\ _- SONTIAC PREWBE IVER PARES Prob x *® 350 Paratroops With Bayonets Escort Students Spectators Orderly as Integration Proceeds in Little Rock LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (—One white man was clubbed and another stabbed with a bayonet in who guarded the entrance of nine Negroes to Central High School ol today. LITTLE Ri ROCK, Ark. nf * x * x k * x kk * sf Poh Negroes Enter School Under G/ Guard xk l0tst Airborne Division of Ft. appeared at the THEY STAND READY — Troops from the Fixed Bayonets Back Court Order Campbell, Ky. ‘Laws, Not Men, Are Supreme’ Hheaea 2 F ak * a - = E * ak Hi i For Florida's Gov. Collins’ reaction; For Adlai Stevenson’s . comment, For profile of % _ tke himself, ae why he ordered federal troops into, Little Rock in the school. integra- tion crisis. A Marine helicopter put the Planes Missing 4 Aircraft With 10 Men Vanish During NATO Exercises in Atlantic LONDON @—The U. S. Navy reported today that four of its crashed in the Atlantic while part in giant NATO sea x * avy identified the planes * \Clear Weather, Cooler Tonight and Tomorrow The weather man promises clear weather this evening, with tem- peratures becoming somewhat cooler. Tonight’s low will be around 47 degrees. Tomorrow will be cooi with the mercury reaching a high near 67. An extended forecast frotn the U. S. Weather Bureau predicts getierally fair and cool for Pontiac on Friday. Scattered showers and a slight warming trend are expected Sat- urday and Sunday: . The lowest temperature ——— in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 4D Skywarriors, single- fighters capable of more than 1,000 miles A tw $2F antisubma- sian attack, especially from sub- s Ga fo ae 30 a.m. was 51. At 1 p.m. the ther- mometer read 69. tee Sar acevo Big Values Offered . - on Dividend Days Downtown Dividend Days, a fes- tival of special values, is being staged by the Downtown Pontiac Assn. today, Thursday afd Friday. Association members are offer- ing a $600 color television set along with the hundreds of special buys on all types of merchandise during Dividend Days. Free entry blanks will be avail- able at association members’ shops rooted the three-day promotion Pages of coupons, denoting the extra values available for Divi- - dend Days, appear today in The Press. | 5 clearing the way for Negro were standing guard this morning when a crowd The charge followed a third the Little Rock high school. A -| that “certain misguided persons, Ike Explains Troop Action‘ ‘President down on the lawn of the Newport White House at the U. 8. In a hastily scheduled radio-TV address to the nation, he appealed to the American people last night to unite in understanding that he had no choice but to dispatch the troops, * * * “Unless the President did so,” he declared; “anarchy would re- sult.” TO STOP INTERFERENCE And he emphasized that the troops are. there “‘solely for the purpose of preventing interference with the orders of the court” which directed the admission of nine Negroes to Little Rock’s Cen- tral High School. * * * Eisenhower said he personally knows that “‘the overwhelming ma- jority of the people in the South— including those of Arkansas and Little Rock—are of good will, unit- ed in their efforts to preserve and respect the law even when they disagree with it.” But he said at another saint many of them imported Into Little Rock by agitators, have in- sisted upon defying the law and have sought to bring !t into dis- repute.” In other nations, he said, “our enemies are gloating over this jincident’t and seeking to under- mine the nation’s prestige and in- fluence around the globe. : x * * As he spoke last night 1,000 para- troopers flew to Little Rock. The 9,900-member Arkansas National Guard prepared for its first day ‘ Continued on Page 61, Col. 4) + Ushehn New Year With Symbolic Ritual, Penance Jey eg - 4 C LiL. News ateeesegtee Sieh oO PP eee eee ee ee . Y; c : owe . eedee *, A ddd ddd ddd Tt 60 "#0 ee ¢ Mark Rosh Hashanah Today On, the two days of Rosh Hash- a Jews greet each other with the hope, ‘‘Leshanah tovah tikasev V’sehagem.” (‘May you be in- scribed and sealed for a good year."’) In the Jewish home, the Kid. | dush (sanctification prayer) is | this ‘symbolic act says, ‘May it be God's will to grant a good and sweet year.” . Likewise, bread is dipped honey to symbolize the hope’ that, They designate it as the ‘‘Day of Memorial” and the ‘‘Day of Blow- Saginaw Seeks |Saginaw City Lines. ‘Claims That — Chased Scavengers SOMAGAHARA, Japan (AP) — A prosecution wit-} ' .Iness testified today that minutes before William S. Girard fatally shot Mrs. Naka Sakai he chased other Japanese brass collectors on a U.S. firing range. The witness, Hidetsugu Onezeki, said Girard pursued *six or seven Japanese for 4 Bus Fare Hike Citizens’ Group, City Council Expected to Urge Five-Cent Jump SAGINAW (® — A citizens’ busi- Ness committee is to meet with ‘city councilmen here today and is| - expected to urge that a five-cent bus fare increase be granted to Committee Chairman Sam Le- nick said he believes the commit- | the face of new attacks from the more than 50 yards on the range near Somagahara. Girard, of Ottawa, Ill, is charged with placing an empty cartridge case in a rifle grenade launcher and killing Mrs. Sakai. Testifying at the fina] outdoor \séssion on the range, Onezeki igave this aes * * After mae the scavengers, iGirard returned to his foxhole and threw cartridge cases toward the Japanese. Mrs. Sakai approached and Girard called to her in Japa- nese: “Old woman, there’s really a Jot of brass, isn’t. there?” Mrs. Sakai went to a foxhole to which Girard pointed and climbed in, Onezeki said. Girard fired at Mrs. Sakai and she tumbled to the ground, he said. The testimony was taken as rain fell on the firing range. Presiding i city management similar to sys- tems already in operation at Jack- ‘son and approved Monday for Kal- amazoo. Mrs. Roosevelt in Yalta MOSCOW w — Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will fly to Yalta tomorrow to visit Nikita Khrush- chev. The Communist party lead- er invited her to pay him a visit ‘at his vacation residence there. Judge Yuzo Kawachi was dressed hat. x * ®* Victor Nickel, of Inkster, Mich., Mrs. Sakai was shot Jan, Nickel testified yesterday that Girard called to Mrs. Sakai short- ly before firing the shot that killed her. Onezeki gave the same testimony. * * * Nickel, the only American wit- ness for the prosecution, said he believed Girard fired’ at Mrs. Sakai as a joke. Nickel said he did not believe Girard intended to “\hit her. Flu Keeps Reuther Here~ DETROIT (INS)—United -Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther says a touch of the flu has forced him to cancel plans to attend sessions of the AFL-CIO executive counci] meeting in New York. A union spokesman said the UAW chief was confined to his home on the advice of his physician. Reuther was first stricken ten days ago while in England. Hotta Campaigns in a raincoat and a large straw, The trial will resume tomorrow. There will be no further outdoor hearings. The testimony of Onezeki agreed in part with that of soldier! who was with Girard just before Around Clock to Win-Election MIAMI BEACH, Fila. wt—In Senate Rackets Committee, De- troit Teamster boss James R. Hoffa campaigned virtually around the clock today to suc- ceed retiring president .Dave Beck of the International Broth- erhood of Teamsters. Hoffa, heir- -apparent to the top post in the sprawling trans- .portation union with more than a millien members, ignored latest developments in Wash- ington. One of the announced candi- dates who is opposing Hoffa, Teamster Vice President Thomas L. Hickey of New York, set up campaign headquarters in one of the hotels on Miami Beach. * * ¥ Hoffa has opened his head- quarters in ‘the oceanside resort hotel which has been taken over as convention headquarters by the Teams. * ® Peter J. Hoban of Chicago, campaign manager for Thomas J. Haggerty, another of Hoffa's rivals for the presidency, said he will appear before the Creden- tials Committee today to chal- lenge delegates from 105 locals in trusteeship. The Weather - U.S. Weather Forecast Fair, Cooler | : _ Details Page 3. | ate sy YEAR ek & & ® PONTIAC MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1957 68 PAGES.._ os ETE, chee, recres Eyes ss Pon tiac Local 61 Payroll ‘To Check Report Salaries Paid to 2 Men in Prison. _ Charge Acts Occurred Under Trusteeship - of James Hoffa _ Senate rackets cael in. Washington were ex-- pected today to look into reports that James R. Hoffa kept on Pontiac Local 614’s payroll two teamster offi- cials serving prison terms for extortion. The two officials were not named. However,.Daniel J. t | Keating, 54, and Louis C. Linteau, 42, of 615 Tenny- son Ave., were sentenced in October, "1954, for their part in a $100,000 shakedown \of Detroit-area contractors. Keating was president of Local 614 at the time of his conviction, Linteau served under him as sec- retary - treasurer and business agent. Keating received a ‘six moaths sentence and q $1,000 fine while Linteau went to prison for five months and was fined $500. Sentenced with the pair were the president and a business agent of Local 247 in. Detroit. Indict- ments followed a two-months one- | man grand jury investigation by Detroit Circuit Judge Miles N. Culehan, * * * 19 Stores Will Open With Miracle Mile ¥H road, They are: . C. Penney Co., S.S. Kresge: a. W. T. Graft Co., Food Fair| Super Market, Nadon’s Teen Age Shop, Jane Lee Dresses, A. S. Beck Shoes, Kinsel Drugs” Kinney Shoes, Telephone Show Room, Sibley’s Shoes, Thom McAn Shoes, Richman Bros., Monarch Men's Shop, Singer Sewing Machine, Darnell Hair Stylist, Pontiac State Bank, Kirby, Shoes and Miracle Mile Pure Oil) Service. A number_of other_ ‘stores have announced opening dates between) now and the formal opening of the center late next month. Still Pay Same Fines PARK HILLS, Ky. — It really doesn't cost you any less, but this city explains to persons fined for traffic violations that it isn’t after their money. A pamphlet given out when the fine is paid says: ‘‘The man who is fined today may not run into you tomorrow.” their horns in traffic, nor is it an Pai pres on 0 8, Models. Just part of HORNING IN — This is not an export-model Isetta made for Americans who like to biow Italian stylists’c me ee eet Music to Bash Fenders By AP Wirephoto is iaaas guy vdliy oh Bete Oklahoma. How would you like a backseat driver with a voice Nineteen stores will be opening jtomorrow at the Miracle Mile Town & Country Shoppers City on/ */Telegraph road north of Square the four demanded tribute from contractors, : ~~fatone have the supreme power of decision in the union. Indications are that the Executive . Hoffa, .top choice = over ~— on Beck's presidency of the amsters organization, was ap- cbr trustee by Beck over Local 614 because of Keating and Lin- tau’s convictions. DEMAND TIBUTE Witnesses in 1954 testified that truckers, road builders ‘and others in building, using threats of labor trouble if they didn’t comply. Contractors involved were then working on the John C. Lodge and Edsel Ford Expressways ‘and the City-County Building in Detroit. - - The four were accused of ask- ing and receiving a fee — ly five cents for each load of dirt ‘excavated fro mthe jobs — from contractors. The offenses were committed between dan. 1, 1948 —_ Ang. $1, 1963. Last year Keating was indicted (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Orders Cleanup of Bakery Union AFL-ClO Expected to Give Similar Ultimatum to Teamsters NEW YORK (INS) —The AFL- CIO. Executive Council today re- portedly gave the 138,000-member Bakery Workers’ Union 30 days to set its house in order and get rid of officials charged with corruption, A similar ultimatum is expected to be handed to the 1,400,000-mem- ber Teamsters Union later. The obvious alternative will be expul- sion from the federation, - Such action would méan that the Teamsters, the nation’s largest union, would have to travel alone. * *- * The council is winding up a two- day session in. New York devoted mainly to the federation’s a for clean unions, og AFL-CIO President George. Meany indicated the Teamsters will be given until Oct. 24 to clean up conditions the federation has been complaining about since the senate rackets committee inves- tigation began months ago. The Executive Council-is ex- pected to make much the same demand on the Bakery Workers. In the Teamsters’ case, the Exec- utive Council will act on. a report by the ethical practices committee which contained a blistering in- dictment of Teamsters Vice Presi- dent James R, Hoffa and President It “is recognized on all sides that unless the Téa install a new leadership at Miami Beach making their exit from the AFL- CIO, since the convention delegates oe ae See ao el < Re ee Aaa . oe ee per) ae ean oes pos wth | bape s ‘ : pt es * 4 eo ees Ley ee ee ee PRESS, WEDNESDAY; SEPTEMBER 25,1957 |, THE PONTIAC \ Day in B OSI SIS a4 rs GPersons Die (Sas cienzer ~ as Planes Crash Russia After All Crippled B26 Bomber, DAVENPORT, Iowa u—Louis Air National Guard Jets Satchmo _ says he ‘may go to Russia after all... After hearing President Eisen- < A hower’s televised explanation of PLASTIC BALLOON—3C 2 36 AN) The balloon was launched fromjing" altitude of 380,000 feet in| Linteau was indicted in Separate Accidents . why he sent aria agreeing NEW BRIGHTON, Minn. W—A University of Minnesota airport/about an hour and 40 minutes. [for filing. I heed af yn the famous Negro jazz trumpet jhuge plastic balloon bearing a/near’ New Brighton, about five} There, above 95 per cent of theltion with the Veterans Admini#-| ,- ra By THE ASSOCIATEL PRESS | Player last’ night declared: |specially. built telescope-camera miles north of Minneapolis andihazy atmosphere the/tration in connection: with GI James Rast Two U.S, planes crashed yester-/ “Things are looking better than soared over Minnesota today on/St. Paul, at 7:15 a, m. earth, it is hoped the camera will|mortgages with a home develop-|Peared at this day, killing a total of six persons.