The s^/greatest sprinters in the world faced the staffer and three Nearly 100,000 speeta- were ours. | ________ _______ tors were absolutely silent as the men toed their marks. But they screamed in unison as the pistol cracked. Armin Hary, the German me* ehanic who holds the world’s record broke the tape ahead of our Dave Sime by inches —* just inches. Fgnnk Budd was fifth and Ray Norton, -our prime hope, was sixth and last. The Ugh jump dragged on ua-Ml the sun sank behind these historic old Roman hills and deepening shadows filled flhe sis* FiaaRy they turned on the lights and although aB track events were finished, no one left the stadium. ■A Russian failed at 6 feet 11 and die others made it. the bar went !, (Continued on Page 2. Ool. 8) 'lane. A neighbor, Mrs.’Stevens luujl rus(|ed over to close window? in Lane’s trailer and was inside alien the .tree struck. ' Home Edition Cuts Devastating Path rAcross Th# Weather II 8th YEAR THE PONTIAC PRESS * if PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1960—40 PAGES By Vetted Ftve parsons, indudii* a Farm-mgton man, were dead today in< the wake of a late summer jgorml which howled aero* Michigan ‘Thursday smashing building. *«§' cam, starting fires and /plunging communications Into near-chaos, the deim was an eight-■ yearold girl who was ennhed hy a falling tree while she was fie-; nicking with her family. ■ ' • 1 . Moat of the death And destruc- land, Macomb and St. Clair conn-tion was caused by ^"ds whichi,ie* during the afternoon. But the !"2 tte,‘T 1°* HZ 4U4 *tcm , developed by early evening. , ^ **** ^Uenti*1 rata‘ Mdl Among the dead was Debra *• Detroit, whew** kilted The atom. one o< the worst ^ BeHe Isle when she fafltng tree. erndk injured snd damage 1 .expected to sear Into the i lory, abruptly slammed into the Upper Peninsula about 10 «m. and diagonal path down the state to the Detroit area by 4 p m. ^Tornadoes wen forecast lor the collapsed and died of a heart at-i Worst hit by the onslaught, which tack while he was pulling a raft had spent, itself hy early evening, to shove on Lake Mitchell • near ware the Cadillac and Saginaw Cadillac to secure it against highjBay areas, winds and rough water. j * to * ' to' * to | Merritt Chandler, general man- EUdiail, fnd., man, ’ Fmdtager of radio station WATT at Roads, <4, drowned when he was Cadillac, who saw Sudd Blair, M. of MM Otl- wUle trying to make shore In a boat an the Detroit River when the storm struck. Re apparently died'ef a heart attack. ■ Robert Groby, 56, of Cadillac - pitched hub the wind-whipped ter of Ryerson Lake in Newaygo County as lh small boat otopetoed. Ronds' wife made shore safely. Henry Reims, 4*. . Detroit, drowned when a rowboat bom which he waa fishing eapalsed en Into fit, Oahr «rar Dutreit.1 ptoachlng, raid it "came across Lake Cadillac tigr a wall of water." TOWER BUCKLE* At Bay City, a 300-foot state police radio tower buckled ^ir thr wind and smashed three unoc-I (Continued on Pfe-2r-GaL-4I■ Slashes Through County Many Injuries, Bctensive One of the worst summer storms In Oakland County history swept across Oakland County and Pontiac *yes-terday with sudden, squall-like fury, toppling hundreds of trees, downing wires and pausing extensive property damage. ~ ' ■ 1 ... - . Numerous Injuries were reported and some jiear-escapes. But no deaths. Winds of near hurrlcahe strength inflicted greatest devastation west of Pontiac, especially in and around Cooley-Lake, Union Lake and Lower Straits Lake. r Whirlwinds with the furious force of small tornadoes were reported in scattered locations. There were reports of winds of at least 60 miles per hour. tile storm burst into the county on a northwest to southeast course shortly b#**~ ; fore 3 p.m. Tornado forecast THE WINDS CAME—The Sark cloud* loomed nearer and nearer and then the firat blast at winds began bending trees. This tree in the front FLAT TdP— This car was flattened by a big —The driver, -George Rr-Halk. 34, of 308 Lake tree falling across COoley Lake Road near Canton Angelua Rd., Pontiac Township, barely escaped Street at the height of yestegHay’s violent storm. injury. Ike Won't Lead U to U.N. WASHINGTON » - Secretary of State Christian A. Herter said to- ■ «a. 270 Killed and Mutilated in Latest Congo Flare-Up LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo UP—A flareup of bloody already had been sounded by the Weather Bureau. Accompanied by * brief, driving rain but little lightning, the howl-ling winds had swept past Pontiac by 3:36 p.m., leaving a wide twath of damage in their wake. Falliag trees and limbs had Sailboats were capsized, on Orchard Lake, row boats on Wolverine Lake. Cooley and Cass Lakes. six-ineh-thick limb fell 30 feel through the air at the height, of the storm, striking Frederickl Forsythe,'24, of 7234 Capri on Neva Lake, White Lake Township, a glancing blow on the head. The White Lake Township vel-unteer fire, department rushed trim from hi* home to Pontine General Hospital, where he was lilted aa still in poor condition Several thousand homes in Western Oakland County were without power for a number of hours, although most service was restored by midnight. fighting between Congolese soldiers and partisans’ in! More than iso telephones were Kasai province has claimed at least 270 lives in the Une“’ town of Bakwanga, the United Nations reported today. I^erce areig om‘ U.N. officials reported scores of corpses strewn on the] a White Lake Townahip man streets Of Bakwanga, cap-*—-- ---- - - was hospitalized With severe head ital of the secessionist so-L- _ Wl ru 'called Mineral State inKm9 Hussein Charged delegation to the United Nattons for the first week after the General Assembly meetings opens S$pt. 30. This apparently means Preirident Eisenhower will not be at the UN. session at that time. li the President did go, he automatically would be brad of the. U.S. delega-' U° Herter emke t.ijii. ii ’raws |B>—1 Vtwf were mutilat-! Damascus, Syria (AP)-^tw fienal Airport farL. Lriw Day jand machetes. • |” imperialist-backed. premeditated weekend at hi. M.ncherter, # * * , taggrrasion:’ agahulVunited •Mass., toeme. The U.N. spokesman said one; Arab, Republic. Soviet Premier NikiuTS. Khrusto.u.N. plane transported two chev announced Thursday that he ed Qmgolese soldiers from the will attend the General Assembly [rceti- H— UM A-k ^-ce com-mccling. Other ComnfilQistrtfciefs mander, Gen. .Curl von Horn, gave fflko are expected 4o attend the a categorical order that all such ------——- ■*-- 1 a - Herter declined comment on the Khrushchev announcement. injuries caused by a falling branch, four other persons sought emergency treatment at Pontiac Lake dweller* watched brats flounder helplemly brater* struggled helplessly to b r 1 n g them ashore In the face of the swift omlooght of driving Winds. PmUm hm rtou yard of Raymond tingle, 569 Nichols 8t., Auburn Heights, waa typical of the scene just before the storm yesterday. . U.S, Snags 4 Firsts in Track Comeback Among other victim? waa Frank Sevington, 9, of 121 Exmore Waterford Township. Frank had six stitches taken in Us scalp after a tree fell on him at an Elizabeth Lake beach as he was running out of the Water shelter from the onrushing storm. ROME (UPI) — Favored Ralph Boston of Laurel, Miss., smashed Jeaae Owews* Olympie record with a ledp of 26 feet, 7% inches today to win the broad jump ★ W • W" and Rive Unde Sam his fourth Olympic gold medal of thi day. ROME (S — Glenn Davis led an American sweep in the'400-meter hurdles today and Tennessee State's Wilma Rudolph ivef Cause for Sorrow and Cheers A half-dozen other been nandliqj ander^ tbe iree seconds before It fell. the south shore of Cooley Lake was Uttered with falfen trees. Eight fell in the yard of Kenneth M. Kiner, 8468 Cascade Rd. A half-mile to the east, a fall eri tree erashed aero** the eai (Continued on .Page 2, Col. 6) Eisenhower is expected dress the U^l. Assembly later this Month. But he w»il to Jo-awidi afiy personal meeting wilfcKhrush-i “****;, " Aev. iPj | Ooa. transport be stopped. The UA appkeamaa said Congolese soldier* and their- opponents, supporter* of Kasai leader Albert Kalonjl, "have aeceos to —A garrison d 135 Tunisian United Nations soldiers barricaded the i local dub where 110 surviving Belgian residents hovered in panic. According to United Nations reports, almost constant firing went on in Bakwanga. to- to to “There was shooting for hours] on end,” a United Nations official ‘Both skies were hravQ armed. They even had mortars." Weather Warm for Next Five Days—80’83 Although 'yesterday's ptorm popped temperatures front a high of 94 to 68 degrees, the mercury, reading for the next .five days will register a high* of 99 to 83,j] (he tpatherman says. near 00 to 64. W . ’ The tow is expected to dip to SB tonight. Saturday's high, will register near 78. ^Uttfettor no precipitation is indicated Saturday through Wednesday. Morning winds northeasterly at four-miles per hour will become light*'tonight and southeasterly at i to IS miles Saturday. ' The lowest lecutdiag in down, ♦own Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was TV * Radio Program* SB degrees. The temperature had] Wllesa, Kbit ....... dunbad to |0 at 2/ p.m. In Today's Press Oanrira ....... CJospty Nows : By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD Publisher, The Foatiae Frew ROME — Thursday blew hot and cold in the Eternal Qtjr- '’’ ; .. In the afternoon, our track and field athletes bowed before supeWr; TOmpnt^g~but our 3Wlmmer» rwdiy poured it on in the evening. If the United States had banked on one gold medal '♦for sure, it was in the high jump. • - ; • But John Thoma* was whipped = by- two Russians and Thr iUS, contingent was stunned. - We hut out In tfie 3,DM meter qualifying rounds •( the steeplechase and all three ot our men I were shut out of the semi-finals | of the SMI meters. And we out ■ I fered- a catastrophe la the ioo CXOfiB CALL — Mrs. Edwin Stevens escaped injury when a . tree, amaahed into tbh. trader yesterday. The trailer, at Bob's Mpbile Home Eftates, Waterford Township, is owned hy. Russell ictory in the women's-100-meter dash as United States track fortes rose to the challenge after a disastrous start. The comeback of the Americans shared the day’s spotlight with charges that a. Greco-Roman wrestler from Bulgaria had thrown a match so a Russian could win gold medal instead of a competitor from a non-Communiat country. The two gold medals, added to the first place won by Bob WebAir of Santa Ana, Calif, in the 10-meter platform dive boosted the U. S. total to 10, on^y two short of the Russians. In the unofficial point standings Rimi* h«d gnu U.S. 197, Da viz, the defending champion from foe 1956 games at Melbourne, , broke his own Olympic record with a 49.3-second clocking, one-tenth of • second off Ms own world mark. He won by about four feet from'diff Cushman of Grand Fortes, N. D., -with third place and the bronze medal going to Dick Howard of Albuquerque. It was the second U. S. track sweep of the games, matching the. ahoLputters. bliss ■ Rudolph.—*- 30-yew-old student from Clarksville, Tenn. was clocked in the ’amazing time rf ll seconds fiat as compared to the world record of 11.3. She had tied 4he-wortdmark wWto taking a semi-final heat. She waa the first American woman to*win an Olympic sprint since Helen Stephens in 1936. However, the Italian Olympic Committee announced later the record was unacceptable becvise of the trailing wind. • Oakland GOP Plans Ox Roast and Picnic Oakland County Republicans are going to roast an ox. Flans are under .way for an allday outing Saturday, Sept. 10, on the John F. Ivory estate in White LaM TMmship, the highlight of which win be a free ox roast Appearing at the ptoMc will be Congressman William fi, Broomfield, R Oakland County, wb» to JWO THE PONTIAC PBBS& FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1960 County COP Interested in Union Hall Debates An mtchango to sagsitead-opk* letters — peppered with political loti - may lead lb Oakland County candidates debating the position tint your party and its members have taken /. Haggard wrote. proposed a sariea o t a week between Arthur G. Elliott Jr , Oakland County OOP chair-man, and Wad V. Haggard, presi-dent ol tin Oakland AFU30 Council. - ' ■ ■' s| Tte Bepahiran leader started Haggard tint OOP esantjr « ■Malm ha ghsn tins f sends si Mar. 1 nanny’s talk ' ti ll JUUUUli Dlf W 1H possibly answer Us letter,' Wd Haggard, “but it might be after Laker Day . " Haggard, who said GOP can0-I be seen and intro ■ did, certain they will respond to the idea with equal enthusiasm, Elliott. fMayi saeh waste sigMl a aew era I tint indi- tpe part ot the Republican to seek to explain to members of the Oakland County APL-CIO and the BepaMeaa patty,” ha •aid. Elliott also sent Haggard a list ot GOP candidates to be introduced at the Oakland Park outing. He explained why he amid, for equal time before. Track Team ‘'Lives It Says Official ROME (DPI) - Wine, women and song were blamed by one (gBdal today tor the wave ot dismal performances by the U.S. (Jack and Arid team to the mpawte Game*. - "Yea eaa’t wto goM medale when yoa’re ast hi ooadltton,’’ ths eMetelaald, "and yen dMl*t get tola eondtilen atttiag Bluntly, the official charged that “the boys have been firing it up too high.’’ "It’s an open secret that the aoacfaee and managers have loot control of the team," smarted official wf “Just the other night I got back to the village at 2 o’clock in the morning. A taxi with •shout atx members of the track * team came in right behind me. “I think tfs time we jsad the etarthv gee sad looked facts to the face, i ^ilany of our men are out ot / training. They stay out too late. %ou don't catch any Russians and flekfteam, Pincus Sober of New York, conceded Olid "we can't put our boys to bed at tone o'clock.” we ars aware that have been somewhat tardy to .. . taettng you about toe'pfcnfc, we understandably (elt that it was only proper lor an invitation t initiated with the sponeoring or* he said. elded le write yea an J matter.” Democrats haven't been vetoed to ths exchange. But Oakland Democratic Chair man James M. Ginn mid debates among ths candidates would be “beneflcial" to both parties, candi-fQ voters.' ★ * Told Not to Take Buttons to Park GOP ComBdd«t Asked to Avoid Any Incident, on labor Day Local (SOP candidates have been asked to leave their political but* tons, banners, balloons and laaft-lets at home’if they toow up In Gatttori Park Labor Dayr: >.~—" Mayor Philip E. Rowston said the request , was made by Fred V. Haggard, president of the Oakland APL-CIO Council. Rowston today notified OOP, headquarters la Birmingham of Haggard* wtoh. “Ha loid me he feared that an Incident might be created," Rows* m said. In return, Rowston said, .patty workers told him their candidates would stay away if they were asked. Haggard, however, said later the candidates are welcome meeting. Haggard invited both Oakland GOP Chairman Arthur. E. Elliott and Democratic Chairman es M. Ginn to aerve on ReiF /> reception committee. Elliott mid he coundn’t because he’ll be out of tile county. Should GOP candidates attend the affair, they’ll have to speak UP to he heard. Police Chief Joseph Korea said no permits tor sound equippraent would be Belief Came From Heat Hard Wm. Pontiac area residents for relief from the hot, humid wuatter got it — the hard way. The storm struck Pontiac at 3:07 p.m. It war sudden, violent A A 1 The temperature plummeted 26 egrees in 20 minutes, from 94 degrees to 69. An inch of rain Ml hi toe city, but some county area* got more. W6umELSEWHERE ___ / winds were tdocked at SO miles an hour hi Pontiac by* The Press weather instruments and 00 miles an hour or higher brother pula of toe county. A A i At Midland, airport officials reported winds “ever U0 miles an hour," and winds Qf toiRttikM force (IS'K.Alk or more) wire reported in many Michigan cltisa. Shortly, after 1 toe first iadl eatisa at a stem came tram tte weather bureaa la Kaaaaa City. A warning of “severe thaadsf* Then word came tram Cadillac tianh^ittoto hnt aBed It a “hurricane." Areas southeast Cadillac began substantiating At 3:33 the weitKer bulletin mm): "Possible tornadoes.” This was lifted at 4:60. Baas were ever sighted, but toe black deeds eat a path of deetructioB alowly eoutteast through the state atriklng at Bay City, Saginaw, Flint, aad then It was swift, not lasting mors ttan 20 minutes. And ttsa ths sun cams out, mil It was cool SBdploassnt.——-------- ... , A ♦ A A beautiful evening — tor dean-ltig up too debris.—— UiL Could Be Too Costly for Olympics Exchange Rate May Us Out •By HAROLD A- FITZGERALD ROME — An Olympic offidsl told me he doubted whether the games would ever be held United Stoles because of the unis vorable exchange rate between o«r currency and that of the rest to.tte world. * dr -A A .