ee ee ee ee ee New Lead Spurs Hunt in Bloomftie Armed with a new lead, State|relt, head of the Redford Post ar- Police today forged ahead to crack}son squad, the arson that gutted the Bloom-| It is Speedway No. 1 Blue Tone field Township home of Teaster| fye} oil, he said. Charlies O’Brien last Thursday | night. This prodyct is sold in butk The inflammable fluid used in| ‘form at Speedway gasoline sta- the arson has “definitely” been! tions, O'Farrell said, It is the identifitd, said Bee Orame} O'Far- similar to kerosene, and com- eat ae erro nrnanee Pal rson | the area of the O’Brien home short-| glasses faa ‘on the lawn of the monly used in small oil burners, hé said. laboratories of two other national gasoline companies, O'Farrell said. Tested was a small amount of Identification was made in the; It was hoped that police might| ell, we urge him to contact the State Police now plan to ques- be spared a long search — during | Redford State Police Post,” |!y before \the fire, according 10, O’Brien home belonged to a De- tion Speedway gasoline station op-| which time the trail to the arson- O'Farrell said Mrs. Sylvia Paris, O'Brien's moth-|} i+ television camerman. who . er, who owns the house: took pictures .of the house the day erators in hopes of identifying the|ists might grow colder — through puphaser of the fuel oil. the cooperation of Speedway deal-| The fuel oil may have been pur- * * * | after the fire’. The glasses had been chased by one or more men, | “But a different car could have considered as.a possible ¢lue. liquid in the bottom of three of the ie * * ers. } four five-gallon cans found in the}’ Police will begin in the vicinity | “If any Speedway dealer has |Sibly driving an old grey sedan,/been used to purchase the fuel oil," O'Brién is a business agent for reason to believe he is the one |Q'Farrell said. |O’Farrell pointed out, Teasters Local 299 in Detroit, the burned out home, 205 Harrow Cip of the fire, then spread wider) cle, afield, if necessary, O'Farrell said.| who sold the arsonists the fuel | A car of that desc rription was s In| oO’ Farrell said that a pair of eye-/ home local of James R. Hoffa. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1959 —38 PAGES a: The Weather US. Weather Bureau Forecast Fair and cooler tonight. Sunny and pleasant ‘tomorrow. (Details _Page 2 17th YEAR. UNITED PRESS | INTERNATIONAL eta! — Se . Nikita Turns On Smiles lor Nixon Pair Goes to U.S. Exhibit ter Nice Friendly Chat Would Provide Wa By PRESTON GROVER : i Y| Sunny and pleasant is the good MOSCOW WP—U.S. Vice President Richard M. Nixon Out of Legal Delays news for Saturday, the high reach- Holdi Up P ing 78 to 80. Today’s winds west 2nd Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev had a friendly olding Up Project to northwest at 12 to 18 miles;meeting in the Kremlin today. The atmosphere was | an hoar will diminish tonight. ‘reported warm in confrast to the* chilly reception for Oakland County should). partly cloudy ang a little Nixon on his arrival Thursday lar " . j warmer is Sunday's prediction. ~ . , . . ae cones with we Of vo raiw ccnecied tc tas el | They-let photographers and reporters in for the first jaree courthouse COntac- ater the wee'end when seat- part of the meeting. Nixon handed Khrushchev a letter jtors in order to speed con- tered showers and thundershow- (+ greeting from President Eisenhower. | : ‘Idingo it ers are again in store for the . | Struction of the building, it aia. After the visit the two left at once for a joint inspec- ie ee ose a Temperatures for the next five tion of the U.S. exhibition : * * * | Dropping the contracts may pro- days will average about two de- Nixon will o later in th pen later in the grees above the. normal high of| d ay. There they got into an U = Books —_—_—— ———$________— a ——— ry Suburban Model Designed for Comfort Skip Raincoats, Weekend to Be Sunny and Cool Umbrellas and raincoats may be left at home over the weekend. |The weatherman promises fair and on our Ouse ‘cool with the low near 62 to- inight. * * * May Advertise vide a path out of the latest legal entanglement three of the Board of Supervisors said construc- 84 and normal low of 63 Pe rest of Michigan will be @Miable but firm argument for the weekend with show-| on press freedom. delaying tion, important committees fai The Board will be asked Aug. 4.°'S Possibly starting late Sunday Shortly before - their arrival, THIS IS THE LATEST — Here's a preview of the latest-style styling and added passenger comfort will make the new line to approve readvertising for bids @ft¢rnoon or evening | Soviet officials arrived at the ex-| Red ( e bus that will begin rolling off the GMC Truck & Coach Division popular with bus canpanes and patrons. The new line has two (on general construction and me-| = Ls = | hibition and threw out books they NSOrs assembly line early next a The company says advanced models, one holding 53 passengers, the other 45. chanical installations, the commit-| Sixty-eight was the lowest | ‘considered objectionable in the = ee tees decided on advice of Charles|temperature in downtown Pontiac | Amer ican library. _ LONDON (#—Associated Press ) A. Davis, assistant corporation) —— 2 is At 1 p.m. the It was not known: whether! Correspondent John Scali re- | , ee . rea me wat |Khrushchev brought up with Nix- ported today from Moscow that CITeSS 0 S e e a S lans | “Readvertising for bids will ex- a on the question of U.S. observ-| Soviet officials were censoring |pedite the courthouse project, Captivé Nations’ Week.”’} books in the American exhi- ; ance gf “ vis said. * Goldfine to Hear ; bition library, . ertis y al n | . ] Rangoltiiver. higher’ pelea tng S t ] d | WASHINGTON (UPI) —Sen. | * &-® , : en ence 0 ay ate GOP policy chairman Styles | on the long-delayed courthouse, . j Bridges said today Vice Presi- ; it was tacitly acknowledged. | New Jer Socialite. Production pla for two new); The windshield Is nearly three visibility is improyed through side | WASHINGTON (UPI)—New Eng-| dent Richard M, Nixon would | sey suburban-type Buses were an- times larger than former models. windows. | The two companies which were jand industrialist Bernard Goldfine| break off his Soviet visit and | Left in Chicago Park nounced today by GMC Truck & Driver’s window is bigger, and I ed sivil - id ‘awarded the general construction was summoned to federal court to-| “come home” if Kremlin lead. Aft 2-D T (Coach Division. | there is more glass in the en. | mreove oy ing 1s also evident and mechanical trades contracts) (day to hear his sentence for con-| ers try to insult the United | er ay ror The models will offer a stylish| trance doors. in the coach interior. Decorative| June 2 have agreed to withdraw, it 4, mpt of Congress. It was expected| States through him. new appearance and_ increased melamine (formerly an extra cost WaS announced, to be a light one. The New Hampshire Repub- A. J. Fredman, Inc. of Pontiac an intimate of the vice | for Two New Buses His report, telephoned to Lon- don, said a three-man committee “threw out book after book’ | from the library at the U.S | exhibit in the Soviet capital. The telephone connection was cut at this point. It was not Both exterior and interior rear CHICAGO (AP) — The omfort, said Philip J. Monaghan, |. . item) is used lican, , , f ) : General Motors Corp. vice presi- view mirrors have been increased sed in ceiling panels} said it would be unable to keep its| The proceedings (at 1 p.m. president, indicated Nixon would Known here whether this was father and fiance of Jac- Ident and division general manager. ages Stes window isiover twice) Min (extend clear ‘over: package bid firm after Aug. 3. Fredman| Ponting time) before Jedge | it tolerate the treatment So. | 4ue to @ mechanical failure | as large as for merly. Passenger racks to window area. Patterned holds the general construction con-| 48™es W. Morris follow last viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev | im the line or whether Soviet queline Gay Hart.landed . One the basis of advance descrip- - == ——— aluminum is used in lower side. tract at a price of $2,104,520. week's decision by the wealthy j j : - : Z ave British Pri Minis s ‘ . at Midway airport in Chi- | tion, 144 of the new buses have panels as a standard feature. | The R. “a Spitzley Co. of Detroit] Boston textile manufacturer not Pe seacaines "he hres censors had broken, the con cago today to bring the | already been ordered by buss | | ~ «) * ‘said it would have to tack $20, 00 to fight the charges any longer. Krushchev snubbed Macmillan | nection. young heiress back home. —— 7 said Monaghan. ancer ociety Seat platforms are now only onto its mechenices trades bid of a = “ —_— ot | wat the British leader did pet | Attempts to reach Moscow by weeny | |Seven inches above the aisle, a re-|/ $645,550, if it couldn't start work interrupt his Russian visit. | telephone were delayed by CHICAGO ##—A young New Mext year. Section of two Aaa over webaesd immediately. | a a Colatine s “we a heavy traffic. : ‘ali one . One of the new buses will carry jol-passenger . models ntrance| Another fi Z. Sh & jf “no defense,”’ Morris said a light! \ ~*~ * * Soaks yep eo 53 passengers. The other, smaller, OSes al wf step eter pas been dropped by: iC oaainiind Oe Pa e2 Col 2) sentence was indicated. This was/This had brought an angry out-) g.ajj is among the American early Tuesday, turned up in a: will carry 45, he said. “ " ‘|1'2" to 1342” for easier boarding. | eS ibecause of the ‘‘bugging’’ of God-| burst from the Soviet premier at eae accompanying Vice 2 Chicago lake front park today and/ Innovations listed by Monaghan| The new vs engine delivers more fine's hotel suite when he was here a public Polish friendship meet- president Richard M. Nixon on told police she had been kidnaped clude all-new, streamlined bodies: Units Macomb, Wayne, horsepower with no increase in F h a year ago to testify before house | Ing Thursday as Nixon was ar- pic vicit, Nixon said July 17 | in Newark, terrorized two ‘days ‘with extensive application of bright Oakland Are Ex elled cubic inch displacement. Its new EWS as influence inve pnigetors: | Tiving A ‘ * that after long negotiations the and dumped by two young toughs. finish aluminum; greatly expanded | . . pe t+valve head enables the engine to! | Rhee eine Wiemed ot Rixon’ Soviet government had agreed : 91 Window areas; and new materials. for Staying With UF | a aine better, producing 1907 CHAPEL HILL, N.c. p— End Class Registration be ee EONS! to et the newamed -Mle dis- | Miss Jacqueline Gay Hart, 21- ‘in interior decor B.H.P, at 2,000 r.p.m. with 55) Mrs. Edna Tatum apparently arrival, Khrushchev got up from patches “freely and without de- : . i 5 ’ aida sadeiee : rally ge ; nw year-old daughter of Ralph A. <.- * « ‘The: Charter of the Southeasiern| cubic millimeter injectors. Ac-! suffering from the same virus | LITTLE ROCK, Ark. W—Reg- his : oe at the Polish spa Mie lay.” lo | g | pe hise ak _ | Nip “ome see a grou Hart, an executive vice president | The buses will be equipped with’ yichigan “Dig celeration is better due to im-| infection that killed her football | istration for high school students ore ey me ag ine ecuiedi ee of Colgate-Palmolive Co., ran sob- Inew V-6 Diesel engines, Monaghan ichigan “Division of the Ameri- proved torque — 550 ft. Ibs. at! coach husband last night, took a | is being completed today with oupsaene D mt < W ak” : “This is interpreted as _ indi- bing to a parked police car aiid land; new heating systems: three| can Cancer Society covering}1,200 r.p.m. with 55 cu. mm. in- turn for the worse today and | the possibility of desegregation of “Captive Nations’ Week. cating that American newsmen cried: ‘‘Where am =I, where l optional transmissions ‘atid an iin |Wayne, Oakland and Macomb) \Jectors. | was taken- to North Carolina | at three white schools already But the weather was warm | will be allowed to cover the trip amr |proved air suspension system. wee ‘ble pas Bes | A new heating and ventilating | Memorial Hospital. signaled (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) without Censorship,” he said. + + © possidie cour igi o0oms F a - wo a _ NM . i . Policeman Jack Miskesiee (ol 4 fany items formerly furnished over -an estimated $1,500,000 in| S¥Stem is located under the | her aad Miles Heit cried my 2 extra cost have been made division assets. _ coach floor just ahead of the ‘Mystery Ship Puzzles Deputies : standard in the new line, Monoghan| National officers of the ACS, emergency door, Providing quiet, name is Gay Hart; I want to call said ordered th ti t New! even distribution of head from | : e e revocation a ew) ‘ | my dad in New Jersey.” i x & * York yesterday, climaxing a two- this central location, it has a | 9 Taken to the city detective | 'Deseribing th new line as a ‘‘com- | year-old dispute over fund- raising | capacity of 114,000 B.T.U. per | S Oul | OS O | ace iS] Ors: bureau, the distraught young iplete break with the past’ as far policies. | hour, based on a 100 degree worman—her arms bruised—gave as body design is concerned, | ; water-air temperature diffe The national office ordered an Pe = a rambling, sometimes incoher- {Monaghan listed these further de-. , tial. Can Oakland County lay claim ent account of the two days |tails: accounting of the local group's | a ) 4 funds and assets. In addition, a powerful new dash to the first rocket ship from outer Bright metal, fluted, anodized | ‘alumium is used extensively in side| The decision was the result of heater (as standard equipment) de- space? Have you noticed any and rear body panels. Streamlined the division's defiance of an-or- livers another 41,000 more B.T.U. around your neighborhood: styling is evident in the forward: 4¢? to withdraw from United Fund Per hour into the driver area and’ “The Thing, as referred to by in both front/°@™Mpaigns. across the - windshield. Qakland County sheriff's deputies, since she bade farewell to her fiance, 25 - year - old Stanley Gaines, at the airport in New- ark and vanished. The attractive Miss Hart, her S!anting windows, “ ” vesterde : blonde hair disheveled, told po-/@nd rear end design, and in such The A : es * ; joaeiek aeennue near pontiac lice a man shoved her into a car|(etails as clearance lights, head- cha Ht ao rat it bpp bined A Mar road in Pontiac Township at Newark Airport just as she was light and turn signal housings. -A/f AP Guo Tu Paited x comics apeer rea an :« about to enter her own auto after| distinctive styling feature is a S by next January.