! 
    
    , 
  T itt g aed ¢ ihe vyeaiier 
Us. Weather Bureau Forecast 
Showers, thundershowWers. 
(Details Page *) THE PON TIAC P a ea PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, "TUESDAY, JULY. 1959 —26. PAG ES ‘ 
    
l 17th Y EAR _—_—-— ee eS ee Leiteiteleiteaal a nn — ~~ —— ig —_ 
= eee Mighty tlas Flig Senate Debates Stee! Union Hopeful 
 Billto Extend = of Aluminum Bargain’ 
/ Gl Benefits rinnegan, who is striving against odds to ind a way Ike Opposes Program to settle the week-old steel strike, said today that| 
to Give ‘Cold War’ Vets scheduled separate meetings with representatives of| 
the steel industry and the steelworkers union have been 
Home, School Aid put off until tomorrow. 
Finnegan said this will enable him to study statistics' 
and data provided to him at his request by both sides 
, in the controversy. He also reported that he was in-| 
boyy eine ecu eee ponte formed that David J. McDonald, president of the United | 
teen uel otnen pence a Steelworkers Union, would* — an estimated four million 3 be busy today interviewing | post-Korean veterans 
The Eisenhower adminis- nts own repr esentatives and | Iraqi Bombers | a considering, the status of tration strongly opposes the :   
    
    
  / 
WASHINGTON (#! — The 
Senate debates today a bill) 
AP Wirephoto 
YOU'RE ON—Thats the cue that winky the screech owl measure. ‘urrent wage negotiations . 
waits for as he nonchalantly rests on a cigar held tightly by However, it is expected to pass with the aluminum indus- [| @ at e § 
Hank Bielecki, a technician in the Philadelphia education try the Senate and go to the House, J 
television station, where the little bird makes regular appearances In Washington, it was learned although some amendments may Report Rebel Positions 
Kirkuk Hit, Army. 
Defectors Arrested on programs. Bielecki says the ow! often perches on his head   be adopted to restrict its effect President Eisenhower had indicat- | 
in its fhghts around the TV studio oe . hear . ed he was reluctant to use the IN 
The Veterans Administration , 
: laft-Hartley law to invoke an 80- 
estimates the proposed program 
. ay “cooling off period in the ~e . a would cost more than two billion is coon ; OLE peries ee 4aUS » IT 1 ) 
& - tT doltarx: ' BEIRI PT) Lebanon tUPIi—Iraqi 
: ; The President wants the gov- Air’ Force planes have bombed 
The bill applies to veterans €D-| erpment to refrain as far as | Communist-backed rebel positions 
tering the service Between Jan. 31,| possible from any action that in the city of Kirkuk, the semi- 
1955, the official ‘termination daie| would impede free bargaining be- official Egyptian Middle East News 
for benefits under the Korean War, tween the union and the indus- Agency reported today 
Vy ii of rights, and July 1, 1963, try, it was learned, MENA also reported that 80 had been ar-       ‘lailed at Launching | 
      
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ge 
ASSOCIATED Linnell ? : 
  
it uccess Thor Missile 
Explodes Just 
After Lift Off First No-Trouble Shot 
in Over 5 Months for 
U. S. ICBM Hope 
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. 
(P—A mighty Atlas logged 
its first successful flight in 
more than five months and 
a. Thor exploded seconds 
after launch in a spectacu- 
lar missile show eanty to- 
day. 
The Atlas rumbled 5,500 
miles down the Atlantic 
missile range shortly after 
midnight and a recovery 
ship plucked its nose cone 
from the ocean an hour 
later. 
Two hours after the Atlas launch, 
the Thor ruptured in a brilliant 
blow-up high in the sky. 
The Air Force announced that 
the range safety officer de 
stroyed the Thor when his in- 
struments detected a malfune- 
tion. It appeared the missile 
failed to halt its upward climb 
the date the present draft law ex-| McDonald and other top. steel semipdhy Feel od tcexuce| in the normal period. 
pires union leaders were known to_ be ae wad fae — } ecause The flash of the explosion re 
TAN oT ORT Pr Te int so _ ae : .,... _ | Of a defection of part of the army = : x 
see une ee o Le fest Bom Its on » dee %~ sena- hopeful that they could obtain a in Kirkuk AP Wirepheto vealed hundreds of pieces of the 
powered merchant ship, Savannah, was hailed today as lore. Gall these’ the cold war vet sizable wage increase from alum-| there was no immediate con FIERY SUCCESS—A powerful Atlas intercontinental ballistics broken rocket falling into the At- ¢ ors, Ci ese » Cc é *T- *o 48 , “ap?! : : : : , , 
a “bold and enterprising experiment in the daring and erans inum’s “big three.” which in turn firmation of the report here missile thunders skyward in a bri ii ant flash of flame on the lantic just off the Cape. could be used as a wedge toward rr 1 es : : = ; start of its st successful fligh 
distinguished annals” of American science and sea-\Lists BENEFITS obtaining a pay boost from the Iraqi Premier Abdel Karem d onan . : a fari ‘ike e strv. The) Kassem has imposed strict cen SADE Ose Cees faring. They would be eligible for three Strike bound steel industry. The d . 
Acting Bectetaly of Commerce Frederick H. Mueller types of benefits: USW represents 30,500 of the more) Sorship over the Kirkuk fight- down the Atlantic missile range b> Ls One and one-haif days of than 58,000 employes of the Alum-| ing and details have been scarce. hour later 
*set forth that view in an schooling or job training for each num Company of America’ Travelers returning here from 
‘address a few minutes be-iday of military service. Educa-|(ALCOA), the Reynolds Metals the area said the_ battling Bene 
Ousted Official nah slid down the launch-) '$135 if he has one dependent, $160| volved in the contract negotiations. | power July 14 
ing ways. |if he has more than one. [A strike would cu off anaes They oN that nat ona _ AA Meeting - 9 ”U : ; ehabilit: yer cent oO e nation’s alumin nm - ragis of urkl This ship,” Mueller said, “was, 2, Vocational rehabilitation/§ omen iis ¢ sh des- Asks Back Pa : itraining for veterans with serv-| production cent — started a aenenenis tie 
born of the inspiration of our dis-, ‘ice-connected disabilities x & * bration, Kurdish Tribesmen, sup- Moret 
; tinguished president, Dwight D.! 3. Veterans Administration guar- The steel union is seeking a ported and goaded by Commu- 
Gullett, Fired by Pontiac Eisenhower, and became a real-|anty or indirect loans for pur- 15-cent-an-hour wage increase from nists, opened fire expected at an area-wide meeting at 3 p.m. Sunday in 
ity through his leadership and en-|chase of homes, farmland farm the aluminum companies — the * * * the Pontiac Norther . . ; é | iac Northern High School After Gambling Raid, thusiasm translated into legisla-/animals and machinery. ‘Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) | Most of the Iraqi army con- ~~ 
ee The meeting is open to \tingents in Kirkuk are comprised Seeks $4,500 Wages tion by the Congress of the Unit- : rey | ed States.”’ |; Sen. John 8. Cooper (R-Ky) 
seg t ff nrendment | . D 
The President's wite was there | rokeres, otter an amendment Mora Showers Due jin the battle against the Turkomen 
the LaRue F. Gullett, former deputy reports said % tor the trdditional ceremony of | benefits on an interest-free loan | s nounced 
nuiac city treasurer, wants 0! giving the ship its name and | basis rather than a grant. for Pontiac Area , Travelers said the Communists , 
~ llect ftom the city approximatefy sending the Savannah into the | thi. has the support of Sen., | and Kurds lobbed mortar shells * * * 11 months’ back pay, estimated at’ water. It is the country’s first oar Re ee into a fortress in the center of The first of its kind ever held 4 50 ae John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) among . erameliacrns weph: : . a een at ora Be non-military atomic vessel. here . ° um ee eogha his the city where the women and | in Pontiac, the meeting ts the 
sullett, 41, of 301 Dick Ave., was ad |mind. Instead of yesterdays fore-| . “ » as. _ 
fired Jast Aug. 29 when he, his| Louis E. Wolfson, chairman of| Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-"'r rais for Wednesday, he pre- ace tn tae irre ties 
wife, Gladys, 35, and three others the New York Shipbuilding Corp. Minn), a sponsor of the bill, «n- dicts occasional showers and thun-) 
were picked up in-a series of raids Which is building the Savannah, nounced he would fight the amend- iderstorms. 
which State Police Racket Squad Said the launching ‘“‘means more ment. | Partly cloudy and a few show- 
members claimed smashed a $1,- than life for one new ship.” wa ers with a low of 66 has been fore-' 
000,000-a-year bookmaking ring in “!t means the birth of an entire) “A loan program would make it ast fo tonight Wednesday's high, 
Pontiac. _ | new era for merchant shipping, simpossiiie for mally eet |p ex ected te to be near 86 ° he continued, “and new hopes the Young men to go to college be~ “es e next f dava tem pera world over for the furtherance of cause they would be in no fi. or 7 VE h Se fi S ~ jrebellious officers and men_ into Program 
nuclear power for peaceful pur- Mancial condition to take on a tures will average three to five ae jcustody The Pontiac Alanon groups, com ‘poses debt.” he said grees-below the normal high of 81- A strict curfew was clamped posed of non-alcoholic 
— Sen. Ralph Yarborough (D-Tex) 86 and normal low of 60-64. | the city 
‘ONLY BEGINNING’ | salati recipitation wi HM) ncenticn, “ — ichief sponsor of the legislation,| Precipitation will total one-half! Unconfirmed reports said the 
Another speaker, Sen. Cliffordjargues it “is a bili from which'to three-quartérs of an inch tomor- Communists strung bodies of Turk- hous ' second in a series of large get- 
togethers for AA members in this 
Two light planes showered the 
city with pamphlets calling for 
popular support for the Commu- 
nist-backed national union front. 
“Fresh army units from Baghdad 
| broke up the battle and took the part of the state, 
Main speaker will be a Saginaw 
man who will discuss his recovery 
from alcoholism through the AA 
Gambling conspiracy charges 
against Gullett were dismissed 
dune 1 by Circuit Judge H. Rus- relatives of 
sel Holland. 
) AA members, announced an open 
Threatening legal action, Gullett) 
appeared before the City Commis- P 
$10 “4 =) me | 
an oe hin cement Saha pa jnah was “‘only the beginning of  “‘It not only invests in the educa- day along the city streets jclubhouse, 1143 Joslyn Ave 
“Declare yourselves one way or| pak es of nuclear vessels of tion and training of deserving) Sixty-one was the lowest record-| The pro-Communist army com-| * + * 
another.’ he told the Commission. jall kinds.'" He _hoted that else- young Americans but also capital- ing. in downtown Pontiac preceding! mander of the Second Division in| Alcoholics Anonymous is a fel- 
where in the building yards work izes on their brains and ability,”’|8 a.m. The reading at 1 p.m. was Kirkuk. Col. Daud Janavi, has Jowship of men and women banded 
ov (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) [he c : i : ‘(Co 2, : ihe contends. : pen retire af ee weeks Zether recover In alc ; ut dhe <Comumiaion Tehieed’ ‘to un g 8 )  |he 2. nd . 186 been retired for about three weeks.|together to recover from alcohol 
debate the subject 
“We have asked the city attorney 
to negotiate with your attorney," 
said Mayor Philip E. Rowston, 
“and prefer not to discuss the 
matter until the negotiations are 
complete.” 
Gullett’s attorney is Howard I.! 
Bond of Pontiac. | 
“We promise to give you every 
consideération,’’ added Rowston. 
City Attorney William A. Ewart | 
said Gullett was basing his claim 
to back pay on the veterans’ pref- 
erence act, which says a veteran | 
cannot be suspended from a | 
public post except upon convic- | 
tion pf a specific charge. 
Ewart added that there was 
technical disagreement over the) 
validity of Gullett’s claim. 
“The law says that a veteran) 
must file a protest with his em-) 
ployer within 30 days of his sus- 
pension date,’ he said. “Gullett | 
did not do this.” 
Mrs. Gullett and fhe three others! 
are free on bond awaiting trial on| 
five counts of conspiracy to violate | 
state‘ gambling laws. 
The co-defendants are Basil W. 
Burke, 59, of 29 Salmer Ave.; 
Charles D. Apley, 44, of same ad- 
dress: and James ‘‘Chinaboy”’ Pru- 
zor, 54, of 4 S. Saginaw St. > for out-of-town Alanon mem 
  | n Today's Press 
   
  Case (R-NJ), said the Savan-jall Americans will profit.” jrow. and again Thursday or Fti-\omen victims from lamp  posts|bers at 11 a.m. Sunday at the AA) 
  in more than five months. The The recovery of the Atlas nose 
jumped on a watery target 5,500 miles one off Ascension Island was a 
first for this missile. Thor-Able 
simulated warheads have been 
retrieved from the water in this 
area, but previous Atlas payloads 
eluded searchers. A recovery ship retrieved it an 
> Company and Kaiser Aluminum othe tpet aes tion grants would be: $110 a month i out during the first anniversar ‘OC 600 t Att d A te « t 
fore the 21,000-ton Savan- for a veteran without dependents,)and Chemical Corporation, in- celebration of Kassem’s rise to ver O en rea The Air Force will study the 
cone to see how it withstood the 
tremendous heat it encountered 
ion re-entry to the earth’s atmos- 
iphere from a height of more than in Pontiac 
han 600 members of Alcoholics Anonymous are 300 miles. It is part of a test iprogram to discover the proper 
nose cone for carrying thermoc 
nuclear warheads. 
AA members from eastern \Big Boost | 
‘of Kurds and many of these joined Michigan The public is¢- = | The Atlas success was a big 
also invited, it was an-' ‘boost for U.S. hopes for an opera- 
ism themselves and help others to tional intercontinental range bal- 
recover ilistic missile. The Soviets claim 
The group is not affiliated with they already have one. 
The Atlas, nearest thing this 
ination has to a workable ICBM, 
had not flown successfully since 
AA divides its activities into jast Feb. 4. Since then five of the 
three phases—individual recovery, huge missiles had failed, four of 
service to others, and continuing them blowing up)shortly after lift. 
cure through unity off. 
* * * 
It is the service aspect of the) 
group that will be discussed pri-| 
marily Sunday. any sect or denomination, nor | 
are there dues or fees. 
The Air Force suspended test- 
ing of the Atlas after the last 
failure early in June. Secretary 
| of Defense Neil H. McElroy an- 
be at least a two-month delay in 
preparing the missile for combat 
use. The plan was to turn the News Flash | first operational Atlases over toe WASHINGTON \®— President | troops this month. 
Eiecemewer today nominated | Air Force and Convair officials 
Frederick Henry Mueller of \were jubilant after today’s suc- 
Grand Rapids, Mich., for promo- |cessful launch. 
tion to Secretary ef Commerce. | The good shot may also accel- erate this nation’s man-in-space 
program. A model of the capsule 
that will carry the first American 
An Aerial View of City's Expanding _Civic Center imo “pace wae" to have bee launched into space this month by 
jan Atlas. The shot was postponed 
until the Atlas got back on its feet. 
In 51 previous tests, the Thor 
had recorded only four failures. 
Operational Thor squadrons are 
now stationed in England as part 
of the NATO = ace 
F gained Alcatraz 
‘Birdman’ Sent 
to U. S. Hospital 
SAN FRANCISCO (®#—After 17 
years, the “Birdman of Alcatraz” 
has left the rock. 
Robert F. Stroud, 69, was trans- 
ferred from the maximum security 
federal prison in San Francisco 
Bay to the Federal Medical Center 
at Springfield, Mo. 
Stroud has known nothing but 
the inside of prison walls since 
1909 when he was sentenced te 
12 years for killing a Junean, 
Alaska, bartender. 
In 1916, at Leavenworth*he killed 
a guard in a dining hall. He was 
placed in solitary and stayed there 
until last October. 
He had a laboratory and 22 live 
birds at Leavenworth and became 
jan authority on_bird diseases. 
In the spring of 1920, President 
    aes foe OO Woodrow Wilson commuted a death 
Wditorlais |... .... eee 6 sentence to life in solitary. 
Markets rags Gerd ecku cays 19 _At. Leavenworth, he wrote 
Obituaries san * “Stroud’s Digest of Disease of 
Sports 16-17 Birds," regarded by many experts 
Stay Alive = os as the ree he on bird pathology 
Theaters . i 16 ( »* : : . i Exclusive Pontiac Press Aerial Phote — p 
TV & Radio Programs 25 NEW LIBRARY SLATED NEXT — This aerial view shows = The library will be across S. Parke street from City Hall (right). new main fire hall tentatively planned across E. Pike street from |; aoe ae pers pia ats. 
Wilson, Earl ...............%6 | the Pontiac Civic Center, with the “X” marking the site of the\ At left is the new Public Safety Building. Plans call for further , the Public Safety Building. Parke street is earmarked to become Pah nt piggy hn ghee ae 
Women’s Pages ...... .. 19-15 | $500,000 Pontiac Public Library, scheduled for construction soon. expansion of the Civic Center southward and\eastward, with a part of. the one-way loop highway circling downthbwn Pontiac, IGreek “ ao 2 - * bad © 5 * 
4 nounced later that there would » 
           
  | - ? ty ERY i 
reat ty ' J ae 
ag 
  
      
  —_ 
Demand Fast Action |" 
on Police Reserves Pontiac’s police reserve prgblem, The plan says, in part, that in| 
is adversely affecting the city's event of tornado the regular police 
civil defense preparedness, two, will call on the 70-member reserve 
city commissioners warned last force ‘‘as necessary.” 
night, 
  It says the reserves should be The warnings came as the Com- 
mission adopted, a new master 
plan for city action in event of a 
tornado. ready to go into action within 
hatt an hour after a tornado 
strikes, helping regulars seal off 
the stricken area. 
  