| they did before.” | |a flight designed to reveal secrets! x record pictures of the sun with a/ment in Waterford Township. At Dayton, Ohio, four persons, armstro hed planaed to of the sun that have been ob-| Project officials expected it to/clarity never before obtained. — * * * M were killed yesterday when a make a eae 4 (scured down the ages by the tow its 1.375 pound gondola load A delicate device sensitive to Today's hearings in. Washi attempt > crippled B26 bomber, attempting) tour of Ruseia but eanctin’d murky atmosphere of earth. ‘of intricate instruments to ‘‘ceil- light was built into the gondola before’ Sen. John L. ‘ MeClelinn's _ to land with one of its two engines) in bitterness when the school 7 = a ee ee as "\committee will be the second day|" ™® '**ns- out, plummeted to earth a mile! integration problem developed . —— a constantly|in the resumed investigation of] Me sald short of Wright-Patterson Air Force) iy Arkansas this month. - rawn to oe north, keeping |14¢a which resulted from Detroit| °’cleck the Base and crashed into a suburban by the teere ers an ee always on its bril-!..4 Pontiac visits of Chief Cumad beans development. dent, whom Armstrong had erit : : The flight, labeled “Project| "bert F. Kennedy. | peter HOME. DESTROYED Authorities said the cized previously, Satchmo said § # o = Air Force, he wired the President: “If you | decide to walk into the schools Or Owns Ip en er ; with the little eolored kids, take | j _ - . fires in two others. Debris from’ me along daddy. God bless | : ; | oe” . t+ t | Frank. Steere of 4230 S. Shoe ° Rd., Waterford Township, has for- Armstrong heard the speech any offered ~ approximately 17 with satisfactory proof that an estimated sum of $250,000 for construction of the library and |- while here to play a concert. “It was just wonderful the way he explained it. It was all in good faith,” he said. - * * * Of his proposed trip to Russia he said, “I won't say that I won't go. We may get to Russia acres of scenic land to township residents for the purpose of creat- ing a cultural center. * * * The offer stipulated that part of the site which is located on Pon- tiac Lake Road near 459 be used for a library, part as a bird and —— a i available. Ms Steere also desired that action necessary for the raising of the annual operating expenses esti- mated at $36,000, be assured. None of the land is to be used for any purpose other than proj- The new pictures, Dr. Schwarzs- at the moment, they could see child said, are expected to reveal] Yesterday mem | on our next trip. We have Ger- : 4 S the smaller, local gas storms near tee ber, _| many, Italy and France in mind | and Russia isn't far away.” “All I want to do is blow that horn,’ Armstrong insisted. “‘Mu- sic puts everybody in good ects classed as cultural with one possible exception of a hospital site in the southeast area if the town- ship desired. , The library building’ would have ‘wildlife sanctuary and another jpart for a library park.- |. Other conditions of the grant stipulated that title to the land would be conveyed to the town- very little hope of solving the sit- uation. , : the southeast, authorities said, but By E. 4. SIMS *$ a red sunrise mean prob-, able rain in the afternoon — as. the old weather proverb contends? No, a red sunrise is not an in- have nothing to fear from the sol- diers” but added ‘‘this is what 1 have been ordered to do, and 1 intend to carry out my orders.” The entrance of the Negro stu- dents today contrasted strangely with their attempt Monday. Today the few spectators kept scattered by the paratroopers said nothing. Monday they screamed, cursed and fought. * * * Later the school said six Negro boys and girls entered the build. ing to attend classes they've been trying to enter since Sept... 3. Earlier the tough paratroopers. pointed stubby bayonets at clus- dication of rain in the . afternoon. Usually, it means there is dry day to keep a crowd from con- Haven, Mich., witness testified in weather to the east (dust in the gregating at the school before Ne- a court hearing yesterday that ters of white men and women to- atmosphere), but that does not gro students arrived. mean rain is due from the west! The troops made no threatening 48¢. Pa., twice changed the treat- immediately. Indeed, several dry gestures. They simply lowered ments for his wife. days may lie ahead. It. ls the red sunset which in- dicates dry weather (not rain), | since it is caused by dust in the air to the west — which is on its way towards you, and this air will be over you in a day, more Or less, The red™“sunrise has little use as a weather omen. | Thus, the red sunset is a a Weather clue, as we explained in an earlier column, but the red sunrise is of little value as a fore- caster of weather to come.. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY¥Y—Fair and somewhat cooler tonight and temerrow. The low tonight, arownd 43. Tomerrdw's high, about €7. Winds west te northwest at 10 te 15 miles an hour teday and tmestly northwesterly af 5 to 10 miles an boer tonight. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding @ am L At 8 am: Wind velocity 15 mph Direction—Northwest. Gun sets Wednesday at 6:25 pm. Sun rises Thursday at 6 72 aim Moon sets Wedtiesday, at 7 27 pin, Moon rises Thursday at 9.49 a m. Dewntown Temperatures ceceeees S20 DD am... ‘their bayonets and moved the ,clusters of people away. | Maj. James Meyers of San An- tonio, Tex., told the few. specta- tors, “You are instructed again ito return to your homes peace- |fully. Disperse and return to your ‘homes.” ‘SKIRMISH LINES The 350 battle-ready troopers ‘were deployed to skirmish lines about the sprawling school. Maj. Louis Breault said 1,000 ‘men would be on duty at the ischool before the day is over. | Negro troops that rolled in with ithe convoy last night were not at the school and Capt. James A. ‘Smith- said, ‘Gen. Walker is not ready to say how they will be used." ; * * * In his talk to the students Gen. ‘Walker said Supt. Virgil. Blossom had asked him to speak to them. “One last word about my sol- diers.” he said. “They are here because they have been ordered fo be here. They are seasoned well-trained soldiers, many of on the theme, “Life: An Evalua-, be held at Congregation B'nai Israel, 143 Oneida Rd., at 6 p.m. tonight, tommorrow and Friday Rabbi Israel Goodman will speak tion’’ at 8 a.m. tomorrow, and on back in service Monday after be- ing modernized at a cost of 30 million. dollars. _ ” Joseph Mercy hospital with a possi- was trefited for neck and back injuries and released. Many Nations Experiment “Our Greatest Challenge,” at 8 a.m. Friday. Cantor Lazarus Her- shovitz will chant the liturgical music. Says Hoxsey Clinic Changed Treatments PITTSBURGH # — A Grand the Hoxsey Cancer Clinie at Port- 2 The witness, Vander Wall, ap-' peared for the government in an; injunction suit in U.S. District Court, The U.S. Food and Drug Administration seeks a ‘permanent injunction against the clinic's deal- ing with out of state patients. Wall said he took his wife to the clinic five times since last Test Missile, MISSILE TEST CENTER, fire its Atlas intercontinental bomb. A-Bombs Cape Canaveral, Fla. (AP) — Speculation mounted today that the Air Force is poised to ‘ballistics missile from here. i x * * : WASHINGTON (AP) — The Atomic Energy Commis- sion has announced detection of another nuclear explosion in the Soviet Union — presumably a test of a hydrogen | * * * ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) — Britain today exploded the second atomic device of its current test series with ob- _ servers from Allied nations looking on for the first time. * * ~~ ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev. nuclear test shot of the year was postponed again today by the Atomic Energy Commission because of unfavorable weather. It may be fired tomorrow. (AP) — The next-to-last funds from Hoffa to help it ride out and recover from a strike by Two Speakers Named GRAND RAPIDS—Dr. J. Donald Phillips, president of Hillsdale Col- lege, and Charles N. Hill, manager of the Coldwater Chamber of Com- merce, have been named princi- pal speakers Oct. 3-4 at the 40th annual meeting of the West Michi- gan Tourist and Resort Assn. in Grand Rapids, 2 Jobs Incompatible LANSING (# — Atty. Gen. Thomas M. Kavanagh held to- day that the offices of justice of the peace in a township and vil- lage councilman are incompat- ible and therefore cannot be held by the same person simulta- neously. Republicans Plan for 08 September when a growth de- veloped on her neck. He said his wife first was given green and red pills with the color combination later changed and, still later, she was taken off pills and organe juice was substituted. He said Mrs. Wall now is being treated at a hospital in Grand Haven. : . x *« * Last fall, after a court battle, the Hoxsey pills “were declared worthless and ordered destroyed. The government now says the clinic has changed its type of pills and is guilty of double fraud. Enrollment at U. of M. - The Oakland County Republican Party today annouriced two ap- pointments filling key positions in its 1958 campaign. John A, Gibbs, who has headed the county’s young Republican group, has been named the party's executive secretary, county chair- man Arthur G. Elliott Jr. an- nounced. Gibbs, 25, of 635 Bloomfield Terrace, has the job of estab- County Group Picks of the 1958 campaign, Elliott said. The other appointment was of Revere G. Counselman as chair- man of the party’s membership drive. His appointment was an- nounced by Richard C. Vani Dusen, of chairman. Birmingham, county finance Birmingham Counselman, 2 Leaders sales engineer, was charged with Gibbs, who headed the young Republicans for the past nine nical writer to take over one of the party’s few full-time positions. The youthful executive secre- tary is a graduate of General Motors Institute, attended the a months, has left his job as tech-| - | Travel and_ Adventure Series « HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Delightful and Thrilling 8 P.M. Entertainment The Kiwanis Club of Pontiac presents seven of the top travelogues in the Country. These are all y get edeasmcod conducted, the kind that a ty houses in the largest cities. our season ticket.now. Only limited number to capac- this list then available. : 7 1. TOP TRAVELOGUES - _ SEASON» $50 TICKET Tuesday, October 29, 1957 JULIAN GROMER, “Atlantic Coast Tuesday, November 12, 1957. ROBERT FRIARS, “Morocco Holiday” Tuesday, December 10, 1957 © KARL ROBINSON, “Madeira and 14, 1958 ; : 4, is , Tuesday, Jani 7 ROBERT DA .“The .Canary Tuesday, February 11, 1958 NICOL SMITH, “Europe's Toy Countries” _ Tuesday, March 4, 1958 STAN MIDGLEY, Tuesday, March 25, 1958 “Seuth from Zanzibar” Se ad ] ; | spirits.” ship when Steere was furnished Be > Radisson Reale toed fs P could be made without disturbing|to bring the gondola and instru-Inot selected . according ee ae noe 8 Bes i a ae ments to a safe landing. junidn's constitution, | ; : In the event the township could | eteorologists estima 2 At an altitude of 70 feet, the ] ews to Ma T k N CW Year not furnish proof that they [balloon would travel about 200) fom riorida Hoffa countered by | ‘Bls's landing gear tangled = could comply with these stipula- |miles east of New Brighton, with) “ering his legality as a delegate fiunged into toe bowing sever, With Symbolism, Penance: ‘ee 2s, 198 tte he el tare somenner® ivan up to the unin ment on fa Fast Side. : | aid ine and cam | Wisconsin, The balloon and gon-|Committee to determine. | -~ * . ematte : ; i (Continued From Page One) great Jewish scholor of the 12th) Also, if the township board does eagles — the j obtained | And ‘at Van Nuys, Calif, an Air over-all length ) loans of $26,000 by National Guard T33 jet planelorigins in the ram that appeared “emtury, the shofar comes like a/not tentatively accept or reject thisitic bag measuring 139 feet across.| im 1962 from subordinate Detrelt smashed with a fiery roar intolat the time of the would-be sacri-\wmpet of alarm to awaken one offer within 90 days of the date) The camera, with a system of| Teamster business agents. two dwellings, killing both pilots! fice of Isaac by Abraham ‘from spiritual lethargy to pray the offer was made, the entire pro-| mirrors, is set to take a picture! , and “ ae ‘ and repent. posal would be null and void, he|, second. Each picture will take|, He declared that Hoffa has paid nearly trapping a terrified» pu MPET OF ALARM A added. a "from 50,000 4. 75,000 square |D#ck the money to all agents last "Mrs. Beatrice Stone, 42, said! According to Maimonides, a’ J; js also believed that the blow- miles of the sum’s surtace. = = selling some bonds to she was talking to her son on the ing of the ram's horn will herald rs es Schwarzsfield said that to the av-|Oo {op ae testifying ‘Tues- | telephone yesterday when she saw. , the coming redemption, the era of| Find Cost of Living erage layman the pictures would) , | ~ Gi ores Norman | ~ the plane coming. Baliooen george || Sch | -\peace and goodwill for all man-| probably mean very little, but to a 28Y ae ma wes i oe flaming — flames shooting out all egroes in 00 kind. Dro S in Detroit scientist they could be of tremen- gate . podliga hired . oe around,” she said. Reform Jewish services in | p dous importance. : rea deans from the “I stunned, It hit the He said that the pictures would|Just being re - NGEF AFMY OUATA | Pontiac win be held at Temple i: Ohio Penitentiary for armed rob- ‘oof. I ran to the back door but J Beth Jacob, 79 Elizabeth Lake DETROIT ® — Detroit's cost |look probably like a closeup view) © ary flames had spread from the roof Ra., at 8:30 ‘tonight, Rabbi | ° living, going opposite to that jof a dish of lumpy oatmeal. ry | and I was trapped. (Continued From Page One) Nethen anak will detiver | of the nation as a whole, dropped ~ * * : “I started to jump from the bowie out mag oar Rage the sermon entitled “Three Pass- | * n.. fer Meret then August. (Good Samaritan Driver aint aoa gy Miles room window, but a burn-|tendance room inside t nO ” drop, year, was ip * from tes ea fell through it into the Was full of students signing out) P°"™ one tenth of one per cent. The (Rewarded by Accident betore the committee in its initial house ; \to leave school. On Thursday morning at 10 a.M.,| index here ip now 123. But that 7 = hearings that he draws $5,000 to -“ ‘screamed. Flames by this! kt & Rabbi Hershfield will speak on the! ig staiti 2.8 above last year. It |,” 800d smaritan” who stopped/si9.g9 = year from the races in| time were shooting down the stair-| Inside the school, Gen. Edwin “Pic: “Happy New Year.” compares to the national index of {T's Car ‘0 aid @ motorist in dis-ipartnership with Owen (Bert) way well. I made my way to the|A. Walker, commander of the| A children’s service will be held] 121 par cent’ of the 1947-49 aver. |tross.n%) Tewanicd! DY RaWng BisiBrennan, a Detroit Teamster of- front door and finally escaped.” troops, told the students, “I intend|&t the temple at 2 p.m. tomorrow./ age. Food costs were a shade [ (....14 Montgomery 1. of 904 ficial. Brennan has been subpoen- The fliers, identified as Capt. |to use all means necessary to pre-| Mrs. Rebecca Gould will appear as; down ‘in Detroit. The deduction Coughlan Rd. Auburn Heights was|**a as a witness. Joseph C, Bryant, 28, of Arcadia, |vent any interference with the ex-/S0loist, assisted by the temple) was four tenths of one per cent. | _, ped on Woodward, a quarter McClellan said he would ask for Geena sot Edison B. lecution of the school board's\Choir under the direction of James . ; wae natn ia Higbee road to aid(2” ¢xamination of Benjamin bs Los Angeles> died plan” for integration Rosenthal. Charles Wilson will . . ¢ led now who has failed to answer a oe P eg an andi Carrier Back in Service _ |a stalled motorists when a car driv-| cincena reportedly because of a * strapped in the jet trainer, ‘NOTHING TO FEAR’ . 