* 
Pa 
          4 
i 
The Weather ; 
    : y 
      U.S. Weather Bures™ Forecast 
‘ Cooler Tomorrow 
Details page two 
114th YEAR oo . leliaitelltel * «cma MICHIGAN SATURDAY, ec coma 22, 1050—08 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PASS. PHOTOS 7 E PONTIAC PRESSE WER 
    
City Auto Lot a for Business 
Humphrey Hits GOP ‘Failure   
France Enlist 
in Canal Users; 
New Talks Oct. 1 
for Details of Union — Invite 17 Ambassadors} 
to 3rd London Parley Huddle Before Local     Speech | 
  ~ Small Business 
Profits Drop, 
Senator Claims f 
  Tells Party in County 
Farmer Income Down 
a Billion Since ‘52 
Democratic Sen. Hubert 
cabinet decided today to 
participate in the blunted LONDON (?/—The French) 
Suez Canal Users’ Assn. but) 
with the reservation that it 
must not weaken insistence 
waterway. 
British Foreign Secretary 
‘Selwyn ‘Lloyd issued formal 
invitations fixing Oct. 1 as 
the date for a third London 
Suez conference to settle 
the mechanical details of 
putting SCUA into action. 
The conference will be on the 
‘ambassadorial level and invi-| 
tations went to the 17 other nations| 
which attended the just-adjourned 
imeeting that founded the associa-; 
tion, 
Warm Weather, | Counting France, at least 12 of 
| the 18 attending nations have | a Few Showers lined up to join the new inter- 
Partly cloudy with a chance of national agency wrap will “a 
solution to Egypt’   Patrolman Ray Kent watches the operation. 
Downtown shoppers started using the lot, which 
represents a third of the city's $600,000 off-street 
parking lot project, today. DROPS FIRST NICKEL — Pontiac Chamber - 
of Commerce assistant manager Gerard A. 
Poehlman (left) drops the first nickel into a   meter in the city’s newly opened 148 - car 
off - street parking lot on West Lawrence Street. 
lke Wins Farmers Cheers, 
but Do They Mean Votes?     
Fall Ushers In 
  
President Eisenhower by a quarter of a million Iowans On| showers are expected for SOME France nce which hed = ee pd 
a 24-hour visit to that state lifted Republican hopes to- ®eas but generally pleasant weath-\ trong action against Feyptian| 
day of carrying the farm belt in November. [eocion todays inet Gay ef sue eat Tener, was sneed ial 
No responsible politician professed, however, to be able mer. French charged most of the asso-| 
to translate into vote results the demonstrations given aie ol ee Soe cones! ciation’s teeth had been pulled be- 
the President and Mrs. Eisenhower yesterday by 100,000\) cared ended, There was con R wns bere. 
  
  
  persons in Des Moines. A siderable warming from the Missis- 
Teenagers and younger schdol students broke police neve Valley eastward to the Ailan-) ee Coast. was dropped. 
‘lines and stormed their M0-) According to the weatherman, ‘The French Cabinet, meeting in 
‘tor caravan good naturedly Sunday will be partly cloudy and|paris today to hear a report from 
as it crawled through the ‘ler. The expected high is 60 t0 Foreign Minister Christian Pineau, 
wiles 10 1€ |declared, however, that it would, 
; city’s business district On) ‘The Jow last night in downtown wor} to maintain French-British 
r way to the airport. Pontiac was 50. It was 7 at 1 solidarity.’ 
Back in Washington for the P-™. today. | The Sritiet had wanted to keep 
0 eZ UCCESS | weekend, Eisenhower leaves Tues-. as much revenue out of Nasser’s 
Flys k ‘day for a-nationally broadcast and|Williams on TV Monday |ciatiy went along with the tem- 
Secretary ying Bac televised spech that night on farm. LANSING @—Gov. Williams will pered an. Se salt ma 
to Launch U. S. Efforts issues at Bradley University ininold the first of his six statewide ™ @C issatisfaction & 
fo Peoria, Mi. This will be the sec- campaign television shows at, staunch government supporters. 
r Users Union ond of a series of radio-TV ap- 19-30 p.m. on WWJ-TV Monday.) President Nasser flew from 
\pearances which are expected to jt wil peal with unemployment.| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) 
WASHINGTON (INS) — Secre-'be the backbone of his campaign) 
tary of State John Foster Dulles for re-election. 
arrives from London today and | The romllmg receplion Piven BULLE’TIN 
will promptly report to President Cent oh br ‘edie Ansang Re- 
Eisenhower that the Suez Canal publican strategists to urge more . , 
conference produced “solid re- personal appearances by the WASHINGTON (?—The White House said today 
wr Sk President in ronscalty critical | it had been notified that President Anastasio Somoza 
The 18-nation parley set up the' The general reaction to Eisen- of Nicaragua had been shot = oer the sheot 
“Suez Canal Users’ Assn."" which hower’s visit to Iowa was that’ . President Eisenhower was inform ie shoot- 
the U.S., Britain and Italy joined. |there has been no lessening of the, ing by U. S. Ambassador Thomas Whelan at Mana- 
Dulles, whe te whedsied te | ‘President's personal popularity in gua, capital of Nicaragua. on the principle of interna-| 
tional administration of the| 
Jel Shears Tops a few showers is the weather pre-) 
diction for tonight, The low is ex- Gon of i; — om on two 
WASHINGTON (®—The shouting reception given pected to be around 6 to @. | months . ars, l 5 
i 
The French were rr acon 
— ee 
ihands as possibie. But Lieyd offi-, over his notes ADDRESSES AREA AUDIENCE — Minne- 
sota Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (center), speaker 
at a Democratic dinner last night honoring Con- 
| gression candidate Paul Sutton (right), looks man. H. Humphrey of Minnesota, 
‘in a free-wheeling hour- 
long address to 750 party 
faithfuls last night in Wa- 
  speech on Republican economic policies. Carlos 
G. Richardson (left) is Democratic county chair- Pontiac Press Phote 
before delivering an hour-long 
  
  British Goodwill Gesture «|   
Plane Drops Too Fast, 
Clips Autos on Road; 
2 Women Injured 
MEMPHIS, Tenn. @® — An Air! 
‘before reaching the runway 
‘. | American tourists and visi Mayflower II Launche 
for Pilgrimage to America 
BRIXHAM, England (INS)—The Mayflower II slid 
stern first into Tor Bay today, climaxing the first chap-| rey said 
os * of a drama that will end next spring in Plymouth, | 
, ‘The Stars and Stripes were draped over one side of her 
‘dark oak hull, and the Union Jack on the other, as the 
itors from other parts of the 
  
sheared off, 
tops of the two cars.as they) 
moved along a road near the run- 
way. 
The jet, still streaking along | 
at about 100 m.p.h., slid 1,500 | 
feet on the field and ground- 
looped. The pilot, Lt. Gerald L. 
Metcalf, 2%, of St. Louis, suf- 
fered 2 minor arm injury. He is | 
attached to the 25th Strategic | 
Reconnaissance Squadron sta- | 
tioned at Larson Air Force Base, | 
Seattle, Wash, | 
The dead woman was identified Ask Mental Test | 
to Oust Teacher Hazel Park Acts Again " 
to Get Rid of Woman « 
Paid to Do Nothing 
jas Mrs. S. Rubenstein, 40, a widow | A Hazel Park schoolteacher who 
ao — op atone in the ‘last year drew $6,200 for doing 
The two injured occupants of ‘nothing once again faces a psy- 
the second car were identified as chiatric eet 
Mr. and Mrs, R. S. Underwood of) 
Memphis. Neither was believed! The schooiboard last night voted 
critically hurt. ito test Marveta Hine, 51, whom * * 
A Delta Airlines employe, Roy the board relieved of classroom. 
land at 2:36 p.m, Pontiac time, 
Dulles will set in motion Ameri- 
ca's diplomatic machinery in an N 
strained 
tolls directly to Egypt, sitliotish 
under Protest. 
UM Doctor Defends 
Fluoridated Water 
ANN ARBOR «®—Fluoridated wa- 
ter In industry is no more dan- 
gerous to workers than water with 
chlorine init, Dr. Seward Miller 
of the University of Michigan said   
Miller, director of the univer-) 
sity’s Institute for Industrial health | Around 75,000 farm. men, women 
‘and children listened attentively 
* \but without much applause as Ei- 
isenhower delivered an informal 
‘igram in his Peoria speech. His that key state despite reports of 
a widespread farm revolt. 
and — as he put it, a nonpolitical 
— speech at the National Field 
Days and plowing matches near 
ewton. 
Eisenhower said he was going to 
lay down a detailed farm pro- experts and equipment 
  ~ Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) No details were available emecoraund on the 
shooting, the White House said. 
Eisenhower ordered a medical team of U.S. Army 
and civilian personnel from the Panama Canal Zone 
to fly te Managua to aid. . 
White House press secretary James C. Hagerty 
said the medical team, already in the air, includes 
abdominal and bone surgeons, X-ray and transfusion 
Ambassador Whelan requested the medical team. Kinard, said he ran to the plane 
.jafter the crash. * 
“The pilot ot out holding his 
elbow -and was completely un- 
_jaware that he had hit two cars. 
He was complaining that he had 
not tell him about," Kinard said. 
. Col. Joseph A. Kelly, command- 
er of the Air Force detachment 
at the field, said the jet was a 
photdreconnaisance aircraft sta- 
_\tioned at Seattle, Wash.   hit a fence which the tower did. duties as “unfit to teach. 
Board members had sought her 
| discharge, but tenure rules call 
for a hearing first te prove 
charges, 
Miss Hine refused to submit to 
tests asked by the board in 1955 and filed a suit asking for an in- 
junction to back her up. 
Tuesday she asked for dismissal 
of her suit, opening the way for 
‘the board’s renewed effort to have} 
‘her dismissed,       world packed Brixham 
‘as the Mayflower was 
‘launched. The vessel slid) 
smoothly into the sea amid), 
|heavy rain and thunder and 
‘lightning. 
| But the thousands of visitors 
‘seemed undaunted. They cheered 
the band of the ist. Battalion, Som- 
rset Light Infantry, as it played 
“Yankee Doodle.” 
Maj. Gen, Roscoe Wilson, com- 
imander of the U.S. 3rd. Air Force, 
‘told the assembly during the 
launching: 
“All Americans, regardless of 
race, color or creed have inherit- 
ed a tradition of courage and for- 
titude which belong in 
te our Pilgrim fathers.” 
The loca] craftsmen who built 
iher—said to be the finest ship- 
| wrights in-Britain — watched al- 
imost tearfully as their pride and 
joy made the first move from her 
cradle to re-enact the voyage which 
took the Pilgrim fathers to Amer- 
ica 336 years ago. 
The 90-foot, 180-ton vessel which, 
when completed, will have cost 
about $250,000 (compared to about 
$900 for her illustrious predeces-     
  jtoward America by the people of 
|Britain. 
  