    It says the reserves should be! 
‘used to help set up a command 
|post in the tornado area and to 
|help maintain security patrols over 
| private property to prevent looting. 
| “Let's face it, we don't even 
‘know if we're going to stil] have 
_; police reserves.’’ commented Com- 
missioner Robert A. Landry. 
/OVEROPTIMISTIC 
| Landry said the plan indicated 
on paper that the city was better 
prepared than it actually is. 
“We shouldn't try to kid any- 
body until the future status of the 
reserve is clarified,” he said. 
| Commissioner Milton R. Henry | 
-backed Landry's contentions.     | “9f a tornado struck tomorrow 
_— and one could — we'd be ex- 
pecting the reserves to come out. 
_ The Commission should take the 
bul] by the horns and step into | 
| the reserve situation and solve | 
| the problem once and for all.”   Leaders of the reserve and top. 
\members of the city government 
have been negotiating ‘on and off 
‘for several months over the future   LEO F. McDONALD 
. . status of the reserve. ; 
; Reappoint McDonald | George D. Eastman, Public Safe- 
to Court Clerk Post ees" """""" "About Banning 
Lawn Watering ‘ty Director, wants to re-screen Residents Sore 
A veteran city employe, Leo F. threatened to quit unless they are ithe reserves and restrict their ac-! 
McDonald, has been appointed to Teinstated in the full duties they, 
another two years in his $8,800 |performed under former Police Residents of 14 communities 
ayear job as Municipal Court Chief Herbert W. Straley. ‘around Detroit continued to blast 
clerk. * * * lthat city’s mayor for sprinkling | 
| 
McDonald was reappointed by! After last night’s Commission bans imposed during the recent 
the City Commission on nomina- meeting, Mayor Philip E. Rowston ary spell, when similar measures 
tion by the city’s two municipal ang John Graham, chief of the re- judges, Maurice E. Finnegan and serves, agreed upon a new date to Cecil McCallum eae Up 
‘ . continue negotiations. He has been Municipal Court ue negotiations | 
clerk since 1942. He also serves as 
probation officer and referee for 
the new Traffic Violations Bureau. | tu ents Enroll | 
McDonald lives at 37 Omar St. | 
| . 
at Little Rock Police Patrol as Whites 
and Negroes Register   
  
Diabetic Condition Kills 
Calhoun County Judge 
BATTLE CREEK (@—Calhoun' 
County Circuit Judge Harold E.| 
Steinbacher, 52, died Monday in a were not ordered in Detroit. 
Water pressure dipped danger- 
ously low in many of the communi- 
ties which buy water from Detroit. 
The sprinkling and car washing 
ban was enforced by police, who 
ticketed more than a hundred resi- 
dents. 
Newly-seeded and sodded 
lawns continued to turn brown 
as the ban was upheld, and the 
temperature of residents rose 
with those on outdoor thermo- 
meters. 
; Affected by the ban were Allen Battle Creek hospital of a recur- . en, 7 Snarike ring diabetic condition. | at 4 High Schools \Park. Garden City, Southgate, 
A Democrat, Steinbacher had| | Beaten) Gitesitar Inkster, River- 
served on the bench since his ap-| LITTLE ROCK. Ark. (AP) \view, Wayne and townships of 
pointment by Gov. Williams in White and Negro high school sen- 
1950. A native of South Haven, jors register today at Little Rock’s 
Steinbacher was a 1930 graduate of four public high schools. Police Notre Dame Law School. |have been alerted for any disturb- 
= ance. 
| A segregationist leader de- 
* inouncéd a warning by city author- | 
jities that protest groups at the| 
|schools would be arrested.   
Thunderstorms 
in East, South | ld be arrest 
F inally Taper Off’ | te Little Rock School Board |plans to open the high schools— 
By The Associated Press \closed for a year — under a plan 
An outbreak of thunderstorms °f minimum desegregation by us- 
which pounded the East and South ing a state pupil placement law 
tapered off today after giving, Police Chief Gene Smith cau- 
many sections more soaking rains. tioned that officers would patrol 
Although no_ general rains were the school areas and “if any gath- 
forecast today, the Weather Bu- Ting occurs which looks as if it 
reau said isolated showers or Might have trouble as its object, 
thunderstorms could fall in most disturbers will be arrested and| 
any portion of the country except Jailed.” 
for the Pacific Coast and the Ohio! Dr. Malcolm G. Taylor, presi- Valley. ; dent of the Capital Citizens Coun- 
de cil which spearheads segregation- 
A violent storm raked Athens,| 'St forces, issued a reply to what 
Ga., Monday evening and dumped he called a “‘heavy-fisted threat.” 
more than 3% inches of rain.) “! have been told that a move Winds gusted at 50 miles an hour, 1s on to remove certain policemen 
and 1.30 inches of rain fel} during | from the force who can’t be count- 
the first 45 minutes of the storm./¢d on to be tough against their Heavy rains also hit the New,°W? neighbors who might fesist 
York City area and were accom- integration come  September,”’ 
panied by a_ severe electrical Taylor said. “Impossible arrest 
storm. The rain produced flash quotas assigned to the officers to 
floods in Newark, N.J. 
* x & 
The stormy weather Monday     
micks to be used.” 
  Brownstown, Dearborn, Grosse Ile, 
Romulus and Taylor. 
Angered citizens were not molli- 
fied by Detroit explanations that 
more water could be pumped into 
the area, but the shortage came 
from inadequate mains and stor- 
age facilities. 
Miriani has favored a move to 
buy the $50,000,000 out-county water 
plant and turn the entire county 
water supply problem over to the 
‘city’s water department. 
} 
Steel Leaders Want 
Aluminum Pay Hike   
(Continued From Page: One) 
steel industry, the final rejection 
of which triggered the nationwide 
strike of 500,000 basic steelworkers. 
Traditionally, the aluminum. in- 
dustry agreements are based on 
|steel settlements. But with a long 
isteel strike likely, top steel union 
officials were hoping the 
would be reversed this year with 
receipt of a substantial pay in- 
crease by the aluminum producers 
‘However, most observers regard-   be weeded out is one of the gim-jed it as doubtful that aluminum’s 
|“‘big three’ would take the bar- 
Smith called this charge untrue gaining initiative from steel in- evening soaked a belt of coastal 2nd declined further comment. ‘dustry negotiators.   
states from Texas eastward and 
north into New England. Laredo,| . ee 
Tex., was given a°119-inch wash- Russian Visit Starts Thursday   
ing; Lake Charles, La, 1.93 inch- 
es; Richmond, Va., 2.25 inches 
and Baltimore 1.63. Some southern 
New England communities collect- 
ed nearly an inch, 
WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice; 
President Richard M. Nixon hopes’ 
|to sell himself to the Soviet people, The Weather 
las a “peace monger’ sincerely Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Repor\ 
PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Generally 
seedy, a few showers testy tenet lore ee 0 building lasting : Lew 66. Tomerrew, mestiy cloudy with friendship with the Soviet govern- | 
secasional showers and thundershewers. ment | 
—_ a ee ee:     
      Teday in Pontiac 
ea temperature preceding 8 am) Nixon has set this as a prime | 
At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 5 m.p.h Direction—West 
Sun sets Tuesday at 8:04 p.m. rs 
@un rises Wednesday ai 5.15 am Thu sday. 
Moon sets Wednesday at 6.59 a.m. * * * 
Moon rises Tuesday’ at 8:55 p.m. The vice president, accoms, 
P apenas Temperatures panied by newsmen and govern- [> | ean ieaear ars : : 
_. a ue. £3; ment aides, will take off Wednes- San cuales sa tee = i p.m. 86 day by jet airliner, a few hours 
10 am...........86 after double checking with Presi- 
|dent Eisenhower what he should 
Say to the Soviet leaders and their 
|pedple. 
Kn Fiat baci achrwve 13 * * * 
Weather—Sunshine, rain. | Nixon is reported hoping to One Year Ago in Pontiac |demonstrate by his comments and Highest ts : Lowest somgorstare es . | behavior that he is a reasonable 
Rether-suany. lnetee ai Pascal age hawlal pie fw oscow has pic im. 
Might one en ee Tere” "| But he is also ready to ,make oT in 1926 51 in 1944)clear that regardless of how ‘much Monday's. Yemperstere Chart American leaders and their people a $e Los Angeles 85 6 want peace, they , will never ,be ey frightened into a Munich-like deal 
a oe. under Soviet threats. 
TO MEET NIKITA 
Nixon has scheduled a Sunday 
morning meeting with Soviet Pre- 
mier Nikita Khrushchev for what 
promises to be a sweeping, blunt 
discussion of the Berlin crisis, the 
; Soviet-American deadlock on dis- 
"al armament and nuclear testing, ‘ € {f Menday in Pontiac 
{As recorded downtown) 
Highest temperature 
Lowest 
Mean temperature . 
         
  ty 
? rm cy 
  Ssuesaneseags me 8 | Qwrsestassnanetacess i - 
wart’ Nixon Aims for and the Soviet campaign for more 
American trade. 
* * * 
Khrushchev is expected to join 
Nixon in Friday's formal opening 
of the big American National 
Exhibition in Moscow's Sokolniki 
Park. Khrushchev is also to be 
  SIX STOPS ON NIXON'S VISIT—The stars 
indicate the Russian cities that Vice President 
Richard M. Nixon is slated to visit during his 
li-day tour of the Soviet Union which Mee 
4 ) trend| EVERYBODY IN — Here are some of the hundreds of Pontiac 
youngsters who are enjoying the Parks & Recreation Department 
swimming program at Pontiac Northern High School this summer. 
Because of the popularity of the program, children are now being 
handled on three, 55-minute shifts Monday, Wednesday, Friday 
and Saturday afternoons, beginning at 1:55, 2:20 and 3:40 Tues-   d    
p.m. Peak afternoons see about 
Leonard Buzz, recreation director. 
tinue through Aug. 16. ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1959 
ys and Thursdays there are only two shifts, at 2:20 and 3:40, 
while Sunday afternoons there is family swimming from 1 to 5 
r) 
Pontiac Press Photo 
350 children using the pool, said 
The swim program will con- The Day in Birmingham _   
/ 
Paving Bid 8 
_ BIRMINGHAM — City commis- 
sioners voted to give the Cooke 
Contracting Co. of Detroit the con- 
tract for Concrete Pavement Proj- 
ect 1959-P-2 last night in a regular 
meeting. Cook's bid of $181,142. was 
approximately 18 per cent below 
the city engineer’s estimate. 
Purdy, Landon, Ann, Frank, Lin- 
coln, and Eton are the streets in- 
cluded in the paving project and 
the Cooke Co. expects to complete 
work by October 30, according to 
City Manager L. R. Gare. The 
Commission also appropriated $27,- 
000 for the paving of a portion of 
Frank street from Bates to Ann 
streets. 
As part of the paving project, 
the commission awarded a §1,- 
7142.49 contract to East Jordan 
Iron Works of East Jordon for 
72 catch basin frames and grates. 
In other highway action, the city 
accepted a $1,458 bid by the Syl 
Meshorer Co. of Detroit for 100 
stop signs and 90 speed limit signs, 
and agreed to pay $102 as one-third 
of the installation cost of a traffic 
signal to be place at the corner of 
Maple and Cranbrook roads. Oak- 
land County and Bloomfield Town- 
‘ship will split the remainder of the 
cost. 
The commissioners gave the 
Chissus Construction Co. of Bir- 
mingham a $984 contract for the 
reconstruction of a portion of the 
  Waterford Board Clears Way for Project   
Appropriates $5,830 fo Blacktoo Lot Appropriation of $4,830, plus ing volunteers, firemen said. Con-|ship departments. Trustees Lewis 
$1,000 for engineering costs, by the! sumers Power Co. has donated and Ruelle, Joseph McGee and Charles 
Waterford Township board last installed a pole for the re-location Pappas make up the new commit- 
night cleared the way for blacktop- 
ping a_ portion Drayton 
Plains parking lot. of the of the siren. 
The Township Board will accept 
bids for three new police cars Aug.|to the Board of Health. The Tow ompletion of the Analysis Report | tee. 
| Ernest R. Lawson was appointed 
Businessmen on Dxie Highway 31. This ection was necessary due ship Board authorized the inspec- 
between Frembes and. Seeden to the tecent addition of five po-|tion of certain areas in the town- 
streets have deposited a check for licemen to the Waterford Township ship also to determine if there 
$5,830 with the Board 
share of the project as their 
Township Supervisor Elmer R. | 
Johnson and Township Clerk 
James Seeterlin were authorized 
to sign the low bid contract of 
$11,060 submitted by Doterhy & 
Doterhy of Orchard Lake. Work 
will begin immediately. 
x. * * 
In other business, a request for 
rezoning of five lots on Voorheis 
road between Pioneer and Tilden 
streets from Fesidential to com- 
mercial was tabled for one week, 
pending study by the township 
trustees 
An agreement between the town- 
ship and the newly organized Lake- 
land Optimist Club of Waterford Police Department. 
* * * 
Johnson appointed a personnel 
committee to make recommenda- Building Inspector Car] Walton | 
'tions for vacations, holidays and and Richard Watson, a building de-, 
‘hiring policies in the various town-' partment employe. are any health hazards involved. 
| Other officers on the Board of 
Health include Dr. John R. Naz, 
  