23, of 10260 Crosby Lake Rd.. Clar a The plane which had just taken! +46 tolq the white students “you! * = * * | BREMERTON, Wash. — The-|ston, hit his car’s rear. yt ppt sae off from Van Nuys Airport on an ; S you Traditional Jewish services will) aircraft carrier Midway will go | Janisewki was admitted to St. | tem. eee 81 1m. bees er them combat soldiers.” ' parcirgsoclenety ° ° = | i oan ; P = The troops, he said eid ete i h With 27.035 | . §& a.m, 87 \ p e * Wem... ‘tain ‘a peaceful atmosphere in Ig est it ' He the Royal Oak Re- Get eason Tick ow ppapsss very Aes n} ’ ithe school and in the vicinity.” publican headquarters during the : Your Se et N ! | Highest temperature ............... 6 | He cautioned that loitering, as-/ ANN ARBOR ® — The Univer- last ntial campaign. No Single Admission Tickets Will Be Sold. Tickets available | Mean fempersture ia dbeeieee. 52 sembling in large groups andisity of Michigan announced enroll- Gibbs said that the selection of from any Kiwanian or Mail Coupon below : { eather—Pair, otherwise making it difficult for|ment has hit an all-time high of a pérmanent party headquarters) — ; Pr | .s H S io - met nt Yea. rAgo in Pontise them “to perform their duties”) 27,035 students at the main cam- will be announced soon. Is i | Lowest temperature | .|........ 31 /™May bring orders from the troops|pus here, at the Flint branch and * e * i Ki Club of Pontiac Mean temperature | ............ 60 |for them to. disperse, at extension centers throughout the “ wanis Clu ol t ( Weather—Ciouay, Mild. He pleaded with the white stu-|state. : Counselman, who lives: at 1730|$ 2814 Ivanhoe Drive Highest ane haces Nee eeeetes This dents for esa ae™ . : More than 23,000 students are at- ply waged rey has active ‘ Pontiac, Michigan _ : if fee. { 82 in 1991 34 in 1970) : tending classes in Ann Arbor, said party many: a a Please send mie wanis Travel Adventure Series folder { : hn SS Lt. Gov. Nathan Gordon, act-|Edward G. Groesbeck, director of ing the Birmingham ‘and Bloom-|} Sd advise where season tckets may be purchased. ? Bitty ietets™ 2M yetuay when Paulus seamed) The tatwide gure yess ago] | "ws calien ties cm poe s : ° bo 5/2 oorerday ubus returned]. a e figure a year ago : . : Breensville 16 #2 Mismi 1 1 to the state after attending the|was 25,810. . Ring wuts pha geo aun, » ON : powered 3. 62 Kiinestons 72 {2 Southern Governors’ Conference at i — tions and headed the Birming: | ~ : = * Po a mie | 68 * . ° ; ADDRESS "a ‘ Chacha ‘ we Ree Yort™ Miike it Sending’ oat ‘i Son"t\Little Rock in Headlines ham precinct organisation daring; “4 veland aha 52 . : ; campaign. eet BS Oe Pret 84 Se) Won't help the situation in the long|“ LONDON (INS) — Paris and eo MS on * CITY. STATE. ; \ Dalth Pr # St. Louis 7s sa run. I wonder if they are going) London newspapers heavily fea- He: said that a drive to raise |i pes Le ‘ ol + Worth | Be A Spry Qu . put a soldier with each stu-| tured today the Little Rock $5,000 from riew party members |’ gery beens tsi y Pei fi | & 4 Traver ea saident?” \ school integration story. Several edging from $1 to $5 monthly is Be porate F Ag ann d Bhai nglh~ yy 8 fSeighber: j | ¢ ies, Lal a = fey Faubus had no new comment on! of the paar gave * aeatbeee / sealatiety scheduled from Nov. ae oe _ ~ plied mathe ae “7 #9 14 Eisenhower's action, REVERE G, COUNSELMAN 9-% , os EAE Rs esate LL Rae eRe a aillies display under headlings. A ? met ‘ 3 4 aN ‘ - : ’ f : = 4, E t 4 : (ee, | . Be =! j > : ey = \ = F gee | ee : ry : : ‘ : + r a4 i i 4 BER 25, 1957 SE VE N The to events in Arkansas show he is ready, willing and able to assume a role more aggressive than any he has assumed since he was-vic- torioug commander of the West- ern Allied forces against Ger- many. . - “* * * This is a man who commanded millions of men in a war against an outside enemy, and was most effective in creating unity to win that war. He has been stirred to anger, never to panic. A man who has been a victori- ike teak the chasse Shen 6 itate governor callg out the National Guard on a controversial day, but Gen, Eisenhower, -both as soldier “by oath commit- ited to the federal duty. x« * «© Ike, the golfing President, be- came again the general, when he issued a statement — which, to war, is an order of the day: “I will use the full power of the United States, including whatever force may be necessary, to pre- vent any obstruction of the law and to carry out the order's of the ‘hower, President of the United those who ‘knew Eisenhower in: THE PONTIAC PRESS; WEDNESDAY, SEPTEM , EP’ 4 ; \ , ee \ * | = : Li j zal used to challenge, not . strane’ to The | scadaataed in chief, ex- States and the free — had trial, not foreign to victory. plaining .to the nation last night been menaced because “gloating” “I will use the full power of the;why he ordered federal troops to ‘Communists abroad were using: United States,” he said, “‘includ-|Little Rock, said “mob rule” ing whatever force may be nec-|there menaced the safety of the represent this country and undef-| essary, to prevent any obstruc-/United States and the rest of the mine its prestige tion’ of the law and to carry out/free world. a the globe. to help bring an end to all aR The President pledged | $600, 000 i4-story Park Avenue Hotel States, speaking. This is Gen. Dwight D. Ejisen-| In a TV-radio- broadcast from by Salvation Army “Mob rule cannot be allowed tol the White House, he | called upon citizens of Arka override the decisions of the DETROIT (INS) — The Salvation courts,” he declared. |Army today is the owner of the Plenty of | Peppers LOS ANGELES California farmers grow nearly two thirds of| federal court.” the or@ers of the federal court.” « * * ference with legal processes. | “If resistance to the federal (at Park anti Spyoat) in Detroit. the nation’s chili-pepper crop. This| a |the school integration riots to mis-! and influence | q 74 North Saginaw St. We Give Holden Red Stamps \ i i } t Free Color TV li Vou Can Win Free RCA Color Television. Ne Purchase Necessary Just .Come Fill Out Fan ” Entry. : Drawing Monday, Sept. To those who think of Eisenhow-|year they planted 3,315 acres of court orders ceases at once, the}. ous general and is presently com- mander in chief of the ine forces of the United States cannot indefinitely sit idly by when his| chain of command is challenged. Nor can a oem. * *. Thus resides Eisenhower, the statesman-politician, might want HOW TO MAKE » Modern Vodka Drinks In this’ issue of your ‘ paper there are 6 dif- ferent vodka recipes. Look for them and make them all with ~— Paro sett er as a compliant president, it|peppers, 6 per cent more than in further presence of fe deral troops| may be pertinent to poirit out that 1956. Last year’s harvest of 5,110 will be unnecessary. the foregoing statement is the ‘tons represented an incréase of 40) * * * ' residence for old people. * * * The SA jhad purchased the announced yesterday it building as a promise of a general not un- -per cent over the 1946 crop. | He said the safety of the United - Brig. Clyde Cox The first local branch of an es- tablished Detroit firm, the Mon- arch Men's Shop, will open this) week at the new Miracle Mile Shopping Center. _ * * * The new store is Monarch’s first| move into suburban areas since the firm was established by two brothers, Dore and Robert Novitz, -4in Detroit, 23 years ago. “Named as manager of the new shop is Orville Springer, of 447 Montcalm St, who has been a Pontiac resident for 26 years. Springer has spent 20 of these ange regwenien Spann 1en0esD?. years in the clothing business. Detroit Firm Oper Store ‘Here’ - foining -brick rooming house will. : ‘| be leveled to provide space for an’ cablote garden, The former hotel’ and renovation is expectéd to be completed next spring x. * * aL new Monarch Men's Shop their Setirech recessed will carry a complete line of men’s system. ‘and boys’ furnishings with a vast istock of everything from casual wear to formal clothing. | cestumetiia, citionsedl'te- genie sll Paper Publishes Late ~~ *« @€ selection an easy task. ‘After Printer Fouls Up Among the nationally advertised)’ the front of the store is of! brand names to be found at the | DOUGLAS. Wyo. » — The week- jenameled steel construction with ty Dougias Enterprise was a day store are Arrow, Clipper Crafttwo doors and straight and “L”’| oe shaped window displays. Open ried this page 1-explanation: Seetpon hate. |wall cases will be found in the; «The Enterprise is a little be- * \{ront of the store, displaying casual | lhind schedule this week as the new lig ghting | | 200 guests. The store will consist of casual | wear, trouser, and clothing de- * * make browsing more easy and en-|semi-self selection. ‘directions mixed up over the week- joyable for patrons. A color design) The building is of steel and con- end and went to work -for the is blended together pleasantly by! ormaly 3 air conditioned and heated. ithe street... Reg. Regular $1.85. Lignophol Gallon Reg. *5.50 Now *3,29 DRAMEX Brown Bros. Removal Ends Saturday, September ‘FLAT PAINT Ivory, Canary, Lt. Blue, Beach, Lt. Green JEWEL, DEEP COLORS, FLAT v0.55 ....... WHITE ENAMEL 5-GALLON GANS ENAMEL UNDERGOATER . DUTCH BOY ENAMEL:.-. 5149 90c Pint; cane neo. 3275 Now 51.75 _ DIVIDEND SPECIAL! Nationally Known | Wallpaper C ee ee ee Sale 28th ee MDG Gat .2. 1,98 cat. ... . 5398 Gal. .. . 32,98 Gal. 2... B00 Gal. vee 28D Gal. 32,00 cal. . $2.00 GAL. Now as Low as UTCH BOY SATIN EGGSHELL. sss. ** © @ @ RAMEX READY MIX TEXTURE PAINT to.ss.: . IN 5-GAL. CANS .. Reg. $4.50 FLAT....... 1.50 GAL. PRIMER, $1.80 Bondex Heavy Duty KEM-GLO || FLOOR es | PAINT S50 § 350 Gal. - Gal Reg. $3.50 10-Ib. Pail 4 98 ° 704 West Huron Street stated an ad- will be known as Eventide Home. Cox said it would accommodate late publishing recently and car- The interior will be designed to|wear in a manner designed for, iprinter we -hired last week got his of soft shades of tans and yellows/crete construction and will be uni-, (competing weekly) Budget across extra savings. Bring a friend with you. Dividend Certificate Worth 75c¢ . PLAID BLANKETS : Actual | 1.69 Value First quality, 60 x 76 sizes Reintorced z= \ edges. Limit 2. : 2 GAAAARA BI Certificate Worth 1. W } mt om Sen aA | mn geen ign. \ at ; LOOP RUGS *1.99 Value Huge 24 x 36 - (Re eS ee * Actual 12.99 Value Extra warm, heavy interlined Poplin coats with or with- out hoods. Sizes 8 to 18 " §6Feather Pillows *1.39. Value Plump chick- feathers ticking mB Limit 4 Dividend Cortiticate Worth 1.22. LADIES’ BLi BLOUSES *Actval 1.99 Values Stock up at this lo price on new Fall Blouses in solid 4 colors G stripes. sia Daa A A i Certificate Worth 45¢ ) LADIES’ BRAS *Actual 89c 4 Circular stitch cup cot ton bras, sizes mM 32A to 40C LADIES’ HOSE 89c Value The value group ef our «ale sii ight irre f ular ons Orton Dividend Certitacte Worth $2. 55 », Kids’ Car Coats Actual 6.99 Value aw Boys’ and girls’ quilted lined Dan River car coats with at- tached hoods. Sizes 2 to 6x LSS SS iM Certificate Worth 40c Men's Underwear *Actual 79c Choose from (4 ) briefs, shorts, : tee-shirta and hs i Undershirts. iM |) a ze *Actual i Certificate Worth 1.50 Men's Sport Shirts § Long sleeve style 1° ) Better Sale. in Fall patterns, flannels and ont- tons. Sie $-M-L . Come o- -running for the Sigbect Bargains yet. Check these DIVIDEND CERTIFICATES SPECIALS BE HERE WHEN DOORS OPEN THURSDAY 9:30 A. M. mM Sl-ineh at YW Dividend Certificate Wow 5.11 a Che Dividend Cortificste Worth 4.99 > MEN'S PANTS in ‘5.99 Values While they las Special group « Pants priced for this re ee eee =" 30 } for ~ oe -5) so Canttlicate Worth DISH TOWELS oy eo Se *19c Value Large fringe edge quality. Past diry- ing. Limit 12 * clita isaac tian Certificate Worth 22¢ Pane)*Curtains *88c Value Pirst 54 quality 63 - inch $1 Vy A's; INNS = Certificate Worth $2 Ladies’ Dresses $5.00 Values ose fro n print $ ve d Junio he es, half size os & solids i Certificate Worth 14.99 Ladies’ Zip-Coats *worth 39.99 Name #£i b e'- Dividend Certificdte Worth 1.77 Ladies’ Sweater * fetual . 2” Cardigan and ‘6 ipover 3.99 Values I DESuESaIAN eapar 90¢. BOYS’ SHIRTS Le 79 Vane a ie )e 1 00) ' f CO amma | h a Fi ‘* ‘ fe y , ‘ ‘ a (OF Ace t| « \ 2S 4 Wilson Orders. Secretary of Defense Moves Fast to Carry Out tke’s Directive 4 WASHINGTON (INS) — Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson moved quickly yesterday afterfoon, to designate troop units to carry out ' President Eisenhower's order to enforce school integration in Little Rock. ° * *, * Here is the text ‘ of Wilson’ erder federalizing the Arkansas Nationa] Guard ‘lL Charles E. Wilson) secretary of defense of the United States cf America, by: virtue of the direc- tion to me from the President of the United States under Executive Order- dated 24 September 1957, entitled ‘Providing Assistance for the Removal of an Obstruction of Justice Within the State of Ar- kansas,’ hereby call into the Fed- eral service all of the units and the members thereof of the Army National Guard and the Air Na- tional Guard of the state of Ar-| | (Galapagos Yala Finch HS Living Text-on ‘Evolution of Birds | WASHINGTON — Gala pag’ s ‘finches form a living text in evolu- tion. Scientists believe all the forms found in the islands are descended from a single species. In time, they took over the various ‘niches customary to bird life. One finch became, in effect, a warbler, with a thin beak and ‘insect-hunting habits. Others be-| .came seed eaters, modifying their ‘beaks for small or large grains. ‘Another species has grown a parrotlike beak for eating fruit and tree buds. Convictions of 2 to Be Reversed Access to FBI Records Lightfoot, Scales WASHINGTON w—The Justice Department says two Smith Act Concerned in Cases of | convictions must be reversed in| ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WE po ~~ NESDAY,'SEPTEMBER S& |at Cusino to a new terminal south- view of a recent Supreme Court kansas, to -serve in the active military service of the United) States for an indefinite period and until relieved by appropriate or- ders. : “I order the members of such National Guard units to hold themselves in readiness for fur- ther orders as to the time and date of reporting to active duty “by the secretary of the Army acting for me. ‘ “Copies hereof shall be furn- ished forthwith to the governor of Arkansas ahd to the commanding officers of the Army National| Guard and the Air National Guard in the state of Arkansas. * * * “I further direct that the sec- retary of the Army take such ac- tion as he deems necessary to im- plement such executive order and this order, and I hereby vest in the secretary of the Army the right to exercise any and all of the. au- thority conferred upon me by sec- tions 2 and 3 of the above men- tioned Executive Order of 24 Sep- tember, 1957." The President's order makes nearly 10,000 Arkansas National Guardsmen available for Federal ruling that defendants must have access to pertinent government files in certain cases. In a memorandum yesterday to ment said the two cases involved the same government records is- sue decided in the Jencks case. The two‘ men involved are Claude M. Lightfoot, a Chicago! Negro nist party, and Junius I. Scales, Communist leader and the Carolinas. * * * Lightfoot was sentenced to five! years in prison and fined $5,000. Scales got a six-year sentence. | The