* tioning in Washington.” x fe fo ae - rap 8 i SR RE a eaerahmcd a > ; * Fait Pr = PO ae) a ome + ae YS Sas Mee a Sa ts é j sl ui ~ 2 eee Te Mh a: Meg Oth I Rg -_ x, 7 ) a4 - ol. nate ee eee Pe ee ee \ Seas } : ; Veh i wes i 4 MH E PONTIAC, MICHIGAN “WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1957—36 ; PAGES “004 -———— "t a Force é Robert Kennedy Continues Probe - of Detroit Labor To Follow Up on Hoffa, Teamsters; Members of) Local 614 Seek Quiz Robert F. Kennedy, chief eounsel for the Senate Rackets Committee, was in James R. Hoffa's own labor backyard today directing a continued probe of Team- sters affairs. Kennedy would only say that he and other investi- gators were in Detroit “fol-) lowing up leads we picked| up during the Hoffa ques-| Whether: he would look into the: affairs of Pontiac Teamsters Local 614 was not’ immediately known. William Bellinger, a leader of | a.group seeking te end Hoffa's this week at Atlantic City, these pose with an Indian touc! Miss Oklahoma, Mary Nanc Z — Van Deter. AP Wirephote i WESTERN ENTRIES — As the Miss America pageant opens two entries from western states added to their headdress. They are Denner, and Miss Colorado, Marilyn four-year trusteeship over Local 614, confidence met Kennedy's visit might mean further investigation here. An tavertigator oe ~ ine mittee quizzed Be! past and nen heegagr Sams © a in July. Back in May Kennedy told The Press that an. investigation here! “was still under consideration." ‘* * * Bellinger, 33. of Drayton Plains, (Continued of Page 2, Col. 8) —— Urge Drivers to Be Wary. of Area School Children | Amidst the sound of school bells ringing anew this) Corrine, 32, and their tour chil- \week, comes a somber note from the Pontiac Area, Chamber of Commerce and law enforcement officials. | The message is largely for motorists and its essence in Lansing Monday night. How. a is: Protect our children. School days are dan- gerous days for children going along busy roads and| _jstreéts to classes, - the ‘|Chamber’ of Commerce, ‘safety committee pointed out today. To cut down on the danger, here's some suggestions from Ciyle! R. Haskill, the committee's chair- man, Fhey were echoed by Oak- land County Sheriff Frank W. Irons and Pontiac Police Chief Herbert! W. Straley: _ Be especially careful of the | younger children. Of the 134,000 | youngsters headed for school this week, about 16,000 will be kinder- gartners going to school for the first time, Without doubt they will be confused—and probably careless in traffic—until they get | used to all the new hustle and | bustle, said Haskill, Adjust -your driving, Haskill con- itinued. Many drivers have prob-| M SU President Jerid ag Bs coder age Will Fell Chiibs | tune bo tee, “ter irs Speaker pt DR. JOHN A. HANNAH ° Newport Ready to Welcome Ike = | President, Mamie Plan Month’s Vacation; Bills Still Require Action NEWPORT, R. I. (INS) — New: port took on a-holiday air today | \tor the arrival of President and) ‘Mrs. Eisenhower for a month's va-| ‘cation at Coaster’s Harbor Island. The President and first lady took’ ‘loff in the presidential plane, Co- jlumbine IIT at 9 a.m., Pontiac’ 'time. Sailors, Marines and secret serv- jice men maintained a_ security ‘watch over the 92-acre island long {before the President and first lady Jeft Washington by plane on the flight to Quonset Point Naval Air| Station, where they will board the) Presidential yacht Barbara Anne |for the trip to a Colony House, the old state at Set Up Air Hunt - for Family of 6 Missing in Plane Unreported Since Flight, Across Lake! Michigan) | | | ik Against Advice Monday LANSING (»} — State Police set up an air search| of the northern lower pen-| \insula today for-a family) of six missing since Mon- day on a flight across uae! Michigan. Unreported from a Labor| Day weekend holiday in upper peninsula were a Lansing photographic com- pany owner, Ray Hietikko, 40, and his wife and fdur) children. The last report of the six| said they had taken off, ifrom Marquette in mid- afternoon on Labor Day _ ‘against advice. Bad weath- er had been reported over First Flight Here by Russians in 20 Years Lake Michigan. Hietikko, described as an expe- irienced flier, had taken his family. ise Baraga to his parents’ home to thelp the latter celebrate their ‘golden wedding anniversary. in the NEGRO GIRL TURNED AWAY — A National Guardsman at Little Rock gestures to 15-year-old Elizabeth Echford indicating that she will not = admitted to all-white Central High School. She was the fi color barrier. away. LONDON w —A big Russian jet flight in 62 hours, jairliner roared out of London air- North Pole | port today for the first flight to REPORTS CONFLICT flying over the were his wife, | m, Cameron, 9; Mark, 7; Connie, 5, and Scott, 11 months. |the United States by a Soviet ci-- There were conflicting reports — ane. : ob The family was due back hom pl B, a of the number of persons aboard : the TY104. A Moscow radio broad- flew here cast said 60 passengers boarded 2 hours and the plane put a news dispatch g, then took from the Soviet capital said there joff for Keflavik, Iceland. were 19 and a crew of 12, includ- ‘FIRST IN 2% . From Keflavik — The twin-jet TU104 iever, they failed to arrive. State Pay wiser stopped |Police were notified yesterday by 2% minutes for refueling irelatives. | * * } Baal the ya return flight, ‘Heitikko was warned at Marquette, - bad con on the lake, State Gander, \Guire Air Force Base in ‘New! i Jersey. It‘ will be the first Rus-' ‘sian plane to land in the United ‘States in 20 years. + The 5,570-mile Moscow-to-Me- Friends said Hietikko usually Guire filakt was Cipected 0 made this flight by refueling at ‘chal aieet 38 hears Pie flying Pellston in the northern lower tne, | peninsula. ; ; : The last Russian aircraft to visit \GAS FOR 4 HOURS the United States — a _ military When he left Marquette he was plane in 1937 — made a 6, 200-mile’ ibelieved to have had sufficient gas-| ——— ee joline for four hours of flying. Nor-| Tan steno near Paine’ Pontiac Leads GM Units in Boosting Production Ministry official at London Air- will fly to senger'ss. Some passengers staye d aboard during the refueling stop in London, making an accurate counts difficult. Most ef those |aboard were translators and minor officials of the Soviet dele- gation to the U. N. General Assembly, The McGuire base is about 60 miles from the site of U. N. headquarters in New York City. However, he was reported to have gone ahead with his ight | | pees. > | Hietikko and his wife have been jmarried 14 years. The General Printing and Pictures Service, Inc., = Lansing is his firm. | State Police said a check ot | Seer puke oud” upper pe- Motors Divisions in boosting 1956 production figures in | Binsala turned up no report of 1957, a monthly report disclosed today. Sei eeaang Poe: | Pontiac produced 29,129¢——————————————— Participating in the search are: gus the Coast Guard at Traverse City, | junits in Au t, compared... the year, Truck & Coach has the Civil Air Patrol from Lansing, tO 26,084 in August, 1956. In’ produced 48,583 vehicles. AP Wirephote rst to try to break the school's Eight others later were turned Red Jet Airliner Flying to U.S. The COW hours 46 minutes. miles farther along, Gander an- other 1,585 miles and MeGuire an- other 1,185. to London was made ing three Britons. A Transport START DELAYED Lf * * The TUI04 was expected at the Jersey air base carly night. Departure of the ‘big twin-je Nfld., and ra dei to Me- ‘port said the plane carrie d 36 pas- from Moscow's Vnukova Airport three hours, ——— because of bad weather over Lon- was delayed nearly don. e At Gander,’ an American pilot and radio operator will be “put | aboard to guide the lier after it enters American air space. The 1,610-mile flight from Mos- in 3 Keflavik is 1.199 The Negro girl refused to an to- | ——_—________ 12 crewmen boarding the Guardsmen Patrol School - Ground Gua rd Refuses ‘to Let Girl Cross Line of Soldiers Little Rock Crowd Yells Insulting Remarks at Negro Teenager LITTLE ROCK, Ark. () '— National Guardsmen to- day forcibly prevented iracial integration of Little ‘Rock Central High School. A lone Negro teen-age girl attempted repeatedly \to cross a line of:200 troops but was turned back by the soldiers ordered out by (Gov. Orval Faubus. | The Negro. girl was un- ‘accompanied when she ap- proached the long line of guardsmen, armed with loaded rifles and carbines, | As she walked along the line, she tried several times to cross through the shoulder - to - shoulder formation. At each instanc® a soli dier stepped forward and turned her back. A crowd of some 130 shouting whites engulfed the girl as she tried to pass the guardsmen. _ The whites, shouting ‘such phrases as, “Nigger, go back where you belong,” made no attempt te harm her. swer questions of newsmen, Last night. a federal judge again ordered the city school board to proceed with its gradual integration plan, It was the sec. Related Stories Pages 7, 35 ond time since Friday that Fed- eral Judge Ronaki N. Davies had ruled for integration. * ® * Between the issuance of the two decrees, Faubus had called out National Guardsmen to cordon plane in’ Moscow included three Off the huge Central High School British Royal Air Force officers. It was their job to help navigate the lives and property”’ to London and Newfoundland. ‘REDS OBJECT Top members of the delegation to “maintain order and protect of citi- zens. * * bd The nine Negro students sched- uled to join more than 2,000 white are tentatively scheduled to leave classmates stayed home on the Moscow aboard a second TU104 Sept. 14. | The Soviet government raised a last-minute objéction to land- Pontiac Motor Division continues to lead the General ing at McGuire yesterday, but | | the United States refused to change the flight plan. Russian Embassy officials in Loe complained that Mc- Guire was 60 miles from New York, the destination of the pas-! Some sengers, and asked permission to time to cut down on the speed and of Local Plans Dr. John A. Hannah, President) of Michigan State University, will be the speaker at-a joint meeting of luncheon clubs in this area on Thursday, ew i ladd a few extra minutes to trav el-| ‘ing time. especially when going by| house, was the scene chosen for jand Air Rescue Service from Sel- the eight months through 66.961 came off the lines in-sthe land at Idlewild Airport, the usual, | Newpert’s noon hour civic recép- |fridge Air Force Base and two A t. Ponti lled out! 1956 arrival’ point for aircraft from); 1a school,’ said Haskill. | Stale Police clance. ugust, Pontiac ro /same period of 19: ee Drivers were reminded that. tion to the President. Ceremonies . Ay at 253, 890 units, compared to) GM passenger car divisions, and overseas, Idlewild is 10 miles: on} will be brief and President Ei- - __.the other side of U. N. headquar-, when following school buses the, Searchers plan to cover the 238,901 at this same time their 1957 and 1956 production |, first day of school yesterday while ‘270 infantrymen and airmen, armed with rifles, pistols and ,bayonets, patrolled the area jaround the school About 100 guardsmen remained at their posts today. * * * The Negroes had stayed away in instructions from Virgil T. ischools. But after Davies an- |Swered an appeal from school board attorneys. last night by tell- - ing the board to proceed forth- iwith .with integration, Blossom announced that the high school a | from a special platform in front | a ee | of Colony House, where the Dec- law requires a complete stop when| S¢nhower will speak a few words = jroute the family flew from Mar.| quette over Manistique and Beav-| ‘last year. | figures for the first eight months ‘of the year, are: Chevrolet. 1,067.,- * Haskill urged drivers to obey laration of Independence first |€T Island to Peliston in Emmet! The only other car division show-|g7? in '57, 1,136,749 in ‘56: Olds- The Michigan State University) the signals of school crossing | was read to the people =a mide Caae ing an August 1957 increase over mobile, 284,860 in at 318,564 in "56: Oakland County project just east of} guards, “who de an outstanding | isjand from a second fleor bal- \1956 figures was Cadillac, with 13,-' Buick, 292,684 in '57, 402,310 in '56: Pontiac on the former Wilson es-| job of protecting our children.” \445 units last month, compared to Cadillac, 111.923 in ‘57, 109,450 in 'would be opened to the Ne - The State Department did SAY dents eine oo mu the second jet liner could land at) Faubus, fn announcing Monday Idlewild if it passed a “noise night that he was ordering guards- level” test showing the craft's ¢n-| men to the school, had declared gines did not create an undue dis- turbance, (Continued on ad ont Eage 2, | 2, Col. 1) has aroused universal in- - terest. Hence, the feels that the community would welcome a first hand appraisal of the venture from President Han- nah himself. The head of the East Lansing (their bikes carelessly and often’ welcoming the president: Mer-|pect cloudy and cooler weather General Motors production in the a ;world’s air routes. It said one will] Institution has agreed to speak taunt the safety-patrol boys wholchants plan to keep their establish-|tonight and tomorrow, says the|United Statgs and Canada was) Comics .....)--.....0:..5 28 'be able to fly from Moscow to here under the auspices of thé are trying to guide smaller chil- ments open during the reception in U.S. Weather Bureau. Occasional 283,293 passenger cars and trucks, County News ............66 10 New York nonstop but gave no ad- pre Michigan State University (dren acrosé busy intersections. — anticipation of a financial windfall. light showers are forecast for this.in August, and 307,926 in August.’ Editorials ......-: . 6 ditiona) details. 51 Contestants Vie in visory Board. * * * | President Eisenhower wil] be|afternoon, with a low tonight of 1956. For the eight’ months ot | Markets ..29 we Prelims for Crown of ; All luncheon clubs in this area) “Parents should caution older ipresented by city officials with a 54-58 expected, Tomorrow's high 1957, GM has built 2,444,728 units.) Obituaries exes 3 Chevalier in Hollywood il . who wish to hold their regular|children about these dangerous|silver bowl and ladle. -made by| will be 70-74, and 2,656,084 in the same period pot.0-Gold Puzzle ...-.... 140 | ‘Miss America meetings that week on Thursday!practices,” Haskill said. jItalian born silversmith, Alfred * * * of 1956. Sports ...............--.. 2426 | HOLLYWOOD «™ — Maurice have been invited to attend, He concluded with this sober re-|Sciarotta, a silver tray made by a! The lowest temperature recorded | * * * .| Theaters .. ............. 27 | Chevalier — looking much young- | ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (®—The = © minder to driv : If you strike a|Providence fitm, and a replica of|in downtown Pontiac preceeding) GM Truck & Coach division) TV and Radio Programa eee 35 | er than his 68 years - arrived 51 contestants vying for the Miss The luncheon will be held at the child, your con will neverjan antique 1720 silver cup made by 8 a.m. today was 57. At 1 p.m. the marked up 5,598 units in August,| Wilson, Earl .............-- 13 | yesterday from Paris to make 4 |America- 1958 title take part to Elks Temple,. let you forget it. a Newport firm. |thermometer reached 60. ‘compared | to %, 215 in n August, 1956. | Women’ 8 Pages ce cee , 19-22 | movie. “ iday, tomorrow and Friday in pre- — a —— liminary swim suit, evening gown and talent competition. x * * COULD HAVE _ Safest Thing « on Wheels, Says Creator of Car of De Future’ the sev Wiig hietin utd SOLD A DOZEN! | eats chosen before: a nationwide tele- i ES ee : \vision audience Saturday from This advertiser said she Saree gon [a tee ne ’ : é , ‘ o ai* girls representing 45 states, Can- - pre a IB oy Mag dh Lorie deel eas ets og ; = ada, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, New num Bs Sige = = si : é York City, Chicago and Washing- ber of calls she received. , ton. DC pete Ke pet into om The contest formally got under quickly? Whatever it may way last night with a dazzling pa- be, 2. Want Ad will find a rade of the contestants down this buyer in a hurry! resort community's famed board- walk. STORK LINE : ~~ & ® tn cneeliant condition. 146 Thousands of spectators watched the 249-hour parade led.