a a a = se oeensen ildtiadiess asi ceieaesamnidmammedd The Weather <1i7th YEAR French Officials Say U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast bina cloudy and warmer : (Details Page 2) DON TIAC PRE kKkekekwk. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AU GUST 10, 1959 —32° PAGES UNITED. penis on INTERNATIONAL TED PRESS y : Pn : life potential of Here, Frank E. UNDERGOES TESTS—Prolonged dynamome- ter tests indicate the 60 degree ‘'V"’ design gaso- line engines developed by GM€ Truck and Coach . Division have between three and four times the the tests. | A Milestone in Trucks — = | eygineer, checks a 351-cubic-inch V-6 during one Budget Cut By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. | existing gasoline truck engines. Hickson (right), dynamometer “County Sees $1.5 Millon & 773 Die, 241 Missing in Formosan Floods Overcast Skies , Will Stay Around Revolt Rumors, Fair Reminiscent !0.000 Without of Twain’s Days By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG Were Mark Twain of this day and age and in Oak- a Little Longer | Partly cloudy tonight and to- morrow with temperatures rising and a chance of showers tomorrow is the U.S. Weather Bureau's pre- diction for the Pontiac area. The low tonight will be 60 de- grees and the. high tomorrow 84. Wednesdiy’s outlook is for fair to partly cloudy with pleasant temperstures. Temperatures will average near the normal high of $2 and normal: low of 62 for the next five days. , It will‘be warmer Tuesday, a little cooler Wednesday and again a little warmer toward the week- end. * « * Precipitation will average near one half, an inch from showers Tuesday evening and again toward the weekend. The lowest recorded temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a. m. was 60 degrees. The mer- cury reached 79 by 1 p. m. Little Suppori for Williams Confab Reveals ! May Push _ Favorite: Sons Out of Running Dems By JACK BELL There's a ‘“‘Hhelp Wanted" sign, about to be hung outside the offices of the Oakland County Board of Auditors. Not that they are looking for new county emploves — far from it — they are seeking help in the DRAMATIZED BY DRAWING — The 60-degree ‘‘V’’ design of GMC’s advanced family of V-6 gasoline truck engines is drama- tized in this phantom drawing. With its 60-degree cylinder block, the narrow, campact engine lends itself to a variety of cab de- signs and fits between the frame rails without interfering with wheel or steering mechanisms. GMC Division Announces New V-6 Truck Engines Development of a highly advanced family of V-6 gas- oline.truck engines whose durability promises to be as much as three to four times greater than existing de- signs was announced today by Philip J. Monaghan, vice president of General Motors and general manager of ’ GMC Truck and Coach Division. form of ‘‘constructive suggestions” on how to cut nearly $1,500,000 from; i the county's 1960 budget of $13,997,- The cut could mean reduced services from the county and no new employes, and possibly lay- offs, one official reported. This ticklish trimming job con- fronts the auditors and the Board ‘lof “Supervisors as they work ‘to- wards final approval of the record- high budget at their Sept. 21 meet- ing. It’s necessary, officials point out, because the amount of money an- ticipated for next year during drafting of the budget won't be coming in. x * A lot has taken place since the supervisors tentatively approved the budget in April and the :Tax;m \llocation Board declared its ‘“‘hold- the line’ policy on. keeping the county's tax rate at $5.62 per $1,000 of equalized valuation. First, the county's hopes that. it! might share in any new state taxes passed by the politically-stalemated Legislature has practically back- fired These new engines—the first of their kind ever de- | veloped—include a 12- cylinder powerplant having the, *same 60-degree “V” design that is common to the en- tire group. Monaghan said prolonged dyna- mometer tests indicate the engines have durability factors and ad- Atomic Test Slated PARIS w—French officials said today maximum cautions have been fixed for a French atomic bomb test in the Sahara. There was no indication when the fest might be held. Thé London Sunday Times said President Charles de Gaulle might witness the test during his visit to Algeria Aug. 27-30. * * * A spokesman for Jacques Sous- telle, minister-delegate charged with atomic matters, Aenied such a possibility... This spokesman said the French government has no in- tention of carrying out an atomic test ‘in the next few weeks. I n Today s Press: Be et ee ee County News.......... . 2 Editorials ..........-....... 6 Markets ..........-...- ye 26 Obituaries sree sistemresreaiwiets 21 Sneha o66.ci see. lw! 18-20 Theaters . eee - | ™V& Radio Programs 31 Wilson, Earl i. Women’s Pages 13-46 security pre- vanced structural features miak- designs. “With proper application and maintenance precedures,”’ Mon- aghan said, these engines have a potential of between 100,000 and 200,000 miles of continuous | operation without Majer over- haul. “Actual performance figures gained from operating the engines in current-model GMC trucks sup- port dynamometer findings and in- dicate that this development is the first major advancement in truck engine design in -over 20 years.” * * Although the availability date for these engines in new GMC truck models has not yet been deter- mined, Monaghan emphasized that the engines are an integral part of «ithe GMC truck engineering devel- opment program known as ‘‘Opera- tion High Gear.” PROMISES - INCREASED EARNINGS In addition to setting new dura- bility standards, the V-6’s hold promise of increased earnings for}. truck operators by providing a new level of truck performance, giving better fuel econdmy, holding main- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) ing them far superior. to existing! REQUEST TRIM | Secondly, the Board of Super- councils of Berkley and Sylvan! Lake to trim the county budget because it ‘‘constitutes a burden on a majority of cities.” Thirdly, an independent survey of the 1960 budget is being made (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) # ‘SKI DIVING — You have one guess as to the identity of this geser on Cass Lake. You're right. It's Bruno Kearns in his Jatest adventure. Only this can't be called water skiing. It must be something between skin diving and water skiing. We call it “ski diving.” (See page 17 for the latest in the series of adventures by The Press sports editor’. pe WASHINGTON (AP)—The con- test for the Democratic presiden- tial nomination appears to be tightening, with indications that top contenders may be able to ipush some favorite sons out of the running early in 1960. Stir in Cuba ister Fidel Castro to clear, Many Arrests Castro to Answer Plea !and County, his cracker barrel would be as ripe and for Clarification From) | dary from his tales. People With TV Report) © HAVANA (AP)—Cubans pulsating with excitement . looked today to Prime Min- . year. up the welter of rumors of. armed invasion and domes- | nt ewecsng sets ove: POSS Staffer Sees Drowning the, weekend. While a government blackout obscured many ‘details, Havana newspapers, said Castro will report to; Photographer Gerls Is the nation by radio and TV, on Scene as Skin Diver at an opportune moment. perishes at Deer Lake .|They didn’t say when that, might be. ‘chock full of stories as when Hannibal, Miss., became Twain’s cracker barrel was the fair, big, colorful and’ . to which people would’ The Oakland County 4- a Club Fair begins tomorrow | this *and it is doubtful that. ‘Twain ever foresaw. the likes of what was to come. The 18th annual five-day ex- grounds at M24 and Walton bou- levard. More than 2,000 Oak'and County 4-H Ctub members will show the results of their talents and a year of hard work. All entries must be in and set up by 7 p.m. Tuesday. The 4H! King and Queen will be picked at) 7:40 and the winner of the freckle, ©. — | Am amateur dandiver drowned! contest chosen at 8 p.m. A talent An official source said Sunday ‘in Deer Lake, Independence Town , ‘up to 200 men — civilians and reg- ship, Saturday afternoon with two- show will begin at 8:15 p.m., fol-: lowed by a calvacade of horses lular army men — had been ar- hours worth of oxygen in tanks| show. irested to smash a military plot on his back, oe £ against Castro’s revolutionary re-| * The 51st Annual Governors’ Con- ference in San Juan, Puerto Rico, last week gave little apparent sup- part to the aspirations of Demo- cratic Govs. Robert B. Meyner of; New Jersey and G. Mennen Wil®| liams of Michigan. Meyner and Williams were un- usually vocal in conference ses- sions but it was not noticeable that they made any political headway. Neither was there any outward surge of support for any of the other potential candidates. Among the Democratic gover- Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) has at least secondary support in all the favorite son states. There lwas also an awareness of a con- tinuing strong sentiment for Adlai E. Stevenson, who says he isn't making a third try for the party's nomination. Gov. Orville L. Freeman of Minnesota got a polite reception —but no public recruits—when he sang the praises of Sen. Hubert \H, Humphrey (D-Minn). Hum- \phrey is billing himself these days as a sort of favorite son of the |Middle West. x w« * There was discussion, but again ino burst of support, for Sen. ivisors. has ben asked by the city | Stuart Syntington (D-Mo) and Sen-! ate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas. ’ Humphrey is pitching his entire campaign on the assuniption he Wisconsin primary. lose there, he probably would be out of the race quickly. nors there was a recognition that! can beat Kennedy in the Apvil 5) If he should! west coast. | PARTNER LOST xt ke | He then spotted a skin diver, Military sources said most of| Peter Raynor, of Yonkers, N. Y., the persons detained are held un-| about 100 yards away. ider precautionary arrest or for “Raynor shouted he'd lost his further investigation rather than| partner (Richard Bolger, 28, of Mate tetas they said de. <0) Country Tame Dearborn). cided to make a clean sweep by! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) detaining anyone within the armed ;~7~~~~~~ ~~~ forces who might conceivably have| Turn to Page Two had a part in the alleged con- . (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) | for Drowning Photos PPA PPI LILI I IO social | days Besides exhibits, shows, events for the next four Among the eyewitnesses assist-|through Saturday, the Fair will in- Theme for the 4-H floats is ‘‘Ex- 'ploring 4-H as a Family.” The reviewing stand will be lo- cated in front of the County Courthouse at Saginaw and Hur- on streets. Judges will be John Hirlinger, manager of the Pon- tiac area Chamber of Com- merce; Cleighton P. Melin, di- rector of the department of mu- sic and parade, Michigan State Fair; *and Charles Mortensen, | hibition will be held at the Fair. | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Off to Soviet Union Homes in Terror of China Island 27,000 Dwellings Are | Ruined or Damaged in _ Century’s Worst Deluge TAIPEI, Formosa (P) — flock from miles around for their Ereetes event of the The death toll from the century’ s worst floods on Nationalist Chinese \island rose today to 773 by official count. Another 241 ing. The official casualty list also reported 1,093 injured and 169,173 homeless. The floods destroyed 15,178 houses and damaged 11,890 imore, the government re- , ported. Mo&st of the dam- age nate in isolated communifies hit by flash floods that followed the ‘island’s heaviest rains in 62 years. | The torrential rains fell Friday gime. ing an the rescue |Clude a host of competitions, in- /aS Typhoon Ellen bore down on Today the newspaper Revolu- Oakland | : t was P cluding livestock, sewing, flowers,| Japan after bypassing northern tion, which frequently speaks for a n Seem wast cooking, dairy, canning, gardening, Formosa earlier in the week. But that-regime, said possibly more ; | Drowning | tiac Press Pho-ielectrical, home improvement, local weathermen said the rains than 1,000 persons were detained | | Toll in’59| tographer Tom leadership, mone y management /|on Formosa resulted from a storm in connection with ‘‘the counter- | Gerls. This is his}and photography. lin the South China Sea, not from revolutionary conspiracy.” It re- 13 account of the * *« * | Ellen. ported they included several | tragedy: | Consisting of “approximately 30) Taipei, the. capital and home of large landowners, These were | | Last Year “| was sitting floats, cars, horse groups and) most Americans stationed on the not named. | to Date: 16) in an anchored marchers, the Fair Parade through) Nationalist island, suffered little Both Revolution and El Crisol' rowboat taking Pontiac will begin at 1 P.M.