““It! j “Lett Residents noticed the rocket-like said it could raise more ‘money on its own than by sWaring in combined drives. . The local Division refused to broad band of bright metal above the windows. Visibility has been increased, both for driver and passengers. leaving Gaines, of Fayettesville, W.Va. CANDY-BAR DIET The young woman, who plans to marry Gaines Aug. 29, said she had been fed a diet of candy bars throughout the two days of travel object and called Deputies Stephen ‘Navarre and Allan Whittingham. “When we first saw it at a distance it looked just like a rocket,” said Navarre. ‘It's white with a red streak down the side and has what looks like Rams Train, Dies A 24-year-old Oregon Township. follow the ACS directive. man was killed instantly yesterday | TRANSFERED ASSETS ; when his car rammed the side of! | Instead, it set up the Michigan a freight train engine at a crossing! West Seeks A Cancer Foundation to which it ar- on Millville road, about three miles! re terror. A ee man Bike in B lj B ot ranged to transfer all its as- sy of fae t me : | fins on it.’’ ¢ car where she was thrown, sets, The assets include about} He was Dean alker of 2254 rarre ‘ gagged, bound, blindfolded and erlin Dar galt $960,000 < funds, Millville Rd. Navarre and Whittingham crept covered with a blanket, she said. Whenever she moved, Miss Hart in Secret Talks said, one of the men_kicked her sharply in the sides. She estimated they drove most, of the time since Wednesday. At} times she heard what sounded jj like coins dropping into automat- ic toll road. gates, she said. ‘+ 4 -“¢ ’ Miss Hart said the car pulled into a driveway Thursday and she was pushed up several steps into a bathroom. About two hours later, Miss Hart said, she heard the young men conversing. . “Ed we're going to get a lot of /money out of this,” she quoted one, Later he said “‘We gotta get ‘vid of her, Ed, she’s too hot.” She reported one of the men entered her bathroom prison and GENEVA 4AP) —‘The Western foreign ministers went into secret session with Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko today to bargain for a price cut in his offer of a truce deal on Berlin. They were under pressure from Britain to salvage a summit con- ference if possible from the wob- bling Big Four foreign ministers conference, They met at the villa of U.S. Secretary of State Chris- tian A. Herter. +’ & British Foreign Secretary, Sel- wyn Lloyd's strategy was to try to get Gromyko to abandon his in- sistence on greater recognition for Communist} East Germany, Then contributed by the UF and through wills, gifts and other donations. At New York, the ACS author- ized legal action if necessary. Spokesmen for the Southeastern: Michigan group said any effort to take over its funds would be re- sisted, Branch assets include head.: quarters in. Detroit valued at $400,000. Karl Bradley, executive director @ of the Pontiac Area United Fund, said the local UF group will back the ousted. Division. An allocation from this year’s UF campaign will go to the Michigan Cancer Foun- dation, he said. as 4 . “We will support our local peo- ple,” Bradley said, ‘‘It seems like The Lapeer County Sheriff's De-| ently didn’t see the New York Cen- tral train approaching in the rain. scene by Lapeer County Coroner Dr. William Heitch. Ct ae In Today’ Ss Press partment said that Walker appar- He was pronounced dead at the | stealthilly toward the strange ob- “We weren't sure that it Na- | ject. wouldn't explode suddenly,” varre explained. * * * “As we got closer, I could see it had some kind of props or | supports on it and what appeared |to be short nozzles on the top.” A close examination revealed |‘‘the thing” was made from some type of hot water tanks with wires _|attached to the “tail fins.” .. Deputy Whittingham said, “It looks a little like it may be some part of a watercraft.” Na- varre thought it could be a part of a carnival ride. “The thing” was left at the Kim- ball Service Station, Perry and Opdyke roads, in hopes its owner would return looking for it. FROM OUTER SPACE? — Oakland County sheriff's deputies had a mysterious object on * Pontiac Press Phote found alongside a road in Pontiac Township, Anyone seeing any little spacémen lurking in said: the ministets could concentrate on | the national, ACS feels that funds) TV & Radio Programs ‘31 | So’far, no one in the area has ‘ hould St ‘friend is chicken, We gottg|an agreement to end the Soviet| already allocated for this year be-| Wilson, Earl ...........<:.%8 reported any strange, oking little - their’ acl yes Wasi ul ¥ ge Woe gern ts De . treet ay get of you.” ne to West Berlin. 4 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4 Women’s Pages .. .. 947-19 imen lurking behind bushes day atte noca to investigate this “‘rocke P pt. ’ . ee. A } | y 7 \, \ j \ ; ali a il waite Dh ue = TWO: aa - i Sj THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JULY 24, 1959 \ \ J | ali wa a aw In eee \ come Senate Kills Bll in Jig-Time; IAQ INVW House Revives Sales Levy LANSING (UPI) — State Police and Coast Guard were called out to- today to retrieve law- makers absent when the | house resumed a marathon | tax-writing session. | By GEORGE WEEKS LANSING (UPI) — The piano played “Let me Call You Sweet-! heart.” ¥ * * And then the fight started Men shouted, swore,, and stomped their ‘feet. It was the Michigan Legislature at work. Tempers flared last night ut the close of the longest and most hectic of 122 sessions this year. Lawmakers were in session 14 hours yesterday with time out for food, drink and caucus sessions. , turned, the flat rate income tax among) Democratic cries of “ruthless.” The day ended with House Rc- publicans reviving a penny: sales tax hike defeated earlier HERE'S HOW It was not so much what hap-, pened as how. Rep. Reimer Van Til (R-Hol- land) was playing the piano in the Holse chambers while Republicans wainted for Democrats to return. from a caucus shortlly before mid- night. | Democrats among were still arguing themselves as they re- led by cigar-chomping Rep. T. John (D-Detroit), who had peanuts in one hand and a coke in the other Lesinski hardly] had a chance to swallow before Republicans had revived the sales tax. At 11:57 P.M., Rep. Willfred G.| |Bassett (R-Jackson) moved for re- | ‘consideration and then demanded | the previous question, which shut x * * Among the top developments yesterday: —Senate Republicans stopped outnumbered Democrats by sus- pending rules in a power play that killed the flat rate income. tax matic midnight adjournment. | Several Democrats were on ‘their feet, pounding their desks and demanding to be recognized off debate. | Some Democrats were still filing. \to their seats when the vote was) ‘taken just seconds before the auto-| Tax Plan ‘Nobody's Sweeth ) \ eart Now’ tt Seomadacs Yona amass . sl = - shortly after it arrived from the| House. —House Republicans drove the! disorganized Democrats in a three-! minute race for action before mid-| night’ by winning a 50-35 vote to! reconsider a sales tax plan killed earlier in the House. it ! —A Republican House caucus | agreed to support a bipartisan | plan changing a penny boost in | the sales tax to a 2 per cent sur- tax on corporation profits and other revisions. —Some House Democrats agreed to support the bipartisan package; | 'as the House adjourned. Several Democrats continued to. argue among themselves. John J. Fitzpatrick drew a crowd when he got into. jan argument with Lesinski over) (D-Detroit) actics. Fitzpatrick and William Hi. | Thorne (D-Dearborn) shoved aside a table that was blocking | the exit and stalked out of the chambers, rushing past Ser- geant-at-arms John Klingenberg, who was sipping a milkshake. When the House convened at Rep. | | - - "atone ae cocteecanaee Lindlorwaod Standard | | | ! Rd., both Central High School students, were YOUNG JOURNALISTS AT WORK — These four Oakland County high school students are sponsored by The Pontiac Press. Ruth Ann The Day in Birmingham lke Signs Bill for Foreign Aid Total 10 Per Cent Short of His Original Request, May Be Cut More Clampdown BIRMINGHAM — “We're getting a lot of automobile racers through Driver, contralto, will be the solo- /here, and we're going to put the |squeeze on them,”’ said Capt. ‘Walter Sluiter of the Bloomfield WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-, dent Eisenhower signed today a’ | $3,556,200,000 foreign aid authori-| | zation bill. | | The total is $353,200,000 short, or within 10 per cent, of the amount Eisenhower recommend- But there is‘ every indication at Congress will cut deeper in ;the forthcoming foreign aid appro- | priations bill to provide the actual funds for the program through June 30, 1960. * * * The bill signed today sets max- imums and defines policies. The biggest cut was in author- ization for military arms to al- lies. Congress set the limit at $1,400,000,000 instead of the $1,600,-| 000,000 Eisenhower recommend- ed. Moreover, it directed that for a two-year trial period military foreign aid be treated as part of! the U.S. defense budget rather, than a separate item. x * * Congress also authorized only} 155 million dollars, instead of the! recommended 20 million dollars, in the fund for the President to) spend in unforeseen contingen- | | Hoffa's Days Are Numbered’ Hills Police Dept. Yesterday the ‘‘squeeze’’ began when Eric F. Scimitschek, 27, and Adelmiro P. Copioli, 21, both of Detroit, paid speeding fines be- fore Justice of the Peace A. J. Richardson in Bloomfield Hills Jus- tice Court. The two were clocked at 7:30 a.m. while racing their cars on Woodward avenue north of Quar- | aa | Presbyterian Church of Birming- jham, the Missionary Aid Society of ton read by Officer George Chrisman of the Bloomfield Hills Police force, Scimitschek won the race against Copioli at 105 miles per hour but lost to the police. He was fined $85 and Copioli came in second at 85 miles per hour to.pay a $60 fine. The Rev. Alfred D. Grey will be guest minister Sunday at the Con- gregational Church of Birmingham during the last week of the Rev. Raymond Fenner's vacation. Rev. Mr, Grey was interim minister at the church for a six- month period in 1958-59. He re- sides at 6696 E. Dartmor Rd., - Birmingham. His topic Sunday will be ‘‘The Fact-Finders Check Strike for President Bloomfield Police Begin on Speeders Hidden Man.” Mrs. Eleanor ist. Mrs, Mary (Sadler) Crockett Service for Mrs. Mary (Sadler) Crockett, 92, of 3933 Kirkland Ct., Bloomfield Hills, will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow from the Manley Bailey Funeral Home in Birmingham. Burial will be Monday in Forest Hill Cemetery, Shelbyville, Ind. Mrs. Crockett died at her home Thursday after a brief illness. She was a member of the First the church, and the Senior Activi- ties Group of the Birmingham Community House. Surviving are her son, C. V. Crockett, of the same Bloomfield Hills address and two grandchil- dren. William W. Taylor Service for William W. Taylor, 40, a former Birmingham resident. will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at St. Paul Cathedral in Detroit. The body will be at the Manley | Bailey Funeral Home in Bir- mingham until Monday noon. . Burial will be in Evergreen. Cemetery, Brooklyn, N. Y. : Mr. Taylor died suddenly. Wednesday in Dayton, Ohio, wher? he was residing. He suffered a coronary attack. He was editor of Manage Maga- zine, organ of the Nationa] Man- agement Assn. in Dayton, and & re member of the Society of Indus- ‘trial Editors, the Dayton Press | club, the Masonic Lodge of Cro- !ton, N. Y., St. Paul Episcopal par- lish in Detroit, and a former chair- some stuck to the income tax, and Matyunas (left) of 19099 Kalama St., Royal Oak, and Chelsea Kaye, 219 Catalpa Dr., Royal Oak, among 90 high school newspaper and publications 12::05 a.m. for today'’c session, staff members who are attending journalism Rep. William Romano (D-Warren) | Attorney Says Jimmy, “WASHINGTON (AP) — Squads’ man of the Central Committee for " started on the Times at the age| others started a drive for a 5 per cent sales tax with exemptions for food and drugs. : * * * Fireworks started in the morning when Senate Republicans scuttled Bay City Times Names New Editor in tried 10 get the Senate BAY CITY Milton D. Hewes, Stead of the sscheduled 10 a.m.