“Those 85 competing countries simply can't afford to send their teamg to the Untied States,' said. They wear white uniforms with long white gloves and they waved away. said to the driver. wryoae awl Finally I It's Just the plain Inescapable sun which beats down with Olympic Intensity. There's no wonder at the dark complexion of Italians. are almost cloudless, day after day, but we've been warned It may rain any time. Let it. toe next corner, tell him ia Italian that I’m fnn The Press aad tbea leave It to me.” i lor tte fsllowtag meet to One day we were near the stadium early In the morning, several hours before the games began, and 1waited to see the big structure when It was empty, but jwlke refused to let anyone get within or three, blocke d It. The Weather WO W*. Wwther Sanaa I PONTIAC AND VICINITY— Mt;, IwhM m DUrtu. C S»T u< |mM| wftaSa S-U ■SNtaStr. Bmalu 1I*M toalcht »■ ■MtlMMtcrtr S-l* bBm SaUrAar. awk S&.7S. » ~ J -* i as the driver finished his little speech, I pulled out my wallet, showed my Oakland County ideputy^s badge and the officer bowed politely, stepped aside and waved us through. Tell Frank Irons the only otter time I ever used this was In a similar episode in Moscow. Oakland County’s prestige, standing authority seem to be worldwide. The other evening seven of wo saw Echo aad It was aa exciting experience to watch this' celestial visitor here In Italy after seeing it four times ia Oakland County, thousands of miles sway. The admixture of the very old and the very new is one of the constant delights, of this tremen-jus city. Driving down one of the great Roman boulevards the other day we passed a.,wall that had withstood the ravages ot time in amazing fashion for it was one of the original boundaries of the ancient Certainly It was more 1 t.ooo yean old. Aad directlj front of It «ss an « The incongruity was simply delightful. Here wai a landmark that dated far back into antiquity, and immediately adjacent was the tingling breath ot today — modern A veteran "institution” to retiring from his duties at The Pontiac Press today after more than 41 yean on the job. H. Gqy Moots, sports editor of The Press from 1940 through 1966 and outdoors editor since then, to stepping down after long re Tsapwater* chart T» 4SLM AacelM It St ss n mmmSi n u as m iH«r " “ is tt Miras ■ ft g ggvaami _ „ w is Mincuotu st ft ss ti w*v ortssns n a St «.gas York ss n is to orate* “ “ The stores dose around one o’clock and remain Mutt until four. There’s a coffee break does anything the Untied States can offer;. However, before the flsgfaaw Street boys sad girls grew too eavtoqs I hasten to aid that they remote open sntU » or 10 at algtt. IfWto the Oakland County schaMe. One of too reasons they dose In ths is tot heat. And It humidity Tm The Day in Binnfrigham Hearing Scheduled Today in Detroit Bank Hassle BIRMINGHAM —-A show-causa jpaitog to sdisdided today on a move to stop the Detroit Battk A Trust Co. from opening a fourth The complaint against toe bank was filed Aog. 22 in toe Ingham County Circuit Court by Slate Ranlriwg Commissioner Joromo J. Marrin i. Salmon who tosuai a temporary futrstotog order against too bank, which halted B from ipiatog. The banking commissioner b ~ requesting the action said a Mirth branch of the Detroit Bank in Birmingham would lead to a com-■ pfcew&tttttyTtoc*"1herr hrw j competition. a *y ■■I He said tost spotter bank, toe Birmingham Bloomfield Bank,* however, applied for » branch in Birmingliam June 1. two days before the Detroit Bank A Trust filed application. HOT WIRES — Things were hot at fire home of W. Earl Givens of 3857 Lakeland Dr., Bloomfield Township. This Detroit- Edison 4,800-volt primary line was downed when a Mg walnut tree was snapped by high winds and is shown sizzling Howling Storm Leaves 5 Dead in Path (Continued From Page One) cupied state police, can and nearly blocked busy UJL1Q. The Weather Bureau said a tornado was reported near far the oafly afternoon but later that a twister had struck. Stem cracked a Michigan tumbling from a high of M degrees to n -e a drop of hMMb k ____________ WRjra. badly anted over most of ths state. Long distance telephone aervfce knocked out in at least 23 communities. Local telephone service also was disrupted in many reaq. Five radio stations and a television station In the Bay City- Saginaw area were knocked off the sir during the stoom apd the television station still had not resumed broadcasting by early evening. Many streets la Cadillac won blanked by fsltoa twos sud pew-«r line* which fall to showers of sparks. The atom whipped down too Lower Peninsula from Trayeree City to Detroit, a distance of nearly 300 miles, in.less than four Bay City was nearly without ______ electrtcjxre* during the of the atom and Consumers Pow- Th. rionn had lottmuch of its or Co. officials said its equipment pun^j by the time It whipped into the Defrott area about' 4 p.m/ but still bad enough fury to register 66 mile-an-hour winds at Selfridge Air Force Base. State Bank Votes Stock Dividend A 3250,(Bo stock dividend was voted yesterday at a stocl * meeting of Pontiac State capital stock of the bank $500,000 to (750,000. Acting «a the vote, toe Board of Directors declared a N par cent stock dividend, payable la was so badly damaged that two or three Ays might be needed to restore full power. After causing extensive damage in the Upper Peninsula, the storm battered, the Northwestern Lower Peninsula and began its march toward Detroit. Huge waves and vicious winds on Lake Michigan and Traverse Bay drove small boats to shelter and caused widespread damage along the ihoim^ stock at the par value of 616 per ■hare. The dividend is payable to stockholders Sept. 30 on the bests of one share of new stock lor every two shares held. The Board of Directors recommended the dividend last month from accumulated surpluses. e bond’s history. With Press 41 Years, H, Guy Moats Retires An outstanding athlete himself ■tyring his prep and college days, despite Ms small physical stature, be has exerted a wholesome Influence over, high school athletes in this area. He always has been ' deeply Micerned with youngsters, ' hors end aspirations «in sports, and their academic endeavors. m GUY MOATS dedicated soviet to 1 paper. ated with sports an sports-reporting to the Osktead County ana since he came to The ~ roes on March 23, 1919. * h Prior to becoming sports editor. Moats held positions as both city and buburban news editor and also did photographic walKT ' B was Ip too realm of earn-potitiva high acted sports Oaf pole vault add half-mile. He also had success in swimming, as-a Over, aad became proficient at Ice figure skating. ,At Benton Harbor High 8cbool, where he waa graduated, he was All-State quarterback for two TV-gers’ state championship football teams. ^ He served la the United States Navy with tte^ Adantie Ttost dur-ing World War I.-------- A ’ ♦ JjS Moats is unembar of i ports organizations ai commissions as Kentucky Oolontl sad Kentucky Commodore. His interests and activities are many, with athletics and outdoor ■ports headiiv the list. ♦ / A Now, after 41 yuan and five months of continuoua service to The Press, he takes deserved net. Bloats livks with Ms wife Carmen at US Slide St Fellow employes and The Rres honored Mm R a dinner lakt night The elorm smashed into Bay City shortly after 1:30 p.m., felling trees, telephone lines and power State police pasts in Cadillac, Bay Ctty, Traverse CM Pleasant and Gladwin either lost n Worried Detroiters overloaded the,clty’s Woodward telephone exchanges as they tried to call their homes when the storm struck too city, virtually choking off telephone service In a large part of th» fUutiOf ,5prHts after' a long lD- Storm WhipsOakland BRN. EUGENE i. MCCARTHY Name Speaker f l\ . : IV* . ,. San. Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota WiU Aid County Fund Raising U. S. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota — the mpn who nominated Adlai Stevenaen for president tills summer — will be the main speaker at tiiis year’s county DoMcretie i V 1 The sixth annual fund-raising dinner will be held Oct. 7 at ths (mashed? Elks Temple in Pontiac, It was announced today by Allen Zem-mol dinner cbsJman. The ^subject of his speech has McCarthy skyrecketod to aa-tlonsl fame at Ike Democratic National Convention to Lon Aa-gains tote rammer because of Ms spossk to behalf of Btovaa-son's canoe. Prior to Ms election to the Senate in 1958, he served four terms to the House of Ropwentatives. The 44-yearold junior senator from Minnesota is a graduate of St. John’s University (Brooklyn) and the Uhiveretty of Bf Tickets for the affair are priced at $10 per person. Reservations may be made through the county Democratic headquarters to. to Roosevelt Hotel. A .A A ' McCarthy’s appearance wil mark tho second straight year the waker to the RSUkaiifr xnes from Bfinnesota. Last year's speech was by Minnesota's senior aMator, Hubert J. sobs, John and Arthur, both to Birmingham, aad Clinton Jr. to Onshore, four daughters, Bln. George Wilson and Mr*. Bruce RJdurd to Ptymoulh, Mrs. Mila CSnader add Bfra. Charles Williams to Sarasota, Via., nine grandchii. . dm. four gnat grandchildren, aad U.S. Hof and Cold in Olympic Games ^(Continued From F to tto toto and all II it quickly. Now It went to 7 feet 1 and a P■<««(»„ ^ W «fi HI* (hW -jmwp and the other on his second. Thomas missed aad mlsmd again. You could have heard a pin drOp as he advanced for his tMrtl try. “ he totlwt a. r be determined by toe flret dale an which rack aa appneatiaa to Zieliiwki said he canceled the approval on thf Detroit Bank and Trust, which was mads before he took office, and told oflktels they could not open a fourth branch. • ;A : % ’A The hank disregarded Ms order, he —td, and made an effort to open the branch. “We net trik to hove a_ rb* field Beak) organise, and tost murder It baton It gate storied.’ The Birmingham bank is adwd-^gori5giT;iiwiffiiaii' Eielinskl was appointed June 30 to replace Alonzo L. Wilson, who raslgitod under fire from Gov. Williams after a conflict to interest ABs charged in a Traverse City branch bank esse. ■ a “This is no reflection whatsoever on my predecessor. It Just my attention. The matter was mishandled, and I don’t want to let' happen again," explained Zieli CLINTON D. WILLIAMS Service for Clinton D. Williams, 94, of 6547 Haggerty Road, Plymouth, will be at 3 p.m. Saturday at the Bril Chapel Ot William R. Hamilton Cor. Burial will be la White Chapel Memorisl Cemetery. Mr. WUMsmi (Bed yesterday in Our surest gold medal flew out the window aad wo total even salvage the sih«rv - v *. --4 UA NIGHT The evening was different An American relay team in the. 400: metertVAtypad toe world roundly, soundly and broke the record by? three seconds. Than our Chris Van Steltxa . faced tte fastest field to all time ia toe MS amtor frsa style-f- The determined young American took a flight lead on the first length and then kicked and. thrashed her way a mite farther-ahead each lap. » A A 'After the Hut frm, toe crowd broke her own Olympic record-set earlier, and she did it by three second and as they met i tete marked lor photographs in pool the Swede threw, her' arms around Chris. Konrad followed end in a split > second the entirp Held of eight was congregated in one tiny spot In the water with Chris Von Saltza in tho cantor of a congratulating had conquered. The Then to round- out a glorious evening, ore 800-nriter relay team whipped the world and -broke to* record by in astounding six sec- (Continued From Page One) -to George B. Balk, M, of Ml Lake AngMus Road, who was driving On Cooley Lake Road near Union Lake Village. The top ot Halk’s car waa caved In, but he escaped injury. Another toppling tree struck too car to Mrs. Mable Group, to 160 State St., on Pontiac Lake Road near Tyron Street in Water-Township. She was treated for cub at Pontiac General. Cooley-Lake Road near the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sana-m was blocked to traffic for ■swat houre because-: trees.' Boats on docks on nearby Union Lake wore swamped and overturned. Mrs. Charieen Greeg ol 1854 Union Lake Rd. at the weatend to Union Lake described what she thought was a whirlwind or small tornado. w said the sky suddenly In TVoy,; the roof was torn off the hangar at Ben Airport Westacres subdivision on Middle Straits Lake was pounded fay the high winds. Snapped power lines small grass fire there that was extinguished later by the rain. Huge maple trees were snapped like matchsticks a ball mile along Green Lake Road. ' A not wire downed at Orchard Lake Road and Middle Belt Road In West Bloomfield Township start-eri a fteM fhn* Trees were toppled In her back yard and another in front nearly Mt a passing car. A mile to the west on Sugden Lake/ Mrs. Albert Atkins, 1100 Castlewopd Road , described havoc caused apparently by the same kind to whirlwinHike bii Two Mg trees ware toppbR in her yard and IS storm wtytjows leaning against tte garage ware kurlod ^trough toe sir and Standing in the back yard as the storm struck Albert Atkins, 6£ had to flee tip path to a falling The. poker- of the winds was described by Btrs. John Tuharsky, f id Park Road who saw Lake as a swirling cloud to dust, 3) feet off the water. --------- She and bar daughter Janet, 13, ran to ths bouse, but not below tin storm hit and sent their 12- the air. At Pontiac Muntdpal Afrport winda swept roofing tof the hangar to-. Fiesta fine., sending debris swfrting crazily 80 feet through the sir to date against toe city’s big Hangar No. 3. private planes, tied down on tte Among the minor damage Pontiac was a downed tree at Franklin Boulevard and Bfary Day Avenue, which- snapped a power line. On North Perry Street near the city limits, winds flattened a huge tent for 300 persons, erected for evangelistic services. Three persons were in the tent " ‘ ere injured. A street light was toppled by winds at ths corner of Tarty and Parfcdale Streets, striking the hood to a car driven by Robert Sherrod, 25, to bake Orion. .He art. : ' Swerving his car tq avoid another auto and a large puddle to water, James A. Penson, 33, to 324 Ferry -St, smashed-into -a-utiUty pole on North Perry street, north to Bft Clemens Street. Detroit Considered for TV Debates By The Asaaetoted Frees Detroit may be tho tote to to the televised debates between San. John F. Kennedy to Massachusetts, the Democratic presidential candidate, and Vice President Richard M. Nixon, Ms Republican counterpart. Andrew Hatcher, a public relations man attached to the Kennedy staff, said Thursday that the first of the debates will originate from Chicago. But he said tint Detroit was being considered for one to the later debates- Golden Age Club InvHot All Past 60 to Moating The Waterford Township Golden ’Age Club has invited all area residents past 60 years to age to attend the chib's meeting at 7:30 p. m. tonight at the Community Center on Williams Lake Road. Members of the club and their tends witt participate hi dancing, trails third and Gnat Britain fourty. * '» ♦ t ♦ f ■ . Jell Farrell ^anchored both relay teams and was accorded one of (fc great ovations of toe Olympics. And did that Navy man swim.-He wps super superb, friends. We went home limp and awed.' Annett to Got Award at State Convention Bruce J. Annett, selected by the Pontiac Board to Realtors as Realtor to the Year, will bo an award," winner at the 46th annual conven- tion to the Bfletegan Real Estate Association ip Detroit. Annett was selected On the.basis to community service, business ac-. compUshments and participation in the Michigan Real Estate Associat-tion and the National Association of Real Estate Boards. Moon Eclipse Monday NEW YORK (AP) — An eclipse to the moon will be visible low in the western toy throughout thfr United States early Monday morning, the Hayden Planetarium said' today. The eclipse will begin at 4:39 a.m. (Pontiac time). ny 'Old Glory1 on LABOR DAY Official JO Star 3x6 FLAG SEJ $4.00 095 Value # 3x5 ft. cotton flag, 6-ft. J pole, haylard, will bracket In storage beta. r v M.U BTOEM xmo IMS jgagtTLg^U-, w txs-rooT mo i§4 m rum StltMk 99 H. fiogfrunr --Main fJoor 17776561 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER V When You Meet Shark, Just Give Him Good $hove DALLAS, Tex. (URT — Capt. Jacques Cousteau, the inventor of .*■» aqualung!1 says if jou meet • 1*h&nc face to Mee, the beat thii« to do i« keep it that way. * ★ * *‘1 cheoee to face them at aD tone*,” yieid the^ veteran n»,,„uuu «. uku _ . _______. , nuatty. Pioneer wfll be taken to Chicago o R "' Bulgaria for museum display. RuwU- Police Calls Load,-Clear Guitar Squawks Back DONCASTER, England (tf) - Brian Senior atappad ■tramming hla electric gutter whan it suddenly started Ford. Foundation Donatei NEW DELHI, India (AP)-The Ford Foundation ha* agreed to donate equipment to bring educational TV to the 500 eecondary school* in the date of Delhi. . it ' it ' if The werda from the gnitetu-land and eleur-teraeG ant to ha paMea r^lhh then a meaaag* him a Eeyul Air Feree plane. ' ♦ ★ Sailing, a draftsmen, explained a quirk In the Wiring to the guitar** amplifier must have turned it Into an ns-castento radio receiver for broadcast* an cartein fra- Four nation* horded on* the Black There are about 2.000 varieties) of soybean* grown throughout that tto«i nut unr men «t sums WHITE *1 MTOMST Will TOU tort 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS DUST STOP Firsace Filtera •15x20x1 *16x20x1 • 16x25x1 • 10x20x1 • 20x20x1 • Value to $1.21 % Xpur Choice OothUm DCST STOP fltoerrUs ftKerv— •t this low price ., . . *u first 8«h«rITprice,^"lnCh **“ M *^OPR THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, IMP Castro Sets Up Another Gigantic Show of By mttlD VAUUUANI -. Observers suggntrd several HAVANA. Cuba (APMtot ^ ... . ____.