— Se A ee ao a . — rn meanest The Weather PRMMEIVER PACS U8, Weather Bureas Forecast HE ?p ON (Detatis ge 2) 117th YEAR kk kkk PONTIAG, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. JULY 2, 1950 —48 PAGES Rater —— ae ws ASSOCIATED PRESS Pontiac Gasps After To / / nampa Book Patient for Investigation of Doctor’s Death A patient of Dr. W. Carleton Warrick, who told police he found the dying physician staggering about his downtown office Friday night, has been booked for investigation of murder. Lloyd Tunnell, 53, was re-arrested at the Public Safety Building last night for questioning in the shoot- ing o of the 71- “year-old physician. Dr. Warrick died of, gunshot wounds Saturday| U.S. to Ignore Steel Profits Ike Says They Have No Bearing on Government Action in Strike WASHINGTON # — President Eisenhower said at his press con-| ference this morning that the U. S.\ the doctor to a couch and stayed | | Steel company’s profits, as re- ported last night, have no bearing! on whether the government should intervene in behalf of a wage in- crease for the 500,000 striking steel- workers. The company’s earnings in the! first half of the year were “ record heights. The union contends that shows wages can be increased. Eisenhower said the govern- ment cannot talk about steel wages or profits without appear- ing to favor one side or the othér, and if it does it is in trouble. Eisenhower repeated his demand | for a settlement that will not! create or incite inflation, and one! achieved by free collective bar- gaining. The Steelworkers Union has seized upon the report of record) profits by U. S. Steel Corp., the na- tion’s biggest steel producer, to! charge that the figures make the) industry's strike position “utterly ridiculous.”” Meanwhile, a mediator reported after separate talks with both sides in the 15-day-old nationwide strike of a half million steelwork- ers that there was no change in the position of either: side. A strike threat affecting most of the aluminum industry sched- uled for Friday midnight ‘was postponed. David J. McDonald United Steel- workers president, said the ‘as- tronomical profits being reported by steel firms” will convince the public that the steelworkers were forced to strike ‘‘by a cold-blooded plan of an industry that wanted and planned this shutdown for its own Selfish reasons.’’ HOLD PRICE LINE U.S. Steel's board chairman, Roger M. Blough, replied that U.S. Steel would hold the price line, unless the government forced a strike settlement which might change the picture. He made it clear he expected the industry to follow suit: U.S. Steel produces 28 per cent of the nation’s steel, and Blough said competition would keep other com- panies from raising prices. Biough said the record profits reported were partly (Continued on Page 2, Col, 3) . Dusts Off Bank Alarm PROVIDENCE, R.1. ~The night in Pontiac General Hospital. Tunnell has been in custody since jate Monday night when he was ‘arrested by Redford State Police narcotics squad officers for investigation of violating state narcotics laws. His arrest in the murder of Dr. Warrick was at 9 p.m., after ~ he “was questioned all day by Pontiac detectives and had taken a He detector test at the Red- | ford State Police Post. “Tunnell has admitted he lied to us,’ said Lt. William Nesbitt, commander of the Pontiac Police | Detective Bureau. “He is certainly an important suspect in the case,” Nesbitt | said. 'o police that he left the physi- _ cian's office at 2442 E. Huron St. after he called police. He said jhe returned to the physician's second-story office before police | larrived. | Tunnell’s admission came, Nes- bit said. after officers told him a | ‘very prominent Pontiac citizen’ jinformed them that he'd seen Tun- ‘nell leaving the building after the, time the patient said he called police. Pay, told- police | co vered Dr. Warrick a few mo- [ments after the doctor had been p |shot by a gunman police to be a bandit. He said earlier that he helped with him until police arrived. Detective Karl Lutz of the Red-! ford State Police Post said that! , Tunnell ‘‘vehemently denied” leav-| ing Dr. Warrick’s office | detector test yesterday. Tunnell was to be given another) (Continued en Page 2, Col. 2) UAW to Pull Rug From Under Kennedy MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI | The powerful United Auto