Supreme Court heard argu-| ments on their appeals last No-| vember, but on June 3 it set re-| arguments for Oct. 14. It. was also on June 3 that the court ordered a new trial for Clinton E, Jencks, a former labor official convicted of filing a false} non-Communist affidavit. The court said Jencks should have testified against him at his trial. * * * the Supreme Court the depart-! been given access to FBI reports! town Detroit. made by undercover agents who! GETTING SET — Hot rodder Ned Watson of Mark, keep a Milford adjusts a line in his ‘‘Baby-Mint’”’ as . Jerry Hance, Tim Greenough and Ned's brother, ; Pontiac Press Phote critical. eye on the work. The pick-up truck took two years and $1,100 to re- build. seer me aed secutive’ Mey Miracle Mile Center n tewesee Has Sibley Shoe Store For years one of Michigan's larg- est dealers in Florsheim Shoes, the Sibley Shoe Stores will open their fifth store, Thursday, at the Mir- acle Mile Shopping Center. The new store, Sibley’s Miracle Mile Shoes, will be one of the larg- est in the company chain, and first in the Pontiac area. “ Their original store was found- ed in 1921, located next to the Fox Theater Building in down- The company has named Nathan iWeiner, who has been with them \for six years, as manager of the ‘ithe Warsaw auto works Saturday jis a great danger for Eastern ‘iselves against Gomulka Tells Borin to Accept Frontier WARSAW w — Wladyslaw Go- mulka says there is only one al- ternative to permanent accept- ance of Poland's disputed frontier with Germany — “the alternative of war." * * ® . “We cannot remain: blind to} this truth,"’ he told a meeting at in a speech made public only last night. “That is why we stress that the present policy of West Germany Europe . . . We must secure our- this danger by building our own military forces 85,1957 - x ae ‘épecial breale at the new Miracle Mile Town & Country City. a ‘Small-sized ‘ae will ‘get | Opening there tomorrow will ‘Small Women Get. Big. Break i : Ss ~ ee : 2 be a new branch of Nadon’s, ‘firm, nine years-old, with two Inc., a Michigan company that | other stores in Detroit. specialize in women's junior- size wearing apparel. Nadon's ig a_ relatively hew to Pontiac, its manager is not. She is Bertha Hunt, who has been in the retailing business many Upper Peninsula Gets Tracks ager .at George's-Newport’s de- Railroad Day GRAND MARAIS w — Railroad building—which is something new to these times—is going on Michigan's Upper Peninsula. . ‘Men and machines are cutting ami smoothing a grade and laying down-steel track. It is only for a distance of 16 miles, But it is. regarded as sig- nificant asa recognition of new potential wealth from the forests, The Lake Superior & Ishpeming! Railroad is building an $800,000 16- mile line from its present terminal west of Grand Marais, a few miles from Lake Superior’s Pictured Rocks. Wood products from timberlands of the Cleveland Cliffs Iron Co. and the State Conservation Depart- ment are to be hauled on the new line. , j Cleveland Cliffs, which owns the LS&I Railroad, says it has-been determined that the timber prod- ucts are of sufficient commercial value to support the new operation. To a large extent mechanical, the methads used in building the line contrast sharply with the past. Men’s mustle was predominant in the old construction of Ameri- g's railroads. But- the LS&I is strictly modern, also much faster. . _ “Tumblebugs” built the grade rapidly in place of the slower slip scrapers of another day. dozed roads, staying ahead of the Pontiac. i. a 3 Returns Trucks haul the rails and other track equipment on newly bull-| ing medium-to-better-priced sports of dresses will be featured in the store's 3,000 feet of selling space. * Decorations throughout take their clue from a large fire- _place, giving the store a , Suburban setting, in which its merchandize is best displayed, said Miss Hunt. track layers. A special crane sets the rails gently into place. , * * * The rails are spiked to the ties with a pnéumatic hammer. Anoth- er device bolts the rails together.) There has been one problem— ties. In the great days of railroad building, the Upper Peninsula was a big producer of ties, A treating plant west of Ishpeming is being worked 24 hours a day The new terminal has a name.| ° It is “Ewalt Landing,” named for) Arr in Rai Richard Ewalt, forester of Cleve- Arrest Reds mn ids : land Cliffs. - “| SINGAPORE (®—Police said to- though sarily styled for youngsters, but rather for short or slim women. , Nadon’s two Detroit stores are Although the company is new years and is former millinery man- partment store in downtown Nationally-known brands, includ- wear, suits, coats and a full line - She was quick to point out that * the store specializes. in . sizes 5 to 15, these are not neces- <| at 13516 W. McNichols Rd. and at ; day they had arrested 50 persons ~ in. antisubversive raids through- out the island. MACK’S DRUG STORE e- Son of Burns and Allen Sentenced for Speeding BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. # — Ronnie Byrns, actor son of George} Burns and Gracie Allen, has been! sentenced to spend two Saturdays. doing “manual labor’ for the’ Beverly Hills police chief. \ * * * - 4 Burns, 22, was given the sen- ¢_ tence in Municipal Court yester- day as a condition ‘of a 10-day jail term. He also was given one year’s summary probation. Burns, was sentenced for speeding 8 m.p.h. in a sports car in a 25-mile | zone here. | ©@ Prescription Specialists 3505 Eliz. Lake Rd. a Monarch “tus ‘any povs wO** ‘Save on Famous Brand Clothing’ OPENS AT MIRACLE MILE With Gigantic Clothing Values ... Arrow - Stetson Hats Clipper Craft Clothes” Congress last month passed a/new store. Weiner is being trans- bill to let trial “judges decide|ferred here from his furmer posi- ays oe * ® service. Wilson also may use You are invited te. open * Swank - Interwoven any Regular Army troops he be- |What parts of a government docu-|tion as manager of the Grand Pulend’s western trontine’ hew o Charge Acwut. lieves are necessary. roa if ae should be shown | River-Southfield store. runs along the Oder Nelom River 30-day, 90-day or 6- Hickock endant * ~ * line: It was imposed by the Soviet Month Budget. The Arkansas National Guard, as The Justice De t nt of July 31, included 8,605 gyre presumably any new trials for/sice wil! specialize in better grade vei rn eS ~ sj Scales and Lightfoot would be! men's women's and children's National Guard. Eiseahowef’s governed by provisions of the| jrorwcar sweeping order embraced bothinew act. o . ease kw e store's in or is an branches of the service. Z unusual and striking design. With for their shoes at. Sibley’s. The the lighting and color scheme -ompany has been exclusive deal- r mous de- | cesar = datas ‘parang the °TS for elevator shores in Michigan if id . ar 5 eens 5 oes | men that they will “walk out two Warped Thinking inches taller.” of Red Students at the present trend toward casual : . x *® * Union after World War II. -The line takes in some former German territory to compensate Poland for Polish territory taken by Rus- sia. The line never has been recog- nized as permanent by the West- ern powers or by West Germany. said) sibley’s, as has been their prac- i Z Los Angeles Packaging Cost of Living Rises «Smog as City Souvenir to Set August Record LOS ANGELES m—Ever since ithe land boom days that preceded |citrus and film production, South-| living. WASHINGTON government reported today that! the cost of living increased in Au- gust for the 12th consecutive month and was 3.6 per cent higher than a year ago. ° * t x ‘ Higher prices for food and hous- ing were the main reasons for the advance in August although all other major groups of goods and services also rose. Prices of goods and services went up two-tenths of one per cent in August and at the end of | the month stood at 121 per cent of she 1947-49 average. Food, which accounts for” one- third of the consumer price index, declined one and one-half per . cent in August last year but went up-four-tenths of one per cent last month. At 117.9 per cent of the 1947-49 average, the retail foed index was at a record high in ¥8figust, 4.2 per cent higher than-a year ago. (INS) — jern Californians have had a repu- tsouvenir tation for capitalizing on any- Yhing. So now come two San Fernando Valley men to package smog, in cans and other containers, as a “of the nation’s largest city.” |.Carleton Young and Noel \Young of Van Nuys have filed’ articles of incorporation. | } | T.| Son Born to Belafontes in New York City NEW YORK (®—Mrs. Harry: Belafonte, wife of the singer and) lactor, gave birth yesterday to a! ‘son, David Michael, at Mt. Sinai! | Hospital, Belafonte is at New York Hos-), 'pital recuperating after a second operation in a month for an eye ‘ailment, He is expected to remain at least another week. | Belafonte, a -Negro, was mar- ned March 8 to Julie Robinson, 28-year-old ‘white dancer. short of ready cash If you can use some Next te clothes, take weekend trips, meet medical expenses or for other worthwhile purposes. eall SEABOARD — your lending neighbor! Get a $25 to $500 Loan Today! Phone: FE 8-9661 for immediate action! SEHBORRD 2 Miles Northeast of Downtown Pontiac; | ‘ erste | no doubt be enjoyed ag much Each department will be sep- the eye and mood of each member is in gold and blends softly with third j,amboo-type wallpaper and modern! bamboo furniture. | Atop all this is a pleasant blue ceiling blended with the remain- der of the design’ by soft re- cessed lighting. The children’s department will by adults as the kids, It is fea- tured by a four-horse merry-go- round and a crazy mirrot. Many men will find they’ can) lactually ‘get a lift’’ out of shopping petroleum product. _The Sibley Shoe chain has other stores at Grand River and South-| arated, with something to catch feiq Livernois atid Seven Mile! Roads, and in the Lincoln Park, ,of the family. The plush carpeting Plaza Shopping Center. Rome Schools Closed ROME (® — Authorities post-) poned. the opening of Rome's! schools yesterday because of in-| creasing deaths from Asian flu. Press reports said 11 had died in the past 24 hours, bringing total deaths here to 20 in the past three weeks. - Gasoline is the most valuable Shocks American. WALNUT CREEK, Calif. (» — Divinity ‘student Staniey Mum. ford, 21, returned home today from Moscow, where he was twice arrested for strolling too close to a Soviet.factory with his camera. oo “I’m even more anti-Commu- nist now than I was when I arrived in Moscow,” said Mum- ford, who attended the Russian youth festival there. “It was shocking to see how a Marxist education can warp the thinking processes of the stu- dents. They think of everything in terms of class struggle.” 4 wa 2-PANT SUITS Smart 3-button styling in these qual- eve , are youa little'short this manth? | Most of us have months when we are a little to pay bills, buy new extra cash rigW@{now, FINANCE COMPANY the New A & P Super Market. \ et | _ Colgate’s new aerosol-type insecticide and other bugs ECONOMY 12-0Z. LARGE 6-0Z. 69: 98: ON SALE AT ALL YOUR FRIENDL D STORES A i NATIONAL F ity all-wool suits. Regular 65.00 48° MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER | TELEGRAPH and SQUARE LAKE ROAD — 2 Doors North of J. C. Penney 7}. LS 7 ‘alee Mens AND BOYS: wer FEderal 8-3105 \ Sport Shirts | Good looking cotton Regular 2.98 flannel Sanforized sport 59 shirts in Ivy league 2 stripes and plaids. Spread and _ button- down collars. Two for 5.00 _. SPORT COATS 100% wool. The very Reg. 25.00 .° latest in sharp sport ts. Huge selection to 75 se meromecinte 1 BOYS’ DEPARTMENT 5.95 Crew Sweaters... ee eet B90 sweaters . -* 2. Sh The very newest style. Made of Sanforized cotton flannel ** “were. 1.98 RAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAS , i Store about to open at the Miracle Mile Shepping Center will be the largest store in the company's George Gust to Manage Branch | . LARGEST IN CHAIN—The new Kinsel’s Drug | Peatiac Press Phete vast chain. It is the second store in the Pontiac area, covers. an area of 10,000 square. feet, and is one of Michigan’s most modern drugstores. Largest Kinsel’s Opening at Center The largest Kinsel Drugstore! — colonial architectural in the company's chairi will open| lines, in white against a bur- this week at the new Miracle Mile| 8®"4y background. Shopping Center. | The side walls of the store will | Mahager of the new store will be gay shades of pink -and yellow, f be George Gust, who has been With a soundproof fiberglass ceil- with the organization fér 30 years.|ing. Canope lighting will be used Gust has spent 15 of these years managing Detroit area stores and for the past seven months has managed the Kinsel Drugstore at Huron and Saginaw streets. The new store, covering 10,000 square feet, will be the second in this area. One of the most modern drugstores in the state, it is designed on the self serve basis with check-out facilities. The store will carry a complete line of drug needs and confections, | as well as major cosmetics and various types of housewares Ce . cutlery. * * * The prescription department will spread across the back of the store, being constructed along colonial designs and offering a re- \ oe freshing contrast to the modern na design of the store itself. ; The department will be set off by four colonial type pillars and housed in woodwork fol- ‘8 - lwarm weath reT.eilbuh dt eS | penx | {around fixtures, while the over- | head lights will be neon. * x * The interior decoration is de- signed to make shopping a pleas- ant venture, with plenty of floor space between the racks and shelves displaying merchandise. | ‘The new Kinel’s store' will also feature a large soda fountain well equipped to serve lunches to patrons or employes at the ing center, as well as those desiring only a quick cup of cef- fee, | One factor allowing tustomers more shopping space will be the lack of window displays. The front ‘of the store will consist of plate glass from ceiling to floor with ino inner display cases using up floor space which will permit shoppers the advantage of moving about and browsing more easily. | The modernistic store will be completely air conditioned during jwarm weather. The building is of ia steel] and concrete construction. First practical automobile was built in Kokomo, Ind., by Elwood Haynes in 1892, according to En- SQUARE LAKE AND TELEGRA wy SLO sv0es oor ih Week et — For MEN “ Florsheim, Sibley, Win- throp, John C. Roberts, Kingsway . Elevator height-increasing shoes, Evans Slippers. For WOMEN Vitality, Florsheim, Grace Walker, Accent, Cheer Leaders, Daniel _Green Slippers. ing hand bags and hosiery for the entire family. 