybody should be free in this life. If after six weeks I know the army isn’t for me then I'll come home. ‘Maybe they think I'll be good for recruiting. Maybe they'll put me on a poster,” the paper quoted Dene as saying. “Look whet a lift the American Army is getting because Elvis Presley has jomed up.” -- Today's Radio Programs == WPON. News. Bee 9:30—WJIR, Jack Harris CELW. News M, Labbit . WIR, (08) CKLW, (800) WwW, (se) WOAR, (1180) WXYZ, (1270) WPON, 41460) WIBK, (490) TONIGHT 11:00—WJR, News WXYZ, Breakfast Club 1:3) WWJ, Bandstand CKLW News, David Ww Wows. | oomad Sr. News WXYZ. News Surrel) WJBK, News, George Cc eatier, Davies WwW, News CKLW. News, Sports . WCAR, News Martyn CKLW. News, Cha WJBK, Stereophonie WPON Bob Lark rable 4 News, Don McLeod WCAR, New 2: do—wsr. Rt, to Happiness WCAR, News, Bennett WPON. Music’ WWJ News Storie CKLW News, Davies eise-K5p. Dieser Gets 11:30—WJR, Music WIJBK, Reid : 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godfre wk Bo we — ell — ww ewe , True Story 7 wa oe a s Lie sed CKLW, News, News, Chase TUESDAY MoRNING =| Sei’ News Mery Morgan| CKLW, shiftbreak, Davies _ WCAR. Pane! Aports File W, News, R eid. Pp WRYE- News: Bhorr f 6: 00 WIR, “voice of sot were WPON Chuck Lewis : 8:00—WJR, He 2:00-— WIR, Guest douse WXYE, Fr Wott 10:30—WW4J, Don Ameche WWws. Matinee, CKLW. Lewis 2. WIBK News. CKLW News Davies WXYZ. Ed McK: WCAR, Rows, 2 Patrick WCAR, Nowe, Sherk an 11:08~R, Whisperine Sts. SoBe Shiftbr et Davies WEGR. Cesanie on eer Ww, News, French = WEON Sim Ameche’ w 1:20 —WW), 3 Star Extra | CerW hoon ft pavid | CKLW News, ernie Ford Gaew Bud avis Wenn Rees CR | Weam Neve artes | S20aWUR, Mouse Party WPON. Jim Casey ' ‘Sports WPON Chuck Lewis Ww, Won Woman _ cog = tie? | 1: Wi tee nee 11:30—-WJR. Time. for Music = ewe, Chase ww rte WW, News, Cederburg 4:00—WJIR. Parade of Band WIR, News, Woll CRLW. News, Davies ww vahe s $:30—WJR, answer Please CKLW News Toby David XYZ, ba oe WWJ, Nightline wok as ae George aaa Wek, ews: ieieod _— . i CKLW Godfrey 9:00—WIR World Tonight WBON ‘Bob p tark TUESDAY AFTERNOON | WCAR. as 2: 2—-WIR, Music Hall WPON Kinnon- WPON. Kew ‘show wxvz, wa. Wolt 12:00—-WIR, News, Wells ‘ : CKLW. David ww sa, Cederbere 4: er, Music Hall e190 war Capitol WsBK soy Georne cae Mo Bhorr vestock News Chase LW. World Today 8:00-WIR, News, B. Guest WoaR™ News. Pare w ) FL sound oft WWJ, News, Roberts A Stereo Wwa. News ‘om CELW. News, Pavia WXYZ, ye 10;09--WIR. Orchestra N Bob Lark 12:30—WJR, Time Out, Music Fone News, McLeod WXYZ, News, Shorr CAR News, Tenn. Ernie GRY Roo Ree. Koow les Tt Rng Mov , CKLW ievn, Davies = CKLW. v! ql + WIBK. News: cents WWJ. News, Maxwell 5 Wx¥e’ Ne we he Kensie roe WW. News be £0 Wik 4 3 Mrs, Page ae Reve weak net 7 ews. wean. News Ate: wis, ey Elisabeth VPON, Bob Lark WPON, Bort rts Siants _ effective 51 a \ ¥ — Princess Me eg Going to Visit Bachelor King LONDON (®—Princess Marga- ret i going to spend the next —and her big date is bachelor King Beaudoin. Margaret’s rejected suitor, Group Capt. Peter Townsend, an old Brussels boy friend, doesn’t even seem to be in her engage- ment book. Informed sources say. Townsend, who has made Brus- sels his self-exiled home, is not in the city. * * * It was from the gay capital of Belgium that Townsend once paid court to Margaret by telephone ‘and letters. That wag when he was air attache at the British Em- bassy, a job to which he was hurried from London te get him away from Margaret, Few, if any people, are specu- lating on any love match be- tween Margaret. and Baudouin, ' but certain facts about them stand out like diamonds on a Margaret is 28, unmarried, rich, a royal princess with no apparent suitors in sight. Baudouin is 28, well-off and