-by grand : ' marshal Bess Myerson, Miss To DIAL PE 238i Ad America 1945. The parade fea- tured 42 floats and the music of 3 Just ask ro the . _ _ — ® CS | Le ee 4 ‘ / WANE ADD EPT. COSTS ONL’ (900,000 — The creator of this car of the future, - and sculpturing at Yale. The car was designed primarily for in Detroit. He pave the car ie frst public showing recently in and he ’ Older children, and their par-; énts, came in for some advice, too. cony. Traffic will be halted in a large ‘section of Newport until the presi- It's the older boys and girls who|dential motorcade has passed on sometimes act “very cocky” iM the way.to the naval base. - traffic, Haskill stated. “‘Besides); qe Ww ashington Square section jay-walking, many of them Fae ig decked with bunting and signs Weather to Remain Cloudy and Cool “Pontiac area residents can ex- 13,277 a year ago. | Pontiac and Cadillac are the | | only two divisions showing pro- | duction increase over 1956 dur- | ing the first eight months of the | year. 36. In Today's S Press FEROS * Just before the ois reached London today, Moscow radio ‘boasted that the Soviet Union has) ‘still more advanced passenger air-| _,craft which will appear soon on the) Lovelies Begin Battle for Title TU CeO he estimates it would cost about $300,000 to reproduce ¢ « + Sh “ e ! poy P ae Ls me st * : é i i \ ‘ roe : \ + ay See eee’ : | | Blossom, superintendent of public * that he feared violence if the Ne- groes tried to enter Central. High. . * *x & The checker game in which Fau-| bus, the school board and the U.S. District Court were involved posed! « one question which ‘attracted the interest of the nation — and the South, in «particular. Is Faubus, as the head of aj. sovereign state, immune from! contempt proceedings? The governor himself says he does not know the answer to that * Teenagers Need Are you a youngster planning on State law says you have to take a driver training course first, : fate a driver's license - soon? course even if you are not a regu- lar high school student, New Bus Plan May Assist Operators Stay in Business ‘by Lease Agreement moving ever closer to municipal leasing of Saginaw City Lines bus Saginaw Eyes \Ada system, the so-called Jackson Plan. we bcs He Cae og eee s- 5 | ee a Po eas vy fe z : \ “y ‘ ( : ee i } « } x ee @ fe . 2 . la? : : 4 a ree - { be ii 7 ae. : : rh : ‘ , . Pe ie : j ‘ 1 r nS S s be - 4. ; L A ae, j ‘ : i : : | : ; % J : : “ ; < ee S ns . ot : ee yi aS pee ‘ m4 = ee * +, #4 THE PONTIAC. PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1957. ge. | oe ’ : SAGINAW—City councilmen are! Adams School. \Driver Training — owe ns. Leader Seeks Aid : to Get License n —— LS in School Road Blockade State Atty, Gen. Bruce and they will be filled on a first- | lease arrangement with City made to have the . barricades Peaelooppri says he is uriable to come, first-serve basis, he sald, | Lines is working out. ae _ jerected from the first recess per- give an opinion immediately. | Registration hours for classes be-| Harvey is acting on a sugges-/) 2. . a the morning to the last in * * * ; ginning this month ate dese Biot made by City Manager) ater OF a afternoon, including lunch . Asked if he knew what action : . a.m, to 4:30 p.m. Sept, 5, 6, 9, ler, : Bad = . the federal government could take) JF) (i eae the high school. ‘The * ok It was explained thet at thé : if he interposed his authority be- aN hy classes will be one hour daily until Proposing the Jackson trip, Mil- . | Start of construction, the Maple ~ tween the government and the) “4 \\ Vale, ithe end of the semester in Janu-|ler said: “The only that oning anges Ave, completion date was set for people of Arkansas, Faubus re-| ANA R23 lary. seems to offer a solution (to-the q Aug. 31. Difficulties on the job, plied: “No, and wobody alse does) a os The law does not apply to persons / Problem of keeping buses operat) ‘| including | either.” ‘ MAUREEN O'HARA DOROTHY DANDRIDGE -H8 or older. « is : The Justice Department in . : AP Wirephetes | Washi indicated it looked on DENY MAGAZINE STORIES — Two well- oe) Chinese Theater. Dorothy Dandridge, who al- ready has received a $10,000 out-of-court settle- ment -from the magazine, denied a story printed . about her behavior. the Litfle Rock situation a’ seri- ous, Officials said the govern- *ment’s course of action would not known. actresses took the stand in Los Angeles to deny-truth of stories about themselves in Con- fidential magazine. Miss O’Hara denied that she participated in a lovemaking affair in Grauman’s Expect Drain Trial in Month - Actress, Singer Snap Denials take: County Conducts Study City Lines, according 1.1. A high neeet — cape of. Apportionment, Cost Lines figures. mS, ee ae discuss the case with Faubus a . ° During a Council discussion triangular-shaped Building representatives Siestas ingen othey to werk oat « ° . ~ ° in 12-Town Project ie of|is located on Williams road, Education Asm, a proposed City Lines route changes!near Airport road,-and is bounded : 10 vets eg == = OF Stand in Contidential [ria a fot fale otter ne Se ‘ceptable to all. Oakland County should be ready| Harvey declared: - ae ne, Grand Trunk Railroad on} invited to help intreduce the new ie. Davies mht cing about a) , for trial of the Twelve-Town Drain] “We're going to have to decide Rs : ! | “ ! ‘ e ht take} LOS ANGELES (#—Glamorous/ed to be the “Latin lover” in the;/tryst with Miss Dandridge on the dispute next month,. Drain Com-| Swift! y what we're going. to do wholesale lumber company Mrs. Triplett, chairman of = oe see \Cnth | | or we're not going to have a pri. will be Built en te site and icyristian Social Relations in the | ‘action to declare unconstitutional actress Maureen O'Hara and sul-\Confidential story was brought|sheres of Lake Tahoe. jmissioner Daniel W. Barry said to-) 101, operated tion sys-| Wil employ approximately 100 |p )nited Chure h W is headi | ‘the anti-integration school laws try singer Dorothy Dandridge|out by defense attorney Arthur J. * * * | Pe A toma bare ) people, according to Donald Wil- Pe piysroan : ng ‘adopted recently by the Arkansas have declared on the witness stand ‘Crowley on cross-examination. He) “Did you ever go. for a ride s * ial of apportionments 3 ¢ * sen, representing Se fre. — _— ¢ pts / ea Legislat e that Confidential magazine stories'elicited from Miss O'Hara the with Mr. Terry?” Ritzi asked. | eappra dy then tol car = Assisting are Mrs. rge eo * * * involving them in theater and statement that she was dating a| “No.” }and costs should be ready then “We have to look; this thing in Later, a mill workshop for mak-|Burnham, Mrs. Edmund Leaven- ; J De woodland love-making episodes Mexican man in February 194) |” “* _ ; jmeet challenge ges by two participat- the face. The more they (City doors and windows|worth, and the group's president, Cony Lene onda cou he were untrue. jand then asked her the man's! “Did you ever walk in the woods ing communities that they AF€|Lines) lose, the quicker they'll will probably be constructed, Wil-|Mrs, Fraser Pomeroy. ee ion ‘whether the governor called out) The two stars put glitter into/mame. Miss O'Hara said it wal ee Terry? ‘the guard solely to maintain order|the criminal libel trial of the mag-|Enrique Parra. — .or whether it was intende das ajazine yesterday when, their eyes: Parra is a mi a Mexico ‘manéuver to maintain segrega- flashing angrily, they snapped City businessman. Miss O'Hara's ; their denials while testifying for former husband, television exe¢u- |being charged too much, Barry ‘said. Action on the proposed plan to were also rezoned from residen-jset special assessment - district tial to commercial. costs of street paving was tabled Hionaire Mexico! .“Miss Dandridge, I hope you : x * *& will pardon me when I say this, project, in the but is.Mr. Terry a white man or i oe oe ” planning stage five years, is de- ; Pie A last night. -tion. ae ; 70) ei : iq is he a colored *man? 5 . in| Miller told the Council: “I'm ; * Davies, i is second integra- prosecuti tive Will Price, alleged in a child signed to relieve annual flooding r . ‘tion side Sect sale noted that = Se * leumtody suit. that Miss O'Hara ~ * ® 13 south Oakland County commun-|net here to toot the bus com-| A 2%-acre plot located on the) Commissioners said that they corner of Scott Lake and Pontiac s|Lake Rds. and an additional 100 companies — a continual increase/feet of property on M59, extending in the number of automobiles.” | back of the high school, were re- zoned. Two Hundred feet of this land hari been rezoned last year. felt the city engineer had made an excellent start on the estab- lishment of the assessment plan. However, they feel there are a few phases such as price ratios, which must be clarified before any definite acceptance is made.. :Faubus had said the troops were They were the first, and per-|and Parra were living together Summoned only to guard against/hap. the last, celebrities to appear PUt later withdrew the charges ‘violence and property damage —lin the trial of Confidential and|%4 Said they were not true. ‘and not as segregationists or inte--w}, js per magazines and o—, ~~ + * ;grationists. — Hollywood agents Fred and Mar-' Crowley later asked: “Have you! + The outcome of Little Rock’s|jorie Meade. The prosecution ex-/eVer been to Grauman’s Chinese ‘off-and-on-again plans for integra-|nects to complete its rebuttal test- Theater with Mr. Parra?” ;tion apparently will have an ef-\imony today. ANGRY DENIAL fect on proposed racial mixing in : sens oon sets Thursday at 241 ar caneenaer: sasceensaiieg ers Vea ok ute fore rm struc An insurgen g ted Moen rises today at ¢ 22 pm i and the pupils had left in ‘safety. * ‘ jone time to. number 2,000, has Persons met death and ik fought from time to time since Cheam's hard beds stem from * Downtown Tempera tures i | : nearly 300 buildings in Des Loge| «ne tradition Spartan living [October 1953 to loosen Hoffa's gam. Wes soeesecea BT and Cantwell were destroyed or : n. of living trusteeship over Local 614. The $ am..,.... ceca tpm., , 66 | ' , : == . —_— : He peceecaters i damaged by the tornado. “aint Privat noble trusteeship was ordered.then by ‘baa As plans went forward for new most ive e 8c *. Teamsters President Dave Beck Twesda y in Pén tiae jSchools, the, pupils “‘hit the books” in such unfamiliar places as: Four railroad coaches, where Chaucer, Spanish, speech, coin- mercial subjects and industrial arts will be taught. when two 614 officers were con- victed on conspiracy to bribe charges, The anti-Hoffa faction also seck an election of officers from, the rank-and-file, which they say has {As recorded downtown} Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature ......., Weather—Rainy .03 One Year Age in Pontiag Highest temperature ,,..........., : To Push Plan at U.N. WASHINGTON (INS) — Sen. | Hubert H. Humpherey (D-Minn) lay he “has reason to oeseee today ij : . | ” ‘ denied. them since Hoffa took Meee temperetere eB, A fire station, where science witi| Pelieve’’ the U. S.-will press the se ai hg Weather—Showers | gs be explored. : ogee Se ae % = iv The group was unsuccessful in Mighert and Lowest Temperatures | fee The erstwhile office of the St. comnty teas Clee: June in their latest ‘ouster attempt i one on in 974! Joseph Lead Co., the public a ee Si |when some 10 pickets paraded for , ee private , Churches and club] | “@ .... delight days in front of the hall at q Tuesday's Temperature Chart halls, - R Arms : 1410 8. . ee... ie Py eae be ce St Shae eee fe : _Memph. 71) : iry| ‘0! 7 : i Dalia Sr BS Milvaonee 1h i : : |. | Hubert H. Humphrey @-itinn’ [Moscow Sees Eleanor Chie 4) 8 New Orleans $9 43) * * % — "| “The Soviet Union has a nS : : Seetpnett. 8 Sh ew Fork = 94° 13) ae The superintendent’ of the Des| ous stdckpile | MOSCOW (INS) ~ Mrs. Elean- oo ee ee ae | ;' 7 : — : eiehh heal » will dh | or Roosevelt arrived in Moscow Denver 85 MB Phoenix = 1027 dit é Le : ree ee i ie |Loge school district, Marple Agee,| are willing and h b $e 2 et tous fe er a Lae a ae ae ghee that, “The the today, on her first visit to the Retr FE : se +e LE NN 1 ta ieee. Le Can lls aeellaga: te taped oemeenaaee Soviet Union, She was:accom- va a heen fe RUSSIAN JET LEAVING FOR U.§. — The Soviet TU104 twin- — plarfe is scheduled to land at New Jersey's McGuire Air Force Jers and students alike, but—from| United States | panied by Dr. David Gurewitch, | _ 14OT Washington m3) jet airliner takes off from Moscow's Visukova airfield early.today base. It’ will be the first flight-to the United States by a Soviet jan eck ‘standpoint—we'll do| nations — that's an old friend and traveling com- se Tombs “ 8B tor rer its’ first. stop on a ‘flight to the United " The _ civilian plane, eae \ a 'Iwery ey ree a 1 , panion. ne vee? t e ; i) : 4 Ne a ‘ i} “f ‘+ .« “ “ 2 . : ‘ = = ne * \ a : oe a . ae ; LF : \ = ‘ 2 ; L ? : Sy ‘ 3 : 5 a \ 4 1 Pe, rf ‘ ae Aa : TN ye ND oe ee ; oA ‘ e Pr y * ¥ * / : | 7 Cf] 2. ~ Many Hungarians Trek Homeward. NEW YORK «@-—Abdut ~.6,000 Hungarians who fled Hungary in last :fall’s revolt have quit tem- porary camps abroad and re- turned -to. their native land, ac- cording to Donald Kingsley, exec- utive mittee chairman for the Tolstoy undation and former director general of the Interna- ‘tional Refugee Organization, He reperted today on a five-week tour of Austria, Germany, Switzerland and France. . Kingsley said the returned Hun- garians had given up hope of get- ting out of temporary camps. About 125,000 Hungarians fled last fall. More than 50,000 came to the United States. . : The Tolstoy Foundation oper- ates for the benefit of’ Russian ‘ yefugees. Learning Politics Young MONTREAL ( — When about 300,000. youngsters voted to elect mayors at 115 civic playgrounds, there was one report of “‘irregu- larities."’" Balloting at Campbell East Park was rescheduled. ‘Parent, 4 j ees By PHYLUS BATTELLE - ROUTE 9, N. Y¥. €INS) — Lest anyone doubt that today’s child can outwit its parents—while i parents outnit-wit the child — he should visit a roadside attraction called “Sforytown, U.S.A.” tureland, are recreations of most mr model—want to be grown-up. The one has seen enough ‘of. life, to yearn to withdraw from it awhile’ and make believe that bears~are S| 201 little, and: that wojves are just ventriloquists with extra hair. The other, having seen life only on the screen, wants to get into Here, on 50 acres of hilly P@S-\it realistically, to walk the streets i THE PONTIAC! betwixt -the badmen, ‘feel the hot sting of carbonation in ° their throats, to dirty their shoes in earthiness. : AND EN 25 YEARS ... Twenty-five. years from now (presuming today's children should live so long) they'll be sentimental day’s PRESS, WEDNE ‘ 1 \ Child Trade Places in ‘Storytown isissies like their parents are, re- veling in ‘the innocent joy of seeing lost fairy-tales reconstructed for only $1.35. But right now, at Storyland, U.S.A., the kiddies are upholding a poetic theory of ours which goes: The youngster of the umodern et - SDAY. SEPTEMBER 4, 1957-5 | ‘A stem. sophisticate. No longer are his eyes amaze At stories that. relate Of Bluebeard snuffing out a wife, Of tails cut off witha carving knife; He life . Served faw upon his plate. wants a slice At gruesome mad ‘ {4 ae ae oo - x rae fe ee ss | ian Te ’ ing! Insutt to tn: DENVER, Colo, — You'll never convince Geary L. Schade, twice in the same ‘place. Schade missed $120 from his top- he returned to the tayern, two men told Schade they knew "who had the money. ; The two men drove Schade. to a residential area, stopped the es 57, that lightning never strikes) coat pocket as he left a bar. As No gummy, taste or feeling. It's acid). Does not sour. te odor” (denfure breath). Get FAS~- TEETH todsy at ony rug of the fairy tales that once avere kicked around the family hearth, before TV became bigger than the produce problems of the old 4weman who tived in the shoe, Who goes ga-ga over this op- | portunity to ride in Cinderella’s pumpkin, feed the three little pigs and discuss the enormity of his eyes with the wolf in grand- + ma’s clothing? Mother and father, of _ course.| The children, nurtured by -televi- sion amd psychology to take a! more. realistic view of life, aren't { * *« ww °° | described as the hurried - man’s) “Disneyland,” is located on Route | 9 just south of historic ol’ Lake George, and is divided into two 14 KARAT GOLD Matched WEDDING RINGS Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. 74 ~N. Saginaw $t. |sections , , . ‘Mother Goose Land,” tumbling Jack and Jill, Mary and /DOESN’T WORK THAT WAY | “The way ‘the owner, Charles. Wood, planned it,” said proprietor, Neil Smith, ‘‘the Mother Goose) ‘section was for the children and the Ghost Town was for the adults. | It works the other way around. 'The kids wait till their fathers are) maybe feeding then they rush off to have a coke in ; j quite with it. | “Storytown’’ which might be} 1. Bridal Gown 2. and Veil . | Dani McGrew’s saloon, and watch) the action. = ' “We lose more way.” Famouk- OLD CROW 86 Proof isas as any whiskey "you are drinking . now! Not only is it as.mild ~—but it has tHe in-. comparable flavor only found in fine bourbon! OLD CROW DIST. CO., FRANKFORT, KY., DISTRIBUTED BY NAT. DIST. PROD. CORP. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY Smith “says. A veteran of six years with another roadside at- traction, “Santa’s Workshop” in the more northern he believes this is a_ typical breakdown on attendance at most so-called children’s play- | lands, 4 | It's very simple. Adults want to |be children again, and children— ‘especially the current, savvier State Traffic 7 Toll Dropping But Official Warns That. | Next Four Months Are. | Worst for Accidents | LANSING WW — Michigan's traf- fie death toll continued to drop last month, falling 33 under the total for August of 1956, state Police Commissioner Joseph A. Provisional figures compiled by) State Police showed 126 persons) August, compared with 159 in the’ same month last year. For the first eight motths of © the year, Childs said, accidents | claimed 952 lives on Michigan | highways, a saving of 179 for the | same period of 1956. { } remaining four months of the year! are the worst for traffic accidents. | “These four months have, on the average, accounted for nearly 40, per cent of the annual traffic toll, with October and November the worst. months,"’ he said. f The commissioner complimented) Michigan motorists for holding the| death toll to 14 for the Labor Day weekend. : Last year 1,747 persons were! killed in traffic accidents in the state.-The State Police goal is to cut that figure by 10 per cent this. year. (Advertisement) (Advertisement) CONSTI new laxative discovery un-locks bowel blocks without gag, Constipation. is caused by what doctors call a “thrifty” colon, A “thrifty” colon is one that, instead of retaining moisture as it should, does the opposite: robs the colon of so much moistre that its con- tents become dehydrated, so dry that they block the bowel; so shrunken that they fail to excite or stimulate the urge to purge that propels and ex. pels waste from your body. (al .TO REGAIN NORMAL REGU- LARITY two things are neces- sary. First, the dry, shrunken contents of your colon which now block your bowel must be re-moistened. Second, bulk must be brought.to, your colon to S-T-R-E-T-C-H STIMULATE it and so,.excite its muscles. to action; to a normal urge to purge. ONLY A BULK LAXATIVE can 1) re-moisten this dry, shrunken waste and 2) supply vital bulk to re-create a nor- mal urge to purge, And; of all ‘bulk, laxatives, COLONAID, ‘the PATED? bloat or gripe amazing new lavative discov- ery is so effective that it relieves evenchronic consti- | pation overnight, yet is so | smooth, so gentle it has been | roved safe even -for women i n the most critical stages of pregnancy. SUPERIOR TO OLD STYLE bulk, ‘salt or drug laxatives, COLONAID neither gags, bloats | nor gripes; does not interfere | with your absorption of vita- mins and ‘other valuable food Childs reports. = i. ] lost their lives in traffic during | Childs warned, however, that | nutrients; and in clinical tests, did not cause rash or other side reactions. A IT’S A PHYSIOLOGICAL FACT: Exercise tones your body! And COLONAID exercises your colon to tone it ognons consti- : pation, overnight! Whether occasional, frequent or chron- ic, whatever your degree of . constipation, get COLONAID, in easy-to-take tablet form at any drug counter, today! The pe only 98¢ for the econom- - tablet brings yea positive setlef ot tees then 2c per tablet. ‘ Bed 3.. 8” Doll in Pajamas Panties, Shoes - and Socks (Dress her in costumes shown) Many More Costumes Available! ca Values from 1.00 HUNDREDS ‘Afternoon Dress and Hat | : 5. Afternoon & Dress. 4 we os Md 6. Trailer and 7. 8-Pc. Plastic Car Set Picnic Set 2. ' parents that) ‘ ° ae In four years of - operation, | ; * | Storytown has drawn “about | three adults fer every child,” BUY NOW! ‘Save for Christmas Gifts, “ Birthdays! each to 2.50! Layaway 5 or More Toys Now! "8 Seo a VA ie & ee FiELOGIASIE SUS Duck Pin Bowling Set. 10. Gun and. Holster Set Friction Load Lift Tractor 8, Pc. Cleaning Set” Ue 7 SALE! It’s true! Top quality toys at a rub-your-eyes low price! Plenty of action for every youngster! Use for gifts, party prizes, rewards for errands. Buy now, save for holiday gift-giving... there’s a toy for everyone on your list. Come in today while this lasts! huge selection Order by Number OF TOYS TO SELECT FROM! 23. Steel Telephone ». 30. Take Apart Tug | 31. Plastic Sail rt 32. Bingo Game 33. Binoculars! 34. . Skill Ball Game MAIL OR’ PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED ON 5 OR MORE TOYS! PHONE FE 4-2511!. | WAITE’S ... DOWNSTAIRS! \ r \ “% r ee rs (ONO Ae ec et + THE PONTIAC: PRESS, WEONESD NY, SEPTEMBER gore Sea: heer ee, ; : s 5 > io ' iy Le ee : - e * od iS 5 i oS Es 'é ‘ f é g + 4 GN eR, wee « 1G uits Hollywood to Write Novels M ANGUBT Say be of sugar-coating for the facts. itytacts, and how to find and use|the ‘i and troge cooked LooK FOR YOUR LETTER is the facts that interest me. them.” whole in coremmnal eos. can: sell to Hollywood and become worked on some 100 pictures after! ‘My pleasure in writing is the} As a result of his interminable) fe ee an earlier career aS a newsman delight in recreating a lost world/research Van Every lards his nov- “hey alin enjved moog sou . FROM. » Dale Van Every, a top author-/here and in Washington, D. C. The|—the period between 1780 andjels with such interesting facts as/boiled dog’s head, and turkey eggs : ; ity on America’s frontier, ‘novels have sold more than two/18ll, when America Teally be-/why Indians daubed a captive’sjeaten the day before they -were eden ‘ did it the other way. He quit a/million copies. came a nation. head with clay before burning him/due to hatch,” added Van Every, is ee Pap! get $75,000-a-year job in Hollywood in x * &. “Everyone knows about the/at the stake. It was to pteserve|who is a steak man himself. ‘ rious 1943 to become a historical novel-/ Qne of the ironies of his suc-|frontier of the later West—the|the scalp! Indians rarely violated] The novelist recently sold his ; oS < te val . ist. . cess as a novelist is that some Covered wagon, the stage coach,/a white female captive in order/home in Santa Barbara, Calif., ; _ ew wd at we « *% * critics, aware ‘of his Hollywood|the cowboy and the horse Indian./to preserve their own -purity, ani plans to spend a year or two . Sean cols tots wae. “| was making $1,500 a week—|background, feel his books have EARLIER FRONTIER _ used crocs wandering the world with his wife. ; Coming tomorrow Pn ty - fern yearte gut which made me a working picture|been written with an eye for the) «51+ even the college professors = a Lally Indians oe I'm too young & settle down, ; LIFE ie esrtts ce. writer, not a celebrity,” be re-|film market. Van Every says that) dont know too. much about the|°’ “S delicacies the eyeballs of'he said. . Le : to get marked drily. “My only regret actually the exact opposite is true.) .. ier West, the frontier east of _vegetasiy tab sole ak ak now is that I didn’t quit sooner.”| “None of my novels have been!in. Mississippi—the West of the’ your one chance fer a Maric Van Every, now 61, has written/sold to the movies,” he pointed), cade, the flatboat, the long FE regy) six ee most recent is'out. “I use fiction only as a kind) ine the time when the. Indians - 3 : outnhumbéred and were stronger Sau A vy. than the white settlers and won LIGIOUS PRUIT co get Powers Reds i in ICBM Race every battle except the,last one.” of & copy. .| Van Every, whose grandfather’s| wt @ year to get d grandfather was a Tory fighter in’ -euiarty for only 10¢ a copy. | LI Missile Boss. Respecte the Revolution, has been interest-| It’ 's your one chance for a year to get ‘\ed in this little-known period since LIFE regularly for only 10¢ a copy. ; _|boyhood, Thanks to his profitable Tt's your one chance for a yeat te get . By INTERNATIONAL NEWS | (all his energies on the ICBM proj-| years in the Hollywood -vineyard, | LIFE regularly for only 10¢ a copy.| LIFE Russia’s announcement that she ect. he was able to assemble one of It's your one chance for a year to get successfully tested the “ultimate The missile chief — he is an (the nation’s finest private histori. LIFE regularly for only 10¢ a copy. weapon” — the intercontinental) artittery officer—is said to have cal libraries. It's your qn¢ chance for a year to get | ballistic missile — gave informed! greg 9 1,500-mile intermediate * sk * LIFE regularly for only 104 a copy. Westerners new cause to respect) pange missile from a Russian | A methodical raftsman, he It's one chance for a year to get a little-known Soviet soldier-scien-| .iymarine in 1955. writes five drafts of each novel, 'E regularly for onjy 104 a copy. tist. nae sometimes spends three or four It's your one chance for a year to get . t the Rus-|, Techniques used in building an\ days checking to be sure he has LIFE regularly for only 10¢ 9 copy. fiafly for only 104 . i oe net ae crucial intercontinental missile can be aP-|, “detail of frontier. life exactly It’s your one chance for a year to get Pit's yr one chance for a year t@et | It’s your one char a year to get on pepo aaa plied to the construction of a space right. eg EE : : adbanpeny Sandy sngctacs con ew ears Geaater dha rulg rls & 1 ba ba rocket and Blagonravov's group) «New c training fs the beet > Te addi delen te. ‘z It’s your one chance for a year t@ our one chance fer a year iqyour AK ayear . - powered by the driving force of | apparently already has made for oem leuuine © Is the bes] 4 FRE Wie; F p J B43: >. 