| 55, for 20 years news editor of the “me. ; Bay City Times, today was named| But everybody figured, they had editor to succeed Glenn MacDon-|°@™ed a long rest ald, who died last Friday. Michigan Parks Fee The post of news editor will be taken by Ray J. Kuhn, 54, = on Verge of Passage editor of the Times since 1946. | announced he was going to ask the attorney general to rule on the) legality of the ‘‘railroaded” vote. The House thereafter recessed, until 10. a.m. * * * Intra-party bitterness was evi- dent —in the Senate too. Sen. John Stahlin (R-Belding) continu- jally rtferred to GOP leaders as |‘the wheels.’’ Hewes, a native of Bay City, of 19 when he graduated from Bay) City Junior College. He rose! LANSING « — Climaxing a through the positions of reporter, long struggle, a bill to levy a $2 telegraph editor and city editor. | annual admission fee on Mich- He is married and has two chil- igan’s state parks was on the dren. verge of final legislative approval today. | Cool Air Moves |, oy Senate agreement on a Into Northern House amendment was needed to, send it to Gov. Williams for T pir The governor said | ° earlier this week he was opposed | ier of States tothe bill but “not oppeatng It Sy ‘The: Assvcliina Poe rynsoed Be probably would [et Cooler weather dented the , Northern tier of states from the | Dakotas into the Great Lakes re-| gion today, but warm, humid air hung on in most of the country east of the Rockies. * * * Thugderstorms were scattered throughout the muggy section and dumped heavy rains in portions. of the middle Mississippi Valley rr _, ——— nearly 142/ The fee plan wouldn't go into seriad pe ae a six - hour operation until next year: State | y i ies | conservation officials recom- | mended postponement to giv Stormy activity was widespread| them time to mt the system tote from Texas and Oklahoma north-| good working order. eastward through portions of | Needing 56 votes for pas- sage, the measure squeaked | through the House yesterday, 57-47. Democrats, spurred by | the Michigan AFL-CIO, defeat. | ed it once during the day but Republicans won five Demo- erats to their cause on a sec- ond vote and put it over the top. , The Weather on Courthouse (Continued From Page .One) Sons of Detroit, said a suit block- ing the courthouse would be with- drawn if construction were once again opened to competitive bid- ding. - ' Letters from the three companies | were read at a joint meeting of! A. Inds west to northwest 12-16) ew A gore tonight. High ba jw tonight. 62. High temer- pleasant. miles teda row Teday in Pontiac Pea temperature preceding 8 a.m ee, Downtown Temperstures the Special Courthouse Committee, | a.m... (a. it ....13}and the Buildings and Grounds: Bam apa 8) Committee, | 3 -e— SaeeRneEeR? & A suit blocking courthouse con-, Se * |struction in behalf of the Shmina Thursda j | PY +4 if ace, : firm is now. being appealed to the! Fighest lompersvure coment Stahli ied t i \. =! pig" o get the Senate| (Continued From Page One) workshops this summer at the Michigan. Barbara Shadley, 94 the typewriter, and Dick Rogers Nikita Turns On Smiles for Nixon today and evidently the meet- ing in the Kremlin was warm. It is expected there will be a. prolonged session between the | two men Saturday. Khrushchev in the latter’s dacha on the outskirts of Moscow Before the meeting with Khrush-| chev, Nixon called on President! Klementi Voroshilov. Normally talks with Voroshilov ere largely! | protocol since he has almost noth- ing to do with the administration the attitude of the ACS national |p, H officers and pointed out that the. of the country. Their talks before about 30 reporters and cameramen in the Kremlin were quite friendly. As long as the reporters were there | they consisted largely of light | exchanges. When Nixon wood-paneled f entered room, Khrushchev 'came forward and extended his!moneys for our local group.” hand. Nixon repeated a couple of words of Russian as a greeting and Khrushchev replied: “You have learned much Rus- sian." GREAT BLOW money for the cancer society than irive at ; the big with the ACS,”’ Bradley said. | were sponsored School. University of Ottawa Dr., at , 180 Chippewa by Royal Oak’s Dondero High Cancer Society Expels : Units in Oakland, Way, Costres P senmit an ees, | (Continued From Page One) The Division has an organization of 16,000 volunteer workers. long to them. We in Pontiac don't feel that way.” * * He continued: * Bradley said it was ‘‘possible’’ that the national ACS may set up * * * The fund-raising dispute dates strength within the union is as | back to November, 1957, when the, high as-ever, and the only way | | ‘‘Naturally the UF. believes in national society ordered its chap-| t9 remove him from office is by | Nixon apparently is prepared to federation. So does the local can- ters to withdraw from community give the whole day to talks with cer society group.”’ fund drives. In 1958, the local branch decided : finally to remain with the United Member of the court-appointed board of monitors supervising the furioughed. ts own organization in south. Foundation. A one-year contrac : : ion's affairs. eastern Michigan and conduct a “®S Signed. The branch had said UNOPS @ ; ae ; peel it would sign a four-year contract Possible conflict of interest — he yled a meeting Monday in New editor that year. He has been edi- th separate drive. He expressed disappointment in| ‘UF campaign has provided more single drive could.”’ * * * Until the last minute we hoped iny that it would be possible *to ar-| a friendly arrangement}. “We've always raised sufficient, | Bradley said the Michigan | Cancer Foundation will probably | seek a sizseable boost in its al- | location because of increased | costs resulting from the ouster. The North Oakland Unit of the! society business region. Dr. Nelson, chief gyneco-| logist at Woman’s Hospital, is a director of the local branch. is year. At New York, the in Coast City Feels Quake EUREKA, Calif. (> The strongest earthquake felt here | since December 1954 rocked a large segment of Humboldt Coun- ty Thursday but its epicenter was out at sea. No damage was re- ported. It was felt in commu- nities 60 miles apart. _ “Just this much,” said Nixon southeastern Michigan Division Paralytic Polio Soars indicating a small amount with maintains headquarters in Pon-| two slightly separated * * * ‘Nixon told Khrushchev face to! fingers. blow to. peace”’ Nixon traded barbed comments| with the Soviet leader while es- office, Dr. Tennessee and Kentuck rT . : i i i split. the sect Aanie Gan ao To Seek New Bids | corting him through the See ethibition in Moscow’s Sokolniki Park. At one point, Khrushchev ac- | cused Nixon indignantly of | threatening him. Nixon denied | this, but said; “T don’t believe the cause of) peace is helped by your reiterat-| ing the point you just made —'! that you haye more strength than’ | we have, because that is a threat, RUNNING DEBATE ithe’ Ways and Means Committee, | While 200 newsmen, photograph- | P©°P le of Michigan,” he said. ers and cameramen eavesdropped| the two men engaged in a running. foreign policy debate while they' looked over the exhibits of dolls, | swimsuits and automobiles. Part of the unscheduled fire-| ~~ oor State Supreme Court. There may| works was recorded while they’ a femperature cittisieesesss 2,44 |ROt be a legal decision until Octob-| toured a color television. studio. : tee er or early next year, Davis| Cameras ground away as they | “ One Teor Age in Pontiac warned. argued. Lowest temperature <0... 0000000": 4 Mean temperature .._ ah reco The suit was - initiated by Tourists, workmen and exhi- | ny. Frank P. Scruggs, a Royal Oak | bition officials looked on in_ Mighest and, Lowest Temperatures This tool — die maker, whose amazement. 105 tn 1096 o0 tm ises| “rember tee —_— employe. | Nixon promised Khrushchev. spent arneenrs Toms In the suit it is claimed that| this portion of the debate would. Baltimore n % pS 88 the Shmina company should have|be shown on -an American televi- Bismarck $2 Ben. a 80 been awarded the general construc-| sion | network uncensored, with Bafiale B wa $6 310M contract because Shmina’s bid| simultaneous “English translation| co (6S eee $2 73) was about $19,000 lower than Fred-| of the Soviet leader's remarks. | | 4 Omaha a8 62| man’s. Khrushchev, in answer to a re-| aioe wus - * *& quest by Nixon, agreed to allow) ae — Sh The county claims that Fred-| video tape to be shown on Soviet! 73 8. Francisco 66 54, 78N's bid was only about $2,000| television. The two men shook mo alternative e & 8. Marie 2 67/higher, and the difference in cost} hands on the deal. 7 B Tams , #| would be worthwhile to the Coun.) ye Washington 93: Moe a se promises to usd Drownings rank’ hext to traffic in accidehtal deaths,” \ f 1 i itiac. President of the local unit is, ‘Dr. John Marra, who said: the national the While critical of Marra deplored * * wo: ‘“‘Many features of the ACS pro- gram will be hard to take on,’’ he said, ‘notably the tremendous educational program, and research activities.” Money for lecal research pro- grams from the U.S. Public Health Service which is received through the ACS may be cut off, he feared. “We'll need the whole-hearted support of the UF and the good * * * Dr. William Bromme, a Division trustee, and Edward W. Tuescher, executive director, said the differ- ences involved only fund raising methods. Both, however, indicated they felt the Division took the pro- per position. Dr. Bromme said the ACS ‘‘does not take into account the general excellence of the Division.” He termed the Division “one of the best cancer-fighting groups in the nation.” The Division is anxious to work with the ACS and is in accord with it on all phases of the cancer pro- gram, Teuscher said. Teuscher sald he hoped chart- ered membership could be re- sumed in the future but that “until that day comes we have but to continue * our fight against canter in the | manner we have found most ef- | fective for the people of this community.” v \ WASHINGTON (® — Paralytic ACS appointed arry M. Nelson to take over .* the Detroit: | Won't Last Past October | } | as Teamster Boss } | LOS ANGELES — A bitter foe lof James R. Hoffa dredicts Hoffa’! and several of his lieutenants will | be suspended from the Teamsters told the National Retail Hardware Assn. yesterday that most rank- and-file members would vote ‘against the Teamsters president. | 1 | But, he added, Hoffa's political | legal action. Schmidt resigned recently as a He quit because of| represents clients who have bar-| gaining relations with the Team-| sters. | * * * He also was the attorney for 13 rank-and-file New York Teamsters, ' whose suit to provent Hoffa from ltaking office resulted in appoint-| ;ment of the monitors. | Schmidt predicted last Febru- ary that the miriters would be | able to force Hoffa out on charges: | of misconduct by June, he noted, but legal maneuvers caused a delay. The attorney also said he will file misconduct charges against these Teamster officials: Vice presidents Harold J. Gib- bons, Hoffa’s executive officer; | 'John T. (Sandy) O'Brien of Chi-' cago; John J, Conklin of New! polio cases increased by 50 per Jersey and Owen Bert Brennan of “We hoped for a change of cent last week to a 1959 weekly [Detroit and John O'Rourke, head, face today it would “be a great heart from the national ACS and high of 166. They ran more than of the union’s New York City joint if the Geneva believed their policy might be one, three times the number listed for jcouncil and trustee Ray Cohen of: | Philadelphia. of government fact - finders con- Layman's Work, Episcopal Dio- centrated today on steel strike, ceses of Michigan. data to provide President Eisen-| Surviving besides his wife, hower with the most exhaustive|Anne, are two sons, David and survey of its kind ever made. | Peter. both at home, and his par- As the strike moved into its 10th ents in New York. day, periodic reports were being sent to the White House by federal experts as soon as they were com- Flint Journal Names pleted. , ; . . The half million styking steel- workers already have oa necay New City Editor 100 million dollars in pay. About) 10 million will be added to the| FLINT (® — Veteran newspaper- wage loss each day ‘the strike man Roland L. (Bob) Martin has continues |been named city editor of the Flint With about 90 per cent of the Journal. nation’s steelmaking at a stand-| Martin, whose appointment was still, daily production losses were announced yesterday by Journal jestimated at nearly 43 million editor Ralph B. Curry, replaces dollars. Losses also were mount- Robert C. Herrick, who has been ing in allied fields where an esti- named editor of the Muskegon mated 45,500 workers have been Chronicle, effective Aug. 1. Martin, 48, joined vhe Journal Federal mediators have sched- i, 1934 and was named telegraph York, the first joint session since tora] writer since Oct. 24, 1958. the strike began. | A- native of Middleton, Mich., |Martin attended Eastern i University and the University Another Thor Launched fnictigge: iaile aauerice aa on 1,700-Mile Test Flight father of a son. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fie. © Gamblers Claim Aid — The Air Force launched a NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — Ten powerful Thor intermediate range ballistic missile on a 1,700- persons listing their occupations as gamblers filed claims for un- mile test flight today. The firing came only three employment compensation yester- day. days after another Thor exploded, Under state law, the gamblers breaking a string of 15 straight Cape sucesses for the usually re- (can draw as much as $5 a week for 28 weeks. reduon FREE OFFER! Introduces Resolution WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich) teday introduced a Senate resolution for the creation of a select Sen- ate committee on the economic impact of national defense, keyed to helping small business and labor surplus areas. ‘conference were allowed to fail. of flexibility. Evidently, it’s not.’| the comparable 1958 week. AFTER YESTERDAY'S RAINSTORM ~— It rained bh and rained — the heaviest rain this | summer. And when the rain finally. stopped late yesterday afternoon, numerous: Pontiac streets were temporarily flooded, like this corner of Lull and Wessen streets, where flood waters swirled eight Thches deep jin spots. Introductory size Tame Creme Rinse FREE with HUSH DEODORANT in exclusive cream applicator only 89¢ plus tax HUSH is the new deodorant de- veloped to control even stubborn all day long! Yet HUSH is gentle pe Won't harm delicate fabrics “a+ Can be used right after shaving on normal skin, Buy Hush now | . +. and get a free Introductory sizé bottle of Tame—the creme that ends dry, flyaway hair. Pontiac Press Photo h 4 ( ‘| a Bi 4 < is we : i" = . cases of perspiration and odor— _ 7 & « ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JIU LY 24, 195 ita i i ea i re yt a a | yo 2 heUDlUO OS OR Ke Ee ee ee ae ae ae rs Pe Oe eee } Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas MRS. CHARLES A, BECK _Mrs, Charles A. (Retha) Beck, 55, of 45 Kimball St., died unex pectedly today. She was a former employe of | American Forging and Socket Co.| and had been a member of Miz-| pah Temple of Knights of Pythias. She is survived by her husband: one daughter, Mrs. Evadeen Snif- fen, of Drayton Plains: two broth- ers, Guy Harris of Benton, Ill. and Clyde of Wayne; and five sisters, Mrs. Cleda Holt in Indiana, Late she was a member of St. Bene-/ Baker of Pontiac, and three grand-| Nellie Bridewell and Miss Harris, both of Galatia, Ill. Stella Gates and Mrs. Mae Good- man, both of Pontiac; grandchildren. rIsie nie S Stereo Pre-Recorded TAPES from $ Ae» WIDE SELECTION Tape Recorders SALES SERVICE RENTALS Eppert’s Camera Shop 57 W. Huren St. FE 5-6615 Secretaries. and two! ~ John Crotty of Fort Worth, Tex. Cemetery. Hospital after am illness of three General | Service will be held 1:30 p.m.|MRS. SOPHIA MAE GARDNER \Monday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel LAPEER. — Service for Mrs. - with burial in Ottawa Park Ceme-| ‘Sophia Mae Gardner, 67, of 132 will be held at! ttery. 'North Elm St., — i © wer [1: 30 p.m. Monday at the Baird) MRS. CLAIRE E. CROTTY ‘Funeral Home here with burial’ Mrs. Claire E. Crotty, 47, of 2550 in Stiles Cemetery. Voorheis Rd., died yesterday at’ Pontiae General Hospital after a ‘here home after a long illness. long illness. * * * | A former secretary for the Oak- |, land County Board of Education, | enton, i'Mrs. John Atkinson of. Decatur.) Fla., and Mrs. Florence dict Church and the Oakland sons. A County Association of Educational | ers, sister, and two broth-| Lee Buckle of Pontiac also survive. WALTER D. GRANT TROY — Service is pending for and Wilbur Crotty of Lansing. a Walter D. Grant, 76, of 1211 South t bar Chatty ot LAnaing. and Blvd., who died at his home this wo sisters. 2 ;morning, at Price Funeral Home! * * * I H ffered brief The Rosary will be recited at § ere. He suffered a brie illness. | p. m. Sunday at the Donelson-| Johns Funeral Home. Surviving are a son, Robert M. | Monahan of Pontiac; two brothers, | WILLIAM M, ILTON WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Service will be held at 2:30 p. m. Service for William M. Ilton, town Monday at St. Benedict Church ship fire chief for the past five and with burial following in Mt. Hope/a half years, will be held at 10:30 lam. tomorrow from Donelson- |Johns Funeral Home in Pontiac. ‘Cremation will follow at White JOHN W. SEAMAN John W. Seaman of 801 Hillwood, Chape] Memorial Cemetery, Troy. | Milford, a former Pontiac resident,; Mr. died yestérday at Pontiac General Rd. 49, of 891 Union Lake in Pontiac three- Iiton, died Wednesday Hospital after a weeks. He was 87, year illness. A retired Pontiac Motor Division, je was owner and operator of employe, he was a member of the \ark’s Garage on Union Lake road Oakland Avenue United Presbyte- and a member of the Metropolitan rian Church, the Knights of Pythias cyyp Spirit 78 and of the Dublin and the Junior Order of United Community Center. American Mechanics. He also was a former president Survivors include three daugh- of the Oxbow Conservation Club. ters Mrs. Robert Jackson of Mil-| Surviving besides his wife, Vida, ford, Mrs. Harvey Dye in Califor- are his parents, Mrs. Minnie Ilton nia and Mrs. Roy Reed in West/of Detroit and George Ilton,of Sim Virginia; four sons, John J. of Vir- coe, Ont., and a sister, Mrs. Frank ginia, Alfred of Washington,: Davis of. Detroit. Charles W. and Robert, both of : Pontiac. Also surviving are 19 grandchil- dren, 25 great-grandchildren, and Walker, 24, of 2254 Millville Rd., two brothers. . (Oregon Township, will be held at Service will be held at 1:30 p.. the Baird Funeral Home here Monday at the Oakland Avenue Burial will be in Mount Hope Cem- United Presbyterian Church with etery. burial in Perry Mt. Park Ceme-. Mr. Walker was killed instantly tery. His body is at the Huntoon yesterday when his car rammed Funera] Home. into a freight train. He was a member of the Na- DEAN L. WALKER LAPEER — Service for Dean L. “SHOWER ee ee —— row < A @ © Full 10-Ib. capacity © Heavy-duty soft rubber rolls © Finger tip wringer release FREE with purchase of this RCA WHIRLPOOL washer during our “SHOWER of BARGAINS”! BUY NOW— SAVE of BARGAINS” A) Whinkpool -~_.. WRINGER ‘S35 WASHER Model DW-30 * © Durable Lifecoat enamel finish USE THE WARD-WAY CREDIT PLAN tional Guard and was employed in the engineering department of the Buick Motor Division of General Motors Corp., Flint Surviving are his parents, aand Mrs. Glenn Walker Sr.; two sisters, Mrs. Jack Daniels of La- peer and Mrs, James LeValley of Flint; three brothers, John_of La- peer, and Richard nad Glenn Jr., both at home. Deaths Elsewhere NEW YORK (AP)—Harold E. Janis, 52, former newsman who had produced the Sid Caesar tele- vision program since 1950, died Wednesday of a heart attack. He 48 South Saginaw St. Mr. of Shellrick Corp., for the Caesar pre ) pro producer ducing firm grams, LOS ANGELES (®—Horace B. Northcott, 64, general adyertising manager of the Union Pacific Railroad since 1945, collapsed and died Thursday. NORTH TARRYTOWN, N.Y (AP)—John J. Sheehy, -78, princi- NOW ONLY pal keeper at Sing Sing Prison fot As keep- escorted 15 years, died Thursday. er he personally had many murderers from their death cells to the electric chair, He suffered a cerebral hemorrhage three weeks ago. He retired in 1941, | 39° COMPLETE Unmold Aspics Carefully When you are unmolding sum- mer aspics, always run the tip of a knife or spatula around the mold before dipping in hot water. CHECK THESE FEATURES! for Fun and Profi rambling structure, 30 years older last year, Wright called the annex |fathomable maze of corridors and) jthan the others, oem in 1923 “horrible.” \the tomb-like interior of Wright's! visto ee eget sige! When’ he saw drawings of the hotel, ask for rooms in one of the! of the worst in history i newest building he said, “Oh, no!”’ new buildings. t : . —"" The new buildings have | ~ * * rooms and the old one 300. Inu-| ST. LOUIS (UPI)—Need a sec-| 4 seven-story annex went up in'maru said nine out of every ten) The Red Cross was founded 100) Hunt Fireflies in Spare Time Mrs. Gardner died yesterday at/of the live insects, | The firm Surviving are three daughters, | Ga. Mrs, Edna _Bolyard of Brad-| and| Imperial Hotel was vice president and executive ° For. : : ORGANS | _ Wiegand Music Center MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER FE 2-49%4 ond income? You might try catch-| 1954 and a 10-story addition opened guests, frightened by the un- ‘years Ago. ing fireflies and selling them to _ _ nesnanasnasnesnente a ‘chemical crmmpany here which \is “willing to pay 25 cents for 100 ssaikaa aaa aaa wants to collect a million fire flies because they are good sources of two chem- ieals called luciferase and luci- | ferin, which combine to put the on-and-off glow into the bug's | tail, ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! | Scientists of the Sigma Chemi- ‘ ‘cal Co. will use the luciferase and luciferin to measure the amount of adenosine triphosphate in hu- man tissue, This compound is the source of energy for many reac- tions of the human body, _ Will Tear Down AERA Plan to Save Portion of Frank Lloyd Wright's Famous Tokyo Building By RONALD P. KRISS TOKYO (UPI) — The owners of Tokyo's famous Imperial Hotel, designed by the late Frank Lloyd Wright, have decided to get rid of the crumbling masterpiece — but they'll leave a few bricks in- tact for sentiment’s sake. “We'll probably tear down both wings ,of Wright's buildings,” said Ichiro ‘Inumaru, executive direc- tor of the Tokyo tourist spot. “But the front entrance and the lily pond are well-known sights in Tokyo, so we'll keep them. The Peacock Banquet Hall is a big money-maker, and we'll keep that too.” The operators of the hotel give the impression that they'd like to tear the whole thing down and replace it with a gleaming. ultra- modern structure But, wary of demolishing Wright's Imperial entirely and erasing one of Tokyo's foremost landmarks, the y Say to leave at least they will try part of it intact. * * * “On the other hand,” said Inu- maru, “things might change and the foundation of the old building might sink a little more. It’s al- ready sunk three feet. Then may- be we'd have to tear it all down.” It's a safe bet that Wright would have greeted the Imperial’s cur- rent plans with cold scorn. Twice before, when the hotel added new buildings to the qriginal without consulting him, the crusty old architect lashed out at the designs s ‘horrible.’ This, perhaps, is why the ho- tel’'s owners waited until a few months after Wright's death ear- ly this year before they got busy with plans for replacing his fa- mous building. tight now, of three the Imperial consists buildings, Wright's low, ONE WEEK ONLY LUBRICATION ONLY 99: BRAID Motor Sales 70 S. 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Dine Other Weekdays 9: $30 A.M. to i hee s _ grecpiernern STORE HOURS: to 9:00 P. ogee, My ” ’ : . ee: | q a ‘ i : ° we} \ Wore ike pee { ia joes ee . “aed J ve = i ' ; : i ) if THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1959 | People spend daily more for) Birds and crocodiles are the! , PO} tr yesemerter cree erst ego \ ore F 3 i . their eneers_ | i | \ than is collected daily from all the dinosaurs that ruled the earth parking meters in the country, about 130 million years ago. } YOU CAN HAVE SOFT WATER for a FEW PENNIES Per DAY! Do Away with Hard and Rusty Water HAVE A WHITER WASH, SOFTER CLOTHES, LOV- LIER COMPLEXION AND EVEN SAVE UP TO 80° ON SOAP. Why Rent a Softener Unit? Have Your Own for as Low as HE SEES LIKE A CAT — This Army driver doesn't need Per Month headlights to drive in total darkness. He's wearing infrared FO Tt E'S | STOCK DUCTION SALE Hurry! Prices Slashed on Nationally Advertised Goods! WE NEED ROOM FOR FALL GOODS... Our policy is to binoculars. Developed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at NO MONEY DOWN 5 ‘Be Ivoir, Va., the binoculars also make construction in the clean out Summer goods at the end-of-the-season.- Cost is , dark possibl. : . Including Sales Tax forgotten! Prices Cut to the bone to move goods fast! Come! Buy for Summer, recreation, and back to school! 10 Year Warranty ' @ State Title Hopefuls Murrow Applies YOU DON'T NEED CASH . . . JUST SAY “CHARGE IT!" \| SEMI-AUTOMATIC FREE WATER ANALYSIS = Commission ra : ( «ae! STOCK REDUCTION SALE . , SAT., MON. ingeri a For Information Call: in Saturday Battles nN IR PY) Ladies Sports Wea ; Hose—Bras-Lingerie DETROIT (UPI) — Four con- > eserve | NE EOOR 1.99 LADIES JAMAICAS mame bLowe Vy ‘ tenders for Michigan boxing titles) NEW YORK (AP) — Television 2.99 Smart 2.99 Sanforized obs ‘a as dae vacation. Tartan: plaids $1 A-B-C Cup 29c Tricot \ CRUMP ELECTRIC Inc will be in action tomorrow night in|; commentator Edward R. 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The bights are Pp r e; twe OC nite Ss ext year) Member meee ae el le Conncailer Big 7 Boxing club. Matchmaker/and continue to appear on the Cool sl ; 7. 99 LADIES SWIM suits — s Julius Piazz Small World program | € sleeveless ayes ; ‘San orized. Expertly Pick from Latex and cotton styles Assorted ‘ - tailored, Sizes 32 to 38 colors. Sizes 10 to 18. So ; Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It E Thi P | “Let 14 Years of Credit Counseline Experience Assist You” Water Rate ve Set Given Ontonagon Post .