Afraid Canadian Tour 
Wrecking Queens Health LONDON (AP) — British news- 
papers expressed anxiety that 
Queen Elizabeth's 15,000 - mile 
will provide a new park at a for-/North American tour is under- 
same demand it has made of the | mer Civilian Conservation Corps 
camp on Crescent Lake road at 
Elizabeth Lake road, 
The township was deeded a nar- 
row strip of land last year from 
the State Conservation Depart- 
ment, providing it would be used 
as a public park. Since that time 
the land has remained unused. Now 
the new club wants to develop and 
improve the area, particularly for 
youth activities 
* * * 
Under the agreement, the town- 
ship will assume all responsibility, 
and liability for operation © and) 
maintenance of the park. It will 
also have the right to enforce rules 
and regulations regarding park fa- 
cilities and how .they are used by 
participants 
A sign will soon be erected 
identifying the property as the 
Lakeland Optimist Club Park. 
The Board adopted a resolution 
to move the fire siren from the 
Huron Gardens water tank to Fire! 
Station 3. Because of prevailing 
west winds, the operation of the 
siren has been inadequate in alert- 
Soviet Friendship compliment at a small American! 
Embassy dinner Saturday. | 
* & * | 
Their small scale foreign policy| 
talk, however, has been set for, 
Sunday at Khrushchev’s summer; 
home on the outskirts of the Soviet 
capital, This is Nixon's only en-, 
gagement for the day, making it) 
‘role of the flying 11-day tour of Nixon's host at a buffet luncheon likely the two men will talk pri-| Leningrad and four industrial cit- 
jthe Soviet Union he is to begin|Friday. Nixon is to return the vately for some hours. | 
Ural Mountains 
4 \ \/- : to begin Thursday. The proposed 
Nixon to the heart of Russia's. industrialized . mining her health, 
“Save the Queen,”’ ‘‘The Queen 
is exhausted — bring her home,” 
were two headlines. 
* * * 
' The Queen canceled her ap- 
pearances Sunday and Monday in 
Canada’s Northwest because of a 
stomach upset, She arrived in 
Edmonton, Alta., Monday night 
looking relaxed and recovered: 
British reporters on the royal 
tour cabled that the Queen’s ill- 
ness was more serious than Cana- 
dian officials cared to admit. 
The grueling coast-to-coast tour 
has brought her ‘‘almost to ex- 
haustion,’’ Peter Moorhead said 
in a dispatch to the Daily Herald. 
* * * 
“IT am no doctor,"’ Moorhead 
continued, ‘‘but I would suggest 
that the Queen is heading for com- 
plete breakdown if the tour con- 
tinues at its present murderous 
pace.” 
* * * 
Prince Philip was _ reported 
greatly concerned about his 33- 
year-old wife’s health. Several 
newspapers had him _ pleading 
Nixon already has made it 
known he intends to treat Khrush- 
chev’s comments as private, to be 
relayed only to President _Eisen- 
hower and Secretary of State 
Christian A, Herter in Geneva. 
Nixon and his party will spend 
three days in the Soviet capital, 
then move on for quick visits to 
& 
ies in Siberia. 
&. 
, AP Wirephote 
trip will take |She has since been released from with her to cut short the tour and 
fly back to London. 
Don Iddon of the Daily Mail re- 
perately tired’’ and charged that 
‘politics are playing a consider- 
able part in this extraordinary 
drama of a sick Queen and blund- 
ering officials.” 
Iddon claimed. that 
blamed for the Queen's illness be- 
cause. he has grandiose plans 
for the area. 
In a full-page article, the tab- 
loid Daily Sketch asked: “Do we 
value our Queen’s health, or do 
'we think that she should go on 
waving and smiling until she 
drops?” 
“Endless handshaking isn’t the 
answer to better understanding,” 
said the Sketch. 
Arraign Butcher 
in Girl's Beating Stands Mute to Charge 
of Using Baseball Bat 
on Baby Sitter 
Bruce M. Taylor, 32-year-old 
Pontiac butcher, stood mute yes- 
terday at his arraignment in Oak- 
land County Circuit Court on a 
charge of assault with intent to 
murder. 
A plea of innocent was entered 
for the man, accused of beating 
an 18-year-old baby sitter ‘‘he 
thought was his wife,” by Circuit 
Court Judge William J. Beer. 
Trial is scheduled for the third 
week in September. If convicted 
Taylor, 591 Mt. Clemens St. 
could receive a maximum sen- 
tence of life imprisonment, the 
same as that for second degree 
murder. 
Taylor admitted to detectives 
that he went to the home of his 
estranged wife, Juanita, 223 W. 
Rutledge St., on June 22 and beat 
the figure of a woman sleeping 
on the couch. 
Phyllis Jean Keel, 58 Wall St., 
suffered critical head injuries and 
lay unconscious for two weeks 
afterward in Pontiac General Hos- 
pital as a result of the beating.   
the hospital. 
Taylor’s six-year-old daughter, 
Valerie, was the chief witness for 
the prosecution at his hearing last 
week, 
She testified, ‘‘I saw daddy beat- 
ing the baby sitter with a ball bat.” ; 
‘20s Dance Ban Lifted   ported that the Queen is ‘‘des-; 
Canadian | 
‘Prime Minister John Diefenbaker | 
‘is anxious not to have the Yukon! Bell Greenhouse. The greenhouse 
‘lies within the right-of-way to be 
‘acquired at the corner of Ann and 
‘Landon streets. 
* * * 
Commissioners also authorized a 
|plan for weekend sweeping of the 
| business section. The sweeping, in- 
itended to give the city a better 
|appearance on Sundays, will begin 
on a ttial basis Sept. 5. Birming- 
ham City Manager L. R. Gare es- 
‘timated the sweeping cost to be 
/$600 per season. 
In fina] action of the meeting, 
the Commission announced the 
of Birmingham's Inventory of Traf- 
‘fic Safety Activities by the Na- 
‘tional Safety Council. The report 
‘will be discussed at 1:30 p.m. to- 
|morrow. 
It compares Birmingham's re- 
ported performance with that of 
| other cities of similar size and 
| problems. The report also offers 
| |   
‘Atom-Ship Savannah 
Slides Down Ways 
(Continued From Page One) 
was under way on a nuclear sub- 
marine and that Congress is con- 
sidering a proposal] for the Navy 
to build a second nuclear-pow- 
ered aircraft carrier. 
| After the speeches, Mrs. Eisen- 
\hower was to strike a bottle of 
‘champagne and speak the brief 
part allotted by tradition to ship 
| sponsors: 
“1 christen thee Savannah.” 
It has been a long time, more 
than 140 years, since those 
words were first spoken and a 
little 320-ton paddle wheel 
steamer also called Savannah 
slid into the water. 
That ship was the first ship with 
‘steam power built for Atlantic 
icrossings, It carried an 89-hour 
| Supply of coal and wood to pro- 
vide steam, and relied heavily on 
iits sails for an initial ocean cross- 
ing that took 29 days. 
Today's Savannah is steam-pow- 
ered, too, but the fire will come 
from nuclear fission, The atomic 
reactor indirectly will heat the 
water and create the steam to 
spin its giant turbines. 
In christening the Savannah at 
the launching today Mrs, Dwight 
D. Eisenhower completes a con- 
struction ceremony started on 
May 22, 1958 when Mrs. Richard 
M. Nixon, wife of the vice presi- 
dent, presided at the ceremonial 
keel laying. 
The Savannah was built prim- 
arily because President Eisenhow- 
er wanted a ship now as an ex- 
ample of his campaign for peace- 
ful use of atomic energy. He also 
wanted a basic prototype from 
which other and better merchant- 
men will be built. 
Shipbuilders might have taken 
longer to design and construct a 
vessel that could earn her way 
in commerce, 
The .21,000-ton ‘Savannah is a 
show piece of nuclear power, 
gleaming fittings, ultramodern de- 
cor, viewing windows to see the 
machinery, and a television to 
peer with safety into the atomic 
generator’s inner workings. 
Her passenger list will be small, 
60 persons; her cargo carrying 
capability modest, about 10,000 
tons. Manning the Savannah will 
be 110 officers and crewmen, the 
deck officers and engineers. spec- 
ially trained to sail this newcom-     
  Below City’s Estimate ' i! 
Per Cent 
specific recommendations where- 
by Birmingham can improve its 
accident prevention program. 
  Announcement has been made of 
the election of Harvey A. Kresge 
of 111 Overhill Rd., Bloomfield 
Township, to the Board of Direc- 
tors of the Birmingham Federal 
Savings and Loan Assn. 
Kresge, manager of the SS. 
Kresge store in Birmingham, was 
named to fill the Board vacancy 
created by the recent death of 
Howard M. Warner. 
* * * 
A resident of the Birmingham 
area since 1949, Kresge became 
manager of the Kresge store in 
1957. He is a member of the Bir- 
mingham Rotary Club and a direc- 
tor of the Birmingham Chamber of 
Commerce. 
  The recent arrest of a Detroit 
woman on charges of shoplifting in 
three Birmingham stores brought 
to nine the number of shoplifting 
arrests made by Birmingham Po- 
lice during the past two weeks. 
Detective Lt. Merlin Holmquist 
of the Birmingham Police Depart- 
ment attributes the upswing in 
shoplifting arrests to the recent 
hiring of store detectives by sev- 
eral Birmingham stores. 
  Roger Joity — 
Service for Roger Joity, 43, of 
6150 Franklin Rd., Birmingham, 
will be held at 1 p.m. tomorrow 
from the John K. Orlich Funeral 
Home, 17950 Woodward Ave., 
Detroit, and at the Serbian Ortho- 
dox Church at Warren and Russell 
streets in Detroit, at 2 p. m. to- 
morrow. 
Burial will follow in Evergreen 
Cemetery, Detroit. 
Mr. Joity, an engineer for the 
Chrysler Engineering Division, 
died unexpectedly of a heart 
attack Saturday while vacationing 
in Baraga County in the Upper 
Peninsula. 
He was a member of the 
American Society of Industrial 
Engineers, Sojourners Lodge 483 
F&AM and the Moslem Temple 
Shrine. 
Surviving are his wife, Ann; a 
brother Frank and several 
nephews and nieces. 
  GEORGE H. PLANCON 
Service for George H. Plancon, 
58, of 19625 Riverside Dr., Bir- 
mingham, will be held at 9:30 a.m. 
tomorrow in Our Lady Queen of 
Martyrs Catholic Church, Birming- 
ham. Burial will follow in Holy 
Sepulchre Cemetery. 
Mr. Plancon, a manufacturer's 
representative in Birmingham and 
Detroit, died Sunday at William 
Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. 
Surviving besides his wife, Hen- 
riette, are a son, John, and a 
brother Walter. 
Ist Boss to Visit 
Pontiac Shoe 
Store Merchant 
Irving Diems, who has owned 
shoe stores in Pontiac for 20 years, 
is being visited by his first boss. 
Jacob Vinner, of Warren, Ohio, 
taught Diems the business in 
Youngstown way back’ in 1920. 
Diems worked and learned in the 
Ohio shoe store for four years and 
then moved to Michigan. 
The two continued to cor- 
respond but since 1920 have seen 
each other only once, 15 years 
ago when Diems made the trip 
to Warren.   
his wife, May, arrived in Detroit 
on the Aquarama. They will spend 
three days with Mr. and Mrs. 
Diems, their 21-year-old daughter 
Esther, a former Pontiac Press 
“Miss Front Page’’ who recently 
graduated a dental hygienist from 
the University of Michigan and 
son, Arnold, 13. 
CAP Hunts for Plane 
Missing in Michigan 
FREMONT (® — The disappear- 
ance of John N. Visak and his 
light plane remained a mystery 
today. 
Visak, of East Chicago, Ind., 
vanished Saturday morning after 
taking off from Gary, Ind., for a 
flight to Ludington in his Cessna 
140 single engine plane. 
Civil Air Patrol craft searched 
the woods and fields near this 
small western Michigan commu- 
nity today, A farmer told State Po- 
lice he saw a plane flying over the 
region at low altitude Saturday. 
Flights by Coast Guard planes 
along the Lake Michigan shoreline 
from Ladington south to Gary 
failed to turn up any clues to Vi- 
sak’s disappearance yesterday. 
Fremont is about 40 miles south-   
                    er to the old lanes of the high 
seas east of Ludington, _   
” BRIGHT 
JEN 
& SHOPS 
x SERVICEO BY 
    and into Siberia, \° ~ *      BEAUTIFUL   
      
               
Your Fi 
T DORu   
Seventy-five-year-old Vinner and 
  
       
  aii 
MME 
ES 
2M a 
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  SE re dad 
 Bumps USS Macon   THE PONTIAC   
House Passes Measure 
to Free USS Aquarama 
DETROIT (#—Someday, there| liberty ship and one of the fastest 
may bé more elbow rooin for the/on the lakes 
USS Aquarama. 
She may have the big oceans to) 
get around in rather than the con- | 
of Great Lakes 
* * * 
The Aquarama, which has a rec- 
ord of bumping into things on the 
lakes, bumped another yesterday. fines waters. 
At a Cleveland pier, she got 
too close to a heavy cruiser of the 
United States Navy, the USS 
Macon, and they bumped sters. 
By the sheerest coincidence, Cun-| 
gress took the first step yester- with the Macon 
series of incidents Her bumping 
was one of a 
in her four years on inland waters.'Bronx, N. Y., suffered a bruised| University is trying to prove a 
No one was hurt. The only dam-|knee while leaving the plane from point, and he borrowed a two-ton ¢.1) 
was a bent flag pole on the 
675-foot Macon. The Aquarama had ape 
150 passengers at the time. Fhe: 
Macon a crew of 1,300. 
The Aquarama went on to De- 
troit, docking on time, and made 
the return trip to Cleveland. 
However, Cmdr. Vineent L. Sher- 
man of the Macon indicated some 
concern 
The Macon, one ; of the navy s 
day toward giving the Aquarama/g00d will visitors to Great Lakes 
the privilege of operating on the) ports during operation inland seas, 
was having an open house for the’! high seas 
The House passed and sent to 
the Senate a bill to that very put 
puse 
* 
The 520-toot Aquarama, pleas- 
ure boat that carries passengers 
and autos between Detroit and 
Cleveland, is a converted wartime * * public when the Aquarama came 
along 
* 
came that she 
rocked the Macon on her lines,” 
Sherman said, ‘‘We had to stop 
people from coming aboard.” 
The * * 
“She close sO 
converted Aquarama_ en- 
| tered lakes service in 1956. Once 
| she was accused of swamping 
State Department * 
Gets Cleanup Tools 
Sen. | 
said to- 
up 
res- (AP) 
(D-Mont) 
putting WASHINGTON 
Mike Mansfield 
day that Congress is 
to the State Department full 
ponsibility for eliminating waste 
and mismangement in foreign aid 
spending | 
* * * 
Mansfield. assistant Senate ma- 
jority leader, said ‘‘all the tools 
that are needed for a cleanup” 
are provided in the compromsse, 
$3,556, 200,000 foreign aid bill on 
which the House acts Wednesday 
* * * | 
He commented in an interview) 
after calling on the State Depart-| 
ment to prepare for a full airing! 
in Congress of reported waste and! 
maladministration of the program 
in South Viet Nam 
Child Dies Getting 
Clothes to Match 
New Red Purse 
DETROIT (AP}—Deborah 
Tomaovich reeived a_ little 
purse from her anut Monday 
The 4-year-old girl was proud 
of the gift because she had clothes 
to match it. First she went to her 
bedroom and put on her red 
shorts Anne 
red 
* * * 
Then, police said, shé pulled out 
the bottom drawer of a dresser | 
standing close to her sister's crib. | 
Deborah stood on the bottom 
drawer and pulled out the top 
drawer to get her other red 
clothes 
Her weight tipped the dresser 
and it fell against her, pinning 
her by the neck to the crib. She 
was dead on arrival at a hospital 
Douglas McKay's 
Condition Worsens 
SALEM, Ore. (AP) — The con- 
dition of former Secretary of In- 
terior Douglas McKay was listed 
as grave Monday night. 
Officials at Salem General Hos- 
pital said a kidney condition ac- 
companying his heart ailment is 
getting gradually worse and is not! 
responding to treatment 
McKay 66, a former Oregon gov- | 
ernor, entered the hospital July 
13.. Hes now heads the U.S. sec- 
tian of the International Joint 
Commission, set up to deal with 
joint water problems of the United 
States and Canada. 
Algerian Terrorists Kill 
French Prosecutor 
BONE, Algeria (AP) — Terror- 
ists assassinated the chief French 
prosecutor of this Mediterranean) 
port Monday night while he was. 
riding in a ear with his wife. She 
escaped unhurt. 
The French army headquarters, 
in Algiers reported killing or cap- 
turing 672 rebels during the week 
ending July 19. French losses) 
were put at 47 dead. 
BETTER THAN 
EVER BEFORE!      
0.JIB- WA. 
FAMOUS ALL-HERS MEDICINE 
THAT HAS HELPED THOUSANDS 
TO ENJOY BETTER HEALTH. 
©-JIB-WA BITTERS IS NOW 
QUICKER ACTING AND MORE 
EFFECTIVE THAN EVER, BECAUSE 
IT NOW CONTAINS 25% MORE 
HERBS THAN EVER.   small boats. 
On other occasions she hit docks 
in Detroit and her home port of 
Muskegon, struck a breakwater in 
Cleveland, and tore out a section of 
seawall at Windsor, Ont., on the 
Detroit River 
* * * 
Seamen ascribed the Aquarama’s 
troubles to a variety of reasons, 
including the tricky winds and cur- 
rents of the lake waters 
ficulties of maneuvering the 
ship with her single propelior big 
Oe! 
RST ALL NEW 1960 Si 
  Plane Lands Safely 
Minus Nose Gear 
BOSTON 
| Airlines (AP) — An American 
plane with 69 aboard 
‘nosed over on landing ai Logan 
|Aiport Monday night but only one 
slightiy injury was reported. 
Michael Ramos, 22, of the 
the cargo door. 
* * * 
The plane halted with its nose 
on the ground and its tail section 
‘in the air. All passengers had to 
leave from the forward cargo 
door 
The big DC6-B coming in from 
New York skidded 150 feet when 
its nose gear buckled on landing 
The ceiling at the time was re- 
ported 200 feet and visibility 
on the ground less than a mile 
because of rain. as 
King-Sized Traffic Lights 
Reduce Auto Accidents a 
  PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1959 
    a ee ee \ * fd . 
\ -, © 
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Professor With Elephant Seeks Disputed Pass   
  modern-day Hannibal with a one-| 
elephant army set out Monday to 
‘conquer the Alps. 
Prof, J. M. Boyte of Cambridge: 
‘Indian elephant from the Turin, 
Italy, Zoo to help him do it 
“The elephant, a frisky 12-year- 
| eld known unimaginatively as | 
| Jumbo, set out at 10 a.m. (5 | 
| a.m. EDT) from. the little village | 
of Fort-de-Montmelian on the 
route that Hoyte says Hannibal 
used in 218 B.C. to launch an at- 
tack onto the heart of the Roman 
Empire. 
Historians know that the Cartha- 
ginian general at the age of 26 led 
30,000 men, 5,000 horses and 37) 
elephants across the Alps from) 
Gaul—which is now France—into 
the Roman stronghold of the Po 
iValley—which is now part of It- 
LANSING \® — Installation of @ly. oo. king-sized traffic signals at five! What the historians do not know 
istate trunkline intersections was|iS What mountain pass Hannibal 
‘followed by a sharp reduction in 
laccidents and injuries, highway 
‘commissioner John C. Mackie re- 
| ports 
Before-and-after studies for | 
one-year periods showed  acci- 
dents dropped from 125 to 74 
and injuries from 42 to 18 when 
normal eight-inch sigual heads /Pass, which rises 7,300 feet in the 
were replaced with 12-inchers. | .jjijjy Alpine air. Please cal! or te 
The oversized signals were set) Neither Hannibal nor any of his SS SEES Sa ROTOR UGG 
up at U.S. 12 and U.S, 112 in New troops left any written records to Earl J. Smith : a rz é ; oe, aoe ar ae car Sm N . . 
Buffalo: U.S. 10 and U.S. 10BR in|show what pass they used Brace-Smith Funeral Home Grand Blanc; U.S. 16 and U.S, 23 
in North Muskegon. ,used, Academic speculation ranges 
over a wide variety of passes, from 
the 4,500-foot Mongine to the 6,000- 
lfoot Little St. Bernardo. 
| * * * 
Prof. Hoyte, who is the same 
jage Hannibal was when he made 
|his Alpine assault, believes the 
‘Carthaginian used the Clapier 
Byt a Greek named Polybius 
and dif- in Brighton; U.S. 10 and U.S. 10BR) went along for the ride, and in 
in Midland; and U.S. 31 and M-20) his memoirs he mentioned that | 
Hannibal’s army spent the ninth | Modern Hannibal Attacks Alps | 
CHAMBERY, France (UPI) — A; day of their expedition in a snow- | boarded a train Friday to come 
fall at a mountain pass. 
Hoyte’s theory is that the Clapier 
Pass is the only one big enough 
to accommodate Hannibal's army 
and also high enough for a snow-, 
during autumn, when Hannibal 
made his crossing 
The big question left unanswered 
—and the one for which Hoyte is 
seeking the answer — is whether 
Hannibal could have reached the 
Clapier Pass in the nine days men. 
tioned by Polybius 
* * 
That's why Hoyte, Jumbo, an el- 
ephant trainer and a smal] scien- 
tific party set off from Fort-de- 
Montmelian where Hannibal's ex- 
pedition began, and will walk to 
the Clapier Pass. 
From the pass, the party will 
continue along the route Hoyte be- 
lieves Hannibal took, They'll wind 
up back in Turin, where Jumbo * 
    here, 
Jumbo’s trainer, Ernest Gobold, 
put him through a series of climb- 
ing exercises in the hills of Turin 
during past weeks to prepare for 
the big climb 
Child Drowner to Stand 
Trial for Murder of S6n 
DETROIT (# — A first degree 
murder warrant was recommend 
yesterday against Gale Schall, 25,, 
in the drowning Saturday of his 2- 
year-old son, Gary 
if convicted on such a charge | 
Schall would have to go to prison 
for life. 
Police said Schall, divorced by 
his former wife June 25 as an 
habitual drunkard, flung Gary into 
a park creek in suburban Trenton 
in order to “‘hurt’”” he: 
  
of where d 
Eliminates 
    Brace-Smith Funeral Home 
Insured Funeral 
Arrangement Play 
Pays for funeral expenses regardless 
you and vou alone determine the cost. 
138 W. Lawrence St. eath occurs. 
wasteful extravagance; 
FE 5-0738    Win FRORy 
   