4 ELEGRAF H on LIFE regularly for only 104 a copy. | LI E regularly for only 10¢ a copy. FErregularh 0¢ a copy.' | Lt. Gen. Anatoli A. Blagonravov, e head of the Soviet Missile Develop- " ment Command, Blagonravov's activities are veiled in secrecy. But enough in- Board fo Study Rezoning Plans Waterford Township to Consider Requests at - Tonight's Meeting WATERFORD TOWN SHIP — A 22-acre plot located on Wil- progress in that field. REWARDED HANDSOMELY ment has.rewarded the 63-year-old general handsomely for this and other accomplishments. He is a member of the. Supreme Soviet (parliament), is president of the Academy of Artillery Science and, a decade ago, was named to the Soviet Union's Academy of Science —top science body in the USSR. In the course of his career, Bilagonravov also picked up many medals, including at least three orders of Lenin. ; He was born June 1, 18%, in the Ukrainian town of An-Zodo. He was graduated from the czarist Mik- hailovskaya Artillery College be- fore the Bolshevik revolution, but apparently switched sides when the Reds grabbed control of the country. . In 1927 the soldier-scientist was i irport graduated from the artillery faculty ary barony grainy rane of the Military Technical Academy. Then he joined the staff and worked tracks has been approved. by the township zoning board and the Oakland County Planning Commis- ‘his way up through the ranks to head the small arms faculty. "A doctor of technical sciences, Blagonravovy has written 2% selentific works, mainly in the In 1954 the board approved the} rezoning of 200 feet of this land and petitions have been filed for the remaining 100 feet to be changed from residential to coni- mercial. The resening of 1'4 acres of land on Walton boulévard is still up in the air pending an agree- ment with the owner and the township regarding a greenbelt surrounding the proposed gas station. Highland Estates Subdivision, lo- cated on M59 and Airport road has presented anocher of its five sub- division plats for board approval. be There are 77 lots included in the new subdivision No. 3. * * * time Blagonravov left the Soviet Union was last December, when he attended a missiles congress in Paris with a group of Russian scientists, 3 New Polio Cases Reported This Week Three more polio cases were added to the 1957 area list during the week which ended August 23. Dr. John D. Monroe, director of public health, reports the two cases developed. in Pontiac. In the couhty, Pontiac Township recorded one, bringing the total 1957 county ‘cases of the disease to 10 com- pared with the 11 the same time last year. Other communicable diseases re- ported during that week in ithe county and city include: said. “It teaches you a respect for An appreciative Soviet govern-| Fat * abe who can = pay any price say: There will be some 300 houses ses i Eres. Your and a complete shopping center) oni — woe fe : when the project has been com-|Gonermhea to} pleted, according to contractors on! Mose eeciareeieceey 3 ° - the job. ere So weceeees ; 4 : formation has filtered through to Syph ae ‘3 “9 0 show that he has not concentrated wh ee : r) ng nucleoats gers ; ; @ e e mat Beer. Year Age he un 3 1 2 2 bd Here’s ‘Mass’ Longevity : LTPCHING Sunburn: Heat Rash Poison Ivy- Chafing Relieve Fiery Misery Fast With Soothing Lanoloted RESINOL Medicinal OINTMENT TOLEDO, Ohio (®—Three of the four boys who served the first Mass in St. Joseph’s Roman Cath- olie Church at nearby Maumee on Christmas in 1889 are -still living in the parish. They: are George Raab, George Pauken and John Michels, REPAIR YOUR ROOF. GIVE IT NEW LIFE Why? Because this 1957 Ford gives you the advanced features, the solid ride, the effortless handling that you once expected to find only in expensive cars. And when it _ comes to looks, where in all the world can you find fresher styling than in the sculptured-in-steel lines of this smart. new Ford? Or consider Ford’s famous V-8 engine. No other = _ “ manufacturer in the industry today electronically balances . every V-8 engine, while operating under its own power, the way that Ford does. This means you get a smoother- paeins epine—the facet V5 in Fouts 3 7et ot V-8 leadership. = * These are only a few ofthe important hidden values that are yours in Ford. But they indicate why so many people who can pay almost any price for a car—people who have driven expensive cars for years—are buying Ford today. Action Test this great performing car at your Ford Dealer’s just once and you, too, will ask, “Pay more ... what for?” ° ! Ford’s superiority is evident in many places. In the vital rear axle, the pinion gear that turns the rear wheels is straddle-mounted .. . supported between two anti- friction bearings instead of being “overhung” from a single bearing. This makes operation quieter, smoother and longer-lasting. It’s a feature that Ford shares with only one other car maker—Rolls Royce. TO BATTLE WEATHER'S STORM AND S TRIFE | ® LOCAt TRADEMARKS, Inc. Y A BENSON CO.INC. ALS LUMBER * Buctdirs SUPPLIES “FUEL _ 549 N 4AG NAW $7 ac [6 Mich % FES 2521 YOU CAN SPEND wanes | MORE... BUT YOU CAN'T BUY BETTER THAN THE NEW KIND OF FORD whe, = ‘SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER i = . i j z : : | : 7 a = ss ~ ’ ; ” le : on , _|séction of sh it would have beenjsorbed us constantly when we were/out first.’ I don't Bab Considine ad : considered heresy to send a child|in school: coming out first, out first. I want to to dancing school or pay out good xs 2 ®t. jother fellows — get money to teach him fiddle. So we; “Pop,” one of them said as he'good, not ‘too bad. Ss C) oo Cc tT Dra le O e r | la S _ |played with the tools the’ city had/ wag measured for a school jacket | other fellows.” — oO "|equipped, Terminal Playground| a bit of raiment which could have|, Jeeves, my glippers | I with, and \when it turned dark each) bewildered us in the past), “Don't| good sort, and pull that t rocking . NEW _ absent that first at 21; C) gives man the|man the right to EST, RIE koa vege plage gegen poapear bey who dpe ‘comingichair over here a bit. sy YORE NS) — mt mt ave De ny 1, © ce or” you could find a sensitive spot hes @ life so crowded it is a won-| : to ‘gchool. If I bad. the time none of these . , . in the south just/ple of the squth owned slaves. on the Galena. Only one family der he or she ever has time’ to and was a bit shorter and brighter The American Weekly ran @ | hefore Civil War, the per- on our bleck had an automobile. (crack a book, centage ves TOUGHER TODAY It was a Moon touring car owned * * * 4 of ecole omni : RC WELDERS less than one quarter; B)| The school child of today has a) by » family named Reavis. It is a wonder, too, that the A ke set I travel in could have passed one-half; C) three quarters, and|tougher than we had, some- : Z for’ ever yg Prosgualh it, D) all. i ‘body occasionally point out A movie was a rare treat ‘coti-|child, , becomes educated enough ©) GROUP HOSPITALIZATION, PAID ane ene tk in the ot widespread con-|fined to a Sunday afternoon. There|misspell, Had a note from a young HOLIDAY, VACATION PAY there for the asking. For example: the Louisiana Pur-| . was no juke box at the corner, ’ : ; demnation of them as the inferiors friend recently who, having weath- | Be ee a (cane ctoden "al thats present-|: Rak to the sevens arate WPwl cs shate Senahagin, Wee ths penc-jene We Selephene Wes wincthing) is echool training, andl Appl vend iol toe books T Muasididay states except A) Beutb Delve: igo 0 tot of wa, In afvedd, SOWMYncy’ denied “our t Wing 30 n9et eleliy tor emeepencios, ee eae as. thea ppty: read 30 years ago and now|B) Mississippi; Louisiana those % know Mississi study together not as something to w away ~ at won't read for fear of missing;D) Iowa .