one of the world’s few remaining kings with no girl friend in sight. But—there are also certain fatty that might discourage any romantic coupling of Mar- garet’s and Baudouin’s names. He is a Roman Catholic. She is an Anglican Protestant. Baudouin is a shy young man who likes fast cars and golf. His tastes in music run to the classi- cal. - Margaret is a stylish sophisti- cate, bored by sport or automo- bile talk. Her musical tastes run to Dixie land jazz and the bright music of American musicals. She likes dancing and night clubs. At a quick look—hardly a wife for a tired: young monarch to come home to. Varying Layer of Peat Covers Northern Ireland A survey by students of Queen's University, Belfast, shows that posits are “blanket bog found on high moorland, The | mainder, about 100,000 acres, “basin bog,"’ usually found in - leys or other depressions. St. Lawrence Seaway Uses Much Concrete more—than~ three way and Power Projects. went into the Long Sault Spillway Dam, the Iroquois Control_Dam and the Massena Intake Structure, 550-pound slab, three days in romantic Burssels ' lneirat entertainer whose weekly television show is back this fall on CBS-TV. is cautious whenever the subject a up for public discussion. ce ‘T’ve been accused of using it as a gimmick,” Thomas said, “as a means of building a high rating on my show.” Nothing could be further from the truth, Thomas says. The comedian soon may be sub-| ject to additional criticism on the] subject. Music from “The Jazz Singer,” sung by Thomas, has been issued on a special record which will be sold on behalf of the hos- pital project. * * wv It’s inevitable that some people will doubt that all of the proceeds of the $5 record will be going to charities. (Half of the profit will go to the hospital and the’ other half will revert to individual ties sponsoring the sales of the record throughout the U.S.) Thomas hopes to raise a final $500,000 for the hospital by the ‘time construction is begun in .November. During the last six years Thomas and some of his show business friends have raised $1,250,000 for the hospital which |- will specialize in the free treat- ment of leukemia-stricken chil- dren. Patients will be admitted regardless of race, color, creed or financial status. Thomas has been fund-raising since 1940 when he hit a low period in his entertainment career. and, as a devoted Catholic, prayed for a sign from St. Jude, the patron saint of the hopeless. When he returned home’ a short time later there were two telegrams waiting for him, both offering jobs. His career took an almost imme- diate turn for the better and since |- then has surged upward at a steady rate. . “The hospital is my way of saying ‘thank you’ for all that I have come to be,’’ Thomas said. The entertainer has not limited his charity work to his own project, however. Every year-he receives hundreds of pleas for assistance and he estimates hé has worked for “almost every major organiza- tion and charity in the United States.” His wife, Rosemarie, says she’s fully convinced her husband must have a terrible guilt complex the way he rarely says no to a good BELFAST, Northern Ireland —|cause. x« * * But that’s all changing now, about one fifth of the area of|Thomas said. “I’m limiting myself Northern Ireland is covered with|to carpal s wee If you —_ a layer of peat varying in thick-|carefu you spread yourse too ness from a few inches to 40 feet. |thin. I don’t want the ‘public to| About 500,000 acres of these de-|Say, ‘Oh, no, not Danny Thomas * —. peat|again,’ every time they see me in a relatively thin layer, usually;make an appeal for funds.” 