____H i 1. Seizure of the remaining U.S. « ********* irtPP* ^ jpnyerty in Cuba-«tim.ted to be “» >*f « C*^rm “J0' awtt 250 million dollars. The land hi* Mtowen far prime Minister'* brother, Armed •* «*»r *° ”*»** ^btate* Minister Raul Castro, in- cattaL ;‘»|ffr«wfawn ■*»” "“|dfeatcd eaiflaLtfafa wtefc each a revolutionary I move wu imminent. The flety Prime Minister air j Anammeement that Fidel Cas-peamd to be setting the stage far tro to going to head the Cuban a dramatic move. Speculation delegation to Hie U. *N, Gem ratogld tpto *j» 0pmi Oplomnttr eral Assembly opening Sept- » break with the United States to an.to i»|^- ‘"gg^nimi** charges ** L meofnitton ofjagainat the United States With Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev Roa dodged Cuba's future relations with the United States. He merely reminded the panelists that U.S. Seen* tary of State Christian A. Better had labeled the San Joae declaration a condemnation of Cuba as a Soviet spearhead in the hami-here Castro supporter! predicted more then a million peraotu turn gut tor today's rally. Newspapers, radio atattone, TV stations, toBtBjtogtn,' air-public addsesa systems and caravam of horp*blowing carp Pension Promoter Held in Slaying Dr. Townsend Dies :af Gas Station who can walk to turn out. tim ANftBTJte ^Pf Francis E. Townsend, pension promoter for senior dtt-sene, to d—d at B. Tireless leader of oldege clubs tiich once daimed 30 million members, hedied Thursday night in St. Vttomra Hospital. Doctors ■II '' ' due to - Castro called the rally in Hav--anh's Ovic Plaza to answer the Oigaafcatiaa of American Staten, which Inst week at San Joae, meddling it the Western Hemi- Announcrment that Cuba-Is pulling out of the OAS. This possibility was seen ai remote, how-" was fait Castro does Castro was certain to lash back at the Declaration of San Jape, in which the GAS foreign ministers lined up eoUdly against Ctoba to condemn Interference in the America! by the Soviet Union and Red China. But many thought he would go further. not want to provoke a diplomatic break with other Latln-American nations where Cuban embassies serve as s» outlet for spreading the revolutionary goapel. Foreign Minister R a u I Roa heightened the suspense when he told a .TV.. panel that Cuba would answer the Declan* tkm of San Joae with a "Declaration of Havana." DR. FRANCIS TpWNSEND and campHcutiom of old age. Only last month the sprightly physician left his organization's Washington, D.C.. headquarters far anotherwurof -Chibs, still campaigning far a fed- security tor the elderly. 1-V ■ ■ ....* -to- •+— This was the battle he waged unceasingly for nearly three decade*. And tto the and he believed tfmt, sooner or later, Congress would heed his plea. Over the years his plan took various forma, but basically its principles remained unchanged. Moet recently he advocated i l to 2 per cent tax on gram personal income!. SAME OLD PLAN -Of his program in general, he eald lately: "It’s the same we’ve had in Congress far the past 30 yean without being able to get it out of the Ways and Mean* Committee."' Hie political encounters frequently were stormy, la UR he was sentenced to 30 days in Jail for contempt because he refuted business transactions to i i who retiradat 00. At vari- Flint Area Youth Givis Up Without a Struggle at Roadblock . BRIGHTON (DPI) - An U-ymiv Id rani Flint youth wu bald today to the abotgun slaying of ai rang sendee station attandi Vernon Hoover, 9, was I MU dead lata Thursday afte at s. service station on U.S. 2? in Livingston County about three ta answer-questions ashed-by-w congressional investigating committee. President Franklin D. Roosevelt granted Mm what Townsend afterward called' "an unsolicited pardon." 7T%e old ausader’s monumental disdain for Hie present Sadat Security system was typified by hit comment: "It’s ah inadequate and unfair patchwork which pays tha moat to those who need It the least." About three hews later, Je-aeph Babay. IS, was arretted at a roadblock la Flint. • • Flint police, who turned the su* poet over to the stole police poet J here;said Babay surrendered with- , out a struggle and readily admit-. ] ted shooting Hoover. i Police mid' Babay told them he 1 ■hot Hoover with a shotgun ho t waa carrying In the trunk of his | car after he and the victim had argued. Proves His Ignorance NEW CASTLE, Ind. UR-Mayor Sidney E. Baker, presiding in city court, overruled the defense of in An alert for a car ouch, as Babay’s was toMtod after police received reports that a youth driv- ® ing such an automobile had been ™ seen arguing with Hoover at the * service station shortly before the unlicensed driver whose cor rammed into o utility pole. The defendant pleaded. "I didn’t think I •laying. Robbery had been ruled but as a motive. Police sold the contents of the station's'cash register had needed a license, because 1 don’t www skjw to mvp a car. 'not oecn loucnta. Pontiac Doctor4 * ■ Joins Affiliate of Podiatry Assn. A Pontiac toot specialist. Dr. Hubert H. Curson, has been inducted into membership of the - American t*Taet *f""« at its annual masting in CUcufot • R A A Dr. Cwoa, of 969 Jackaon Blvd., hat offices at 15f W. Huron St. He iccelyed the honor an the basis of raongnttfcm that Im has met specific qualilcations for a* vanced training to foot s THE STRIKE AGAINST THE EVERYBODY LOSES...SHIPPERS, PASSENGERS AND EMPLOYEES! So that all of eur of operations to each of our clients and the general public may undnrstind the facts behind the shutdown upon is by unitn action, we are pubttstilng this letter which bee bam sent by Francis A. Gaffney, Vice President and General Manager of the 8IW: TO ALL GRAND TRUNK WESTERN EMPLOYEES: Knowing Jhat you are beset with tensions of many kinds pertaining to your jobs and to the railroad in general, I am for the first time sending a message to you in your homes to tell you that a condition has arisen that may causa you and your family additional anxiety— indeed, your jobs with the Grand Trunk Western are being placed in jeopardy. The Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen is causing the suspension of Grand Trunk Western operations by calling an unwarranted strike over certain local rule changes which have been under negotiation for the better part of a year. I want you to know that during the negotiation period therailroacf has agreed to the National Mediation Board's offer of arbitration and to their suggestion that the dispute be submitted to a one-man fact finding panel. Both of these efforts to find a solution were refused by the union. As you know, the union issued a strike call to become effective Sunday, August 28, but after discussion withdrew the strike notice, arid negotiations were resumed on Saturday. Some of the working rule disagreements were then resolved tentatively, and your officers earnestly sought complete settlement. These negotiations Were continued on Sunday and until 5:30 a.m. Monday, at which tima the union representatives walked out over an issue which they later withdrew. However, no request was received from the Brotherhood for resumption of negotiations until 4:00 p.m. Tuesday. At this meeting we were informed that the strike had been reinstated for 11:00 a.m. Thursday, September 1, and the union issued an ultimatum that unless all issues were Settled prior to that time they would go through with the strike. Another meeting was called this morning, in which we offered to settle 14 df the 28 items in dispute and to make partial settlement on 1 seven additional issues, if the Brotherhood would withdraw the remaining seven. We regret to tell you that this offer was rejected by the union. The rule and agreement changes which are still under dispute would increase our costs to the extent that we would be faced with tha necessity of eliminating nearly 200 jobs. . I have always been conscious of my responsibilities in connection with the welfare of the GTW employees, and I am greatly concerned because the incomes of all6,400-are being affected by this action on the part of.the 14 per cent who are Railroad Trainmen members. In one month, the payroll loss Would amount to $4,000,0Q0. If the strike should continue over an extended period, there would be a permanent loss of traffic through diversion to other forms ? transportation, resulting in the need for aibolishing a great number of jobs permanently. It is my personal desire tp keep the wage levelof our employee* as high as is possible on a sound business basis. Incidentally, doubt are aware that the employees represented by the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen were granted a 2% increase in July additional 2% increase next year. 4 am sending you this information personally because I want you to know that tha company is bending every effort to reasonable solution to these difficulties. However, I believe you will agree that since tha union has refused to accept Board’s offers of arbitration and of submission to a fact-finding panel and since it would be economically impossible mends, we are faced with no other alternative but to let the strike become effective in spite of its unfortunate conf will increase inadverseeffect as time goes on. •* king out a i Mediation ant their de-which Vice President and General Manager r' / ■ V- GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD MEDIATOR — Francis O’Neill r., chairman of the National all way Mediation Board, to mediator in strike hy the Not only to lay the right thine ‘ right place, but far more df. to leave unsaid the wrong The college to an affiliate of the American Podiatry Association. Both group* are holding their Costume Is Realistic NORMAN, Okto. ill-A fourth* grade boy at Washington school dressed as a ballet dancer and wearing lipstick and rouge at a party, attempted to go into the boys* room- William Fkgsd Duty, -custodian, nabbed him at the door and refused to let Hie youngster enter. The fruit i the sweetest ol all pleaaurea.-venargue*. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY] rv h OUR REG. 7.99 BOYS’ Quilt-lined WASHABLE CORD JACKET Mom, keep your boy warm for school and play^-and in style tool Inis sturdy cotton cord jacket Is completely washable .. . from fancy checked quilt lining td knit trim. 2 slash pockety yoke front Loden, Cold, Natural, ^izes 6-18! ’5 OUR REG. 2.89 BOYS’WASHABLE COTTON SLACKS FOR i Alterations at no extra dmcgol SOLID BATUMI AND CORDS f Buy now and save! Sanforized cotton -cordsand sateens in Ivy or continental stylet Four pockets, pearl buttora.OBve, tan, ’ black or antelope. Sizes 6 to 18. OPEN SUNDAY 12 ft 6 P. M. 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Sparkman, D-Ala., feels the “solid Sooth” probably never will be soUdly Democratic ^ain. * : dr . * , The M62 Democratic vice presi-deotial nominee said in an inter-view Thursday the Democrats wwdd cany the South hi Novem- Johnson to Embark on Campaign Trails WASHINGTON (UPl) - Senat Democratic Leader Lyndon I Johnson, Tex, shed " PATIOS fot MDcU/lK, CuKttfj! F ictery-to-T •■•Prices ——stoni pot — 10*12 PATIO FOR ONLY Delfeerad le Tear Sear -----d Cefeu end Bias - Hoger A. AsHner PATIO STONE CO. 1O570T Highland Read ■ Win WmI W hattM Straw* EM 3-4125 he would embark next small saX 31-state campaign swing as the vice presidential semlnt. . . ; Johnson w0j• formally open Ms back-breaking Campaign next Thursday at- Boston, the home grounds of Ms running mate, Sea John F. Kennedy, D-Mass. He wttl leave here by plane for [Boehm and complete his travels back in Washington, Oct. 22. - jFtosh Cement Traps—r Grocery Store Burglar OZONE: 'Ark. to—Grocer C. W Melton couldn't catch the burglar . Iwtip hnd heen lonttny hie ceeh register at night. So he poured fresh cement around toe entrance to the store.TSa burglar sirock, ieft Ma footprints, and police arrested a 16-year-old youth "-with fresh concrete on his shoes. The money recovered.^ Prince as Negotiator Seems to Be a Flop LONDON (AP)—Prince Philip's bid to ssttle s strike looked headed lor the rocks today . Peace talks have broken down between toe Automobile Assoda-and a union representing 22 girl clerks tired for going on a one-day strike, -.’ ■ » » e The prince it president of the AA and the girts asked him to intervene. He sent discreet letters PPRRP AA and to the clerical and administrative worker!' union expressing the hope that toe dispute sben would and. The AA agreed to negoQak but toe talks tailed Thursday night when it refused to reimtate the clerks. labor* Club Taken Ov*r LAHORE. Pakistan (AP)-The Punjab Club of Lahore, the center of official and social activity In tola north Indian city during.British rule, has hem taken over by Pakistan’s martial law regime. Weofhar Bureau Plans 2 Flights Into Storm \ MIAMI — The Weaker Bureau's national hurricane research project In Bermuda planned to Qy two planes early tottey flto a large low |a insure area in me Atlantic. J *5* the Nevy's hurricane h* n tJ r mb'Wm ~ evidence af - a weak circulation area" with winds up to about 40 AT fMNU BRIEF REUNION Linda Sue Beasely, a authorities who do not want her released to her 12-yesun-bM mother who was jailed for six months—parents. She told the story of leaving home la in Tampa, Fla., on a forging charge after giving May 1259, having a baby in Lexington, Ky., her age as aft, has .l"brter¥elmh>n with her ' mtrrylfig T ELysatsdil man in Cincinnati and parents Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Beasely Sf’Paducah, finally being arrested in Tampa with her hut- Ky., and brother Mickey. Shp is being held in band who was given a year in' prison on. the a juvenile home at the request of Kentucky same forgery charge. EVERY FLOOR AIR CONDITIONED SHOP TONIGHT AHD MONDAY NIGHTS TILL I Buy Any lt#m at Watta's with ^ NO MONEY DOWN ________- toko months fa pay! The world's most fashionable 10990901---- ECONOMY Jumbo Daluxo Utility S#"*? SWmM" * Extra Heavy Gauge Steal * Refrigarator-typa Doors * White Exterior, Aqua Inferior * Extra Daap Storage Shelves Daluxt Utilif 3**xl5K*W * White Exterior, Aqua Inferior * Refrigarator-typa boon * Deep Shalvas * Msgastic Catches * Extra Storage in Both Doors Be FimMtn M THE PONTIAC PRESS t Hun* Street Pooltoc. Michigan FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. I960 Owned and Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company iakup a. rrmauu) I ■ mowtm E lu—mi VM rraMMl ul — Wm JOHP A RI1VT. ---T4«Muwt Mia-------fc_ AdrertUtns Director « c. uutm. [Approach Labor Day •Weekend Moderately §3* Labor Day weekend la here. It'a Z the last real fling of the summer. Ac-•cording to all reports it will be the lend for some 600. Americans. Traffic {accidents, boating mishaps and Sdpownings will take their lives. ,T— ‘ Why be onr of the 500? Slow ~gy»dawa aa< thiah—— --------——- ★ ★ ★ I Most of us take great pride in t playing as hard as we work, so it is {not at AD surprising that the ex-loesses in fun often lead to accidents. Ilf the three day holiday weekend •could be approached in a spirit of {moderation at least half the accidents •could be avoided. Last Labor Day's record: • 438 persona died on tho high- * 91 livea lent boating and drown- I ings. other than the $2,069 recorded in 1968. With only a one per cent consumer price rise, most of the per capita increase repreienis an improvement in buying power. On a national basis earnings from manufacturing accounted, for If billion of the $23 billion rise in personal income. Factory wages In every re-gton were chiefly responsible for the 1959 upturn in income. In the heavily „ industrialised Great Lakes states, njearly two-thirds of the total increase cbme from , the manufacturing division. * ★ * — According to the QBE Michi-— Kan's per capita income amounted to $2,253, an increase of six per cent. The state’s total personal income in 1958 was'$16,581 million and rose to $17,594 million in 1958. Business Usually Is slow th is presidential election year. Such doesn’t appear to he th» >mc this time._____„ Voice of thePeojfte r ‘Analyze Both Then Vote Int Congratulation*, Mr. Cbnfoear, your concept of tine Americanism »a* moat refreshing, VVtoti those 2,000 minister* inTennawyewho voted agaimt- Meeting a Catholic preaident could have read It We spent A) yean and billions at doltarsto build a Communist Emptae abroad; we aiccond the Pinks. Reds, SodaMM* and gangsters at home; we emitted our courts, misinterpreted laws and tamed a gnat people into a bigoted, hateful rabble. Striking our bread like tho Pbartaee, wo thonk God we*re not like other men. Nixon and Kennedy are brilliant and distinguished geidlemea, ttrriy wa can analyse .them and their platforms and vole Intelligently. Let the bigots form their own party. Cambodia Presses U.S. for More Military Aid ------ PHNOM' PENH, Cambodia in Cambodia Is pressing the United State* for more arms aid. The present aid' U compared unfavorably with that the. United States gives Cambodia's neighbors. This viewpolnt has boon expreaaed by TbC Nationalist, a newspaper wotctnfr the policies of a powerful political group headed by Prince ‘ Norodom Sihanouk, '' ' chief of state; % V Read ’Em or Weep . by the United States to Cambodia was also criticised. ★ dr. .