5 Great Sibley’s Stores. to Serve You ° % 2231-35 Woodward Avenue (next to Fox Theatre) * 17740 Grand River Avenue (near Southfield) * 19121 Livernois Avenue (at 7 Mile Rd.) %* 3620 Fort (Lincoln Park Plaza) * Michigan Miracle Mile Shopping Center MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER SQUARE LAKE AND TELEGRAPH RDS. Another uliraumodern family Quality Shoe Store in NEW MICHIGAN MIRACLE MILE = SHOES for the ENTIRE FAMILY . and many other nationally advertised brand shoes... also fine accessories, includ- PH RDS. SS =a T Tos SS For CHILDREN Red Goose, Winthrop Jrs., Simplex Flexies, Yanigans, Cheerleaders, P. F. Canvas Shoes. | HOUSEWARES! OVER 50 SPECIAL BUYS! Lovely, Like-Real GIRL & BABY DOLLS Regularly $100} APPAREL! Very New Styles in Stripes, Solids! Blouses Reg. é ‘Beautiful dressed dolls with latex bodies, vinyl heads. Washable, they scand 12” high. You'll want co start your litele girl in on a collection of these beauties’ Versatile import blouses look ‘crisp and lovely in Sanforized cotton broadcloth .. . rich fall colors. See your ‘favorite styles with new and novel details. Misses'womens 32-38. 4 Toy Hat Box... 77¢ Toy Ukelele. . .77¢ J Seamless Nylons 77. Pastel flocking on 8 x 4” hat Full size: 12” long, 644” wide. 4Bo ys’ ilvy League Reg. 98¢ pr.! Extra-sheer or Decorated, boxed. Reg. $1.19 box. Plastic handle. Reg. $1. Flannelette Shirts ‘sam $1.19 Value! Corton flannel shirts have regular and button-down col- lars. Washable dark and light solids, *, cz plaids. Perfect for school, sports and playtime! 6-1. ' a TOT SIZES 2-6X fica SIL pes Fe JUST 77° told cuff. 9-11. 3 prs. 77¢ Y8¢ Value! Pre-shrunk cotron flan- nel shirts in colorful patterns. Washable, wonderfully wearable styles take rough ‘n’ tumble wear! . » oe Toy Train .... 77* Friction Bus. . .77¢ Mechanical, track tender, loco- Streamlined greyhound bus is motive, passenger car. Reg. $1. 11” x 342” high. Reg. $1.00 , ss 4 ® ‘§ t VT re i ts Sate at OE om a9 H tein at & “ag eu) & : Rayon Panties 2 irs.7 Women’s, elastic or band leg: ja 5-7 and x-sizes. Reg. to 59¢ pr. Friction Truck . .77¢ Gun & Holster . .77° Boxed dump truck is a full 10 Single holster with a buckaroo long, rubber tires. Reg. $1.00 cap pistol complete. Reg. 98¢ na ult ii sit ii fie” i tit ee id a) ee | utch Bags . . 77* New Fall syles in plastic pat- ent or shoecalf. Reg. $1.00 ~~) Plastic; for ia living room, kitchen, nursery, etc. Reg. 98¢ Regularly $1.98! Dogs, cats in cages with sliding doors. 77¢ . “ ¢ Moccasins ees 77 5 Reg. $1! Women’s cotton suede cushion innersole. S-M-L. Diaper Bag... 77 7: Plastic Trucks . . 77* * Has diaper, bib, bortle, spoon, cup-saucer. Pink, blue. Reg.$1. Colorful pick-up, delivery and skip loader trucks. Reg. 98¢ | 3-Pe. Kitchen Sets Ironing Board Covers : of 77: 2for77* - Reg.$1! 3 fry pansor 3 sauce 54” scorch-resistant Silicone pans: Aluminum. Set...77¢ covers in pliofilmReg. $138 3 Pc. Grouse Set. ..... 77¢ Dish Cleths....... 10 fer 77¢ ° ¢ Knit Gloves. . .77,:] Reg. $1! Women’s wool gloves; J applique designs. S-M-L. PR 78 To Re 8 au a pas Beooty Kit. « «77° Blocboord .. 77 Kit has lipstick, rouge; com- aple finish, masonite writing pect, mirror, soap, = — 98¢ a ace. 20x18” Regularly Sl! . Houseplant ASSORTMENT TI Many varieties ‘of favorite ; houseplants in a 4” pot. Add) 9 x 12” Natural oak frame. charm re yeas mommeiag 7. 19 aa aguees. Reg. $1. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 5S. S. KRESGE COMPANY Cortoias, Valance LTT Set eg $2.77 set! Dacron ruffle ‘tiers and valance. 36" long.” TEL-HURON CENTER Choc. Wafers 211s. 774) Reg. 47¢ |b! Chocolate- coated sugar wafers. 2bs., 11¢ tape ye Ih - tee _fiiiias a ide | — 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, ON. RESERVE LIST — Lisabacher Sheree / aeeny) ‘Gandee, who will undergo surgery next week for cartilage injuries, was one pt the three players pared from the roster of the Detroit Lions today. "He was placed on the reserve list, while end Tom Rychlec and» ’ guard Chick Muelhaupt were cut from the squad. - ‘Is Robinson Hangin “NEW YoRK w—Was Sogar Ray] Rotleee threatened to retiré/is a .manh ‘ot: tremendous pride, |Robinson ser ious when he said he after Carmen Basilio lifted his ‘was thinking of hanging up his middteweight title Monday night, gloves for good? jbut most insiders agreed he would) | No,-aceording to most expert)try to regain. the crown. Lopinion, | They point out that Sugar Ray Up jand he dearly wanted to bea ‘Basilio and retire as the cham pion. Now, having lost the title three times, he wants to give it one Open Season at Baltimore | - ‘ping heads around the National speedster from East Texas State. |Football League as the teams pre-! Other rookies on the squad are eeckend. their season openers Mitac adc Kec Russell Of Bowing wee . | The Detroit Lions reached their Green, defensive back Terry Barr 35-player limit by placing veteran of Michigan, end — Junker ot ‘Sonny Gandee on the injured. re- ay heel an tackle J Gordy serve list, Tom Rychlee on the °"~ 2 A — ‘military reserve list and putting tea teaak yi Tee bgBiae g a k Muel-|*** ’ Faust on sarong = er inext week to correct the injury. g This left the team with. five | rookies and 30 veterans. One of | the newcomers who battled his | way to stay on the. squad was Yesterday was the day for chop | little Marvin Brown, 149 - potind i | In workouts for the regular season opener Sunday afternoon St. Fred’s Lyon Leads County Scoring St. Frederick junior back Jack said his pleased coach Gene Lyon, who ran wild tallying five) Wright... touchdowns Sunday in the Rams'| Lyons takes a big two touch- Ist victory in four seasons, is the'down lead over his gearest com- leading individual scorer for Oak-Petitors in both the” county and land County and the surrounding/@rea into a Sunday game at Fern- area following the opening weex-(dale St. James. end of prep football with 30 points. *~ « * * * *« If the opposing backfield. that The speedy fullback scored bet- day wilt be one of the six arca ter than half his team’s points in 8tidders “who has 18 points on a 50-0 walloping of Holy Cross of three tallies. He is rugged veteran Marine City despite the fact he is|Bill Tunnicliff. not an experienced ballcarrier. _Lake Orion pass catcher Jim “| think these touchdowns Drake, Frank Redman .of Mil- were the Ist Jack has scored in| {9rd and Troy's Wayne Figiey high ‘school bail. We used him | 2"¢ others with 18. mostly as a blocker iast year | Ed. Thompson of Armada and. when we were passing a lot,”” New Haven back Bob Petty are Last Game at Ebbets Field? Dodgers’ Home Is Like | Ghost Ball Park Today - . ‘ PAT TP BROOKLYN — Ebbets Field| Gil Hodges, the big first base- | Thompson: Armada .......3 © 18 looked the same as always today. |man, who married a Brooklyn girl Lace arbors vetoed ® is The admission price signs still! Gacki, St. Benedict ....,...2 0 42 were hanging. The flags of the 2% has resided the year-round|Biery,” Northville ...., “200 8 eight National League teams stil|here the past eight years, said TAR.’ eon coe = 5 watted in the “Fiatbush breezes Bare Sedan cet 1G Even the tarpaulin was sptead| se | across the infield. | “I hate to leave.” There was one big difference,| “It's a funny feeling,” said vet-| though. eran pitcher Carl Erskine. ‘Every It was a ghost ball park. Bar-| play you watch, you realize that ring an unforeseen miracle, the! you'll never see the same thing | Brooklyn Dodgers never will play at Ebbets Field again.’ ? there again. Only the official) Captain Pee Wee Reese, the | signing of contracts stood between'| senior Brook in point of service, | them and moving to Los Angeles|shook his head and said: next year. | | The . scoring: - area slayer with three six-point- ers to their credit already. x * * There is certain to be a new ‘county scoring champion this fall with Ron Brewer of Southfield graduated. He tallied 128. A strong threat may be 1956 runnerup Jim Kearney, Bloo: field. He scored 12 points open- ing day. Gary Ballman, area leader easily with 144 points for East |Detroit a year ago, will have a} jtough time defending that crown idue to a summer injury which| has sidelined him for the early; 'games. i MAKES GRADE—When the roster of the Detroit Lions was pared down to the 35-man limit yesterday, little Marvin Brown, OAKLAND COUNTY LEADERS rr State found he had made the Lyon. St. Frederick .......5 149-pound whiz from East Texas | Lions: Pare ‘Roster 7 at Baltimore, two of the Lions’ ,in Miami or New York if it takes first stringers missing from last week’s game were back in,action today, with a bad leg was running well, and Dave Middleton, leading pass receiver of the team, has com- pleted studies for the summer at Tennessee medical school, The absence of Doran and Mid- dieton along with Dorne Dibble was a hurting factor in the 17-0) loss to the Giants Sunday. Baltimore will have nine rook- les on its roster when it opens against the Lions. Yesterday, the Colts placed veteran defensive back Den Shula, linebacker Bill Underwood on waivers. | Shula has been with the Colts since 1953 when he was obtained from Cleveland. In other player transactions around the league yesterday: CHICAGO BEARS — Fullback Dick Washington and halfback | Dick Breel. Tackle Willie Lee, | burgh Steelers in cash deal. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Quar- terback Jim Haluska, fullback Frank Purnell and end Cari Isaacs. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Halfback Rex Shiver, end Gilmer 2 Spring and guard Jack Davis. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Halfback Harold Giancanelli and center Bob Kelly. : SAN FRANCISCO. 48ERS—Ends' iCharley Smith-and Charley Mackey Rhodes. and halfback Bill ; LOS ANGELES RAMS — Sent tackle Charley Twogood to Chi-; cago Cardinals in exchange for a draft choice. . Jim Doran, out for three games, jin its eight-year existence. Koman and halfback caeaed | ‘|fand. “The moment a champion Florida A&M was sent to Pitts-! Akins Hand ls Broken iovesT== more try. If he can beat Basilio(We The ae it Dy apne in a return, he'll call it quits,{PPove of the format of uur nament. in which only 16 players} Monda Available “ei en ot = > ie pS ee Oe oa we Ns ge * | es Z i f He’s 37, and can't go on forever. | are oe ee Basilio is perfectly willing to go ‘through with the return. The contracts ‘stated that it was to be at? | held in 90 days, but that is purely legal terminoldgy. Because of) taxes, neither fighter would want to make it again this year. * * * It probably will be held some- time between February and June. There is talk of holding it either place in February or in Chicago if it goes outdoors in June. The promoting International Boxing Club lost about $100,000 on the Monday bout, and a Basilio- Robinson’ return is really the only remaining big money bout left to put on. The loss, incidentally, was the biggest the IBC has taken ' $353 “$223 Code #2720 Cede #2721 Available at all SDD's &: State Stores Yes, when it’s * * * Robinson went into seclusion to lick his’ wounds and hurt pride right after the fight and still has not come out of hiding. Basilio’s brain trust has been toying with keeping the welter- weight title which he also wears (or wore), figuring there might be more money involved. But that appears to be out. +® * * “The New York State Athletic Commission ruling on this is spe- cific,” said Chairman Julius Hel- wins a title in a division heavier than his “own, he must abandon 'the title in the lighter division. Basilio is the world middleweight champion, nothing more." The National Boxing Assn., which is not affiliated with the New York commission, gives a jdual champion a 10-day period to decide which title he wants to keep. ST. LOUIS (»—X-rays disclose Virgil Akins of St. Louis. a con- jtender for the middleweight title, broke a bone in his left -hand: in the second or third round of the bout he lost to veteran Gil Turner last week at Atlantic City. it’s so smooth you'll ike it And gin that that smooth makes a perfect Gin & Tonic every time! DISTILLED FROM AMERICAN GRAIN » DISTILLED DRY GIN + 90 PROOF THE FLEISCHMANN DISTILLING CORPORATION, NEW YORK CITY Drake, Lake Orion ..... . 3 is grade as the NFL season opens giey, Tro ne . Redman, Milford ........ 3 1s| this weekend. Tunnieliff, St: James .. ... . 8 Kearney, Bloomfield mie 2 2 Fox, St. Michael _. 2 12 Banks, RO Dondero ....... 2 Volk, Clawson .....-...e00- 2 Rehse, Clawson ete secret Murphy, Hase) Park .. ApooeeJ Derocher, 8t. Pregestek eet 1 Hm Wwenecseoeeosoo” - Pe) onville 1 cou NTY AREA LEADERS D Ee j The Harlem Globetrotters played | before 75,000 in Berlin Olympic | Stadium in 1951, to become the | largest crowd ever to view a single | basketball game in world history. | -. -«- the Brooks were sad at the thought of leaving the little band. Major league ball players are not supposed to have any feeling about where they play. But to a, man—even the native Californians, box. * * * “Tt’s an eerie feeling,'’ admitted Duke Snider, who resides in Cali- fornia. Said ‘Manager Walt Alston: “When I came here, I heard that this was a tough town, but ‘anywhere ever had better treat- \the finale and it resulted in a 2-0) \up a running selection of reminis- | 'was over, she-played Auld Lang the fans could get on you, But they treated me good. I’m Slow making friends but when I make. them I hate to leave them.” Roy Campanella refused to give up hope that the team would stay in Brogklyn. “Gosh, I hope last night's game wasn't our last one in said the usually jovial catcher. suddenly realizing that it was the season finale at Ebbets Field. “I'm afraid it was the last} game in Brooklyn,” fielder Carl Furillo sadly. ‘This, is a sorry bunch to have to leave, Brooklyn,” ; j observed out-| | “I don't think any ball "reat ment than I here in Brooklyn. It’s tough.” * * * A crowd of 6,702 turned aut for | victory for the Brooks over the | Pittsburgh Pirates. Organist Gladys Gooding kept cent songs and when the ball game Syne. And the wake ended. BRAKES RELINED Ford; Chevrolet, Plymouth. Complete brake relining. First auality, fully guaran- teed. Complete 3] 49> wan Tite co. to 9 : FE 8-0424 here. It is a good town.” Ope 72 W. arse cn @ Proto Tools @ Globe Hoists @ Bean Visualiner Automotive Parts 29 Auburn Ave. . 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TIRE DEALER FE 5-6136 SOURCE CHECK. ~— Dave Deschenes, four, eyes the white leghorn which laid huge egg in Oklahoma City. ence, is twice si: Oxford Scene of Big Campout Clinton Valley Youths to Leave Friday for Weekend ‘Jamboree’ More than 1,000 Clinton Valley Boy Scouts and Explorers will head} for Oxford on Friday night to par- ticipate in a weekend ‘Roundup Jamboree.” Largest camping event ever sponsored by the local Scout coun- cil, the activity will be based on Scout Jamboree held Valley tional Boy during the summer at Forge, Pa. It also will provide a panoramic iview of Scouting for boys who have few. weeks. Coming by car, truck and bus from all parts of North Oakland and Macomb Counties, the boys will put up their tents at the Paul White farm, four miles éast of Egg, nine inches in-circumfer- ze of a normal one at left. Work, $1] 00 p roduce Hotrod By REBA HEINTZELMAN . MILFORD — After two years of hard labor and $1,100, a Milford youth has almost finished build- ing one of the most unique hotrods in the area. Every time that Ned Watson of 1100 Commerce Rd., roiis his “Baby-Mint” out of the ground- ~ —— ; Start Evangelist Series Tonight 2 Outstanding Leaders to Hold Nightly Services, at Mandon Lake Church WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—Dr. Homer A. Hammontree and Paul Beckwith are holding a series of evangelistic meetings at the Man- don Lake Community —- Round Lake Road. lene garage, other “rodders” Oxford on the Lake George Rd. .. MIXED CAMPING Dave -Vogt of Rochester, chair- man of the miniature Jamboree, ‘|pointed out that this event will | said, “we never completely fin- {previous council-wide jamborees. Juting the program and layout of the Na-|. i | joined troops and posts in the past| incorporate many changes from) | istroked-Cam aluminum flywheel cial drag-strip under the jurisdic- jand triple carbs were installed.