Workers | union apparently is preparing to ;pull the rug out from under Sen. John Kennedy (D-Mass.) in the April 5, 1960, Wisconsin presiden- tial preference primary. A source close to the UAW said the auto workers. ‘‘probably’’ will support Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn) in the expected primary test with Kennedy. The UAW plans | to actively enter the political arena labout the first of the year, ac- cording to one of its high ranking officials. k & * Wisconsin is but one of three primaries, along with Oregon and New Hampshire, where Kennedy | and Humphrey are apt to collide. But since New Hampshire is in Kennedy’s back yard, Humphrey plans to concentrate his campaign: ing on the northern states from | popularity with labor and agricul- ture, according to Lt.. Gov. Karl Rolvaag, of Minnesota. Wisconsin westward, relying on his} vv employes, their cars don't float. going anywhere for a while. Their cars were half under water in é THEY’RE IN DEEP — Unfortunately for these Pontiac Press And no one in this picture is a parking lot by the Clinton Rive flowed, following the heavy rainstorm. i iT Ne" N Peaflac Press Photo r this morning as the river over- Ike Sees Soviet Air of Friendship Tunnell broke down and aizniteca Says Nixon Has Every _ Right to Discuss U.S. Visit With Khrushchev | WASHINGTON | tion M. Nixon in Russia is clear evi-| ,dence of a friendly feeling by the the lieutenant governorship. Russian people for Americans. * * * 7 Eisenhower also told a news con- \ference that Nixon has every right! he had dis-'t, discuss with Soviet Premier Nik-| % S. Khrushchev a possible visit the Premier to this country, believed | fe has no authority to offer an) Unofficial but virtually com- | outright invitation, By indirection, the President thus seemed to confirm reports that the vice president had | broached the subject of an Amer- ican. visit to the Russian leader. | Eisenhower said Nixon has ac- publican Hiram L. Fong defeated in a lie quitted himself splendidly and in a ‘Democrat Frank F. Fasi 83,592! ww — President! | Eisenhower said today the recep-|won a spectacularly close contest) given Vice President: Richard for the 50th state's governorship, ‘But GOP Scores 5-2 Over-All Victory Dems Win 2 Hawaii By ROBERT TUCKMAN l HONOLULU (AP) — Democrats captured two seats in Congress ;and Republicans nabbed one to- = in Hawaii's first state elec- ‘The present House lineup is 282 ion. Democrats, 153 Republicans and s * * one vacancy. The Senate has 64 Republican William F. Quinn pemocrats and 34 Republicans. Quinn's GOP running mate, Hawaii-born James K. Kealohe, | jeasily defeated Japanese - Ameri-| jcan Mitsuyuki Kido 85,593 to ' 73,755 for the leutenant gover- 'norship. Democrat Daniel K. Inouye swamped Hepublican Charles K. Silva 108,343 to 49,304 in the race for the lone House seat. and his running mate easily won| Tv¥o of Hawaii’s three-member | congressional delegation are of Asian ancestry—one a Democrat | of Japanese descent and the other a Republican ef Chinese parentage. *® * After Burns had conceded, {Quinn said: ‘I think the State of | Hawaii will have to make quick |use of the outstanding services of 240) Jack Burns.”’ Fong, son of a poor Chinese * | plete returns from Hawaii's - precincts gave Quinn 82,514 to}. 80,083 for Democrat John A.! farmer, and Inouye, Japanese- | Burns. a American World War If hero, VICTORIOUS FOR SENATE =| Will be the first legislators of | | Chinese and Japanese. ancestry Re-| to serve in Congress. In one senatorial contest, Fong was the only Republican, { ‘Seats 24,000 sugar, pineapple and dock | workers in Hawaii SURPRISE. SHOWING By winning three of the five top offices in the 50th state's first election Tuesday, Re publicans| made a surprise showing. | Democrats had been favored | on the strength of a strong | primary election showing a month ago and their successive | victories in every Hawali terri- | torial election since 1954. | Inouye, much decorated war veteran who lost his right arm in| combat, had the easiest contest. | His opponent, Silva, is a dentist | currently serving as Hawaii's di-| |rector of public institutions. x *« Long, 70, is a former governor jot Hawaii, while Fong, 32, is a | millionaire businessman. | In defeating Tsukiyama, 62, ‘Long beat the elder statesman of) the islands’ nese ancestry. Fasi, 