-. . What did the ex- p seared the ee pete — Sour each pager the hours, Our ae was touch-jhe planned‘to go to “‘collich” in) P ARAGON CONSTRUCTION co. what's going on this minut e,|pression ‘5040 or refer to? . helping the next youngest. able by anyone with moderately|the fall. I've noticed, talking to) 44000 Grand River, Novi, Mich. - Beowulf to Thomas Hardy, let’s|... ..The constitution of the United|5040 or fight concerned a line of ial long arms. Our distractions were|our own kids and ‘their friends, | Phones: Northville 2910 — WO 3-3515 gay. I'd like another stab at Al- States A) declares all. men free/latitude, between Oregon and Can-| There was no TV. Radio was |limited. that they have little interest in, | gebra, from the first lesson on. and equal; B) establishes voting|ada, the constitution “gives each; something you listened to oc- | In our block in the *swampoodle!achieving a position which ab-| Fresh! Young! Tender! Cleaned, ready to cook. Rushed refriger- , ated fo reach you flavor fresh. A real budget saver value at this Kroger low price. ~ Legs & Thighs » &Q« Ring Bologna Plump and tender, farm-fresh . . » « Hygrade’s plain or garlic . . 2. 2 ee o> Apex Hams 79c Sliced Ham 8-10-Ib. average Smoked, lean, sugar cured’ , Liquid Starch gust, 29: Kroger everyday low, low price . .... > Cookies S830 42 3Q¢ Delicious with milk or ice cream .... 2 Kotex ae ATs Sliced Bacon a . Cho ed Steaks ‘Wak. 79: =e Kroger everyday low, low price . ..... | Hygrede’s lean, old favorite brand =. 69c weP Pe tireen set ee on 3 Kleenex a tig 2/° E 4 Soft and highly absorbent .........: Hot Dogs ine 53° Plumrose Ham ya yates Greenfiel@’s skinless, all meat . . . « Ready to eat, canned . . . . Toilet Tissue onser Am 53° : ef Kroger everyday low, low price | Table Napkins Smoked H Gd m S 4 IDEAL FOR BACK TO SCHOOL LUNCHES . | Kroger everyday low, low price . c 49 Corned Beef .. - 65 = Kleenex Towels | Se off regular price . . . TY) 101 mL TTITTT AT KROGER! /*) J Vanilla Wafers as 5‘ and 10‘ KROGER VEGETABLE SALE! Cg Pheiffer:Dréssing Perfect for all your-salads ee @ @© © © #8 «© » TENDER, FARM-FRESH EARS CRISP, GARDEN-FRESH Liquid. Trend Sweet Corn... « 5* Carrots.... ~ 10°H iat adores , Kroger everyday low, low price . SLICING OR PICKLING TENDER, GARDEN.FRESH \ i .. 5* Eggplant... ~ 10° euennnient 3 i BIG, TENDER, GARDEN-FRESH , FINE FOR SALADS OR SNACKS owe elneart 20a 2 Green Pepper 5* Red Radishes = 10° Gi Hydrox Cookies ae PLUMP AND JUICY, VALUE PRICE MICHIGAN, HOMEGROWN o / Miracle Whip a Bartlett Pears _“ 5 Onions = 10° NY a Cocktail Segruis E CRISP, FINE FOR A GARNISH FINE FOR BAKING WITH BUTTER. 7 sre 7 Instant suds for dishes . ....., + Baby Food ~ 6: Just the thing for baby . , RECIPE NO. =; Duncan Hines 2 Frexcx Ereee DRESSING . 4 Everyday low price Parsley... . 5: Squash.... ~ 10° SPECIALLY PRICED ALL THIS WEEK! >. e¢ © © © #@ © #8 @ @ Liquid Detergent E | New! Fels. Special offer 5c off oe @ #® # #@ FOR ALL SCUFFED SHOES SCUFFY Shoe Polish Just wipe Scuffy on, ee w $179 White Bread Raised Donuts [Seed 5s I cites Des QI mrcmmisr ~ BBs Golden Visor 50 u sQe Smsta. Fiesta Bar Cake ume 35° Wheat Bread ae Oe tas 5< Peet Moss - 25 * s 79: | « 25° Budget value, Kroger baked’... 44.5. + Fresh Kroger sliced . Michigan, Kroger low price . DAY AFTER DAY, ITEM AFTER ITEM, PRICES ARE LOWER AT KROGER! , We reserve the right to bey oe Prices effective through an September 8, 1937 levee ge eS ‘es. \ 1 oe Rg: is, * € + we eo Ete. ‘ : a ues : ns . : Sey 2 ‘ f & = Pige jt : i = PES Miss Bee Wilson PERMA-LIFT STYLIST YOU ARE INVITED to consult with MISS BEE WILSON PEAMA-LIFT Educational Counselor who will be at our store all day tomorrow THURSDAY, SEPT. 5th Consult with Her for Perfect ‘ Fitting and Helpful Suggestions on ' PERMA-LIFT BRAS and GIRDLES PEGGY'S te wORTH SAGINAW 51. PADDED “added attraction” Bra ) By PERMA-LIFT A and B Cups 32 to 36 BRASSIERES THE LIFT THAT NEVER LETS YOU DOWN Adds to your charms naturally, without exaggeration. Styled with precision cut, and'tailored foam rubber pads. In cotton. PEGGY'S. te WORTH sagimaw 51. | $7.45 a “ as og Me . i r * " 3 * Ce Be a as ee ees : : i : aS ees : 40 f “ge | tee Sy : 4 ; « 7 ié roe \ He : Pies ; as : - ~ en ‘ : i | f . if eo ‘ ee : ; ‘ : Dn bo. 3 4 {a * ere { | ) | VW | 3 | | | | a | | “i j . a ; J | i at a : C : ; ; “! . ' — PI “ , =. 4 - : * .™ _— 4 e ( poke Ita Daily “Must? . Beauty Routine Is Girl's | BY JOSEPHINE LOWMAN : : | This week I already have called] uniess ves thought attention to the importance of ex-lesetin” * No ae ercise, being outdoors and good nutrition for the business girl or ‘wuman. Lack of thes¢ are her three greatest hazards. | She should work as much exer- cise and activity into her daily life as possible. She CAN have New Hair Styles | Direct From. Paris FEATHER CUT || COLD WAVES | °7"" 101 Complete | “Where Service and Quality Are Supreme’ Open Friday THI 9 P. M. 3 | No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service! || Andre Beauty CSalon _PHONE 2nd Floor Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 5-9257 od THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4,'1957"_ splendid nutrition but she is al-jevident that arising a half hour|benefit can be derived by taking "a eae _ 4Placeforlroner = Best Betizsee2s.2~ — . en automatic ironer now ig attractive eR ae a Wiens 8 | jresistant finish. The front of the os [Living Room Now resistant finish. |The front of the tor fabric and framed in .hatd- es _Jenough for the living room. Always use plastic utensils to . t has Been designed into a fur.|°PP {0d out of a vacuum insu- niture cabinet and is available in/!@ted container, Metal objects, el such as a spoon or fork, may seratch the glass lining. = WHAT IS YOUR : " 4 Fi z i i f E i E i It’s Easier and It Takes Less Time ATTEND FREE DEMONSTRATION ‘~ ‘Monday, September 9 at 7:00 PM. | The Business Institute 7 West Lawrence Street, Pontiac. . Phone FE 2-3551 Call at Olfice or Retura This Ad for Iniormation . | 5 § tH a SEs NOTICE DR. HAROLD BUSSEY 9 BSSEF MELE are for shoes... STAPP'S ... _ Mom and Dad—here are the shoes for your fleet- footed fledglings. Value built for comfort and wear. Value packed —_ with new styling, too! TO-SCHOOLY headquarters ‘ BLACKWRAWK = Red or Black Calf one strap for young miss to step off to school. $645 A new twin-strap in Brown of Red. Fall school styling. 3" $645 Directly below the new school time, date - time Casual by Active Maid. Red Loafer. “ an $ ] 4 5 sizes 1242 -3 B-D $7.45 Left—New Brown or Black Moc - Tie. Wonderful new sole and heel fit. and com- "$645 sizes 8%-12 B-E sizes 1242-3 B s 1 -E Wing-tip smart- ness in heavy black feather. A foot- ball hero’s must. Active Maid brings you the new | grey oxfords below to give you cheers from the admiring crowd, sizes 844-12 wna tes POAS $7.45 Every Pair of Shoes Accurately Fitted by Stapp’s Trained Staff! All Styles at | BOTH 7 Shoe tores Sta JUVENILE BOOTERY 2 28 E. Lawrence St. } (Open Fri. and Mon. to 9) and: FAMILY SHQE STORE 928 W, Huron St- | (OpenFri, and Sat. to 9) STAPP'S - oa \ : ; : ; eu ( ee +. ©; i é a ps oe te Sr ‘ Ho « os ‘ va say? *- Optometrist HS HAS OPENED HIS NEW OFFICE For Better Service for His Friends and Patients RIGHT ACROSS THE STREET — NEXT TO THE OAKLAND THEATER 3 $ 8 Hl i ile ® 6 finishes may also be added to a whether tht ish i durable or 559 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-0127 Se Guan "TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND plied washing or drycleaning. Let the label be your guide to INTERMEDIATE POINTS : better Permanents | pes - COMPLETE WITH CUT AND SET '” NONE HIGHER You Get All This: AIR CONDITIONED %& Custom Haireut * Styled Set % Permanent by an ‘% Our Famous Guarantee, Experienced, Licensed a Wave for $3.75 Operator None igo . WAVE | HOLLYWOO! SHOP | | 78% N. SAGINAW , (Over'Bazley’s). . ' . + i as < £ . < t au ; 5 ea \ \ : i j i | : ee : ; ; gh epee 5s i = a #. a < x % oN re Bees S he os y Ges OS ee ate, eae % 2 i oe ee Ye “e ; Pd 3 By DOUGLAS LARSEN’ Ww GTON (NEA) — “It’s like trying to design a bullet that will hit another bullet in flight.” scribe the problem of developing the anti-missile missile that will ‘kill either the Intercontinental Bal- listic Missile, which Russia claims to have: tested, or the Intermediate . Range Ballistic Missile. The ICBM presents a dismay- ingly difficult target. Until re- cently, many qualified ‘scientists believed defense against it was impossible. Now they are opti- mistic. , As * * The ICBM will travel about 25— times the speed of sound—about 15,000 miles an hour—almost 30 times faster than the manned bomber aircraft operational today. This speed would take it from Siberia to Seattle in about 10 min- utes, from New York te Washing- ton in about one minute. * * * Once launched, it will be im- mune to radar “jamming” and similar counter-measures. It