  Open a. 
- Convenient 
* ¢cc 
CHARGE 
No money 
ddwn,.take 
6 months to 
    
  
  
    
NEW 
1960     
    
  
  
    
     
   
    tin 
ever 
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‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TL "ESDAY, JULY 21, 1959 
  
m| rotating with army and air : : Ne | Ld . 1 
oe N V Asks Unit if fe generals in command, ob- 
| Moers would give the navy a bet 
iter foothold in the missile-space 
field. 
If and when the proposal reaches 
|the stage of formal JCS considera- 
jtion,' air force advocates are ex- 
Pro osed Comman d pected to emphasize that: (a) the 
Pp single, strategic concept already | 
adequate 
eventually to include space com- 
mands as well as missiles; (b) the 
iplan would confuse the already 
WASHINGTON —The Navy is complex missile - space setup in| and Ballistic Missiles 
  ‘} considering a plan to ask the joint)government by superimposing or) oe ; a chiefs of staff to create a new uni- injecting a new agenc y. 
fied military_space command. In any JCS showdown the navy The proposal by a group of obviously would have to look to 
/ policy and operational officials and the army for help. 
experts may be passed on to the| 
joints chiefs organization sometime oe bd Ld 
this week, it was learned today. | ut IVI Ig tS | 
| The JCS already has under | . 
study another proposal, from the Off Until Next Week 
air force, which would bring the | 
the Navy's Polaris missile sub- | WASHINGTON uh—Members of marine under combat direction | 
of the air force’s Strategic Air |'he Senate judiciary committee Wild Cuban Revolution 
Seen Before Year Ends 
By PHIL NEWSOM 
UPI Foreign Editor 
No matter how high Cuba’s Fidel strated. 
Castro may be riding now, there! One news writer said of him: 
are many who predict his country; ‘‘Fidel Castro and his 26th of | The magnetism of Castro’s lead- 
tion before the year is out. symbol of opposition to the regime. 
* * * the organization is 
What manner of man is Castro youths of all kinds. 
— saviour, impractical idealist,; « jg revolutionary move- 
trigger. -happy zealot and tool of meant that calls itself socialistic. communism ? It is also nationalist which gen- 
erally in Latin America means 
anti-Yankee, Whatever he is, few men have 
so stirred the imaginations of 
restless Latin Americans since 
Simon Bolivar, the South Ameri- 
can liberator who was born in 
Caracas, Venezuela in 1783 and 
who by the time of his death at 
the age of. 47 was the liberator-   “The program is vague and 
couched in generalities, but it 
‘radical, Democratic and therefore 
; anti-Communistic.” 
|; That paragraph was _ phrased 
  i 
Command (SAC). 'skirmished briefly Monday on civil 
coon ‘rights legislation, and then put off! 
SAC now operates the medium iii next Monday any decision as and long range strategic bombers to how fast to proceed with the! 
and is getting ready for operation bill. 
of intercontinental and interme. Backers of the legisJation Were 
diate range ballistic missiles like mildly optimistic after the session! 
the Atlas, Titan, Thor and Jupiter.|that a bill eventually would be. 
The navy'’s proposed military|sent from the committee to the space command eventually would senate. , 
not only take in direction of space | 
reconnaissance vehicles, like satel-| 
lites, and weapons of space but} 
might eventually include control of | 
‘ballistic missiles. Those missiles | procedure of by-passing its own 
travel into the edge of space dur- Committee and putting a house 
ing part of their high trajectory | civil rights measure directly on flight. its calendar for floor action. 
A unified military space com-| An abbreviated two-point civil 
mand, as studied by the navy, rights bill was approved 4-3 by a' 
would be composed of deputies judiciary subcommittee last 
from the army, navy and air force. Wednesday, 
The commander would be chosen| 
by rotation from each service. A| Britain's 
députy also would represent the 
civilian agency the national aero-| In 1957, the group bottled up 
all such bills. The Senate 
eventually adopted the unusual 
  
  
smallest colony is 
the rock of Gibraltar. here of Venezuela, Colombia, Ec- 
> a ” Py * 
spieb See SG Castro’s fina] victory. livia. | 
. . PROVES ACCURATE In the seven months since Castro. ae a 
drove former dictator ‘Fulgencio|_ 1" one aspect it proved accurate. Batista from Cuba, uprisings or, n another, at least open to doubt. 
threats of uprisings have occurred| Castro obviously came to pow- 
in the Caribbean nations of Pana-) er with his ultimate objectives 
ma, Nicaragua, Guatemala, Hon-| only vaguely couched in_ his 
duras, Haiti and the Dominican! mind. The result is today’s chaos. | 
ateD op ; rae | Laws or decrees have been pro 
at ‘mulgated at Castro’s whisa, Each Two of these, Nicaragua and the js advertised as for the nation’s 
Dominican Republic, are dictator) good, but each ha’ resulted in near 
nations especially earmarked by or total dislocation of the area af. Castro as next on the liberation fected. 
schedule. But each uprising has 
Horseback Rider Killed In most cases, the uprising has had the Castro trademark 
been generated by political exiles | ANN ARBOR (®—James D. Hap 
of the nation involved, aided by pel, 15, of Saline, was killed Mon 
Cubans and sometimes abetted day night when the horse he wa: 
by. training in Cuba’s Pinar del | riding veered into the path of 
Rio Province, spawning grounds (car on U.S. 112 in Bridgewate 
of revolutions, |Township, Washtenaw County.   
  
nautics and space administration. | 
The navy at present has little’ 
stake in space programs and is| 
only beginning to enter the field| 
of strategic ballistic missiles 
through development of its 1,200- 
mile range Polaris solid fuel weap- | 
on. Representation on an over-|   
    
  
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   THE! PONTIAC! PRESS TAREE COLORS : | 
  
PONTIAC, MIC HIGA AN   
  
* SH IRTEEN   ~TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1959 a 
  The beauty of gold broeade woven in floral design 
is fully demonstrated in this theater suit by George 
Carmel. The new, longer jacket has a sable shawl col- 
lar and buttons off-center. The dress beneath is slim, 
gently shaped and has tiny sleeves. 
Women of the Moose 
Hold Chapter Night 
Seventy Women of the Moose 
members of the college of re- 
gent were present for their 
chapter night program Monday 
at the Moose Hall on Mount 
Clemens street. Mrs. Clarence 
Cavalier of Pontiac Chapter 
No. 360 was acting college 
chairman. 
College members from Belle- 
ville. Dearborn, Lincoln Park, 
Garden City, Mount Clemens, 
Detroit, Ypsilanti and Pontiac 
participated in the ritual work. 
Included in the program was 
the enrollment of Mrs. James 
Rowe in Pontiac Chapter No 
360, the class honoring of the 
new college member, Mrs. = 
Floyd Yeaman, and entertain- 
ment by Mrs. Harold Finn. 
* * * 
A committee chairmen meet- 
ing is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. 
Wednesday at Moose Hall and 
ritual] practice will be at the 
same time on the evening of 
July 29. The time set for the 
officers chapter night is at 8 
p.m. August 3, at which time 
enrollment will also be held. 
*. x * 
Members of the college of re- 
gent and coworkers of the Pon- 
tiac chapter are invited to at- 
tend the college chapter night 
Wednesday at Ypsilanti and 
Thursday: at Dearborn. 
Sharon Kaye Butler Wed 
in Local Church Rites 
Some 300 guests attended the 
Saturday wedding of Sharon 
Kaye Butler and Larry Ken- 
neth Gee of Nelson street. The 
rite was performed at First 
Church of the Nazarene by the 
Rev. Kenneth Hutchinson 
White gladioli and pink snap- 
dragons banked the altar. 
Parents of the couple are Mr. 
and Mrs, Merritt F. Butler of 
South Tasmania street and the 
Rev, and Mrs, Kenneth Gee of 
Carriers Mills, Ill. 
* * * 
The bride wore a floor length 
gown of Chantilly lace and ny- 
lon tulle over satin with a Sa- 
brina neckline, long tapered 
sleeves and a skirt of three 
tiers of nylon tulle draped with 
Chantilly lace. A headpiece of 
pearls and sequins with a drop 
seed pearl held her fingertip 
illusion veil, and she carried a 
cascade arrangement of white 
roses and stephanotis. 
Maid of honor Barbara Hol- 
der wore a gown of shell pink 
chiffon over satin with a cum- 
merbund and butterfly sash. 
* * * 
Attendants Judy Holcomb of 
Stanwood, Dianna Gee, sister 
of the bridegroom, and Patricia 
Blackshear were gowned alike 
in dresses of tangerine, orchid, 
and mint green respectively, in 
chiffon over satin. 
Junior bridesmaids, Mary E}- 
len Butler, the bride’s sister, 
and Londa Briles wore shell 
pink dresses in modified ver- 
sions of the bridesmaids’ gowns 
in chiffon over satin. All the at- 
tendants wore white nylon 
gloves with tiaras of.. seed 
pearls securing nylon tulle 
veils accented with tiny match- 
ing bows, Their flowers were 
colonia] bouquets of carnations. 
Carla Mae Pankey was flow- 
er girl. She was dressed in 
white batiste over satin, The 
_ frock featured a butterfly bow 
at the back, and she wore a 
white lace ruffled bonnet with 
satin streamers. She held a 
basket of pink rose petals.e 
Carl Pankey attended as best 
man, Ushers were Charles Stal- 
fons, James Gee, Darrel] Haw- 
ley and Jesse Briles, 
    MRS. LARRY K, GEE 
Mrs. Butler wore a dress of 
turquoise chiffon over taffeta 
with-white accessories for the 
wedding, Beige lace with beige 
and black accessories was the 
choice of Mrs, Gee. Both moth- 
ers wore white carnation cor- 
sages, 
* * * 
Following the ceremony a 
reception was held at First 
Methodist Church, There were 
guests present from Chicago, 
Ill., Carriers Mills, fil, Big 
Rapids, Stanwood, Detroit and 
Birmingham. 
* * * 
When the couple left for a 
trip to northern Michigan, the 
new Mrs. Gee was wearing a 
white sheath with pearls and 
white accessories and a cor- 
sage of white roses. 
Attends Funeral 
John Leacher, of Murphy 
avenue is in Menlo Park, Calif. 
to attend the funeral of his 
father, the Rev. John Leacher 
who died July 17 at the age of 
89, + opulence, 
  Yellow and silver butterflies shimmer and change 
color in this pale blue silk. damask hall gown 5) 
Herbert Sondheim. The dress has a strapless bodice 
caught with a bow in froni above a high waistband. 
The skirt falls in a wide sweep to the floor. 
* Elegan “e 
ce xf 
Keynotes for Fall The opulence of fall fashions is the most striking 
thing about them. Rich in color and luxurious in 
fabric, they offer true elegance. This is true of both 
daytime and evening clothes. 
Fur trim is used for evening and dinner dresses 
as well as for daytime coats and suits. And every- 
where, there’s the shining, gleaming beauty of pure 
silk. 
Evening dresses have a softer and more romantic 
look. Skirts are willowy and sweeping, floor length 
ball gowns have sleeves and decolletes are far more 
modest than in the past. 
' * * * 
[he iavish look of fall clothes is demonstrated in 
ihe rich fabrics. used for evening gowns. Metallic 
brocade is popular, 
as well as black. and chiffon appears in brown 
Daytime dresses are sleek and simple, an ideal 
background for smart jewelry. They are shaped ‘to 
the body lines and frequently done in beige, dark 
gray or black. Although neutral colors are big this 
fall, there are flashes. of vivid cerise, violet, red, 
royal blue and some muted greens. 
The look of elegance is carried over into fall coats. 
Some of the lavish look comes from the use of fur 
trim but even the untrimmed fabric coats have an 
air. Fur linings are used in a new way as linings for 
silk or satin evening coats. This way they provide 
warmth as well as beauty and make it possible for 
the evening coat to be worn even in bitter weather. 
* * * 
Most costumes are jacket-and-dress mergers in a 
fluctuating color range from browns and charcoal 
to winter white and black, and on to mossy greens, 
brick red, voltage blues and a new plum-toned 
neutral called wildwood. 
One of the collections features a slim sheath of 
iridescent sequins paired with a camel hair great- 
coat, its very perversity a charmer. A shell pink 
satin topcoat covers a crystaj seeded chiffon dress 
with a skirt of fine pleating. 
Handsome dinner and theater suits in moire, 
velvet and broadcloth are sparked with jeweled but- 
tons. 
There is excitement in color and fabric—pimento 
reds, peacock blues, nutmeg and citron in satins, 
wools, brocades and souffle tweeds as light a 
thistledown. 
| 
Womens Section 
Get Up in Driver's Seat, Mom, 
Keep Tight Rein on 12-Year-Old 
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN 
DEAR ABBY: I ance heard 
an old lady say, ‘‘When chil- 
dren are young iney step on 
your toes and 
when they are 
older, they 
step on your 
heart.” These 
are the truest 
words I have 
ever heard, 
My daugh- 
ter is 12 and 
she knows ev 
erything. She 
has no respect ABBY 
for anyone. She is a pretty 
girl but has the ugliest dis- 
position ] ever saw for a gir’ 
her age 
The kids get worse every 
day. Is it because they get 
too much? I know [I am not 
the only mother with this prob- 
lem because I hear other moth- 
ers say the same thing. I 
wish you could give me some 
good advice. I am at my wits’ 
end MRS. C 
DEAR MRS. C.: By the Hme 
a child is 12, you either have 
the CHILD trained or the child 
has YOU trained. Giving a 
child “too much" wil) not 
spoil him unless he has had 
“too little’’ discipline. It's pret- 
ty late for new rules at your 
house, but if I were you, I'd 
get in the driver’s seat and 
lay down the law 
* * * 
DEAR ABBY: We had the 
sad experience of losing a pre 
mature baby girl. She lived 
only five days. We named her 
We are wondering ‘if it would . 
be proper, if and when we 
have another little girl, to 
give her the same name? We 
loved that name. PARENTS 
DEAR PARENTS: It would 
Will Wed in Kirk in Hills Cedarholm Chapeh of Kirk 
in the Hills, Bloomfield Hills, 
will be the scene July 31 for 
the marriage of Sue Shanks 
and Dr. John Thomas Kennedy 
Jr. Sue’s parents, Mr. and: Mrs. 
Leslie Talbot Shanks of West 
Lewiston, Ferndale, formerly 
of Pontiac, are announcing her 
engagement to the son of Mr. 
ang Mrs. John Thomas Ken- 
  “a steady date Be Nm be proper, The decision is en- 
tirely up to you. 
x * * 
DEAR ABBY. [ am 353, di 
vorced and have a 6-year-old 
daughter. I’ve been zoing with 
a widower who has a 9-year-old 
son. He is well-to-do and would 
make an ideal husband 
He says he ts very fond of 
me, and [| know [ love him 
Should [ wait and hope that 
some day hell break’ down 
and marry me? [ don't want 
| want a hus- 
band HOPING 
DEAR HOPING: You could 
‘‘break down" before he does 
It this man really had his 
son's best interest at heart, he 
would marry a good woman 
and give his son a normal 
home life. The ‘wait could 
be a lifetime 
et 
DEAR ABBY; My husband 
has the habit of taking up 
with the oddest kind of people. 
He invites them to the house 
and after a while, when they 
get to be pests, be runs and 
hides and asks me to make 
up excuses for him 
_ Annual Picnic Held 
by Plumbing Unit 
The adjoining nomes of Mr 
and Mrs. Wilfred Thompsor. 
and Mr. and Mrs. Curtis 
Thompson at Elizabeth Lake 
were the scene of the annual 
summer picnic, of the Plumb- 
ing and Heating Dealers Assn. 
and their Women’s Auxiliary 
Saturday. 
Guests at the. affair included 
Mrs. Glenn McFarland, Mrs. 
Ellen Duffy and Mrs. Marcel- 
la Williams and children 
Thirty-two members, their 
children, and _ grandchildren 
were in attendance. 
nedy of Wauwatosa, Wis. .The 
prospective bridegroom is a 
graduate of Beloit ‘College, 
Beloit, Wis., and the University 
of Michigan Medical School. 
The granddaughter of Mr. ‘and 
Mrs. W. A. Windiate of Union 
Lake road, Sue attended New- 
ton Wellesley Schoo] of Nurs- 
ing and was also graduated 
from the U, of M. 
} He recently picked up a re- 
ligious fanatic and his wile 
near where she catches the 
bus. They drove us nuts with 
their talk of religion. They left 
pamphlets here by the arm- 
load and told us to pass them 
out to our friends. 
They are still bothering us 
How can [ get my husband 
to quit collecting these char- 
acters? PESTERED 
DEAR PESTERED: As long 
as vou make up excuses and 
permit your husband to “‘hide”’ 
when his guests call on him, 
you can expect to have the 
job. Next time, YOU hide, 
and let your friendly husband 
handle the situation. 
Ld x * 
For a Oersunal reply. write 'o ABBY 
in care of this paper. Enclose a self- 
addressed, stamped envelope Shower Fetes 
Bride-to-Be at 
Rosberg Home 
A miscellaneous shower hon- 
oring Linda Ruth Schellenberg 
was held Saturday at the Bev- 
erly road home of Mrs. Farres 
Mrs. Robert Thomp- 
Farres’ daughter; 
and Barbara Calhoun were the tosberg. 
son, Mrs. 
hostesses. 
* * * 
Linda, daughter of Mrs 
George H. Schellenberg of 
Maplewood drive, will marry 
R. John Ensworth Jr., son of 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Ens- 
worth of Starr avenue, Aug. 8 
at All Saints Episcopal Church 
* * * 
Attending the shower were 
Mrs. Schellenberg, Mrs. Ens- 
worth, Mrs. M. E, Thompson, 
Mrs. Robert Mills, Lois Farrell, 
Joan Trzcinski, Marsha Stapp, 
Delores Melnychenko and Mrs 
Emil Bruestle 
* * * 
Others were Mrs. Norbert 
Capistrant, Marcia Thomas, 
Nancy Nicholson, Joyce Whit- 
field, Janet Hudson, Lee Pat- 
terson,- Normalee Braid, Mrs. 
James Jones, Mrs, Dale Han- 
nan, Joan Gorman, Ann Mac- 
Donald, Mrs. Stanford Han- 
non and Mrs. Charles G. Parks.   The coat dress for fall, 1959, is done in moss green 
silk serge by Bill Blass for Maurice Rentner. Buttoned 
down the front from a collarless neckline, it has a new 
sleeve called the “cornucopia”. 
John Kraft Marks 
Second Birthday 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kraft of 
East Walton boulevard hon- 
ored their son, John F., at a 
party celebrating his second 
birthday Saturday 
Attending the gathering were 
Mrs. John Lutkins and her son, 
Larry; Mrs. Ila Ross and her 
daughter, Carol Lee Parris; 
Mrs. Leafy Wimberley and 
daughter, Linda; Mrs, James 
Staples and children, David. 
Daniel and Patricia; Mrs. Mar- 
tin Berney and her sons, Wil- 
liam and Joseph; Mrs, James 
Lorenz and daughters, Laura 
Ann and Peggy; Mrs. Peter 
Lorenz, Sandra and _ Cindy 
Mielke, Charles and Linda 
Stout, Larry Tooti, Jerry 
Prince and Richard and Thom-: 
as Williams. 
Mrs. Deno Sees 
Grandson Graduate 
Mrs. Hugh Deno of High 
street has just returned from 
Abilene, Tex:, where she visit- 
ed with her daughter, Mrs. 
Don Denton (nee Esther Stick- 
el) formerly of Pontiac. 
During her stay she also 
attended the graduation of a 
grandson, Jack Parmenter, 
also a former Pontiac resi- 
dent, from St. Mary’s Acad- 
emy. Jack won a scholarship 
to McMurray College of Abi- 
lene Sheep or Wolf? 
His Necktie Is 
Giveaway! 
LONDON (UPI) — Two Lon- 
don clothiers claim that a 
man's necktie tells all about 
his character. - 
Leslie and Langley Powe, 
owners of one of Britain's most 
fashionable men’s shops, ex- 
plained to a Sunday pictorial 
reporter how women can read 
men's ties 
White or very pale-colored 
tie—The man is a wolf. 
Printed silk tie—The wearer 
is a tightwad.. 
Tie that matches suit—The 
man is very timid. 
Off-beat colored tie (olive 
zreen, lavender, etc.)—Denotes 
a lady-killer, : 
Brocade tie with a small pat- 
tern—The man is an obvious 
coward. 
Maroon tie —_ Man is very 
dull, a conformist. 
Handwoven: wool tie — Man 
would rather’ talk about foot- 
ball than sext 
Tie tied in gmail, neat knot— 
A neat, .methodical organiza- 
uuonal man. | 
Big, loosely: tied knot—Shifty, 
untrustworthy. 
They said the man who wears 
a bow tie delights in being un- 
conventional and a woman can 
expect nearly anything from 
him. 
  . Barbara Luscombe, daughter of Mrs. Charlotte 
- Luscombe of Birmingham, relaxes at the Forest Lake 
Country Club pool where many, of the younger set of 
Ld id 
Petes Press Photo 
the Pontiac- Birmingham area spend masts of their ve 
cation time, 
      