And Blows Taps Over a Zany Summer   
Summer ends today. 
Some say it never came. 
4 The hour’s 8:36 tonight. | 
The summer of 1956 will be written into private 
diaries as a dizzy period of continuous —— 
It was a zany season. é 
x *& 
Let’s allow it to depart in’peace with a minimum 
of cat calls and just a small Bronx cheer. Certainly 
we won't burn any incense or suggest the cantation 
of solemn requiems. 
x * * 
FalL.is with us at 8:37. 
_What can we expect? . 
What lies ahead? 
* 2 : 
The Press cornered our own Herman Lysander 
Yiffnitz in the editorial department and asked for 
_ @ forecast. Herman's predictions on everything 
are uncanny. He was contemplating the dubious te 
      there is no threat of accumulative ae as eae rd ni ct eg he gave forth reluctantly. . \ . » “The fall of 1956,” quoth Herman with a far away 
look, “will be a sockeroo.” — 
“A what?” he was asked. 
“A sockeroo,” repeated Herman, “A 
+ double whizzoka. It will be bright. It will 
> be crisp and cool. It will be invigorating. 
>, It will be delightful. It will be delicious. 
SJ Itwillbe—”’ . 
- “Delovely,” interrupted our Camelia. 
ge ore 
Herman scowled anc reached for an 
ee glass that wasn’t there. 
CAMELIA — “You're right. Delovely. And quit inter 
_ rupting. The fall of 1956 will be the Golden Fall of the 
Fifties. It will be the fourth finest autumn since 1900.” 
       Our new and cute little Camelia who took cver from 
Magnolis ea receptionist tn the editorial department, 
gasped. “How does he-all know thet?” 
x = ® 
, Herman turned a stern look of appraisal on our 
newest Flower of the South. “Several generations 
ee first Farmer’s Almanac. Yiffnitz Waxes Lyrical Over Century’s ‘4th Finest Fall’ He was a sensation. He 
was terrific. Not as good as I am,” added Herman 
juridiously, “but still very, very good. We will have 
average rain this fall. The crops and harvest will 
be simply magnificent.” 
x * * 
“How about the cotton?” asked Camelia eagerly. 
Herman fixed her with 
something rather difficult a cold, impersonal stare, 
for the average male to do 
with our little Southern Camelia. The Yiffnitz’s al- 
’. Ways wear wool,” said Herman. He reached again for 
the imaginary glass. It was just an illusion. “You 
can quote me,” said Herman. “This is official.” 
w. ® 
He rose with an expectant look in his eyes. 
“Camelia, if you were a year older I'd take you 
with me. The others know where I'm going.” H. 
Lysander Yiffnitz walked rapidly in the direction 
of his favorite grog shop. 
al -~ * ® 
There it is, boys and girls. 
_ A great fall lies ahead. 
  Women's \terford Township, 
jout at Republican economic 
| policies. 
|sor) represents a good will gesture|~ lashed 
The occasion was a fund- 
raising, $10-a-plate dinner 
honoring Paul Sutton of 
\Royal Oak, Democratic 
candidate for Congress in 
Oakland. County. 
Humphrey, jibing at the 
“discriminatory prosperity” 
of the Eisenhower admin- 
istration, told local Demo- 
crats “the Republicans have 
a very limited circle: of 
friends, and you're not in 
it.” 
He quoted figures, reportedly 
from a Council of Economic Ad- 
visors report, which indicate a 35 
per cent over-all rise in “big busi- 
ness” profits and a 66 per cent 
drop in “‘smal] business” profits 
since 31953. Farm incomes have 
dropped 26 per cent, he said. 
Republican failure.to keep its 
|1952 farm promises is “the most 
iterrible double cross on rural 
|\America im our history,” Hum- 
He added there ix an “inter- 
Humphrey rapped Republican et- 
forts to keep Eisnhower “above 
party politics. 
‘KE ON A CLOUD’ 
“When something goes wrong, 
it’s never Eisenhower's fault; it's 
‘somebody way out in left field,” 
he-gaid. “The President is way up 
here on ‘tloud 19.”       He also blasted: 
The Republicans’ “giveaway pro- 
gram—the greatest giveaway of 
Roosevelt.” Secretary of the Inte- 
rior Douglas McKay, he said, is 
“so used to giveaways he con- 
vinced the Administration to give 
him away” to oppose Sen, Wayne 
Morse for an Oregon Senate seat. 
GOP tax reductions, in which “73 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) 
Adlai to Appeal . 
for Farm Vote Makes Major Speech 
at National Field Days 
in lowa Today   
  
WASHINGTON (@ — Adlai FE. 
Stevenson flew today to the heart 
of the farm belt to start an 11. 
state campaign tour with a major 
speech at the National Field Days 
at Newton, Iowa. 
The Democratic 
nominee will make a bid for the 
farm vote before somewhat the 
same big audience that heard an 
informal talk yesterday by his Re- 
publican opponent, President’ Ei- 
senhower, 
Only a small group of close 
drive the 25 miles to Newton. 
Stevenson reportedly has draft- 
ed a detailed outline of his farm 
program for presentation to to. 
day’s crowd at Newton. He also 
was said to be prepared to hit 
hard at the agricultural policies 
of the Eisenhower administration 
in the struggle between Demo- 
crats and Republicans for the im- 
portant farm belt vote. 
  
In Today's Press Building News seeneeeeaene 17-28... 
Church News seeeeeneeree 7 8, > 
County News fdlh dia eal didiatnaiatiaatietin tat baad 
Editorials Se ee el 
Sports ees eeeeeeereeeeees MM, B 4 : 
Theaters eee e eee eee eneenes 4, n. 
TV & Radio Programs ...... 4 
Wilson Earl veseeebere teeese ‘ee a 
Pages seigeeyeee i, nu                 
        
    
  
                      Specs O'Keefe Faces His 4th Day of Intensive 
- Cross-Examination 
BOSTON (@— The Brink's rob very trial resumes today in an 
extraordinary Saturday session or- 
dered by Superior Court Judge| Mf Felix Forte in an effort to speed 
up the legal marathon which al- 
= * 
Joseph J. (Specs) O'Keefe, who 
has pleaded guilty to participat- 
ing in the $1,219,000 looting nearly 
seven years ago, faces his fourth 
day of intensive cross-examination 
by Paul T.. Smith, chief counsel 
for the eight men accused of the 
rebbery. : 
O'Keefe emerged from yester- 
day's verbal sparring with his 
story of the nation's largest cash | 
robbery unshaken. 
* a * 
Under Smith's cross-examina- 
tin, O'Keefe testified the gang 
The entries were not for prac- 
tice, O'Keefe said, because in each 
of them the gang was prepared   
PRESIDENT SPEAKS — Addressing farmers 
at the annual National Field Days and Plowing 
Contest at Newton, Ia. today, President Dwight 
D. Eisenhower was reported looking fit and tanned. Farmers at the contest, often the scene 
of major political addresses, will hear Demo- 
cratic presidential candidate Adlai E. Stevenson 
tomorrow in what is billed as a “top speech.” 
  
Can Cut Decay 40 Pct.   
to carry out the robbery if condi- 
tions had been favorable, 
* ” * 
--The defendants are Anthony 
Pino, Vincent Costa, Thomas F. 
  
Humphrey Lashes 
GOP in County Talk 
tion went to corporations with an- 
incomes of one million dollars 
eh: E 
Sen. Patrick V, McNamara act- 
ei as toastmaster. 
State Supreme Court Justices) 
Talbot Smith George Edwards, | 
running for re-election on the non- 
partisan ticket, also attended. 
Father's Car Hit, 
Girl, 16, Bumps Head 
A 16-year-old girl suffered minor’ 
head bumps when her father’s car   Canal Users Union To try reducing tooth decay, a 
fluoride application program will 
be held again this year in Pontiac 
public schools,"Mrs. Ruth Topefer, 
dental hygienist for the Pontiac 
schools, said today. * * > 
First schools on the schedule are 
Linda Vista, Emerson and Daniel 
Whitfield, Authorization cards are 
being sent to the parents of chil- 
dren in these schools, 
The applications are open te 
second, third, fifth and sixth. 
graders at Emerson and Linda 
Vista — schools not covered in 
last yeat’s program, Only sec- 
ond and fifth graders are eligi- 
ble for applications in other Pon- 
tiae schools, 
The series of four treatments 
costs parents $4 for the first child 
and $2 each for others, Mrs. Toep-' 
fer said.   i 
| 
  ae + * | 
The four treatments include a 
jdental examination, cleaning and 
‘four applications of fluoride solu- 
tion. The fluoride treatment can re- 
duce the number of cavities by as| 
{ 
Participating in offering the 
treatments in the Pontiac School 
    a 
Wins French OK 
(Continued From Page 1) 
Calre te Riyadh, capital of Saudi 
Arabia, for a three-power Ara- 
bian summit conference with 
President Shukri Kuwalty of i } 
| 
Arabia. 
Egyptian capital that Nasser’s, 
West, were putting pressure on 
him to come to an agreement. 
Some informants in Cairo have) | 
close to meeting Nasser’s ideas,! 
and there was much curiosity, 
about the forthcoming visit to Lon-| don ‘ef- India’s roving ambassador, | 
V. K. Krishna Menon. Menon, | 
who embodies Indian hopes of 
bridging the gulf betweerf Egypt) and the West, has just wound up 
an intensive week of diplomatic. 
bargaining with Nasser. 
  Pontiac Police said. 
Sharon B. Almas, of 4281 Quebec! 
St., was treated at Pontiac General, Theodore MM. 
Hospita!. 'Pontiac traffic engineer, will leave Her father, Robert G. Almas Sr.,| 
Was uninjured. The other driver,) 
Norman R. Saint, 34, of 108 W. 
Strathmore Ave., claimed he did 
not see the Almas car, police said,| 
Cooler Downright Cold 
CORUNNA (INS) — Police offi- 
claly in Corunna today were try- 
ing to make their cooler a little 
warmer, The pokey's heating plant 
went out of commission yesterday 
and prisoners along with deputy 
sheriffs complained the cooler was 
too cold. 
The Weather 
Foll CU. 8 Weather Bureau Report 
PONTIAC AND VICINT   
  
Today in Pontiac 
Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m 
Veiocity—caim. Di- 
eete Gaturday at 6:30 p.m 
rises Gunday at 6:20 a.m. 
sets Sunday at 10:03 a.m. 
tises Saturday at 7:33 p.m. 
  
eee ee tee 
ee 
     | City Official to Parley 
Vanderstempel, 
for San Francisco Monday for the 
annual conyention of the Institute 
of Traffic Engineers Monday 
through Friday.   
expected to attend. Pontiac Schools Offering 
‘Fluoride Tooth Treatment 
system are PTA members, the 
local dental society, the local 
health department, and the Mich- 
igan Department of Health, Mrs. 
Toepter said, 
Applications will begin in about 
two weeks when funds have been 
collected at the first three schools 
on the list, she said, 
Blind Pig Raids 
Net 71 Arrests 19 Held for Loitering, 
2 Charged as Owners 
Face Judge Today   
} Pontiae Police staged two raids 
on after-hours drinking places 
early today, and arrested 19 on 
loitering charges, and 2 operators. 
| Tony Stoiloff, 65, was charged 
with running an illegal liquor 
place at his house, 491 Franklin 
= as.40 per.cent, Mrs. Toepfer'.q which police say was raided| 
Said, | about 3 a.m. 
Two women and five men were 
charged with loitering there. 
Police. say they raided a house 
44 Maplé St. at 4 a.m. and charged 
William Dooley, 48, of that address 
ree women and nine men were 
All were to be arraigned today 
\before Pontiac Municipal Judge |p - Coryell.   
Pontiac Newsboy 
Robbed by Bullies 
Pontiac Police said, 
Arab neighbors, fearing a cut of Senior Newport, 13, of 7% Chase | 
their own oil revenues from the|St.. Said he paid $6 when one of “lke, Crowds Mingle 
boys threatened to strike him on 
the head with an empty wine bot- 
tle. 
The boy said he was returning 
younger brothers when he was 
pounced upon near the Grand 
Trunk railroad tracks at Wessen 
street, 
None of the boys was injured, po- 
lice said. 
  