♦ Prince Sihanouk has been quoted as saying some weapons are "more dangerous for tho uwr than for the onemy.’’, % l" ,' __________, In 1955 and 1958 much of the equipment given Catnbodia came from American material used by tip French in the Indochina war against the Communist-led Viet- ★ ★ dt • Do we really need this awful Milling? All of us agree lh conversation I that it is unnecessary and could be wetiminMed. Letta give lt an hcneet-' {try this year. ! ★ • %* ★ I Organized labor for tho second I year la waging a apodal campaign J to Aura Labor’s own holiday Into a day of wfotrfiidoad of tragody. David Lawrence Says; * K Nothing but an Unwelcome The Man About Town September Heat I AFL-CIO President George Meany £ save the deaths of hundreds of • men, women and children and the • - • injury of thousands more“dese- • crate" the purpose and meaning • of the occasion. ★ ★ 1 m' Mr. Msany is correct. We can wily • add that a little common sense, plus -keeping the companions Drink and • Speed apart, will do much to prevent ; this* futile deaths. * « m W ? Unseasonable Clime Brings Variety of .Unusual Results Rainy!dapt What our farmers canaat save up for unless w# have These high temperatures may gem unusual at this time, but according to that fong'Ume weather watcher, Gene Vanderilnd .Of Pontiac Trail, we’ve had at leaat two year* in the' last quarter century whan our hottest weather was In September WASHINGTON—So Nikita Khrushchev is coining tp, the United Nations General Assembly in New York later this month. Mfefae. since he istryrti' to get lots of publicity, he might even go on Jack Paar's television show! - As the Soviet: boss will be ante* Ing in tne mMrtj He made a gross error by wreck- It is a safe bet that the Massa-suramit conference at Paris chusetts senator Isn't going to tot Chummy with the Soviet premier. What will tho people of New . York City do W say shout the ■hnfljekev vtott? He Iks’! oHF” dally visiting America, but hh Ing the si when he might have given a : There’s No Accounting {for Louisiana's Voters { It's hard to believe that Louisiana • has picked former Governor Earl ] Long to represent it in Congress. The 1 run-off election on Aug. 27. means 5 election to the House in November. -« While governor of his state • Long headed the most’eorrupt a political machine in the country. I He boasted that he didn’t “buy” f people to get his own wsy, he * g Ktrely “rented 'em — it’s cheaper > . J. - that - way.” ! I • - it _★ .At *7 Barred by law from succeeding |hini|Self as governor, Lono was de- • feated last December for lieutenant Z governor. But he got 150,000 votps • even after staging an unbelievably gfhfrmwfHt two months riphnnch Tn • that time he was in and dOToTthree • mental hospitals, went on buying -{sprees, indulged his penchant for the I tower strata of society and acted like • a lunatic. , - it it ★ I Eight months later Louisiana vot-- ers put him back in public office. •They apparently were made for each . I other. x --------L-.-. ■■■-- {Personal Income Rise {Shown in OBE Report g Under the impetus of expanding | industry, says the Office of Business {Economics (OBE) of the U8. Depart-Jment of Commerce, the flow of per I capita income rose to new highs in {nearly every state in 1959. I Personal income totaled $381 billion, a rise of $23 billion or six per cart over 1958, while consumer prices •went up about one per cent for the |«une period. Last year the dollar vol-giftne of nonfarm income in every state |i|as four per cent or more greater ithan tn 1958. ★ ★ ★ • , Per capita personal Income, ! • that is total income divided by total population, says OBE, was *$2,166 in 1959, about $100 more Even the honey bees lose their traditional industrious activity in hot weather, according to Georga PhllUm* of Lake Orton, who reports that those In his hive are listless — but more diligent wltl^ their stiijfers. . ■■■•> '_L,„._ That usually very versitfler parakeet In the home of v "« Mrs. Anna Haalstt In Auburn Heights has succumbed to lha heat, probably because it Is too mannerly to use words lh good company to properly express itself. —■ *1.1 h , That the heat to kllllrg the butterflies to the claim of Mrs. Gregory Polham of Drayton Plains, Wh6 has' found several dead ones in her yard. . Several of my readers have come forward with the annual assertion —- thai a tablespoon of. rolled oats to the quart of cold water to the beet hot weather dripeh. * This column to 4ft absolute agreement with the sentiments expressed In a letter from ! . -, ‘ v *■ —-------—Mrs. Virgil Fltchley of Rochester, who writes; “My only complaint about life to that our peaches, cantaloups, blueberries, .green com and other super deUctoqg products are with us at the same time, so we cannot do Justice td all of them.'*-- , The tfkll sunflower honors now rest with , Edward Felcher of Lake Orion: 14 feet and still growing. Coming forward .with a peach that weighs il ounces to-—*—*-—-------------4 Lawrence Millhouse bf Clarkston. It is of t)ie Golden Jubilee . variety!' * An albino hollyhock blossom has been produced by Mrs. Lois Fresney of Birmingham, growing on a stalk of red blooms. —There seems* to brnq-hmtt’ to Hie size of leaves on castor bean plants: Now . Mr. and Mr*. Alan Dlllson of Oxford report Aome 40 Inches across. ol the presidential I rairqsjjgn, be have, gn opportu- LAWRENCE riity to add to his Insults of the outgoing president of the United States by insulting the next president, too. The. Soviet dictator just a few days ago called both VlM President Nixon and Sen. Kennedy “repr reeentatives of ^blg capital’’ and .“lackeys of monopoly capital.” He pArsnu^M S|> t&jki con-tpmptuously of where he will probably stay. Demonstrations are inevitable! The representatives of die “captive” countries will doubtless pa- murderer’’ signs. Brig. Gen. Charles H. Chase, chief of the U.R military assistance and advisory group to Cambodia, says there are being replaced with more modem weapons. By United Fl Cambodia claims threats ana - mday is Friday, Sept. 2, the terWtorial incursions are being 246th day of the year, with 120 made by Thailand from the west ^ igg). and South Vlat Nam from the east, moon is approaching its full .using arms furnished by the UjMtoA=yaaarm=^^^ States.. The morning staf fs Man. Cambodia doebta the serious- Hie evening stars ETC Jupiter, Venus and Saturn. On this day In history:' tn 1688, the Great Fire of London destroyed 13,000. houses and 89 churches. In , 1789, Congress established the TYeasurr Departntont._______ .—In 3864, Can. Wiliam TVmmaeh any caae. The Nationalist aays, «Kre dlBBfW HnPfl not ftnatftfv Today both nominees for the-------For the klnsmen of those who presidency are tar from eager to ww murdered on Khrushchev’s , embrace Khrushchev or sit down order in Hungary cannot be polite PAftf«|tg with him at summit meetings. to the man who to responsible alio Evan ao mild a comment as Sen. **• ^ tyrunnlea being suffered Kennedy made in a thoughtless today by tho people of Poland, moment on the stump a few weeks Czechoslovakia, Rumania, Bul-ago about "expressing regret” to S»ia, East Germany, Lithuania, the Soviet premier has earned him Estonia and Latvia, widespread criticism. (Copyright, ino) America was formed.. ’ In 1915, Japan signed terms of qncontUtknlal surrender ending World War H aboard the U J. Battleship Missouri In Tokyo Bay. of a grocery' deck.”&. Jkikjk ' Khrushchev continually shows his lack of understanding of the rotes of common courtesy. Because the United Nations . building* happen to be located Inside the United States sad enjoy a kind Of diploma tic status, Dr. William Bratfe gays; , % Normally, Menstruation Should Not Be Painful Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. James F. Glover of 42 Allison St.; 85th birthday. John F. Stewart of 2579 Woodbine Drive; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. ^ay D. Baker of Green Lake; 53rd wedding anniveraary. Mrs. Jessie Jackson of Rochester; 87th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Ford of Lake Orion; 80th Wedding anniversary. ' Homer b.,L«wrio of eiarkston; 86th birthday. ' Fred F. Stevens Of Oxford; 85th blrtbdaf this coaatry as the head ot the Soviet delegation to the Assembly without requiring any invitation or other action by tin United , States government. One' thing is-dear. President Eisenhower is under no obligation to welcome th^ Soviet propagan-dist-in-chief or to take official notice of his visit to America. Eisenhowei' can make any speeches on disarmament that he wishes tp make to the world. ft is unlikely that the President will attend those sessions of the United Nations at which, the fevlct premier is preseirt. ’ AIM IS PROPAGANDA Just what ia Khrushchev’s game or real purpose in coming to the United Nations meeting? Propaganda, of course. He believes that Ms Speeches will get wider publicity than those on the Soviet viewpoint 4 o w a r d disarmament which might have othepvias been made by his fpyrigp minister. The premier, ta Ms own damsy way, may thlsk also that perhaps he Is making a gesture of good wtit. He may still be under the filusion -that Eisenhower doesn't stand high in the' opinion 61 the American people. In faeL Khrushchev’s speeches ail along have given the impression that he believes,, the people of thts country are friendlier to communism than Is their own' government, and that It’d only n question ot time—perhaps a generation or two—when Ametlaut ’ liberalism” will be indistinguishable from communism. By coming to America now, Nikita Khrushchev may be compounding'the blunder* he has committed in his previous handling of the United States government's policies and pronouncements. Hie Country Parson L-V A woman, tee a fine watch, to delicately • but sturdily constructed, and, with core, should function normally for 30 years.' A girl becomes a woman when menstruation becomes , a regular occurrence at intervals of approximately 28 days (a lunar month) and-lastathrecj days, more or I less. I There may he* MM.nir some discomfort DR- BRADY fronv cramps fat the first two or three periods, but not enough to warrant the use of dope. Take a girl in whom pain continues to the family physician for examination and advice. Or, if you prefer, the family physician wtH refer yotf-to a gynccologtot — specialist to diseases of women. Some gills , begin menstruating at th*^ egs of 13. Others at the age of 17. H a -gM lias riot menstruated before her 18th birthday,' she should consult a physician, although, ll to tile normal age.for girts hi Fir Northern countries to begin menstruating. ♦ # ★ . If a girl menstruating finds ft necessary to .change napkins or pads more than three times a day, Uto Saw is expessive and she probably needs ttfdical treatment* say for anemia. Aa external napkin or pad to —Menstruation ■ is a function not a weakness or disease; '4 ' # It . ’ . ' ~ Slfn«d letter* n*t more Uiw a By JOHN C. METCALFE SPORTS CAR CROWD They live in a woild beyond the John reach of rockets . . . Where they >udden friendship springs! tptok * down-shift Jangipge . They gre n jangling mass of mental tomplege* » . . Dressed in oolarful, mad overseas attire ... .With overhead twin cams for flat caps . . . They roll through life on inflated wheels . . . Satisfy their sumachs on liters of oily fluids ... And supercharged sandwiches of Jaguar steak . . They dance the gymkhana at the Saturday hoe-down . . _ And fest at a twisted race trade'on Sunday . .. They age frenzied addicts of initials and numerals . . . Stretching from MG, to TR3 to 300SL*... TTjey are guys dolls from sixteen to stoty . .. Thought for today: English poet Bhn Gay said: “Frow wtne, -what Smiles ................* During these hot days there ta many a roughneck in a Miff col- - People who live too fast may wind up fasting to live.' p ----* J ' It "v A doctor slapped s choking boy oa the hack sad up cam a pen-ay. Grows • ip patients don’t Why to it some people have to , ,---, „ ..... - _ - - be disagreeable every time they !?* J2tn Wth '*yer glued ®n *top watche* disagree with somebody die? ^ and rally route ... And I am the * * dr leUow P®**1"* 4" * short Mary about' n person with (Copyright i960) (Copyright 1900) a toothache: drill, fill and bill. Case Records of a Psychologist: , Use Salesmanship in Sunday School Sunday school teacher/ have: a harder taek than public school teachers. For they mutt "tell" their ideat or pupilt will stay home. AU our churches ought to emphatite mote sales- "I.want to feel important,” 4s figuratively tattooed on every-, body’s chest. TEACHER SALESMEN A good teacher to simply a good to every shank If wh had sales manship. St. Paul uxuastdr «ale*man of kfcas. He tries to . r ... 1.1. ku “(Raaglag your‘ way* I* like • '(111 getting married — the laager M’s put eft the leas likely * It Is fo happen." Every dose of nostrum for menstrual cramps or pain does, some damage to the heart, destroys some red blood corpuscles and interferes with the carrying of oxygen by the hemoglobin (iron coloring matter) in the blood to the cells throughout the body. Any girl who suffers from painful menstruation, which doctors call dysmenohne, should make the Mosher exercise an essential part of her daily .routine. This Is a method devised by hy her (Dr. (Mta Duel Mosher) with happy results In tot pre- instructions are given bu the pamphlet Hygiene for Girts and Health for Women. Send stamped, self-addressed envelope and ask for ft. It is to great mistake .for a mother to request that Ur teenage daughter be excused from physical education or gymnasium because the girl has a men-difficulty. talesman tor religion. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case F-458: Mike R.; aged 7, la the son of a talented mother. 'TaSn’t want to go to Sunday school” he protested ’ when his m o l h i t bad broached the subject to him. “All right, you don’t need to," she cajnly replied. But an h o a r| later Mike saw| his . mother put-______^_ ting on her hat M and coat ** CR4W* “Where are you going?” i ho -quickly inquired. “Oh, I’m going to litlt; school,•• she gaily replied. “Yon eaa take car* «f the hesae while I am gain. “I gliess I’ll go ■ with you,” he hastily added, phteu. (Copyright 19*0) “She let me sing a song,"'Mike A Sunr **0^ teacher, more: exclaimed. “And I get to pas* JTJ*. mu*t be a^ better salesman •Press is entitled Sea for fMoStt* I laolretar _______________ ton of oU local n«ws printed t tawSjMjgar as twl is au Tbs PmUm pism class b< stmtal t latter has the cofcroioa of a Please notice that children enjoy truant officer at her elbow, where-themselves when they are doing 6* fonder must rely almost something! it apparently infintm retirriy on good psychology, theft ego to have • public Job. K would be q boos, morwver, irered^by ad.'oractoc.' Llvlnr-Lapoor and W*»h-p Is SIMS a yrar; pl*oe> tn the United OUSo* SZS.M I reor. AU mill cabocrUMton* papahla la sdreno*. Poetic# ha* bom paid tm» re** »t raaiiw . ¥ , • |W!f" , SLIM PORTABLE TV “Stop Switch”... automatically turns —off TV up to B 3 hours from time S you sat control. / grained Watmnt color, or with Seandia Nougat Brawn color ■vinyl covering. If* overall diag. picture mfae. Iff eg. in. of rectangular picture are*. As Little As wM Futures Hinserafttf Ip:T! Quality TV Chassis. Sun-■j ■ ihissl Picture Tuba, Aw Spotlit* Dial. Targrt Tur-bS ret Tunsr. 23’ ovarsll Eg dtag. picture man. 2S2 m> : aq. in. rectangular pie-IM tura tree. Chelea of SSdS grained colors: Walnut. Mahogany, or Blond tttJj AMERICA’S NO. 1 1 [REMOTE CONTROL TV! THE PONTIAC PRgSS. FRIDAY/SEPTEfoffeR », lt4» SEVEN Herter Says Russia ^ [Worklnir for Pqpce .., or Self-Attention? Undermining Congo WASHINGTON (UPI) —' Seer*. Wry of state Christian A. Hrrter has accused Russia of aeekh« a "collapse of order” in the Congo —Tbo 16th Congress has adjourned alter a postconvention session tint crackled with politics and produced disappointments for both the Democrats had President B- i . , i IWIIIUHWITW « ~ Ginn has urged the rerndak „«iHT. from = (Md Oak Park School Districts tola—^ ft. m •ccept 24 ninth-grade students ftom the Carver School District. InSotnl orteln” la a statement on behalf of the Democrats* Executive Committee, _ - ■ * ~ ■/. Ginn said ^ committi ' {“strongly urges" “This t* an Oakland Cbaotjr {districts to take * ' * *, • The House quit Thursday night Williams contended that dksolv, ■* « » p m., the Senate at 11:51 ing the board would permit the P-m more than county to re-district the ana and thrw* trying to round up a assign pupils to schools In Oak <195 $349 I S Ca. to. UPRIGHT FURNITURE ud APPLIANCE THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 2f 1900 Oyer BO Township School Congressmen Williams, Ginrt Enter Tiff Call If Quits WMihuns met yesterday with rwn^wnfativea from H» Carver Women Pitying Cards Slid Detroit school boards and from those of Ferndale and Oak Park. ■. - .. . .. ,■ - - .1 WO Opdyfce Rd. 0 PI 4*4110 HURRY! IPX PffWTS SUPER KEN-TORE •* PLUMBING AMD ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES wnduriiiMiAM HARD TOOLS SAWS ARD WURCHES SHU ELECTRIC DRILLS STAIRLESS STEEL NOD&DDW ^ PICTURE FRAME MOULDING BUY NOW • ood'• i,'v: HURRY! SAVE Ou KatinStock of HARDWARE Regilar Price Os Parchase of Sd»00 or More wnDOWscuns ADJUSTABLE FUBRACE PIPE ELBOWS —TEES FILTHS/ CLASS FIRS nSHEHC TACKLE SPORTING GOODS BALL GLOVES {RS0L1TID ROOTS GARDEN TOOLS GAiDM HOSE BOLTS — SCREWS HOUSEWARES BROWNIFS HARDWARE CleaeiTUs Suhyai Labor Day 489 S. SANFORD ST. Phono FE 4-6105 Store Heirs 9-8 COMPARE JOHN F. Kennedy DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Speakers Program Begins at 2p.m. MONDAY * SPTEMRER 5th OAKLAND PARK S iT PONTIAC Paid for by tlw OaMaad Caaify AK-CIO PEN N E Y’S GENTRY* MARK 60 3-PIECE WOOL ’NORtON* SUIT THE PEHHEY PLUS COLOR-BLENDED VEST REVERSES Perfect for career or casual wear! One minute it's a slim 3-button business suit with plain front slacks and matching vest. Second's later it’a a sport suit with, a color-matched plaid Vdst boasting blazer buttons. Diagonal stripes mid hopsacking solids distinguish a rich wool 'n orlon acrylic blend. 