|tion of the State Police and Safety pistons dominate the top. ish building our cars because screeching stop to investigate and | something new can always be examine the progress made. added.” Peper 6 the scat-going vehicle} The boys usually go to New Bal- a 1982 Ford pick-up truck./timore, where teenagers from all re 1948 Mercury engine with ajover the state may race on a spe- driving by —-come to a Special chrome racing type domed Council] committees. “I don’t know of one single ac- “Scout. units will not camp by districts, but will be assigned to tent areas in the order in which they arrive. In this way, the boys will meet more scouts from other parts of the council. A Romeo troop may be next to a Farming- ton unit and a Milford exployer post next to a Utica troop. “Program events will not be * * * “The chassis was stripped, the “T@ab cut way down, then mounted on the framework. Inside, the most important item is the unusual! Stewart - Warner dash ariel for the various instruments. safety belt will be Rae to the| sides. Up front, there are 670 x inch tires, while on the rear oe there is 800 x 15 rubber. Ned has a fine radio installed, too, but. is “not concerned about a heater.” Other equipment includes air- plape-type tube shocks, and the | ine hotrod racing. In contests, “Baby-Mint” takes the curves at 84 miles per hour, Ned said. Although Milford does not have a Hot Rodders organization at the present time, plans are being made to re-organize the “Clipped, An-| ; ms.” which folded up in 1955. FT we ” Most of the local teenagers be- long to the “Spark Plugs,” in South Lyon, according to: Watson, and they are affiliated with twenty active clubs in Michigan. Each Monday night the boys get r and help members w on their cars, There are sine suds wader canceled uae ! Prices of Eggs : Won't Be Aided | by Flu Vaccine protective roll-bar, so necessary now: | represent and “as far as that goes,” et ja" ‘strike for what they feel is nec- ‘cident that has occurred there, yet,” wees oe concluded, on a conté$t basis, but will be offered for participation by the unit. An award will be given to those entering at least four‘ of the nine events,”’ he said. Saturday’s program events in-, | chude: rope and knots, orientation compass, axemanship and sawing, SKULL SESSION — Developi , i ae See af re apa pes Ss) \ Gee 8 ad a ot f , ts \ ‘ { Tc > =. eee tee _ f - \ \ a ie \ ce ! + Ad THE PONTIAC PRESS: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1957 Sn ae of West Bloomfield production are, left to right, Muriel director; Ted Hendrickson, executive producer, and F Marco, assistant director. “‘Wake Up Darlitig,” slated for presen- tation at West Bloomfield High School Oct. 17-19 will be mounted in a lavish setting and promises to be of Broadway caliber. ng plans for the Township Players negan, ces De- J f nature, friendship exchange, whit- Martin Charges “Rival Coercion | ting. firs aid and camping. Neigh-| Says MMPA Compels mor four distgicts of the council will be| Members to Sign Up; jjin charge of these events. Asks Aid of Williams | Sher PROGRAM | | Sherry Mapley of Oxford, in! Sarre - . charge of # big campfire program LANSING « — The organizing on Saturday night, reports high- boss of a fledgling dairy group|jight acts are to be a bull whip hag accused a rival organization|demonstration, trick roping and of resorting to coercion and intimi-|horseback riding, Civil Air Patrol | ; ship. ‘ Indian dancing. “And, of course, 'there’ll be singing,’ he said. The Michigan Milk Producers | | Assn. has 8,000 “prisoners” among On Sunday, field services will its 10,000 members, Homer Mar. | be conducted by church officials for Scouts of the Protestant, Re- tin, organizational director for A Dairy Farmers Cooperative man Catholic and Lutheran falths, Accenting the miniature Jam- Assn., told Gov. Willlams yester- day. |boree theme, boys of Pontiac troop “Farmers are told to sign up|244 Will set up a camp similar to have a market, sign up or the dairy boree. inspectors will be out to see them,”’ PLENTY OF WORRIES Martin said. “The MMPA doesn't, Ervin Schilke of Rochester, di- the dairy farmers atirector of physical arrangements, readily admits that his committee | ~*~ * * had “‘plenty of headaches” in ar-| Martin and directors of the year-/ranging for the many unusual| ‘old coooerative p called for,needs of a group of this size. |the Governor's help in Michigan's} «gor instance,” he said, “we | milk price battle. have to provide plenty of water Dairy farmers are ready to for the boys to use for drink- ing, cooking and washing.”” The dation in building up its member-|f@ncy drill team marching and) with the MMPA or they won't their site at the Valley Forge Jam-| MR. AND MRS. CH In White Lake Rite essary to give them a decent liv- ing,” said Martin, Plymouth farm- er and former leader of the Fair Share Bargaining Assn., another Michigan Milk Producers As- sociation is going te bring in a tank truck with water. Carol Lee Miller Wed Feature Tenor, Pianist Tuesday M usicale to Start | ROCHESTER — Rochester Tues- Clubs and the Oxford Music Club day Musicale will open its fall'will be special guests. © -. , season at 8 p. m. Tuesday, Oct. 1,! “ ’ at the North Hill Elementary, “™lusle, the ee a 4 School. | uage” is the 1957-58 theme. = ¥ » |. State and District officers of the, Mrs. Hollis Hinkel, program 4 Michigan Federation of _ Music chairman, will present Wanzie , | ee ee \Davis, tenor, and Christine Smith, ipianist, of Detroit. Davis has ap- peared on radio and television agd Guided Missiles Mix sess on ryt an wievsion x With Boots, Saddles vec! esas ite | iCounty General ‘Hospital. | WHITE SANDS PROVING, + + * \GROUND, N. M. (INS) — Boots! | and saddles mix well with guided 'missiles at White Sands Proving | Ground, in New Mexico. Mrs. Howard Wilson and Hazel Griffith will give a travelogue and . show colored slides of the recent Biennial Convention of the Nation- ; The missiles belong to the Army. a} Federation mecting at Colum- |Navy, and Air Force. The cowboy pis Ohio. gear belongs to the five-men who fiostesses are Mrs. Johnson |keep stray cattle and humans out'Neweli and Jean Lilly. Social \of the missile paths, : Committee includes Mrs. C. W, Floyd Adams and four cow- Shepard, chairman; Mrs. Lyle | pokes under his direction, patrof Marshall, Mrs. George Rosenquist | the 100-mile-long range from sun- ‘and Mrs. Ray Frank. | Up to sundown five days a hia In two years they have ralled” 200 horses, nearly half “ot | '|Keego Harbor them wild. | The modern cowboys are not sur-| Library Lists » prised to bring in as many as 300 Newest Books-.. ‘Stray cattle in one week alone.| iTrespassers of the human kind) ARLES A. REDMAN The ' which start to- money officially that ean of! dairy group. State police and the sheriff's de- Lares t nearly. so carneroue batt WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN. eggs to. produce Asian vaccine ; artment contr os ; so numerous but they _ e oe ie conclude on pore ia Williams told the delegation he ewes tar C nad oS ond MILFORD An evening cere- wees, Jim Miller and Dale frequently) dare saddeni/Genth py SIP 5 matan Stelle ae 7:30 pm each evening. in retail egg prices. was sympathetic to their plight, {control A Red Cross first aig|™O"Y at White Lake Presbyterian : ‘wandering past the danger warm- Sie i field = ni ie ° _ : *« * * but that dairy farmers must |truck will be on hand. jChurch Saturday united in mar-| After a reception in the church ings. js. ee oe Dr. Hammontreewas for Six! 11. denartment noted yesterday| SP feuding among themselves | Inasmuch as little firewood {s riage Carol Lee Miller and Charles|Parlors, the couple left for a Cape t+ & a a ee years the head of the music de! nat egg prices have been. rising and settle on a course of action (available, Scout units will bring | Arthur Redman. Cod honeymoon. | The four riders working under) bald nats oes ied 10 ine nian partment at the Moody Bible In-| 5. “June because farmers re.| before the state can come to their |their own charcoal for cooking. << *« -« + * Adams are Donald Graham, Fred. Pass Recreate eee eae big has ee ae duced their laying figcks. The| Tescue. | And, fire pails for fire protection.| tye pride is the Guaginer ot Mr | They will reside in a new home English, Tom Dayberry, and Dolph; ae yenr. an «ewe Wook ieoding avetaeiiel mcholng Gat trend has nothing to do with pro-| Asked to outline the group's pro-| “The Jamboree staff of leaders) 444 \rs. Melvin C. Miller of 3141\" Highland, upon their’ return. | Pate, ail sith at least 15 years of. pace 7 edition of The Worl — duction of an estimated 85 million|gram, Martin said: will sleep in a circus tent. That's | ‘cowboy know-how. | Bleved: veer ‘ational Ges with the “Billy” Sunday team. He}, oe ot the vacci Tee goal, simply put, is more|PTobably indicative of the size \Eake Dr. here, and pathetic | ve Orion Church | Eleven years of National .Geo- has an outstanding ministry with , 9 , _,,|i8 the son of Mrs. Eva Redman,|Lake Orion ure graphic articles, pamphlet form. servicemsed date the Sait twa In the “Poultry and Egg|money for less milk.” jand of the fun we're expecting, 1085 North Park Dr., Milford. | Patent hioceaphles tae ccare ine wars Situation,” the department noted) ‘He called for legislation setting|Schilke said. Plans Dinner Thursday ‘Avon Photo Club ee tte Cente wien =, | - Wearing a gown of Chantilly through 1956. 20th Century Authors that total demand by drug com-jup bargaining powers for ~dairy- | , : x * * : isi lace over taffeta with bouffant | LAKE ORION — The ‘Women's and first supplement. Junior Baok a ative of M6 panies for eggs will be about 20/men which would allow them toFoyp Towns Methodist f M T Ve atitor ee saad Ball chigaNit 30 million over a five-month|control milk prices and milk pro-, : skirt, the bride repeated her Department of the Reorganized {Q M@@t INUurs ay jot Authors, = wages Theologi-|neriod.This amount is regarded/duction through contracts w ith Guild Meets Thursday | ‘v7 before 1s0 pm. [Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Arnon o\Rer shew Sp ao sre cal Seminary and has been active with the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. He has edited hymn- books and authored — articles that have appeared in Christian magazines, SS Both men, active on the con- ference programs of many churches; have a unique teach- ing ministry, The church is located north of Cooley Lake road. The Rev. Dorr’, W. Fockler, pastor of the church has extended an invitation to the public to attend the meetings. . t : Alden r., Dr. Leslie Greene | 3 gente 2 8. ere ine at 12 none This | meet- to Talk Thursday at Clarkston CLARKSTON—Dr. Leslie Green, Superintendent of Clarkston Com-) munity Schools, will be guest speaker at the gerieral membership meeting of the Clarkston Gardens Improvenient Assn., Thursday, at Clarkston , Methodist. Church Bo Hind the evening premiger be The Association now is publish- ing a monthly newspaper, with Mrs. Douglas Griffiths as chair- man of publications. A bowling league also is in the process of being formed. A “Hard Times Dance” is planned for members and friends of the group Oct. . a. at the Com- munity. Center. | He vba that about 130 mil- by one informed poultry, special- Af oo “a drop tnshy Bate” h- & ony ~ imi ar recial every day. County | Calendar The Leonard = iakeytne Cemetery) a wills hold its meeting tonight Auxiliary Hall, A supper will be serve. Metamora — of officers — By held at = 8 . meeting , Oct. 1, of New Hedson Matie Renwick Circle of the WSCS of New Hudson Methodist Charch will meet at 2 p.m. Thursday, in the home of Mrs. Stanie Potts, Eva poeerect Circle will meet the same day 8 p.m. in the home of Mrs. curt’ Ghenowiih rkston oe Clarkston arts and Garden Club of w nies h will got poms ore. the me Betolarship we: Pund. sale will be held Com munit a El Pride and satura Oct. it. 12. : = Club Elects Officers | ROCHESTER ~~ New officers for the Grandinothers Club here are: Mrs, Ada Toussaint, president; Mrs. Helen Holman, vice presi-' \dent; Mrs. Frederika Schwark, ; |secretary and Mrs. Anne Delsoe, | treasurer. The group meets the second Township Hall. ernment. help, he said they aim to}riome More Attractive at Monday of each month in Avon| Marie. dairies. + ke & FOUR TOWNS — The Elizabeth Paul Dehring of A iawese Russell Guild will meet at 8 p.m. urer of the organization, tald Wil- liams dairy farmers hope even- tually to “get government off our Detroit ; ; FS troit Edison Home Service will backs.” Rather than rely on gov- give a talk on “How to Make Your Low, odist Church. After the business set up an organization to bargain Cy.” for theniselves. s and ivy formed Rer i meeting a repres@ptative from the Seacars Peceaat Her headpiece was of Chantilly lace and iridescent sequins with} alloped edge of pleated nylon andi Thursday at the Four Towns Meth- ae cana: orm Stephanotis, x * Bridal attendants were Sandra’ |Lee Ribble of Milford; Patsy Ann! Hostesses for the evening are 'Miller, sister of the bride; Connie Se |Mrs. Calvin Patterson, Mrs. Harold | Weaver, and little Sue Ann Simp-' Auction of Ewes, Lambs Seat ° . rs. Dan Simpson. The Building to Be Held in St. Louis Committee also will meet at 8 Knisley, Mrs. Leon Betcher and|$0". Who was flower girl. best man and ushers were Frank Qakland County farmers will PT. ees at 1200 Williams have the opportunity to buy native) “@"° “¢- ewes and feeder lambs Friday dur-| - ? ing an auction sponsored by the Sfichignn Livestock, Eechangs Rural Nuclear Power Held in St. Louis beginning at Conference Scheduled 8 p.m., the ‘auction will consist! _. of more than 500 ewes and 500 WASHINGTON (INS) — — The lambs, They will be sorted into|/Ural Electrification Administra- uniform lots of 20 to 50 head ac.\tion today scheduled its Poffenberger, assistant county ag- Oct. 7 and 8 in Washington. ie oye agent rt : sheep a tren flocks|#4tes will meet with industry rep- throushout the céntral Michigan|"esentatives at the meeting. area and many come from farmers who are shifting their sheep re Metamorat Girl Engaged. gram to large flocks of western ewes, he added. METAMORA —. Mrs. Hugh Buck- lingham of Attica announces the : Wee jengagement of her daughter, Freda County E Births \Mae, to Stuart Gingell, son of Mr. land Mrs.