| som the storm. Some low-lying denied .without attribution rental pictures of a salvage operation on) Wednesday, starting from Raeburn) streets were flooded Friday of aportive sea and air strikes at | Deer Lake when suddenly someone Street on Saginaw Street and will) night, but there was little dam- the Isle of Pines, off Cuba's south-; shouted for help.” Gerls said. — proceed north to School Street. | aye, A spokesman for the U.S. com- mand on Formosa said there were no reports @& American saaediies Elsewhere the floods wreaked havoc, sweeping away roads, rdéi- way beds and telephone and pow- er lines. In the central Formosan town of Miaoli, 75 persons died and 750 houses were washed away. Nearly 24% inches of rain fell in 36 hours in Taichung, and wa- ter stood six feet deep in places. President Chiang Kai-shek told the army to give all possible help to the flood victims and instructed the cabinet to get a relief pro- gram-—under way immediately. The _ government estimated to cope with the crisis and threat- ened severe punishment for any- one boosting food prices. Food Commissioner R. C. Li ex- pressed hope that the crops might be saved if the waters recede quickly. Peiping Radio meanwhile ~ re- ported heavy rains around the Red Chinese capital. It said 20% inches fell there in the past 37 ‘days and that several million (peasant were battling floods, News Shout Brings Fine LONDON (UPI) — = Cyril Thompson, 42, a newsboy, was fined $5.60 for “using insulting words likely to have caused a breach of the peace.” persons were listed as miss- there was enough food on hand — bd * * Kennedy is almost certain to challenge Gov. Michael V. DiSalle in Ohio's May 3 primary if the latter assays a favorite son role. The Massachusetts senator is de- termined also that Gov. J. Millard! Tawes shall not block Maryland | off from him with an uninstructed | delegate slate. ? . There have even been hints that Kennedy might take on Meyner in New Jersey’s April 19 primary. although the result of the vote would not be binding on the dele- gates, Pennsylvania, where Gov. David L. Lawrence remains pub- licly undecided, also may offer! Kennedy a target in its April “ad non-binding primary. | The one state that seems to be Kennedy - proof, so to speak, is California. “There Gov.” Edmund! G. Biown has erected a fence against candidates in the primary that neither Kennedy nor Hum- | phrey seems ready at this point ' to attempt to leap. They’re Shopping Early LONDON (UPI) — The London | Times, this 10th day of August, | carried this -ad isement: ‘‘Fa- ther Christmas with own costume | wanted immediately." tor of The Chicago Tribune. PRESS PUBLISHER TO TOUR RUSSIA — First American newspaper editors to tour Russia since the visit by Vice President Richard™M. Nixon are Harold A. Fitzgerald (left), of The Pontiac Press, and W. D. directors of the Associated Press. Mrs. publisher Maxwell, edi- Both men are Along with | es Maxwell (rear), the newsmen left Detroit Saturday. They will leave ‘Berlin by automobile for Warsaw, Poland and will enter the Soviet Union Thurs- day for a two-week touf, talking mainly to news- paper reporters and éditors. Thompson's offense—peddling his papers with the shout: ‘‘the Queen is in the family way.” For Real Fun on Your VACATION —S RIGHT AFTER THAT VACATION GOLF GAME, SETTLE BACK AND READ THE Comics! Major Hoople (front) and Mrs. Fitzgerald > | | | ) | Take Major Hoople’s advice. It's easy to get The Press while you're vacationing. Just phone FE 2-8181 and ask to have the paper mailed to you. A ~ i ! ——_ The Day in Birmingham i de Thieves on the Day Shift | Victimize Two Residents at the home of Mrs. Norman G. Currin, 26630 Captain’s Lane, Franklin. : A pot-luck picnic is planned for 1 p.m. with a business meeting to follow. on Bonn First BIRMINGHAM —,Two residents discovered Saturday that . some ‘Ithieves work daytime hours — and ‘practically under the noses of their victims. * * * Clarence Kidd, 2616 Dorcester May Desire to Assure>. West Germany It Won't Suffer in Future Talks i Pa i(AP\—! has shifted GETTYSBURG. President Eisenhowe! ~ Eisenhower his European schedule to make! Bonn call. * * * purpose is his first One possible to allay West German fears of being left in the Jurch bv Eisenhower's forthcoming talks with Soviet Pre-; mier Nikita Khrushchev, although, “reportédly {cels the! Western Allies need no such as- surance Announcement here Sunday that Eisenhower wil! fer with Chancellor Konrad Aden- ; aver in Bonn «en Aug. 27 came as a surprise in diplomatic circles * * . While it has been all along that Eisenhower would see Adenauer while abroad. observers had been unde: i the chancellor would go to London or Paris rather than having E}- senhower go to Bonn ind in Bonn con- stated the imi * * * White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty came here to Eisenhower's vacation headquar- ters to tell reporters Eisenhower had accepted Adenauer'’s itn-' vitation. ' The President is looking for-! ward to the opportunity: to meet, with the .chancellor and discuss with him “current problems of in- terest to the United States and. the Federal Republic.’ Hagerty; said Traveling by jet plane — the, first time a US. President has done so.— Eisenhower will arrive’ - im Bonn Aug. 27 for the talks with | London. . Adenauer. and travel to that evening for a five-day stay. During this period. he will confer, with Prime Minister Harold Mac-' millan and probably make a side| visit to Balmoral Castle in Scot-| land for a formal call on Queen! Elizabeth IT. * * * Eisenhower goes on to Paris: Sept. 2 for meetings with French) President Charles de Gaulle, Ita-| lian Premier Antonio Segni, and} the two top civilien leaders of the! North Atlantic Treaty Organiza-| tion. He has no plans to meet/ with al] the heads of the NATO) governments. Hagerty said Eisenhower will remain in Paris for several days, but added no exact date has been set for his return to this country. Khrushchev is due in Washington Sept. 15. Eisenhower is known to have set no date for his return visit to the Soviet Union. Instead, he is keep-) ing his schedule flexible . through | next January to attend any East- West summit meeting that may be arranged. There is some thought this could develop from Khrushchev’s visit -here, although the odds are against it. | Will Buy Police Cars . | CALL FOR HELP, DIVER DROWNING — The first note of tragedy is sounded as a skin dive: with head and shoulders abovy water in upper right ture Othe: calls for Nelp rd = f~ ae ~ ey — FAHS FO and Shi fis s j with an inhai, ENE icp oes iry ‘to revive skin diver Richard Bolger wr, Lut cheir efforts failed. Skin-diver Barry Tuttle ~ Working desperately, Clarkston firemen | Press Le-sman Witness divers and bystanders look toward him, while the drown- center of pie (right) gasps for air after recovering the body as another diver ing victim's wife (circled) with head submerged, scans the lake bottom for a glimpse of her hushand, Richard Bolger, 28, of Dearborn. The drowning occurred Saturday on Deer Lake. . . <> 'Rd., Birmingham, keeps his power Walter R. Naas, 254 Westwood Pontiac Press Photos 1 | i | | | | i | 1 i | | | * Well Known | on Police Force | ’ . Bids will be opened for three. a; US . ai’ new police cars at tonights meet-| i c : ¢ \ ing of the Waterford Township| The Pontiac Police Department’s | * switchboard operator's face lit up Like every other theft, the case will be investigated by detectives. And Glancey, with a special in- terest, plans to do some investi- _ gating of his own. The shirts were valued at $24. ca eens ames | | Dies at Age 93 Mrs. C. Church lawnmower in his back yard—or did until early Saturday afternoon. Someone opened made off with the mower. Dr., Birmingham, has been ap- pointed sales engineer in the De- troit District office of Buhr Ma- chine Tool Co. * * * According to Chester S. Johns, general sales manager, Naas will serve selected companies in the Detroit and Windsor areas that use multiple-operation machine tools. the gate and Dr. Clarence Hall, whose office is at 177 Maple Rd., Birmingham left his front office unattended for about an hour Saturday att- ernoon, time enough for someoge to drop in and remove three $10 bills from un unlocked cash drawer. Another pair of Birmingham area residents ‘ound Friday that crime — in this case automobile racing on Hunter boulevard — doesn't pay. * * * Edward Kalaczynski, 20, of 59 Judy Lane, Bloomfield Township, and Rudolph Belian, 17, of 19660 Warwick Rd., Birmingham, were nabbed by Birmingham police at 9:30 p.m, Aug. 3-while using Hunt- er boulevard north of Maple road as a race track. They were clocked at 90 m.p.h. Both appeared in Municipal Court Friday before Judge John Emery. Both pleaded guilty and were Son Conrad Retired as Pontiac Press Editor 3 Years Ago ‘Service for Mrs. Carvie Church, 93, mother of a fcermer Pontiac Press editor, will be at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at William” R. Hamilton Co. in Detroit. x *« * Mrs. Church died Saturday at Brae Burn Convalescent“Home in Bloomfield Hills. She recently had ‘suffered a stroke. Among the survivors is a son, Conrad N. Church, 958 dames K. Blvd., who retired from the Pontiac Press in 1956. M. | fined $100 and $3 costs for reckless driving. x * ' Kalaczynski’s license was sus- nended for 60 days and Belian's ior 15 days. I Franklin Cemetery Auxiliary will ler of Revolt, Arrests Out of Cuba (Continued From Page One) spiracy, then weed out and release those not implicated. Allan R. Shilts of 1235 Dorcester Rd., Birmingham, has been named controller of the Stromberg-Carlson Division of General Dynamics Corp. in-Detroit, according to Rob- ert C. Tait, division president. The Rey. Robert D. Dewey and family will be visiting in Birming- ham this weekend. Formerly min- ister of the Congregational Church of Birmingham, he is now serving the Community Congregational Church of Garden City; New York. County Faces Budget Cut of $1,500,000 (Continued From Page One) by James Sherry of the Citizen's Research Council in Detroit in cooperation with the auditors. Also, some supervisors — par- ticularly freshman Robert J. Huber of Troy — have voiced increased jhold its annual meeting Thursday interest in budget hearings start- ing Aug. 19 by the Supervisors’ Ways and Means Committee. ££ > * * Some other supervisors — who asked not to be quoted — have indicated they would be ready to fire awav with many questions on icertain proposed county expend- ‘itures in the coming budget at these hearings. Norman R. Barnard, the coun- * * x ty’s corporation counsel, readily Born Feb. 28, 1866 in Edgerton, A similar roundup was staged | admits the county is in a ‘‘critical near Grand Rapids, Mrs. Church Jast month just before the anni- situation’’ as final approval of the spent many years in St. Louis in Versary of Castro’s 26th of July >udget nears. Gratiot County. She lived most of her life in Detroit, in later years residing with Ave. Mrs. Church was a member of the Order of the Eastern Star, Detroit Review Club, Women’s City Club and Grand River Ave- ; hue Baptist Church. (unidentified) looks on anxiously at the left. 3 | Besides her two sons, she is . , ‘survived by three grandchildren! - —_ ‘and 11 great-grandchildren. Following crematién at ~ Ever- af tersection of Jackson and Bagley green Cemetery, the ashes will be! Theft t Victim | streets. inurned in Oak Grove Cemetery, St. Louis. County Fair Recalls ‘only a few dozen of those detained | would be formally held as con- ‘revolutionary movement. At that time military and ‘tainees were estimated to total ireleased quietly two days after the ‘celebration of the anniversary. FAMILIES SEIZED | Families of a number of civil- jians seized over ‘the weekend, in- ‘cluding that of President Arman- do Cainas Milanes of the Cuban Cattle Raisers Assn., were seek- ling habeas corpus writs for their ‘release. “But our problem is to find our relatives,” one man said. “They’ve just disappeared and no court can produce them.” Best estimates here were that} spirators. Some sources said they believed civilian de-, | “We already know another son, Felix, at 700 Seward 1.300. A majority of them were have to top $1,460,800 off the pre- ONE BRIGHT RAY that we'll liminary budget to make it balance with expected revenues of next year,”’ Barnard said. The problem is where, he quick- ly added. ‘* bd * The one bright ray of financial relief for Oakland County, he said, is that the State Legislature still sharing split in welfare costs this year. Counties have been heavily burdened since the 70-30 (with coun- ties paying the larger share) ratio | was passed several wears ago. However, this still wouldn't lessen the burden much on super- visors and auditors who must find a way of cutting the budget without upsetting county services might approve a more even cost- a Days of Mark Twain Board. Also on the agenda for the: —_ . meeting beginning at 8 pm. at. (Continee? Fram Paco Ones in the wrong direction twice and‘like a light as he took a Teport, Consolidated Paper Co. t - idisclosures made by Rafael del! too greatly. the Township Hall is a Recrea-| FE puted un my atcher backed each time went under to set of a theft over the phone Sunday . (Continued From Page One) |Pino, 32, of Miami, Fla., a Cuban ; tion Department request for $2,000 into th salvere ores te pick . afternoon. Workers Go on Strike — > ‘born naturalized American wound-| Pealizing that welfare’ costs were ! of their annual budget. i up ime fcr. awl 1.049 row: him straight.” Raynor said For he — and every other man president of the Birmingham |eq and arrested July 25, led to going to continue to climb steadily {, | img as fast as Po eontd, * A x on the force — was well acquaint. MONROE «—Production work-| chamber of Commerce. ‘the roundup. , bee a year or so, auditors, during. Rain D “We ree che Toss in a mat.’ “After the secend .time I didn't Gul ats TE Wiss Saar on spite = te al Winners will be announced at, hes Donon Siege ies aia ampens | oe . ae ., solidated Paper Co. today. . can : a ihad to deny many departments the | iter of secon sath of he salvage-see any bubbles at all. I couldn’t The caller way Patroiman Wil- Approximately slit workers! al the 4-H Parade of Floats, 7:30 Police ambushed Del: Pino's rent-| | dividual budgets the uested M S ti idivers went wy os nee Tere. | “. liam Gracey of the city’s police S wnmemasia Wee aie * “"ip.m. Wednesday at the Fair-.ed plane when he landed on a a : any ections Tattle «3. of 30 Given De oe Oe ane called for help.” itorce as ae = three plents Were | pounds. ‘highway outside Havana. An old * * of the Country Bloomiield To ais aeated Bol: You can Duy eo0d equipment.” ‘He reported that someone stole Monroe . Gauniure second target Judging the King and Queen revolutionary comrade of Castro, ee ° ger’s body on his se-ond dive but you can't buy experience,”’ said six uniform shirts from his car employer. The Ford Motor Co. is contest the previous evening (Tues- he is accused of plotting against ns Board of ‘Autlithrs, has: bees By The Associated Press — * * * Jackson while it was parked near the in- largest. . , \day) vu es Busey 2 VanWag. the eenent peor oo al Na poe! = can be 3 Showers dampened many | “He brougit Beleo~ te the sure .- oner, former Michigan governor Spokesman said his conviction heads to see where cuts can tions of ‘the ant , ‘nda, $e face, Poth he and nic oartner. ° < |eounty is going,” Sherry said.’ Inter-County Committee, , taxes. Schools and county govern- © eet. a ' i \ j MAKE OVER PARES = he Queen’s Coming Baby Is Key Marriage Could Be Easier, for Princess Meg Soon LONDON Ww — An old romance} may be reviving in the gay life | of Princess Margaret who will be| 29. on Aug. 21. At least rumors’ of it are reviving. The young man involved in fhe, fresh whispers arter mule ; ser , 7 , sy From 2 pullside Ni leanlaar ial When Alderman Wiliam L. Clay Brig. Gen.