3795 PENNEY PLUS VALUE! Awifksr AN AomHcm mImH«h as mm so the Dm Caitewey "Teftef" Show. _ V MIRACLE RULE STORE !« AM. to 9 PUL ; THE POXTIAfl PRESS, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER,. 2, 1 flOQ [Whit* Group Pickets Against Racial Move Khrushchev • Is Ottered Freedom Tour NEW YORK (tPI)— Ainfri CLOSE-OUT SALE OF I960 MODEL FRIGIDNRE WASHEBS and DRYERS HOltSTON. TWliUPn - Newly | 40 white men, written and children j 1 picketed a department store Ttiurs-1 day night to protest the Integration j of lunch counters and the failure j of local news media to report it WASHER DRYER Segregation of lunch counters In several large department stores, grocery, chains arid variety store chains 'was quietly ended eight d*ys ago. The city' (erf# C a pot Hr | three daily news*] papers carried brief' accounts of the Integration only Thursday. fcrabbiag Rosario, a city -2? m j stream from Buenos'Aim Parana River,, Is a jK>i;t In use tor many ocean-going ttMiTtp surplus • I960 CHRYSLERS BUY HOW—SAVE NOW H I B Motors, life Tie Show * Place al NllWT RUMP ^sr 3465 Auburn Rd. (M-59)~- bearings used in' the giant machine* employed by (he steel tn-Htwtry for rolling out cold flat steel Sheets sometimes weighs,'up^to too ROUGH LANDING — Six light planes were *r rs.t.u. wrecked and several hangars flattened Thursday in excess ni ifta miles per hour. This plane’s when high winds raked Midland Municipal Air*; hangar was demolished and the aircraft was port. Airport weather equipment recorded winds—smashed against the.adjoining hangar._ DIAMOND EYE SPORT OXFORD FOR GIRLS COTTON CORDUROY 15 BIG IN LEISURE SHOES YOUR LUCK'S IN! OUR PENNEY SPORTS SLtPON PATCH SADDLES ARE BIG NEWS FOk GIRLS! Penney’* ties up the fashion news for little girl*! Easy clean nylon velvet, leather patches and trim. Long-wearing ribbed rubber crepe soles. Smart in black. A must in every school warri-robe. White, black. Balanced arch sneaker with white trim Sturdy, colorful .and at a Penney, price to" amaze you! Blackf-biack and brown and brown leather with,synthetic rubber sole and topiift, back-to-echpol favorite. Designed and built-for growing ’feet, — gives her good fashion footing, tool, With new diamond .eyelet, pebble-grain* rubber crepe sole and heel. Black, red. built on rugged rubber soles. MEN'S SLIP-ONS GET HIGH TONGUE STYLING His shoes are Penney crafted , to look ’ smart. These high tongue and tapered toe make them greet for dress up or; fMqttl. Long wear composition soles. BtoWnstone and ' black.* £ ' ^' ••-_ 795 OXFORDS WITH STITCH 'N TURN SEAM DESIGN Penney’s quality stitch 'n tuna treatment hides stitches . . . gives you sleek, smart styling from heel to toe I Rich kip leather In black or brpwn. Sanitized.® 895 M'ttiSM fh to 12 YOUNG BOYS' STYLE ON MOCCASIN TOE OXFORDS Towncraft® builds long'wear, ’n solid shoe comfort into these dressy oxfords. You get plain front styling with composition soles, rubber heels. Black or brown. Similar to illustration. 595 HANDSOME 'N RUGGED SCUFFLESS TIP SHOES 1 Penney’s builds ’em with an extra piece of Jeather over the toe ... tor extra long wear! They’re Sanitized, too, for lasting freshness. Brown only. Similar to illustration,, 595 WEAR THE SMARTEST STYLES PENNEY'S - MIRACLE MILE; * Open Every Waatidoy&Monday thru Saturday . 10:00 A.M, to 9:00 P.M. PENNEY'S-DOWNTOWN: Opto Every Mon. oM Fri. 9:30 A.M, to 9:00 F.M. All nHur w.ckdoyi 9:30 AM. to 130 F.M. i® lilt I Free Delivery Free Service of ponrgAc fray THE PONTIAC rates. FBIDAY. SEPTEMBER .2, 1860 HK J)0€HESS FROM DEYOHSHIRE •on Ex^NabbedgpP051^ . r.,cl . ICongoChlei !in Girl Slaying Arrested Death Notices Is Facing a Charge of —m..„.r.T.4 LBOPOIl>VniJI, ike. Congo Witn Attempt (AJP)—•The Congo! res government *0 Boy Fri»nd *£lJ5*di£!£d7-SI i BENTON, m. tAPi—An convict, once imprisoned for Oar, «M arrested today by FBI A government spokesman said Jean Botikango, 60, leader of the agents )a connection with thep^, an^ ^ 0f Lumuro- kidnap-slaying of • waitreaa andl 1 -— In )aa on SSO.OOOj ,.roPOI-nvilXK. the ] —Pa ' group Of August Friak, «. of 12S Norton Ave., died of pneui log. He bad hew jgg at fl< Church, he leaves fain wl two brothers, Toivo and Key ef Pontine: two weed egCalifornia endMil. Eve-lyn Alilello of Copper City. Mr. Mira body In at the Hen-toon Funeral Home. KEITH A. FLYNN HOLLY - Service for Keith A. Flynn. 32, of W Park Ave., be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the ____ j»Pflgriin Holfatoo Church. Flint. Burial will be in Cottage Cemetery, OtieviBe. Kennedy Picks Oakland County Man tor Post John F. Kennedy today mt Oakland County man as am ef the Michigan Ottawa nnedy organization. He is Am OM. 255» Dundee ‘ ------- Mils mm Ha la torney and director of the Bank of LhoHa. appointed William X. finally of Jackson Mm. Theodore Btthl Groaoe Pointe Farms, co-chairman, md George C Chute Jr. of Gratae Joseph Harry Milaoi. 33. of attoeklng armed civilian* near Herrin. III., wa* chanted in; af IbyavtUe yesterday and killed | ^i* My it at the Dryer Funeral a lederal complaint with aaaault tne person, a L'.N. spokesman |Home Mr j,-|ynn drowned Wednea- with attempt to murder John Bry-j announced May,_________________ [day in BHh Lake._______- ■ 20, * fiance gof the ^laitf Riri,[^ - " Surviving-are hie-wile State Industries Moving Forward Ford VP Hill Dtcjorts Michigan Prograiling, to ConHntiw to Gain IRON MOUNTAIN Ift-Mlchigan it again mnfctag gnat industrial progress. Merritt Hill, a Tord vice d chairman Of At Mclnatly. an attorney, la a member of the University of Michigan Board of Regents and Board ebair- [Mhry Lily Ellen Roberta, 17. principal political rivals, , . ___,__________ After hia arraignment before .-ry.t.H Thursday night near daugfatecs, Nancy and Sheila, al, two a BUT YOU CAM! I JOIN SEPT. 10 U.S. Commissioner Everett Lew-is at 3:30 a.m., Milan! was ordered to We Jackson County Jail at Milan!, husky construction worker, baa served eight years In murder conviction and flve years lor auto theft. He was released from prison April 3 on the auto theft convks Lisala la his native Equator prov- |ee.' Bolikango. who to leader of the Bangala "river people" tribe, was brought by plane to Leopoldville and held. The government spokesman did hot say how many members of bis party were amated with him. WIN A 1960 RAMBLER Plus 500 Gallons SPEEDWAY 79 Gasoline! Get Details and Entry Blank from Your Romblor Dealer or Speedway "79" Station ACT NOW! i Min Roberta’ body waa I last Sunday in a well at an abandoned farm house near Herrin. She had been shot through thej and released Milan! twice. ________ __________, p „ ...... A blond gunman kidnaped Miss vubu and Premier Lumumba and Roberts from a lover's lane nearl*vcral of them have atoo been *y<^^»^lnriou^ grounding! He gava no detailo of the al-1 Italian TV Star Pitt Bryant, (HfM ld«. TwTiwk aaannaTsm i trying to atari a aecea statist movement in Equator province and personally oraerwd Ms arrest. y The spokesman charged that •1'a head. Authoritie. bad qurottoned RoJikango' party^has threatened to atoassinate i, Keith and Bill, add twa man orthe Natkml Baiaof JK»-}dence every day that Michfcai at home. Hia mother Mrs. Cars Flynn, a brother and two sisters, all .of Phut, alas survive. ARSON R. STONE ROMEO — Service for Anaon R. Stone. 76, of 244 Croswell St , be held at 3 p.m. Sunday Roth's Home lor Funerals. Burial 111 be in Romeo Cemetery. Mr. Stone. died unexpectedly last night near hia home of a heart attack. He waa a retired Corps, declared here Thursday. ' * ‘ * •*. • ; Speaking before 66Upper Perdu-sula Imsliifigs and industrial lead ets, Hill said there to mom evi Cabin CrvisBr Explodes CHICAGO (API—A 30-foot ebbin cruiser exploded Thursday' night at the entrance to Diveraey Harbor. One man waa missing and five others were burned, none seriously. Brazilian Envoy Quits ( WASHINGTON (AP) - Brazilian Ambaaaador Walther Moreira m _ ___S _ Salles is resigning to return to •Bd P”? (*n"ntfr U ^private businessHe plans to leave meo; and two brothers, Oscar a^ Weshiiwton today George, both of Romeo. *" Roof Value '"leribaTeperimnK’ chief purpose af the raglsaol am . • * • - e --- |g aeg Michigan. - Hill laid the Corps was formed to assist the Michigan Economic Development Department and local Industrial development groups. *■ * * ’ product, regardless ef merits, sells itself: It to our Job to be the ealee force tor Michigan. Bad publicity bur st&S}aa received to tragic and deplorable. It is high time that we build our state “ our people on its great- Something New iir Gracious Suburban living RIVERDALE HILLS ^' “Prerequisite for Elegant Living” Come out gftiStateh look—you will be amazed at the beauty of these custom homes, on beautiful Huron River-fed lakes. ELIZABETH LAKE RQAD Just Across Williams Lake Read The FBI said -Bryant, a Car-ii , p:_. r)annri bondale bather, had identifiedLQ,r n9* Milan! as Ms assailant. SECAUCUS. NJ, (APt-Not ah i iii.iii.iii .....— oink to to be heard in this town She Sovod Her Money "■»“Ltor *!• »*** ,or.haM. • Dust Control MA 4-4521 EM 34203 "SISWii,"OX~UiPf - When he died at the age of 84. Fannie Spratt. a charwoman for 25 years, left an estate Af about , flD.000 Saved from her (mall unary. She Willed I3.M0 to Patrolman Franklin Cook, the cop on the beat near her borne: $1,650 to those whose offices she cleaned at the County MaU-ot Records; and the—**t|uw p.,11 Mnmrro Trooot I to other county employes and|T0 KUI1 ,VVOrOCCO ,ro®P* tury. Thursday was the deadline tor sit pig farmers ro be out under a .Superior Court Order signed last May. Farmer John Henhel, who moved his pig term to south Jer-few day! ago. waa the last to leave. - Secaucus, within Bight of Manhattan's skyline, once had a pig population of over 900,000. friends. V- [eminent has readied i Honolulu lie* 2JJ90 nauticai milesjwith Morocco to pull Ns troops west, of San Francisco and 3.394 out of that African nation/ once a miles to the past-of Yokohama. I French colony, by the md of ISO. By THE ASSOCIATED FRE86 VERONA. Italy (API - Mario Riva, 49, roly-poly comedian who was masier of ceremonies cl Italy's mpst popular television show, died Thursday. He fell on a flight of statoy lending off a theater stags 11 igysago and suffered several broken riba. Later he developed pneumonia? m Iran Deputies Resign TEHRAN, Iran f APMFhe Mel* liyouug party of former Premier Manuchehr Eghbal hat announced the naignatk) of its 104 deputies recently elected to the 200-seat oapis iAPi-Ttw IWwto gow National Assembly. The action automatically invalidates die elec-which opposition leaiders charged bad been rigged in favor of Melliyoun candidates. BUY WAREHOtJSE DIRECT TO YOU! OPEN TONIGHT ___________________________| ' PARK AT THI DOOR STEWART-GLE1VIV WAREHOUSE BRANCH sfrORE JUVENILE FURNITURE SALE imm / so easily! Rasy to clean tray unconditional-ly guarantied. One hand roldlng . . . other hand for baby. Folds to flat six inches to seconds. Btatoproof seat and back ... no nod catching corners. Generously padded for comfort and beau- nosvsttd 1 ty. Automatic locking and wide, ‘ —" —T| jfigjjjfgljl * *- sen ior o«by's protect! adjustment “Rasy lift trays swings away FAMOUS "EDISON" FULL FANEL CRIB AND MATTRESS run Panel Hwdwaad Crib DELUXE STROLLER 'Adjustable Back Knl Exactly as Fletnrcd.. 1A Ulhistpeol 12 Cubic Fool 2# Door Refrigerator ■ Freezer 107-Lb True Zero Freezer BIGFREEZER BIC REFRIGERATOR Roomy Refrigerator with automatic defrosting. Separate freezer that holds 1^)7 pounds. Deep door shelves, bushel-size crispers. Come trade and save money!, " fr; Wffi*.r' r. *07# ™ L lO“ 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! Delivered and, Serviced SAVINGS on MAYTAG ____FLAY PIN This to full size play pea of all | hardwood construction. It has I easily. Sturdy floor 1* raised I plastic teething rails and folds I and play pen rolla on $w 'gm I largo plastic caatere... ID I CREDIT TERMS 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! ; a YIAR MYMENt! S-C WAREHOUSE FURMTSK SALES „ ...-..'.ri,* .FI 5-9279. OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00 P. M? 20 FRANKLIN RD. JUST OFF S. SAGINAW ST. Optto Mon., Thurav 14. 'M 9:00—Tires, ond Sot. 'HI 5:30 AUTOMATIC GAS CLOTHES DRYER INSTALLED FREE l Pay Only *10 Down MAYTAG SQUARE TUB WRINGER WASHER Oversize capacity aluminum tub. Adjustable height, hinged tub cover. Heavy duty wringer. / Pf NO MONEY DOWN 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! FREE SERVICE 1 Shop Tonight ’til 9 P.M. Other Models From $98 7&G00IX HOUSEKEEPING 51 f. Huron THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER ELEVEN ChinaWants War to Kil faff* about outside help, ft la “INeed Not Take eeonoqiie reality that Russian aid la vital tp Mao's blueprints and oC/IOQi 1 TQlflllKJ will be .for some years to come. •# , * # LANSING (lTPI>—Persons tattler The expected Mao-KhmshchevL18 ^ ™ ^ meeting this autumn may resolve “cew« tf*> u*» • Soviet Has Patience, Witt Wait K was the vital need to take the minds of the Qilnw people off tribulations at home that was at least partially responsible for Map's "War is inevitable” stand- - hardly be expected to accomplish i anything bat what has happened. r The country's population, and thus . its economy, has been so severely i dislocated fast economic chaos is MfM nkf It* *wl. clorit, was acftwnl by police tw From the dispute resulting in a day of stealing (35.000 In dog food slowdown or stoppage of Soviet and pat accessories over s five-aid to Red China, itrnay wind up year period. The entile cargo was Hcenses would bit granted if .the driver education ♦ ♦ • And as it comes nearer, so do neae even greater assistance in an - Much of the taiame must fall on Mao and his lieutenants become attempt to nmrtall lmpotunan mil. Mao’s shoulders, tt was ha who more desperate for a solution. To itary adventures by Peiping, decreed In 1M| that tha emphaMa th> Chinese the answer apparently Despite the Communists' ex- course and examination given by the public schools or an agency which offared a course equivalent to the school Instruction, WKC. 108 N. SAGINAW lewwlsry — Appliances — f araila/e ORCHARD'S AIR-CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT New Carload Purchase Allows Yoii Large Discount 3 and 4 PIECE SECTIONALS • 90 DAYS SAMI AS CASH PMTFORM Choore From There' Leading Manufacturert No Monoy Down • HOWARD PARLOR 54" DRESSER BEDROOM SUITE - WITH PLASTIC TOPS • MONARCH 1 KROLAN u • CHAS. SCHNEIDER •-SKXUNI •GAINES ALL 3 PIECES Ar Low As STEP TABLES or COFFEE TABLES Charcoal only Cash and Carry f save > OVER HALF PLASTIC TOPS ON BED PILLOBfS Thu beautiful room group includes: a 54" DOUBLE DRESSER a MATCHING CHEST • BOOKCASE BED t MIRROR • INNIRSPRING MATTRESS a BOX SPRING a 2 BOUDOIR LAMPS a 2 FOAM RUBBER PILLOWS * DRESSER and CHEST * utile *159’! Included in this room grouping: e Luge Comfortable Safe e Matching Lenge Cheir • 2 Stop Tallec • Coffee Table • t Decorator Leapt • 2 Fean Throw Pillows • Wretght Iroa Smoker All Sots With Extonsion Tobias and Matching Chairs 164 Orchard lake Avenue '• Pontiac 3 Blocks Watt of South Saginaw m mmr quai/w M LOWEST PRfCBS! vSTF/NCST SERVICE! Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY t ■ > TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDA ^SEPTEMBERg, im ;,C! re Oxford Man, 21 Held by Police OXFORD - A 21-year-old Oxford man has bean charged with getting a fire which did an estimated $20,000 damage hare Wednesday. Fred Hanna of 20 E. Burdick' rv. ycfitofdtLV admitted v Detec*ive R*l*>h Wamatrom ofi »h- S-a— Fire Marshal'* Drpt.,j pbltc'1 ra'd today. ; Hama waived examination in Ilia arnignmeiii bcfoiy Justice of! the Peace George E. Mead*. " wilt appear in circuit, court mm Sept 12.