— bd er The bee rns Yee Ce ee © \ Hours: Daily 9 to §. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 12 Noon. OWOSSO WwW — An increase of LANSING uP — Gov. Williams) about 25 or 30 per cent in water S is appointed Frank A Domitro-| J i MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS rates will go into effect here in Vich Jr. of Ontonagon as Ontona-| STOCK REDUCTION SALE .. . FRI., SAT., MON. Dresses, Hats, Uniforms 716 Pontiar State Bank Bidg. FE 8036 8 §= August, the City Commission re-'gon County social welfare agent to| 4 ae a, ports succeed Mrs. Helen Hill, resigned. | moet) tt YES! $3 LADIES DRESSES c SECOND FLOOR Se a : - - 19.99 Group $149 Genuine Pick from higher Be) KS, prints and 59 3.99 Gropp of 3.99, 12-44 LADIES’ MUSKRAT Novelties 2 Sizes i: tors SUMMER MATERNITY SUITS STOLE Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It WHITE HATS DRESSES 25 North Saginaw St. 10° 79° | ca 2° JEWELRY CO STOCK REDUCTION SALE . , SAT., MON. : 2 14.99 Group 16.99 Group Ladies’ Summer enectce 3.99, 10-44 10.99, 10-18 ' POPLIN LADIES’ Pick from solid colors, prints. Ideal for picnic 88 NO-IRON NYLON ; 43 pc DINNERWARE LP raincoats COATS and vacation. Sizes 12 10 44 UNIFORMS DRESSES f & CYMAC Macihinda “ 855 788 Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It 2” 5 STOCK REDUCTION SALE . , SAT., MON. STOCK REDUCTION SALE . , .SAT., MON, i ERN $10 Ladies’ No-lron Dresses $15 LADIES’ SHORTIES | ROSE PAT | Come! Save! Beautiful cool broadcloth in solid 00 Only 18 beautiful coats in all wool and wash- 00 with Rainbow Colors and print. Sizes-10 to 52 at acritan. Sizes 10 to 18 Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It & 5 7 H 5 Look! Boys’ Wear STOCK REDUCTION SALE . , SAT., Save! Girls Wear’ SECOND FLOOR Boys’ -- Girls’ sis Shots SECOND FLOOR 59c Size 198. 3 to 12 Save on these $1 Sanforized, full cut. Solid "149. 7 to 14 39¢ Girls’ N Denim-Plisse | BOYS‘ 10-07. calor isred pattern: GIRLS’ BABY GIRLS’ PLAY SHORTS DUNGAREES Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It Doll PAJAMAS PANTIES 29° | 1? 88°); 25° | STOCK REDUCTION SALE .. . FRI., SAT., MON. Wash ‘n Wear Fitted 1.69 Boys’ Pants, Shirts g | Sule sit | 1.99, Size 3-8 BOYS’ SHORT LASTEX Look! Sanforized pants, 6 to 12... or Go GIRLS’ WHITE GIRLS’ ra ae PAJAMAS | SWIM TRUNKS [MM short sleeve sport shirts, 6 to 16, ANKLETS SWIM SUITS ] 49 99 ¢ Even at. This LowPrice You Can Charge It ] 4 ¢ | 1 49 a ; 3 THER SERVER ome hg es me Stonie STOCK REDUCTION SALE. . . FRI, SAT., MON. STOCK REDUCTION SALE . , SAT., MON. Full cut—double crotch. Fine quality cotton. Sizes 1 to 6. Limit 10. Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It First quality, absorbent 27 x 27 ‘‘Snuze Brand”. —Limit 2 dozen. Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It Men’s Furnishings SEOGE SEOU CIES SALE ee iF: SAT OO Men’s Sportswear MAIN FLOOR 2.69 BIRDSEYE DIAPERS 179 19c Tots’ Training PANTS 10 ALL 60 = ONLY 1.99 Men’s Sport “ae MAIN FLOOR $ a 3.99 White 1.99 Quality Stock up for summer at this low price. Better Group 5.99 MARLBORO WORK Prints, stripes, novelty. Sizes S-M-L. WASH-WEAR MEN’S SHIRTS SHIRTS Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It ; PANTS JACKETS | ] 7 ] 49 48s ] 99 NO MONEY DOWN iw thE STOCK REDUCTION SALE . 1, SAT., MON. | SERVICE *T Mo Wawra []/ 3.99 Broadcloth | 59c Quality 69c Men’s ie deeae ¢ ag) Rates te tee ’ Sis Fon, Mae a COTTON MEN’S Sto on better quality briefs, T-shirts, 3 eV. : FOR 8 Week! a PAJAMAS SOCKS cians. Sizes for all. 9 JEANS SHIRTS ONLY Just what you've wanted—The service- 49 ¢ Evén at This Low Price You Can Charge It 77 ] 88 i OPEN STOCK RETAIL PRICE ability of MELMAC plus the luxury of 2 24 / B Dinner Pater .. . $22.00 $ 88 a lovely design. Gorgeous Rose ~ ; MON. Bien es 120 Bouquet Pattern plates and accom- STOCK REDUCTION SALE. . . FRI., SAT., MON. STOCK REDUCTION SALE . , SAT. | Strom ....... 128 : : 4 $ Snr comiptete | [0s Piece: ct Melnice red cyte 5.99 Men’s DRESS PANTS 1.99 Men’s Swim rik 1 Sugar w/Cover 2.00 h in pastel tints of Pink, Yellow, Blue Look! Better groups of cool, swell tailored 88 Save on these fine quality swim. suits, as- Total It bought wit and White. 3-tiered Server in ebony pants. Assorted’ fabrics, Sizes 29-42. sorted fabrics. Sizes 32 to 42. al Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It & separately $57.80 noatass Even at This tow Price You Can Charge It OUR PRICE-$24.88 get Black. Everything for the one special price while this special shipment lasts. *The memes MELMAC ond CYMAC ‘ore registered trode morks of the American Cronomid Co j Copyrio’! Merchandise Selectors ing | Save on Domestics STOCK REDUCTION SALE a FRI., SAT., MON. : S ave on Home Needs | , THE STORE WHERE GRamopa | | a NSTAIRS - - i BUY NOW for ANNIVERSARY | as te — _ 1.99 MUSLIN SHEETS 29 Sage ae : 7.99 Full Size $5 Better Fine first quality. Full size deep hems. Pillow 39¢ Fine Qual. § 5.99 Full, Twin ‘ 4 or WEDDING GIFT . . . WONDERFUL NYLON PRINT case sets| at 39c. “DAN RIVER” | CHENILLE 4 BLANKET DRAPES Even at This Low Price You Can Charge It YARD GOODS SPREADS Ve to GIVE or for KEEPS! Zo | 2 Cee 1.99 P’ethylene | 39c Hand Size CANNON ad D ; E ‘ [a " s P 3” tk 54”, 72", FT i 1:29 Plump : CURTAIN FEATHER PANELS PHLOWS, 4 | 88* | $8" aN _ Never before hove we! offered such o value on such easy terms. Beautiful 60-piece Melmac Dinnerware at a saving of over Y2— JEWELRY CO. _ Come in today or Saturday, see how you save at Enggass! } ad | __ 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET | NORTH SAGINAW STR | _. NO MONEY DOWN! ONLY $1 A WEEK! EET | . : ay ‘Open Monday and Friday Evenings! ‘AN Eo ‘i ~ = " bs 1} - ‘ a \ . : * hao ; ‘ i Se et ty Se a a ee, ee eee eee ee Se a Pate 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JULY 24, 1959 = Legislature Sends It to Williams _ Clears ‘Right to Know’ Bill LANSING W — A bill to assure| sessions could be held, but not public access to school board) for taking any final action. meetings was waiting Gov. ial Also sent to the gowernor was liams' signature today. a bill to permit small loan com- The so-called ‘“‘right-to-know’ | alee to lend up to $1,500, raig- measure, backed by the Michigan) iing the present $500 ceiling, New Press Assn., .cleared the legisla- interest rates would lower charges, ture yesterday after House ap-|on joans below $50 but double those’ proval of minor Senate amend- in the $300 to $500 range where! Co urt Summons week honeymoon 10 feet ander Committee Approves Miami, The suit contends Minin- W ait s f or Gr O om is and another man failed to go, Equal Time Exemptions ' through with a deal to buy - WASHINGTON @ —The |beauty parlor In Bomb Shelter Mininson, 28, and the former | Commerce Commilttee ‘has ro {Maria Rodriguez, 27, were wed} proved a bill that would any | MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—Life in a) beside the shelter July 12 and de-| radio-television newscasts from jbomb shelter may be confining,|scended into jit to publicize the the equal time rule, * | r ta- : | Me fren , ea.|21'-t tructures and point up| The rule provides that a s' ibut it’s free of some complita- braid ae p DP tion giving time to one political ‘tions that exist above ground. candidate on a program must A summons for a civil suit has! . give the same amount of time to ‘been handed to the sheriff's de- At the start of 1959. 4,925,000 per-| all other candidates, Under the ‘partment for service on Melvin) sons. were covered by employer- bill, interview programs and | Mininson when he and his bride|employe pension plans in the| coverage of political conven- jemerge Saturday from a_ two-' United States. tions alse would be exempt, | ' | } WKC’s 12 CARAT SOLITAIRE SALE! SPECIAL PURCHASE! An unusually large purthase of high quality diamonds at an unprecedented low price enables us to give you these regularly $350 2 carat: diamonds for the low price below! ments. . loan companies do most of their) it would require school boards | business. to open their meetings to the x +t * . _ Public. C Aosed door _ executive Other changes would permit} = ———/pre-computation of interes ty deferred payment charges and is-| BETTE sues of life insurance to protect, the loan company, with the bor-' FEVER BEFORE! rower paying the premium, | x : oe : oy * | Rep. Willard I. Bowerman (R- THROUGHOUT THE UNITED Lansing) lost a last-ditch move to : sg eS a ec STATES AN een ae oninaiion Giteciy ue aiaeate TOMORROW'S OCEAN LINER? — A giant there are no plans at present to build it. The Tass AS Welt, O48: 4 ae ae Alt helicopter, 300 feet long, powered by nuclear projected behemoth would weigh half a million FU rates. He predicted Gov. Williams ; : ; ; Vines SOS RES would veto if energy, takes flight from the drawing board in pounds—10 times more than any ‘copter in exist- FRIENDS. THE REASONS? — * * * artist's conception above. It’s more than a ence—and be able to carry troops, passengers or O-JIBWA BITTERS IS THE BEST = The House xeiected a Senate) (UEnl of fancy, however. . Preliminary studies cargo on its many decks at over 200 miles per ALL-HERB MEDICINE IN THE -passed bill to remove a require-| the Air Force by Bell Helicopter Corp., though giving it virtually unlimited range. WORLD. NOW 25° STRONGER, ment that the state highway for such a craft have sist =a eee ed for hour. Atom he could ean it aloft Enetiohely, MORE EFFECTIVE AND QUICKER |department make a — taith| ——— : ACTING THAN EVER, AND AT | offer efore making a etermina-| | . . NO INCREASE IN PRICE. IT WILL jtion of hecessity in buying UP Kittens See ‘Combat’ Planned to Dynamite Struck Mill ae | right-of-way. HELP You To |" ©" _ | CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. w— ENJOY BETTER 'Two black kittens went through & fb t ! l } M b ene te tee Tobacco Lures Buffalo ‘amphibious maneuvers with First ex | ec nhion em ers ‘Division Marines.’ They were | PALATINE, ll. ( — Buffalo loaded, unnoticed, into the hold of Get Prison Terms for Pp lot | farmer L. B. Andersen has dis- the USS Pickway, a troop trans- covered that one of the most ef-'port, with camouflage nets. Act-| _— : fective taming devices is a supply ing Cpl. R. G. Balzarett and Sgt.. HENDERSON, N.C. (AP) — Pegram, 22; and Johnny Martin, | e lof cigarettes or loase tobacco, An- J. R. Hoy found them and took Eight members of the Textile,97, each received 5 to = 0-JIB-WA BITTERS \dersen said the animals are fond'care of them through the am- Workers Union drew long prison terms; and Malcolm Harrell, 23, Ire, iy, ") 28 S of tobacco and will venture very phibious landing and found homes sentences Thursday after their con- received 2 to 3 years AT ALL DRUG STORE close to him te get a chew. for them with married Marines. |viction for conspiring to dynamite * * * a struck cotton mill. | Notice of appeal was given for| The. eight included Boyd Payton all eight by their lawyers. | 51, Carolinas director of the union! Judge Mallard, who has a rep-) who ied’ the long and often vio- Utation for being hard but fair, lent strike at the Harriet-Hender- told the defendants and their law- son cotton mills here. yers: + + * * * * : Superior Court Judge Raymond |! “We need unions in the United| States. We do not need a union e Mallard sentenced Payton to 6 to ~” 10 years at hard labor. Judge Mil- 0 Union officials who think and} U ring era eat hope all of you gen-|2°t like they are above the law. tienen will some day come to aoe” has run rampant in Hender- . dacetand that the law is bigger 5°" and Vance County the last OUR NEW SHOWROOM NEXT Shan you, baer than the anon, Tans, dont know who ‘bigger than any organization. The here = Bae ms ......... $3.50 $ 3 19 3x0 $9B49 \isolated radio and weather stations, |it means the annual inspection. | * * * Few settlements have any dock-| ing or cargo handling: facilities. So) |more than 1,000 men will go nort ' by sea and air to help get the! ishiploads of supplies ashore by} |tender. The task is not easy. Many | unloading Points are beset by drift-, ling ice even in August. | | The vessels will operate from ‘Quebec to Hudson Strait and Baf-| fin Island, Some will travel still] farther north up Foxe Basin to! Cornwallis and Ellsmere Islands’! iwhere there are Canadian-United | | States weather stations. * * * Not one Canadian in-a thousand | ilives in the Arctic. Hardly one in 'a hundred ever sees it. Yet Cana-| dain territory above the treeline | — the frue Arctic — covers | /more than’a million square miles. LIGHTING FOR SMARTER LOOK ahi ce acc 3 bile ee i PIECE MODERN LAMP ENSEMBLE PLU MATCHING SMOKER Reg. $49.50 SAVE $14.55 2 Art 4 Pieces ay 4 hae | The Canadian North — some- | times defined as the Northwest | Territories and the Yukon — is | still vaster; it is big enough to | | contain more than half the United | States excluding Alaska. ) A single island, Ellesmere, is) Smoker tray avoiloble nearly the size of England and_| in attractive Pink, R a @) @) M f ' c aD , Scotland combined. Yet the island | Turquoise, Green, Eggshell PAY ONLY $1.00 Weekly! jas a population of only about 60, | inot counting walrus and musk ox. | ‘The rugged land is not, how-| ,éver, a perpetually frozen waste U m e r Cc O Mm p ‘@| a) y -- where nothing grows. Summer days' cs , ican be hot, There are bees, flow- | ers, and, alas, mosquitoes. Sees eee ee ieee anemia fH Not just 1, but 3 ultro-smart matching lamps ond 1 matching smoker for one remarkably low price! Includes reflector floor lamp, 2 table lamps, and smoker finished in exquisite brushed brass plot : ing with fine china breaks decorated in Gold. Has 2-tiered Deenaglas shades. Decorator-Designed .. . Fits any Decor |. SPECIALIZED | SERVICE TV Hi-Fi © RADIO on kh RECORDERS 2 Ries Se Save | OPEN MONDAY’ BLAKE |{' NIGHT ‘til 9 manio-TV |] FREE PARKING a” | FE 4-871, * T a ~ DISTRIBUTORS FoR PULLUM WINDOWS y i to ' im | Pe f hs AN A.M. to Pre esnares Me? '72 SOUTH TELEGRAPH ROAD “¢'P = Te = \ see bartan wena A sR eeCN CASRGIG eet eDienerses oemarnoccwsarme | tei. ONTIAC P | 1 , +. THE P it RESS \ én FRIDAY, JULY 24, Keego Urban Renewal Fears Are Answe 1950 4 a PONTIAC, MICHIGAN | 7 2 ed i : * ‘ ~s | Rapid Growth Threaten ick Wheat Farmers Vote pI Calens ero, cme 4-] for Rigid Controls: Living Standards of All rerebe marae OF NIG | : #3 By DICK HANSON OXFORD—The Oxford Chamber _ WASHINGTON (UPI)—The na-|the present program for producing 7 2 iof Commerce yesterday picked tion's wheat farmers voted by ajSurpluses, told a news conference | Press Suburban Editor Caroline McMillan, 18, to represent better than four to one margin in advance of the returns that he KEEGO HARBOR — The haphazard growth of Keego the village in the Peach Queen con- 4 ti : ae did not believe Congress would re- : . . 