*PejJham D. Glassford away € dea ys tamMlys and his friends refused to leate, iret.) 76,1 died Sunday in a_hos-| watched the ceremony. Supersti- : | the hostess at the Howard John- pital at this seaside resort and art son restaurant, Miss Dorothy Con- center. He had been ul several gleton, 52, ca tion prevented them from going any closer. * * * “They think they'll go blind or; lle@ police. weeks, * * * me chief of police} something if they touch anything Booked with Clay on charges of in the capital after his reti rement | that has been hit by lightning,” disturbing the peace were Ray from the Army in 1931. | Hukriede explained, “They won't Howard of St. Louls and Robert He served in the Pee and | — Schwerdtmann of suburban World War e also was pe 2 Sel dt f burt World War I. H polic Richmond Heights. Schwerdtmann chief in Phoenix, Ariz. He faked World| a 3 | is white. to Laguna Beach after | The three men filed a peace War IL. a : disturbance charge against Miss Z| % leton and she also was No Contract booked. The iol were ae on To Ask Death Penalty N for 3 Negroes in Rape ecessary bonds of $500 each and are sched- Call Today uled to appear today in city court s Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Blvd. Phone FE 5-6141 a | fiar } Glassford beca LAGRANGE, Ga. (AP) — Three i Negro men go on trial for their) Drops $34.52 on Ads lives today on charges of raping, two young white women the night |+ The automotive industry spent of Julv 21. an average of $3452 advertising Solicitor General each car sold in 1958, according Wright Lipford savs he plans to) ito Advertising Age. ask the death penalty. {prosecutor Ny MORE. 2° RETURN Paid semi-annually on your placed before first! investment. Savings the 10th of the month earn from the ve CONVENIENCE ‘Four offices to Serve you. Save-by-Mail Service. Drive-in Window and Free Parking at the rear of the Home Office and Drayton Plains Branch. ° SERVICE Prompt, efficient, xpefier need you. Personal attention to each customer. personnel to serve Pontiac Federal Savings < SININGS sartry Home Office: 761 W. Huron Street Downtown Branch Rochester Branch 16 E. Lawrence St. 407 Main St. 4416 Dixie Highway—Drayton Plains ae \ : # re ) FOR YOUR MONEY 700 Pontiac U. S. No. 1 Michigan All Purpose Potatoes Michigan Grown Garden Fresh Pascal Celery" 9° Michigan U. S. No. 1 Duchess am Apples: Michi-Golden Tender Young Ducks Michigan’s Finest at Low Low Prices.. ° The Michigan Harvest is Here! And truckload after truckload of the Thumb area's finest, fresh, homegrown fruits and vegetables, picked just hours ago, are waiting for you now ...in Wrigley’s Freshland! Fresh fruits and vegetables that are scientifically grown and hand selected to assure you of the finest quality possible. And priced extra low... This week... at Wrigley. Michigan Grown Yellow or Green Squash 10¢ Michigan Grown Fresh Green Peppers 3 for 14¢ Michigan Grown Long Green Cucumbers 3 for 14¢ ~ . KRAFT’ S Salad Dressing 59 S. Saginaw St. 398 Auburn Trail Avenue Miracle Whip = 39 536 N. Perry Street w ¢ a? , AAA 4 ‘ ‘ ‘ ¢ ¢ ‘ 4 5 r : : Vepsereeess Prices Effective Thru Tuesday, August 11. We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. ad — LB. BAG Large ‘ee 23 Minimum ” Size Lb. . Fully Dressed ~ « Oven Ready. Specially Fed T-Lb. Cello 10¢ Michigan Grown Sugar Carrots Michigan Grown Green Beans 2 ibs. 29¢ Michigan Grown Pepper Squash Each 10¢ 4 BEE RSS EIS, 2 ete gg’ qi This Coupon Good Thru Tues., August 11 Cl wrarr's Over ¥ : MIRACLE WHIP ™ 3% .« Limit One Coupon Per. Family With Coupon * 4 | »« Coupon Has No Cash Value. Please Give 5 r to Cashier Before She Checks Your Order §- settee acetal SUTURE 45 S. Telegraph 5060 Dixie Highway North Hill Shopping cor. W. Maple Rd. Open 9 to 9 ' Open 9 to 9 Open 9 to 9 Drayton Plains ms , Road Plaza . Walled Lake Thurs., Fri.; Sat. Mon., Fri., Set. Thurs., Fri., Sat. Opendtod «gg ing Cater me Rochester : : f ‘ * ‘ -Mon, te Sat. ‘ ; \ : he Mon. te Sat. * _ Thar, Fri, , ‘ ‘ rs \" je ‘ » tie c& GAG aye i t : a es Se First synthetic rubber tire was placed pn U.S. markets in June 1940. It’s the Cut That Counts by Rowena Wilson If your summer coif is to hold its styling for any length of time, correct shaping and cut- ting is essential. ™ Be proud of your ™ versatility but don't be a do-it- yourselfer when it mr comes to a new » , hairdo. This re- quires skill and professional know- . - how if it is to create the right affect. A be- coming “do” is important and not one that looks well on your best friend. If you are to enjoy your sum- mer, every comfort should be available. 'There is nothing quite like an attractive and easy to-manage coif. That means an early appointment at Rowena’s Beauty Salon, 4831 Dixie High- way, Drayton Plains. OR 3-3541, 14 &. Main, Clarkston, MA 5- 1000. 1216 Baldwin, Pontiac, FE 5-3735. By MURIEL LAWRENCE He signg his letter ‘American Male.’’ Reminding me that I said [American women resent fathering ‘their husbands’ children, he | writes: | “You're kidding yourself, lady. | | American women’s aggressiveness has made them notorious through- out the. world. They love wearing ‘our pants. I know. I'm married to jone. You're’ alj just a bunch of| j\female spiders who devour their| fertilized. . .” x & * Oh boy, am I sick of this line!! Why do you allow yourself to | imates as soon as their eggs are! . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 10,’195%- 8 If You Really Cared You Wouldn't Whine be devoured, sir?’ Why do you let us wear your pants? if you want them back, why don’t you take them? Do you know what you sound like? Like a baby whining because Mommy won't give him back his bag of lollipops. The fact is, those American males who are continually com- plaining about the loss of their pants don’t really want them back.! Or they'd have grabbed them back. It takes two people to make a dominating woman, sir. To make one you have to have another person who wants to be dominat- who needs to blame somebody else for his fear of disagreeable friction, of the loneliness involved in decision, of responsibility for mistakes, Just as you can’t have a tyrant without someone who loves submis- sion, you can't have a dominating woman without someone who loves being her child. Just reread what you've written to me. No woman has identified you with a helpless, exploitable male spider. You have identified yourself with this wretched insect. And that is the problem. If some members of your sex ed. You have to have a person insist on regarding themselves as exploitable insects, you can't expect members of mine to re- store you your human dignity. That’s something we all — both men and women— have to sweat out for ourselves. We can't beg Mommy to give it to us. It is not a lollipop, It’s something we have to give birth to ourselves; something that must suddenly rise like a tower inside us so that noth- ing but our human importance mat- ters—neither disagreeable friction, making mistakes, popular disdp- proval or loss of protection. Mommy gives birth to us all only once, sir. Our subsequent births we have to give to ourselves. Inner Glow PHONE FEQERAL 2-485) c ’ OAKLAND: MODERNIY AIR CONDITIONED NOW SHOWING rom the most gripping nd dramatic best-seller! today’s column. New Interests Add Sparkle "Rae “ é By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Hobbies are Wonderful because) they turn a person's thoughts from’ himself and open his eyes to a whole new world. The impact of; a new world on an intelligent per-| son can have many splendid and shining results. . This was impressed on me after a chance meeting with Rosalind) Nadell, the mezzo-soprano who has sung so widely in opera, con-| cert and musicals. She looked! wonderful but somehow different.| When asked what she had done to herself, whether she had a new hairdo or had colored it or was, using a new make-up, she laughed, | “I HAVE cut my hair shorter but: that’s not it. It’s nothing you can; see because whatever it is comes from within.” | “Vitamins? A diet?” | She laughed again, ‘‘No, noth. | ing like that. I guess you might | call it a new viewpoint.” Rosalind Nadell always had a flair as a performer as anyone, would agree who has seen her on! Broadway in “Helen Goes to| Troy,”’ or in opera or summer} musicals. However, off-stage she had been a retiring type. She was’ responsive to friendliness but not outgoing in offering it, able to likely to emerge from a sort of; light in her face. There was a lilt in her voice and she seemed to enjoy the sparkle of others but not): quiet modesty to sparkle herself. | | Now she had glow, a sort of % Dark eineces Have Glamour Plus Comfort The day of the heavy frame in sunglasses is gone forever. In 1959, frames may look fash- ionably large but they are light on the face. The reason? It’s because they're made of feath- erlight nylon. _ * * * There's something-for every- body in sunglass frames this year. Oversized sunglasses in | eae tortoise or black are eye- stoppers for bright days. For streetwear, there are wrap- around and modified harlequin | shapes that can go anywhere. * * * For patio parties and picnics, frames become dressier. Some are trimmed with pastel Li- moges and others get a treat- ment of silver filigree or col- ored stones. Others havé rhine- stoné or pearl trim to be matched to jewelry. The lenses in your sunglasses should, of course, be ground and polished whether you use | a prescription or not. They pre- | vent distortion and give max- imum protection. . eae MRE NOE oc FRO gi. be Gan ¢ Whol _ CATCH THE : BOUQUET? © Oe et ee ee Tiwi tribesmen of remote Mel- 'that continue for months afterjare necessary to set at rest the ville Island .north of Australia'each burial. The Tiwi. believe|deceased’s spirit, which -is re 2 s t hold death corroborees, or dances, that such prolonged ceremonies'garded as evil. nae ‘labial usually much higher priced @FOAM PILLOW supports your arch @ FOAM CREPE SOLE walks soft ‘n light Elastic—ease at the instep for non-slip fit, won- derfully flexible. Smart Cream trim and a sole # that matches the unlined glove leather in Autumn aa Brown, Red, Black, Grey. * io : Shoe Salon — Mezzanine ANOTHER new important fashion name at... radiate delighted interest. It was ~ For Short Teeners eo ruame PETER FINCH easy to see that this change was © id 2 : DAME EDITH EVANS DAME deceit | not due to a small cosmetic trick.| =| ; a ees © eee entenere It was as obvious as a flag wav-| = €| | ; She can start, right now, She cannot slop along in flat fad to ext ne that weal @ WEDDING PORTRAITS * : ; learning to pull herself up to shapeless shoes. She can wear tolaliyun eonneate d.with my jeri ... OF COURSE ae 5.95 her full height. She can walk low heels, to be sure but they. [career.” |g Admiration for the maids. compit- * ec cow o tall and think of herself as tall. must be well-fitted and they Tomoreow: “With * ‘Going? what you'll hear for the wonderful al 5 A timed. toce-toviched But if she wants to fool other should have a heel more than Steady’ in Mind, the Past Is|& aT overs prin ieee Sraadiug ‘ ‘ 4 [™ At 1:10 - 4:54 = 6:38 - 9:25 PRE ZIP-OUT PILE LINING! Sizes 3 to 6x with leggings. Sizes 7 to 14 Coat. Cash Price: 998 Subteen sizes. 8 to 14 coat. Cash Price: 498 The coat that outlasts all fashion whims. zip-out pile lining. Navy, grey. The , MARGARET AN Camel, red, 37 W. Huron The teenager who has at- tained her full height and is disappointed to find that it’s 5 feet 3 inches can do something about it in addition to complain- ing. * ; * * people into thinking she’s tall, she will have to see to it that her body is both slim and well- proportioned. Stay Trim; Look Taller This means diet and exer- cise. It means that she cannot afford to have lumpy hips (which never seem quite so bad on a really tall girl). She cannot have a tire around the middle. x * * one inch in height. And she should be wary of blouses and skirts which tend to split her height in two. Sie se eae ana t Hamburger ir By JANET ODELL ‘= Pontiac Press Home Editor i= Instead of making regular '§ hamburgers for a late eve- ning refreshment, try these * Open Faced Hamburgers of i Mrs. Earl Straub. You can, get the meat mixture all » Broiled Right on Bun, Mixture vision where they live. Boat- ing and fishing are her leisure © time activities. Open Faced Hamburgers By Mrs. Earl Straub - 1 pound ground beef Salt and pepper 1, teaspoon barbecue seasoning Tomato-vegetable juice to mois- os | Yes Wright custom builds your ‘new furniture too. ..of the. jsame superior quality and %, workmanship as his re- Ey upholstering work. And ‘this fine furniture can be jyours at very reasonable ea Warm camel hair and |} eliminating the usual prices — because you are buy- és ing direct from the maker, ‘é “middle-man” costs! ¢ SAVE 30% to 40% new Colonial Sofa! NN IMME OSE Se BE a F- = @ Choice of many beautiful fabrics * @ Choice of spring-filled or & Fs «WILLIAM Weigh Shop }270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0558 feam rubber cushions * @ Steel reinterced full wed bottom — and hand-tied springs @ All werkmanship guaranteed 5 years @ Easy budget terms or 90 days cash Furniture Makers and. Upholsterers Serving Pontiac “T think it all started,’” she said, | paint a picture myself probably) because singing satisfies my need | for expression. as pia gardening, sewing or _ writing! might another person's. BUT this) Best.” PNR RE SR eS ek. BEE ‘ @ FREE COUNSELING | ee ee % : @ u ¥ i= : 4 CERTIFICATE .. Have You Tried This? c #| 1% | A gourmet is a fellow who in- spects the food instead of the waitress, ing in the breeze and as exciting.! © “with an interest I began to take! = in painting. Merely as a spectator,| %; you understand. I had no yen to # take a brush in hand and try to) ®!. | SEER OED. HS * IN YOUR INFORMAL e oO. ‘ Yes, it will be beautiful . . . just “come in, or phone for your ap- *: pointment. ’ FOR YOUR WEDDING . . . ~ QUALITY & QUANTITY = @ 12 PHOTOS IN 5x7 ALBUM era 5 ee +B: SOOO OULU @ A_LARGE “JUST MARRIED” SIGN % BOs. ae. C. R. HASKILL STUDIO 1 MT, CLEMENS ST. FE 4-0553 gts Bo OR TR i Nc Es Ain: Sil FOLDING CHAIRS, BANQU RENTED FOR ALL OCCASIONS if PONTIAC FOLDING CHAIR SERVICE ;; 5 Ry Oc ae ET AND BRIDGE TABLES ‘Over 28 Years ‘ { . . EXCELLENT COMPLETE FE 4-1536 Quality Cleaning Since 1929 0 EE ER abit se $39.95 + § MES SE BO. 5o8 * SHIRT SERVICE = 719 W. Huron Because You Love Nice Things. bodice . . . lace-scal- loped hemline with delicate underlay, too! Slip comes in three + lengths. eee 4.95 New edition of Van Raalte’s famous Frivolace slip... in . Suavette tricot. Lined bodice. In short, average, tall lengths. Lingerie — Main Floor i= -ready on the buns and re- 28 cup: chopped .ciina e 245 North Perry Street o FE 4-4044 j a ) ; i& frigerate them until time to ~ Hamburger buns | Mg $5: RRO aaeganane eneanaeceseaae etae p:Pr na paaae ee e as | Coal V4 : \= eat. « Mix first 5 ingredients to- i: . J 2 ; 3 x &* * gether and spread on halves ic 4 TA ne | € Mrs. Straub works with cr of buns. Place under broiler je N>..,4 WS. Famous Classic |& husband in his business. She and broil until meat is done. — ° ie vi ‘Ne BOY CO ATS |@ is secretary of the Improve- This will make 4 servings, that Ay Ife SS g . ment Association of the subdi- using.2 bun halves for each. “ty LIGHT Ag AIR & ee 3 Now Include Ee EN oe a, REE SAREE LEE BEE P. AR ss 8 Van Koalte , GOMFY-CONTROL GIRDLES / To mold your figure easily ... gives you support for the sleekest fashions... that’s the purpose of these lightweight garments that rise above your waistline. Girdle with non-roll band top and bottom. Extra tummy control in front panel of rayon satin lastex. 