— Bond waa set at $5,000 for H who is being heid m Oakland County Jafi. Oxford Mice Chief A lb Hoberti aaid that.the suspect had! brendrtnktog the night of the file which gutted the interior of Jim’s Bar to 13 8. Waahington St. A pat-t.vpe attest flare was ■aed to start the blase. Urn hare. . Was fosnd at the rear af the batHtag altar the blase was brought ander cootrot. No one was hurt in the Are, but three families had to be evacuated from upstairs apartment! which were damaged by amoke. Offer Low Bids for Village Hall Wheat Lowes Small tyring Long Storage Clifton, agricultural economist at iKaataa Bate University, aaid. Lay NCw Phone LONDON (VPIt>r Architect Con See No Reason Building Can't Start Soon in Rochester MANHATTAN, Kan. iUPIl —i A test she conducted, for 24 Wheat may ha stored tor a long months at 53 government bin sites tint* with little foag from tort*- throughout- Kansas showed very Ruth'Httte loss to stored wheat Cable handling trawsuMtoom rectiona Is being laid nautical miles of the Britton wit The world's to both di-under 530 North Sea b Sweden. ROCHESTER - Moat bids tor construction of the proposed Rochester Village Hall are wider the $100,000 budget, set for the work, it was announced today. . Henry M Denyes Jr., nrcMtdct hired by the village to design the building, eald he could sea m son that construction should not] start soon after Individual bids arc) accepted Sept 13., Deayes la atudylag the bids wW i architectural bids opened yesterday ranged from $71,000 to $102,- The highest bid ifer. mechanical was $23,500 and the lowest aboul tU.QQO. Electrical bids from approximately 19,400 to $15,- im ........ »v. With ts Immediate start l previous to the fire when he'was Involved in an argument there. Iba blue occurred early Ned- IX'APDS INJURY —• Reginald Goodrich, 40, of S27 E. Mansfield Avt., Pontiac, miraculously escaped injury yesterday when the roof of his Infant Diaper Service truck was caved in by a falling tree. He was driving along Commerce rnHw pr*M Mtola Road just east of Union Lake Road when violent winds toppled the tree. Here Goodrich examines the shattered wjndahieid. He already has restored the baby statue to tts rightful perch. It had been .knocked across the road. Married at Perry* rould be. completed by May. The new building will bp at Oak1 and Sixth Sheets in Stone Park. Jhe H-shaped structure vyilj contain about 6.700 feet of Hoag space and] will include council «ham-i bers; 'village offices and police i headquarters. Bonds will not be required to finance the new village hall since funds to pay for construction have] been accumulated over several years. Newlyweds Honeymooning in Canada COLU MBIAVILLE—Now honey- Falla are Strand koto.' Gerald L. Ward who were married in a candlelight ceremony at the Perry Mgthodiet Church, Perry. groom's parents at* 1 after Ike bar waa closed. Firemen, celled to the scene at .___, . B . 1 -. —-ty Oxford Pfttmtoian-^gjng ULOuehec Nl*g*”| "*r ft »■"* ■rnf""»>‘««- Bay Johns, arrived to bind the * ’■* back of die building in flames. They brought the Are under control before M could spread to nearby *“-i------- f* For her wedding the bride chose a floor-length gown of i Schiffli embroidered tulle with a baby chryianthemuma and steph- Families In apartments adjacent to the burning building and aa t Ideriy couple living directly above the bar Trnrr rrataed frnm ii»|i and evacuated. The newlyweds, both teachers bouffant skirt and acaUoped. .... to the LakeVille School System,, broidereti detail at the sahrina will reside here when they return.' wining The bride, the former Rath The fingertip veil of illusion waa Anne Hannon, Is the daughter j held in place by e crown af I af Mr. and Hit. Otou B ■ Jjan jpeariiied orange hloOomt. The moa of WebbervtHa. The bride- 'bridal bouquet was' made up of I The bridegroom’ Mrs. Buell Ward i Ihonor. Criminal Law Class 1$ Sat {or Ar«a Police NOVI — A class In criminal law Village Hall, Police Chief Lee Be-Gole announced. *V All area police can attend the instruction class. _ .. . .. . . . It will be conducted by Oakland : for his hrotlwr wu Awt pntoecutor Edward Keith Ward of Columbiaville. 0 Seating the guests were Buell * • % Ward, the bridegroom’s brother, and Ron Puckett the bride’s cousin. " WE SALUTE YOU . . FOR TODAY, LABOR IS JUST ABOUT EVERYONE! The typist, the baker, the afrparel maker is as much 'a part , the modem working force as the man behind the rivet gun turret .lathe. We pay tribute this Labor Day to all working better our American way of life. of School Opens Next Week DRIVE CAREFUL! C OVERINCS 3511 Elizabeth Lake Road ism No Business Will Be Transacted ' at Either Bank Monday, September 5th Regular Banking Hours Tuesday, September 6th The Pontiac State Bank Community National Bank and AU Branches Member F,D.LC. Do-It-Yourself VACATION Tl M E TO REMODEL Vacotion time is the ideal time to accomplish your remodeling job. Watch How finished paneling brightens rooms and makes better use of existing areas. Or you con remodel those rooms- in Other Ways, inexpensively, when you buy your material ini ■OQilur’r-HmMHHMMHHmMtoMHwitoMiiSMlHMtoHilmfltoMtoMflmmMHHHHMtoto GENUINE CERAMIC FLOOR TILE See How Easy' -D Ji to Apply A$Y BRASS BANDS at your house? quiet 'em with Gold fond CIILINd Till SIIENTEX Exclusive, brush-textured, wood fiber til# makes a beautiful ceiling. Absorbs up to. 80% of thg noise, too. 15W per M* f»* * for qasy installation use exclusive CLIP-STRIP # Lower material cost... used ' in place of wood furring. Re- " quires no palling or stopllng of tiles. • lesy-to-niee ... lightweight, comes in handy 4 foor length. ■Pocked 100 ft. (25 strips) to ja, tube. ,. \ ** , -skt ■KSSS& | ___ AVz* m GRADE "A" FLUSH MAHOGANY DOORS iHrxfy'xys"... :,;;v. : S4.55 1 %"x2'0"x6'8".. $5.25 I%"x2'6"x6'$".......$5.95 All Other Standard Sift in Slock ’ CLOSE-O Genuine Mahogany Prefinished Plywood Paneling aa W« Carry a Complete Stock of Mahogany 1 Moulding to Campigmant Hie Pawallng BURKE LUMBER COMPANY 4495 DIXIE HIGHWAY , OR 3-1211 INSTALLMENT FINANCINC BY LOCAL SIRVIC( HOURS: Weekday* M:**~SoNrdrt 1-4 Closed Sundays ' ■ All Yard Price* Are ps Are Quoted J 't wmhUm v l§ Big ShrpBtnt ol 3-14 School DRESSES Complete Stack Chubbette Fashions Fur Blend Sweotars by Canterbury Bulky Orion Gills' Cardigan I SWEATERS auguratqd in May when -the City Connell approved a plan whereby $18,000 a year would be allocated in the budget for qsphalt paving only. to $1195 ....... | and etreeta>" aaM Mayor Don- New Truck Trailer Will " ’ Haul Cars, Dry Freight Other main roads to -fae paved NEW YOR¥ # — Manufacture ! with asphalt in coming yeara fat1 of a new dual purpose truck!ciude Bede, which will be under trailer designed by the ’ Dual- taken next year, Loon Lake, Well Evans Corp. of Plymouth, is Maple, West and Charms, planned by the Boreey CoTp, —- ' the tracer, with conveyors to All Wool Shipmotes Girls, ond Sub-Teen SLACKS >5.09 BLOUSES BbCk road OdU'receive an £ __________M__________________ PR ^halt coating front Pontiac Trail freight, will be marketed fay the to 12-Mile road, a two-mile stretch, Plymouth firm. Trombley aaid. When not needed for student use, die residential building will converted entirely to, administrative offices. • • College officalc said today that they hope soon to begin another dormitory unit, possibly two stories high- and larger than the one now nearing completion. Visitors can see all the buildings on campus during an Open 4M at a later date. ■ The new dormitory will not be large enough to house all Of the boarding boys. It ddw^-however," make It possible for the dormitory In the hUfitipurpose building to be turned over entirely to the girls. / . pr ★ * Some 50 boys are expected this year, necessitating the acquisition of temporary housing tor the over- SHEATH Save on Cotton and Knit SPOBT SHIRTS $]99 There are 715 wild-lile refugee in tha United Statoe national refuge system. ; ■ _ ...» Orion Plaid Pleated SKIRTS *3.99 New Fall Carcoat* $1.99 -Knee Tickler Need No Ironing! = Amel Dress Bulky Knit Orion SWEATERS BERKSHIRE $]©9 CASHMERE T-SHIRTS. RRDS 49 SHEETS 14. la. the Pontiac press. Friday, September 2, \m Wixopt Begins Road Pto/eef Work Started on Potter Road $200,000 to Se Spent 'on Improvements Over Next 10 Yeors Rites Held in Rochester Sharon Kay Wilkes AVON TOWNSHIP - IP — at. Rochester, JAIL TP* Methodtut Church, the aoeno of tha rooant wedding of lharou Kay Wilkes and Harvey J. Applegate. The Rev. J. Dougini Parker parionaad the double-ring The bride is the daughter of Dr, end Mrs. John V. Wilkes of 1*90 Graeuridge Road. The bride-groom's parents am Mr. and Md. Harvey E. Applegate of 590 Utah Road. ~ For her wedding the brfcto sheas a Beer length gdwn ef law parted Indian aUk mist. Mblh ly edged with beaded Aleneea Isre metXa ending la aa ap-pgqaad and puffed train. It had a bateau neckline aad long. FIRST ROAD project — Wixom started Re-first road-paving project yesterday since becoming a city with the “stabillxation” of Potter Road. The huge machine is an asphalt road plant and according to the city DPW Administrator Robert J. Trombley, ILchews up gravel and sand, mixes R with aaphfelt, and deposits it back in the road where H is rolled into a hard surface. By JIM LONG WIXOM —The first proj- -ect of a $200,000 road Improvement program that Includes rebuilding nine milei of main arterieg hert got under Why yesterday. The initial project Is a one-mile stretch of Potter road from Wixom to Beck roads. • '“'Cost of the Potter road rebuilding is $11,900. The type ef week, on Potter Is “With this process we ere able to use tbe gravel andaand that la already on the road and mix it with asphalt. Alter the mixture la rolled , several times, it ie covered with a seal coat.” * * He said Wixom is fortunate In having the proper type of dirt to mix with the asphalt becaui communities doing this type of roadbuilding have to have the gravel and land trucked In 'miking the work expensive. . Her fingertip yell was I to a matching headpiece of French silk illusion. She carried a cascade .arrangement of itephanotia centered with a smite orchid. j Janet Louise WUkes, slater of I'wrong^^M the bride, was maid of honor. aHmoHBI Bridesmaids were Marianne Doamfl™ * Verlarec Hinas, bath ef Pi . and Margaret Applegatv. sister of the bridegroom. Assist lag Ms brother aa heat' man was diaries V. Applegate. liaharo Roger Rewold, Jerry Ulmoff. Marita Klteheu and Vance Tmi Crodlt If fat* *t GEORGE'S. Sov# money oh Fin* Quality Fashions. At a Bonus Get Holden Rad Stamps. WIN FREE ROTS* . _fast Eater on fad floor — & GIRLS’ BOB Drawing lepteniher If NCCC Boys' Dorm Wears Completion Cat-Tree Crash Hurts Pontiac Area Woman LAPEER—A 32-year-oid Pontiac Township woman was .hospitalized road and crashed into a tree on just south of here, good condition at Pontiac General Hospital is jPetty Marie Meier of 185 N. Perry St. Nurses at the hospital said she suffered a fractured ankle in the accident. BLOOMFIELD umber compan FE 3-7853 72 S. Telegraph. Across from Tel-Huron HOURS: Weekdays 7:10 A.M.—fd>0 Ml $AT. 1:00—4:00—Closed Sunday and Labor Day, ____________: "SHELVES AMEMIV’ (hanginf th*lf kr«cket») , nosy ot driving o spike 2 Shelf Unit $4.30 Pr. 3 Shell Uait 35.45 Pi. 4 Shell Gait. 16.19 Pi. 5 Shelf Uait.: SITS Pt. All Purpose REDI-MIX CEMENT DOOR CASING IASI MOULDING SHOE MOULDING 4x8x1/4” Plyseort *4.50 4*8x3/t” Plyseors 13.50 FIR ECONO-STUDS I Cynthia Heaketh was (lower girl. The reception was held In the I church parlor immediately follow-H ing the ceremony. After their 10-I day honeymoon trip through the ■MMBBMBBHHHMMMMO West, the newlyweds will reside In MRS. J1ARVKY J. APPLEGATE Sacramento. Cafif. * FOR BACK-TO-COLLEGE! at the pace set yesterday. The stabilization job la being done by the Cadillac Asphalt Co. of Detroit. 2 x4 They Law GEORGE'S I GEORGE'S I GEORGE'S TAN. SAGINAW STRICT — PRIt STAMPS 74 N. SAGINAW STRICT W PM( STAMPS 74 N. SACINtVW STRUT — Mil STAMPS 9 1 >JL, THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, I960 U.S. 3uprefne Court Getting Tough ' on 7-Year-OW Integrafion Orders ■»- iMctaM Prr« OJ. >PR» Court „ moved to step up the pace af public adted Integration In wtwl areas at llw start of the seventh piement tile ruling at (he start of • the aehoelyrae Alter Go*. Jim* y mie Davis sailed control of the tl school system Aug. if* A three-judge court returned _ control of the New Orleans schools to the School Board Satur-d day. But the governor asked the ;; Supreme Court to stsy the order, n NO COMMENT ^ __ >, ' Davis declined comment on the state and federal officials [Supreme Court’s refusal to do 'have been at for weeks; arid this. But a statement issued in Delaware. through his press secretary de- f Ihe action led Dr/ Henry has |coniere„ce mar , Petersen, president ol-theJUauston .which has changed he drt'mmtw with 2i000 t0 3i00 JSchool Board, to say he 1 hM.tnd mnat of Gov. ttto Daniel would * viM tour! „ refected pleas ta delay at Houston. Texl largest segregatad school system hi the South; at New Orleans. pf the school year Sept. 8 instead of Nov. 14.. The court also rejected a toOdeiay effectiveness of a July 19 ruling of the ltd Circuit Court of Appeals In Philadelphia that Delawaiw’s grade-a-year plan was too slow. The appelate court Monday ordered a modified plan be prepared for hdl integration of all grades by the fall of 1981. While the court was acting jn Washington, a NAACP regional director, Ruby Hurley of Atlanta, Integration of the fir ft grades The first grade at New Orleans arms ordered Integrated Sept. 8 by tJS. District Owrt Judge J. Skel- jsystern pf public education basis of separate, but equal facilities' ta bodi rtokL” f ~ * dr i The Supreme Court denied a Idea by attorneys for the National Jacksonville, Tla., news [conference that five Negro gangs ,000 members were which has taken place in that racially troubled city. -ghs-aald~ Negro leaders wert working around the dock to calm |y Wright. However, ho granted;Assn, for the Advancement a A»i«y until Nov. 14 when the Colored People that Integration board contended it could not lm-! begin In New Orleans at the start • Over 48 Stores and Services t ........ To Serve You In One Location S. Tglggroph at Squara Laka Rd. Modern Complete Shopping FadJitios With Over 2,500 Merchandising Deportments! All Stores Open 10 AM. Is 9 P.M. Daily FREE PARKING FOR 5,000 CARS For the third day in a row, seven vilsn children were thwarted rom attending classes with white uplls at a high school In Dunn. . LC. They were taken Into custody twice by police and later released without charges. dr A * In Virginia, seven Negro pupils were turned away by school officials when they attempted to register at white schools in Stafford and Portsmouth, In Alabama, a riot brigade Was reported ready for action if violence erupts when the Mate’s segregated schools reopen next week. Fluoridated Milk Cub tooth Decay WASHINGTON (UPI) — A team of scientists reported today that children who drank fluoridated milk with their school lunches showed an SDper cent reduction in tooth decay. A A 1 A' • Five Louisiana' State University scientists reported to the fifth International Congress on Nutrition that the decline In dental decay was noted during a 4%-year research project, in which another group of children drsfflrregatirTnllfc. / ~ A A A " The children in both groups had similar sociological, educational and financial backgrounds and lived in the Baton Rouge, La. area, scientists said. Storm inlokyo Causes 36 Fires - TOKYO (DPI) —A severe WHAT A CARD!—A Seattle Civic Auditorium sign charter came up with this startling an- wrestling card had been replaced nouncement. He had tUMtKOled Sen. Kennedy's that Kennedy, Sen. Jackson and name for four tag-team wresUers then had will appear next Tuesday—M Cons to lunch. An hour later the reet ol the team. with the nofice Gov. RoseQini not as a tag Dems Scored a'Goose Egg! SaysHalleck WASHINGTON (UP!) - House Republican Leader Chariea A. Hal-ieck says the Democrats scored a "goose egg” during the poet-convention session of Congress. "If it was designed to put the Kennedy-Johnson ticket Into orbit, the whole thing fizzled on the launching pad,” the Indiana Republican said Thursday. Asked for a one-word description of the session, Halleck termed it futile.” President of His Union for Fifth 2-Year Term * CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI) -James A, Campbell, former Veterans Administration officer, here, began his fifth 2-year term today »« nf jrf 75.000-membcr f AFL-OO) American Federation of Government Employes. Campbell was elected by the 500 delegates at the closing session of the 17th biennial convention here Thursday over Vice President Arch L. Oram of St. Louis and Thomas Walters of Washington, D. C. Glommen, Norway’s principal river la 400 miles long. Iowa Sheriff Continues Holiday Rest Stop Idea CLARION, Iowa (UPI) -Wright County Sheriff Bob Blecker has invited Labor Day weekend motorists to drop in for a, cup of coffee and a “rest stop.” . \ Blecker, who started his coffee break campaign on holiday weekends four years ago, {aid the 'step for rest and refreshment lessens driver fatigue and aids highway safety. GET-UM EVERYTHING FOR YOUR TEEPE...AT... PRESTONE $1 88' 1 68 | DAL. Purchisd your first ballon for only $1.88. Pay only $1.68 for- the second gallon. CAR RADIO REAR SEAT SPEAKER $2’5 LABOR DAT SPECIAL: PAINT 11m te lay HOUSE PAINT $3" SUPER KEM-TONr PAINT THINNER m: HURRY for THESE CLOSE-OUTS! Aluminum Chain ; MASK..... 49c SNORKEL.. 