4>,,'test to be held Aug. 7 in Romeo r © continue rigid government COM-|vise the program at its present Harbor, stimulated by a rapid spreading out of Detroit’s | A master plan showing the pro- other public facilities, would cost about $14,000, according to Jack Zubrick, city planning commission- -er and third member on last night's '@\ written portion, explain fully the) pressed a desire to know more about urban renewal. financing of urban’ renewal and ; Ns answered by a panel of urban re-| newal experts at last night's mass) meeting in the Roosevelt School at Keego Harbor: Q.—Will urban renewal taxes on homes? A.—Possibly yes, replied George raise newal administration, ‘‘but it also will raise the value of homes at the same time.” — Q.—What will come first, urban renewal or sewer and water sys- tems? A.—They must be planned to- gether to dovetail with the over- all plan, Schroll, regional director of urban) renewal, ‘‘Otherwise the systems| might have to be resituated to comply with a master plan if urban renewal came later.”’ Q.— Why do businessmen Keego Harbor) feel that we are ready for urban renewal when Ann Arbor, a much larger city, | turned it down? A.—‘I don’t know why Ann Arbor turned it down, but locally no other group has really gotten ‘behing urban renewal here — someone had to take the initia- tive,” said City Planning Com- missioner Jack Zurbrick. Q.—Who determines which houses are to be torn down as slums? A.—"Until a final plan is jelled, with streets rerouted according to the plan, we can’t tell which houses will come down, be moved or refurbished to meet standards,” said Conklin. “After a plan is ap-| proved, a planning commission) will decide, but they will bear in mind the wishes expressed by various groups to be affected.” Q.—How will the city’s share of urban renewal costs be raised? A.—Zurbrick explained that if Keego acted now, the $500,000 approved by taxpayers for a cen- tral sewer system at a recent election would be the city’s share toward urban renewal with the federal government paying $1,000, or two-thirds as provided by law, after federal approval is gained. Without federal approval there can be no urban renewal. Questions were submitted to the experts by residents on unsigned (in| Inquiries of other businessmen | would constitute Keego Harbor’s, master plan and urban renewal |the new “Miss Oxford” said she cost for urban renewal, supple-| is rejected, we stand to lose the [Was ‘‘surprised and e xtreme] y pleased” to receive the title. Caroline will be one of 10 area} | much public assurance as possi. |title-holders c o m pe fing for the ble that Keego Harbor will pro-.|Peach Queen crown. The winner Sheriff Arthur J. Shumping, who rots.” ceed with urban renewal before- jwill reign over the 27th annuallis on a di \Peach Festival celebration SALISBURY. N.C. NAME ‘MISS OXFORD’—Blonde blue-eyed Caroline McMillan, 18, has been selected to vie for the Peach Queen crown in Romeo on Aug. 7 Chamber of Commerce yesterday Mr. and Mrs. Alan E. McMillan, of 56 Mechanic St. You'll Make It, Doc (UPI) et so he can play on 11 children Dn _ | The selection was made by a committee of the Oxford Caroline is the daughter of the law enforcement officers base- ball team next month, said yester- day “I've joined the rabbit fami+ ~ ly. Nothing but lettuce and cary Shumping is the father of 4 _ $4,000 Richer Centennial Nets $1,500 While Woman’s Club Donates $2,500 | LAKE ORION—The Orion Com- munity Center, Inc., is $4,000 rich- ler today. * * * Last night Gilbert Woodcock, | OCC treasurer, reported that the irecent ‘‘Centennial Spectacular” jhad netted about $1,500 for the jcenter treasury Additionally, a check for $2,500 was presented to the OCC by | Mrs. Delbert Matthews on behalf | | of the Lake Orion Woman's Club. | The center board meeting was unofficial because of lack of a quo-| rum. But an informal report was given on the progress of the bduild-' |ing program. * * * Woodcock reported that a four- | Conklin of the federal urban re-!inch well is now in. It is 70 feet, \six inches deep and pumps 400 gal- lons an hour, he said. | Referring to the centennial, of- | | ficials announced that they had | been talking to local merchants | about staging q similar celebra- | tion next year. announced Bernard| The response to such an idea has, 'been enthusiastic thus far, the spokesmen said, because of the success of the three-day program’ ‘held here over fhe Fourth of July. | * * * and residents will be made in the near future to determine if a sim- ilar undertaking would merit fur- 'ther consideration in the months {to come, the group decided. ae MRS. DONALD 0. EWALD Mr. and Mrs. Wasson Lee, of Smith, of 180 Indianside: Dr., 4760 Sawmill Lake Rd., Orton- ville, announce the marriage of their daughter, Nancy Jay, to Airman 3.C Donald 0, Ewald. He is the son of Mrs. John A. Lake Orion. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. D. D. McColl, minister of the First Christian Church in Pontiac, at | the parsonage. The bridegroom | is stationed in Texas with the | VU. S. Ait Force where the new- Diamond Jalues You Can faut! From Leonard’s 99 Pt. Marquise Diamond Ring, with 2 tapered baguettes valued at $900. 587" A 5-Diamond. Wed- ding Ring, total 1 Ct. weight and val- ued at $450. 220 1.07 Pt. Emerald Cut 14-K mounting with 28 pts. tapered bagu- ettes valued at $1,000. °685. Others Styles from 97.50 Ladies’ Diamond Soli- taire ring in 14-K mounting and in per- fect blue white. Val- ued at $250. *125 6-diamond 14K Lady's Hamilton Watch yal- ued at $300. *145 lyweds pla t6 reside. & i od Tr P| TWENTY ‘ } % f a _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1959 “Tiger K's Boost Averages in 11-2 Win = in; cits | SRP EDRE T&S in Nat Series . ‘Sanford Back in Form, Beats Braves 5-1 Injuries Factor in NL Race for 8 Hits in Sweep) of Washington hander singled home the clinch. inning on’ Ken Boyer’s two-run er in the seventh for his first error after Willie Mays and Or- Major League victory, but need- lando Cepeda singled with two out ed Don Drysdale’s saving relief and then pulled off a double steal. job after Ernie Banks: singled |Wilmer Mizell (11-5) lost it. — neal Kuenn-Kaline > JP1)—Harvey Kuenn| i grea) Ka coud wi the Devercall By The Associated Press jahead of idle, fourth place Pitts-| League batting crown this year! If there's to be a turning point burgh. . with a .340 average, but team. in the tight fight for the National Hodges, who has driven in 61 mate Al Kaline might force him League pennant, it may be at hand runs, one less than team leader to revise the e-timate upwards, |— Not in the won-lost records or Don Demeter, and has clubbed Kuenn banged out four hits yes-/batting averages, but in the in- nine home ryns in the past month : to tap the Dodgers, broke up a. terday only to see Kaline connect Jury lists. Moe Drabewsky (4-8) was the loser. home two rung in the eighth. | | Loser Joey Jay (3-7) had shut’ ‘out the Reds on four hits for 7 2/3 innings before singles by Frank for four hits also as the Detroit; For while right-hander Jack Sa He witha oer Tigers ted to an 11-2 victory ford proved himself sound again '" the fourth, then was injured’ Sanford, winless since June 7 Robinson and Jerry Lynch and the over the Washington Senators ‘by pitching first place San Fran- Sliding in the sixth. The big first after being struck on the hand by error set up Jones’ eighth hom- ; cisco to a 5-1 victory over St. Louis >aSemen is batting .293. Kuenn jumped his average /yesterday, idieaue third place} Wally Moon also homered for from .339 to .347 and Kaline Boyes found they'll have to do’ the Dodgers his seventh, and climbed eight percentage points | y ithou: slugging Ed Mathews in- forced in another run with a to .340. |definitely. And second place Los bases-loaded walk in a two-run The two “‘Ks’’ played a part in Angeles lost Gil Hodges’ perked seventh that nailed it for Larry - all four of Detroit's scoring rallies|up bat for at least a week. Sherry (1-2). The young right. a pitch by Pittsburgh's Bob Friend, er. Brooks Lawrence (5-9) was the gained an 8-9 record for the Giants. winner in relief, pairing with start- |He had the Cardinals blanked un- er Bob Purkey to check the Braves til the ninth, walking one, strik- on three hits. They made two— ing out five and allowing nine hits./Billy Bruton’s double and Lee |Wally Shannon’s two-out single|Maye’s single — pay off for both| ‘broke up the shutout. | The Giants won it in the first |inning, Peach’’ who is considered the against the Senators as the Tigers Hodges, the man with the big —~ —— completed a three-game sweep’ bat in the Dodgers’ comeback, from Washington. pulled a leg muscle last night iruns against Purkey in the fourth’ Peach” who is considered as the greatest Tiger | | of all, yells encouragement to the Detroit Tigers iw AP Wirephote from a box seat where he enjoyed the game with club president Harvey R. Hanson. The Tigers won the game and ‘‘Peaches’’ was happy. greatest Tiger a- —A | | + ke ot after his 19th home run had | ‘ « s Eddie Yost singled to open the! touched off a 5-3 victory over | bottom of the first, took second on| the Chicago Cubs that kept Los | 1 ° an infield out and scored on) Angeles within 114 games of the ; i Kuenn’s single. Kaline was cred-| Giants, } A z = ; : a A ited with a single when neve Mathews, the NL home run lead- ° A Throneberry slipped on the wet, with 29, was kept out of the } ; outfield grass while trying to catch |); : re *77_° re , A a high fly to right. Kuenn pened | Steed Sena are hip, Bud Wilkinson \ ; _ raced to third and came on on @ slipped 414 xamen ‘behind ih « Is Shocked b \ A squeeze bunt by Red Wilson. 16-2 defeat by Cincinnati. y A In the third, Kuenn singled, | It was the only other game ’ From. A stole second and scored on | Scheduled in the NL and left Mil- oot a Oac Tatum’‘s Death ; ‘ " | wauk . g i Ar aaa = S eaiewee ae a ee Se ae NORMAN, Okla. @® — Okla- The A on Wiens anurldice fly homa football coach Bud Witkin- A . | son expressed great shock at the = Kuenn and Kaline singled in suc- | Succumbs at Ap death of North Carolina coach i cession in the fifth and then worked | Jim Tatum. = a double steal. Gus Zernial . . r scored one run with a sacrifice fly| North Carolina Pilot x & * PRESS BOX B ST Tae came mie Reached Great Heights Wilkinson, a friend of Tatum's R . tM | d since 1937, was speechless when Two former Michigan college c a a at Marylan C Tex Clevenger relieved starter informed of his death. stars were signed by the Detroit c Hal Woodeshick in the sixth and ji Raiders of the Ontario Football c was tagged for five runs. Singles CHAPEL HILL, N. C. see ze Union, They are Gene Snider cen- ‘ b Jim Bunning Yost and Charley | AMERICAN LEAGUE Tatum, the North Carolina’ football Finally he said, “I'm so ter at Michigan through 1957 and ! c y r ; | Won Lost Pct. Behind coach who rose from a_ sandlot ’ ar Marv Raab, Little-America in 1956 \ Cc Maxwell filled the bases before Chicago 33° 39576 lay h : ] { the shocked I really don’t know what Pa ; Cleveland $2 39 86-571 ' player to the pinnacle o . while at Alma. c Kuenn lined a two-run single to Baltimore 4 4% SIL 6” |coaching profession, died here last to say. I'm just too shocked to ‘ left. Kaline’s second double New York . v4 00 ? ~ Inight. The Byer 4 Titan sac: make a coherent statement.” | x & * c brought in another run and SS i aT ah AP Wirephote (cumbed to a highly contagious ~*~ * * Rained’ dut games yesterday . doubled for two more, | Boston" esreapd's Sears 2 YOST AT SECOND — Infielder Eddie Yost (1) of the Detroit virus that ravaged his bulky form. ir hie avai in the city softball and baseball c . x ke ee __ | Kansas City 9, Baltimore reget oA Tigers slides safely into second base as the ball bounces away x ke wuss aoe nn ean aduhgnam: leagues will be ger aoe : . ton ae eS aa ang | Betrolt ripe tl ne from Washington shortstop Bill Consolo in the first inning of the | Feverish and delirious, his ai Syincass aad ‘Tatem: was at tasgae's we r Gears ad soft. { C | Boston at Chicago, L : a : : _ " s nel : Kaline strack oui. ee a TODAY'S “GaMis rain aa pteriay The umpire in the picture is Frank Umont. The age mi! thas pe a red TATUM DIES — One of the Cornell. They served in the Navy ball at Beaudette and K of C c In all, ‘the Tigers collected 15) - "(68) va Mossi (7-9) 2 ™—Tarsen ‘Tigers won, 11-2. a 2 atm fasae = = ee nation’s outstanding college foot- together and Wilkinson came meets Shaws at Wisner’s base- c "hits in their biggest spree in more | ***?ip#", *! Cleveland. 