Careens Across Field 
A Leonard man is in fair con- 
dition at Pontiac General Hospital 
with severe head injuries received 
yesterday when his car struck a 
tree, in Addison Township. 
Edward J. Frayks, 530, is also 
being treated for face cuts, His| 
car went off the highway at 1469 
Rochester Rd. and traveled through Mother of Six 
Severely Burned Woman Leaps Into Tub 
With Clothing Ablaze 
After Fireplace Mishap 
A 36-year-old mother of six suf- 
fered second and third degree 
burns of the back and hands when 
  State Temperatures Up 
Over 35 Years Ago 
is getting warmer. 
Definitely so, claim two Michi- 
from 1887 to 1920 with those from 
1921 to 1955. 
W. D, Baten, MSU statistician, - 
and A. H. Eichmeier, climatole- 
gist with the U, 8, Weather 
Bureau at East Lansing, checked 
the reports from 156 U. 8. 
Weather Bureau stations scat- 
tered ‘throughout the state. 
January and February tempera- 
tures averaged nearly two degrees 
higher in the latter period, they 
reported. , 
HIGHER EVERYWHERE 
Temperatures for November, De- 
cember, March, July and August 
also were significantly higher in 
the modern period, they said. 
Although temperatures Indicate 
a warming trend, they said there 
was very little difference in the 
two periods as far as precipita- 
tien was concerned. Both peri- 
ods averaged about 2!) inches a 
month, 
The two researchers do not 
claim to. have any answer for the 
change, 
* * * 
They say one school attributes 
the warming trend to increases in 
combustion from factories, home 
heating and other means coming 
with the growing population. An- 
other school claims sun spots 
cause warming and cooling cycles. 
       
    
  
      
          
      
      
        
           
HARRY H. PATTISON 
Pythians Honor - 
Orchard Lake Man 
tion at Grand Rapids, —~ 
His selection tops off several 
grand lodge for 12 years. 
held high state offices 
four years while also editing 
“Michigan Pythian." 
Pythians from Pontiac Lodge No. 
19 and Lodge 108 of Oxford are also 
participating in the convention. 
Two of the major projects ot the |county, spoke convention concern promotion of a 
North American highway courtesy 
campaign and a high school public 
speaking contest. 
    jher clothing caught fire yesterday 
las she stood in front of a fire- 
place in her living room. 
| Mrs, Catherine E. Zumbrunnen, 
jot 3700 Joslyn Ave., is in fair con- 
idition at Pontiac General Hospital. 
She reportedly put out the 
flames by running to the bathtub 
land turning on the water and 
jumping in. ¥ 
| “Her clothing was so badly 
‘burned TI had to cut it away with 
iscissors,” said her sister, Mrs. 
Lulu Nesbitt. 
Passenger Injured 
in Avon Accident 
  Marvin N. Scott, 25, of 3135 
Orchard Lake road, Keego Harbor, 
‘suffered an injured right hand in 
a two-ear accident in Avon Town- 
iship early today. * * * 
He was treated at Pontiae Gen- 
with operating an illegal place’ ara} Hospital and released follow- 
ing the collision. Scott was a pas- 
lsenger in a car driven by Ralph 
41, of 2651 E. 12 Mile 
road, Royal Oak. 
The other car was operated by 
|Richard D. Kingsley, 26, of 5980/is chrome-plated and has leopard jLivernois road, Troy. 
| * * * 
| Coryell told Oakland County No data is. available yet to 
determine lengthy weather cycles,   
lthe researchers said, since tew Fire Razes House jaccurate reecords were kept be- 
fore 1860, | 
  
Lands in Africa 
to Begin Tour | 
Margaret flew into Mombasa to- 
day to begin a month's tour of 
Britain's African teertorien. 
The 26-year-old princess who 
left London yesterday will spend) 
the royal yacht Britannia which) 
through the city. She will teview 
an honor guard of veiled East 
African Arab women. 
* * * 
A* special Land Rover—British 
equivalent of the U. S. Jeep—will       Kenya, former stronghold of Mau Princess Meg- 
ren after a ceremonial drive! 
| 
take the princess on her tour of| } 
in Independence 
fire in Independence Township 
today. 
. ° * ° 
The gutted home, believed to 
at 5931 Clarkston-Orion road. 
Fire Chief Donald Beach of the)at the home of Mrs. Russell Lin-) y¢rs Marshall (Ida) Hadley, $1 \Independence Township Fire De- con, 5455 Cambourne Pl., for alot sor Mechanic St. died yesterday 
partment said only the walls were 
left standing when his men arrived 
on the scene. . 
most of the day rtsting aboard) * «8 * 
Beach will investigate the ruins 
‘sailed into the harbor yesterday.'of the building today in hopes of 
| Princess Margaret's tour be-\determining the cause and origin 
gins in earnest tomorrow she Will of the blaze. The name of the! 
be greeted by 19,000 African child- ‘owner of the destroyed home was 
inot available.   
fo Open for Visitors 
‘Mau terrorists. The Land Rover, S0me 1.200 visitors are expected 
skin seats, 
  
| sheriff's deputies the Kingsle y Sues Highland Park Syria and King Saud of Saudi | A newsboy was robbed of part!vehicle made a sudden left turn in 
jot his weekly collection money yes-|front of him making ° it impossible 
. ‘terday by two older youths who ‘© stop. Kingsley said Coryell was 
There was speculation in the threatened him with a beating, ®bout 200 feet away when he made 
the turn but still struck his car.   
at lowa Fair Rally been hinting that SCUA came home from deliveries with two! 
(Continued From Page 1) 
audience broke into cheers when 
he said: * 
“Now many of you here will 
not agree with me, Seme of 
you, frankly, will probably think 
I am a little bit crazy. But I 
am sure that none of you will 
think that I am not honest.” 
While he said he hopes to have 
the ‘‘earned approval” of the 
itarmers, Eisenhower made no 
other direct political pitch for 
ivotes. 
This seemed a calculated ma- 
neuver to offer a Republican con- 
trast to the full-blown political   
  ' 
la field and yard before ramming campaign speech his opponent, 
Some 600 traffic engineers from into the tree 475 feet away. He|Adlai E. Stevenson, makes before 
ithe United States and Canada are|was unconscious on arrival at the'a National Field Days audience 
hospital, ‘today. for ‘Poisoning’ Water 
DETROIT (#—Mrs, Marga¥et E. 
cover medical expenses and the 
cost of enough untreated water to 
last the rest of her life. 
She filed suit for that amount in 
Circiut Court yesterday against 
Highland Park, where the water 
supply has been fluoridated for 
tooth decay. 
Her attorney, James A. Marle, 
said Mrs, Jones prefers to drink 
mineral water which costs a 
gallon. 
  
Wet Formosa Braces 
Typhoon Gilda bore down on the 
island's southeast edge. 
Weather observers said the 
storm’s present path would bring 
its full 138 m.p.h. wind fury to 
the Taitung coastal area by early 
tomorrow, * .     
    7 4 63 67 61 
ti be KIWANIS GUESTS — Off to Selfridge Air Force Base for a 
oo day's visit, the Pontiac youngsters ig the buses above were among 
62 4¢ 5,000 Southeastern Michigan chi whose trip was sponsored 
te | yesterday by Kiwanis clubs. The Pontiac clubs and clubs HB in West Bloomfield Township and: Birmingham held pganut sales 
b f : ee i Ri re ee \ i ; > wore Sees ITT TT 
  fe 
  yesterday and today to help raise 
also goes to support summertime activities at Camp Oakland, 
Sherwood and at thé area boy scout camp Mahn-go-ta-see, and 
near mn, « 
a 4 | 
~Penttxe Press Photo 
funds for such trips. The money four years in an effort to combat 
as Typhoon Gilda Nears eek for projects’ in’ Pontiac by 
TAIPEI, Formosa #® — Heavy Assistant Building Inspector Maur- 
rains drenched Taipei today as'ice Van Gordon. at the open house and dedication 
service at the $309,000 Oakland 
County Health Center, 1070 N. Tele- 
graph Rd. Sunday afternoon. 
The 40-room structure was com- 
pleted and opened unofficially in 
August. 
Officials who will partigjpate in 
will include members and commit- 
itee heads of the County Board of 
Jones, who says fluoridated water Supervisors, state and county 
made her ill, is seeking $10,000 to health officers and various civic 
leaders. 
Open house with inspection tours 
7 p.m. The public is invited.    
  if 
“Fee as if 
B : 
i i i 5 
® Fikes t A 
ii i | Sees 
é rpeek 
3 
ri? gi tf f 
staff and MYF officers at the 11 
|' a.m. service tomorrow at First 
| Methodist Church will be high- 
| light of that church’s Christian 
Education Observance. 
The sermon, “Windows of Faith"   A one-story house was burned to by the Rev. Allen E. Wittrup will pyneral Home, 
ithe ground in an early morning follow that theme for the 9:30 with the Rev. R. Maurice Peter- 
a.m. and 11 a.m. services. 
| * * 
| The Women’s Alliance of the Bir- 
MOMBASA, Kenya (®—Princess have been unoccupied, was located Mingham Ugjtarian Church will 
imeet Oct 3rd, at 12:30 p.m. 
‘program, ‘‘Alliance Presentation,’ 
conducted by Mrs. Morton Graddis. 
| Relationship to the General Al- 
liance of the Unitarian Church, its 
hopes and resolutions taken up at 
ithe May meetings in Boston will 
be outlined. — 
| An Alliance Rummage Sale 
| will be held at the Oddfellows 
18th, under Mrs. Peter Loomis’ 
chairmanship. 
County Health Center| imme First meeting of the First Con- 
gregational Church's Youth Fellow- 
ship is tomorrow night at 6:30 
p.m. with first practice of the new 
jhigh school choir at 5:30 p.m. pre- 
‘ceding the chapel service. 
| The church's Westminster Guild 
jhas slated a smorgasbord supper 
iat the church next Thursday from 
(5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. with reser- 
jvations being taken by Mrs. Don- 
lald Plumstead and Mrs. Earle   
\the 4 p.m, dedication ceremny Steele. ° * « 
Drunk driving cost a Waterford 
man $530 in fine and costs 
{Justice Court Friday. Francis J. 
\Kelley, 39, of 3778 Brookdale, 
ipleaded. guilty to the charge yes- 
will go on continuously from 2 to terday at a second hearing before’ 
|Waterfard Township Justice Willis 
  