5.95. Companion Pantie- = ‘Girdle. Both in Van Raaite’s own nylon lastex and powerlastic net. Detachable gar- ters. S, M, L. 6,95 Our corsetiers will assist you to a proper fit Foundations — Second Floor 900000000000000000000000000000000000000009000 6 90000000000000900 , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 1959 ~ Advertisement) | l T , cae Cae tron cmice oe Dgaths High in Big Cites! AUTHORS WANTED Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas |." t= Deaths Elsewhere sco owes" srs Paces BY LY, PUBLISHER ; | . ‘rate in the nation’s five, largest Studt, 87, of 7101 Sand Hill Rd.| By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS cities—New. York, Chicago, Los An-|Leading book publisher seeks mani ~~ was to be held at 2 p.m. today) JOHNSON CITY, N.Y. (AP)—| There usually: is ‘no rain trom geles, Philadelphia and Detroit —|of,sl! \ypes: fiction, non-fiction. poetry. NICK FARCUS | The body is at Sparks-Griffin Fu-)| ROBERT HARRY JOHNSON : hair- scholarly ‘and religious works, ete. New ) | NSON | ; . \Charles F. Johnson Jr., 71, chair ‘ le i below! the cath conoa bend tex ives bocce Nick Farcus, 68, of 12% S. Sagi- neral Home, | ROCHESTER — Service for Rob-|* Mur Brothers Se ig A of the board and former Bide 0 ie eng of October in) runs pe genet rced bad IN-68, Vaptage Press, 120 W. 31 St. New i | ¢ ; Almont, with burial in Almont) Sai sraet. \ national average. York 1. naw St., died Sunday in St. Jo- MRS. JOHN CORYELI lert Harry Johnson, infant son ’ president of _ Endicott Johnson, . seph Mercy Hospita} following an| ; | Mrs. Cli . -|Cemeter]. idied Sanday of uremia, a disease : livag of one eae. WASHINGTON — Service for of Mr, and Mrs. Clifford A. John \died Sun Mis) Joho (dargaret ML) Coryett | 2" of 425 Hill St., will be held); Mrs. Studt died Saturday injof the kidneys. He was a retired General Mo- at 60060 Kittle Rd will he held at 3 p.m. tomorrew -at Price Fu-;\Community Hospital after a brief) tors Truck & Coach Division em-|9 a. aanmorroud? at Suen ee] col Home, Troy. Burial will be illness, RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The) ploye. be ‘Funerals Romeo. Burial .will it, Mount Avon Cemetery, Roch-' surviving are three sens, Harold|Rt. Rev. Henry St. George Tuck-| Service will be held 2 P.M. be in Oxford ‘Comeleey, ester. of Dryden and Harvey and How-/er, 83, retired presiding bishop of| Wednesday at St. George Rouman- Mrs yell. who was ; Carte, The baby was stillborn at St. ard, both of Almont; two daugh-\the Protestant Episcopal Church | ‘ a ian Church with burial in the vet-."*: Ces WO WAS A ris-| Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac.'ters, Mrs. Hazel Avery of Dryden of the United States ang Bishop of fsa : 000 Pair ‘eran’s plot of Perty Mount Ceme-|@@" ee ae ~ P ast! yesterday. ‘and Mrs. Grace Heacock of Al- Virginia, died Saturday. | tery. The body will be at the! ™atron of the Order opus East- Surviving besides his parents are mont: eight grandchildren, 25 +—— - jern Star, Davis Chapter No. 402.) two sisters. Bertha Lee an 1 died at her home Saturday fel-' ‘ church from noon Wednesday until d Dar 9; eat - grandchildren; and three | CANTON, Mass (AP) — Dr.| time of service. The body is now ne lene Gail, and two brothers, Clif-) great-great-grandchildren, William Augustus Hinton, 7,| is at Pursley Funeral Home. Jowing: @ long ulness) ford Jr. and Arnold, all at homes world. caicanes leader in the! ee ; The OES service will be con- and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. MRS, SHELBY WOOLDRIDGE fight against syphilis, died Satur-_ . e er 0es MRS. ee GORDON j|ducted at 8 tonight at the foneral Hatry Evans Sr. of Rochester, and) \jrs_ Shelby (Mary) Wooldridge. day. Dr. Hinton became the first. . ; : Mrs. Carl (Lottie C.) Gordon, 55,| home. | John M. Johnson of Owatonna, '55 of 1390 Crescent Lake Rd.Wa- Negro to hold a professorship. at} ~ of 901 South Lake Dr., will be) Surviving are her husband, John; | Minn. ‘terford Township, died Sunday fol- Harvard University when he was Final Clearance of odds and ends of famous name shoes — all styles held at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Rich-'and a sister,.Mrs. Marion Davaris! - . : - acpe _ lowing an illness of two years. appointed in 1949. ardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial! of Freehold, N.J. MRS. FRANK K. POWERS aa are OXFORD TOWNSHIP Service A resident of the city for 30 ae Catone Oakland Hills Memo- GEORGE E, DWYER —_for Mrs. Frank (Margaret) Knif- years, she was employed by Bald- NEW YORK: (AP) — Pasquale : @ he ; sea! ers ~35 as win Rubber Company. Ferrara, 62, for many years a i= ’ _ . 34] DRYDEN TOWN HIP—Servi \fen Powers, 74, of-3301 Thomas Win ’ : pany x n | ae ergo was Beas on alee Georgé E oe 68 of 5800) Rd., ‘will be held at 10-a.m. to-, She is survived by her husband; noted opera singer, died Friday of edlor ecelving ’ , . — all sizes — but ndt every size in every style — In a great at Hospital, . 4 « : ‘morrow at Pixley Funeral Home, two sons, Robert in Indiana, Glenn heart diesse. ; Friday following an automobile ca acca nee ga Bee Enchesten Burial will follow in of Pontiac; one daughter, Mrs. —- ‘ cident, imilay City Burial. will follow in| Rich Cemetery, Mayville. ‘ Marie Carter in Indiaha; twe EAST BOOTHBAY, Maine (AP) DAY EV ; Surviving are three daughters.) i41° Sepulchre Cemetery, Bir-| Mrs. Powers died Saturday at brothers, and two sisters, . Mrs. —Harold L. Cross, 69, counsel: for Mrs, Jeanette Stubbe of Walled) singham ers \the Bacon Convalescent Home, Ox-|Fern—Crabb jn California and the New York Herald Tribune and | ; Lake, Mrs. Violet Bridges of Farm-| , : ford, after a long illness. ‘Mrs. Mildred Cooper of Pontiac. the New York Post, died Sunday | ~ 5:00 P. M.: to 9:00 P.M ‘ ington and Mrs, Lillian Jenkins ofl, ~— dee ce Mae Bete Surviving are four sons, John-A. The body is at Huntoon Funeral of a heart attack. He also served, : ° ° : ° ° ° : Pontiac, a son, Charles of Detroit.) P: ; . . * and Myron McIntyre, both of Lake Home. as counsel for the Freedom of In-) , and 10 grandchildren. One brother|Funeral Home, Imlay City. ‘Orion; Lewis McIntyre of Oxford; \Ho (ee ___| DISCONTINUED NUMBERS—SUMMER STYLES—NEW STYLES also survives. Mr. Dwyer had been a farmer | Lovell McIntyre of Drayton Plains; ; | WEDGIES — FLATS — HIGH HEELS — LOW HEELS since his retirement from the/21 grandchildren, and 13 great- ope : Choose from Such Famous Makes as... JULIAN DEYCE JOHNSON [Fond Motor Co. | grandchildren, Our Julian D. Johnson, 91, of 102) Surviving are his wife, Gertrude| : Gladstone, died Sunday following and five sisters. | MRS. MINNIE A. SANK , — VACATION is OVER | @ NATURALIZERS — - @ RED CROSS @ TOWN & COUNTRY | an illness of éight months. DAVISBURG—Service’ for Mrs. | 2 . @ DARLINS ' @ PALISIO He had been a former srl MRS. ERWIN HADDEN ‘Minnie A. Sank, 87, of 10791 We're back ready to oes ( SANDLER mploye; oe an ne ; @ DELMAN @ TROYLINES @ SA of Cooper and Miner Grocery KEEGO HARBOR — Service for|Rattalee Lake Rd., will be held serve you... in ALL NY OTHERS Store. Mrs. Erwin (Eva M.) Hadden, 83, iat 9 a.m. Wednesday at St. Rita's Y 0 U R DRY CLEANING e HAYMAKERS r ) COBBLERS t ) MA He is survived by five sons, Of 3026 Moss St., will be held at Catholic Church, Holly. Burial: _ Re, is survived. by five sons, of 926 Moss St. will be held at Carnie Com el eurial NEEDS. — -SOME ORIGINALLY SOLD FOR AS MUCH AS $16.95 C., Carlos M., all of Pontiac: one hardt Funeral Home. Burial will Bay Gity. © daughter, Mrs. Florence Hoffman follow in Pine Lake Cemetery. Rosary for Mrs. Sank will be of Newaygo; one brother, Fay V... Mrs, Hadden dieq Friday in a Tecited at- the Dryer Funeral $ eight grandchildren; 14 great- Pontiac hospital after a long ill- Home, Holly. at 7:30 p.m. to) GENEY DRY CLEANERS Your = grandchildren, and four great. ness. . eae she died vesterday after | 12 W.\ PIKE ST. FE 5.6107 | ; . great-grandchildren. * * * ‘a long illness. | . | Ch e Service will be held 1:30 p.m. Surviving are a son, Kenneth H.| > * Pick-Up and Delivery ; Park Near Our Door | oice ® ; . pair : ; : : : , Awhar a y at Lal s Pp 'Mrs. Edward Harris and Mrs. | Bruce Barnett, both of Davisburg, | = : —— — MRS.. WILLIAM HARRISON a grandson and two great-grand- Chapel with burial at Perry Mount @n¢ three grandchildren. Park Cemetery. - nee . ; | SECOND PAIR FOR ONLY ARTHUR H. WARRILOW WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP. children. s . Authur H Wartitow 57 of 200'—Service for Mrs, William (Flor. . a , . Travel Adventure witha BIG PLUS | , 5 al, 2399 MRS. MARION SNOW SPENCER BD —_—_— ">> Going St., died unexpectedly yes-jence May) Harrison, 80, of terday at Pontiac General Hospital. 28-Mile Rd., will be held at 3 p.m.|_ INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP— ra C RU ISE A ARA . ° A member of Northeast Commu- tomorrow at Pixley Funeral Hoon, | Seeciee for Mrs. Marion Snow : Racks and Racks of Sensational Pair nity Church. he was employed by Rochester, Burial will follow in Spencer, 93, formerly of Independ- General Motors Truck and Coach Evergreen Cemetery, Detroit. ence Township, will be held at | Division. | Mrs. Harrison died at Stoney} 1 p.m, tomorrow at Sharpe-Goy-, | He is survived by his wife, Vic- Croft Convalescent Home, Roches- ette Funeral Home, Clarkston. | toria; one son, Arthur G., stationed ter, yesterday following a long ill-/ Burial will follow in Lakeview, : with the Army at Fort Dix, N.J.; ness. ‘Cemetery, Clarkston, | one daughter, Elizabeth of Pon-| Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Spencer died ‘Friday in | tiac; two brothers, John and Wil-| Mrs. T, C. McKay of British Col-|Tucson, Ariz., where she had been) | liam, both in Florida; and four/umbia, Mrs. Fred -V. Williamsonja resident for the past 11 Years. | | sisters, Mrs. Russell Tabor in Col-'of Mount Vernon and Mrs. George She had been ill for a year and a PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE orado, Mrs. Floyd Loree of Dray-;McCrossen of Santa Fe, N. M.; half, 698 W a oy TRAVEL SE FE 8-9611 | ton Plains, Mrs. William Mans- twp sons, Frank and Stanley; 11 Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Ber- S on st | 87 N. SAGINAW S | e Next. to Federal’s. field, and Mrs. Roy Fosdender, grandchildren and 20 great-grand- nice Waterbury of Springfield Se a ——_ereeeeeeee~*> i aeeem>s EOE m~s’ both of Pontiac. | children. | Township. seermempememrnrers §=EARLY WEEK SPECIALS! | BELISVI Las ~U. S. GOV’T GRADED CHOICE «Basa Ct*éSTENNDERAAY ROUND OR ee €UBE STEAKS | NORTH 6-62. , = € | = TUNA riSkh & Ss: fee ROGER CATSUP: ; iS2GRAPEFRUIT 2 Shoe Savings — Be Here Early for DAILY SAILINGS TO CLEVELAND the Best Selection — Bring a Friend DEPARTURES 3:20 P.M... . .SUN., MON., TUES., WED DEPARTURES 9:30AM... 0... . THURS., FRI, SAT. J Open Monday WITH RETURN SAME DAY AT 10:30 P.M. e i & SAILING SCHEDULES DESIGNED FOR YOUR COMFORT | and Friday | Enjoy a Fabulous Full Day's Treat on Scenic Waters | ECONOMY PASSENGER AND AUTO FARES ‘til 9 P.M. : Eee +heeded agdecbboeveera #4 ¢ N) feet et WHOLE COMPLETELY CLEANED FRESH FRYERS...... « 29% Hroger SWIFT'S WORTHMORE oo ; . | -L8. ¢ oR . Z | SLICED BACON eooeeee e PKG 39 EACH SMALL KROGER GLAZED e ONU i Ss. = © ' FRESH EGGS ... . = 29¢ % WHOLE—HALF—OR END PIECE SLAB BACON ....* 29 50 EXTRA STAMPS WITH TOKEN INSIDE JAR INSTANT COFFEE “ten "wax" $14? CAMEL: WINSTON - PALL MALL - KENTS CIGARETTES “eis” 4 mx 995 | MICHIGAN RED HAVEN . KROGER FRESH SLICED — of " SAVE be—KROGER FRESH SLICED a, WHITE BREAD . . 