38, beaten by| | manner fitting his high office dur-| to 75,681. In the race for a Senate: supported by Harry Bridges’ In- | Fong. gatiied in the islansia after’ counters with Khrushchev. ONLY TIME CAN TELL Asked whether the served to ease cold war tensions, | cafi tell, Nixon took on a series of hec- klers today and demanded to know why the Soviet Union sees fit to maintain troops in Poland, Hungary and East Germany. ibirsk, Western Siberia, Sverdlovsk. x kl Nixon’s eagerly-awaited tour of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Ignores Own Advice LOS ANGELES -(PI)—Powell Crosley, manufacturer of small automobiles, was quoted in Motor Life magazine, as saying the ; new Detroit small cars aren’t small enough. Asked what. car he drives, Crosley replied with- out a quiver: “A Cadillac Brougham.”’ ing his Russian travels and his en-|; seat, Democrat Oren E. Long re- ternational visit has) the President said that only me Little Rock The clashes took place in Novos-|gered by his crushing defeat in| just be-|a primary election for traffic judge) fore the vice president took off for) ‘here, an ousted member. of the Russians greeted him Sverdlovsk in the eastrn Ural Mountains. Longshoremen’s and ceived 80,879 votes to 76,159 for) Warehousemen’s Union. The rest). Republican Wilfred C. Tsuki-jof the union’s endorsement went} yama. to Democrats. The unign claims Senate E Bargains in Tax Battle (P—An-| ‘Segregationist Blasts Voters LITTLE ROCK, Ark. | Would Nix Corporation | Little Rock School Board last night | blasted segr egationists failure to Add Many More Several thousand silently waiting support him. at Robert W. Laster, traffic judge! LANSING (®—The Legislative way contest for the Democratic. chamber Ahowdown today as Sen-| nomination yesterday. late Republicans bargained for a’ Of segregationists Laster said: \118 million dollar package falling’ “They can go to blazes. They, '98 per cent on consumers. wanted a standard bearer to lead| x **« * them and then they let him down.’") Asx trading Laster — who once said he in- }jouse, they hinted willingness to tended to be governor of Arkansas/raise thé ante later with a token someday — was elected to thejincrease in the existing business school board last Dec. 6 on a activities tax. strong segregationist platform. The| | voters recalled him and two other board members May 25 after the) trio had voted to fire 44 teachers for what they called integrationist sympathies, The Senate GOP counter-pro- posal to a “compromise’”’ plan approved by the House last Fri- day got caucus blessing yester- day. Rep. Joseph J. Kowalski of Detroit, Democratic House 7 A River? No, Saginaw Street * so iecepeni die as dozens streets. \ photo was taken at the intersection of Saginaw This and Rundell streets. Who needs swimming pools? leader, promptiy labeled it ‘‘un- realistic.” “I hope we will ieee bipar- tisan House rejection,’’ he said. Its salient points: FOUR SPECIAL POINTS stand for a two per cent tax on cession to Democrats in last week’s “compromise.” | * * * | 2. A four per cent tax on tele-| phone bills, estimated to yield $8,- 1300,000 in 1959-69 and 10 million dollars in a full fiscal year. 3. A jump from the present | to four per cent in the sales tax/ on drug prescriptions. Value: about $500,000 a year. 4. Removal of the monthly ex- emption now allowed retailers on the first $50 of sales in figuring monthly sales tax returns. | The omnibus proposal, as ex- pected, was built around the one per cent use (sales) tax hike House and Senate Republicans haye de- manded for months. It embraced two other House-, approved items ~— application of the levy to hotels and motels and withdrawal of exemptions ‘on sale (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Sentine Prec’ Pinte | oo \ 2 Per Cent Profit Levy; since 1957, ran third in a three-| tax battle edged toward an inter-| material with the | 1. Flat rejection of the onl World War II and was a senator lin the last territorial Legislature ‘as was Inouye. Quinn, 40, fast appointed gov- ernor and first elected one, won in a contest that saw the lead change four times. The election brought out a rec- lord vote estimated at 170,000 or \93 per cent of the 183,000 regis- tered voters. Quinn will have unprecedented patronage powers. He will ap- ipoint 460 officials, including \judges, department