Total $69,017   
Thirty-two building permits total- 
ing $69,017 were approved this past   * oe * 
Included in the total was a per- 
Pythias for a $15,000 remodeling 
job for 16-18-20 W. Huron St. 
Permits for two single-family 
dwellings of brick veneer con- 
struction te be built at 1261 and 
1265. Featherstone Ave. in the 
Harrington Hillis Subdivision 
were issned by Van Gordon. Esti- 
mated cost of construction by 
Northtown Construction Co. of 
Pontiac was listed at $10,000 
each. 
by 39 brick veneer single-family 
residence with full basement at 
143 Pingree Ave. was also ap-' 
proved. 
* * * 
Other permits issued during the 
week included the following (the 
estimated cost of construction is 
listed): 
Reroof project at 61 S. Astor St., 
$240; build outside stairs to base- 
ent, 41 E. Ypsilanti Ave., $150; 32 City Building Permits 
“Approved in 
mit approved for the Knights ofs: from 165 Dellwood, $600; repair 
Another $10,500 permit for a 24/613 E- Columbia Ave., $8,000; build 
  Past Week 
83 Orton St., $800; build frame 
garage and kitchen addition, 715 
Robinwood Ave., $2,100; frame 
garage, 44 Belmont Ave., $500; 
build rear addition at 56 Wil- 
$300, 
Move house to 897 Mt. Clemens 
rear porch, 57 Mary Day Ave., 
$150; general repairs, 5 Hilldale ow 
  118 East Bivd., $100. 
6 County Doctors 
fo Visit State Meeting   Hall in Royal Oak, on October | 
in’   
Reginald Collins Brower : { & 
i i Fy £ 
i ii, wz 
Service will be 
Horner, both of Flint, Mrs. Edna 
” IGerber of Pontiac and Charles L. idren and 12 great-grand- 
children 
Also surviving are a brother, 
Charles J. Brooks of Pontiac and a 
  sister, Mrs. Bert Sprig of Portland, 
Ore. 
Service will be at 1 p.m. Tues- 
iday from the Dudley H. Moore 
Auburn Heights, 
ison officiating. A graveside service 
‘will be hed at 3:30 p.m. in the 
\Elktor Cemetery, Cass City. 
Mrs. Marshall Hadley   
jin St Joseph Mercy Hospital. She 
‘had been ill two weeks. 
| She was born in Greenfield on 
\Sept, 9, 1875, and married in Wind- 
sor, Ont. Her parents were William 
jand Caroline Benton. 
| Surviving are two children, Mrs. 
‘Enola M. Quigg of Pontiac and 
\a son, Marshall] B. Hadley of Flint. 
Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Mon- 
iday from the Huntoon Funeral 
|Home with the Rev. C. Warren 
|Wilson jof the Baldwin Avenue 
‘Methodist Church officiating Burial 
jwill follow in Perry Mt. Park Cem- 
jetery. 
Mrs. Thomas E. Shipley 
Mrs, Thomas Edwin (Myrtle M.) 
\Shipley, 74, of 2895 Deland Rd., 
\Waterford and a former Pontiac 
lresident, died yesterday in Pon- 
itiac General Hospital. She had 
ibeen in ill health two years. 
Born in North Woodville on Dec. 
114, 1881, she was the daughter of 
‘John and Matilda Stafford Bur- 
iden and was married on Oct. 4, 
|1899 in Plymouth. 
| Mrs. Shipley was a charter mem- 
iber of the Church of God on E. 
Pike Street. ~ 4 
| Besides her husband, she leaves 
\three children, Mrs. Dorothy Ern- 
est and Howard Shipley, both of 
Pontiac, Herbert Shipley of Dray- 
ton Plains; 14 grandchildren and 
10 great-grandchildren. : 
Other survivors include two sis- 
ters and two brothers, Onley Bur- 
den and Mrs. Cora Delap, both of 
Pontiac, Ernest Burden of Plym- 
outh and Mrs. Jennie Ashton of 
Detroit, 
Mrs. Shipley’s body will be at the 
Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home until 
Monday morning when it will be 
taken’ to the Church of God for 
service at 2 p.m. The Rev. Perry 
C. Horton, her ,, Will officiate 
with burial in White Chapel Me- 
morial Cemetery. ‘ 
Mrs. Harry Hodgkinson 
    Mrs. Hodgki 
United States in 1911 
Park Methodist Church and had 
been employed by the Pontiac 
Motor Division with the Davidson 
Caterers for 13 years. 
  Six members of the Oakland 
County Medical Society will attend! ij 
    
  .     
      
ee ee| 
  
  
    
      
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1956 
    
‘Litterbug’ Problem Met 
With Varying Success . 
MINNEAPOLIS (INS)—Are you 
a litterbug? Do you throw candy 
wrappers, empty cigarette pack- ages and other paper out the win- 
dow of your car while driving or 
riding? 
If so, it is costing the American 
public $15 to $50 a mile per year 
for the cleanup of refuse strewn 
along the highways of our various 
states by motorists and riders. 
A survey by the family econo- 
mics bureau of Northwestern Na- 
tional Life Insurance Company 
shows that this problem has be- 
come so serious that 13 states 
recently shapenéd their penalties 
for the offense. 
The survey was conducted 
through cooperation of highway 
department# of 44 states. It found: 
That penalties for “‘litterbug- 
ging” vary from practically none 
in Idaho which reports “law not 
very enforceable, litter increasing 
every year” to a maximum of 
$1,000 fine or a year's imprison- 
ment in Georgia. The latter state 
reports “a noticeable reduction in 
this type of offense” since the new 
law was passed. 
That eight of the 13 states 
which stepped up their penalties 
report that the “‘slovenly type" of 
motorist has become neater in 
habits when faced with stiffer 
penalties. 
Some highway departments 
stated in a survey that under| 
existing conditions litterbugs are 
hard to catch, and even if caught, 
are usuallg let off with a small) 
fine or a lecture by local justices. 
But South Carolina did some- 
thing about the situation and 
through close cooperation of high- 
way maintenace and highway 
patrol departments, arrested §1 
trash strewers and convicted 80) 
of them in the first 12 months) 
of its clean highway program. 
Ohio, the survey shows, set up 
an outstanding example of effec-| 
tive coordination of intensive anti-/ 
litter education with stricter 
enforcement of anti-litter laws. 
Ohio reported that it reduced—| 
through its campaign—the cost of| 
  
Starch Sponge’s Use 
Urged in Medication : 
WASHINGTON — Starch sponge, 
developed by 
culture chemists and already in 
wide use by surgeons as a hemo-| 
static agent, has been proposed | 
as a carrier for medicaments for, 
slow release within the body. 
= s * 
The sponge, made from ordi- 
nary food-quality starch by a sim- 
ple process, is nontoxic, nonirritat- 
ing, and is reaflily absorbed by 
body tissues, It can absorb pbout! 
18 ti its own weight of water. 
- * * 
Used in block or powdered form: 
to control bleeding, it need not be 
removed from wounds or incisions. 
This ability to disintegrate slowly, 
harmiessiy and completely within 
the body has suggested its use as) 
a vehicle for the administration of 
certain medicines and drugs. Department of Agri-| cleaning state highways 
eta bs anes to $achaan tn Und 
and to $344,452 in 1955. 
California, where keeping the 
estimated $750,000, reports notice- 
able improvement 
Chamber of Commerce educa- 
tional campaign coupied with a 
strengthened anti-litter law. 
Oregon reports gratifying use by 
motorists of the litter bags so 
distributed by civie and govern- 
mental organizations and of hun- 
dreds of litter barrels placed 
along highways in 1955. But there 
was one note in 
Oregon's report: 
necessary,” said the report, 
relocate eeme of the barrels due 
garbage.” 
Court Order Outlaws 
NAACP in Texas AUSTIN, Tex. ~The state at- 
jtorney general asked and got yes- 
terday a court order aimed at 
putting the National Assn. for the 
Advancement of Colored. People 
‘out of business in Texas. 
Dist. Judge Otis T. Dunagan of   
'to stop all operations in Texas, to 
file no more school integration| 
suits, and to collect no more mon-| 
ey until a hearing Sept. 28 in Ty-) 
ler, Tex. 
“We allege that the NAACP has 
exceeded the bounds of propriety   
    Wut Bisegs True Life Adventures |   
highway system clean costs an| ' 
  and law and have asked that they) 
inot be allowed to operate in this) 
state,"’ Atty. Gen. John ‘Ben shep-| 
pard said in a statement. 
Dr. H, Boyd Hall, state NAACP! 
president, said the attorney gen-) 
jeral's move showed that Negroes 
lin Texas were entering an era of) 
| Persecution. Hall said he had an- 
| ticipated the ban.   ‘Someone’s Making Dough 
WILMINGTON, Del, —A special 
grade of silicon suitable for use 
in solar * “batteries,” which capture 
lenergy from the sun, sells for only 
$180 «a pound. The regular semi- 
‘conductor grade of silicon used in 
such electronic devices as trans- 
istors ot | for + 3 0 a ‘pal. 
‘Sportsmen Meet in UP 
| NEWBERRY #—The Northern 
Michigans Sportsman's Assn. wil! 
‘hold its 33rd annual convention in 
‘Newberry today and Sunday. Paul 
|M. Barrett of Lansing, an exten-) 
‘sion specialist in conservation and 
land use will speak. It is hosted by 
the Newberry and Tahquamenon 
Sportsmen Clubs. 
  
‘Potato Festival Opens 
POSEN (®—The fifth annual 
Posen Potato Festival is being 
staged in this Presque Isle County 
Community today and Sunday with 
potato pancakes as the main dish. 
Gov. Williams will be the luncheon 
guest Sunday, will crown the potato 
‘queen and then speak at t3 p.m.       eck =... i a, 
5 ae, oe ae 
4 Nato ; 4 ® DIVISIONS 2 "st Ray pty & es 
. Mpg Fae eet ah 
ative 
to local residents filling them with) & 
Smith County ordered the NAACP} 3s ee =< 2 ee w 
ZACH OF THE EARTHS = 
GREAT BODIES OF WATER HAS We = aa OWN SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ~ 
TEMPERATURE, COLOR, FLOW. HERE 16 A i © 1956 
World Rights Reserved 
GRAPHIC EXAMPLE: THE ZIS-ZAGGING STREAK MARKS | 
THE MEETING OF THE PACIFIC OCEANS DARK BLUE 
WATEZE WITH THE LIGHTER BLUE OF THE BERING SEA. | Distributed by King Features Syndicate, |    
    Tt ale Disney Productions 
  
        
  
  it was 
an 
important 
business 
deal... 
and my 
“aed   
A well groomed ap- 
pearance counts 
heavily in your fovor 
on special occasions, 
And, since you never 
con tell when spe- 
cial occasions will 
arise, it's smart to 
put your best looks 
forward every day. 
Count on us to keep 
your clothes in “like 
condition a 
always! 
  