5'Plans ‘Unified Dress’ for Egyptian Workers CAIRO — If plans now afoot are earried out, all the workers in Egypt will soon’ be wearing a standardized uniform, The Minis- MASSENA, N, Y, (UPI)—It took itry of Social Affairs has approved million cubic |the introduction of a \yards of concrete to build the U.S. dress’ and -has asked the Egyptian portions of.the St. Lawrence Sea-| Industries Federation and employ- “unified ers to adopt it in their establish- About two million cubic yards|ments, The new dress — shirt and trou- sers or an-overall to replace the traditional flowing garment known enough concrete to provide every|as the galabia—will be introduced resident of New York state with a|first in towns and then in rural aréas, ACROSS 1 God of the hes 20 Oke + a pa 14 Moon goddess 15 Indian weight 46 Bands of tissue 48 We mg ye a _ ei eccrine 3 21 Office holders 5 give forth 323 Astronomy m 34 Charm 35 Secondary 37 30 Is “indebted 40 Roman road ‘ Blackbird ‘Draw forth 6 Straightened 49 Make 89 Dash “4 Little - 83 Not mythical gh 54 Be d 56 Bea eagle - 57 Furtive - DOWN me 7. Biblical’ name 8 Vigilant 9 Roman queen of the gods — Steer bt] if “4 Of fact day food 19 Up to the time- 1 Go by 2 Nautical . term 3 Greek z mythical self-lover - “ arr ; Rae } 2 - 24 Habitat plant - | creemns Corridor Capitel of 42 Alwa: ays Tele a 8 Surreal ist 2 whiteness tanga meee 38 Back talk (eoll,) 31 _. . home, _ as ird Critics Ripping Denny Thomas for Works o + Elaine's Making Sure She Won't Be on Reliet By EARL WILSON - ~~ MONDAY — Box- with brains. too!) Because you called Show rest of the WILSO was going to happen. split 3 for l... what do I do—go on relief? “When I first went to Hol darling,’ with rounded lips. from this.” 7 It'd be strange,. wouldn't for her money? cigarets? WISH I'D SAID THAT: car will last you a lifetime.” T-year-old son, “Tommy, I’ve NEW YORK — I just interviewed a Hollywood actress xk *« * ? Beautiful Elaine Stewart, whose curves rival Marilyn Monroe’s and decorate many a magazine, has oil well interests in Texas, real estate in Beverly Hills and Palm Springs, and chunks of good dividend-paying stocks. (Such a figure, and a head for Pica “I got into it when things teppaned at MGM and they began cutting down,” Elaine, who's from Montclair, N. J., told me. “I'd been wanting to try it, anyway. a town called Hollywood and a thing “Besides I thought ‘it would keep me from getting a neurosis worrying about what * * * “And I just happened to hit it lucky. One ef my stocks I picked up some land in Palm Springs and you know-what that’s doing. . Was crazy to invest in oil but you can ask my bank in Abilene where I have an interest in four going.wells... _ ‘So now the attention’ 's reversed: Elaine ocks upon acting | as the thing she wants to do but isn’t sure she can. paisa? “Now I don’t think I'll ever eat my heart eut thinking ~ one of these days I'll be old and it'll all be over and then realistic coaching,” she remembered, “It was the year every- body wore dresses without underwear and sald ea te x * * “Life isn’t ‘Ooooooch, darling,’ all the time. Part of the} course was learning to walk. When the coach said; “To-/ morrow, darling, we rs I said, ‘Dear God, take me away/ x * Elaine may not have learned to walk but ‘she took a) ‘walk, anyway—out of the course. She’s just gone back to Beverly Hills—“to clear up some things’—and may come’ back here and do B’way shows and TV. : WILSON © 17 SET DC — ELAINES MAK- can get so wrapped up with Business that you forget the world.