2.88% 39. BUTTERMILK BREAD sit 15° We reserve the right to limit quantities. Prices and items effective at Kroger im Detrost and Eastern Michigan thru Tuésday, August 11, 1959. _ — . : ne ad . “ +, ‘ : SAVE 10c ? ¥ brimette, pev Parade Opens Festival fcundieds Take Part “White Lake Area's -Community Fete = HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP — Ful- Towing a two-mile-long parade Sat; wrday morning, a beautiful queen -was crowned. and hundreds of people participated in the first Community festival! held in the White Lake area for man vears . * * * “at 9am., Boy Scouts. Girl Scouts and’ open convertibles with eight pretty girls congregated at the €orner of Highland and Duck Lake pvoads along with firemen and the Qakland County Sheriff's Mounted Patrol to begin a parade to the Beaumont School grounds. * During the afternoon the -fes-_ “tival took on the air of an old-_ ‘fashioned .cotnty fair with a “spirited horseshoe tournament attracting most of the older folks. «@n the edge of the school grplnds, children rode ponies as parents viewed the photo ga lleyy, baby picture contest or had. their pietures taken by a_ professional plytographer. CONTEST ANTS INTRODU CED A dramatic war dance was pre- seftted by the Indian Boy Scout! Tevop 42. - “At 3 p.m. the girls sapeing “for the queen’s crown were in- “fFéduced by contest chairman -Gene Russell. ; & tall blonde, Lois Marie Lemke, | bad of 3300 Lakeview “Dr., chgsen the winner with a lovely | Beth Kellogg, 17, al nigg a close second, * * * The queen, oldest of 12 childr en, | received a $25 savings bond. She was judged on posture, poise and| personality. She is the daughter, ef Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lemke. An avid sports enthusiast, Lois Was graduated from high school in June and will begin work this fall for a Detroit attorney. She is also an accomplished accer- dionist, Sponsored by the Seven Harbors Assn. at White Lake, all-of the! $500 proceeds from the festival will) be aised for area beach and road | improvements, along with other) community projects, according. to eoechairmen Mrs. Allen Simmons and Mrs. Ray Johnson. * * * Judges for the contest were Oak- lang County Sheriff Frank W. i|Manager Donald L. Swanson re- ‘ports. ¢ Dnt per a ae SS ae SelUm THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 10, “= oe OE US 195 e Seventeen- SEVEN HARBORS QUEEN year-old "Lois Marie Lemke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lemke of 3300 Lakeview Dr.. Highland Township, won the queen’s crown over seven Saturday. She 1 Irons, of roses from Oakland County Sheriff Frank W. who was one of the four judges and |General Hospital, and Johnny was + jnor injuries in the mishap and Was 'face and eye and bruises. Head-On Crash Hurts 6 Saturday Using Revoked License; Family of 5 Injured LAPEER TOWNSHIP — Six per- sons were injured when two cars crashed head-on at 7:40 p.m. Sat- |urday on Imlay City road, one and a half miles east of Lapeer. * * ¥ Driver of one car. was Ted J. Oliver: 23, of 2441 N. Alba Rd., Oregon Township. He suffered: mi- lodged in Lapeer County Jail for driving with a revoked license and for further investigation of the ac- cident, police said, More seriously hurt were the driver of the other car, Thomas Barnes, 29, of Newberry, Ont.; his wife, Laura, 28, and their three young sons, Barnes suffered possible inter-| nal injuries, cuts and bruises, and Mrs. Barnes, internal injuries, cut Pontiac Press Photo s shown here receiving a bouquet Jimmy Barnes, 7, had a broken leg and internal injuries; Johnny, 4, head injuries and a. broken leg; and Lonnie, 2, a broken leg and, internal injuries. * * * presided at the coronation. other girls in the seven Harbors Assn. festiyal = Michigan Beauties to Vi for 1959 State Fair Title Entries for the annual Michigan in convertibles in the opening day (State Fair beauty queen contest parade through downtown Detroit.. are pouring in at a greater clip They also will be guests of honor than in previdus years, General , ‘grounds. With Aug. 28 set as the dead-) Last year it was Miss Lila Ver- iline for entries, a score of Michi-|slype of Harper Woods, Michigan) gan Queens already have applied' who as ‘‘Miss Chiropractic Michi- ‘for entry blanks in search of the|gan Posture’? won the State Bair! title “Miss Michigan State Fair,in competition with Queens from | of 1959."’ jall parts of Michigan. to other functions on the Fair-| | Pontiac Township Board | ie Vote on Counsels PONTI AC TOWNSHIP — At to- ue meeting of the Pontiac | Township Board members will vote ‘on the appointment of a financial consultant, a bond counsel and a consulting engineer. | * * * Other business will include the adoption of a sewer ordinance and) the awarding of bids on fuel oil All were taken to Lapeer County transferred later to Hurley Hos- pital, Flint, They are listed in satisfactory condition today, hos- pital officials said. One Driver Jailed for. PRETTIEST PEACHES Queen competition over seyen County area title holders vying 18, of Armada, center. She is beauties won top honors in the Romeo Peach crown.:The 1959 Peach Queen is Lorelei Hoxie, This trio of two maids of other Oakland for the coveted Rochester.”’ flanked by her Sept. 4 - 7in Ro Pontiac Press Photo honor, Frances Goff, 18, ‘‘Miss Waterford Township’’ and Carole Bird, 19, ‘‘Miss The queen and her court will reign over the 27th annual Peach: Festival celebration meo. Romeo Motorcyclist Hurt in Car Collision ROMEO — A 35-year-old Romeo * * * Lapeer County Sheriff's deputies; said Oliver’s car pulled out of his) lane of traffic to pass several other, vehicles into the path of Barnes’ | car, Both cars were total wrecks, po- lice said. motorcyclist is reported in satis- :factory condition today at Commu- |nity Hospital after being injured in a traffic mishap on Van Dyke just south of town Friday night. * * * Jack Hamilton, of 303 Morton St., suffered a broken ankle and cut knee when his motorcycle hit a car pulling out of a gas station. His cycle skidded 97 feet be- fore coming to rest on the oppo- site side of the road, Hamilton was thrown clear by the impact, local police said. Driver of the car was Samuel Zilkie, 51, of 188 Pleasant St. Po- lice said a car parked near the gas! station obscured the view for both drivers. Zilkie was ticketed for failure to; concede the right-of-way. State Construction Up DETROIT (® — Contracts for future construction in June in Mich- igan totaled $186,508,000, F. W. Dodge Corp. reports. The figure is an increase of 36 per cent over June 1958. Dodge said the cum- lative total of contracts for the first half of 1959 amounted to $747,- / 401,000, up 28 per cent over last year's first half period. The Navajos are the largest In- dian tribe in the U:S. ,and blacktopping. » * *€ | The meeting will start at 7:30 p.m. in the Township Hall, at 2060, ‘Opdyke - Rd. As in past years, to qualify for | the contest, the candidate must | have won a sponsored Beauty | Contest in Michigan since the | last State Fair. She must be between the ages of 16 and 25 years and single. Miss Michigan State Fair of 1959. WALLED LAKE—A local man’ Irons, Highland Township Super- thus actually will be the Queen of \disappeared from his home July 1, much for him,” she said. ‘He | Walled Lake Husband Missing Since July I “I think it just got to be too ¢isbr Lewis Oldenburg. Dr. W. 0. all Michigan Beauty Queens. She! 74 hasn't been seen since, accord-. Was acting nervous and upset Benjamin and Reba Heintzelman) of The Pontiac Press. . * x * » Sheriff Irons presided at the, coronation. | | i Beverly Hills Council Appoints Safety Director . BEVERLY HILLS — The Village: Ceuncil here has appointed its first! p@inistrator. Public Safety Di- reetor Robert E. Murphy has been named to the post. His present salary of $7,200 remains the same. + * * * ’ Murphy, 51, a former Lathrup; police lieutenant. was previously| with the Detroit Police Department for 28 years before retiring in * * wp: Beverly Hills, formerly Westwood ee 1958. Ms a be — Fos corn ing to Walled Lake Police Chief, joges am Cow ames A. Decker. Williams on Wednesday, Sept. 97 ‘The State Fair dates this year are! ~ * * Roy B. Scott, 37, of 321 Leon Sept. 4 through 13. ; Only one Queen may be sent Rd.. was first missed by his wife an group When he failed to show up at their ‘by the sponsoring Michig which pays her expenses. Entry restaurant to relieve Her of duties must be made on an official entry there that evening. blank and returned to the State| Together, they operated Scott's Fair in Detroit to the attention of Restaurant at 235 N. Pontiac on bea ai ; | Trail in Walled Lake. elin, who is director of music and parades in addition to the| - They worked two different shifts Queen contest, will see that the ,ta eke as much as they could out various Queens are invited to ride Of their little business. But profits were mighty slim, Mrs. Scott ad-| mitted. Holstein Show Set | Their only son, Terry 18, grad- uated from Walled Lake High In keeping with long-standing School last June. And the parents | custom, the National Holstein were trying to scrape up enough to Show will be held at the Na- send him to college. tional Dairy Cattle Congress, | oe . KEEPS BUSINESS GOING Waterloo, Iowa:this year. Hol- steins will be judged Oct. 8-9 by | Mrs. Scott is keeping the business| and wouldn't talk.” | “When he didn't show up for iwork at 6 p.m., I went home and found all his clothes gone,’’ Mrs. Scott explained. any money that I know of;” added. she * * * Her husband left once before! ‘without saying enything, said Mrs. ‘Scott. But he phoned two weeks later | from his parents’ home in Mid- dietown, Ohio. Nobody has | heard from him this time, the | | worried mother reported. Scott is believed to have eae off in the family’s cream-colored Chevrolet, Michigan license! ‘number GS 1549. He is 5 feet 7 jinches tall, weighs 142 pounds, has blue eyes, and brown hair usually} jworn in a brush cut. Anyone knowing Scott's where- ‘abouts is urged to notify Michigan iState Felice | Village, became a village in April,, Douglas S. Dunten of Brampton, going. hoping for her husband's 1958. Ontario. return, | ome ~ ———ee aa FACTORY AUTHORIZE Qo KOrF is Regular Price $ 5” ~ PLASTIC WALL TILE 1 This is not a dealer’s re- ’ duction but is factory authorized . . . which means that all stock will be retagged from $5.95 down to $2.98 for 30-days SPATTER ASPHALT TILE || “|| only. a. Ea. Ay Your Choice es =o of All Finishes nterior or Exterior UNTER TOPS WHITE $469 Gul. 1/3 off @ Alkyd Flat 2.98 PAINT ; ‘ies. Wace @ House Paint 2.98 nia @ Semi-Gloss . 2.98 © Recemry es We Aré Your Authorized iny! Flot. . @ Gloss Enam’'l 2.98 SANDRAN DEALER e Beret, Deck 2.98 @ Ext. Primer 2.98 CLOSE-OUT ARMSTRON | PURE VINYL TILE REAL Caer oe i <7 9g ye . ow 7) NATIONALLY [072° 216% | | ox” 12¢ ee ADVERTISED 98 GAL. TILE FREE PARKING Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. lf You Don't Buy Your Tile From Us We Both Lose Money! 1055 West Huron =e til 9 —— Tues., Wed., Sat. OUTLET Pontiac ¥E 8-3717 til 6 ! I “He didn’t have! ' | | | ] | | 1 Maytag o YOUR C 158° Big 10 pound capacity — Ends weather worries, eli lines, savesthours of work. The GOOD ! ! 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! r Hamilton HOICE minates clothes Your Choice Fully automatic . . 2. . Adjustable water temperature . . . Lint filtering tubs. The Same Big Names NO MONEY DOWN TWO GREAT NAMES IN AUTOMATIC WASHERS HAMILTON or MAYTAG 198" Big family size in Dryer ye of PONTIAC Open Monday and Friday’ ‘Hl ) w. Huron St. ee FREE DELIVERY! | FREE HOOK-UP! FREE'1-YEAR SERVICE! WITH TRADE * m MONDAY, oN SE 10, 1959 cen IN GF en Set for Valiant Chrysler ls Expanding *lymouth and DeSoto or New Small Car TROIT # — Chrysler Corp. flay expanded its Plymouth-; ito Division to include its new) car, the Valiant. car will be on the market ye November with a wheel- of about 108 inches, some 10 ; shorter than the smallest ‘hrysler product. ysler thus follows the pat- pf the other Big Three manu- rers in assigning its small o its big volume division. ‘'s Falcon is being handled by Division while General Mo- Corvair is being built by -rolet. . C. Newberg, Chrysler's exec- e vice president, indicated ‘ever, that the Valiant may be : by some dealers in all Chrys- lines. . fe said preliminary market d dealer studies ‘indicate that “lection of Valiant dealers | iould be made on the basis of aler location and market po- ntial rather than exclusive dis- bution by a single dealer yup." ‘ade circles have speculated any Chrysler Corp. dealer who not distribute Simcas will be le for the Valiant. Simca is} ler’s small car import from We. . t's Put Limit November Date. /still awaited. Sharp Tumble NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market fell sharply in active early trading today. Pivotal stocks were down from. fractions to about 2 points. { Steels, motors, rubbers and chemicals were about the most badly hit of the key stocks. The space age issues, which fell sharply last week, were heavily traded and declined sharply. Brokerage house comment over ‘the weekend was to the effect that the market had put on‘ a poor technical performancé in the week just past and that a fairly sharp “‘correction’= was a likelihood, Meanwhile, economic activities): appeared to be ‘“‘coasting’’ as a: settlement of the steel strike was! i Losses of about 2 points were taken by such issues as U.S. Steel, Goodyear, Eastman Kodak and, Westinghouse Electric, Philco, in a .delayed —opening. dropped 2% to 23 on 5,000 shares. Radio Corp, was off about a point ‘and Thiokol more than a point. Also in delayed openings, Zenith fell 658 to 98% on 8,000 shares and Motorola dropped 6 to 110 on 2,100. General Tire, which has a rocket- making subsidiary, fell 2 points. Little Change in Grain Prices CHICAGO wu — Soybean futures ‘were in moderate demand at islightly higher prices during early dealings today on the Board of | Trade while grains hovered fairly close to previous closes. Corn eased on receipts some- MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer’. Market by growers and sold by; thern in wholesale package lots. | Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of! Friday, Detroit Produce com pu pas, What heavier than recently but i e Ls * “ ae Aoples. Red Bird, bu, $2.79 there was a scattered demand by pples, Transparent, bu. .......... 3.25 mente sae Blackberries 16 qts eo0| Processors and other cash inter ests. Bluccerries, No. 1. 12 pts... pete eeee Casiaioupes, bu. Peaches, Hale Haven, ‘bu. Peaches, Red Haven, bu. Pears, Clapp’s. bu. ..... wheat appeared to have slack- Plums spurbank., Bp 250! ened over the weekend and oth- Watermelon, bu. ...... ane - 3100/ er influences were generally { . VEGETABLES | absent. ‘Beans, green. flat, ou. eeiewielne eas] SA eae Beans. green. round, bU. .........44. 2 26) After about an hour wheat was See Ky. Wond ers, bu. ... 2 35 unchanged to 14 cent a bushel eAlLS ee oem eso Omoincrs Yyeans, Roman, DU. 2.06. oops. sees 3.50 higher, September $1.89%4; corn 4s Hees inp bebe 4, a fees teen eee eee oe to 44 lower, Serr apes $1.18, ; Beets, oe 108 Schb occcececee ‘vo Oats % lower to ‘3 higher, Sep- Ceubeee No. Hy Goes. SHE: 300\ tember new type contract 67%; Ca! bage, oe o* Cabbage. Red, . Cubbage Pov bu * rye 4% to % -higher, September $1.32; soybeans 44 to 1 cent higher, carrots, LU) saqcanadccacoacd aos 2.15 eta. dom: bene. : September $2.15 \eervitiones Doz. é ” ; Geer lee wien oe Grain Prices ‘Area Student Export and flour business in | Corn. Sweet, 5 doz. 25 Cucumbers, ‘dill Fancy Bn Wee omens 3.75 CHICAGO GRAIN Cucumbers, Pickle, BU, 2... . 