    
      
   
        | \ 
TH PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1959 \   
  
     
  > 
      
    
   4Be Patient With Young Tot 
At an open 
aah = Child’ S F ear of W ater N atural the engage- 
ment of 
} darparee GG BY PATRICIA McCORMACK water, for example, gradually | progress. Dr. Stern said some , Some children may get along 
ool “ NEW YORK (UPD—Your | Will play closer and closer to | children take until they are fine in the water and then for 
Dow toe child may be a water-baby in | the surf. He'll notice that this | five or six years of age to no apparent reason, become 
ab ht b or backyard wad- great big body of water that convince themselves that ‘‘big afraid of it-around age five or Nanmanl his bathtub or p | . 
orman . ing pool—and a trembling cry- puzzles him isn’t harming other | water’ is okay, A few don’t six. There's usually a reason, 
Hoskine was baby when near a big swim- children. | get over the fright until they Dr. Stern said. 
: ming pool, the ocean or a lake. | It may take him until Labor | are eight or ten. * * 
announced. Whew ihe Teromex: waldiahy | Day to get his feet water- | Obvious fear of water usually “It may be that the child 
Th nvonite | the "tempt ati - - mietivies. is soaked, if you allow him the | doesn't show up until a child recalls that the last time out a 
pe | ee carey Sim aceaming and freedom of taking it at a pace | is two or older. Dr. Stern said painfu) sun-burn developed. He 
are Mrs. Janet fairiy deep water he understands—and one that | younger children ‘‘don't have remembers the pain and the 
; sees Vad may suits him emotionally. | the sense’ to see a possible water. He traces the pain to 
Dow of ; oe * minute If he gets his feet indoc- | threat in water or anything | the water, blames it and— 
lex rove. tk naa i wim: trinated by then, that’s not bad | else. | avoids it.” 
7 anh ming’s as natural as breath | = _ (itt i¢ and ing : | e 
Mr. oa Vie Your intentions are thé best, | KH d 
AEs: but such tactics are sure to | Mr. and Mrs. air resser 
dibert heighten his fears, according to George A. 
Hos of | Serie = ae | W asserberger Ma Be sistant professor of pediatrics | ls 
Southfield. at Cornell University Medical | of Illinois 
‘ = School, “It's a traumatic ex- | street are hanged 
: we perience — emotionally — that | . 
) ) can make itself felt in adult- GATOUMENNS the . ; = 
oM ARG ARET C DOV aa engagement By EMILY POST 
—- The child, for example, may of their “Dear Mrs, Post: I have a 
; continue to be afraid of water problem that I don’t quite know 
: | i while he’s growing up. He may daughter, how to handle. I live in a rath- Se : 
= een’ fo) swine antl Janet, of er small town and have been S< PF OU. 
- 6-DIAMOND oe oe eee Los Angeles, | . going to the same beauty salon a egainst the use of trickery to Calif., to for years to have my hair 
W EDDING n ET “‘help’’ a child frightened of Phillip Burnet styled. The person who owns 
$s 50 PER SET water. “Don't sneak up on Franklin Agee the salon is a very nice woman 
: AG AND UP ” him and push him in and don't rankiin Agee.) and has always, been very 
e ‘yy F promise him a reward if he second oe -_ a great many of 
jumps in lieutenant with my frie go there. However, 
JOCOOU ROSE * * * ios she doesn’t seem to keep up 
; = “Neither should you tease, the United up with the new hair styles 
“OE GIN WATCHES scold or ridicule a child who is States Air and is not very good at cutting 
a x ~ $9995 water-shy when he’s near 4 F the hair. 
" | 14-Kt. Gold, from. AND UP body of water that is so much orce, iM “There are two other new 
DIAMOND NECKLACE, bigger than the little bit of son of Mr. beauty shops here and I would 
by Columbia $9995 water he’s come to trust in and Mrs. B. F.| - like to make a change but just 
. — his bathtub or backyard wad- A can't bring myself to do it for 
WATCH REPAIR EL EC TRONICALLY TIMED ing pool,” she said. r gee a fear of hurting the beauty sa- 
; 7, r It’s perfectly normal for chil- ampa, : lon proprietor’s feelings. Is 
“3 GREGORY °s JEW ELRY dren to have fears—but not — oe a there really any reason why I 
: - children who aren't afraid of would you suggest doing? 
aaiasentnioIa SES nese pene ___ | ~6water may be afraid of fire 
engines or big trucks or— Answer: Any beauty salon 
PE RM ANENTS Cemplete with Haircut eau Set 
No App't Necessary FE 5-8000 
LOUI BEAUTY 
35 x Be 10 West Huron—2nd Floor Next to Buckner Finance 
ss 
  
Se ee == Ses —— —__—_— |   
Relax . . . in Air Cooled Comfort while you 
have your PERMANENT or SHAMPOO-SET 
THELMA CROW, Owner 
RANDALL'S HARPER METHOD SHOPPE 88 Wayne St. FE 2-1424 bd 
    darkness. The fear, ability to 
worry, is a sign the mind is 
developing. 
The fear of water and other 
things usually stems from mis- 
trust. The child doesn’t know 
whether a thing or situation 
is going to help him, harm 
or_let him alone. He doesn't 
completely understand. 
Until he does, he tries to 
avoid it. From a safe distance, 
he studies it—until he does un- 
derstand it. 
* * * 
The child who is afraid of 
    
ONCE A YEAR SUPERB SPECIALS 
BUDGET WISE...FASHION RIGHT 
  
  
20 Wave so 12   
  2nd Floor Pontiac State Bank Bldg. OUR SALON IS 
AIR CONDITIONED 
Open Monday and Friday ’til9 P. M. 
No A ppointment Needed! Immediate Service ’ 
        To Be Stubborn   
Give Grandpa a Chance 
By MARIE DAERR 
What’s behind that ‘‘just 
plain stubbornness” grandma 
or grandpa often shows that, 
incidentally, can drive the 
younger members of the fam- 
ily wild? 
In the opinion of Dr. Alfred 
K. Bochner, assistant professor 
of psychiatry at Western Re- 
serve Medical School in Cleve- 
land, Ohio, this is often just a 
rather pathetic fight against a 
“growing awareness of flag- 
ging powers.” ° 
“We can’t change this,’’ said 
“Be concerned, but not too 
concerned, Tell grandpa he can 
take sleeping pills for three 
nights, but after that, he must 
fight it out. Tell him to try 
staying up One night. He will 
sleep the next night. 
Grandpa has no appetite? 
“‘Nearly every old person has 
happy: memories of some food 
he enjoyed when he was 
young,”’ said this psychiatrist. 
balanced diet. 
“If you travel] in other parts 
of the world, you find, to your 
  | 
| 
  | “Have You Tried This? amazement, that many people 
grow to be very old on what 
Americans would consider a 
very bad diet.” 
Sometimes younger members 
of the family must be eagle- 
eyed and firm guardians of old 
people’s health. 
UNPLEASANT MEMORIES 
“Often older people won't 
complain when they are actu- 
ally sick,’’ said Dr. Bochner. 
“Or they, refuse to have need- 
ed surgery because, 30 or 40 
years ago, people who lived 
through an operation some- 
she needs a doctor, Use your 
own judgment. It can save 
everone concerned a lot of 
grief.” 
CREE RES   proprietor must expect new 
customers to come to her and 
‘to lose old ones, and you 
should have no compunction in 
changing to a salon where your 
hair will be done more to your 
liking. 
  
“Dear Mrs. Post: Will you 
please tell me how to correct- 
ly word a reply to an invitation 
when both husband and wife 
are invited to a wedding break- 
fast and only one can go?” 
  
Answer: The reply would be: 
Mrs. John Smith 
accepts with pleasure 
Mr. and Mrs. Lee's 
kind invitation for 
(date) 
but Mr. Smith regrets that 
he will be alsent from town 
  
Answer: Not unless you are 
still on friendly relations with 
them. 
RA EERIE OSES FREER: 
  
= Beets in Gelatin 
  
gillies BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN AT 9:30 A. 
SPECIAL PURCHASE. 
SALE of 1.000 Pair 
WOMEN’S FALL Pontiac Press Home Editor 
Little molds of lemon gela- 
tin filled with julienne beets 
make an attractive garnish for 
a meat platter. Try this recipe 
that Mrs. B. M. Mitchell 
shares with us. , 
* x * 
Mrs. Mitchell’s main inter- 
ests lie in church work. She 
is a member of the PEO mee 
terhood. 
  1 EEE: 
  By Mrs. B. M. Mitchell 
1 can (No, 2) julienne beets, 
drained 
2 packages lemon gelatin 
1% tablespoons vinegar 
1 teas m salt 
1% tablespoons grated eaten 
% abl sliced stuffed olive 
2 14 espoons horseradish, drained 
% eups chopped celery 
‘Add enough water to beet 
juice to make 1% cups. Bring 
to a boil and dissolve gelatin 
in it. Add vinegar and salt 
and chill until thick. Add rest 
of ingredients. 
Chill in 8 small molds until 
quite firm. 
    
  
      
   UPI Phote 
Wrapping the shoulders like a stole, a big soft 
collar adds a dramatic touch to the jacket of a black 
llama wool suit from the fall-winter collection of 
Rapuano of Rome. The suit has a wide belt closed 
with a single giant button. 
alan elias ions Feature Hip Cinchers 
By SUE CARDOZO 
cinchers appeared Monday night 
as the Florence showing of Italian, 
‘fall and winter fashions got into’ 
  
  SIZES 
14%4—24% (Som She did everything to en- 
FLORENCE Italy (AP) — Hip lcourage the natural hip, some- 
times winding a three-inch trim 
  * 
| a round it. 
* * * 
Marucelli of Milan seconded the 
|full swing. Wide belts in leather, dropped waist band. Hers had a Dr. Bochner. ‘But we can give 
these old people reassurance times died the second or fourth ‘suede and fabric underscored the buckle that generally stuck where 
Custom and maybe some constructive day after it. “Dear Mrs. Post: I am go slipping waist. ‘it fell.*It did not fall in the same 
| chances to be stubborn. I had an emergency call ing to be married soon for the Antonelli of Rome featured the place all the time. C ] d W “For instance, we can urge recently from the family of an second time, having divorced | swathed hip Ss her collec-/ Marucelli's collection repeated 
ave | them—sometimes very much 80-year-old who l.ad fallen on | my husband several years ago. | |the dropped lapel from shopping against their will—to exercise the ice and for 12 hours had We plan on sending wedding | time to midnight supper. It con- 
complete to the point where they really refused to let his famil call announcements to our friends | sisted of a misfit collar drooping 
are making an effort.” a doctor. He had broken his and relatives. I would like to | |down to the waist. 
$45 W | 00 It an old person insists he | hip and had done himself real | know if it would be in order | . s & 
ave NOW. can't sleep at night, and may- harm by the delay. to send my ex-husband’s fam- | Other Marucelli themes included be walks the floor to prove it, “So don’t cov on grandma ily an announcement of my |belted suits with full _ skirts, 
here is a Bochner prescription: or grandpa to know when he or marriage.” harem-topped -evening dresses 
ith folds slung from shoulder to 
shoulder, some tunics, some flared 
|skirts and lots of fur collars and 
| cuffs. 
Evening clothes glimmered with 
gold and stones and Egyptian in- 
fl uence, prompting one American 
department store executive to re- 
mark ‘‘this reminds me of Aida.”     
| Phone “its worm t to ty ome ot | fOr Pretty Meat Garnish - Andre Beauty Salon FE 5-9257 a wet giving him . nertectiy. | oy GREE OOREL BEET SALAD Guests! bp li Ll i i Li hi Mi i i Li, i hi Li 
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Size 16% requires 2% yards 35- 
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Printed directions on each pat- 
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Send Thirty-five cents in coins 
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Send to Anne Adams, care of The 
Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 
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nth | a7 a4 | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1959   
  VFR PAP | : savanna al t * 
4 * 
mp oe         —t 
Cheboygan Yacht Akead of Dyna poe ? ie 
  
Sabre First at Mackinar 
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. 
(AP)—The yaw! Sabre, owned by 
Ramon Brotz of Sheboygan, Wis. 
ghosted across the finish line to- 
day, 
333 mile Chicago to Mackinac Is- 
land yacht race. 
The giant Sabre completed the 
run at 2:45 am, EST in the 
elapsed time of 61 hours and 4 
seconds. The boat has a corrected the first boat to finish the) 
  time of 63 hours, 33 minutes and 
5 seconds. 
* * * 
Second to finish was Dyna, 
owned by Clayton Ewing of Green| 
Bay, Wis., 
61 hours, 
ond. 14 minutes and one sec- 
Race officials here reported the night at 
owned by Walter Heimi-|games were Hornet, 
chem ‘of Chicago, was on the 
rocks off Tle Aux Gallegs, about|the league's 10-run rule, 
35 miles west of here. No one 
was reported injured but 
Coast Guard reported it was 
standing by. 
* * * 
Freebootei”. owned by the Pohn 
Brothers of ‘Chicago, finished) 
third with an elapsed time of 61 
hours, 22 minutes, 33 seconds, 
Bartzen Keeps Clay Court: 
litle by Defeating Reed CHICAGO w—Calm settled over 
the River Forest Tennis Clubd to- 
day after a week in which rain 
and Alex Olmedo played hob with) 
the National Clay Court Tourna-| 
ment. 
The meet ended under the sun 
yesterday with Bernard (Tut) Bart- 
zen of Dallas repeating for the 
men’s title and Sally Moore of 
Bakersfield, Calif., 19-year-old Oc- | 
cidental College sophomore, win- 
ning the women's crown. 
Rain washed out a portion of 
play Saturday and all of Sun- 
day's activities, cutting into what 
attendance was left after the 
exit of Davis Cup star Olmedo. 
Olmedo, accused of throwing his 
quarterfinal match with Abe Segal 
of South Africa last week, was 
kicked out of the tournament. 
Despite his absence the rest of 
the week and the rain, tournament | 
chairman Pat Hennessey said the 
club broke even financially. 
“Because of the  pre-tourney 
buildup of Olmedo, we had __in- 
creased the seating capacity by) 
40 per cent,’ he explained. 
Bartzen, 31-year-old southpaw 
who won the National Clay Court | 
crown in 1954 as well as last 
year, retained it by defeating 
the NCAA champion from San 
dose State, Whitney Reed, 6-4. 
8-6, 7-5. 
* * * 
Miss Moore took her 
  in the elapsed time of | 
<the/and Al Cuthrell and Paul Emer- 
ican chum, 
title with | followed by Hilaria, éwned by Hugh 
Schaddelee of Macatawa Bay. 
Mich., with an elapsed time ot a 
oe 10C President onds. 
Other early hialies were Gyp- 
sie, Taltohna, Copperhead, Caribe, 
Nimbus and Barb, in that order. Ou Uppor 
Earlier the fleet had reported, 
China Republic er. 
  