WE 
GIVE 
“| HOLDEN'S RED-STAMPS 4 5 DRESS SHIRTS 
13¢ Cash and Carry 
  
GRESHAM 605 Ockland Ave. 
  Wiener Stegiom CLEANERS sete, FE 4.2579   
ie 
mo, — a     Open Sat. and 
Mon. 9:30 TO 9 
as well as Thurs. and Fri. Nights     
     EDERAL’S     
      Double holster 
set with 2 guns 
278 
Reg. 5.98 2 western guns in 
leather holsters, 
  Spring horse on 
chrome frame 
6°8 
Reg. 9.95 Colorful popsicle 
truck plays song 
Metal truck rolls 14 
along, plays song. 
Reg. 2.98. Spuvking plastic 
flintlock pistol 
Unbreakable _plas- 3 4 fa Extra - big horse 
Reg. 79¢ tic! Sparks. bounces and rocks, 
    Colorful metal Dav Crockett Large plastic 
bird shoot target Tommy gun station wagon 
Cork sho Sparki Mini size. 
whirling swath agp 44c plastic “ ‘re 44c Sedeails sty le. 23¢c 
Reg. 5% 
saliatrad ROAD GRADER TRUCK 
Sturdy, enameled road grader with 244 
moving parts. Rubber tires. Pang eg. 2. 
mpeg ornate ep y reve area eis 
29-in, baton has rubber-bala 
and bottom. Official model. -” 44c Lig 
DAVY CROCKET CATCH-A-DART Reg. 98¢ 
GAY COSTUMES FOR BOYS & GIRLS Many, many styles. All colorfully 98 c 
deignid for halloween fun. Reg. 1.98 
STAGECOACH, ne ee 
ealistic rses ¥ 
wood coiuitaition. Sele gs ae 
UPHOLSTERED TV- ROCKER x 
Ch finished rock pholstered 2 1 hand targets, 18” rubber- 
sith bentharlibe plastic. 788 opnk den ile eatin tee, | OA Rep. 9.98 : Rep. 606 
recat SPORTS CARS PORTABLE METAL TEA WAGON 
it makes “ I 1 _ Kit 2 rr om and 243 owtentd a = pany wheels. 144 
see Reo. 4.98 Pes. 1.98 
Purchase Coupon Credit @Leyeway 
WAYS TO BUY: “@Bosy Term Credit eCash 
  SAGINAW AT 
WARREN. PONTIAC FEDERAL DEPT. STORES 
         
        [STARTS MONDAY Downtown Store } 
} | 
        
   
     
      ‘MEN! 
DON’T 
Takes From 
Regular Stocks 
00707 
Pairs 
of 
Fine. 
ALL WOOL 
Included Are Martinelli and Phoenix 
Suit Pants—Actual Values to $24.95! 
Two Extraordinarily Value Packed Groups 
*B™ sna 107 LOOK AT THESE POPULAR FABRICS 
® All Wool Worsteds 
@ All Wool Flannels 
@ All Wool Gabardines     
     
A pair or two of these well-cut slacks is one of the 
soundest wardrobe investments @ man can make, Extra 
slacks make for extra wearing possibilities . . . Also 
they prolong the life of your business or dress clothes. 
Beginning Monday at Osmun’s Downtown Store Only, 
we will have for your inspection two selected groups of 
the very finest slacks from our two stores. And, what 
is more important to you, they will be marked at an 
all-time low of just 8.75 and 10.75. Sizes 28 to 44. 
NO CHARGE FOR CUFF ALTERATIONS 
              31 ‘North Saginaw Street 
) Open Mon. Fri. "til 9 P. M. 
   
        THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1956 |   
   
  ages and. other paper out the win- 
dow of your car while driving or 
riding? 
If so, it is costing the American 
public $15 to $50 a mile per year 
for the cleanup of refuse strewn 
along the highways of our various 
states by motorists and riders. 
A survey by the family econo- 
mics bureau of Northwestern Na- 
tional Life Insurance Company 
shows that this problem has be- 
come so serious that 13. states 
recently shapenéd their penalties 
for the offense. 
The survey was conducted 
through cooperation of highway 
department# of 44 states. It found: 
That penalties for “litterbug- 
ging” vary from practically none 
in Idaho which reports “‘law not 
very enforceable, litter increasing 
every year” to a maximum of 
$1,000 fine or a year's imprison- 
ment in Georgia. The latter state 
reports “a noticeabie reduction in 
this type of offense” since the new 
was 
Some highway departments 
stated in a survey that under 
existing conditions litterbugs are 
hard to catch, and even if caught, 
are usuallg let off with a small 
fine or 4 lecture by local justices. 
But South Carolina did some- 
thing about the situation and 
through close cooperation of -high- 
way maintenace and highway 
patrol departments, arrested 1 
trash strewers and convicted 80 
of them in the first 12 months 
of its clean highway program. 
Ohio, the survey shows, set up 
an outstanding example of effec- 
tive coordination of intensive anti- 
litter education with stricter 
enforcement of anti-litter laws. 
Ohio reported that it reduced— 
oe its campaign—the cost of   
Starch Sponge’s Use 
Urged in Medication 
WASHINGTON — Starch sponge, 
static agent, has been 
as a carrier for medicaments for 
slow release within Pad body, 
* 
The sponge, ae from ordi- 
nary food-quality starch by a sim- 
ple process, is nontoxic, nonirritat- 
ing, and is reaflily absorbed by 
body tissues. It can absorb about 
18 times its own yreight of water. * 
Used in block or powdered form 
to control bleeding, it need not be 
removed from wounds or incisions, 
This ability to disintegrate~slowly, 
harmlessly and completely within 
the body has suggested its use as “Lilerbug’ Problem Met 
: With Varying Success 
"meccAPCL.s (INS)—Are youlcleaning state highways from} ‘\)” . 5 
$621,733 in 1953 to $442,258 in 1954 
and to $344,452 in 1955, 
California, where keeping the 
highway system clean costs an 
able improvement 
Chamber of Commerce educa- 
tional campaign coupled with a 
strengthened anti-litter law. 
Oregon reports gratifying use by motorists of the litter bags so 
distributed by civic and govern- 
mental organizations and of hun- 
dreds of litter barrels placed 
along highways in 1955. But there 
necessary,” said the report, “to 
lrelocate some of the barrels due 
garbage.” 
;Court Order Outlaws 
NAACP in Texas 
AUSTIN, Tex. (®—The state at- 
torney general asked and got yes- 
terday a court order aimed at 
putting the National Assn. for the   
out of business in Texas. 
Dist. Judge Otis T. Dunagan of 
Smith County ordered the NAACP 
file no more school integration 
suits, and to collect no more mon- 
ey until a hearing Sept. 28 in Ty- 
ler, Tex. 
“We allege that the NAACP has 
exceeded the bounds of propriety 
and law and have asked that they 
not be allowed to operate in this 
state,"" Atty, Gen. John Ben Shep- 
pard said in a statement. 
Dr. H. Boyd Hall, state NAACP 
president, said the attorney gen- 
eral's move showed that Negroes 
in Texas were entering an era of 
persecution. Hall said he had an- 
ticipated the ban. 
    
Someone’s Making Dough 
WILMINGTON, Del, —A special 
grade of silicon suitable for use 
in solar “batteries,” which capture 
energy from the sun, sells for only 
$180 a pound. The regular semi- 
conductor grade of silicon used in 
such electronic devices as trans- 
istors sells for $350 a pound.         
‘|Sportsmen Meet in UP 
NEWBERRY (#—The Northern 
Michigans Sportsman's Assn. will 
hold its 33rd annual tion in 
Newberry today and Sunday. Paul 
M. Barrett of Lansing, an exten- 
sion specialist in conservation and 
land use will speak. It is hosted by 
the Newberry and Tahquamenon 
Sportsmen Clubs.     
Potato Festival Opens 
POSEN (#—The fifth annual 
Posen Potato Festival is being 
staged in this Presque Isle County 
Community today and Sunday with 
potato pancakes as the main dish. 
Gov. Williams will be the luncheon 
      a vehicle for the administration of| 
certain medicines and drugs. guest Sunday, will crown the potato 
queen and then speak at 3 p.m.     
  Out Dives True Life Adventures     
  estimated $750,000, reports notice-| © 
through aj =. 
to local residents filling them with) ; 
Advancement of Colored People 
to stop all operations in Texas, to “ Ue tan 
BACH OF THE EARTHE ee 
GREAT BODIES OF WATER HAS ITS OWN SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF — 
TEMPERATURE, COLOR, FLOW. HERE 16 A 
GRAPHIZ EXAMPLE: THE ZIS-ZAGGING STREAK MARK6 
THE MEETING OF THE PACIFIC OCEANS DARK BLUE 
WATERS WITH THE LIGHTER BLUE OF THE — in 
         * 4 ©19 
Tot Walk Disney Productions 
World Rights Reserved 
BERING SEA. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, 
  
    
  it was 
an 
important 
business 
deal... 
and my 
appearance 
counted! 
A well groomed ap- 
Peorance counts 
heavily in your favor 
on special occasions, 
And, sifice you never 
con tell when spe- 
cial occasions will 
arise, it’s smart to 
put your best looks 
forward every day. 
Count on us to keep 
your clothes. in “like 
“new” condition, ,. ‘f 
always! 
  
_ GIVE 
HOLDEN’S 
RED STAMPS: *] 5 DRESS SHIRTS 
| 3 Cash and Carry 
  
GRESHAM bend Oakland Ave. 
  Wisner Stadium CLEANERS 1 
Joat North of BE 4.2579       
      EDERAL’S 
Double holster 
‘set with 2 guns 
278 
Reg. 5.98 2 western guns in 
leather holsters, 
Colorful popsicle 
truck plays song 
14 
Reg. 2.98 Metal truck rolls 
along, plays song. tic! Sparks. 
Davy Crockett 
bird shoot target 
Cork shot gun, 
whirling targets. 44c 
Reg. 98¢ 
saad so ae rod — ath - GIRLS 
any, Many . All colorfu 
designed for Rlowern fun. : 98c Reg. 1.98 
STAGECOACH, GALLOPING HORSE 
. Realistic design. Horses gallop. Ply- 14 
wood construction. Safe fun. Reg. 2.98 
UPHOLSTERED TV ROCKER 
Chrome-finished rocker upholstered 7388 
with leather-like plastic, ay Peg. 9.95 
|} YOU-BUILD-IT SPORTS CARS 
Kit makes 2 sports cars. Metal and 243 
plastic parts, Educational, fun, Peg : bi a 
4 WAYS TO BUY: 
        Sparking plastic 
flintlock pistol 
I — plas- 34c 
Large plastic 
Tommy gun 
* Adc Sparking-t 
plastic gun. 
Purchase Coupon Credit 
@Easy Term Credit 
FEDERAL DEPT. STORES Open Sat. and 
Mon. 9:30 TO 9 
as well as Thurs. and Fri. Nights 
           
Spring horse on 
chrome frame 
688 
Reg. 9.95 Extra -big horse 
bounces and rocks, 
Reg. -79c 
  Colorful metal station wagon 
Miniature size. 
Authentic style. 23c- 
Reg. 98c Reg. 59¢ 
ALL-METAL ROAD GRADER agar 
Sturdy, enameled road grader with 
moving parts. Rubber tires. 2 eg. 2. 
OFFICIAL-SIZE CHROME BATON 
29-in, baton has rubber-balanced top 4 4 
and bottom. Official model. he rc eg. 
DAVY CROCKET CATCH-A-DART 
2 metal hand targets, 18” rubber- 3 4 
tipped dart, Safe fun for two. a rc ‘2. 
_ PORTABLE METAL TEA WAGON 
Sturdily built, Rolls easily on wheels, 
Use also as a table. Sturdy! Reg. 3.98 
@Leyoway 
@Cesh    
  SAGINAW AT 
WARREN, PONTIAC 
      
  4 
       | STARTS MONDAY ? 
     