49c ilfimhMa 1910 $1.98 ~M 'm.l I I jJl WALL VTtwiwvrpovi con; : □puts : rr mm 25 K ; JW iwtMk : & i ;|k8 ' yWILsali %* i:ssm Ran tarsggtota TsAys. ’ * •#. * Pettee said U perasaw Jared, It of then la the had as way of leavtag Korakaea A record three laches of rata llghtnlag strack JO. places. Teen Bdby Sitter Shot Accidentally by Boy, 13 YARDLEY; Pa. (UPI) - Cprol McKlssock, 15, w a s critically wounded last nhjRt when she was accidentally shot In the head by a 13-year-old boy for whom she was a baby sitter, police reported. The toy, whose name Was withheld, was stowing Carol a .22 callher revolver when It discharged, poiice aaid. He fold police he didn’t realize the gun was loaded; RUT YOU CAN I JOIN SEPT. 16 leiDRIOflN Girls Rate Better Than Boys, Says College in Florida GAINESVILLE, Fla. «—Girts are smarter than boys—at least a* the unlvffivily of Florida, I- ♦* A- ★ Sorority g 1 r J » averaged 2.47 grade points during the 1959-80 school year. Fraternity men averaged 2.28. Non-sorority girls averaged 2.35; non-fraternity men 2.21.. Honor points are tallied by using "A” as 4, "B” as 3, "C” aa KEEPJfQUR EYE ON GRANTS 1* Uf any 1 af Oranti 3 %Chorga-1tf Plans GALVANIZED GUTTERS $7.95Six* $588 $9.95 Six..... $6.88 $12.95 Six. . $8.59 $5.95 Six*.... $4.59 W Ebctrk Drill T n«u« min $1888/ fsb-Osr Al T*w / ] tmi Titt f ilirflu MISSES' pOTTON BLOUSES ARE SANFORlZED-FOR-FIT... GUARANTEED SMASHABLE Fine quality cottons are tops for skirts, slacks, shorts. See the variety of styles, prints or solids. Sanforized for fit. Rollup sleeves; import. Sizes 32 to 38/ t— a. hiwia m Tw iiffci war« ggn J JmH »n pointment for a check-up tor my two ' young - children. -I waited and waited and waited, and the longer j^watt*d the angrier I became. I later learned, that three doctors had been working on* baby, trying to dote an open safety pin without tearing the Child's hfltides. Needless to say. If ,1 am made to waft in •a doctor’s office now, I never say a' word. I read a magazine^. Why Not rnonener and Ask? By EMILY PORT Dear Mr. Poet: I received a very lovely engagement present .from a friend who efapied the enclosed card, “Helen.” It so happen that I have two friends with this same name ate I don’t know which of the Helens sent the gift. I want vary much to write a thank-you note for the present • but I don’t know to whom I should write it. Will you pfeaae tell me how I can properly handle this situation without causing embarrassment to anyone? Answer; A* you evidently do not-recognize the handwriting, the only tiling you can- do ip to telephone the one you think is likely to have sent you the present and ask her, "Did you tend me the lovely whatever it-wa*?’’ : At Kingsley Inn * r Schedule Fashion Show -CAROL ANNHVFF Fashions by tty designers and manufacturers will be shown by Arthur's. Women's Apparel Shop at JQngsley Inn Wednesday. ■ * W, * . Robert Baldwin, Paula Dean, -Polly Bergen, Bobbie Brooks. Miss Sally Victor, Mr. John Jr. and Michael Terre of California are a few of the not-seht the finest er" hats hi fur,^elt and velvet and metallic sheen jackets, blouses and evening coats. . .* Sir"* A' Ten professional models will parade in, apparel for the Junior miss, the yMfof mother, In their lines for the faU Aide fo Potnting - A aerial l_______ . ing. fle«iq| *•* Mrs.• James Vincent and Mrs. Oroaey. The Alfred Tripletts of Livorno, Italy, ' formerly of Sacramento, -Calif., announce the engagement pf their daughter Vicki Ann to Navy iRM SC. Jack L. Bergstrom, son of the *. Elof C. Bergstroms of Silver Lake Road. Thiy will be wed' Sept . 24 in Italy. Club Plans for bridge The Michigan State University Club of Oakland County Women's -Auxfltary t| starting the season with a membership dessert and bridge at 1:30 p.m. Sept., 15 in Birmingham's Community House Auditorium. * * * All MSU alumnae and wives of alumni have been invited ^to attend the event.- Assisting Mrs. Paul Wheaton, chairman,, are Mrs. John Taylor and Mr. James Garrfty. * * * The Women'a Auxiliary assists the Alumni Cub Board In fund raising projects to support scholarships for Oakland County students at Michigan State University. Garden &roup Sets Season's First Meeting ' Mr. Ricterd Cardona of* Tangent Drive wiU be hostess to the Holiday Faiths Brandi of the Woman's National Farm and’Garden Association Sept. 7 for the first meetiqg-of the season. Assisting her wiU be Mrs. Joseph Lewis. - - ' . * * - * -Members will bring flower arrangements to be Judged by Mr. Arthur Arnold of the Waterford Branch, winner of five blue ribbons at the Water, ford Flower Show bi May. •A'**. A question ate answer session' on arranging and conditioning will follow the Judging. Furs, especially in vogue tills season, will be seen on coate, dresses, suits, hate - even blouses and glove*. Included will be fox. whlje fox, Saga Norwegian Blue and silver fox. * ★ *......... Guests at the. 12:30 p.m. public show also will see the popular corduroy Coat in various lengths and colors, "high ris- (AF) — A new cover for a paint roller ten be made by using an old tehy efoth towel. It glves the paint a pleasing, rough texture that doesn’t show the teOts. Four Pagos Today ‘ in Womon'i Section Psi Chapter Agenda Set VICKI ANN TljJPLETT Psi Chapter of Sigma Beta Nations! Sorority met Thimsdey evening hi the Perry Street home of Mr. Morgan E. Siple On the agenda Tor the year, established^ the charity committee, are fund-raising projects for Christmas, with an . early spring style show ate rummage sale. The group also will entertain patient* at Pontiac State Hospital. The chapter will be boat to the Province 1 meeting on May ,.2L; Wtth Mr. Joe G' Benson and, Mr.- John W. Spragg co-chairmen. The September social meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Spragg on Shoals Street. Waterford Township. Mr. Jerry D.' ' McKay will be cohostess. Dear Mih. Poet: Is it proper for a guest to leave a/party before the gueat of honor* We hgve had a discussion on this and some of my friends think it is the height of rudeneos to leave a party before the gnett uf honorr and others think it is^flulte all right. Will you (dense tell us- what it correct? . a. Answer: In former timee tt~ was a fixed ana unbreakable rule that no one should leave before the guest of honor, but today it Is no longer considered ill-mannered to foil to Watt for the gueat of honor to Imps, unless he (or she) is a very important personage. ★ * ★ Dear Mre. Post: I have been told that when taking a heat trip, passengers do not dress for dinner the first night out' Is this true? If tt is, I would like to kqow the reason for tt. Why is 4be . first night different from any other night aboard ship? / Answer: There is realty' no difference. If the hour of the ■ailing is early in the day, many people dram for dinner. V*yy often, however, the host does not ball' until late In the afternoon, and in this case passengers find they have too tittle time to unpack ahd put an their evening clothes before dinner. 1 - ★ + . * Dear Mrs. Pori: If a friend should call me on the tete-- phone when I am not at home, is it necessary, in order to be polite, to return find person's tell when' I get brine? 1 don't think it Is, unless of course I • was asked to do ao. But some members of my family disagree with me. Aaswar: The fact that your friend leaves her »»»"» indicates that she hoped you will call her, and to be polite, you tepuM do so. \ * * *- \ Dear'Mr. .Pori: When Invited to spend several days with friends, does a guest have the privileges of going to the Ice box 'for a snack Rr a odd drink whehever be (or Oh*) feels like it? Answer: Very definitely not! guest is not free tofonme in the icebox or tike any drier similar liberties snlee* iSe hostess gives him (or hot) permission to do R; The Corliss E. Armstrongs of Weponoh Drive anfuwnce the engagement pf their wr A guest is not free to forage to Kathleen Helen the icetex or take anv other to Leo H. rVoelkle, son of Vhe Medard- Voelkles of D**r P** * five with roeuues oj nvj^ mother. Wten toe Endicott, N.Y. doctor loaves, or her com She is • «teuld I go oat with graduate of Michigan Slide, University. . them to the apartment efevajtor ate ring, or is write them to the bunt door aotUtef 1 Anewer: Seeing them to foe front door i» suffictent union titty are elderly, fo which cue KATHLEEN H. ARMSTRONG to go to the elevator wMi THE PONTIAC PRESS.- FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, IMP SEVENTEEN Susan's Engaged HARRISON’S auuTlfooM of their daughter Susan May to U. James H. Schwarts are Mr. and lira. Edward 8. Ladd of | _ _____________ __|QoBe, Sue Johnson,Marilyn Jade, 28 at. the home of the Clyde Milli-jBarbara Gaylord, Janet Thoe, Sue kens of Keego Harbor. ! Putnam and Judy Prevette. Mr. and Mrs. Brady Adams opened their home on Sinclair Drive, Waterford Townahip, Wednesday evening to members of the Friendship Class of the First Christian Church. .The hostess read cards from members who are attending the world convention in Scotland. ' A picnic is scheduled for Sept. September 7 — Arthur’s of Pontiac nosegay of pink rosebuds. I Duties of best man were performed by Mark Boe. James Antb-cs ushered at his brother's wedding with Charles B. Stark of Howell, uncle of the bride. Alvin’s of Pontiac. Hilda’s Boutique of Birmingham and Northland Ferguson’s of Birmingham and Detroit (3sttftw C Receiving some 250 guests after the home ceremony, tea Brueatle chose a dress of powder blue lace OUR CAREFUL FITTING art Because they’re-never still, little feet muat be always comfortable. And they, will be when they’re fitted with our apecihl care in find, firmly supporting, glove-soft CHILD LIFE Shoes. Sizea SO 99 100% NYLON TWEED 1 Roll Only CANDY STRIPE . Ideal with Colonial Furnishings SPECIAL SELLING SURPRISE PACKAGE! In every weather .. . everywhere ... these dressy Scamperoos are leading the social whirl. Quality construction assures good 100% WOOL Pebble Textured Plains or Tweeds 100% ACRILAN Plains or Tweeds selection includes many styles, all sixes and widths. BACK TO SCHOOL QR 3-3311 OR 3-2100 UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY NO MONEY DOWN Sizes 8% to 3 B, C, D Widths Open Daily 10 to l:M ' Monday and Friday ’til 9 P.M. 4528 Dixie Highway Drayton Plains se a Convenient Lion Charge STORE MIRACLE MILE It's SO EASY to Buy the Right Kind of THE PONTJfAC PRESS, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER g, 1966 EIGHTEEN lEmerging as an Individual Have Yon Wed TM>? Use Up Extra Egg Yolks in Golflen Brown Crul lers However, despite this assertion, FWm isn't sure of her judgment. For the real of the day anxiety makes her so irritable you can’t get a civil word out of her. She feels this anxiety act because she Is an adolescent but 1 because she Is bsmas. like us she Is rxpcrirsriax the kind sf in our own right involves crises * * * . that cause tremendous anxiety, no We cannot allow children the matter how old we may he. No crisis of anxiety Involved with wooder many persons repress the their development unless we have conflict end try all their Uvea to-emerged front ours with greater run from the anxiety!’’ {strength and courage. Mrs. Robert Drouth, today’s cook, is a homemaker who thoroughly enjoys her Job. She I has a married son and two | grandchildren. BAR Groupj Has Picnic Wed at Grace Lutheran Sees Slides Opens Season at J, L VonWogoner Home Honeymoon Down South CUTTING - Vwf A diamond cut in proper proportions shows an equal distribution of light and brilliancy at alt distances front the eyes. It refracta die rays, which hit the diamond, bach through the top. In a poorly cut diamond, however, the light rays leak through. Let our Diamond Experts show you the difference scientifically. General Richardson Chapter, Daughters Of* the American Revolution, opened tHe fail Reason Thursday with a picnic luncheon at the home of Mrs. J. L.-Van Wagoner on Anderson-vflle Road. Assisting the hostess were couple plana to live on Lansdowne Street, Drayton Plains. They will further explain the Importance of color end absence of inclusions or flaws. Mrs. Earl L. McHugh, Louise Pontiac Couple at VFW Confab Representing City of Pontiac Veterans of Foreign Ware Post 1316, C. D. Btrdsall of Lynsue Lane Waterford Township attended the recent VFW national convention at Harper, Marguerite Buttolph, Mrs. Charles Ball, Mrs. Elmer Mrs. Walter Kieinert of Birmingham state chairman of. in several of these schools which are maintained to serve Mrs. Birdsall, a delegate for the ladies auxiliary, canted the eolora jg the six-hour parade of dome The Store Where Quality Counts children otherwise deprived of attended as miTroh oftorarIftOWpost and amdnhry membgfS.: Lila Harrington canted the auxil-iary banner. The national convention will be in Miami, Fla. in 19631. Slides were shown of the Kate Duncan .Smith School at: Grant, Aik., arid Tamassee School, at Tataassee, S.C. The Michigan DAR has recently built and furnished a dormitory F. N. PAULI CO. Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Starts Serving as best man and usher, respectively, were Carl Loomis and James Terry, brother of the for small boys at Tamassee. A reception followed in t h e covered by tangled swamps. Check 8 Items |Before Your Tot Gpes to School For Your Wedding QUALITY At Klece Toe Can Afford and Quantity LANSING (UP!) — Parents of jmore than 196,160 children who will enter school for the first time this fall are told of eight Items which should.be taken care of be-ifore school gUster-*1-*-.i';,. /yH bridal and AFTER 5 SHOP Rich Autumn Shades A sculptured knit sheath goes horizontal pearlized stitch hands and everywhere. Il Mashes, packs and re- VELVET AFTER FIVE DRESSES appears fresher than^ ever with its Dr. Eugene Crawley, pediatric | consultant of the State Health Department, said parents should take a copy of the child’s birth certifi-cate to school on the first day and provide proof that the child was Immunized against small pox, tetanus', diphtheria, wixibping cough 'land polio. , | Crawley advised compete physical and dental exastenadona hew 37 W. Huron — Rilcer Bldg. Educator Appeals for Multi-Level Writing Ask Notables to Fill in ‘‘Each student should be al-i lowed to progress at hw own reading rate of speed, competing against no one other than hinisett,’' she says. “But one reason be cannot do this today is because of the, manygapa in too many subjects which have not been filled by understandable reading materi- . NEW YORK (NEA)—If educators like Mias Dorothy J. Andrews have their way, grade school pupils will be reading books like "Syntax for Beginners” by Ernest Hemingway and "Simple Science’': by Wernhartbu Braun. ; These books haven’t been written yet but textbook firms already i are calling upon noted writers i in various fields to help close “the reading gap.” i Making .reading .sense .for I r T mathematician's world is in-• volved with “strange symbols”; ; a scientist's with numerous charts ' and graphs. REQUIRES BULL Each of theie areas requires a particular fading «MH, Mlaa Andrews says, noting that “reading is not a subject; it is a tool.” She adds: “The' trouble is that reading la taught as a single entity; moat students iearii to, read ■everything like they would a novel. Ojiljr one of over300 opensfock dinnerware patterns offering top selections and priced to give top values A pre-school visit by the parents, education in the basis Of safety and self-care are also 'recommended, Crawley said. Parents should also keep the child’s clothing simple enough to enable the students to take care of buttoning or zipping outer clothing. Finally, Crawley said, the school should have the names of several persons, including the family physician, who could be called if the child Is hurt or sfadt and his parents aren’t home. “BAMBOO” Universal—Oven-Proof 8-10” Plates — 8-4” Plates — 8 Cops — 8 Saucers — 8 Fruits— HO” Platter — I Sugar — 1 Creamer — 1 Butter — 1 Open Vegetable — i Cover Vegetable ~ Reg. $29 25 NOW •I# No Need for Salt -Salt is used in canning ’tof flavor only. Home economists at Michigan State University state that salt Is not necessary “That might be fine until you consider that textbooks rarely cover 'more than three or lour general reading levels throughout the school period. Enlisting top-notch talent to write textbooks for grade school pupils is one step In Miss Andrews’ *- uwa oou u liut MOXaBUjr |fU|*U9 19 QHC iafe procming of ^honte- appeal . ini' ned foods. materials." enth grade class may include students* whose -reading- abilities range from the second to the eleventh grades. “Half the seventh graders in the U.S. have reading abilities be- DIXIE POTTERY A John Gilku Dttign five of them can comprehend 5281 Dixit Hwy. — Waterford Mr. THOMAS) FASHIONS AMERICAN FINE CHINA AT A PRICE-YOU CAN AFFORD: Taylorton China... light, translucent, durable. Costa bo more than good earthenware, to advanced ceramic research by Taylor, Smith 4k Taylor Co. A cherished possession, it will provide you with many proud and happy moments in the years to come. Exclusive processes make Taylorton stronger, more enduring. Scratch and stain resistant. Unharmed by , harsh detergents. And Taylorton is oven-proof. Aak about our one-year guarantee Weekend OPENING SEPT. 6 Call Now for an Appointment WE WILL REMAIN OPEN ' ■ DURING OUR REGULAR DINING HOURS OVER THE HOLIDAY f Michigan's Largest Dinnerware Specialty Store N -4382 2521 Elizabeth Luke 1 Hours: Mon., Thurs^ Fit 9 •*; Tuea^ Wed., Sat. 9 - 6 Telephone FE 2-8642 'W/r THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, i960 .v.v,. ; nineteen Woman Doctor Claims Antiaging Drugs NEW ' YORK IMl auburn-halted woman doddr from Romania la frtttng accustomed to bring a controversial dgure In la-tcrnatkmal medical circles. * * * Ever since weed of Or. Anna Aslan’s ag*roeiatiiig experiments with an IB procaine formula began to filter through the Iron Curtain a lew yean back, she has been the center of heated dispute. Doctors to this eo—try aad Eagtoad have said ton to no real evtdence that HJ, which she has bean iajccting for U years. Is aay geed at ah as a refa- Dr. Aslan says: “It's very good I'm controversial because I would not have learned so much about my work U I bad not had to discus It With » many people. And By Rt TH MILLKTT “My husband is getting entirely too chummy with our next-door ■a n—w. -mm*. ‘Nobody throws a itono tol nn oggle trsa without M^apptoa^ “Besides, it makes me very happy to have done aomethtag other* neighbor who is a divorcee,'' writes a wife. WMh todrif a proud moth e( paBsnto at the tostlteto of Geriatrics la Bucharest, at which to la toractor. Hare's a hearty-looking fellow she Mqro fa U& A man of S7, who she says was crippled with arthritis when ha started on H3, is doing a headstand on a table in one picture: in another he’s posing his brid*. 