‘Action Short and Sweet 
‘in Waterford Softball 
Action was short and sweet in 
the Waterford Softball League last 
Drayton Plains. Both 
runaways and play 
was halted after five innings -by Olympic Committee Will 
Open Door to Games 
WASHINGTON (tP— The State 
Department Monday welcomed a 
; Statement attributed to Avery 
Brundage that he will support the: 
son each made two safeties as | recognition of the “Olympic Com- 
‘Lotus Lake swamped Wallis Serv- | Mittee of the Republic of China.” 
ice, 10-0. Roland Jaekel also Department press officer Jo- 
ipitched a one-hitter and Bob) seph Reap said ‘‘We hope that 
| Thatcher collected two hits to fea-| 
iture Lakeland Pharmacy’s 13-2 
rout of the Waterford Merchants. Bob Almas hurled one-hit bal 
along the lines of Mr. Brundage’s 
recommendations. Brundage is 
presindent of the International 
“mes Committee. 
phia by Kenneth L. (Tug) Wilson) 
quoted Brundage as saying of the 
| 10C's rejection of the Chinese Na 
tionalist Olympic Committee under 
the name: 
“The wording of the resolution 
ternational Olympic 
a 6-2, 2-6, 6-3 decision over 19-, May 28 was unfortunate. It certain- 
\year-old Sandra Reynolds of South|!y did not express the intent of the 
Africa. 
The winsome, blonde Miss Reyn- 
olds teamed with her South Afri- 
Rene Schuurman, and 
defeated Janet Hopps, Seattle, and) 
|Jeanne Arth, St. Paul, 46, 6-0, 
63 for the women's doubles hon- 
ors, Munich meeting.” 
: * * * 
“The IOC action was merely a 
|move to identify properly the ath-| 
|letes of Taiwan. The Formosa Chi- 
‘nese have now applied under} 
the name of their country, the 
Olympic Committee of the Repub- 
In a men’s doubles marathon Beat Eee, 
that lasted 1 hotr and 45 minutes, | 
Bartzen and Grant Golden, Evans-| the recognition of this committee | 
ton, Ill., won the title with a 12-10,| under that name.’ 
6-2, 6-4 victory over California teen-| The committee's action aroused | 
agers R. Dennis Ralston of Bak- 4 furore in the United States and| ersfield and William Bond of La Taiwan. 
Jolla. In a letter in Monday's Washing- 
ton Post, Brundage said that on 
his return from Europe recently 
“I was amazed at the completely College, Prep 
Coaches Head 
of the action of the 10@ in its re- CMU’‘s Clini s Clinic on of the 10 cent meeting in Munich on the 
MOUNT PLEASANT. Mich. question of Chinese participation in 
(UP1)—Big Ten and Michigan high the Olympic Games 
school coaches will head the an- “Never has ai subject been 
nual coaching clinic at Central, more garbled,” Brundage wrote. 
Michigan” University Aug. 17-21. “One wonders what was behind 
Dan Rose, CMU athletic director, the widespread circulation of 
said today. misinformation, much of which 
Ara Parseghian, Northwestern plays inte the hands of the Com- 
University football coach; Bill Pe-| munists. 
rigo, Michigan basketball coach, 
and Jack Hepinstall, retired Mich- 
igan State University trainer, will 
represent the Big Ten at the clin- 
ic. 
High school coaches taking part 
in the program include Bill Doo- 
little, Flint Central: Walter Paw- “We did not ‘oust’ the Formosa 
submit a name more in accord 
with the facts,"’ he added. 
* * * 
Brundage said again that the 
IOC is concerned “only with sports Recognition of Chinese. 
the matter will soon be resolved | 
statement issued in Philadel-| 
| adopted at the meeting of the In-) 
Committee | 
“I will recommend and support | 
erroneous impression here in cer-| 
tain quarters of the United States| OVER AND OUT — Miss Spokane, 
limited hypdroplane, 
at scenic Lake Coeur d'Alene, 
2 World Swim Marks Bettered in Tokyo world swim- 
bettered and 
champion TOKYO (—Two 
ming records were 
Australian Olympic 
|Murray Rose won the fastest 
1,500-meter race of his career 
Monday in the opening events ol! 
ithe United States-Japan meet. 
Mike Troy, 19-year-old Indian- 
apolis, Ind., sensation, stroked the 
200-meter butterfly in 2:17.2, bet- 
tering the Internationa] Swimming 
Federation's 2:19 world standard 
for the: second time this summer 
Troy's recent 2:16.4 clocking, 
which won the AAU champion- 
ship in Los Angeles, already is 
up fer recognition as a world 
mark. 
To 8.000 cheering Japanese, the 
co-star with Rose was Japan's 
20-year-old Tsuyoshi Yamanaka, 
He bettered his own 2:08 world 
record by winning the 200-meter 
free-style in 2:02.3, and less than 
two hours later finished second in 
the gruelling 1,500, half a body 
Chinese, we merely asked them to length behind the blond Australian 
Yamanka’s periormance, and a 
Japanese upset in a photo-finish 
400-meter medley relay, put Japan 
m a 149 lead, with two days 
remaining in this fifth meeting of 
GRIDIRON BAR lowski, Holt: Gus ‘Ganakas, East not with politics and must recog- the two swimming powers since 
  GRAND OPENING 
July 21, 
E. Pike St. 21   | 
  Lansing, and Charles Hollosy, De- 
troit Austin. 
The clinic is sponsored by the 
Michigan High Schoo! Athletic As- 
| sociation in cooperation with Cen- 
tral Michigan.   
  
BRAKES 
seals; clean entire assembly: adjust 
tries; check sheck absorbers: free 
inspection; rotate tires ff desired, 
MARKET 77 W. Huron   15 FAMOUS SERVICES: 
clearance; check brake fluid; check all grease 
500 
Other Cars $16.95 Except Nash, Studebaker, Hudson Whip Jets, 3-7 Three consecutive hits in the top 
of the 8th inning brought 
/Knights of Columbus a 3-2 extra- RELINED 
All 4 Wheels complete, Remove all 4 wheels; install SAFTI-GRIP jinning victory over the Jets yes- bonded linings; clean and inspect wheel incledi lab. d 7 drums; adjust eff 6 wheels: adjust hand including rg an terday in Class A City League, 
brake; inspect master cylinder; clean, inspect, materia 
pack front wheel bearings; adjust pedal ‘baseball activity at Wisner Field. 
| A single by Ron Kind, Hal Trott’s 
i'triple and another single by Fr.) 
John Rakoezy tallied two runs for 
| the Knights and broke up a ee. 
‘mound battle between Don 
mann of the K. of C. and the jel 
iBill McGuire. 
| The Jets rallied with an un- 
earned run in their half of the 
(8th stanza, but Bud Hayward, who ® Chev. 
e icra eccen- 
mile 4 2°: 
TIRE CO. FE 8-0424     
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RELINED isingled home the tally, was strand-| 
ed on Ist base. Picmann allowed. 
i six hits and struck out 11 batters. 
| McGuire gave up seven hits and 
: | fanned eight. aé al 
MONDAY’S ony Bi BASEBALL SCORES 
t . K. of C. 3, Jets : “a on 
CLASS B 
P.B.I. 10, Don Nicholie 6 
CLASS D 
Pontiac Boys Club 7, 8t. Michael 3 
CLASS E (Evening) 
x ‘ Auburn Hts. Boys Club 8, Lake Orion 
Pontiac Boys Club 7. Lady of 
Refuge 2. 
MONDAY’S CITY tat bec SCORES 
American Leagu 
—. & Herk's 5, Lakeside Royals 1. 
Elks 7, CIO 1. 
International League 
Sport Shop 10, Griff's Grill 2 
State Hospital 10, Pontiac Police 9 Our 
  the | nize. facts, not claims."’ 1931. ; 
Besides Rose's truimph and 
. | Troy's butterfly victory in an 
| .) in OW event long dominated by the 
Japanese, the other American 
victory was by AAU springboard 
diving champion Don Harper, 
formerly of Ohio State. Harper 
outscored Shinsuke Kanete of 
Japan 155.07 to 132.11 in the 
3-meter springboard dive, 
Rose, Olympic runner-up Ya- 
imanaka and Alan Semers of In- 
dianapolis all turned in the best 
times of their careers in the 1,500 
  [Setting be both American and Jap- 
“Regas Condition 
Continues Critical 
COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho (AP) 
= Hydroplane pilot Jack Regas | 
/was reported ° ‘holding his own but | 
semiconscious'’ at a hospital here” 
itoday,. Welcome Brundage Statemen 
goes into a spin at 
than 100 miles per hour in the final heat of Sun- 
day's Diamond Cup race for the big speedboats       
      wt 
Pease opine 
es gsc 
  
AP Wirepheote « 
Norm Evans was thrown clear, but unhurt. The 
race was stopped after this mishap, the third of 
the day in which two other drivers were hurt 
more seriously. Evans was leading at the time 
this dramatic picture was taken. big un- 
more 
Idaho. Driver 
* 
team won in the good time of 
4:14, a Japanese record. 
The American team of Frank 
Mckinney, French Munsch, Lon 
Larson and Hee Alikro was timed 
in 4:14.3, bettering the American 
standard. records, their times have 
bettered only by Australian 
17: 28.7 world mark 
* * * 
a student at the University 
of Southern California, started 
slowly but spurted into the lead 
after 1.200 meters, then fought off 
a terrific final spurt by Yamanaka anese 
been 
John Konrads’ 
Rose, 
In winning the 200-meter free-| 
style 'Y amanaka splashed ahead) 
of Jeff Farrell of Yale after the} to win in 17:46.5. Yamanaka was : n oa . first turn and led fhe rest of the! timed in 17:47.5, and Semers in . . : way. Farrell faded in the last 50) 17: 48.9 Veteran American. star wet 1 finished ¢ h >te ‘ oO George Breen finished fourth in ” 6 F = ™ Bishe ure in 17:59 ?: 08.3 Eugene Lenz of Santa ‘ ht, . : 
Maria, Calif., finished last in 
The Japanese 400-meter medley  2:19.3 
Aussie Davis Cup Netters 
Pass Mexican Challenge 
MEXICO CITY uw — It's away 
from the high altitude and into fa- 
miliar grass court surroundings for 
the Australian Davis Cup team, 
which now should march resolutely 
into the challenge round against 
the United States. The Aussies hur- 
died the difficult Mexican barrier, 
4-1, On grass, the Aussies 
with Cuba, low 
first Interzone at Germantown, Pa. ‘Cardinals and Toronto in the Ca- 
| with a game against 
‘should 
sweep past Canada easily and fol-| 
also in Montreal, 
the next week-end. The American 
and European winners clash in the Lions in 7 Chaitis Tits” 
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The, Bell said games will be played 
Detroit Lions a seven in 29 cities in 20 states and are ex- 
‘games in a total of 38-pre- season. aerate ee ayed, be apse 12 Na. |Pected to raise more than a half 
tional Football league teams this million dollars for charity. Most 
year. of the games are sponsored by 
newspapers and other organiza- Commissioner Bert Bell an- 
nounced yesterday the pre-season tions for charitable purposes. 
schedule will get under way Aug. |- . tine 
5 with a game between the Chicago 
New Du Pont : 
LUCITE 
ACRYLIC # covenant titaisine 
  
    nadian city 
The Lions will start Aug. 8 
Los An. | 
geles at Boulder, Cole. 
Other pre-season opponents on 
the Lions card are: Chicago Cards, 
at Norman, Okla., Aug. 15; Cleve- 
land at Akron, Ohio, Aug. 22: New 
York at Detroit, Aug. 28: Phila- 
delphia at Toledo, Sept. 3; Wash. ' 
ington at Detroit, Sept. 18. Cleve- HOUSE PAINT 
land at Detroit, Sept. 13, and 
Washington at Detroit Sept. 18. 
_ Open Champ 6th 
in Pro Tourney Dave Hill’s 146 Is 3 
Off Stuart’s Card in 
Kalamazoo Affair LASTS 50% LONGER 
WHITE 
AND NOW 
16 COLORS 
AVAILABLE 
JUST RELEASED GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) — Dave 
Hill’s first tournament as the new 
Michigan Open champion was 
something less than spectacular. 
Hill, wearing the 1959 Open crown 
ibarely 24 hours, finished sixth) 
yesterday in the annual assistant 
pros tournament sponsored by the 
Michizen PGA. x} SOLVES BLISTERME 
The 22-year-old Kalamazoo pro 
fired 75-71—146 in the 36-hole com- + weed with Du Pont Bo. 38 
petition at Cascade Hills Country primer on new or unpainted wood ! Club. 
He took the Open title over the, x4 EASIEST PAINT T@ APPLY 
weekend with rounds of 70-72-71-72 
for a total of 285 at nearby Green| 
Ridge Country Club, 
First prize of $125 went to Glenn 
Stuart, host at Cascade Hills, who 
went the distance one under par 
at 70-73—143. 
Tommy Watrous, who was on 
| Hill's heels throughout the Open 
| and tied for second at 288, also 
| slipped here. The young Oakland 
| Hills assistant pro tied for 13th .. thins with water—yet dries te 
toughest, most weather resistant 
fish over deveioved. 
DONALDSON 
LUMBER — at 143. 
Tom Buncie of Flint won honors 27 ORCHARD LAKE 
in the Caddie Superintendents FE 2-8381 
class with a 153 total and Stan Ko- 
ziatek of Detroit and Bon West of 
Knollwood tied for first in the 
Shop-Assistant division at 84, no 
~ playoff being held. 
Rosburg Takes | IGRI Buy the paint that's 
worth the work 
cali 
        
Utah Open Title jteenenensenenene; 
sSALT LAKE CITY (AP)—Com- | » VACATION TIME & . 
to be followed by a meeting with! jplete disregard for the usual pro-|M paye your transmission checked @ 
* * * cedure a golfer follows when he 
Ramathan Krishnan and his India'.an win or lose a tournament on and repaired in time to not 
spoil your family’s summer. mates at Brookline, 
There is still one big worry, 
apart from the four more oppe- 
nents who must be accounted for 
, before the Aussies can try to get 
even with Alex Olmedo in late 
August. Tigers Sign Four, 
Including Prep Ace 
DETROIT (UPI)—The Detroit Ti-| 
gers today announced the signing 
of two pitchers and two infielders   
That's Neal Fraser's cantanker-. 
ous appendix. The No. 1 Aussie ace 
had another mild attack yesterday, 
forcing a substitution in the fifth 
‘and final match of the Mexican to contracts with clubs in their 
series. minor league system. 
* * * * * * 
It remained for Rod Laver, the 
bandy-legged Queensland rookie, to 
score the decisive point which 
brought Australia a first round 
American Zone victory over the 
Mexicans in this mile high city.: 
Redeeming his opening day 
loss to Mario Llamas, Laver won 
a come-from-behind marathon 
from Antonio Palafox, the 23- The Tigers assigned pitcher Ro- 
bert L. White, a 22-year-old, six- 
foot, one-inch southpaw from Tem 
ple University, to the Montgomery 
Rebels of the Alabama-Florida 
League and pitcher Jon Nelson, a 
(17-year-old Farmington, Mich 
‘right hander who hurled a_no- 
hitter during the past high school 
iseason, will be sent to the Decatur 
year-old Mexican national cham- (Commodores of the Class D Mid- 
pion, 6-3, 6-8, 4-6, 7-5, 6-3, Roy (west League. 
Emerson, subbing for Fraser, | * * * 
made the final score 4-1 by “beat: arr Teer The infielders signed to contracts; 
ng Liamas, 6-4, 6-2, 4-6, 4-6, 6-6. by the Tigers are Frank Karwoski, 
The Australian team caught anja third baseman from Gaylord, 
Regas entered the hospital un- overnight plane for New York from) Mich., who hit .480 with the Aldon 
conscious and in critical condition Where they will go to Montreal for’ Semi-pro club, and Ronald Syme, | 
Sunday: following a near tragic @ second round match with the Ca-'a second baseman from South-) 
‘accident involving Miss Bardahl, 
the unlimited hydroplane he drove 
in the Diamond Cup race on Lake 
Coeur d'Alene. 
The veteran pilot, who races out 
of Seattle but lives in Oakland, 
Calif., 
‘crushed chest, three broken ribs 
/and other injuries when his boat) 
+crashed ‘into a heavy wave on a! 
turn, suffered a fractured skull, | 
| 
  
  
    
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Whether you are hav- 
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MI 6-7664   674 | nadians, starting Friday,, Jeastern High School in ) Detroit. Mass, 
" Gabriel's Market, one putt brought Bob Rosburg the) rn Y : 
Utah Open title yesterday. “ 
_ + * & rr 
The Palo Alto, Calif. pro didn’t @ 
even bother to survey an eight-| 
foot stretch of green between the M@ . 
ball and the 18th hole before sink-|& 
\ing a putt that gave him a one- 
stroke victory over Ed (Porky) /™ COMP 
INSTA 
   