5.50 CHICAGO. Aug. 10 (AP) — Opening Cucumbers, silcers, Raney bu. ~ 2.25) gra Dill, doz. behs. Be . 10 Wheat Dec 1058 Eggplant, ‘a bu. : : Eggplant, Long type, pk. . Kohirabi. doz b oes a doz.. behs, ....... ! te) Rn ee ee eee: cee se 3.00 Onions. green, OZ. ....cceeeeeees- 80 Onions, Dry, 50 lb. bag .... Parsley. curly. doz. bchs. Parsley, root, doz. .. Lf CAROL SAUL ,, Best Speaker Waterford Township Girl Wins National Oratory Contest A Waterford Township High School student, 16-year-old Carol Saul, has won the National 14th Annual Knights of Pythias Public Speaking Contest. The finals. held in Denver, Col., consisted of a 10-minute oration from the subject, ‘‘My Favorite Character in History.” Competing against entrants from all over the nation, Canada, Hawaii and Alaska, Carol chose “Christ’’ as her topic. second week of high - pressure WASHINGTON. (UPI) — An esti- mated 250 lower-echelon Team-| sters’ union officials start their| lobbying today against labor reform bill. The lobbyists — nearly one for every two congressmen — were called into the nation’s capital from practically every state by Teamsters’ boss James R. Hoffa. Hoffa, who has been branded a threat to decent unions by the Senate Rackets Committee, sum- moned help from Teamsters’ lo- cals in his drive to head off what he calls union-busting leg- islation. a tough Most top Teamsters who have been scored for taking the Fifth Amendment to avoid testifying on misuse of union funds are not in town for this campaign. Instead, most of the lobbyists are experienced in political work. Many are old friends and support- ers of the House members whose votes they are trying to influence. * * * A Teamsters’ spokesman denied that the union aides were trying to call in their political IOU’s for past favors. “It's just a matter of meking democracy work,’’ the spokesman asserted. 1 ee ~ Most of the 250 will stay in ashington until the House votes on a labor reform bill. Debate is scheduled to begin tomorrow. There is little direct supervision from each local union talk to con- Teamsters Press Lobby | i to Squelch Labor Bill of the lobbying activities. Officials’ He an child. To: Habib A, tcner been a, id in this Court Meg my that ee present where- about the father of said minor child nown and the gs child violated a law of the State, end said child should ee ates under the ——— of this Co are i} In the name of the of the State ; jot Michigan, you are heréby notified ‘that the hearing on said petition will | Be. held at the kiand County’ Servite enter, Court 12608 Pegg icy REVO Frank Schram, Oakland County sheriff from 1925 to 1933, died un- expectedly last night in Pontiac General Hospital. He was 79. . House ex, last week, Expenses are being | ‘West va. in the City of Pontiac in | sa ty, on e ay 0 ugust, paid by the various Teamster °F ‘jos. at nine o'clock- in the fore: joint councils and local unions. nec: and you are hereby commanded wh Reing apracticn Yo stake "persaa in ersona Hoffa has shifted his emphasis| servos terest. this summons co notice from trying to stop passage of allj|snali be, served bf _Dunlication of & cops F ; : lone week previous to sa earing in significant labor legislation e bat- |Pontlac Brees a newspaper eres a8 circulate nm sa ount thing mainly against Le E wos oe Witness, the Honorable Arth 5. picketing and ‘‘hot cargo’ boycotts.| Moore, Judge of said Court, in el City va! Pontiac in said County, this @th day Nr taata AD. 1959 ARTHUR E MOOHE, ~ ry oe copy) Judge of oe Prohate meer. Juvenile Division August 10, 5 5 ; ‘STATE OF NEW YORK (COUNTY OF ONONDAGA SUPREME | COURT L J. STAMBAUGH, éiniatits ain Served as Chief County a1 SMITH HALE STAMBAUGH. ant Lawman from 1925. at oe A nee OTe DIVORCE s A é Ves W - S07 North Saginaw to 1933; as 79 \" Pontiac, Mrchiges | THE FOREGOING SUMMONS Is served upon you by publication pursuant to an Order of Hon. Frank Del Vecchio, Jus- tice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of Onondaga, dated the 15th day of July, 1959 and fied with the complaint in the office of the Clerk of the County of Onondaga at Syracuse, New York. Cause of death was a ruptured Dees isthe 1850 N.Y. blood vessel. Yours. * x * HAROLD - ‘MANHEIM, ESQ. . . Attorney for Plaintiff A resident of Pontiac since he oftics and . ©. Address was 13, Mr. Schram lived with his Syracuse. New York July 20, 27, Aug. 3. 10, 17, 24. 'S® wife Frances at 541 Judson Ct. He was born in Huron County on Christmas Day, 1879. Mr. Schram served as a member of Pontiac’s vol- SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, COUNTY OF ONONDAGA DONAL J. ora pint REVO SMITH HALE. “STAMBAUGH. ACTION FOR ABSOLUTE DIVORCE i ae Defendant unteer fire < eiccurr auienats Summons a signates partment aroun ONONDAGA County 1902 and later joined the city’s | police force, ris- ing te the rank as the place of trial. Plaintiff resides in - ONONDGA County. To the above named Defendant: You are hereby summoned to answer the sempietnt aa this action, and te Lukens Steel dropped a couple. eee er nee oe Hes The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.|8Tessmen from their area in theirjof lieutenant. [compiaint i no of your snswer. or, if the Losses of about a point were pevcer. ney sweet, Pk. 2.00 Joseph E. Saul, 4240 Roseberry Ct.,| OW? ay: He joined the mons, ve @ aotice cf sppeatence, ‘shown by Jones & Laughlin, Chrys-| [potatoes, Re 50 ib. bag... .....- 1.40 . Carol will be given a $1,500 schol-| All of Hoffa's emissaries, how-'Qakland County pligtig py” this sumone, | orel n ars ler, Ford, Raytheon, American Cy-|Radishes. white, dos... o 1.00 e in 0 an arship to any college of her choice. Ve": Sather each evening at the sheriff's Depart- exclusive of the day of, service: and in 'anamid, General Electric and In- ae pee dos. och - 9 She plans to study for missionary U0"'s five million dollar head-iment in 1914 as judgment will be taken against you by . : ae Telephone. Squash, Butternut, 4 bu. 2 00 work after graduation from high Ce building to report OM undersheriff. He -_. ee demanded ‘in’ tbe lon Sées Danger Du Pont dropped about 3. Banh Balsa bu 1 school next June. [imogress:cn Jackief at was elected | SCHRAM | Dsted. December 10, 108 sy esa. ~ | Tobaccos were~ mainly steady |Squash! Ital, % DU. .........eeee. e arge Carol talk x *& & sheriff in 1925 and held that offi Attorney for Plaintiff Gamesb ia a a alked her way through ; —_ an at office 4 een of Gasoline a hone were mixed, Drugs took Tomatoes, vous, 14 Ibs. ar, three public speaking contests in|, ane delegations then Sand on until January, 1933. $00 Loew ‘Bice ee 4x evenue |maderate losses. Se De the state to be chosen as the POW their..congressmen stand on x *« * Syre N. . | nice : e , urnips, toppe : _— °° Former U. of M. Student Michigan “representative. to. theithe Teamsters’ proposals for sof-| From 1933 through 1945, Mr. July 20 aT Aug. 3, 10, 17, 24, ‘30 TH BEND, Ind. «UPL — ew toc > Cabbage No. 1, ou. .......- siso, Is Accused of Takin Denver finals. jtening the bills pending in the: Schram was employed in the police! D, iLate Morning Quotations) Collard. No. 1. bu. 150! * * * House section of Ge al M | », William Dorn (D-SC) charged Figures after decimal point are eighths Kaje rt eeeseen oe 175 $19 000 F St Hoffa now is devoti t of hg oie otors Truck: wday night that the rising num- Mustard. No. i. Oba 125 ’ rom ore Her speech was judged on de- as s devoting most o!/& Coach Division, holding a lieu-’ js” g:1de i Admiral 18.6 Kellogg _ 38.2 Sorrel bu, a pocottryttssss 1.78 liv his time to the lobbying cam-'t . of foreign automobiles import-| Al" Pedic 966 Kelsey Hay ... #7 nach, ' 2.25 ivery and composition, including} director Sid Zacri enant’s rank. . into the United States is one of, Allied Sits . 3 aioe ce : Ne Reo bu. el ous ee Hee AMSTERDAM, the Netherlands ame pene ra evidence of briefing the local BHieal 6e te. From 1947 through 1951 he se Che o.3 va © ; sce ggadsloes a seenis ane Sir ch, choice of language, con-| riefing the loc: ; . ve reasons the highway building | Alum Ltd i Sree ee ze cicanlaeanne (AP) — Dutch police today al) emictive character of ee Voice | tails of the labor reform meas-| 28%!" worked for the Sheriff's | yzram is running’ into many Am Atriin 27.2 LOF Glass ..- Celery Cabbage, dca: $25 oirested an American classical stu- ftectiv : su Md "| ures Department. uubles. lam cre Se ee 8 ie Endive, DU. ceceeseeceecte esis rere: 2 00 dent accused of stealing $19,000 at SEVEN DEES, Ae JOG x * * : it costs * * * Am M&Fdy | 91.4 Lockh Airc... 28 Fike’ wie. geo _?% from a state liquor store his father acenee sincerity and per-| The Teamster president gave Besides his wit ; Dorn said on the weekly radio| Am uo = rere ine aie ic ae es Te ce eaes ; a anes in Seabrook, N.H. ness, a banquet for the lobbying team lly dens sons. ean Lgeibola ti in- so little rum of former Notre Dame Law 4@ XN Gas 63, Lone 8 Gas. 4% |Lettuce. leaf. bus 00 “225; Em N. Eaton Jr., 26, w ee ere a3 Le at ory on Jr., was a land Cecil G. of Holly, four grand- ‘hool Dean Clarence Manon. “for, Am Tel & Tel 935 Mack Trk 45, [omaene 1.50 Dicke in ¢ 7,10 es insure your eet time in soy, more a Aaa, «WB, Mass narytemancee Auto Accidents Claim I=" """""| onuaren smanies ae coming: into the Unit- Rnour oe May D Str -. 85) , : land, 27, of Ann Arbor, Mich. a C n d States than we —— [Aveo Corp 138 Mesa CP = gi | Poultry ond Eggs In Concord. NHL. De Atty . © 5 * * * F ips It & On 44 Meee on a 8 192] n Concord, N.H., Deputy Atty. 4 D rown M | The body is at Farmer-Snover| Modern Woodmen Junior “This is beginning to affect the | Boeing Air... 33 Male a am 2 “ecoetne POULTRY Gen. Warren Waters said he would|- In 1c 1igan | Funeral Home. life insurance protection costs ohn um a) = | iti i : filling station operators, the me- Bond Sirs... 33 Monsan Ch 53? pound fo. b. Detroit tor No. 1 quality | es Eaton's extradition. He said * : surprisingly little. A $2,000 chanics, the tire dealers, as well Borden, #13 Mont ei oo jlixg Poultry: | bisa STTAe MeN (pel ere are no charges saint Eng- By The Associated Press | his life Friday night in ‘a two- e . “junior policy costs only $8.40 as the automobile worker in De- Brigks Mig .. 11.2 Mot Wheel . ee hens 9-10: heavy type broflers aud tryers| and. - | At least 11 persons were halted | car collision in Taylor Township.| New hild trolt | Berm said Bre oes ige1 Welno "ar. 28 elas ay. cheuuetioe aver b Wer tae: woes ee men arrived in|in automobile traffic in Michigan * + : per year, if your chil is EER : udd Co... 271 Murray Cp... 284)lings 26; turkeys—heavy t oung/Amsterdam by plane from the , : « | under 5 years of age. No wonder we are having trou-| Burroughs ... 33.1 Nat Bisc . 54 # hens et on the weekend. Cloyd Miller, 53, South Bend.) ,. A ble with the highway building pro-|€slum'& H.. 2¢6 Nat Gash $92) 5, ‘DETROIT EGGS) | United States oa Four other persons drowned, in-|Ind., was injured fatally Friday, ,,Paward Davis of 472 Harper St.| Proportionately a sram through a_ loss ine | Game> Soup . $1.7 wat Gyns Se "| Getralt in icaueliete dederulsteta graded ; ; : cluding two in sailboat mishaps. night in @ two-car collision near)! 0 Pontiac Police over the} to age 16. Polio -_ 4 of gasoline|Gan Dry 21.6 . , faa now lax revenue Gan Buc et Nat ng, 128.4 Whites Grade A extra, Inrge 43. large ae . charged with taking the + *« « Niles hon aa that someone entered his} included at no_extra cost. ae : : . Capital Air. | 166 NY Cen 7 rade B largejreceipts from his father’s store. : ; ome through an unlocked i The government will continue | €arries, Cp .. $0.6 ea atahsy te ilidtge cr media ae ene 20. “hecks} He and, England were class- A father drowned in the Huron| DROWNINGS sand stole $57 from his froasar Havestigate : to lose revenue from these low| Cater Trac . 103.4 ‘Nor Pac 3.322%. Total weekly receipts of govern-| at the U River while trying to rescue his} fF Gay | pockets wage 4 : hes & Oh . 70. Nor Sta 23.1) ment graded eggs August Ist through 7th) males at the University of Mich-|,_. F uverett aylord, 47, Berkley, | PO : ) nee parts unless they are lim- Chrysler ae) Ohio O11 42 [were 8.847 cases. igan and had shared an. apart- two children. Others saved the! drowned Saturday in the Huron| ~ Poly At No Extra Cost - ies ¥ ae rens Cn a Ta ~ 4 | Clark Esuip 24 omens mM g! 4 qs Wnites—Grade jumbo 38: extra large|ment in Boston. Eaton studied for children. River north of Dexter in an at reported to. Por hs * tee St. ose Dorn urged that import quotas |E2%* Sols 150, Pac Ge EL te vated AY jumbo 38 tare, 34,(2. Goctor’s degree in the classics) TRAFFIC DEATHS tempt to rescue a son and daugh- burglar stole sie t ules mats FOR FURTHER INFORMATION be set for all products this na- a 214 Ppanh Evl .... 47 |medium_ 26 to 28; small 18: Grade Bat Michigan, taught at) Furman N 5 . ter when they waded into a swift : rom his home 1 Paul CALL OR WRITE tion produces in surplus ‘‘and Con N Gas 308 ce Se. ke mike ct to = — University in 1956-57, and had Rouge cy Kove Wants, 21, mixer current. jover -the weekend. The intruder nd . those traditionally American.” Cont Bar > 384 Pa RR ue . worked at his father’s store until e, was killed Saturday night /entered through an unlocked door. \eont Can 204 Prost Cole... 3 Livestock July 16 . in a car collision with | a train Richard Bulger, 28, Dearborn, . M. E. DANIELS » Dorn also cited cotton, tobacco | Cont Cop & 8141 piems D Be . , _.| in Detroit. drowned in Deer Lake near Pon- A Utica man, A. G. Cleghorn, District Manager 3 and other farm produtts aq being, Cont Mot 104 Pniteo oa DETROIT LIVESTOCK The young man’s mother said ; tiac Saturday reported to Pontiac Police Sunday] 563 W. Huron FE 3-7111 adversely affected by what he con ea 333 Proct sn a3 200 o Bak cane : iy elacghite asiapie|they had talked of his going to) Ada Valentine, 6, Leslie, was ; morning that someone stole his - at ne:Corn Pd ..... ’ early ; F : ; ee . ; termed ‘‘our unfair foreign trade §2 Curtis Pub 2? Pure Oil 49 °|these fully ieedne stare (ead heifert Europe to study languages. killed Saturday night in a two-| Virgil Schuon, 28, Lansing. wallet containing $280. MODERN WOQDMEN policy.” : “| Det iedis ad Republic str). Sal cleanuy y atfare eon c de atints “He never did anything like this|Car_ collision in Emerson Town-|drowned in Saginaw Bay Saturday OF AMERICA . | Dis C Seag 36 vion 60 |cows ¥7 50 50-18 50° jnnes wana ncatters before,"’ Mrs. Eaton said. ’'He has ship. in a fall from a sailboat. Sommone stole a pigeon from a . ; |Dous Airc 453 nex Drie gl cate, stne meliowcoes 1 02 10.800 Con always been steady and Fellable!”’ xe «w x *« "* pigeon hutch at the rear of his Home Office, Reck Inland, Tl. ed week ago yearling st ti 4 : Se Ir Ip Made Nixon Ela wt mo. Man caleway St) 3) leiomee. “tke oe “steets over 1100 1bs.| A police spokesman said Eaton| Bethel Ray Allen, 21, Lansing.) Mrs. Beverle Whiteman, 30, home, Edmund Bachman of 405; | Beiso ate $6.3 Bree Pap 51 1}cows and wile kes tiger most goca (WAS arrested as an undesirable|‘*S killed Sunday when struck) South Bend, Ind., drowned in Ga- t Walton Blvd. reported to P | Stron er, § p) (EL Auto L 1s --- 2 Scars Roeb _-asijminea Gong’ Laushter steer 26.00.21 $0: lalien after police were informed by a car in Tonia County. lien River in New Buffalo, Mich.,|"@° Police Sunday. Most Fathers af Shel!) Oj) iri v * ; hj . g ay ems [Emer fed Rad 14.5 Simmons 38 2/under 1100 tee 77 75-2850: choice steers : aaa reports ‘on. the alleged) Loyd Keck, $2, Monroe, was |when the boat my wach he wee so N OF POwTIAC ane \ ° ene sreowisee a giocletr ena eee Tos. 27.50-28.25: few loads erm, . killed Saturday night when his sailing capsized in heavy waves. ichiga Need This WASHINGTON (UPI) — Two Firestone es oa scareee oe aan cboice to prime 1100-1200 Tp. steers Eaton and England will be held| car hit a tree in Raisinville Sree o “ShatbnOrDiRe that, MEETING | a evel ff -.. 5 . } } iti . : . . purs Senate Democratic leaders be. Ford Mot 784 Bperee Ra oo 238 Rearaga chances Seisee th atec a Tse mnt American authorities contact) Township. 2 San Fr ancisco Papers to call of tts directors. specia meet- : li ge choice 1200-1300 Ib. steers 27.50-|the Li vit’ ing of the shareholders of C agiuabie Dee Vice President Richard M. | Free Sul +; 30.2 Bid Brand ;--- $8-$|28 00: standard to low good steers 23.00- seer ee TA 7 ee the Henry P. Lutz, 22, and Melvin ‘ National Bank of Pontiac. will be held ixon’s trip to Russia and Poland en Bak Etat Std Gina ace ores acc, ets eee ie spokesman added. : Ly #4, Become-One-Today—___[at its banking house at 30 North Sag- , i = Ar : ’ t strengthened his position in the Get peat ig Std, OH ND. G24| Refers, a8 ana, ty weights 7150; mot Muelle, 17, Detroit, were lled) ss ERANCISCO (UPI) —The Sa Harcrang so euarttr “Sowa! Brochure . . . Bee oice heifers ° . - a m prese .. Gen Mills ’...1102 Sun Os”) 604 Rullty wlours, and betters, 20.00.23 50. Senator Wonders if He ° x & & new San Francisco News-Call-Bul oh eaaerio, ang “intermning by y vote * |Gen Motors .. Suther Pap | elters . : sre ete or eo hereement to merge th ‘ Senate Democratic Whip Mik Tel am | tt Swift & Co “45 cutters ‘iC'00-17 80: utlity “bulls 22°50 Has Rainmaker’s Gift Patrick McCarthy Jr., 17, West|letin — a consolidation of the ees wi ane Soph ep lice Ravings Bank. as : Se for < hee of 5 Mansfield (Mont) said Son _ eI Gen Te 856 Team Gss ae 23 $0: reenter bulls 2050-22 Olive, was killed Saturday when|News, a Scripps-Howard newspa- of Michigan ener the. crores at sntonnative os nie me - aed would be harder for the Democrats Gerber Prod OR) Textron a able to make os Not goough svat WASHINGTON (UPI)—Sen. Karl'a car struck a motorcycle he) per, and the Call-Bulletin, a Hearst ratified ‘and confirmed: end ‘for the se out, es cially “prepare 3 Not to heat than New York ov: er Gillet S12 Timk R Bear. ns week venlers ally, sande: mast choice 18. Mundt (R-S.D.) isn’t certain he; and a companion had parked for/newspaper — began publication neidentar ne upon any other ratter fathers a is Lite of Vi wai’ cma. Bektel dee Gee oe ae “W311 Tran W Air 182|over “aa Ie Siam co 28 ce vealers ee ealinalione powers, but . . . repairs near Grand Haven. today. two. banks. A oe ar Gen cictecstall Protection: Chiat ke List BILL ; nd_ goo cull and utilit: n the interes i ac y" j i ement executed b mee trip, he said, Rockefeller would a no fae aoe Gnaetwrea . asa 17 00-26.00 t k Ae be of ee tnerane pets John Green, 66, Ypsilanti, was Tule new ‘paper will be pubished |the directors of each of the twe wankn, JENKINS, Life of Virginia's rep- have be h | Greyhound 214 Un Carbide 148 Sheep—Salable 25. Not enough avail-/f0 seek drought relief for his state | , 2 . " [six days a week, Monday through |Providing for this merger, is on file 1 enthe stronger candidate. | Guilt of liga UA Pac 35, /able to make @ market. Comnared Jest |the senator has made four or five Killed Friday night when hit by Saturday, by a new corporation at the bank ro may be inspected dur- eee wold a . pro- Ham Pp 354 U ana ve spring slaurhter lambs 25-50c 4 ‘ TT 18 ours. t ' Sen. George A. Smathers Holland Fr D2 Unit Aire ane cpa sisietites © mc8 and eee ete trips to South Dakota in the past | = car near Ypsilanti. equally .owned by Scripps- Hows te) ‘an mm. A simple, but “hocogh, way of (Fla), chairman of the Demo: Hooker Ch 424 Un Gar Cp 192) jlmighter lambs 24-00-25 Go sae Prngifew months. Each time it has) Robert R. Wheeler, 41, Grandjand Hearst' Publishing Co. Inc. GO SPresidgent || checking every single point in cratic Senatorial Camprige Com: in Rec” 30 us Ruy” 26 24.00: mee ooea aces ae ay 30. rained. ‘Rapids, was killed Friday night It will be delivered to subscribers. ana "1 bg RR your family security plans. It mittee, said the believed Nixon | inland 8tl ... $0 US Bteel A jeull to Enolce slaughter ewes 400-700 “The last rain was a whopper.” .in a collision between his car and‘of both the former papers. laces fi ee § ¢ 7, 8 10 11 12. 1318 tells you exactly what you definitely would get the GOP iintenay de 387 Upjohn 45.5 20.00: "medium. rade 15001800.) 00- Mundt said in a TV speech. “While | (a ‘trailer-truck near Berrien ee should know — and do — to nomination because of the trip |I%t Bus Mch..400 West Un Tel | 38 Hogs — Safable 100. Limited suppl#|we were having our drought meet-| | Springs. The canals of Venice, Italy, BIDS WANTED family’ | tpt 8 - - wulchera auat coe r sane | = protect your family’s future. and his “ever increasing |int Mick at wea aa Gnd S ihe ate fe ines: eet auen ine in Horon we hed almost a x * skirt among 118 islands which are, “receive Tae eats bee ee re oy — e eg: stature.” - [Int Paper ...128.2 White Mot $46/No 1 and 2 uneven in weight rangins |downpour.”” Jack C. King, 36, Inkster, lost|linked by more than 400 bridges. August 16. 1968, at the ownship Hail,|f There's no charge or obligation | Int Shoe 35.6 Wilson & Co .. 43.7 ee wih, averaging (215° Ibs. 14.90 g North Main Stfeet. Clarkston. toril for this ‘interesting brochure ver 4 Woolworth §6.2| Mixe ts) M ibs. 13.95- ire Fighti . _ Regardless of whether the Re-| |int Tel & Tel 348 Yale & Tow ye) seo. small tot No.3. 266 Ibe. 1375: Specifications Gay ee igiea care BILL JENKINS would like to- pence select Nixon or Rocke-|}5,Cr* goa! - 204 youme & & WV 82 [1 25: No. 2 and 3 600 Ibs 830-10 59 : lor Don Beach. Fir ‘chal sok Charen ee YO your copy. Telephone eller as their presidential nomi-| Jones & L ... 754 Zenith Rad 99 |Compared last week barrows and gilts : Street. Clarkston. . Chureh him toda It's” i ' .. . y. It's-“valuable. It's nee, h ake | steady, to 25¢ hieher. bi «| The Townshi - d ‘ “will ° eee bas Jeti | ugh STOCKS ‘ a z : rs to reject any or ai las ar le nese free. will not have a runaway in’ (C. J. Nephier Co ° any bid which tn their judgment is inj either cases . | Figures after acetal somit wee cinine Tee Pontiac : the interests’ etl cme * | Alien Elec & Equin Co* 24 25! Township Clerk Mansfield said Nixon performed | B30 "Grarcen ° Ba a ‘Teenagers Hurt Or UN S orta e ee ‘Ross Gear C 424 444 ens —— ——} “excellently” on his trip and Gt Lk Oil & Chem Cot . 13°15 / STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- " ag: ) , | Howel Elec Mtr Co* 114 12. te Court f made a “magnificent address’ to | | Pen Metal Prod, Coe ioe die in Smash up } . . - jatwils Otyiuec, cai the Russian people. The Pesphet oF ees Hs 16.2 17.7| ROCK ISLAND, Ill. (AP) —!/tolls probably started soon after; Tolls on the bridge are 10 cents ling’ Michael D. Hobie, minor (aces We! Toledo Edison Co... 161 Three Pontiac teenagers were|Operators of the Centennial|the bridge, owned by the city.j/for an auto, 15 cents for a car|! I omer Hovis! ane Waterford Gi rl —— injured when their auto struck an Bridge over the Mississippi River|was opened in 1940. The bridge is siltne (eloneasde trailer (and 60 patente ce cate eens en Leslie Hobbs, ; 5 : embankment and overturned on| between Rock Island and Daven-|used by an average of 10,000 autos P ; ; Con Ges teeta brane eh Youth Hu rt i n Bo Str ck b Ca Baldwin road east of Indianwood|Port. Iowa, have suspended all 13\and 2,000 trucks daily. Daven- cents for a semitrailer. abouts of the parents of said minor y U y f road, Orion Township, late Satur- toll collectors, after disclosing a|port’s population is 81,000; Rock} Last April 20, a toll collector enact oa the ane oe ee Au to Mis ha : . ' _|day night, according to sheriff's |Shottage in toll funds up to $750,-|Island’s about 50,000 and nearby/refused to participate in the and thet eeracagctian amend Wa baced p. Doing Safisfactorily deputies. | 000. . . ; Moline, Ill., 41,000. scheme and told Moran about it.) In the name it the people of “the! | i: «¢ + Acting on information supplied] The commission decided Sun-|The informer said the daily loot feels of Miceiees. fee are maces ee A Dearborn teen-ager, and a W a- . ; ‘Carl A. Romanelli, 16,-of 745 E. iby state authorities and the FBI.|day, at a hastily-called meeting, |ran from $7.50 to $40. lwill be held at the Oakland County! terford Township girl were injured| Lawrence E. Davis, 10, of 3107 | First St.. Lawrence W. Spencer, jue bridge commission Sunday|to install automatic toll-collecting| — x « * {T2808 “West "Biv ein the city Be onl when their auto went out of con-|Margaret St., Auburn Heights,/17, of 40 Clarence St., and Tommie SUSPended the collectors. City po-jequipment on. the bridge immed- tre | ae in) ate Comnty, om the tee on trol on | ; ‘ : : : mie Moran said the toll collector August. AD. 1958. at nine o'clock in me rol on loose gravel and overturned|was listed in satisfactory condi-|F. Thomas, 17, of 583 Peacock St., (Pecrner: took over their jobs in/|iately. then pretended to engage in the|‘h* ferencen. and you are hereby com- . Saturday night: tion at Ponfiac General Hospital| were taken to Ponti the ——— * * + , prete oO engage IN tC manded to appear personally at said) BILL JEN Cathy F. Barwig, 15, of 3940}today with injuries suffered when|ospital a mf | * looting and turned over his daily Ping impractical to make per- Iris Dr., was admitted to Pontiac|struck by @ car Saturd ospital. r | * Franklin Wingard of Rock Is-|take to Moran. sonal service norect: this summons ind Representative oe ay. x * t | Bernard Hi Moran, Rock Island )jand, chai f the issio ft : i notice shall be served by publication of .General Hospital where she was| , Sheriff's deputies siad the boy Courty State's Attor id Bel ccnr cone enn. crake condiine we i hemi eli moved in Ons ‘copy one week previous to said hear] BE 2.9219 1080 W. Meron St reported in satisfactory condition|ran from between two cars stopped| Spencer and Thomas were ad- will seek indi tm ts r Tuesd yee cone were mate aged 2%. They set up headquarters |e ica ‘and. cireulated te said, County | : wae * today with head and arm injuries.|for a light into the path of an mitted and are in satisfactory |; he f ctments AY | defective design of a treadle sys-|in a hotel at the foot of the|” witness. the Honorable Arthur THE LIFE INSURANCE é rom the federal grand jury meet-|tem which atuomatically counted| bridge on the I id used| Moore. Judge of said Court, tn the City = ss . The driver,’ Da'> A. Bosch, 16,/auto driven by Theodore Murray,| CoMditton today. ee a y on the lowa side and of Pontiag in said County, this éth da ot MATS Boston ‘St, "wae treatei|39, of 104 Oak Hil Rd. Pontioc, "| treated and’ releasede--~ — |iyoran paid. that ' vehicles passing over the bridgejeléctric equipment to count the jot Ascust, 4D. 4 ye COMPANY = alae 2 es Moran said that ' neither the/ and. helped compute what = vehicles crossing the bridge. ig» “ARTHUR, © a oe and released. The accident oc-| Deputies said he was not at! The driver, Thomas G. Muen-|bridge superintendent, Wiliam E. | owed. Moran said the toll. dollectors (A (ue COPY) are 3 VASEASEENNO.. »\ of VIRGINIA curred on White Lake road east/}fault. stermann, 16, of 425 First St., told| Downing. nor members of the id the d Id Era _ Probate. Register, of Teggerdine road, in White Lake| The accident h “a aela Moran said the treadle wou ibs were bonded for $10,000 each ‘‘and Juvenile Diviston : F jappened on Au-|deputies he was going too fast bridge commission are involved in | August 16, "$8. | Since 1871 | turned off at certain periods, andjthe bridge commission, will, if " Township, sheriff's deputies report-) burn d just east of irrel ene feats } , Sne foad ju of Squirrel|and couldn't negotiate the sharp )the alleged shortage. ' collectors would pocket the coins|necessary, tak tion t | STATE’ OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- reer a ed. : . road-in Auburn Heigh { | Pais la ali St ee Richmond, Virginia | \ ghts. turn. He was uninjured. He, said a wholesale looting ofitaken in during, those times on those bonds." | 3Neniie Division Raves of Cnkbens.| ee . ‘ ; : ; ‘ es vision ‘ bye Ba a . | . \ a . < . ee ‘ I .