7 p.m —Pascual ~ — a 7 Only his con, virsuaY ball coaches, Jim Tatum, died here in 1946 as an assistant to ball diamond, : D than a month. | Boston at Kansas City, § p.m.—Sullivan, latices - = ae te ae last night of a poisonous virus Tatum. He stepped up to the | ~~ - « \ Veelterace at uienen 6 a ee s mitted at his bedside in the a infection in the University Me- head coaching position the next | | “I have no explanation for the ~~ (10-5) vs. Pi ‘e “om tion ward of the North Carolina i ; : . | The Jets of the Class A city . a TOMORROW'S SCexDU . ; t morial Hospital at Chapel Hill, year when Tatum went to Mary- ‘el t sudden hitting,” manager |... »T0 pegs Stoll ene - Memorial hospital. N.C. He was 4 * aon | baseball league had to forfeit > Jimmie Dykes said. “I guess Washington ai Cleveland, 1 , re three victories in loop competition “4 Jn. Boston at Kansas City, 9 pin Baltimore at Chicago, 1:30 p.m. we're just getting back to nor- | His lovely wife, Edna, lay ill * at home suffering from the same | because of using an_ ineligible mal, We had a rough spell for | : . ® |player according to league direc- Ww @ Whlle-ell teams 6 Cabbage, bu 2.25 ¢ 4 . a Apu General Telephone, RCA Mand Sper. Cabbage, Curly, bu 200 by hedge selling. November, a ater he failed to! ings. adbage. Red. bu 3 ; appear in federal court on a/ eeenta ' : mend ry Rand nudged a shade higker. caneect: Bprauss: ¥ - }38| All prices had moved ahead by charee of violating Securities and| Brown said he would recommen 5 . . = 2 se Carrots, doz. behs. 1.00 the end of the first hour. Wheat Exchange Commission rules, jthat Grundy be transferred from Ford and Amer can Motors post- | Galery. Pees ai) od 39 Was unchanged to 3% cent a bushel Southern Michigan Prison at Jack- ed fractional advances. But Stude- Gorn, Sweet, 8 des us im higher, Sept. $1.89%; corn 4 to . son to Marquette Prison where he baker-Packard slipped nearly a Gicambers, Pickle ba... ...,.. 6.00, 5% higher. Sept. $1.2048; oats % to A t C h | served time before. point. Chrysler and General Motors Bil bers, siicers, | Fancy, bu a5 1g higher, Sept 68%; rye % to 5% u 0 ras nyures vs * * A rary o. . « - each lost about half a point Ik 8 fear a bu : ; Pa higher, Sept. $1,294: soybeans Vy P The judge commented that he ra oz ocns . , : 0 : + Onions, green, doz. ce eee 70 to 1% higher, Sept. $2.20. 2 in Waterford Twp was giving Grundy a long sentence New York Stocks ee roe aaa 138 , because of his previous record and tions jPeas, No 1. bu. 450) A ° | because ‘I want to make sure you ‘Late Morning Quotations) | Peppers Cayenne pk . Her Grain Prices Two people escaped serious in- | don’t hurt yourself or anyone else Figures after decimal point are eighths pepbers’ sweet, bu. 580! |juries in Waterford Township at 2 any more? Grundy _ previously | Potatoes. New. 50 Ib. bag 1.90 CHICAGO GRAIN ia.m. today when their car crashed any ore. 7 : b Admiral ae pis. c hao zs. 2 bee 2a) sos : be CHICAGO, July 23° (AP)— —Opening witn twa eraee and a mail box at served time for etary Tae: = ait euwe ow Cher Nuhae” authori ioe idee, i . . zlary, felonious assault and assau Allied Ch 127 Dow Chem 86.6 ahuherb curdac: dee oche 00” «6Wheat Sep . 67% rae . iy glary, fe S assau. Allied Btre $9.2 Du Pont 96 Squash. Acorn, % bu 250 Sep 190% De 60h Hatchery road near Marlington with intent to commit rape. Allis Chal aa.7 Beet Aly t Squash, Delicious, ‘2 bu 209 Dec 1.04% Mar 70 | street. | Alum Ltd 37.5 Auto 501 Squash. Ital, % bu 100 Mar . 1.97% May 68% | * A + | Alcoa 114.4 i & Mus 67 quash 8 imme r 'e bu 1 00 May 1.95% Rye | i | hd Am Airlin 30, Emer Rad 16) Pematoes, Hothouse: hee in ae Ene (en 129 | Edward E. Farnsworth, 23, of 93, ‘Thompson 1es A Cc 43 e t coors 18 -orn Pc 3 i . ~. , : Ain Gyan 63 Da es as Turnips, topped, bu 250 Sep 1.10% Mar 1.34, Mains St., told Waterford Township . _~ Am M&Fdy és Pirestan ¢ 1 e Turnips. topped, bu 2 Ces Lins Lard {iseatys 'Police he was driving west on Notice of Appea Am Motors Food Mach 50 6) ar 2 bee 8 sa Noe | Bt Pitot Bt ure Maus ae’ trbty BEE BR [Hatchery road, when be lost_eon- Am News 6 reepot & . Cabbage No 1, bu $1.50 ates ¢ ew : c . ve Am Tel&Tel 802 Pruch tre 266 Collard. No. 1. bu 175 trol of his automobile while trying | to Supreme Court Racine 62 Gen Dynam 11 Kale, bu : Led ‘to pass another car. 0 acon¢ 52 4 } rd o lb 15 7 _ Armco $1798 Gee os ge Serre bu 2 00 Livestock Farnsworth and his passenger, | | Jack Thompson, former Flint 2 - 4 t 73) n , js + 13] Gen Mills 1086 Spinach bu ee ‘Lois G, Cook, 15, of 5046 Hatchery | . | Teamsters business agent, filed no- Gen Motors 571 Swiss chard bu 1.15 ae . : -. | UPI Photo | 48% Gen Te} 78 Turnips. bu 1 50 DETROIT LIVESTOCK Rd., were taken to Pontiac General | . : tice in the Michigan Supreme Court M2 gen Tire 3. SALAD GREENS Gepteod as July 23 (AP). a sal- Hospital. He was treated for knee! MEMBERS OF THE WETTING — With an The ceremony was held at a new recording studio jtoday that-he will appeal the arson 224 ih ; : . Sah. able trade moderately active, . , calls a o j ’ “ing ilt ¢ 5 » 7 > ; row : P He aoe, 5} Celery Cabbage, doz $2.75 steady in a cleanup affair: supply large. injuries, and Miss Cook was in sat-| upside-down umbrella providing protection from being built at the site. The tent the singer was in conviction that sent him to South- 5 +4, $34 Goodrich 3 oeere, PS oe Aes ener and’ heifers, slanacra 2a; |isfactory condition today with right’ the rain, opera star Maria Callas and husband began to leak and the umbrella was set UP. | ern Michigan Prison. a ee ie Gran Paige ot perry beer art 13 2, payor peal etna ec ae leg, arm and chest injuries. Giovanni Meneghini attend a cornerstone-laying | Madame Callas had just completed a singing en- | petroit attorney James E. Hag- Brun j ‘ e@ttuce Boston bu ‘ 225 anc eifers ut cows, . | Budd Co aa a Ne Ry Fi wee es a Rsy soe ied me. sonnera and cutters 14.00-| : | ceremony in the Dutch village of Heemstede. gagement in nearby Amsterdam. gerty told the court today an ap- rroughs s aft uce, lea u 2 ompared last week fed steers be = < ; y 4. Cal Pack 30 Greyhound .. 11 ‘Romaine bu 1.50 and heifers steady to S0c lower. with Study 1n History | peal will be filed Aug. 4 . 204 Home Stk .° ..422 Loe wager Goll seen: leet, perl - Thompson was convicted April c 20.5 Hooker Ch 468 i ‘eas tise Te an oe eh me one L d Sh . rs ° . : 7 : ter 5-2 i x ; T i h” F | ai plese” gt Poultry and Fags tase" ood Sto “tow thors aev0-27%3, WEAAS to Shots (15 Beauties. Vie for Miss Universe Title "3 of aiding “human torch” Frank : ( 33 tad an, H ; : standard to low good 23.50-26.00; utility| | Kierdorf in an ill-fated arson at- C ing Teen 8 4 DETROIT POULTRY 2200-2400: choice heifers 26.50-27 50:| see . iat dey ah mR ( 32 6 Inoit Gos ot DETROIT July 23 (AP)—Prices paid 00d 2500-2650 standard 2350-25¢c0.) SUFFIELD, Ohio (UPI)—The tempt at a Flint dry cleaning c! tog int Harv 346 Per pound { o b. Detroit for No 1 qual 18 00-10 00. carvers wey coms, ‘losed/ more than 400 students. attending tablishment last August. Clask (Bes a6 Trans WoAir 224 type tena 17-18: light tepe hens 1800: uttiity bulls 2250-24 00 grfgiinis ural ‘commiunityis public ir S OO ib in y a y S oser Kierdorf was fatally burned. Clark 1ip as ee ee ee ves en, | 20 50-2300: vealers salable nc or the, = . j : i ee on Bh, Twent Cen a i wie ee oe in ka week vealers. steady. to strong: choice SChool have all received <7 po- b The notice of appeal claimed ‘oca Cola 57 Underwd 281 ihe ; eer. eS and prime 3400-38.00. few 3250: good Ho shots — aus istory i “fai ee 5 Pale at Un Cat bide M461 5 ibe — ee under 5 tbs. 21: over 30.00 34.00; standard 26.00-30 00: rel ns we ause of @ tor ‘Twomsn ad i get a fair and ba Le P n Pac 33.7 = ee and utility 1700-2600. sheep salable Class f , . sae : ‘ ; impartial’ trial. Gon N Ges et ee ae DETROIT EGGS none compared last week spring sisugh- \ avian: By RICK Du BROW Although half of the finalists was sent here with no clothes !mpartia - » & “ne . n Aire axe ter lambs tr ‘Oc : ol i ow ’ ac : : “ con = 6 Oat Prat itl GerRoim duly pic. bere Fa uae Mice ole eke coe| . Tee Claes Gee = ying | UPI Hollywood Correspondent are her fellow Europeans! Miss except the dress I was wearing, Last ditch efforts by Haggerty Cont Can (14 U8 Linen 359 Detrolt in cove lots (aderei-siate aradee steady’ choice. spring lambs 22 50-2000, laws are made when the dis- | 14. . BEACH, Calif-—Fifteen Buccella said they could all use anq my family is not rich. Then/1 obtain bond through the Su- Cont Cop & S 147 Ug Rub 66 | Whites—Grade A fimbo #48 extra 99°00. Goce end hole det, 77.00;| cussion turned to a bill then be- | *“\ a“ a steg lie ia ito obtain bo: “ont Mie § : imb extra 99 sod and choice p and : “ Es » a Steady diet of pasta . Cont On $3.1 Us ten” at pest sis race i tell 32 pearing °17 00-19 00. utiltty and good fore the Ohio legislature which beauties—all dubbed “too skinny” ‘ 7 . ; a friend arranged for the actress preme Court failed last ee , “apy ) 29 = de ne OWNS) 14 19-17 ; = 4 .y re ice ¢ ns » 1. : ‘ rive 1s eG be 5 , eons oe a wan naa 34 vormes & Le ms ane Hated Ld zl a9 0-17 00. cull to choice ewes 4.00 | would require polio immuniza- iby a peeved Italian loser—square ; They are nice girls, ~ Marie McDonald to give me some Thompson began oe a 0 be in roi aes Un Tel 43 om Ls ame ay jcbeche a4-83 Hogs salable $0: not enough offered, tion for every public school pu- off tonight for the title of Miss said. But the judges an gowns, but when | wanted to wear 10-year sentence July 1. . willie * wane a Grade A saab 79 extra ee ie Satcnote oh see lowe Sees pil unless his parents objected Universe seriously disagree, u tight one last night I was, D STOCK AVERAGES 33. larse 34-38; medium £1 Se: browne st-ady entimates [or Monday eatties0e:| bn writin i + "T never really had a chance. I;warned not to.” 1G ber Earnings Down NEW YORK July 23.—iCompiled by ~ t lak oc medium 27 2 ghindle sale 8 : ‘ =e ns: final! g. * * * : erper arning he 39: 1 2 : jum calves 200: hors 800: sheep 400: final ie Pres 1s 60 meaty, | ume wee meas eer methine oan sows: Weney to 2c! A classroom survey showed that) “Back home, the men woulk Due to Plant Expansion owe Nothing on ROWS sev-r? ats : . Net Shake “ees Rat's U a wiceks ~ wee Fo) 2 se No. 3. and 3 butch: ynly a third of the students had wait for these -Birls to gain some , , Noon Thurs 483 1422 98.8 2323 ae - are ise ae received their Salk shots, The pu- - FREMONT (P— Gerber Prod- 3 Prey day 7 le aT —_—---—--——— > weig ute sty ue ; : Weer oe 479 1414 987 1319 ROSSEllini Loses Bid ipils promptly asked that arranze- More weight,” pouted busty (38-_ . ‘o.. has announced consoli- Month ne od 134 983 2311 } ie Ja- 2142—34!2) Maria Grazia Buccella, ‘ — $1,380,631 vo eee 337.7 1440 95.0 2285 - ; : W |ments be made for mass inocula- 21'2—31'2) Maria Grazia é net earnings of isso High 380.7 1476 1038 oie ROME (UPI—A Rome judge Cold | to Get Home |tions with one provision: that they a voluptuous Italian blonde with a eo three aeatd ending June. 1959 Low 306 1 > yesterday rejected Roberto Ros-| - 168 High 3120 1383 987 314 2 nellé a ‘ bid { _. ; a TONAWANDA, N.Y. (UPI)—Les- Pay for the vaccine themselves. It 4, arilyn Monroe wiggle walk. 1959, compared to $1,716,495 for ee eT 808 19 156g BOS a Gor custody Of tie Schmidt, 16, fell into the Ni-| aS arranged. | The finalists, chosen last night he same period last year. DETROIT STOCKS his three children by actress In:| jagara River from an ice floe last) | before some "4,000 persons in | Ms The babyfood Se pc {c. Nephi ’ | " ? ar / / | ¢ an cons - Figures after decimal noire. wre eighths S¢14 Bergman. Judge Alberto Vir-| winter but managed to climb out, lt s What's Up Front... | municipal auditorium, were: ba Jaigelie graromy wel Alle Elee & Equip Cor "8h Low Noon gilio ruled that Rossellini must al-|and hurry home to change clothes. | o | jtlon costs “a gher prod ited Equip Co* * . > * * : z. T " arte ’ = Baldwin Rubber Co= —- 22 low the children to return to their. 4 couple of hours later he re-|} NEW YORK (UPI)—Filter tips) Miss U.S.A., Terry -Lynn Hunt By BEN PHLEGAR million dollar loss of a year ago and marketing expenses resu Gt ia One chee & ya aalinotee ia Fe Aue. 2% in ac. turned te the river, got trapped on and mentholated brands now ac- ingdon, 19: Miss Belgium, Helene into a profit of $12,073,281, equal in the profit redpetion. , Howell Fe air ee ae A mother in France Aug. 25 in ac- a floating ice floe and had to dive count for about 50 per cent of the Savigny, 24: Miss Brazil, Vera AP Automotive Writer to $1.87 a share, with the intro-| Dan F. Gerber, sarge Al ae The Prepner coe oe 134 13.3 cordance with an earlier ruling into the frigid water again ard |U. S. cigarette market, according to Ribeiro. 