  (Oliver of Denver. = 
*- * * Ss 
Both shot 69s over the 6.980 . é 
Oakridge Country Club course ™® 56- 58 $175.00 
with Rosburg winding up the 72 @ -Flicht 
holes with 275, and first place Strato Flig 
Waterford Jr. ‘Scores 
  money of $1,500. Oliver won $1,150. 7“ $50.00 Labor to Rebuild 
ia 
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key'’s Hangar Grill nosed out Roc-'g 
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" _ Phone Ft 5.4101     
   | 
} 
  
  | Stocks Halt 
, Downswing NEW YORK ?—The 
market turned mixed today 
swing. 
With trading moving at a 
just about matched each o 
Price changes generally 
confined to small fractions. 
Motor shares managed to push 
higher. All other groups w 
mixed. A few high-priced e 
tronic stocks spurted ahead. 
General Motors, Ford and Amer-. stock Quotations are furnished by the 
: after Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of three straight days on the down- Monday. 
argic pace, plus and minus signs 
were Apples, Dutchess | | \ THE 
    
| MARKETS | Soybeans Lead covering sales of locally grawn Stead Market 
produce brought to the Farmer’. 
  Market by growers and sold by 
them in wholesale package lots. 
early Board of Trade transactions 
and were out ‘in front in a gener- 
ally steady to firm market. 
Within the first several minutes 
nearly all contracts had added 
$350 another cent a bushel to their re- 
opie Seaucnarere: 3433 cent steady climb with the bullish 
|Biueberries, No. 1, 12 pts 425 influence still related to the prob- Sherries Jur. 16 gt Hera a ale 4 GU ; 
Cherise sweet, 16 ‘Gis. S .... 373 ability that the crop this year may 
ere Currants, red. 16 qts 626 be short of domestic and export lec- Gooseberries, 16 Qts... ...s.ssseees 6.25 
Raspberries. black, 24 qts . 500 requirements 
Raspberries. Red. 24 qts 1.50 
| Some le new crop VEGETABLES ome of the n | 
tracts have gained more than 10 { 
leth. . : Detroit Produce 
FRUITS 
bu ther. 
bu 
con- CHICAGO (AP) — Soybean fu-| 
tures were strong again today in) PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1959 
™m. Summit Hopes. 
) Dim, Says tke | President Unconvinced 
Russians Want Meeting, 
but He'll Attend |    
  DETROIT w™ — Purchase by 
Kelsey-Hayes Co. of the U.S. 
Navy’s huge jet engine plant in 
suburban Romulus Township was 
announced yesterday, 
Rep. John Lesinski (D-Mich), 
who made the announcement here, 
said the General Services Adminis- 
tration at Washington had accpet- 
ed the Detroit firm’s bid of $2,- 
260,000. 
Allies Pressing - 
for Berlin Truce Keep Apprehensive Eye 
on Russia for Change 
in Foreign Policy By MARVIN L, ARROWSMITH 
WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-| 
dent Eisenhower believes the 
chances for a summit ‘conference 
‘have become steadily dimmer in 
‘the last 10 days. He feels Russia's) 
attitude régarding Berlin now is | 
‘tougher than ever. ; | 
| This Eisenhower pessimism — 
/based on confidential reports from) 
‘the Geneva foreign ministers 
meeting — is known on excellent 
authority. It embraces his view 
that Soviet Premier Nikita, 
Khrushchev may not even want a) 
summit meeting. | 
It also is known on high au-| 
thority that Eisenhower still is, 
dead set against any recognition! 
of Red China, The Communists’ 
there still are holding Americans K. of C. to Install 
Officer 5 Tonight ae eee ‘ilar authority that: Andrew Hoehm to Take “*'       | 
} |       
  H. HOEHN ANDREW 
GENEVA (UPI) — The West-' 
(ern powers pressed Russia today. 
for a simple Berlin truce that, | 
esuite hi | = could lead to a summit’ Confer-| 
. espite his pessimism, Ei- .... ; Sentemb t el 
Head Post at Pontiac senhower remains perfectly will- ence in September. A ie) sem 
"ne to attend a sinmit meetin time they watched for any sign of . g iz, i . ‘ Aen) 
Council 600 - brovided there is decent progress # Major upheaval in Soviet foreign | 
‘at Geneva. That means Soviet Policy. 
The Pontiac Knights of Columbus, recognition of Western rights and| * * * MAME IVE 
    
The plant covers 157 acres and 
has 13 buildings. It was designed 
to employ from 2,000 to 5,000 
persons and was valued at about 
50 million dollars when completed 
in 1954. 
' Kelsey-Hayes, which manufac- 
tures automobile parts, did not say 
to what use it would put the 
plant’s facilities but said they 
would be “fully utilized.” 
The plant wss built for the Navy 
by the old Lincoln-Mercury Di- 
vision of Ford Motor Co. for the 
manufacture of J-40 jet engines. 
It has been vacant since 1954 when 
the engine contract was cancelled 
by the government. 
  
Teenagers Hurt 
as Scooter Rams 
Car on Auburn 
An accident involving two motér 
scooters and a car, at Auburn 
and Adams roads, Avon Township, | 
yesterday afternoon resulted in in- 
jury to “two teenagers. 
Donald Blasingame, 17, of 470 
4th St., was in satisfactory condi- 
tion at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital 
today with leg injuries. Thomas J. 
Miller, 16, of 3080 Greenwood St., 
Rochester, was treated at the hos- Romulus Jet Engine Plant Rockefeller Declines Sold to Kelsey-Hayes | _~ Senate Invitation WASHINGTON \#--Gov. Nelson 
|A. Rockefeller has declined an 
invitation to testify at senate sub- 
committee hearings on President 
Eisenhower's veto of the $1,375,- 
000,000 housing bill. 
| Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala), ithe housing subcommittee chair- 
|man, said he regretted Rockefel- 
iler’s decision. 
| “I had supposed,” Sparkman 
' said, ‘that Governor Rockefeller 
' would: be eager to tell the sub- 
' committee about projects in his 
| state which would have been 
aided by the housing bill.” 
The Alabaman said he was 
pleased that Gov. David L. Law- 
rence of Pennsylvania had accepted 
an invitation to testify. The hear- 
ings open Thursday. 
News in Brief A refrigerator and two couches 
|Monday were reported _ stolen 
from a summer home at 2225 Roch- 
fester Rd., Oakland Township, 
owned by John Kloka, of 2645 South 
Blvd., according to Oakland County 
sheriff's deputies,   
  
Burley Evans, of 158 E. Huron 
St., reported to city police early 
today that while walking past 205 
Hughes St., two unidentified men oF . a : athiliti; : is . 
‘> I cent a bushel higher on July tO Monsignor Sharpe Council 600, wil responsibilities in West Berlin. 
# *, lower on the other deliveries, hold its installation of officers to-} 2. Regardless of talk by Krem- 
is not | The western foreign ministers pital and released. _ |held him at knife-point and took were lunching with Soviet Foreign’ Both youths were driving their’ $63 from his wallet. 
Minister Andrei Gromyko at th€ motor scooters east on Auburn. 
half earnings. 
  Among rails, Southern Railway T¥rnips. topped. bu   j ste 4 ‘ nt Beans, green, flat, bu ; .» 62 78 | 
se Motors stepped about a point Beans, green, round, bu. . 300 cents a bushel in a little over a 
ugner. Beans, wax. bu 25 see 
“ . . pests topped bu . oe. 179 Week, 
Steels, which joined with motors Beets! No 1, doz behs . 90 ; lb roc z } . » « c 2 r ¥ 
to lead yesterday's retreat, were Cenbace a 1, dpe Dens . a Mode rat e ilour ml uying 
narrowly mixed. U. S. Steel and Cabbage. Curly, bu. 1 i3 steadied wheat. 2 : , Cabbage. Red. bu 75 x < ever, 
Bethlehem crept a notch higher Elppage’ Sprouts, bu zag After about an hour, however but Republic Steel dipped a shade, ;Carrots, oe ne . ane wheat was unc beh: 2 cent a 
lie rs : bushel lower on the 1959 crop con- * * * Celery, bu. .. sone .90 : sae : ce 
- Celery, doz. stks #0 tracts. . » $1.86%%: and the 1960 
Sharp advances among the elec- Corn, Sweet 5 doz - eh ea . to 3 Hens: earn uaa iie! ce 5 ar or ee _ Cucumbers, dill, Fancy 476 crop montns ‘4 to “s gner, cor tronic eat mt ae a Gicunibers Pickle, es 5 : a 
ton Industries, ahead aroun 4 Cucumbers, slicers, Fancy, bu 
: z : > Et duz ochs 4 Season 
points; and by Texas Instruments, Konirabi. doz pens... ... 1.50 et HHT. oe 4 &. hicher 
almost 2 points. Raytheon and Onions, green, doz . ee. 70 July $1.247s; oats %s to 3s higher, 
machionally Parsley curly doz bens ... 1) July new type contract 6842; rye Square D rose fractionally. Parsley, root doz 90 12 higt July $1,293 Peas. No 1, bu - 450 4; to l'4 higher, July 293° soy- 
y P Cayer Ls 2 00 5 nie 
DuPont ran ahead by around Peppers het pee 150 beans 7% to 2's higher, “July 2 peints. Goodrich gained about peppers, sweet pk 150-g9 9414 
a point . Foreiees. nde 50 Ib. bag S| 1.90 8 
- . adishes, re doz One Oo acne 1.10 
= 7 Radishes, white, doz. ; -. 1.10 
Colorado Fuel & Iron gained Rhubarb’ outancr aoz behs ||...) 80 
about half a point after the com. |Ssussh. Siete oe peg eaecea: He ewer ssue 
pany reported sharply higher first: Tomaties. hothouse, 8 !bs ... 2.00 * Tomatoes, outdoors, 14 Ibs. - 2.00 
§ 
“Takes Beating Turnips, bu Sas a 
eussn oR ERTS Too 2 
    
  night at the K. of C. Hall, 295 S. lin officials, Eisenhower 
Saginaw St. convinced the Russians really 
Andrew H. Hoehn of 247 S. San- want a summit meeting. He thinks 
ford St., will be installed as the. the Soviets’ real objective may. 
new grand knight by Andrew V. be to split the Western allies, par-| 
‘Risteter of East Detroit. ticularly the United States and. 
| Hoehn, who joined the local coun- Britain. 
‘cil in 1945, previously served as| On the domestic front the Presi- 
‘deputy grand knight, chancellor dent sees no real hope for a tax, 
land guard. | cut during his remaining 18 months! 
jin office, it.was reported today; Other officers to be Installed | on high authority, vince him that rival East and 
West plans for Berlin had can- 
celed both plans out and that a 
simple truce was the best solution) 
to the German crisis. 
The Geneva talks were right. 
where they started last May 11. 
With many weeks of deadlock | 
behind them and no progress in | 
sight, the Western ministers were 
  
  
      Russian’s villa today to try to con-| Roy M. Thompson, 37, of 3394! 
Rockhaven St., Rochester, driver 
of the car, was- making a left 
turn when the Blasingame youth's 
scooter struck his car. 
Miller swerved and avoided a 
smashup, but fell from his scooter. 
Blasingame said his vision had 
been obscured by another auto. 
New Cigarette, Alpine, 
  
  
  
  Best Carpet Cleaners. Owned 
and operated by Jim Bradford. A 
number of years experience with 
one of Pontiac’s iargest carpet 
cleaners. Quality cleaning of car- 
peting, rugs and furniture. Free 
estimates at your convenience. Call 
Township, Oakland County, Michigan, 
will hold a Public arian 2 on August 
12, 1959, 7:30 pm. at the Township 
Hall, Clarkston, Michigan, to consider 
  
    
  
  
      
    
    
  
  