   Takes From 
Regular Stocks 
d67 
Pairs 
of 
™~ ‘Fine 
ALL WOOL 
SLACKS Included Are Martinelli and Phoenix 
Suit Pants—Actual Values to $24.95! 
Two Extraordinarily Value Packed Groups 
at | te aind $ 
LOOK AT THESE POPULAR FABRICS 
- @ All Wool ‘Worsteds 
® All Wool Flannels 
@ All Wool Gabardines 
    A pair or two of these well-cut slacks is one of the 
soundest wardrobe investments a man can make, Extra 
slacks make for extra wearing possibilities . . . Also 
they prolong the life of your business or dress clothes, 
Beginning Monday at Osmun’s Downtown Store Only, 
we will have for your inspection two selected groups of 
the very finest slacks from our two stores. And, what 
is more important to you, they will be marked at an 
all-time ‘low of just 8.75 and 10.75. Sizes 28 to 44. 
NO CHARGE FOR CUFF ALTERATIONS 
  51, North Saginaw Street 
y Open Mon. Fri. *til 9 P.M. 
                    
unwillingness to act. The        
        PRESS ture ot an     
    
  
     
  "This Is the Time to 
Clean Up the Basement 
This is the time of year when a 
little precaution may pay big divi- 
dends in protecting your home from 
408 Pe 
  e ever type of heating you may use. 
— san Check your furnace over carefully, or 
TVS nsors Decision have your furnace man check it. 
on urchill Is Correct Check the chimney and the openings 
= Some of these television emcees ito it. See that both furnace and 
better spend more time on their home pengronnd are clean and ready for win- 
| work, or else someone should tell their T operation. — 
sponsors to take a long, slow walk. Next, see that your basement 
Théy’re crossing each other. is clean. Clean out all the papers 
* * * that have accumulated during the 
The other evening Raxpotra ‘Summer. Remove ail litter, any- 
on the $64,000 Question. , 
He vany ae it. And, while you are at it, see that 
i : = the basement is shipshape, that no 
ay aes Sow. lose boards are left lying about which 
However, Hal March, oneofour might cause an accident leading to 
favorites, hemmed and hawed and — personal injury. Many such accidents 
nudged and re-stated until so = can be avoided if the home is kept dl much time had elapsed the thing : 
i terminated for the night. The prow caning ari — all pas 
’ overly zealous Mr. March assured 9 ““8°W"Y8 8D places where persons 
everyone Mr. Churchill would be ae to walk kept open and clear at 
back next week. times.   
However, he won't. ° 
The sponsor has spoken—but THe moron whose doctor told him 
definitely. four days ago to rub himself with a 
~ *& *® certain liniment for three nights 
=. Mr. Cwuncumt agrees completely running and then skip a night is 
» with the decision. This tends to prove suffering from exhaustion. 
+ that he’s really Winston CHURCHILL’s 
' son. 
» One emcee actually lost his Soviet officials who have been low- 
- lucrative job by fumbling around too rating Stati have somehow failed 
‘long too often—and he deserved the to mention that he was a Russian. 
hs fate. ; 
pk * * * 
- You either call ‘em all alike and 
call ’em straighi—or you don't. 
Winston Churchill's rogeny aren't. 
any better than anyone else in 
the United States of America. 
And to the everlasting credit of 
Randolph Churchill, he doesn’t 
want to be. 
oe 
ee 
* 
oe 
ew 
  
    
  
The People’s Business: 
Cobo Campaign Dissatisfaction Voiced by 
Some Outstate Solons 
’ By ROGER LANE 
LANSING—A good many outstate Re- 
publican legislators say they think the 
Republican Cobo-for-governor campaign   ee 
oe 
Oe 
© 
& 
  
t Ee — 
| 3 Another Stalemate is rolling along in fine styic. 
i * * * 
i + Michigan's Legislature again has A tew interviewed during the legisia- 
,. = demonstrated the type of legislative tive meeting earlier in the week had criti~ 
I ; stalemate which frequently results ee to sag. One predicted Camu 
» when the state has a governor of one atth ueedtive re «= jee 
| | political party and a legislature in 
|| which the opr =e party either con- | 
| «trols or very nearly controls the law- | 
| making body. 
! : x~ * * generally reluctant te discuss them, 
and did not want their names publicly 
associated with their views. 
Mostly, the senators and House mem- 
bers said Cobo was getting a warm re- 
Gov. Wit1aMs calls the legislature “?*" ee ~_ into Pasa areas, 
back into special session and tries t0 sen -Creighton R. Coleman (R-Battle tell it what to do. He does this with Creek) said he timed enthusiastic applause one eye on the legislation in question given Cobo when he appeared at a Packed 
' and the other on the voters who are Rotar?, Club hincheon and a- a 
ry going to the polls in Nevember. In ; : EXCELLENT IMPRESSION other words, his moves are quite He said Cobo made an “excellent” im- 
_ largely political, . pression in an earlier appearance in the + ~ * district before a Republican Party gathers 
The legislature, in its turn, also ing. 
* * * ~ has its eyes on the November Seas 
Other legislators told of good crowds, - election. So it refuses to do what 
the Governor suggests. Some- 
times it does the opposite thing 
and sometimes, as in the present 
case, it has done nothing but ad- 
_ journed again without passing ‘Several legislators said Cobo had 
not yet been in their districts or had . 
not come in since the Aug. 7 primary. 
x * * 
Cobo would return, 
~ enacted they should elect a governor paren To APPEAR ee 
and a legislature of the same political © One senator said he had written for . Then a distinct program could and received a commitment that Cobo 
but the governor presumably would ‘Midas fale to ahem sm carry out the new laws with a deter- to build the Republican , 
mination to make them truly effec- been slipping some, by maybe 5 De   
  a TEMBER 22, First comes your furnace, or what- MH 
   
be put into effect. Not only that, would visit his county fair-but that the | ; rj \ & 
ti 
“TRUST IN THE LORD     
UNTO THINE OWN UNDERSTANDING. “ [ ye f ‘ 
WITH ALL THINE HEART; AND LEAN NOT TEMBER 22. 1956 
    
Assets Unlimited — HOV FS 
  
Days of All Faiths   
North America Had Martyrs, Too 
g SERTERLTTE Te 
Ee? Sprs fF : 
i 
Hf s HEE ? i something of 
ot Tens   
     
  
  ’ Tergy. Two pare the season for the one that 
would soon begin. Now the prayer 
modern 
cultivated their own soil. 
* * *., 
Today’s Jew is not praying for 
rain in New York or London or 
wherever he may live; he is pray- 
ing for rain in Palestine. And 
since the establishment of Israel, 
the unity between the Jews who 
have returned to Palestine and 
those who are still scattered 
throughout the world. Friday, the final day, is Simhath 
Torah—"‘the rejoicing in the Law.” 
The name comes from the fact 
that the annual cycle of the read- 
ing of the Law in synagogue serv- 
iees comes to_an end and will 
start over on the next ‘Sabbath. 
It is at the same time a closing 
and a reopening, an end and a 
beginning, of the Jews’ most’ cher- 
ished possession, the Torah, and 
the Jew rejoices in this never- 
ending gift. 
* * * 
Processions will be held today, 
in which the sacred scrolls, both 
of the Law and the Prophets, will 
be carried about the synagogue, 
(Copyright 1956) Voice of the People’ 
. ‘Republ ox 
  
   e 
uri Se 
Bo req 
in ite nature. 
States, and fought within our 
boundaries. 
Dorothy C. 
‘Truman’s Dopey 
Without a Needle’ 
According to Harry Truman, 
White was never a Red, Silver- 
master is a-sterling character, 
He deserves a kiss. How a man 
can be so dopey without taking 
the needle I'll never know. 
Joseph P. Larutia 
Wants ‘Prospersity 
for All Residents 
I read a letter in the Voice of 
the People that says the 1,800 resi- 
dents near the Pontiac plant don't 
want the new tracks. It concludes 
by asking. whether the city is 
being run for industry or the peo- 
ple who live near the tracks. 
That's a fair question, Should 
we run the city for the 1,800 
who signed the petition or 
should we run it for the 78,200 
whe didn’t sign but who want. 
to see Pontiac grow, have more 
jobs and expand? 
We want more prosperity for 
the whole city. We shouldn't de- 
cide questions for a handful of 
people that sign petitions. 
Guy Who Has Been Laid Off 
. Since May 
‘Bus Isn’t Denied, 
Rather Rejected’ 
In answer to J. C. and Old Trou- 
ble Maker, I believe he has named 
himself right. 
I myself send my boy to a pa- 
rochial school, not that I am 
averse to the teaching in the pub- 
lic school, but because of the lack 
of religious teaching. 
Now it says in my book, “Thou 
‘shalt not covet anything that is 
  
Dr. William Brady Says:   
Iodin Ration Does Wonders Again 
I went on lodin Ration about 
three months ago, Now I am feel- 
ing like a new person, energy 
boundless. It's wonderful . , . (Mrs. 
P. H, S.) 
Answer — Yahbut, like milk, 
wheat, meat, fish, fowl, fruit, nuts, 
etc., it is habit forming. Once you 
start using such things have 
to keep on eating them thé rest of 
your life. If you discontinue your 
daily ration of meat, milk, wheat, 
etc., as soon as you get feeling in 
fine fettle, the old tired, weary, 
bloomy mumpishness will recur. 
For pamphlet The Iodin Ration 
send stamped, self-addressed en- 
velope. 
Please send me your pamphlet 
on Alergy, I do enjoy your ref- 
erences to Canandaigua so much, 
for we spent many happy summers 
there at a nice cottage (F, W. C.) 
Answer—at the west shore point 
that bears your name, I betcha. 
To decide whether Canandaigua or 
Keuka is the Gem of the Finger- 
lakes, one should spent three 
days around each lake in the sum- 
mer and three days around each in 
the autumn, Every reader subject 
to allergic sensitivity should send 
self-addressed envelope 
the pamphlet Relief for Al- 
     steady my nerves. (Mrs. B. E.) 
Answer—Boys of that age should 
help Mom ‘with the dishes, setting 
table, cooking, efc. That sort of 
thing makes a man out of a boy. 
ASK YOUR DOCTOR about pre-- 
marin tablets—estrogenic — effects 
in a coated tablet. 
I can’t take milk, not even a 
- glass a day or a small portion on 
cereal, creamed vegetables, etc., 
without getting a very offensive 
breath that lasts for days. Would 
calcium shots be advisable? (Mrs. 
F, J, Ho , - 
Answer—I{ the purpose is to pre- «vent calcium deficiency due to in- 
all one suffers if milk consumption 
is less than 1% pints (three 
glasses) daily. It would be neces- 
sary to correct riboflavin, vitamin 
A, and vitamin B complex as well. 
Sh letters, not more than one page 
pertaining to pergonal 
health and hrgiene, not to , diag treatment, will be answered by nosis, 
Dr. Wiliam Bredy, if a “< self- 
oadreeee envelope is sent to Pon- 
c n. Press, Pontiac, Michigan. 
Copyright 1956) a a= Pi 
  
For my money, these people are 
not denied the bus service; they 
are rejecting it. 
H. A. Bowman 
93 Gladstone PI. 
School Bus Rules 
Present Problem 
Just yesterday there was nearly 
an accident when a school bus 
stopped near a drug store where 
I was shopping, This was in a 
semi-rural area. 
The comments ensuing among 
the people in the store as a re- 
sult of this incident wag thought: 
provoking. Out of about ten peo- 
ple, not one, including myself, 
could state positively what the 
rules are about school buses. 
Understand there was no doubt 
about what to do when following 
the bus, but rather about what to 
do when approaching a school bus 
from the other direction. Do you 
hit someone or get your trunk 
bashed in? ' 
I believe the driver should get 
out and flag down approaching 
traflic, 
d. McLean 
3335 Auburn Ave. 
Calls Delinquents 
Just Lazy Bums 
I am sure the public is getting 
sick and tired of social workers 
claiming that juvenile delinquency 
is merely the transition of youth 
to adolescence, with accompanying 
pranks and revolt against society, 
These young hoods are just lazy 
bums who get up at noon and then 
hang around outside some candy 
store, while their parents work to 
support them. 
  Jack G. 
  