will reach heights of perhaps 1,000 miles, and spend most of its brief flighttime in the icy vacuum of outer space. As it re-enters the atmosphere, - it will crash down on its target like’ a shooting star. The Intermediate Range Missile will present much the same prob- lems as a target—except that its speed will be only about 10,000 miles an hour, and its peak alti- tude only several hundred miles. But since its flight time is even shorter than the ICBM’s, there is less warning time to deal with it. MAN-MADE? = Both ICBM and IRBM are diffi- cult objects for radar to recoghize because of their low reflectance of und and kill the enemy in the air. the early 1960s. __@HE PONTIAC . a — ss - i — < 2 oS ; . ‘ i \y* i ‘ . * i isstle ritt Another Une tn ritignt and operational use some time in| be simply an extension and de-| A recent unclassified Army di-) | velopment of their existing Nike (rective included a name for |Inew and not further identified! worries Army missilemen — and PRESS, “WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1957 imember of the Nike family—Nike Zeus—which may be the anti-mis- e || sile missile developing out of Nike Ajax and Nike Hercules, the pres- ‘ent anti-aircraft missiles. |. There is only. one element of the & anti-missile missile problem that They feel that their missile will | system. pond is the “Roles and. Missions’ |sidered to’ dpply ‘only: to’ defense directive issued by Defense Sec-|against planes, Whether new Sec-’ retary Wilson on Nov, 26, 1956. . retary of Defense Neil McElroy: it limits the Army to a hori- | ie clan 4a As Aap zontal range of 100 nautical miles | will app ly it also to defense aaneet in its surface-to-air missile de- Missiles is still not known, fense systems. Next: How far should the k/ntil now, this has been con-| Army fire its missiles? to NIKE-HERCULES: Its job: radio waves. In addition, a way must be found for radar to dis- tinguish between man-made mis- siles and the largér of the natural meteorites which plunge into our atmosphere by the thousands every 24 hours, * * * An anti-missile missile must be able to detonate harmlessly in empty space the thermonuclear warhead of an ICBM or IRBM — or to neutralize the warhead so that it won't explode at all, _ All these. requirements will push to the limit the scientific imagination and engineering gen- ius of the anti-missile missile de- signers. The best way to under- stand their problem is to assume an actual combat situation. An ICBM leaps from its lair near Leningrad—target: Chicago. In about 20 minutes, the Loop will be vaporized, and the area. for miles around will be flattened—; unless the ICBM is stopped, JUST 20 MINUTES There will be less than 20 min- utes to confirm that an ICBM is on the way over the top of the world, to plot its course and to launch an anti -: missile missile. Every second the ICBM races four miles closer. There is no time to waste on slow and inexact human reac- tions. The entire defense system will be a marvel of automation, with the human supervisors ex- ercising only veto r—power te halt the launching. In 20 minutes, or less, the duelf is over. Either the ICBM is de- stroyed—or Chicago is. The three “radar fences’ pro- tecting the polar approaches tc America against aircraft can be adapted to gear into such an anti- missile missile system. TIME PRECIOUS These, the Pinetree Line, Mid- Canada Line and Dew Line (Dis- tant Early Warning Line), can save precious minutes in launching} the anti-missile missile. Army missile scientists who have been working the problem for several years are confident they missile by the time the Russians can get their ICBM into production “MILLER’S and style. weaves. " pate here before you buy. 144 Qakland Ave. Elegant New Living Room Suites— Sectional Sofas and Separate Sofas! - Bench built and hand crafted for years of comfort Gorgeous covers in latest colors and’ Select yours now while September Savings Sale prices are lowest.. Shop around first if you wish, then com- Open Friday Evenings . Closed Wednesday ‘Afternoons Miller Furniture — | Our 2st Year of Greater Value Giving” = 144 Oakland Ave. Ds You'll be glad you did. ' ee Ceoretul Free Delivery | Corner Posts with Fittings ...... ES ROEBUCK EM. Reg. 8.95 vinyl plastic, opens at a Fits ail doorways up to ba wide and §0-inches high Galvanized Guttering 10-ft. Length of Homart — 1 Save $2 on Homart Folding Doors 6” Space saving Homart in durable touch. 32-in Save! 99 Box style heavy gauge galvanized steel. Quick and easy to install. Replace worn out gutters now. Protect your home, lawn and property. Other gtyles available at Sears lower prices! Rainpipe in 10 ft. lengths ee ee ee ee ee You can count on DAVID BRADLEY FENCIN for dependable protection *s we Mer a e ow = .* 5 x. ° Put a Fence Around Your Future CHAIN LINK FENCIN * Posts, Top Rail, Loop Caps and All Ties ¥ Heavily Galvanized, Lasts for Years J “Good Fences Make Good Neighbors” Protect your children and beautify your home with David Bradley Chain Link Fettte in your choice of . 36, 42 and 48-inch. ‘Discourages climbing, keeps children out ‘of mischief while it protects your property! Ask about installation by Sears experts at heights . . slight additional cost. Call for estimate. End Posts with Fittings ........ .. @@. ea. Sears Fence Department — Perry St. Basement 97: ft. dv Use Sears Modernization Credit Plan G this $6 $7 . ¢ ON SALE THURS. FRI. and SAT. | ome improvement All the materials and supplies you need for home improvement from roof to basement, front to rear, inside and outside. oS sein ea 4 2 er b 1 0% Off! 3-in-| SHIN ¥.Homart—Sold Exclusively by Sears ¥ Final Week of Building Sale Now-——you can beautify and protect your home with Homart 3-in;1 shingles at Sears Sale price! Easy to install, instruc- tions included with each bundle. Choose Yeu color. Poe RENTER ee TEN: ” oe 5 3 We All the financing for mejor improvements — no money down, 36 months to payi Sears Modernizing Credit Plan. inquire now! — * ; * . anal GLES Reg: 3.33 Bndl. 530, J Regularly at $8 Bndl Choice of 3 colors for beauty and protection, helps save up 20 fuel bills too! other cx Insulated Siding Sale Homart Applied Roofing d 10-¥r. Guarantee As Low As Save !0°% on roofing applied 20 P by Sears experts Wide $ choice of colors and styles on i . . : . Mo. badi. | Homart Genuine Ceramic Wall Tile Reg. 79 TA: eautiful china-lke permanent siain, Spacers assure tit. Choose yours at Sears $q. Ft, C mnisn as your Lome burn ertesh ae bahia AL La Sale! Rock Wool Pellets to | Insulate Your Attic Floor Pe House stays warmer in winter, cooler in summer, you insulate with easy-to-use rock wool pellets! covers 40-square feet. Get yours during, this sale! Rock Wool Batts (Carton Covers 50 Sq. Ft.).... 3.99 Reg. 2.09 1” Bag when Bag _ MASTER MIXED HOUSE paint Our Finest One- Coat House Paint « Barn, House Paint coies 6,39 Caton Batten 69GB cratumeny B2..95 Our very best! One-coct Bright Vermont Red Durable An extengr trim .paint ‘haf Integral piston type hides even black. Fume proot, bright color. Alkyd-linseed 1! aives a bright gle with 45-HP motor. Easy mildew resistant for added formula with long lasting pig- tive coat against dle.on inside or outside jobs. protectior 8 « & ments ior long wear See it —; bay it at Sear: Complete with hos Complete Craftsman Home Spray Kit at 10.43 Savings ; Easy Terms . a Includes sprayer, cart, gun, hose, dropcloth, masking . tape, tirpolene, paint pot, tire chuck, viscosimeter, “How to Spray” book. All packed in one easy-to-carry package. Save'on a complete spraying kit: Paint Department — Seuts Basement Regularly at 70.38 for this Combination Reg. Sic ¢ Ea. Reg. 5.95 9x9-in. Tile >) * 4.44 Ideal tor basemen! floors Last- Simply hack-saw stock length ing beauty. Black, brown railings to size ond assemble In 4-foot length Save at Sears. _ Med. Colors, Reg. 8e.....7¥2e [® loot length. Save at Sears soondc 9c = Reg. 8.95 Six-ft. Lengths. 6.66, Runs when you need air'-- stops automatically when storage tank is full! 4-H. P., piston type, mounted: paint sprayer and air compressor. Delivers 1.7 CFM,at 100-lbs. Gun, 15-ft. hose, strainer and air chuck, . 154 Sale! Aluminum Door Canopies Ae PS ry oa UFO Be ST Homart Adjustable Sale—Easy to Apply Iron Railing Sale Asphalt Floor Tile Le. Colors, Reg. 9'2¢ Spray... It’s Faster and: Easier- Fast Drying, Color Fast Trim Colors Paint the Fast Easy Way Craftsman Automatic Sprayers 153” ° ® e Buy Yours on Sears Easy Payment Plan N.Saginaw St. Phone FES-AI71_ oe 2 owe t |