78. LOOK! YOUNG VDr. Aslan la IS and baa been experiRMlHIng on herself with procaine for a decade. She looks an attractive, active 45. "That’s the oufy thing everyone is in accord on,’’ she says, '.'that I halt ywwptor than my age." , ■to la an her wsy back to Boassataa from laa Francisco OOOfOOOOOOO00000000000• # Cento In Today for Your Fra* • « MAKE-UP DEMONSTRATION 2 This is tar first trip to America. Sha finds it "very interesting," 6W rite shakes her heed because "everything is so. easy.” And at* too many automobiles. “I doel thinkjt’s good logically for people to lose their toet,” rite says! "it’s bad for the arterial circulation not to walk ore." Her mother was a widow, and the young Arms put herself through medical school on scholarships and! work. Sha became the first _ to practice Internal medicine to Romania. ' ♦v-'.W .*_• Forty-five doctors work under her at the institute, but rite doesn't know fit there’s any antagonism tl Mr m. , 'Tv* never beei^ Interested fat the competition'between men and wosatoh" rite lays. "But I am absolutely surs that In medicine women have as much talent at men. Medicine should ha a woman's trade because k's a woman’s Job to taka'ears of the atok." Husband Is Chummy With Pretty Divorcee ebvtoas plays tor him, 'at least try to outsmart her. W&fhyou See her Waiting to Mop your husband before he can get in am, goodPlooidng and definitely looking for a husband. I think aha t^ould like to have mine. *She ssmtOy ‘just happens* fa h* la halyard when starting « coaveseadew that may t 12 W. Huron FE 2-4010 2 ales while dimer gets ceM. “She pretends to be too helpless to drive a nail and so she is forever naming over in the evening to ask if she can 'borrow* my husband to do something for her. "So far I'have held my temper, been nice as pie on the outside while seething inside, But Fm getting worried—as my huriwnd is always telling me how heave She is, what a raw deal she got from her husband, what a rough time she is having trying to go it alone, and ao on. • ■ A “Am I doing right hi pretending don't know that thla woman is imIHimt a .qlav far mv huahand? 'I hate to act like a jealous wife —but that Is exactly what I am at the moment, though In nine years I of marriage I have never felt this way before." It 7*a haven’t the courage to toll your neighbor to leave your husband atone or to tell your . tort—d of worrying about keeping the dinner warm. When ■he aria to borrow your husband for a Job tell her that you’ll come along and visit with her while your husband fixe* whatever she wants fixed. She'll get the t&m. Why wives think It la better fo Play dumb that to play smart in tills kind of situation is a mystery. Happy Husband is a happier rlage., Order your copy of Ruth Mill&t's new booklet, | Have a Happy Husband." Just send 25c to Ruth Millett Reeder Service, c/e The Pontiac PA). Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York 19, New York. The Newest DIAMOND PENDANTS "Heavenly Star** At Such a Low Price! 1/5 Carat {20 Points) 0 |50 p]Ug Tax Add a star drop each year to enhance this treasure! A small deposit will lay-away-for holiday giving. Use our convenient Budget Payment Plan ... 10 months top*y. JtWElthS 16 W. HURON FE 2-0294 One square in string makes a [dainty doily or pOlpW-tdlp; 6, a 24 x 36 scarf. Pattern 692: directions; chart 12-inch square in string; 8 In. No. 50 cotton. Send thirty-five cents .(coins) for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send to The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecreft Dept., P.O. Box 164, - Oid Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly Pattern Num-[her. Name, Address and Zone. JUST-OFF THE PRESS! Send | now for our exciting, new 1961 Needlecraft Catalog. Over 125 designs to crocfaet, knit, sew, em-jbroider, quilt, weave — fashions, jhnrtu, furnishing*, toyij gifts, b*- jzaar hits. Hus FREE — Instructions for six smart veil caps. Hurley,: send 25 cents now! Tlmclctt, psrfsct '. . . the pump it always in exquisite taste any. where, any time. This elegantly cut example has not a stitch to mar its perfection. Fiancees' collection Includes fashion's newest end slenderest. Take your choice: dyeebie Nik, satin, tapestry, lame, .. . any leather, color, heel height! Go steady with lancees OF PONTIAC Mob., Thun., Frt. 10 to 9—Ton* \yod, Sot 10 to 6 Save Unflattering Photo (NEA) — Summer is the time when ell of ue take kite of pic-vecstkm, at the pictures can turn up some interesting things. Used in a- positive 'iflhion, they ean provide irasure for aelf-improvement. For instance, how does your pos- round-ehoulderedT B ao, it’s time What about thp hairdo? b it really becoming or is it Just out-of deter B it doaaa’t do ^ change It. And ■ala, Was it rsally a bargain or should It go out of your life forever? 'Jr A • * Don’t destroy the unflattering pictures of yourself. Keep them and study them*carefully with Improvement In mind. Torn them out you’ve made the imp manta. And don’taak your friends and family wbat .they think. Few people havRthe caeraigs to befaore set when omflouted with a question of this sort. Just go ahead sea 21™ Sifts Received at (Shower Phyllis Raymond of East Ypsi-atl Street was fetid with a miscellaneous bridal shower Sunday by her prospective mother-iivlaw Mn. Robert Sonnenberg of Place. . # # ♦ Mias Raymond will marry Leo VandenBowche of Stout Place Sept. 17 «t St. Michael Pariah. Attoatom besides Mrs. Oserge Raymond, the bride-to-be’s mother, were Nn. GemM McHeney, Mrs. Denial Drapps aad Sarah Raymond, aB ristora of Mist Raymead aad Mrs. Ifitchaa! Clever. ••*=**■—». -• A. 4 .~4b.——-....... Guests from Mount jCIemena in-, duded Mifi. 'George Essmaker, Mrs. Hugo Blank, Mr*. Max Patrick, Mrs. Ralph Durst. Mrs. John Presley, Barbers Essmaker, Mrs. George Essmaker Jr., Mrs. William Essmaker, Mrs. Harold Essmaker, Mrs. Art Schutt, Julianna Schutt end Angelo Schutt. * . dr dy Jeannie FreviUe, fcarol North, Its. Marguerite Pierce and Mr*. William Adams also attended. PEGCY AM FAGEN Jeanette Ball Married Mr. and Mrs. Vinton BoD of Virginia Avenue annouqce the mar-rilge of their daughter Jeanette Lenore to Richard Romps of Sylvan Court, son of the Florin Rompas of Jackson, Saturday- aft-moon. h * ‘ * The Rev. M. F. Boyd of the Columbia Avenue Baptist Church performed the double-ring mony at the bride’s home. The bride eboae a Attending at maid of honor was her sister CUnor. Ken Rompa was his brother’s best man, chiffon orgaasa street drees with matching headpiece. She carried corsage on a Immediate families and tela attended the wedding and recap-following Dm ceremony which Mr*. Ball dressed in blue lace, Mrs. Rompa appeared in an olive green sheath. Both mothers had light pink giadlola corsages, Pule fold I* toe soft to make Enroll For Foil INSUM YOUR FUTURE Proper* yourself fur * cereer In the Beauty Prefee* lew Mils Wilson PONTIAC iMity Collofo l«Vh IAST HURON Earsll Today Pksis FE 4-1114 SeMedhufi... lurfftof FINE PORTRAITS sDTHnmntD studio 12 E. Pike St. FS 2-2711 *iocnsm mudowt SUMMIT BLDO. CO. Pray for Noxt Prostdont PITTSBURGH, Pa. « - A later and newspaper editor have launched a "Prayer for the Next President" movement. The Rev, ■bbert W. Young, pastor of the North Presbyterian Church here and Editor Andrew Bernhard oi between JtiocL nlediiMZ: fliy SPECIAL PUB€HA§L may occupy the White House." Shorter, fuller? These new, Fall skirts are perfect for you! They’re shaped to slim you smartly, to fit without alteration at waist, hips, in length. Printed Pattern 4595: For half sizes — 29, 31, 33, 35, 3712, 49-inch waists. Size 31 slim skirt 114 yards 54-inch; flailed 1% yards. Send thirty-five cents in coins fori this pattern — add 10 carts for! each pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St, New York ll,| N.Y. Print plainly Name,- Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. w * ★ ★ SEND NOW! Big, beautiful, COL-j OR-IFIC Fall and Winter Prt-I tern Catalog has over 100 styles] school, career, half-sizes. I Only 35 cents. J Back to School SWEATERS and SKIRTS rum 59 Cash and* Carry — Bring Them In and Save FE 2-6424 CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY Office and Plant *941 Joelyn Ave. G Sleek North of Pewtiee Meter Engr. Bldg.) ..’Iflememfcer.our branch. xmM-S9 and Crqtcent Lake Road it open /or your daily dry cleaning service.” 1 DAT SERVICE! DON’T START MARRIAGE WITH A FLAW! We Trivife > Comparison . . . The Quality of Out DiamondSelection Demands H4I Each ring purchased is accompanied by a bond ... or we will certify your diamond with International Research Identification Bureau. No Society gem or otherwise—governs the quality of a Jeweler's purchases —his pride is your guarantee. a Sorry! No $275 Per Carat Diamonds We K Have Pride! 4$ North Saginaw St Pontiac, Mich, of Full Fashion Fur blend Varna, to regularly sell for as high as $12.95. Due to the Special Purchase we have made, we are able to offer them to you at sucb low prices. All novelty styles and seasons newest colors. $g88 to* e»rd below U an met dupUcot* of the on* you will rtotlT* with th* purchM* of • Swwtor or Skirt it Burton'*. Buy 11 It Skirt*) and f»t ths Utb ran. Thu *ff«r Utt»—Any U Join Natoll! Baton's Sweater Skirl Oak ' You pay for 12 Sweaters or Skirt* the 13th is FREE Curry thlo car* with you tnd (it It oUmped rtwww yot ewwstor or Otlrl—Offor food from ta|M U to Pmato Burton's . Smart Ladies' Apparel Jgldld Teettoe.ftofirigae fa SMART LADIES’ APPAREL 75 N. Saginaw Use Oar tayBiroy er Jest Sty Therf It”. TWENTY THE PQNTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3,i960 life Among the Flats , v f { Pontiac Loom& Gigantic in Rome other and weraxH the laaat I ■jr mm i mnauLo MMM,n»PwtecPnN ROME—Onr Pontiac it about the bit rat car I've seen in Roma. Thert are a law latter saw, of course, but they're a hopeless and unacen mktorky. The Pontine attracts a let ot attention bcc^oe of its size aad beauty. Nothing made br Southern Europe touches Smaller oars defe**at crossings aad corners. The traffic is tre-mendous hut ii!s a kindikt traffic than we have at home. No one ts on having all his legal, moral and aptritnal rights. There’s ore Christian spirit. champ, Jt'» tbs tiniest of all and any ally h Buraya. I «sa*t aaa phobia far riding drivers. • siege at this which be JaW sarvtved. sfcanli have hesn his aadalag. I’ve crossed ssy fingers until they ache, hot ap-poreally no one ewer hits anyone. Rome is over run with fits Alfa Romeo, the Lands and the Flat. 1>e first is a very small ear but Lanca around like mechanical mice and you’re always in the nddiBa of a swarm of 15 ar 30 in the giantsized Pontiac. • ♦ . *. * Newspapermen here have been up against tough obstacles. With 85 different nations competing, the demands lor space in the press box were terrific. It 1‘uns the length of the stadium on one side. Wilfrid Smith, sports editor of The Chicago Tribune, has a badge numbered more than S.OflQ. i ham a seat in the si proper, a portable typewriter in the Aaaoctatad Press stadium hrartqiiar*—y wdffrh h*f lyyitt. era all over the place. iad'ghfi tee boys and girts, wherever they're bora and whatever the color of their akin. Ttafs cm of the things mates it so wonderful to be f boy or a girl.' A.P., has wrttaas everywhere. Thtak of the demand tram IS nations, every MM sf which has special tntereat In oertaia events. Washing end Mam details la Ted’s Jab. He's the greatest. The old world's pretty much the Mime. Going to the Olympic pool, three fine looking' American girts •topped to buy a program. Two Jep boys gave an A-l wolf whistle. * * ** It was the rail McCoy and never * in Japan. The girls grenlec profusion. Ths JIai’t thorny hotel room, plus ready access didn't turn, they smfled Stairs as Great a Hazard as an Outerspace Trip BURLINGTON, VI. lambs come from. Tan. ChH- fleHsr of her home Thursday fomia. Wyoming. Montanh. COdo- drowned. Her'-psurexte. were rado and Idaho, *..... 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They wouldn't' he appearingln today's newspaper if ail Labor Day drivers had exercised due caution last Don’t cause us to have to run such a picture in Tuesday’s edition telling the story of your death. -If you are driving during the Labor Day Week* end, use good judgment as a constant guide, and allow for possible poor judgment on the other driver’s part. In addition to the life-saving warnings to drivers— don't speed, obey traffic signs, and stay on your side of the white Uno- hare age-somd footnotes to fatal accidents over the last holiday weekend: Almost three out of five death-dealing holiday crashes occurred on roads with which the driver was familiar, indicating .that familiarity does breed con-tempt—-for signs, for Signals, and for life Itself. Half the fatal accidents happened within 10 miles of the driver’s home. More than a third came within five miles of home. Two-thirds came within 25 miles. Three-fourths came within 50 miles, dispelling the notion that short trips are 1ms dangerous. Twenty-five per cent of the ..trips which ended in death were to visit friends or relatives, 12 per cent were for picnic outings, 11 per cent for shopping, and five per cent for going to or from work. , On the latest three-day weekend — the Fourth of July holiday — 442 men, women and children didn’t make it home. They djed instead on the highways or in hospitals of accident injuries. Two of these fatal accidents occurred in Oakland County, where the record for this year already stands at 72 killed. Don’t he reduced to No. 73 in Tuesday’s news. mm 1 ■S3W »; i f l i 7 TWE^TY-TgBBR Still Poor Relations HARTFORD. Conn. (UP!) -Mn Civic* 8. Gmmtte, mother at 21 chiMran, died *t the age of 01, leaving 48 grandchildren, U7 . LANSING ' culture Department has announoad l it will make available additional 1 rice and nonfat dry milk to United I States voluntary relief -agenciesfor Exclusive! FIRST SHOWING GARY COOPER BLOWING WILD99 1 foreign donation- during "the cur-! rent fiscal year. * ' Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. > Benson said as much as 500 mil-’ lipn pounds of nonfat dry nulk ! and sih additional 100 million ; pounds of rice, for a total of ISO I million pounds, would be made ; available for foreign donation. PREMIERE OAKLAND COUNTY SHOWING ^THAKAUTUAN-8ARBARA1>RR0LLHI BAUWNN KRI^DOm-MIMilO P^M*»-i>NB^^lg6UltlERII0 IHEHI ■*rSS3sr HANNlBAtft HERE wirtilvs H^MjyBwyof . mastodons that clobbered Wf the world! 'AU3.M filmed R in COLOR inEsyptf The spectacular savagery of the towering Titan of VALLEYofihe KINGS ROIEmunOlt-ELEANOKBiRHER Ji, togetherl and oh §o THIS )8 NOT FICTION. IT IS REALITYt [MAN OX A STRING GORR1LLA AT LARGE TOH1TE sad SAT. OWLf WATERFORD Monroe AND MEET... FIGHT... AND LOVE... IN THE MOST SAVAGE WILDERNESS OF ALL THE AMERICAS! River#*? OF NO ** Return TV\nENTY'FIVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1960 Hawthorne Park Sugfcated Race Relations Topic American Firm Finds Tea-Break Is British'Must' One American Brin (tat has been operating tor 14 years In Grant Britain la Juat learning that for Urban Leagues Eye Go-Kart Track Site Girl's Slayer Surrenders tn the harvester manufacturing plants "of this AmeriesiMWMd company recently laid down their tools because, they said, they were Oty Manager Walter K. Willman ot the nod to sound out private T«Ks Police Ho Just Wanted to Stick Knifi Into Someone V J company would give the men proper olf-down tea break" with freedom to phatter as much as they Uke, nine-tenths of the plant l,hir t»—1 _____ MILWAUKEE. Wto.