heads and, members of boards and commis-| sions. x *« * His pay is $25,000 a year, a i$6,000 raise over the appointive | job. | Hawaii's two senators will serve |terms, of either two, four, or six years, to be determined by the! Senate. They probably will draw lots, as Alaska’s first two senators ntial Rain Floods Close 2 Plants After 6-Inch Deluge Widespxead flooding in the wake of a torrential rain this morning caused production to halt at Pontiac Motor and Fisher Body division. About 3,000 day-shift workers were sent home when over-loaded storm sewers backed up in both plants. Hundreds of Pontiac basements were reported flooded and numerous streets temporarily blocked as an estimated six inches of rain was dumped on Pontiac within an hour. The Pontiac General Hospital power house was threatened by 18 inches of water in its basement. The Kills Girl, 9 Four Others Injured; Two Area Drivers to Be Questioned Oakland County sheriff's depu- ities today planned to question two drivers involved in a smashup on M24 in Oxford Township which killed a girl and injured four other persons Tuesday night. Dead is Patricia Jane Sabov, 9, of 895 Glaspie Rd., Oxford Town. i ship. Her father, Kornel, 38, was one of the drivers. Driver of the other car was Donald D. LaPlante, 30, | Oakland | of 14N. Broadway Highway St., Lake Orion > Both were Toll in ’59 treated for mindr head and facial 4) injuries at St. Joseph Mercy Last Year | Hospital and re- te Date: 50 | leased. Sabov's son, | Mark, 5, a iwife, Betty, 30, were admitted with | jhead injuries. The boy is in satis- factory condition today and his. mother was reported in fair condi-| ition by hospital officials. | The Sabov girl was dead on arrival at the hospital at 8:40 p. m. | She was pronounced dead by | Dr, John Naz of Clarkston. Deputies said the girl suffered severe brain injuries. . * x * Initial statements of the two drivers conflicted, deputies said. 'Sabov said he was stopped facing ‘north. on M24 at Drahner. road, waiting for southbound traffic to, problem that occurs only once in clear so he could make a left turn. Suddenly the LaPlante . car “struck me from. behind,” depu- | ties quoted Sabov as saying. LaPlante said Sabov ‘‘made a turn from Drahner onto M24 in| front of me. I couldn't avoid hit-' ae, him,”’ he told deputies. Reporter Jumps Gun “HONOLULU, T.H. (UPI)—A news reporter for a Boston ratio station called a station here to- day at 11 a.m. EDT to ask how | the election came out. He was informed that it was 5 a.m. in Hawaii abd that the polls would did. not be open for fro hours. American teenagers lead of the world. Say American Teeners Lead Soft School Lives soft, sociable school lives They get off easy on* homework. Theys can skip tough courses and slide through school on the soft ones while concentrating on dates; and fun. + Exams are a cinch. Good grades on hard subjects. | And high schools are so sugar coated with extracurricular ac- | | tivities “and social events that ' they seem more like child's. play. ; than a serious occupation for in- tefligent young people. That’s the consensus among a' cross-section. of 1,170 teenagers! from 35 countries who have just! completed their senior year as ex-! change students in high schools in| every part of, the United States. They're now taking a month-long natjonwide bus tour before return- ing to théir own countries in Au-| found | . Even | those who spoke only elementary corporation profits, the lone con-|come easy. Teachers touch lightly English when they reached the United States last August had no trouble sailing through their sen- lor year here. a” 'No Water—No Building DETROIT (®—Livonia'’s mayor, William W. Brashear, said toda no new subdivisions will Se as ap- proved until an adequate water peel is assured for the fast grow-! ing suburb west of Detroit. The city council is awaiting a promise) of plentiful water from either De-| troit or Wayne County. Fight for Peace—Baruch | NEW YORK #®— Elder states- man Bernard Baruch, 88, -returned) Tuesday from a six-week visit to Britain, ‘‘We are going to be en- gaged for many, many years in getting peace,’’ he said. ‘It will, be a prime problem for our chil-| dren and* ow grandchildren.” breoinar arily politicians of Japa-| Oakland County Deputy Coroner ~ ‘surging Clinton River sent 2-Car Smashup . six inches of water flooding ‘over