Portraits 
By JAMES J. METCALFE 
The hills of San Francisco are 
» » « The steps that lead the way 
. « « From daily cares to restful 
thoughts . . . By gazing on the 
bay ... They are the invitation to 
. . . A quietude of soul... For 
everyone who ventures there ... 
Whatever be his goal , . , The 
visitor, the native, and... 
* Francisco give . 
over in... 
phere, 
Copyright, 195¢, Field Enterprises, Inc. 
All rights reserved. 
Looking Back 
15 Years Ago 
VICE GRAND jury may be 
asked for city. : 
GOVERNOR URGES aid for 
small firms. 
2% Years Ago 
MADRID, TOLEDO collapse be- 
lieved near. 
19 POLICE, Firemen face trial 
as cult members. ;   
  
Case Records of a Psychologist:   
Urges College Church 
Judy indicates the tremen- 
dous influence which college 
students can wield if they get 
into the harness of local moral 
organizations. Nowadays, the 
four years they are in college 
are almost totally wasted as 
regards constructive social in- 
fluence. It is an unusual col- 
lege town that can show 10 per 
cent of the student body in 
churches, 
_By DR, GEORGE W, CRANE 
’ Case S-372: Judy, aged 21, fin- 
ished her senior year at college 
jJast term, 
* * * 
She wrote home at least once 
.per week, and in one of her letters 
she mentioned the fact that Daniel 
and David were going to Detroit 
for the week-end for dates. 
She had been invited to go along, 
and had a date arranged with a 
very attractive footballer. there, 
but she declined the inyitation. i in the 1920's. I roomed in the Bap- 
tist parsonage at Northampton, 
Its pastor was a livewire. 
named Edward Estaver. I have 
always taught Sunday school 
But there wasn't a girl from 
Smith College in attendance at 
the Methodist Church. 
“Do they attend your Baptist 
Church?” I asked Rev. Estaver. 
* 2 * 
“Rarely,” he confessed, “But Dr. 
Harry Emerson Fosdick’s daughter 
    
  Attendance ~ 
situation exists on almost all 1,900 
college campuses in the United 
States. 
SABBATH VIOLATORS 
The students usually date late on 
Saturday night; then sleep till 
mid-morning on Sunday. 
The girls use Sunday as laundry 
day to wash their lingerie and loll 
around. e. 
Yet women are the chief cus- 
We need to harness more coeds 
for useful civic and religious work 
in their college towns, 
Judy Is obviously an exception. ‘ And se are my sons, who attend 
ehurch faithfully, But they laugh- 
            
         
  
    si 
  
         
        
    
    
   
   
      
   
        
    
    
       
     
              
          
         
   
           
        a ai i a 
              . 
  
Patrons for “High Fever Follies” of 1956 are being 
invited to lend their support to the project which will 
benefit Pontiac General Hospital. Members of the 
auxiliary to the hospital reveal that proceeds from the 
Oct, productions Oct, 24 and 25. Members of the patrons of the committee,   
Sorority Meets for Picnic 
Mrs. Barbara Kinney of the Cen-|teer program and donate its serv- 
tral Volunteer Bureau told of the 
work of the bureau at the Thurs-| 
day evening meeting of the Beta 
Chapter of Beta Theta Phi Sorority. 
The chapter will support the volun-   
Interlakes Club Gets 
Tray Etching Lesson 
Mrs. Robert. Scharf presented a 
lesson of etching colored aluminum 
trays at the Wednesday meeting « 4 
ices as a group. 
Mrs. George Zannoth, presideent, 
opened her home at Watkins Lake 
for the picnic supper and meeting. 
Mrs, Kenneth Madsen served 
as chairman, assisted by Mrs. 
William Hutchinson, Mrs, Joseph 
Burgdortf, Mrs. Nerman Hal- 
dane, Mrs, Norman Mack, Mra, 
Ward Cummings, Mrs, Don Kal- 
ser and Mrs. dohn Sinclair, 
Reports were given by Mrs, Sin- 
clair, house and calling committee   
of the Interlakes Extension Group. 
  chairman; Mrs. Hutchinson, cards 
  Mrs. William Hurlburt opened 
her home on “‘mburst road for 
the all-day meeting. Guests for the 
day were Mrs, Dean Peterson and 
Mrs. Donald Johns, 
During the business meeting 
plans were completed to attend the 
home demonstration Rally Day 
being held at the CAI Building 
Wednesday. and flowers; Mrs. Ward Ross, ways 
and means; and Mrs, Ida Hiltz, 
Mrs, Kaiser, 
planned for the year, 
Guest night will be held Oct. 18, 
at which time a copper demonstra- 
tion will be presented. Mrs. Don 
White will be hostess to the group) — 
for its next meeting.     
Church Sets 
Antique glass, china, rare woods, | 
household furniture, homemade} 
baked goods and apples by the 
bushel will go under the auction- 
eer’s gavel, at an auction sale 
being: sponsored by Lake Angelus| 
Guild of St. Mary In the Hills. | * oe * 
| 
  The sale is to be held Sept. 29 
beginning at 1 p.m. at the L. E. 
Smart farm on Tienken road near   
Women of Moose 
Meet Draws 15 
Fifteen members answered roll 
call at the Thursday meeting of 
the Academy of Friendship of the 
Women of the Moose. Mrs. Roy 
Post and Mrs. William Morgan 
were cohostesses for the evening 
meeting, held at the Post residence 
on Fairgrove avenue. 
Materials for the American Can- 
cer Society were gathered during) 
the and plans were made 
to adopt a monthly birthday group 
among the patients at the. Oakland 
County Tuberculosis Sanatorium. 
The October meeting will be held 
at the home of Mrs. George Bread- 
“ow on Third street with Mrs, John Auction Sale 
Rochester. Proceeds will benefit 
the church's building fund. 
The committee headed by Mrs. 
Edgar Beatty is soliciting items 
of any kind for the sale. | 
Serving with Mrs. Beatty are 
Mrs. Arthur Dodge of Lake An- 
gelus and Mrs. Bernard Zinn of 
Birmingham. Persons having items 
are asked to contact the commit- 
tee mone, & oor. areas, 
oe 
Cider and donuts will be avail- 
able at the refreshment stand dur-       committee ate (left to right) Mrs. Jack 
Eileen drive, Mrs. William Rogers of Washington street, 
Mrs. Lucius Howlett of James K boulevard and Mrs. D. 
J. Kennedy of Draper avenue. Mrs. Kennedy is chairman Pontiag Press Prete 
Cvengros of 
Q ea i THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1936 
Tie 
  spree, 
. Not one to let a good idea lie     
  
a a Retired Couple’s Security 
Endangered by Relatives 
Return of Loans, Halt to Untimely Visits 
cooking meals, washing dishes, Oldsters Urged to Be Frank in Asking| 
     
   
   
     C 28 Older Folk 
  
                          
    E 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shorey of We- Savings and Loan Building. Those inter. nonah drive have completed plans for the ested in participating in the Follis are in- Oct. 2 kickoff party to be held at Federal vited to attend. 
                      
      
   
    
        
  
ing the day. 
Mothers Club 
We lcomes Three League of Women Voters of Pon- 
tiac will open their membership Mrs. Roseline Hickman, Mrs. El-|,_:.. , 
win Sutherland and Mrs. Francis Grive Wednesday evening with talks by Mrs. Neil Stabler of the L. Amos were welcomed 88 NeW!ctate Democratic Central Commit- pmembers at the recent meeting of/tee and by Mrs. Robert Stacey of the Mothers Club of the Pontiat/tne state Republican Central Com. Boys Club, mittee. 
Plans were made for a bone| The League invites the public to china cup and saucer card party|hear the representatives from the to be held in October, and annual| women’s groups of the Democratic reports were given during the busi-janq = Rpublican Parties at the as errs a aS eave YWCA at 8 p.m, Wednesday. 
gape age Mrs. Stabler will speak on “Ad- Mrs. Walter Peters, Mrs. Ralph vantages of Women Working in   Baxter assisting the hostess, feir, : mald McKee and ire icaag tenet their Party.”"“Living in Ann Ar- : ‘a bor, Mrs. Staebler is a long-time   
   
         
   
       
        
    
  ~street, her’son, Mark, and    
  pont fatally reunion in Kirklin, Ind., five i the ‘amily were present. Pictured are 
‘stan ft to right) Mrs, Alford Denman of North- 
field street and Mrs, Harry Swope of Frankfort, Ind. 
Seated are (left) Mrs, Robert Bunker of Northjield 
   rs. Allie Jane Cox of Kirklin. Democratic worker, , 
Mrs, Stacey of Birmingham, will 
speak on “Mechanics of Party Pol- 
itics,” Working in many capacities 
in the party, she is now im her 
second term with the state central 
committee, 
AIMED AT SERVICE 
The League of Women-voters, a 
jnonpartisan group, gives voters 
service by presenting unbiased, Voters League Slates GOP, Dem Talks 
non-partisan facts. 
Recently the candidates of Re- 
publican and Democratic parties 
were interviewed and the find- 
ings reported to the public. The 
group also has demonstrateg the 
use of voting machines to the 
general public. 
The invitation to-the Wednesday 
evening meeting was extended by 
of the league. Mrs. Glen Griffin 
will handle refreshments for the 
event. 
Another project underway by 
league members is the finance 
drive running from Sept, 17 to Oct. 
WCTU Meets 
for Luncheon 
The Rev. Mrs. Leland Marion 
was hostess to the Frances Wil-   
* lard WCTU at a luncheon Wednes- 
day in Christian Temple. 
  
Mrs. John Lamont 
Entertains Circle 
Mary Martha Circle of Oakland 
Park Methodist Church . met 
Wednesday for a dessert luncheon 
and meeting at the home of Mrs. 
John Lamont on Nelson. street, 
Devotions were given by Mrs. 
|Ralph Clara and Mrs. Leo Mine- 
weaser conducted the business 
tmeeting. Guests at the meeting 
were Mrs. Albert Barker, presi- 
dent of the Oakland Park WSCS, 
Mrs, Reginald Lamont and Mrs. 
Amanda Everett, 
‘ The next meeting will be held 
Oct, 17 at the home of Mrs. Iri 
Williams on Dover road, sented -the devotion, ‘Steward 
ship for Life,” and the Rev. L. L. 
Marion spoke‘on ‘‘God Is Praised 
for His Goodness and His Power." 
During the afternoon officers 
were elected for the coming year 
with Mrs, Ashley chosen again for 
president, 
  
Entertains 
Mrs. R. C. Lippard opened her 
home on Lakeview avenue Thurs 
enjoyed. Mrs. 
          will open-her home on Beverly ave- 
nue for the next meeting.   
  his great-great-grandmother } | 
    {| 
  day evening to members of the 
Mrs! W. A. Bull, card games were| 
        
  arold McGraw | 
         
   
       
        
J 
! z 
é 
i 
if 3 & 
i 7 : Hf ij 
:   ae F , 5 
& 
ws 
    
    
at 
bo 
a 
    
  
a 
  5. Workers are under the chair- 
manship of Mrs. Harry Aten. 
  