¢ , \ iy , 7 * r t ‘ t . } ‘ & : ‘ ] . : ; i . ae “44 \ 200,000 Babies Born Out of Wedlock Each Year .. * Let Nikita Come; ' ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST. 10, 1959 ee | : Many Have Ability to Talk , minds, but they don’t know how to’ ‘express ‘them,”’ he said, Teach Deat ‘What to Say’ This is Capano’s third summer | leave Apples Awhile Don’t harvest your winter apples © | v gs « s s : | é | Says Johnsan . at the University’s speech im- |too early, orchard experts say. ° —— camp, and enly his | Apples which ripen on the tree ‘ secon oted deaf. About ; : ° i geadl Pee Tex. (AP) —.Allowing NOR’ THPORT \# — The wonder- ing the regular school year,” Ca-| 90 cane persons: ae a hai | 02Ve Detter suality and. color and . . < cammiar Niilcits iehir | store muc tter, ° 1 a ar | * po ar} | . ite ice tue es “deg Mimery. Walter A. Chachere of Louisiana, pregnancy “occurs. and that suit] u Bremer Nikits Brush new fal aes ot ent sre at eS St ARs iuierere, teceye ee _ s : a 5 a H > wu ¥y riei 7 ; cr a highest in history, What should be member of a special legislative able prefentive measures could and other Soviets to visit the Unit- ing Eup tor a am srove © hice “[ give them an opportunity speech habit" training at the | aoe es is punishment tre committee Which is investigating be takep to alleviate disturbed |ed States poses no threat to the Ys in a scenic summer CaMP' ¢4 jearn what to say in various | camp. s 1 S< . near here. but never-ending problem) the problem. 4 \family ge ether situations rig freedom of the American people, HeGE! METE A mn * everyday situations. | Before Capano joined the camp By ROGER GREENE ‘Yet some top-ranking — s0¢ ae may t the core cause of the Sen. Lynden B. Johnson said Sun- die + vieenes apy In essence, he says his job is to 88 a full-time language training | : oe " 4 : gists argue that more—not less— pregnarcy. day nder the guidance of Richard | specialist, language sietruction for. an ASH coeeenl al cot oll ‘should be done to ease the distress : “Let the Russians say what they Capano, language training instruc-, teach the boys how to begin a ‘the deaf was limited to special time record o s : Wi hei Sats ; hear itt ; ae — ; ; eal k ‘are than 200,000 a year, of Young women caught in the dark isconsin Synod Delays wish Let our people hear it tO tor at the University of Michigan conversation and how to take part! camp assemblies. : week f [ iweb of disgrace. guilt, fear and a the bitter. end. I have faith in speech improvement camp, five/in one — truly an important part —has set off.a new storm of Con: involve g a child Severance Decision them, I do not believe that there ,~ Pak : ari forta panic involved in bearing a clule . > a Fe dctally deal and th artially of life in the hearing world ttoversy aver standards of Ameri t of wedloc! will be any Communist converts,” i as ies oe | ~ Civil Air Patrol Closes ° can morality and the resulting °" i SAGINAW (UPI: — Delegates to Johnson said . ~ ‘deat, boys: ave learning “what to us - * burden on U.S. taxpayers NOT THE ANSWER the 35th biennial session of the On his weekly broadcast record. ~** Each of Capano’s pupils is tested Capital Headquarters an - rien, 5] F the ey : . . re “ine tI “e reek i >| t x é Punishment is not the answet Wisconsin Synod of the Lutheran’ ag tor Texas radio stations, the “Most people think the deaf during the first and last week of, _ ; . | In some communitics, officials to the crisis of the» unmarried, Church put off until this week any senate Majority Leader said the can't/talk, Capano said, “They summer camp to measure progress’ WASHINGTON «®—The Civil Air ate discussing possible sterilization mother.” says Mrs. Katherine B decision on a rupture in assvela~\ proposed visit of the Soviet leader can, but eften they just don't pe vocabulary, sentence structure. Patrol — volunteer civilian auxil- Sf women who stray too often from Oettinger, chief of the U. S. Chil- tien with the Missouri Synod is “the type of exchange which know what to say.” grammar, reading and spelling, iary of the Air Force — formally; the paths of orthodoxy. dren's Bureau The two synods, togethers with could do much for the whole Capano’s group this summer They receive general speech joceq out its national headquar- eewhere..the debate centers, “0 amount of censure or hard--the Slovak Lutheran Church, have world . : _ improvement classes in articula- E Elsewhere, , the debate De rere 2} s problem.” Pee Wy Waa api varsens ranges from 10 to 16 years in age ters here Saturday. = on proposals’ to cut down relief ship will abolish the problem. shared common doctrine, mission I have long advocated the open | 4 as achieveme t levels from tion, voice training, phrasing and Ri M ti vinents to mothers who produce Underscoring the financial im- work and pulpit exchange for 87 curtain,” Johnson said. “'T hope te EJ Gl i Bas : Th, s ‘anos emphasis and other factors. im- * * * ing ountings pay 1d! . el Care that this will be a wedge which "td to ninth grade. FMS Tarse, jortant in speech intelligibility. Headquarters operations re- | Beeutifally 95* more than one illegitimate child. pact of illegitimacy, the U.S. - . will it ‘1 even further.” SPan makes it necessary to give oo , —_ In Raleigh, V. C.. authorities cite Department of Health, Educa- Batihere iais) becnerowing cit tnt) SU SCRGn Severs SUESier: leach of ihe cAnIpers individual. Because so much education for sumed today at Ellington Air Force | Cerved as an example the case of an Ul- tien and Welfare (HEW) says icisin of activities by the Missot — — attention, he said the deaf in their early years is Base, southeast of Houston, Tex. - *ples f.<.t. married mother of 10 children. federal, state and local taxpay- Synod in providing chaplagiy for The northern district of Lower er conducted on a practical level, Ca-- The CAP has maintained its} Enhance your own diamond nine of them receiving public-sup- ers this year will pay 216 mil- (the armed services ind ‘on California became Mexico's 29th SPECIAL ATTENTION pano said he tries to teach his headquarters at Bolling Air Force ] in 14-kt. white or yellow port funds lion dollars toward the support ing Boy Scout work, as well as state. The area has about the “My aim is to give them the pupils how to express abstract Base, across the Potomac River gold. » Ye are Hterally paying a bons, of children born out of wedlock. | assoc lating with so-called “‘splint- SO latitude as that found in special attention and training which ideas. from Washington National Airport, With 2 side diamonds, 29.95* for iHegitimacy.”” says state Rep. Payménts average $27.29 a .er” Lutheran groups. Arabia. most of them do not L238 eive dur-| AY Oe en nae ideas in their for 1315 of its 18 years. SS = <= month per child. ! = == — : Sa aa ae ———__--—- --—- —— : — (nen —————— SSS SS The money is provided under the government-supported Aid to De- pendent Children (ADC) program, with the federal government pay- ing 60 per cent. State and local taxes contribute 40 per cent. The nation’s exploding popula- Marriage License Applications Richard F Cairns Farming Marilvn R Carmack, Farm aeton Lyie T. Rossman. Oxtord Sara J Helmick Oxtors tion accounts, in part, for the up- | Richard PF. Greenweal, Mea surge in illegitimate births from Sheila R. Smart. 177 Danforth 87.900 in 1928 to 201.700 in 1957. the ‘Bruce E Schmeichel Rova!l Oak Brace E vcison. 030 Kettering largest official figure. An estimate AS S | —— for 1958 puts the number at 205.- pom Erum, Keero Harhbo: 000. But experts say this- doesn't Dean G Hess. Walled Lake tell the whole story | Mary J: Hinckley, Walled ‘Lets Latest figures show the rate of Darrel E Polan, Lake Orion such births per 1,000 unmarried B jv J. Mizell, 23 Hartung . . . _ 4 “J ° females has tripled in the last two Easy to Apply Adrian E. Howell 200 Sanderson : i articularly Florence Patton, 37 Whittemore decades, with a particularly . James T Bouber Battle co eek alarming rise among teenage girls Asphalt Floor Tile ochester ° | =e . On a nationwide basis, the of- Marbleized € Ea. Pileen Secct "Farmington fice of Vital Statistics says il-° gy Eke «aE i t ll d b E t or Brown | Frnest F. Kulessewsti East Detroit legitimacy now accounts for 15.6 ns a e y xper S ese Ps Virginia Colombo Davisburg per 1,000 total white births and Last mg beauty at ‘owes: ce | Vv 97 E. Wilso 206.7 per 1,000 nonwhite. Idea! for basement ilecr Bama rom 2 Bron 206.7 per 1.00 ) Guaranteed for 10 Years powers cant wear ei. 0 Car! J. Dila. Birmingham Mrs Ocettinger says nearly »,000 clear thru tile Hurry toa Marilvn K Buri. Royal Oak illegitimate babies are born each — ee = ‘ Axel H Girschner, Grosse Pointe year to girls under 15, Some have: a on 2 eee ~ as Ingeborg M. Gutkew:tsch, Birmingham ven confessed they deliberately Average en tay. Hust 6 we >| 1 . or i a stephen A. Jencks. Pian: City, Fla. Decame pregnant so they could 30x24-Ft. 30 g 2c ea Margaret A Studebaker. Waterford = quit school. V/, : R { John H. Dart, Detroit _ “Unwed motherhood among ado- , 3 Pitch 00 Barbara A Knisley. Drayton Piains ‘).--ents is on the rise and will 210-Ib. weight were Ski nocueste continue.” says Mrs. Oettinger: TF ee eee ee “Ry 1962, if the rate remains the N M D S Carmen J. Rollman, Rochester same, between 110.00C and 120.000 fe] oney Vown on cars Jackie Parr. Br c babies will be born out of wedlock . ele ee icine eae? | Tl], Modernization Credit Plan Rav A Craghead. Clarkston * x * = . Barbara A. Bates. Highland Park A ic b duct is: 1hat “at - Robert P. Kircheis. Birmingham ‘ tragic ye! met is that 2 d Expert Installation Marthe L. Long, Birmingham least 20,000 young unwed mothers, Donaid P. Friedrich, Rova! Oak sell their babies on the “black | df Choose from 19 colors ‘. Marcia T Kramer, Milford market” annually, with price tags . S Wiliam H. Whited, 1701 Baldwin ranging from $1,500 to $3,000. O oEt . arg pines Tey hain oe ~ . Pris verly : . Uur most ocpulidr roolrg comoire Search for an explanatio ‘ mae Gerald K. Davis. Northville ae or een P nee m high quality and beauty at Sears Homart lron Railing 44 loria J. Thomes. Farmingto for the upward trend, sociologists = have turned a scattergun ‘on a usual reasonable price Your choice H | P t A id t Leo A. Parisien Birmi : 4: 2 MIMEOGRAPHING : | at -beys and girls registering at a 4 2: cheap hotels and cabins . . . WE SRAM ATE URE > SERVICE 3 expose magazines . . . pep-pill | SERENE P 4 $ and reefer parties . . . teenage | 3 Bulletins 2: gang codes which virtually re- | 3° 4. 3 quire illicit sexual relations. ! $ rg > Letters, Etc. $' Far and away the most contro- , 3 > versial of all the iactors blamed 2 > FAST SERVICE! g for the upswing in illegitimacy is 3 > the growing customs of boys and : 4 D | yg : es : > tian @ girls, still in their budding teens a ‘ ; kas : oe 4 : a i | 3 Chris Literature Sales |, go steady. Champions of youth- | x af . . eee eo = $ 38 Oakland FE 4.9591 3 fu freedom staunchly defend the. Homort Waterproof ‘Steel Garage | Door Homart Tilt-Action” HOMART Aluminum 48-In Wide Homart Reg. 12.95 APSA AIPA ipractice, but some parents are . 5 ; ° 7} i linia dn ivorn By patie P ‘ Roll Roofing Swings Up and In Aluminum Windows Combination Door Al 4 De 10” (Adverti ae a ! é C veruisement “Outside of those few girls and Reg. 4.49 3 79 8x7-FI. .95 Only 16 95 Reg. $35.95 uminum oor anopy , ITC H | N G Tortur jwomen who become prognant as a Roll. ° $5.50 Down — © $4 Down 31 95 Unpainted Canopy “CHARGE IT” ; “CHARGE IT” Nienwives wie Geta. Averhear “CHARGE IT” 3 ers [resull (of (sexual experimental: Beatles te MGT ee ow Piptect your entrance from snow, rain, and sur. Easy to e agi the ast Majority of unmarri’ ee - “earance Nylon rollers used Xa 2h UA t Never needs painting. all rec- up and instal] yourself. Durable aluminum can't rust. _mothers represent girls and wom- ba Ir no jump head- track. - hesist i Is¥ cleanin mea essary hardware included. 2 h - d Bu Seva during this sale Here's blessed relict from tortures of vagiaal én who fave fail some problem a eet NM iconrosiony Geel i) | at quali Barry a 1G Geeen inset ciang hinge Proi ects 32-inches over door. Buy now during this sale : itch, ‘rectal itch, chafing, rash eczema : . Le fe) Sea tle gquartines las Gnille ord initial extra ‘ . Save! See it at Sears. may genes w scientific formula within their own parent-child re- : aa 2 Ss i GNESI. SS Xt fe medicated creme Lils hecnfal Sacer ae a Mrs ES x “8 : E Ms e — raw, itritat “Studies show that some adoleés- ; : C speeds ealing. Don't fuer another mise. cent girls could be helped with : asy-to- ally LANAC. today at ail drug sroces. emotional distur ‘bances long before a 3 ° eohasiatilons babel ee ! 3-Ft. Magnesium i “4 “ ( l tte oy } Step Ladd - ; ae : Ree Al 88 Cooccvcccoccgcoossesooees ; ‘ € F 3 14.98 omer —, : ; . 4 ¥ ae oe = The Latest in Frames! “your Color Coxtom Save 1.10 Gal. on CHARGE IT Mixed by Machine! Flat Wall Paint A tremendous low price by the miracle of Reg. 3.98 2.88 this quality: Made of wor SHADE-O-MATIC “CHARGE IT" Dee a a ete tiegh aire Choose neany 450 col- Dries 6 hrs Scrubbable tures 1 eres a Der a Ses ‘ ar are walls cl esistant tr , riveted cor- e Lightweight 2 aE Te EY S Colors are lead tree!- Colors . ee 5 ‘aaders " ihee on e@ Sturdy @ Attractive : Scie wihed ont . | spreaders size: is § We fust recetved these new frames! ba We invite your inspection of the new | est. latest development tm attractive frames! qi Always the Very Highest in Quality St R li ble ‘Lo Pri ALUMINUM at the Lowest rong, e la e, ow rice in Prices! ; SATISFACTION GUARANTEED + Round Rung Extension Ladder @ Prescriptions Filied @ Safety Glasses a e os Sun Glasses @ Repair Service . =. e Regularly at 21.98 @ Frames Repaired Come in and Have Your Present ® Seasoned ladder lumber some resen ~~ =n eo . : Glasses Adj — N en ninn . @ Equal length sections . vlasses Adjusted — No Charge: Master-Mixed Weather.” Ze Get Fast Cleaning Handier and Safer ; q 9 eh aree i re , « . ° : , t’ Glasses Ag seied Froperty Means Resistant R oatin With this Brush Rinse ‘Ladder Jacks — etter Vision oof C ; : ag 5-Gal. aly 1 19 Qt tai 6 49 Sturdy, flared bottom extension ladder. Hardwood ° ‘ ve ° . : ' s ® Made from fiest weather resistant refined asphalts reinforced eaiwa Te : exeae a: rungs securely mortised and nailed to the side rails. a el ) 1ca if =with long fiber asbestos. Contains no coal tar. For use on papet. % Automatic lockPand steel guide irons are rust resistant. . e (eit 7 ! cemiar : Simply dip wash with soap Easy to adjust steel side rail , elt, meto!, cement or composition roofing. Buy now ladder jack balances weight See it at Sears. FE and water: No brush soaking oR > the rails, not on the rungs ; 8-4331 Root and foundation coating, Gal. 98c necessary .. . cleans quickly Save jessy at Sears. Paint Dept.. Main Basemen! ” 86), Aérese from Federal's— , N. Saginaw Sasa ee ease . |: HOURS: 9:38 . 5:30 — FRIDAY ‘ull 8:30 : OL OW 154 North Saginaw St., Phone FE 5-4171 : (NO A PPOINTMENT NECESSARY) , "ome WEDNESDATS . : : 4 . . : . . . : | 4 ‘ \ ‘ - A. . : t }