19: Miss Colombia, Olga. DETROIT uw — America’s auto-'duction of the new, compact dent, told the —_ . ae a ni "ee aa es u 117 that provides for alternate custody.'swim to safety, itrade sources, | Pum: - a 0: Miss England makers are making considerably Lark. Total S-P sales were $209.- Pepe aaa a “re *No sale: bid and saked. 6.2 16.2 umatejo, v; _ Ne a os "more cars and a lot more money 816.771. the immediate tuture. a | Pamela Anne Searle, i ae this year than last year: American Motors-operates on a) Lod C le d France, Francoise Saint-Laurent. qi” put huge General Motors fiscal year basis starting Oct. 1,| odge Calendar , |18; Miss Germany, Carmela Kun- Carp. Have feported their earnings so yesterday's report coveréd | : Present Cases zel, 19; Miss Greece, Zoe Koy- top the first six months of 1959. nine months, roughly equal to the’ Oakland Chapter No, 5 R.A.M. roykly, 18; og ecient, Sigridur they presented a rosy economic 1959 model year for the fast-sell-\Picnic, Sunday. July 26th, 1 pan. a Thorvaldsdottir, “ picture. ing Ramblers. American's nine at Davisburg. Park. ot Tuck, — = + +, 962. or $8.36 a share. , . lo Commission | Also, Miss Israel, Rina Issacov, Ford and American motors hit ce 19: Miss Japan, Akiko Kojima, all-time records. Chrysler and For Studebaker, News in Brief the quarter | | 29: Miss Korea, Hyun Choo Oh, Studebaker - Packard recovered just ended marked only the i : sed ants moe at sopra | or 2 : hat 5 Fire > Mi Jorway. Jorunn Kristian-| Will be as good or better than | third one, all in succession, t " men Complain ye ery ip iia, Reeder Fianna. all of them. the company has shown a profit A bushel of corn, a bushel of About Notification oe ee ee nila Rane | _ _ | sinee it merged with Packard. tomatoes, nine bags of potato f Cembrowska, 19. and Miss Sweden. Ford was the first to report American went inte the black (chips, 12 melons, and assorted |Marie-Louise Ekstrom, 20. rale { $2954 3 ym): : ge oa 2 = teen Status Changes “a inner ee “tonight's finals and ted oes * ine ues a little earlier and is now work- peaches and plums valued at $25 o 5S 1 > ‘ ond straight irofi were reported stolen Thursday will be guaranteed $11,000 worth profit of $285,900.000 equal to $5.22 ing on its second straight profit- SHELBY POWNSHTE a The five| ~ a contracts for tours from a COS- 4 share ~~ able, year. from a oo ie at mm Bt salaries were "Teiliced prese ea baiHing suit company (Catalina). |aperican joined the parade. crest of the compact car wave. | horiff's deputies their cases last night Ps Sar iF LES oo ‘Chrysler netted 58 million dollars swim later this year and in his: hearing of the Shelby. ‘Recridhse ($6.6 a-share on sales of $1- statement yesterday. L, L.. (Tex) Paul Eghigian, of 6335 Sashabaw Civil Service Commission. * R 0 k C nf ap 531,000,000. A year ago Chrysler Colbert, president ol Chrysler, | Rd., Independence Township, Te * * * oya a arpen e lost : $25,239,802 in the same pe- warned that asl over the ported to Oakland County sheriff's The nine men had previously les Scien Bakes iau . eae months pre = would deputies ree? that gan complained to the commission Facing Murder Trial | cue cer J ae card turned a . in : to J oe enses “entered a tool shed at the rear, ahout the -procedures followed in for new esulpmgent, —, a it of his home and had stolen cans notifying them about the changes necessary to produce the Va tant, | of \auto grease valued at $60. ROYAL OAK — Ruled sane Ls a sanity commission yesterday, Royal Oak carpenter must stan d » Branch Manager dos he'ls accused ot commanine,, Appointed by GMC Woodrow G. Besonen, 46, of 1912) E. Fourth .St., is accused of} Appointment of Ralph Slaten bludgeoning to death his foreman, ‘GMC Truck factory branch man- Chrysler's small car entry. During the first six months the | industry built slightly more than 3'q million cars, against 214 mil- lion in. the first six months of ship, last night and escaped with 1958. | an undetermined amount of money, as” ——— |according to Oakland County sher- | iff’s deputies. Kitchen Space, Maybe? | in their job status. They said they received no notice of. the proposed moves. Thieves broke into a vending ma- chine at Owens’ Service Station, 15 Ortonville Rd., Groveland Town- At a civil service commission meeting May 27, the five laid off men testified that they learned of their impending toss of employ- ment from a notice posted on the George E. Sweigert, 64, Feb. 5 aft-jager in Detroit was announced to- ee ed < , a jz creas 4p t @arpet Cleaners. Own department’s bulletin board two er an argument in Sweigert’s home | day by R. C, Woodhouse, general] ROANOKE, Va. (UPI) — The and operated by Jim Bradford. A days before the lay-off was in Detroit. truck sales man- Statewide home economic con-| number of years experience with scheduled to go into effect, ager of the GMC ference next month announced its one of Pontiac's largest carpet h ri Besonen admitted the slaying seveyys autorias ey ‘cleaners. Quality cleaning of car- pie enledaese rapes ee under the influence of a truth Truck and progr ae > hs peting, rugs and furniture. Pree Guced Teported that Ueit first pay serum Feb. 7, but denied the Coach Division. |S€5Sion tutlec ow fo ‘rain’ estimates at your convenience Call check after the April 25 budget D. 4, e ofv. Slaten, former-, homemakers for the — age.’ * dim, FE 2-2442. ly GMC heavy duty truck man-/3 ager in Atlanta, lead are Pacis be ACCURATE “QUOTATIONS admission the next day, police said, mect was their only notification of the salary cut. . ; * * * This is the first hearing by the new township Civil Service Com- mission since it was voted into ex- istence for firemen in the Feb. 16 election arid for police in the April ‘6 election, He stood mute and an innocent iplea was entered for him at his ‘arraignment Feb. 11. : The sanity commission was held before Recorder's Court Judge John P. O'Hara in Detroit. No date has been set for the trial. Ga., zone, suc-! eeeds Hughes M. Harper who has been appointed San Antonio, Texas zoné man- SLATEN * * The outcome of last night’s meet- ing was that the commission agreed to study the situation and send a letter containing its findings to the next regular meeting of the Township — * * At contig to state law, employes Under the Civil Service act must, receive lay-off, notices personally, +» Lu Ann Klar, of Glen Rock, N, SISTER ACT~Getting together with a doll that looks more like her sister sg a plaything, a and friend and ‘individually, | are soopeglines, right down to thetr bangs. ihe i} ‘ort Photo life-like doll is ‘sized like a youngster of three or four years. The doll was one of the toys shown at the sind Guidance Council exhibit in re ‘Hard Way to Set Record NEW YORK (UPI)—Rugged Rat- tling Nelson, late ex-lightweight | champion, was floored 42 times | before he knockéd out Christy Wil- iliams in the 17th round at Hot ‘Springs, Ark., ‘Dec. 96, 1902. Their itotal 43 knockdowns is the all-! time record for any fight \ ager. He joined GMC Truck in 1957 as a district manager in At- lanta after four years with U.S. Rubber Company there. Slaten, an Air Force veteran of World War II, was graduated from in industrial management in 2948 He played football there and from | 1949 ‘to 1951 coached football at jAuburn University. e Georgia Tech with a 'B. S. degree | CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO. FE 22-9117 818 Community National Bank Bldg LISTED & UNLISTED SECURITIES — MUTUAL © Con OUR oe EXTEND FROM CORES TO rt of Murdering 2 Sons SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)—Wan-' da Brogdon and her lover Archie oe wane oS eae Rina HAVANA (AP) —Fidel Castro for strangling her two sons lgoes out to play baseball tonight " ‘ | } 9 oF ig ] They face death in the gas|” Support of his agrarian reform chamber or life- imprisonment, . | i es 5 The jury which convicted them) | Be ramet ig meg hees Starts deliberations today to de-| ry ; termine the couple's punishment.| °“ pe aes ne . Merriam, 36, had testified that !ve-imming contest between _ his Mrs. Brogdon, 33, showed him|S°ldiers and his police, Proceeds| how to strangle the boys. Mrs, |fr0m the game go to the agrarian Brogdon denied it . fund, which is to help peasants iget started on the lands Castro Diamonds are made of a com lseizes from big owners and gives : s Z e mon substance. Chemically, dia-|'© the landless, 43 monds are pure carbon, the same! The revolutionary chief, onetime substance as the “lead” in a pen. (College hurler of little success, will cil, Last year, jewelry and silver-|P€ Opposed by one of his top lieu- ware advertisers invested $1,49g,-/tenants, army chief Camilo de| 000 in daily newspaper advertising, |Cenfuegos. Both are right-hand-| That's over 27 per csent more) ©**- uled to pitch at least part of a/wanted executions of so-called war led to jam vast Plaza Civica to | shout Vb ceWein — ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY sis thin Mother, Suitor Guilty Castro to Pitch at Ball Game Boosting Agrarian Program mier, The peasant’s decision is certain to be unanimously affir- mative, just as it was last Feb- ruary when Castro summoned an estimated 300,000 to another giant rally and asked whether they with razor sharp machetes, the knives used for cutting sugar cane. Some scuffling , and injuries al- ready have been reported, Six hundred uniformed Cuban Red criminals continued. luxury Riviera Hotel to assist au- Thousands more peasants con-/thorities, tinued to pour into the capital. ~ % Organizers said as of Thursday} night lodgings had been provided for 130,000. They added, however; thousands of additional] arrivals' steps to prevent any acts of hostil- still were unregistered. jity against Americari$ during the The city is getting more andj celebrations. more into a carnival spirit, but x kk. many looked with apprehension at the celebrating peasants armed newsmen Thursday night the gov- support for Castro's pro-|there be,’’ gram. They will also ‘‘decide’’ whether or not their revolutionary leader resumes the post as Cuba’s pre- eigners — particularly Americans one-hour general strike Thursday. than was invested the previous) The game is part of the 26th year of July revolutionary movement's ee ‘anniversary celebration which} ‘reaches its peak Sunday, A_ half M t ] TV ‘million peasants are then expect- ee , —_ = | * | Sam) |Dies W tty y | LIES en RunOver | by Own Car | HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)—George; ,U. Lansdowne died Thursday, | when his own auto ran over him} |four times. Patrolman J. B. Calloway said |Lansdowne, 81-year-old head of a farm implement firm here, was thrown from his car in a tw6-car collision. After the wreck, the. Lansdowne car began moving in a circle and ran over its owner four times be- foré an unidentified man stopped it. Luxurious Low-Boy with sound-out-front. $229.95 SWEET’S Radio and TV Shop 422 W. Huron FE 4-1133. Free Parking Open Fri. & Men. ‘til 9 The driver of the other auto, Mrs. Betty Ann Sud, 25, escaped UNDERWATER jij WEED CUTTING = pare There were 42 million more SERVICE newspapers purchased on the av-| INLAND LAKE SALES erage day last year than ig VE 4-T171 $127 W. Reren FE 9-6122 | purchased on the average day iyears ago. Some American families, how- Cross workers have moved into the! {7 President Osvaldo Dorticos told ernment is taking all necessary @@ ‘There is no hostility among the| /] people or government. of Cuba @ against the United States, nor ¢can| /J he said after corre-| spondents told him that some for-| /7 ig — had been threatened during the | /// ville, Ohio is 105 years old. In Population of West Germany, including West Berlin, is about 54 million. Population of Soviet|half million. ee FSCS LSD ESS phase eas : — Auto Races Tonight Modified Stock Cars 214 HOURS of THRILLS and CHILLS MICHIGAN’S GREATEST DRIVERS The FINEST in MODIFIED Stock Cars TIME TRIALS 6:30 RACE TIME 8:00 P. M. Racing Every Tuesday and Friday Night M-59 SPEEDWAY JU 8-1144 8 MILES WEST OF PONTIAC his vote for Eisenhower, Said he still thought Abraham Lincoln wastour best president. Frank R. Miller of Madison- 1956 he went to the polls to cast rin ever, were reported. planning to State Creditors. ————= to Goto Court EARS Contractors, Vendors. Must File Suit If They| Want Interest LANSING «® — Most contractors | and vendors owed money by the! state will have to go to court if! they want to collect interest Atty. | Gen. Paul L. Adams has‘ advised. | Adams said Michigan's creditors can't colfect interest without an interest provision in their contract. A creditor, however, can bring suit against the state in a court of | claims, Adams said, and can re-| ceive five per cent interest if the judgment is favorable. Such a judgment, he added, should be eas- | ‘ ily obtained for a valid past-due 1 account. Adams also said money owed by the state cannot be written off as a credit against state taxes or fees. 1 ROEBUCK AND CO. STARS) cxomatale Ey bedspreads! | specially costing 9 twin o in perky taffeta . . fabrics Shop the like this. you love Clear-Away sale savings— compare to spreads 97 don't think you'll ever find a buy solid spreads, tailored the way full flounces, rich quilted tops. 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