  
  | | S cifi 0 rac- GREENS | if \ - the following changes in Township .Zon- 
eRe a) jane ae Cabbage. No. 1. bu TS EESTD -- $150 | Bie) Domakl ratte ye vey xrene But it also is kown that the looking apprehensively at the ito Combine 3 poaties int 7. toons from Suburban Farms te ‘ ivania edeedi higher | goparc. No. 1, bu oe | knight; Alonzo Barnard, chancel- | President at this. time is planning) Kremlin to see if some change 7 YORK—National distribu- Residence-1: - : (Mustard, No 1, bu... * 2.00 Problanulot es rinancin _ lor; Donald Farrell, warden; Ted to call for a tax increase. | in Soviet foreign policy would fol- NEW — , yr Le New York Stods \Beisecae ba ny 2 00 | : 9 Klimowicz, lecturer; Francis Eisenhower's views on this and low Premier Nikita Khrush- tion is under way on a new St" commercial: See ee ae aie ‘in Weesdice GuviaZias’ fede Dg bu. a Eight Mile Road Project sim pecording wie Lie other matters domestic and politi- chev’s cancellation of his pro- | cigarette called Alpine, which com- ROE, | describe de beginning a (Late Morning otations . : ene to 0 r., financial secretary; ¢ F, | ; . ; 4 nt distant 8 * 33° W E t., and Figures after decimal point are eighths SALAD GREENS Called Political Football and Seki: Aevepmcy, ticanaver. ; ae a be reported on excellent) posed Scandinavian tour. bines three features—high filtration —° "17-20" E 333.0 tt fica tha center 
Admiral 23.4 Kennecott 103.6 badive sg - a | i Eis he 4 d t | h Authoritative sources said the with a light touch of menthol and oi: 30's Soot * Soom. thease s Air Reduce... 88 Kimb Clk |. 69.6 Escaroie, Rn eee ped a —— | Also being installed are William eae ah eae pe Pate Ministers had questioned Gro- | 05 12 20 16.8 ft. to Oar ae 4 + f - “e anvorate: ari Toct fr s ih - ‘ | E Allied sell 118 Kresge. ‘os 2 35:3) Lettuce Bibb, ok. 128 e issue over whether the coun- Brandt, advocate; Lewis Scoaetaiel 5 ley | : oe x 4. myko about it yesterday but that! ; ity “air conditioning’ the center of Clarkston-Orion Road; Allis Chal ... 31.6 LOP Glass. 714 Lettuce head bu... 1.) 12s ty will get the green light to fi-'and Ralph Murphy, guards; and/ Hartley law in an effort to en jhe did not answer. Some thought 8h Porosity | enee ad center to the ‘point of bat asses _ iti Lies a My. a1.6 | Reman ees = ise nance the. imore an $4.000.000' John Lindgren, Tohmas Farrell the steel strike. a extreme-' ihrushchev’s failing health may Paper — Joseph F. Cullman, 3rd, Manne. excepting all of the right-of- Am Airlin ... 30 Lockh Aire... 29-7) © OSE eo esa 20R0R ~\Eight Mile road storm sewer has ang Diamond Wright, trustees. ly sprue a a tiger he have caused the cancellation but| President of Philip Morris Inc., way of sald Garksten-Orion Reed. Am Can ..... 42.7 Loews. | become a “‘political football’ eels it wou o little ultimate) ; | mak { the new brand, an- iteatod Am Cyan |... 604 Lorillard 45 | Poultry and Eggs | they also were looking for a Makers 0 , in the Zoning Districts may be ex- Nash 86 | Lansing c h ay. | ood. | : : 7 ' j will amined at the Township Hall during 
Am Motors. ‘4 Mack Trt 4) TRO Od County sity Gana ; oie intends to say nothing to in- possible major diplomatic offen- nounced today. alii sell at gular Township sitica’ bears 
an Men ee Martin “Co rd DETROIT, July. /20 JAP. Prices =| sioner Daniel W Se today said ee en | y fluence the Republican presidential | on part of the Russians. etre aie Alpine’s ad ini Gaacitary . tr .. 49.3 per pound f. 0. b Detroit for No. 1 qual-|- . . . . aed ’ ; Independence Township Zoning Board re ee aa Mesa mor . 478 ity five poultry: : he could see no other reason for, nomination unless he sees a pros.) . x e& * ; 'vertising? “‘you had to smoke two! Lee July AL remy 1, ‘58. Anacende Si Moreen Line’ - a IL more as iarolteoaes p hed the ‘‘record delay”’ in the Michigan) A pect that the choice might other- The ‘ West yesterday Ee lected cigarettes to get the qualities you,” GommuNITY NATIONAL BANK Armour & Co 31  Merr Ch&8 ". 194\to 4 Ibs. whites 19-20: caponettes under Municipal Finance Commission. | |wise go to @ candidate he feels Russia’s latest plan for a Berlin) z Alpine.” OF PONTIAC r 5 tb ‘can now get with one Alpine. Atchison 20.5 Mpls Hon .. 150 s. 20-21; over 5 lbs. 22-24; turkeys, da brace what Eis ,_. settlement and came up with one, : ; Pontiac, Michigan Aveo Mf 145 Minn M&M 147.6\ heavy type young hens 24 | The $4,760,009 bond issue to P| oes not embrace what Ejisenhow- : ; h , . | A king size (85 mm) cigarette noricz OF SHAREHOLDERS’ MEETING 
Balt & O 45.4 Monsan Ch ... 55.2) . _ er calls his middle-of-the-road phil- Of its own — that the foreign min-| ul cetate fil-|, Notice is hereby given that, pursuant Beth Steel - $42 Mont Ward ... 48.6 DETROIT EGGS | finance the project is awaiting | . : isters’ conference be converted into| With a pure cellulose a |to call of its direcfors, a special meet- pecans A 35 Met cred me a eee ESE £00.) the Commission’s approval, Bar- | +) osophy. New York Gov. Nelson !sters ¢ coe iter, the longest filter offered to !n¢ of the shareholders of Community Borden . 225 Mot Wheel _.. 19.4 Detroit in case lots federal-state grades | ; : Struck by Auto While Rockefeller. along with Vice Presi-|@ Permanent commission on Ger-| *€F, : : National Bank of Pontiac will be held Brun Balke bd otorola ..... 117 | Whites—Grade A jumbo 43; extra large ry submitted the issue last No- ieneaita = : ficati , ‘consumers yet, Alpine is produced at its banking house at 30 North Sag- Budd Co - 29 Mueller Brass 28 | 40-41: large 35-38: medium 31: small 2)...” idi : | +m dent Richard Nixon, is on the ™an reunification. West and East‘ ef : 1 Pi inaw Street. in the City of Pontiac, Burroughs 36.2 Murray CP .. 2&1 22; grade B large 31-35: browns—Grade Vember. Ri ing His Bicyc e nm, ; » ant neestaa: German advisers would remain ad- in Philip Morris Inc.'s Richmond, state of Michigan, on Saturday, August Pac 39. Nat Bisc ..... 52.2 A extra large 40: large 33-38: medium 28- . Eisenhower list of 10 possibilities |“ . Va.. factories 22nd. 1959, at 10:00 a.m, for the purpose preggg: Mond H 3 wat Cash R .. 631\31: small 21: checks 22. | “Ordinarily, the Commission Woterford Township he could support. | visers. [vis . of considering and SHtormining Les Cdn Pac 29.4 Net Dairy ... 52.6), Commersially graded = takes no longer than three months a | The Soviet plan called for an : whether an agreement to paerget 60 Whites“Grade A jumbo 37-39 extra said bank and the Romeo Savings Bank, coe ce 88 shee me "(197.4) large 33-34. large 32-34: medium 27-28. to act on anything,” Barry said ; ee ap t ‘all-German commission on Ger- Melbourne. Austra photogra- iccated tn the Village of ops Cose, JI 224 NY Central .. 285 grade B large 26: browns—Grade A... . hae lec cict An_unidentifiec -vear-old boy D P ae ; sere | pher ordon de isle won ao chigan, Cater Trac 1124 No Am Av 471 uthbo 37-39: extra large 32-32: large 31-. We have been waiting eight riding a bicycle in Waterford own aymen /many with the Big Four powers tee , dicat. in & cam. eet" of anaes | Sestos: = Con Ili Lt pf 32 Wor Pac . 52.4,31%%; medium 26-27; Grade B large 26 months gf a yC ED) 5s acting as advisers. Gromyko said fiber-glass speedboat i [eS oe for the per 
Saf oor tel ate Ctl oS ca | ‘We have been told that they are Township was hit by an automobile for Ci VIC Center yesterday ‘‘any proposals that pre- era competition conducted in the [ncidantal tothe propane? marger efi tie = . Ci Rid . . aan : - - a ae : me \7** isd “ er i f id 
Cities Bye 83 Quins Tea!” 95 Livestock 'a few months behind in their ae ae ea “ ee = a at clude possibility of negotiations be-|United States. He had to cur? agreement ecreuted by « (eaiechivae! Cluett Pea... 51 . 62 work.”’ Senses yeaa injuries a No Problem ‘tween the two German states are down his prize because, although the directors of each of the two banks. Coca Cola ie fee Cee | 27.6 DETROIT LIVESTOCK : \Pontiac General Hospital at nc t=cen . | ; . providing for this merger, is on file Cols Pa q Pan AWAD tis] DETROIT. July Be (AP) Cats tk * * rene BSpnAn BY Doon unacceptable as a basis for free of cost, it would have cost |%t°the bank and may be inspected dur- Colum Gas | 21.6 Panh Epi... 46. ha P)—-Cattle salable - : : iq. today | ins eas ing business hours. Penney, JC ..111.2/2500. About 65 per cent slaughter steers Finance Commission decid- on . . = i own ag ig. him $3,375 Australian import duty. : Gon Edis 4 Penney, 117 and heifers: 30 per cent funtcoss: ‘mode The Finance Ci ke at least’ Pontiac State Police, assisted by| SOUTHFIELD — The first down agreed settlements $3 po Suly 17. 1989. Ao. otrarp Consum Pw . 566 Pepsi Cola 31 jerately active; fed steers steady to £0c ed on July 7 it would like at least Waterford Township Police. began P&¥ment of $110,000 for Southfield'’s —— eat Cont Bak 49.2 Pfizer . 38.3 lower, mostly 25¢ lower than last week's a week to study a 10-page report atertfor¢ ownship Police, began » aivi . a Ry aa | ly 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 27. 28, 29, Cont Can 481 Philco close; heifers 25-50ce lower: cows steady : i : a house-to-house canvass of the MEW Civic ce nter site on Evergreen) July ~ | oes 
Goat Meet Ht Prot a0 ae ime we Men moat cael ne peo the sHommey General oP area at the intersectioniof Frembes Tad between 10 and 11-Mile roads, F"® aug 1, 3.4, 8.6.7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13 ‘ont Meter . , i most choice steers 900- 7 if: F; orsec of Fre Si. 5 | ‘ 17 18 and 19, ’s9. — Cont Oil... 53.4 Pure Ot 422 1100 Ib. 28.00-29.00: good to low choice fice is » roads is practically assured with a) fo eee Curtis Pub 94 RCA - 675136 9-27.75: standard and low ‘arade| eceipt of the report was the) Street. and Hatchery roads, where | eg HE ? . | Deere ...... 63.4 Repub stl ... 735 95 50-26 00: utility 22.00-24.00: few. choice ete | the accident occurred. | $54.358- surplus the city has in its, Sec icl wo. JS4P010818 Bir Pa, GF Ber POS, 1134 betters 7 0-27 40: cond. to. Jow choice first tangible progress shown since ‘cash register as it ends its 1958- Se Covet BG ag eerie a Doug Are | 436 Rey Tob 8233 Seanee: atihity cows th oon 50 ty he asked the Commission's approv-| The boy was described as be- |s9 fiscal year. : July 23, 1959, at 601 Pontiac State Bank Dap: — 284 bay de ae 37.5 Bers and cutters 1500-1900: utility bulls al, Barry said. ; | ing 5-foot-3, blond, blue - eyed, | There also is a $26,226 surplus | re 1 . . oS 4 Side. Pontiae, — July 20 and 21, 1959 
Eest ‘ede Bs Sovin FAP Silewtter bubs ‘00-2380, 8°! MSM) The Commission is meeting to- and weighing 85 pounds. He was | in the Parks and Recreation Fund Eaton Mig _. 794 Sears Roe 47.6 Hogs salable 700. Butchers and sows day in Lansing. | wearing gray summer slacks, a | , 3 
Ei * ot $3 Simons 3 soa Wee : waichers oe: 230° Ib ap Sond) i he | light blue short-sleeved — shirt, oe Pe used Soe est | : . Emer Rad ... 186° Sinclair .- §0.1/15.25: number 1 to 3 and number 2 ana. Barry said the | nd — | black shoes and gray sox. He was K FI y id d | TELEPHONE Es PR 16. gocony | $3.3 190-230 Te 1425-1500: number 2 and submitted is a ‘‘perfect’? one, | ‘di black bike with t rick Flannery said today. - me * i iB 2h. BP F - | E , , , ili y Ercell-O 63 Seu Bee $5.33, 230,260, Ib 18.80-14:50: 260-300 I>) a4 that the amount is not out of | : ng a ack bike: w eae | James and Mary Thompson, own-| By STERLING F. GREEN Department outlays for military, ANSWERING Firestone 014? Sper Bho 1.3, 400 Ib. 1050-12 00; 400-609 Ib. 850-1025: the ordinary. A 40 to 50 million | tie ry he in — ca lers of the 106-acre site, recently) WASHINGTON (AP)—The gov- Programs. Ford Mot.” 146 Sig OU Cay $12 Doers 8 00- | dollar bond issue will be sub- | “0m marks on the bicycle. |agreed to sell the land to South- ernment wound up the unhappy Ls: | SERVICE Proc Tre wa Se OLN3, Bt ' | mitted shortly for the proposed | Driver of the car, Mrs. Ewing field for $447,000, the first pay- fiscal year 1959 on June 30 with 1950, ‘at $80,700,000 008 * far Gardner Den $14 Stevens, JP 24 PAOHJe D tTak ‘Keith 36, of 2234 Hartford St., ment to be made July 30. |a peacetime record deficit, of 12%\199; at $80,700,000,000, was far) You Leave— nn Ot oe 12.6 Pp e von CAKE 12-Town Drain. W: ‘ns ‘| Whil ster plan for the civ- | pil; rs. , “/above any other peacetime year. | Gen Dynam .. 51.6 gun Oi] .... 50.4 | nies tpayig., Waterford Township, told State Po-| ue a master plan for the |billion dollars. a oe 
on rae ear 2? Fnou h Interest | According to Barry, ‘we Ae lice she was traveling east on ic center has not yet been de- The deficit was the fourth and|!t compared with actual outlays’ It Rings Poe ..° 92 gwit & Gh 49.5) g < | ical fo is a cesult a a e Hatchery road, when the boy rode veloped, plans are under way for largest turned in by the Eisen- of $71,900,000,000 in fiscal 1958 and We Answer It! 
Gata. nn? Dee eet 327n Part Politics Fight Mile Road Drain axpayeTs his bike out of a gasoline sta-.a new library to be named the hower administration, as against |$69,400,000,00 in 1957. | CALL Gen Time ... 883 Trans W Air 223) y | Assn. The Southfield protest group tion driveway into the side of her| David Stewart Library, after an|two s ses aaa. +_| Government revenues in 1959 Gen Tire 74.6 Transamer 302 savs assessments. at the rate o 1 two surpluses. But it was 330 mil . Gerber P 582 Twent Cen | 387) < ce eee At the Tete Clear. | ancestor of the Thompsons at their jion dollars less than President Fi-|Were\ 900 million dollars below FE 4-2541 Seated $0.4 oneal a8 ANN ARBOR (— Michigan's $2,006 an acre, are ‘‘confiscatory Police said that skid marks in-| request lsenhower estimated six months|those of 1958 and about 1% billion 
Goodyear 143.3 Un Pac .... 341 Democratic and Republican state And would oe an ee dicated that Mrs. Keith was not) Real estate experts agreed that ago in his budget message to Con- dollars, below those of 1957. Grah Paige 26 Unit Air Lin.. 43.2 : naving to sell their property. essay pe : we a . | EE ~ — Gt vas a - Unit ‘Aire : 834 chairmen agree on at least one other vesidenia Byes for traveling at a high rate of aioe Pe aa alone easily = be worth | gress, 0 34 Unit Pru lien , : Si , | i n acre in a few years. 
melend PONS Ue Ge thing: People don't take enough years have been petitioning for ac- . , Eisenhower's _ . H nes Soe ; : vey =e n s “ = _ : Hooker Ch 454 US Rub ...... 666 Part in partisan politics. tion to relieve the seasonal problem. ' ildren’ k Sat had hree sur 1 ses| Ind — a: a rt . a ~* * lof flooded basements, Barry said. ropose 0 evive Brands Chil ren’s Boo pe c s detitite die ree rh uses . us y ob 9 _ LS ' lo ‘ and five deficits during his term’ Ing Rand 98. Van Raai .... 35.4 Democrat Neil Staebler and Re- * x * u : ; : aS = 50 ween {$3 publican Lawrence B, Lindemer,) The proposed drain will stretch Securit Pro ram With Negroes Not Typical in office, including the $9,449,000,- | 
Interiak i ts West A Bk 33:3 their party chairmen, said so at 37 miles along Eight Mile Road y g SHREVEPORT. La (AP)—The 00? Sette for fiscal 1953 at the - it Bus Mch 436 yestg 0 inp (vpeterdac 5 eas ics oo ee . : et aes ment beatin |S ., |peak of Korean War s ing, Int Harv... 53.5 White Mot _.. 51 ce eee sesterniay of the insti-/ beginning just east of Evergreen| WASHINGTON (AP) — Revival chief librarian has taken a chil- Eye Teany hide Budget Bu . Int Paper ihe Woeocn > fa 7) Mile On partisan’ politics: jroad and going to the River of the industrial security program dren's book out of circulation be- reau released without comment Int Shoe - 354 Yale & Tow 364 Staebler said public indiffer. | Rouge. — recently struck down by a Su- cause it has illustrations of white ; i a Int Tel&Tel.. 371 Yngst ShaT 1362) ; | Detroit has been interested, also 2 : ued : : ~— Monday these preliminary 1959 h Isl Crk Coal | 386 Zenith Rad ...1194 eMce is a seriOus problem for the | Detroit has been the drain peme Court ruling — is proposed and Negro .children fishing and|tiscal year-end totals: \ = Man -. <= scree “> 355 democratic system. Lindemer ‘in the construction of je Sy Sens, Kenneth Keating (R-NY) picnicking together. Receipts $68,158,142,030. : Kelsey Hay | 61.8 | deplored what he called a “holier Which\ would prevent heavy rains’ and Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn).! Miss Inez Boone said the draw-   
STOCK ‘AVERAGES from oVerflowing into its northwest | than thou” attitude of persons | 
area. who criticize politics but won't 
  
costs aboyt $2-bittion annually and jing the identity of the witnesses 
requires the services of 235,000 would adversely affect the nation-,book before a final decision is   Expenditures $80,698,842,169. 
Deficit $12,540,700,139, _ Eighteen months ago, in his. 
|budget message wf January 1958, | 
|Eisenhower had forecast a 500- 
million-dollar surplus for the 1959 
fiscal year. 
* * * | _ Under their bill, however, al-|ings in ‘‘The First Book of Fish- 
leged security risks would be given |ing’’ presented as typical scenes 
ithe right to confront their aceus- [thst were not typical for the area. 
ers, except in cases where reveal-| She said she wanted the City 
|Library Board to look over the 
‘al security. imade.  & 
  NEW YORK, Jul =i i i the per, Press). a eomreicd 7) take part themselves. ; : . Net Change ... +8 +4 +3 46) * «*« * Industrial research in the U. S. Noon Tues 344.4 1403 982 228.9) 
pret ee vor se%,s| The institute, sponsored by the Prev. day ..... 343.6 1399 979 229.3| University of Michi “C Week ago - 346.3 1452 97.9 231 Me ty we nigan,. the Ford workers. Month ago ..... 34.1 1416 941 223.9 Foundation and the two parties, 
ear ago 105.7 81.9 180.5 j j ivi-| i980 cn ao ie tee oO | Seeks to stimulate partisan activi 
1959 Low . 306.1 1338 937 2115 ty in the state. 1958 High ......3120 1365 957 2143. * * 1958 Low ...... 234.7 869 72.9 
  
CHICAGO GRAIN 
CHICAGO. July 21—+AP) 
frain table: 
Wheat— Oats new 
July 5 1.87 Julv. 
Sept 190% Sept 
Dec 1954, Dec 
March 1.98'9 March . 
Mav . 1.967% Rre— 
1966 July . 1 
July 1.80'5 Sept Bs : 
Corn— Dec 1 
July . 4 1237 March 
Sept 1.1844 
Dec . 1.15 Pp 
March - 1.18% Oct 
May 1.19% Nov. . . 
a 
  Branch Bank Branches 
CHARLOTTE, N. C. 
branch. of its own, First Un 
National Bank officials say their 
plaza branch in a suburban area     
      
   has outgrown its confines, 
just around the corner. 
  ~ Opening Tt runs for two weeks, conducting’ 
e-*.-*:» Moves On to Senate 
(P—A | 
branch bank here is getting 
a small structure with two drive- 
in windows is to be constructed 156.6, ae . : | The institute is believed the only | 
_meeting of its kind in the country. | 
spe seminars for 19 workers from each | 
6g., party. 9% 
»: Medal of Honor Bill   
, WASHINGTON (AP) — If the 
|Senate goes along with a House- 
passed bill, holders of the Medal 
of Honor will be entitled to pen- 
; a sions of $100 monthly for life. 
ion : * * * 
| Passed unanimously by the 
|House, the bill woud greatly 
iliberalize a present law which 
igives $10 monthly pensions to 
;Medal of Honor winners who have 
|been’ honorably discharged and 
who are 65 years old. 
  So 
    of the new Student Center| on   STUDENT CENTER GOING UP—Construction That vanished*.when the busi-. 
ness recession bit deeply into tax 
collections. At the same time the. 
Soviet missile challenge, some 
antirecession spending, and other 
factors pushed government spend- 
ing up. 
On June 30 the debt stood at $287,705,907,078, a record for any | 
fiscal year-end. That was 15 bil-| 
lion dollars higher than at the 
peak of World War II, | Government revenues for sev-, eral months have reflected the re- 
covery of business. Tax revenues were 158 million dollars higher 
than Eisenhower predicted six months ago because of larger cor- |       deal 
cost 
\ your 
‘our 
speci 
  
months was 172 million dollars less than Eisenhower had fore- 
seen. Most of the departments and agencies spent a little less than 
they had been budgeted for. 
  Pontiac Press Photo Poration and excise tax col-| 
lections, ‘ 
a a ee 2 | Spending in the same’ six 
Capitol 
          These economy efforts more freshman class entering the university this fall. the ‘campus of *. We can help you ‘swing the 
   Convert Your Seasoned Land Contract to 
a Mortgage and Acquire Your Deed. 
7 \ 
Savings & Loan Assoc. | Established 1890 af 
with one of our low- 
home financing loans 
Come in and discuss 
plans and needs with | 
friendly home loan 
alists. 
\ = 
  Jim, FE 2-2442. adv 
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING 
The Zoning Board of Independence 
  
/ There is hardly any real dark- kook 
ness in Norway, the land of the’ A House committee said there 
      
       e to the middle of August. jwinhers now living. 
   Midnight Sun, from the end of are about 314 Medal of Honor | Michigan State University Oakland moves ahead 
rapidly as the opening day nears 
will be the focal point for all attivi than absorbed a 100-million-dollar 
rise in the cost of interest pay- 
ments on the national debt, and a/ Located east of the academic building, the 
center will contain eating facilities, lounges, 
student activity areas and office space. . The building 
ties of the first                       75 W. Huron’ St., Pontiac’ \ FE 4-0561 
  \ 
CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR ‘oF OFFICE 
\   417-million-dollar rise in Defense . " / 
’ s { 
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i Aga, singh A eh i ERS ae 
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af SOON ce UN neg iQ. Me aE secs acontte ate is 
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AS thease sega. 
RARER ge nA RN REDE 
a