Sunday 2 
  
         
      
   
       
          
    
        | 
be returned to you 
on $5 
NEW Open Tonight 
‘til 9 P. M, 
    Let our experts remove all the dirt and grime from your carpet with New Way’s amazing rug cleaning . They will 
Rug and Carpet Ct Woke) on        
         
      
      
to 5 
           
     
          
   
   
   
oking like new. 
95 } 
| 
9x12 =| 
‘Rug | 
    
4   
  amet 
      
   
   
     
    
       
   
    
e@ COLD WAVE 
@ HAIRCUT 
@CORECTOR — 
Hair Treatment 
635 
* For the lift of your life, have 
this amazing glamour trio! 
Your waves will be vibrant 
with lustrous 
baer | Neisner’s | Beauty Salon — 
Som 42. N. SAGINAW Sr. WA" Phone Fiderol 8-1343 2nd Floor 
AIR CONDITIONED. Regular 10.00 
   
      
       
     
   
   Genuine 12.75 Value 
Heircut 
Regularly 
$1.25 
BUDGET 
WAVE 
4* : 
    
          — 
  
  
  
  
  
    
      
    
THIRTEEN     
      
  = THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1956 
. j‘*Gatellite in the Sky,” color, Cinema~ throughout the country. Total 
Community Theaters PI te tee cai, el Oe Work Metered «I enw trigue,"” , Robert Mitchum, CARACAS—Venezuela has built by the Fedetal Government in 
soe : pone one ae of high |1965 totaled some $66,000,000 
es ee Sat: “Lawless Street.” Techni-| re! gen, Hee 5. Handotnh a   
  
Without the, development of new|the gas oe would not have 
See 
      
       
      
      
         
     
    
) UNION LAKE and HAGGERTY Y ROADS Open 6:30 Show Starts 
TONIGHT    
  SUN. MAT. 1:45 MA 4-2151 
SUN.—MON.—TUES,   
   
     
      
  
  Spe 
    
      
  
    
SUNDAY —- MON DAY cs 
Dh 
az thal    
     
    Keese (\DY 3 | \) |e AUDIE MURPHY : > aati Ame. t2¢4,/Plan Air Conference | | | ee Cee Loven — 
~~ a JAMES CAGNEY 9 toed     
  [AST TIMES TODAY— a Amc ge Sedan bet. ” : ME” . t 
eS a aa | “Tribute To A Bad Man       
    
    
  
    
Wuere Movie GoinG Is A Rea Preasure 
Exclusive First Run Relures Only!   
              ‘CALLING MR. DEATH? 
~ SUNDAY ONLY TOMORROW The GUNFIGHTER & His GIRL     
    
       
    
    ‘Try? T es ee ~ , - 
le A ll lll ll tli. ti tli li tli lt ti tli il lili la il i ln li cil tl, lil lt ll i ll ll Ul lta tins A te th th thn ii te te | 
       
(ZL — ALSO: 
2nd ACTION FEATURE! . 
STICKS WITH ALL THE TERROR OF A TIME BOMB!   
      i 
       
    
   and added 
Hollywood's 
best! 
20th Century-Fox Presents 
THE ONE AND ONLY 
introducing 
Hollywood's newest 
CinemaScoPE hunk of man! 
COLOR by DE xe COE FSS Fe Se eee 
        
    
SEE THEM FIRST! 
SEE THEM NEW! 
SEE THEM BIGGER AT — Bex Office Opens 6:30 P.M.—Show Stents 7:10 P.M. BFE ECR 
TONIGHT: YOUR LAST CHANCE TO = eee hae GREAT HITS   
  
        
      
   
    
      
    
DON 
MURRAY ARTHUR O'CONNELL 
BETTY FIELD EILEEN HECKART Based on the Stage Pay by WILLIAM INGE 
PRODUCED BY 
SCREENPLAY BY 
GEORGE AXELROD 
EXTRAS © Soonstege fel yoLcamte voucr 
St rand)          
   
   
       
    
       SHOWN AT 
1:25 - 3:25 
5:30 -- 7:35 
9:40 P. M. 
        
     
        
  LATE SHOW TONIGHT! BOX OFFICE OPEN UNTIL 11:00’ P.M. 
    COMES THE STORY OF 
KILLERS THAT TER- 
RORIZE AN 
ENTIRE       
       
            
     
yaa ‘ i 
- oe er re ee ae «a a ak a gary Fe are — 
# a : 
cnet   
                     
   
    
  
TWO METHOD   
5 YEAR LAND CONTRACT 
$48.34 Per Month or $2,500 Cosh Only 2 Miles West of Pontiec In Pine Loke Manor 
pnp tains cova ees 
Call Immediately —FE 
SYLVAN REALTY COMPANY SYLVAN CENTER 
2383 Orchard Lake Ave. ~ A LOOSE RUNG 
=i _ WEOGE 
         
      
    I 
Attractive 10 unit apartment motel on main high- 
" way and popular Oakland County lake. - Comfort- 
able 5 room modern, owners quarters in addition, 
plus drive-in restaurant—now leased out. Full 
price $68,500 on terms. Owners will accept trade. 
@ “The Bird to See...” 
realtor ward e. partridge 
1050 W. Huron St. Ph. FE 4-3581 
  A Lakefront Apartment Motel 7 
\ ,       
methods .team up in the repair of broken or loose chair rungs. 
Old Chair Isn't Through 
Don’t junk that wobbly chair.,;tied. The tourniquet is tightened 
A little glue will go a long way|by twisting it with a stick. 
toward putting it back on its own} Sometimes chair rungs break 
jfeet, minus the characteristic/near their peg ends, and this ail- 
‘drunken my. ment’s cure calls for different 
treatment.           | * 
| Loose legs 5 ar rungs top the list} USE MEDICINE DROPPER 
i   
Have Us Show You Our NEW 
LEDGE ROCK STONE SIDING | Made of Fiberglas With All the Colors of Nature 
Also Aluminum, Asbestos and Insulated Siding 
at Rock Bottom Prices 
FREE ESTIMATES — TERMS — NO MONEY DOWN 
MICHIGAN HOME REMODELERS 3377 W. Huron FE 4-5063 
  ee wt ieee and the re-|. If the peg end remains firmly 
routine, stuck in the hole, put glue on the 
et wigs remove the offending broken ends and clamp them to-) 
gether. The next step, after the 
song cd ror’ oft the peg nd glue has dried, is to bore a hole 
SF ee tad @ ee Oh + i pcm ge I -_ leg. You can manage this by break. 
a — i a on ee Drilling must be delicately done. 
Sein senior Unless aimed perfectly, the drill 
- — is liable to come sailing through 
Test fit the rung im its hole. If|the side of the rung at an angle. 
ithe fit.is sloppy, there are two!Have someone stand off to one side 
methods of tightening it. to make sure the drill is held in 
| One is to apply glue to the pegiline with the rung. 
end of the rung and the hole, then 
cut a small square of old nylon TO BUY OR SELL 
REAL ESTATE     
its niche. The fabric will take up   
  
  MIDWEST SUPPLY 9 NORTH TELEGRAPH 
REMODELING 
  @ ATTICS © RECREATION ROOMS © GARAGES 
© ADDITIONS © SIDING © BASEMENTS 
F.H.A. PHONE. 
No ret Down FE 4-2575 
2S   
RE TE Ra 
DO YOU NEED up to FIVE YEARS to pay 
MANY STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM 
Call us right now. Don’t delay. Let us give you an 
estimate on your garage or alteration, big or small, any slack in the joint. 
The other way is to saw a slit. See 
JOHN KINZLER REALTOR & BUILDER 
FE 4-3525 |       670 W. Huron 
  
    A: Little Glue Will Do—§& 
      
       
       
  peg end of = rung and glue will DEWEY 
seal the joi 
The glue to for chair re- 
pir i te hd the a REFRIGERATION strong bond even if there are 
sacs nfo: Sa tae of fens and Alr Conditioning. 
FEderal 5-6247 
Member of 
PONTIAC-OAKLAND 
REFRIGERATION ASS'N,   
          
     
      SS 
YEAR after YEAR 
SELL More 
Because We 
        vacation living the year around in 
MT. ROYAL    
        
       
    
      a 
MAGNIFICENT 
Superb homes in an area of hills, lakes and trees 
.« just a 5-minute stroll from lovely 
Commerce Lake and its unspoiled beauty This picturesque setting is the location of Bert L. Smokler’s newest suburban 
home development . 
vacation living 12 
freedom you've alw 
conveniences, 
high, and high—on full day sessions. Mt. 
. Come out this weekend and discover the kind of living you'll love 
. how within your budget. Parish . 
  
  
    iL ; of . magnificent MT. ROYAL. For Pontiac families, it offers 
months of the year. Here in this natural beauty spot is the 
ays wanted for your family ... . without sacrificing city 
¥our children will attend modern schools — elementary, junior 
Royal is located in St. Williams 
  Spacious ving inside,too .« with 3 bedi 2 baths, 
- full separate dining room, and attached garage     
3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, with covered 
front porch, spacious rear patio, full separ- 
ate dining room, attached garage . 
from $15,200, The homes in Mount Royal are designed for 100msy comfort nnd pleseant 
entertaining. 
The King's Crest; illustrated above, has a full separate dining room’ 
_ with French doors opening onto a spacious patio in the rear. A covered   
Remodeling — Roofing — Siding — Storm Windows — 
Kitchen Cobinets—Recreation Rooms—Concrete Work 
House Raising — Eovestroughing — Electrical Work — Garages—Breezewoys — Drivewoys—Additions—aAttics 
  Porch Enclosure Insulation. 
MAKE A BEDROOM 
IN YOUR ATTIC 
  
  
    ‘bedroom in the atfic.. You'll be surprised Estimates 
at the low cost, and these roofs will be With t 
cooler in the summer and warmer in the ou 
winter. See us for complete details. Obligation! 
"| 00 Dike By. Mech of Teloguaph   
If you're cramped for room, you can fix up 
two spare rooms fast. Make a smart, modern 
rumpus room in the basement—an extra 
   
       Open Sunday.12 to 4 
  Construction Co. FE 2-121   
        
        front porch adjoing the attached garage and shades the wide Picture 
Window in the living room. Thee ae are two full baths, one serving the 
Master Bedroom. 
‘The Coronet is a popular 3 bedroom model with carport. It, too, 
has a full dining room, big utility room, ahd a room-size storage 
-area adjoining the carport. Both homes are of brick construction, with 
over 1,100 square feet of living area. Both homes have many “look 
ahead” features we can't begin to describe. You must see them for 
yourself. Don’t delay!   
FREE! ||   3 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH, with full separate 
dining room, big utility room, and room- 
size storage area adjoining carport . 
from $14,500. 
    Trade in your present house 
"We'll handle all details, get you top dollar on today’s market. 
VETS: ONLY $725 DOWN—UP TO 30 YR. MORTGAGES AVAILABLE Civilians: Attractive terms available 
MODEL PHONE: EMpire 3-9123 
Bert L. Smokter.Co. 
1200 Penobscot Building | 
Detroit 26, Michigan 
| } ( : é . is ¢ : 
* g : : < xf f ‘ é . ij i ae 5a =