\Warten Gingell of Lapeer Mrs. Vwittera cage a. 3s) ren ns Pare Py him the bride elect is the Mr. en Heart Attack Kills Man on Outing Dance Club to Meet Fire Department was summoned the late Hugh Buck-jand Dr, Ronald Rosman’ inebam. No wedng te hs Dee nounced the scene. | ROMEO—A Detroit man col-; second)lapsed and died of a heart attack! cording to age and ity, Jay|Tural nuclear power conference for| yesterday morning in a woods a b yet ee half mile south of 31 Mile Rd., About 250 rural electricity dele-near Camp Ground Rd. * * * on victim was Andy Sotoliga, 64. He had been picking mush- rooms with his wife and friends, Mr. and Mrs, Walter--Patlewicz of Hamtramck when ie was stricken: ee * + ae The rescue squad of \the Rofneo pro- man dead at the ; ‘iL, Ker Ne ie the gon of Mr. and .Mts.| |Day Saints will hold a family sty i) AVON TOWNSHIP — Woodward) Fiction : idinner Thursday at the church.| Memorial Library, Rochester, is The Odyssey of Thaddeus Bax- Serving will be continuous from 5: the chosen meeting spot for Avon) [ter by Robert Lund 7 p.m. |Photography Club at 8 p.m. Thurs-' ‘The Cruel Cocks by Garland ‘ Proceeds of the event are ear- day. | Roark - |marked for the church building | Color slides will be shown at | th. Citadel Is Yours by Brigid | turd. ; ae —— pe mm have | Knight ee esta ed) to Dring siides Cor ; The Double Quest by Donald J. i i At “the recent meeting of the ols 0! : . ; Plan Girl Scout Troops | eeap hes Ware a eg, Onionhead by Weldon Hill METAMORA — Plans are being vice president to complete the term) The Feast of Lupercal by Brian ;made for starting two Girl Scout!of George Taylor, who has moved Moore Norman St. Clair served as mrt for the girls of the com- raat iewnis and : jfrom the arean | Non-Fiction 7 a ie an Inter-! ——_—__——— | eexar AN . group. "Fa | Where did you go? Out.” eaaud Ga” Shellenmar “and ra Ci ity Hall Clock Rests | ‘What did you do?” “Nothing” by Mrs. Edward Brecht are to take So Citizens Can Slee Robert os training as leaders at Lapeer Pp | Dough, Ray and Me by Pat Kil- BURLINGTON, Vt. ® - City Hall mer clo¢k is sounding again — but it — jrests between midnight and seven liam Peters jin the morning so nearby residents; ‘Charlie’’ by Ben Hecht. an do the same. The library is located “The clock was halted a year and Orchard Lake Rd. 9 FOUR TOWNS—The Four Tow ns ‘Squares are meeting at 8 p.m.) ‘a half @ when area householders) Friday at the-Four Towns Meth-| and ie objected to its loud’ ‘jodist Church. Bob Longe will be|honging of the wee hours. Planter Club Names the caller. Hostesses for the eve- It was electrified by a Harris-| ‘Offi t Rochest ning are Mrs. Douglass Shafto and) iburg, Pa., firm, which also changed ICSI SSO! ROCHSsISS Mrs. Bob Shafto. the mechanism to assure a dis-/ ROCHESTER — Newly elected : creet, sleep - saving silence {0F officers of, the Planter Club here Karen Korte to Wed seven hours out of each day, have been announced this week. na | Mrs. Richard Justice is the new METAMORA — Mrs.. Marjorie! Plan Pinochle Party president. Mrs. Thomas Lusk fs of Hadley announces the | vice president; Mrs. Lynn Taylor, engagement of her daughter, Karen. AUBURN HEIGHTS—The. Com- secretary. and Mrs. Johr London, Lee, to Ronald Frank Ostrander:| munity Club here will hold a pub-|¢otresponding s¢eretary, lie pinochle party at 8 p.m, Thurs-, The club is composed of over Howard Ostrander of Metamora. jday, at the clubhouse at 220 South|200 members, all -ne ers to No wedding date has been an-|Squirrel Rd. Prizes and refresh-/Rochester. They meet on third, nounced, ments are being [Thursday of each month. oe ? fo : . \ ie | Fi yo } j ¥ i oh = ee eos el ee a ee Dee hi i Passport to Friendship by Wil- . at 3201 THE, PON TIAC PRESS, _ WEDNESDAY. S SEPTEMBER 5, sar” * “Most Issues Quite Lary NEW YORK UW — The stock market was mixed today in quiet early trading. There were slightly ‘ higher tendencies, but most divi- sions were irregular. Gains in key issues ranged to a point or more, and losses were | MARKETS ‘Produce ering sales of locally grown pro- ‘Markets by growers and sold b Quotations are furnished by Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Friday. Fruits The following are top prices cov-|. IGrain Futures Turn Lower iduce ‘brought to the F she CHIC ‘AGO WW — Grain futures) Y! and soybeans turned lower on She ‘them in whoelsale package’ lots. 'Board of Trade today. Wheat contracts lost up to a cent a bushel in early dealings. Floor business still lacks volume mostly held to fractions. |Apples, Delicious, bu $6.00 and export buying showed no im- Ieoome pesraeormy fer -: 23 provement, ‘There was no news Aer jApples, McIntosh, bu. ......... y+» 4.00) : : Plus signs dotted the’ aircrafts, a (erate) 12 pts. ........ 3.13, of’ importance to stimulate action : ; ‘anteloupes, . - 3.00). on _ but changes were marrow. Oils (Giines Concord, pk. bask. "10 in the bread grain. aid motors made a little head- ipescnes, 1. Rarer . * * . * way. Steels and rails were Pes aireaan |g "335, ; : i jums, Burbank, ‘a-bu. - 2.26; ally mixed. | Watermelons, DU nee eee ee cne es 50! Corn eased fractionally on addi Vegetables The market appeared to be mark- | “Beans Seon, Moses, ME: ing time after yesterday's rally, in Beets, Topped, bu. oo = 3a 300! GRAND RAPIDS \w—Rep. Ger- of “allegedly improper appoint-) ald R. Ford Jr. (R-Mich) says the ments and administrative proce- U nited States expects to launch an) dures” in/ Oakland County, earth satellite within 15 montis. | Ford discussed the development yesterday in a Grand Rapids Lions _ Club address. ae * .* * He referred to the appointment of Harold K. Schone as director of the new Department of Public Works, after Schone, as a former | supervisor, had been instrumen- He told members elobe- tal tm bringing the new éepart- ‘tional selling influenced by yester- iday’s decline, to new seasonal levels for the Messmer and July Uradian: Miners’ . |Health Checked by Government - —Some 2,000 curanium miners on the ore-rich Colorado plateau again are receiving free health examina- tions this summer “under a U.S- Public Health Sérvice study. en ae ee The federal agency began an in- vestigation in, 1954 to determine how health is affected, if at all, by exposure to uranium ore. The pro-| gram will continue through 1964. the barren, semi-desert county | ot seuthwestern Colorado and eastern Utah to miners, Parts of _New Mexico GRAND JUNCTION: Colo. “aNs) | Two mobile uits are roaming ~ examine the - iNew ‘Brazilian Auto Has Single ‘Front’ Door automobile called the Romi-Isetta, which is 72 per ment Brazilian- made. The car has two-cylinder motor and is equipped with four- wheel brakes. +” , ‘| Switt Expansion in / America \anel World — ‘Cause of Inflation, World By SAM ‘DAWSON When. a tamily tries: to eke on . oe 7 The big bary|to much to fat tra imo cash J nge from a have-not to a have can be just as upsetting to and credit troubles. When -the national and international finances| United States tried. to expand its as to a family's. __- - lindustrial plant and living stand- man for the Qakland County Chap-'899 of Prudenville, president of ter of the American Red Cross, em-|the American Hotel Assn. phasized that instructors must at-' Order Flu Tests tend the-classes in order to remain etigible. . The classes will be conducted at) MOUNT CLEMENS (® — Throat 7 p.m. Oct. 9 and 10 in the|cultures were ordered for six pub- ‘multi-purpose room at Crofoot|lic school pupils Tuesday to de- School by Douglas Trites, géneral|termine if‘there has~been an out- field representative of he Ameri-break of Asian flu. The six at- the girdling space sphere—about the ment shout. - size of a basketball, circling the A recommendation that commit: | earth every 90 minutes at a height-tee Meetings of “the beard be pub-) of 300. miles—would be in the dir licized in advance had, been pre. * by Dec, 31,1958 pareg by the Ways and Means * * * Committee Chairman William C.) Ford mentioned the satellite in Hudson, of Royal Oak. But Hudson! _ commenting on government de-!said yesterday he whould hold up| fense spending and President Ei-'his recommendation until the spe-| seniower's budget requests.” icial meeting is called, \, { ae jean Red Cross. tend Clemens Elementary School —— where 111 of the 426 pupils were} Truck Kills Worker absent Tuesday, an increase of 30 over the day ‘before. DETROIT w — Kenneth Mon- troy, 21, of River Rouge, died! Tuesday of injuries suffered last 'Thursday when he wks run oyer by a truck in the yard -of his steel company employer. The largest reptile today’ is be- lieved to be the leatherneck, a marine turtle. It sometimes weighs | around 1,500 pounds and is: eight | feet in length. | ‘ : Re cae! * t Be effort to reduce highway accidents ‘af night and in times of poor Bank Says a a a ke ws ce set off a new inflation. Other na- tions~have been doing the same thing and are reaping the harvest of shaky currencies and infiated abieia x «© * = That Séems to be the gist of the warnings from the World Bank and the Interygational Monetary Fund, struggling at meetings to- day in. Washington to ward off the latest in a series of international financial crises. The fund was set up at the end of World War II with a chief aim of easing the world’s way back to currency convertibility. It's: still cuit Judge Theodore R. Bohn in his conduct of a recent one-man) grand jury investigation of * muni- pal graft, will replace Laurence A. Price, who stays on as assis- tant attorney general. Paint Safety Lines NEWAYGO ® — A stretch of M37 from Sparta to Newaygo has ‘been edged with reflectotized paint on both sides of the road in an visibility. Ralph Shumaker, district highway engineer, says the: ‘project is a* continuation of an experi- ment started in the ‘eastern por- tion of the state. stole a 22 caliber target pistol from _ his bedroom during the past two! weeks. The gun is valued at $55. Seek Port for 'sundew PETOSKEY Py — Rear Adm. E. H. Thiele, commander of = Ninth Coast Guard District at) Cleveland, told Petoskey officials, that the icebreaker Sundew will not be moved to as Northern iMichigan community . until. the ‘Coast Guard determines whfeh community offers best facilities: for personnel and ir families. The vessél is scheduled to move from its present Wiscorisin base to} which the Associated Press average Broceoll. 3 bu. ': { $0| deliveries. Oats also were easier, #84 Arizona also will be. entered of 60 stocks rose $1.10 to $167.30. Carrots Topped bu. : 2.56) —— A test | by the health teams. z trying, but the chances look even “ doz. - Seecacwens OG) bat ‘a . There was little important news ae ig ” - — e — The audy-ie still too young. slimmer today .than they did a to encourage either buying or Corn, sweet, 5 doz .. 200] Weakness, Ceciining more than aa tlc c year ago. selling. Bul bench, Iden bi. odooor 6 25| a cent a bushel at the start, re- health See ke Oe te fa ‘*e ik” * ; une OB eee eee ee BOS, mane : | termine re is a tie-up between E Poids Metals ‘added more egplant. bu, -- 200, Mlecting lower of and meal | onium mining and certain health The fund says one reason is that a point after’ announcing the ere ee OR " 175). Prices. >, jaspects, — : too many and too costly national . — = — eal ee Gas. Ohlone, Gien tbehs.) don... ie! Continued good crop weather - * * * development programs are being il, which fell 2% yesterday, Megane Rost ieche) 00. |... 1 30| was a factor in the action of most! Whatever health chanees there tried all at once by the have-not was am one-point gainer, as was) Satay EE ba serecess as futures. may) bel acelemeciadiis) be Nae nations. The international finan- DuPon Peppers, “Sweet, bu... 2-00 BA A Hight at this time that it will be cial setup is feeling the strain. Ahead fractions were Douglas Potatoes, fancy, 50-ib. 1.60 ‘slight at this time it w i t Aircraft, United Aircraft, Curtiss | Pumpkins, Rei go i 2g) Near the end of the first hour impossible to make a -complete| Convertibility means freedom to * Wright, Anaconda, Southern Pa- | Redishes, Red. (Behs.) doz 125 new style wheat was % to 1 cent Conclusion. ‘Thus? the examiners) . — aay Pgoeat = = cific, Royal Dutch and Paramount. 'Sausen Delicrous, bu. 290 | a bushel lower, Dec. $2.16%, corn are taking ‘unusual care to insure = tho t hindres * That - Down fracti were Goodyear, | Tomatoes, 14-Ibs. SINT 125 was 4% to % lower, Dec. $1.20%,/accuracy in their reports. ket prices without rance. Ctions were Goodyear, |rirmips (bes). dos valee esses, 1:60) hasn't been done since the war Goodrich, Caterpillar, Dow Chemi- * Greens ‘oats 4. to '2 lower, Dec, 6612, rye| The greatest radiation. hazard *-* * , cal, Allied Chemical, International Cabbage, Du TB was 4g to 1% lower, Dec. $1.29. to uranium mine workers is be- _— Nickel and Westinghouse. — Kale bu. 1% soybeans’ wert %& to 1% lower,| lieved to be inhalation of dust Mood alt nations ee tight, : iSorrel, bu... 7 TIES P3§| Nov. $2.29%, and lard was) un- particles. Authorities think such? ee ee ; ah i Fell Be a Ce New York Stocks perma pry Pee eee sonene 9 oa changed to 2 cents a hundred) a danger could be minimized foreign ‘trade. Even in the United #4 | . Air Red actSRe 49 s Jones 3b... 33 ‘Tarnips, bu... ‘i eee ee 250, pounds higher, Oct. $11.32. with — ventilation. — States, where the dollar is strong See Ee Be Ee 2 cman BERS OR oping Stes ding te he 85 ar woniae [am ichaloned, the caren le, hed, bu, aN 2.28 = water ~ rmany “zechoslowakia indi-| , : is managed to the extent that t ae ht --:: Bo ee SS taare ences 2 dor. 60|“Whest (new)— Dee. é |cated a high incidence of chest; . BOTTLE BABY — Although old enough to owner, 12-year-old Betty McCall of Jacksonville, | citizens can't change it into gold, am Aistia verse HO LOF Glass. T18 " wavuar wees pa 317, May ++: 695 leancer in men working at certain know better, Fluffy, a 3-month-old kitten, stub- Fla., says her feline “baby” demands a lot of | ang credit is made easy or tight Am ...... 4 p .| May .2 cea gy 1.29% Fi s J 4 ‘ . ae 40° Lockh Aire.” 333 p DETROIT. Sept. 24 (AP) — Regs Meri 217” Dec 39's radioactive mining areas. bornly refuses milk from a saucer and cries until _ attention, and cries for his bottle several times a [to keep a rein on. the economy. Am Gas & El 33.3 Loew's © 929 csccel eruaees veces 2B) May 0. 3am ——_—_—. he is provided with her doll-sized bottle. Fluffy’s day. a ee 2 2 - Am EE ey 388 Lone 8 Com .. 29.2) "Whites: Grade A jumbo $b-47; weighted|Mar. 7"). :125% | Lard: . pee ee i Am N Gas... 806 poets cn | Bp Riaverage 56: extra large 56- “ST, wid avg) May Oo. 29 Nov. 11.80 The current fiscal crisis abroad Am Red .....126 Mack Trk .. 26 | 56: Apia Cpt fed oe a eer Oate— President Eval ains | comes from several things: (1) Am Smelt ..... 46.6 Martin, GI 28. 32: O “a B hk 49-50, td — iF Co F W G Am Sever, 283 May D sire a3 Se) aca lates oh acatons sic or Corn Farmers est Germany is stronger finan- McGraw H ... 44.4) 4°: ; . : : BS Wiles: He Hera? 2 Sat oo Many mo ires Calling of Troops OF€ did 5 cngsnry and specs seh oe tl F ' lis s ; ot vse ap Mapa A ee Ameer tharred Speteprened aan y p 5 | turn British pounds and French ~ Armour @ Co 12% Midi Oil Pa . 44 abies eipedium 34-40, ssinall” S| (Continued From Page One) MSI Re francs into German marks; = eed oe Be - Hon . ml *. Check: 4 the . Atchison. 21 Minn Méat . 