__ . Many people said I | lywood, I got some pretty un-| 4 | it, if somebody married her) EARL’S PEARLS: Have you heard about the Bway| character who used to, be a chain-emoker—then switched to “If you'r re careless enough, your TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: A man in Minneapolis told his a surprise. Mother found a tiny baby brother for you in the garden this morning. Why don't you write sister the good news?” The father sneaked | a peek at the letter which said, “Dear Sis: buck. It’s a boy!” (via Oscar Jay). (Copyright, 1958) You owe me a/ Morning Thirst Lands Driver in Jail 10 Hours MAPLEWOOD, N. J. (UPD— Warren Dixon, 21, was thirsty. _§o he ended up in jail for 10 hours. Dixon, en route home from a party in the early morning dur- ing the weekend, stopped at a closed service station and tried to get a soft drink from a ma- chine. Dixon inserted a nickel. Nothing came out. Dixon started to bang and jig- _ gle the machine... Out came two policemen from the shadows an arrested him .for attempted larceny. * * Ten hours later Dixon was freed when sfation owner Thom- as Maione told the police the machine was not working. Former AF Engineer Builds Plane at Home CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI)—Ray Looft, a former Air Force flight engineer, has built his own light plane in the garage of his home. And it flew on the first try. The single-seat craft, with an 85-horsepower engine, has a 22- labor Party Asks « Quemoy Evacuaon . SCARBOROUGH, England Py —The annual convention of Brit- - ain’s Labor party today called for the Generalissimo. . cession of. The was only one dissenting: - vote, “I cannot accept that Britain's ,, attitude toward America should be one of obsequious silence when we disagree with them,” leader Hugh Gaitskell told the delegates. = “We cannot and we will not be a party to a war designed to up- hold and maintain dictator Chiang ” on the offshore islands.” The temporary chairman of the~ party earlier accused Prime Min- ister Macmillan's ruling Conserva- - tives of practicing a “master race’’ philosophy similar to that of Hitler's Nazis. Philippines Ask Japan for Big Loans on Dam TOKYO (AP)—The called on Japan today for big loans to help build the “Marikina= River power dam northeast of Japanese officials have. pres viously expressed willingness to help in these projects, whose total cost is estimated at 784 meipion dollars. party - Philippines : MUFFLERS | | INSTALLED | FREE! is :) Mi Tits Servi While You Wait OLE SETITE TT EL eae se res MIDAS one MUFFLER si, SHOP LIFES GUARA “AGAINST raat y= BURN-OUT, BLOW-OUT KINGS | ‘Midas Matton Service ert te Jerome Olds) FE 2-1010 ‘til 5:30, Fri. ‘til 8:00 Sat. ‘til 5:00 Open Mon. thru Thurs. FEderal 4-7 Fests, Home or Office foot wingspan and an 18-foot fuse- lage, It cost Looft about: $1,200 to build, flies 125 miles an hour and can cruise two and a half hours on a full tank of gas, One Second Too Late to Start School in 1958 RCA COLOR TV Sales and Service SWEET’S RADIO-TV Open Mon. & Fri, Night FE 4-1133 422 W. Huron Gary Pereira missed kindergarten this year because he was a second ate, Born one second ates midnight on New Years Eve in 1934, he /can’t start school because he won't |be five before the end of this year, the school board ruled. ~NEW BEDFORD, Mass (UPI) —f°" Gassy? 2 Times Faster Relief —_ Seine: Chirping of Parakeet Adds Flair to Concert SYDNEY, Australia—At a recent concert played by pianist Isadore Goodman, patrons got a little ex- | tra for their money, A woman in they ae took | a parakeet from a cardboard box, perched it on one index finger and | uséd the other to beat time while: ment to Goodiman’s playing: The act over, she put the bird; back in its-box and left the~hall.' ' * the bird chirped ‘an accompani-| in your spare time. If you | American School — P. bo! Kensington \Br., Detroit Se wick, a Address City YOU CAN FINISH™ HIGH Scii00L AT HOME BOOKLET — —_ Sy how. Please send |\me your free 51-page High School — left school, write for FREE. PDP 9.29 9