82 4) Oreae Mt) edt Lon ceed had Fi ht for § rl a under Eisenhower's orders federal- eSed f C reagents Legh has a ao | izing it. > tale x pan: ate Mont Ward - a Poultry y ae mission: To make sure by! P S c WASHINGTON (INS) — Agricul- “commercial” corn area, which coke et =e the eeepc: wet... LL Motor Whee) | 17 6| DETROIT POULTRY p Cc ‘ ‘force of numbers of arms, if nec-| easants State Cancer: ture Secretary Ezra. Taft bapa includes most of the midwest. adage Ay from us than ‘Boeing Air ".. 371 Mueller Br... 33 pee Bails ter Ne. TO- ommunist Coup essary, that ““demagogic extrem-| Halted by Mushroom; has reluctantly ordered price sup-| —— the law, Benson's action « e * Bor 60.5 Murray Cp .-. 266 1 quality live poultry up to 10 a.m: Brings Alien Influence ‘ts. disorderly mobs” do not again| 7 Confi ports of $1.10 a bushel seeded! also requires him to pro- ‘Almost al} the nation ti Borg Warn .. 36.7 Nat Bise 39.1. Hens, heavy type. 18-21: Went type 12. prevent the seating of Ne hil-| ests Confirm Claim ‘or farmers in the commercial corn| vide supports outside. the.com. |. ‘“/most al] the nations meeting Birgss MI... 13 Nat Cash R .. 584 protiers and tryers, heavy type 2's-34/ ty Ane} t Land 1 egro cole) ; ae | jin. Washington say convertibility Burroughs.” 401 Nat Gype ... 392 caponeties, 1 ibe S035; turkeys, eavy| neient Lan dren in the high school. | . [aren sho refased to comply, with) mevesel aren mt 0 por oot of would be a fies thing. Abmast bal Peek Sy mux lace aes aoe i Hee ys, y WARING : DEPLORES DISORDERS EAST LANSING w — A re-|their 1957 acreage allotments. parity and to increase price sup- canal of thean (is willing te laive i a 8 NY Gon ot 3a! renee coup in Syria once ears Eisenhower deckeed the beat-| ‘membered bit of unusual folklore! Benson said he took the action to verte: ter tents, bertey ant rye- up the curbs-that make it impos- ” “3s Nis M Pw... 29 | ° Z e i arket . oan 4 ae : 6 Nort & West . 60:4 | Livestock | brings alien influence to an ancient ins and riots Monday, and the ‘has resulted in an ambitious re- A conigrees ped — paar 7 the Benson noted that AS loefsigaaets sible now. Ls er ae onda el ee se DETROIT LIVESTOCK land. A focal point in the pres- lack of sufficient action by local search project at Michigan State |ruture.” A bumper crop of barley ee a report ae E * * * ar —_ “Atri - i ke os Bean 0 ag oss:| tna Near East turmoil, Syria has, and state - authorities to prevent University =r i: eorets dded tol. eee oe eee They need artificial controls on Cater Trac 79.9 Nwst Airlin ... 11.5 sala jutchers cents bower; | bees them. . . oats and grain sorghum, @ © seven per cent increase in pig pro- hei rrenci and curbs on Gen I Ps .. * 282 p nacht ‘ oy ag cane choggaenl wy butchers 11.30 nm a prize for competing em-, : | *' «* a larger corn crop than was ex- duction next winter over @ year satel ial “ s Ob 65 | 18.00: ag >|Pires and ideologies for centuries. | + * * in : their imports if they are to keep . Owens Il] Gl _ 59.4/18.00: several lots ed No and 2/P' centuries. | . cted, has resulted in new in- : py a Oe 9 & El. 46.2) 200-240 Ibe up to 18.28; 11, head No 1 Egypt ruled there in the days! Picking up heat, gesturing with| Dr. Eugene H. Lucas, professor acta in pig production. earlier. their domestic economies regulat- Cok Eee 5. OO eet mein mind ene ile ibe of its glory. Assyrian hordes his spectacles, h ed hi jof horticulture, said the project He added: ‘We have repeatedly ¢4- Climax Mo-... 13 55 2°.) 335 1620-1725: mixed grades sows 300-400. s “id 4 ee = Seen oe eee: The non-compliance supports . - peoney ~*~ * * Ciuett Het: 37g Parke De. |.. 38 Ibs 1675-1780, No. 9 and 3 400-400 Ibs OVETTaN it” The Babylonians came,/ “It is important that the reasonswas inspired by folklore from the valinble to farmers tn the |"Arnt’ hoe producers against ex- ic Palm. 4 Penne i. 198 16,28-16.80;, stage ond bears 43,00-18.68. 'to be’ driven out by the Persians, for my action be understood by all Bavarian - Bohemian forests of, ®T¢ ® = pansion which could wreck their) Even the United States regu- Gol Gens: 46 Pepsi Cola... 194 ing slow weak to 1.00, lower: ‘most de-| |The might of Macedonia and| our citizens . . . “oy Frowgas eae there ee — for frome sane Sy saa’ 6 eae -Comw Ed |... 39 ner see. 54 [cline on top calves; choice and prime/Greece, the - thoroughgoi | a t people who ate a certain mush- The average support price products a s 9° Phelps D ..... 46.2) veal mainly 26.00-34.00; standard ghgoing con-| Our personal piaien i : ‘Gonsum Be rr 3 Priico 141! and “tooe 18 00-25.00; 00: utility *18:00-18.00; ‘quest of the Romans, the Mong the ar een Court's one about room that grows in the forests'did, Consumers Power’ farmers who stay within acreage into a ior ; ie Cont Bak pad noe Pet = 06:3| mamehtes calves $9 @>- devastation, and the rise of the tegration decision have na bear- jnot develop cancer. controls in the commercial area|move part © - ane Cont Oa ee ee a Sa meer doo. Bulk ePy, supsities|Caliphs have marked {he region.| ing on the matter of enforce. ie ee | remais of $1.38 pending Singh e-jwurld. markats where prices Sonn hket 7 Broct & G .... 497 lished: “few soles slaughter lambs and * . | ment... As a matter of routine, MSU ‘sci- fo er ve ntures vision Oct. 1. lower than here. Cont Oli -8 Scere oes 5S [sheep about steady with yesterday's de-! qro1q by the Ottoman Turks t entists began an investigation of a — Capea hee pce ee 2 Sinughier icone ma bo! few “utiity” ant’ fo World W ae ty We are @ nation in which laws, 'the plant, known as Boletus Edu- : — etl ES Repub Stl “'.. 492) good 16.00-18.00:; weak call chaeles ui ee orld War I, Syria was un- Inot men, are supreme .. . ia. a -WASHINGTON uF — Consumers e WAREHOUSING Wc. OD ee oo a to choice slaughter aap — | er French mandate between the| “Both the | nal the Power Co. of Jackson, Mich., is sacl g ergs - ae Rey Tov > B- 22 60 | ae two World Wars. It is now an ine interest male tha at ae - a When an extract from the |seeking permission of the Securities ATING pes Soom a3 Saleway st. 5 dependent remabiic and a member gent take action... mushroom was injected into and Exchange Commission (SEC) © FABRIC eet ee RY ae ee Pap 4) ‘Coun y if ers jof the Arab League. * «£ mice and rats it was found to to register $35,156,700 in 15-year ; pet Scovill Mf. ; - i res. . Bee he Ene | lone Syria's ancient caravan “The very basis of our individu.) SO" gee" Project Sow ty tempt: | ever ete te be otteed for sub 115’ Branch Street ; 2 Seare Roos 2 Tt | Toutes traveled traders, war- al rights and freedoms rests upon| t acity nd identify the ieey are) be oe oe . Pontiac Ex-Cell-0 : 43 Simmons... 4S | fiers, and religious leaders, the certainty that the President ac i te. see ta oe ke ——, Get 6, the stoc parts Firestone ..... fear ecia ession | bearing ideas that have had a and the executive branch of gov- 4 om exe a Pood Mach... 803 Bou Paes. o p f | in the fight against cancer. (yesterday. . | Telephones: Ford Mot ... 804 seu vee | profound effect on Western civili. [ernment will support and insure|. - etep ° Freept. Sul .. 84.3 ‘Borer’ | | zation, the National G ‘the ¢ The National Institute of Health blic off ‘ Frueh Tra, . 135 ; | jeographie ‘he arrying out of the decisions na. 0 | The interest rate, public offering Heed feet hoop Std Sie rey Supervisérs to Debate Society says. jot the federal courts, even, when granted $9,085 for the project for|price and underwriting terms are FE 4-0586 , Std O11 NJ... 586, ne d h all the’ t\the next year and has promised to be announced later. Subscribers Gen Elec Btd O1Oh s.. 49 | Aband ery Of eee” With all the’ means a o 4-9582 pes one st Stud I k . $2 Need for Housecleaning an ened ahr ie sar ha of the President's command. 'to support it at the same level, will be entitled to subscribe for $100 Wil FE 958 jen Motors ,. 481 $08.0), 234 Government Procedures China, the Se to India and! ‘THREAT OF ANARCHY for thé next two years. _ | worth of debentures for each 25] | on er Be ae 8 So enene routes! survive: today: ‘ : ‘shares of common stock héld on|] ggamS — PLATE — RE RODS — ANGLES — CHANNEL — PIPE Gen Time’), 206 Texas Co... 67 | in the form of an oil pipeline and “Unless the President did so, ithe record date. ' ' BARS AND FLATS — TUBING — SASH — ADJUSTABLE Gen Tire -° . 56 Texas G Sul - 218 Oakland County supervisor s will roads that, in normal times, car- amfarchy would result. Thorpes to as to Lear n | whe com ny said proceeds of! AND FIXED COLUMNS Soetron st mo pa 57: jhold a special committee of the ry part of the Near East's wealth) ~ * * ¥ : ; ‘th ee * le. together with! Goodyear 811 Timk R. Bear. 414 whole” méeting soon, to consider to the Mediterranean “ : te nture sale, together with) : Grah Paige 14 qraasuuier .. 8 heth: ° ineéan. There would be no security for ; proceeds from a bond sale of 35/F ' ee Ge No Ry ... 396 ae | ee ine er county government needs: x & any except that which each one en ence on ay million dollars announced eariier | e Grevhoun oe . “ ness : v| “Gut Ou 1394 B2 Carbide agai staan by Oak ‘Syria’s 4,000,000 people live in,of us could. provide for him- : will be used for property additions. illac Demos Remectk + sea Uae On fen By vente i ae ioe y Oak Patk a 70,000-square-mile-area — about self..." MOUNT CLEMENS ® — Floyd and improvements and to repay Hooker El 63 Li dored a. 428! uperv soe harles E. Cardon, who | the size of North Dakota. Th and Anna Thorpe will be sentenced outstanding loans. Mm Cent |... 422 Un Gas Cp __ 312/Said that ‘speedy action and infor-. = | ¢ troops are in Little Rock, |@7d Ann Choi f 6 Colors—None Over 200 Miles jedaae hs? 24s tee " mation to. the _ublle on several _ Where it borders the eastern | the President said, not to relieve” in tae ea ¢ porn ee _Ghoice of © 4 a 5 US Rub .. 30.1 Meat ‘ | embezziing . n state, auto . SEN GB Bh gsiirorersal ree ncemary| MNS ear | Set ay at be sera nee an News in Brief Tar POrCLAR are nterla r 25 | : . ; - | = ; int pus Meb 3020 Wert on TS MT ee the meeting was left to extends inland to form a giant | Preventing’ interference with the * ae a . | ‘EQUIPPED WITH... _. Int ick me Weste & Bk . 243 “ll rman Dore = Lemay an wedge between Turkey and Iraq, ders of: the court.” | Sentence will be imposed by Cir- | Rummage Sale Wed. and Thurs. | > i a t «Wilson & Co. 142, © se the country falls away into des- | Once resistanc ie cuit Judge James E. Spier. ‘1160 S. Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion. Signal Seeking Pre-Selector Radio Lights, Directional Signal 5 . Woolworth 405, mington, but the board agreed to i resistance to the federal Light, Glove Box (automatic ane er il = use Ate Ba tae palais) upes which Carden erts, At its southern tip, Syria court ceases, the troops will be re-| The Thorpes have been held | —Adv. Electrically Operated _ Light, Luggage Compartment Tal Crk Coal 407 Gardner Dev, 34) insisted _ borders Israel and Jordan. The called, he said, and then: ‘The, in the Macomb County Jail here Saccckrant disaer 810 Sosa daetae wen ™ mor, Glare-Proet Rear View, SScne Man aa noing M&M 275 . . southwest corner is blocked from icity of Little Rock will return to! Since May when they were re- aduita Serving from 5 S q Roose- | Ale Cleaner—Oll Bath Type i Fl STOCK AVERAGES _Cardon” asked that action be| the sea by mountainous Lebanon. its normal habits of- peace and, turned to Michigan after thelr |vei Temple. 22 State St. Wed.|| Crauiee poser Brates out er Mirror, left side, remete (Compiled by The Associated-Press? ae taken by a a iaelt The capital, Damascus, is an.°'der and- a blot upon the fair) capture in Corpus Christi, Tex. sept. 25, —Adv. fl Cereus Lighters. frost (we) | Port, two-tone ; Indust ho Sere it be taken. by the boar SEIS. | oasis only 40-miles from the Is-| ‘name and high honor of our nation! Richard Radwill of Chicago, on ¢ ae Parking Brake warning ~— Prev. day ...,. 2491 108.1 712 1677 = *& *® Lraeli line, TI te i lin the world will be removed. * \ brother-in-law of Mrs, Thorpe, also, Betty Wolfe, of 736 W. Huron Hyaramatie Toomemioes Viser Vanity Mirrer Week ago 1... 2386 1116 119 112 In a ine Cardone stand. the ne site is so fertile, st ed to Pontiac Police, Lights, trout ash receivers Visers, 4 Month ago- .....2573 1148 723 1737 4" Approving ms stand, that the prophet Mohammed re- will be sentenced Monday by Cir-|°t-. report i Lights, Soch-Up ( Wheel Dises_tset of four) euimeter lest high “72.0 2800 Ta0t 2 tang POArd Teversed its. previous deci: bortedly refused to pass through Wayne Plans Flu Shots cuit Judge Alton H. Noe for aiding|Monday night, that sometime dur-jj Light, Courtesy or Saap (ontematis) Windshield Washer & y Cost@ins 1987 low ....... 2406 1041 u ° 1862 sion on one of the issues—that of! Damascus’ gates alter < decd the ’Thorpes in their flight to ing the day, someone had broken! $ g 16.2 I 5 py . i ; Na Changs oy es TUN rata catne arte journey, saying,.“‘A man may not) DETROIT « — Wayne State Mexico on March 2, 1956. into er Cae ; stealing $30]. D Noon today ....2483 1051 712 1669 aa ae appraisers eee of enter paradise twice, and I pre-| University Set up a program to- ~ x * ° 1 Only | own | perconriiverte he Eoaid int 17, ment of its members to the = come to Detroit. Tom Kavanagh Names broke into the gas station at 836. h ettl f L ee Th yphet Co. * 93 100 of appraisals, some of which ac in assroom . . : | y e ror ess Rudy Manufact. Co * 106 113 D troit Office Head Joslyn Rd., breaking the cigarette’ e . c carry high fees. 200 | e : e eel Edlson Co. 130 120 130 i . ; to Atten Par ey machine and escaping with $5 in! D s% a Ba ain "No sale; bid end asked ““ | The Board had decided a week! Oakland County's authorized firs) GAYLORD 1 About 200 per.| LANSING — Charles S. Far-jnickels and $10 in wrapped pen-| rive “S ago to refer the question to the aid instructors will be back in the so ‘3 are 6x aa th ith a “|mer, 37, an assistant to Atty. |nies. = ‘Legislative Committee for a report classroom next month to stud ue are expe or “ 40\Gen, Thomas M. Kavanagh since : Says U. §. to Launch \in January on possible change in: study new nual convention of the Michigan December. 1955. has been named) Rummage Sale, Youth Center, the state law governing probate Versions of the American Red Cro Hotel Assn. at Hidden Valley Fri- by Kavanagh to head the depart-|Fri. and Sat. Lake Orion. —Adv. courts. | {fis-aid text book, manual and/4ay though Sunday. Hotel manage-| vents Detroit office. effective | Goltry. of 80 N., 280 South Saginow St. afe ite in onths ° oo. -« ‘eaethous ‘ment experts are to address the Sept. 0 : ‘ eee \ naiiay resol - . : toselawn Ave.,. yeste — ———— Cardon alse had asked for airing Ralph Forman, (first-aid chair- BTOUp. among them Earl M. John . Farmer, who served under Cir-|0 Pontiac police that someone! en 7 TRUSTE (on atia €m ‘A OUR HOMEOWNERS’ PACKAGE PROGRAM New broad protection, to fit your individuel needs can be yours — for yout home, your personal property, your legal liability — under one comprehensive. policy. Come in today and let us — it to you, ° CRAWFORD -DAWE-GROVE _ 710 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. icmsiase Ps FE 2-8357 \ \ a North Michigan port. gpl * en