the city’s Sewage ‘Treatment Plant. river and Pontiac Creek overflowed their Ybanks in many low places, City Hall reported. Mounting pressure within storm drains caused manhole covers to pop “all ever the. | elty,” police’ said. The Department of Public Works said basement flooding was widespread. The DPW was caught shart of pumps to rid flooded basements of water. The Pontiac Motor Division ‘ceased assembly line production at 9:30 am. and about 2,000 workers were sent home. Water shooting up through drains covered most of the mala floor, several feet deep in places. Fisher Body, served by the same storm drgin, shut down at 9:45 a.m. About 1,000 assembly workers. went home, but some minor activities, such as tool and die, remained in operation. At 10 a.m., spokesmen at both iplants said it was hoped that nor- mal production could be resumed ‘at 4 p.m. today, when the After- noon shifts are scheduled to report or work. Both plants were expected to an- nounce later today when produc- tion would resume. Robert A_ Stierer, assistant city manager, said that the De- partment of Public Works and . the Citizens Complaint Bureau -had received about 250 trouble. calls by 10 a.m., an hour after | the heaviest rain had fallen. | Officials described the rain as |‘‘the worst in years.” The amount jof water dropped on Pontiac re- sembled what drain officials de- iscribe as ‘‘a 10-year rain.” That is, \a rain that is so heavy and sudden ‘in volume tht it presents a drain ‘about every 10 years. * * * . Pontiac’s storm drains are not built to handle a ~~ rain ad- jequately, nor are the drains in 'most cities. a The sewage treatment plant, where the Clinton River delivered the accumulated storm waters, | was a “shambles” this morning, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) x &* * Don't Put Raincoats Away, There’s More Well drenched Pontiac residents ~~, are faced with more scattered , Showers or thundershowers tonight through tomorrow, the weatherman | Says. Low tonight will be a moist \74 degrees. This morning's rain dropped temperatures of 77 at 8:30 to 69 at 9:45 a.m. ;| Thursday’s high is expected to in the eyes of their contemporaries in other parts reach a sizzling 90. Temperatures for the next five days will aver- age near the normal high of 83 and normal low of 63 with to- morrow a little warmer. Friday will be somewhat cooler with a. | warming trend again Sunday or | Monday. | Precipitation wil] total one-half ha one inch in scattered showers tonight, tomorrow and again around Monday. - Today’s southerly winds at 8-15 miles and hour will increase to 10-20 miles tonight and tomorrow. The lowest temperature in down- yitown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was ¥/73. The reading at 1 p.m. was 74 Mar MAgieet deep nai gnS In Today’ s Press | eee ee ee “ euwek, cace a0 0eing ie county § News ...... pavecnes 3 mnie iiguctacacsabou at O@Raniee ..4..:...0:08 12 a ee 36-39 Stay Alive Longer. iva ae Theaters ...... Mt Wise. Earl nes ede = je cae eee oe i / Women’s \ 1 ©) ¥ ‘cand “Muh Henry's Charge of Bias Denied City Personnel Office: Says All Applicants Are’ Treated Fairly The Pontiac city Personnel Of. fice deals ‘fairly and impartially” with applicants for the police de-| pariment The office “definitely not’; prejudiced against applicants be- cause of race, creed or color, said Harold E. Marshall, personnel di- rector, is Marshall made the statement ¢ in answer te assertions hurled by City Commissioner Henry at last night's sion meeting. Henry said he was angered over the case of Herman M. Walton,) 44-year-old former Pontiac patrol-| man who Monday asked Marshall/ commis- for reinstatement on the police’ force. Marshall told Walton that he) would not automatically be rein-| stated but must apply for the job’ under the same conditions as any other applicant. He added that Wal-| ton’s over age and present resi- dence would be considered’ against him * *” * Walton, 16 years over the age limit, now lives in Chicago, IIL, where he is a weighmaster for the city At present, Marshall said, the “city’s policy to consider appli-| cants between 21 and 28 who live within Oakland County. Saying that ‘“‘something is wrong) . in Mr. Marshall’s office,’ Henry! last night challengéd the person-| nel director ‘‘to give me one good reason why Walton wasn't rein-' stated.” Henry threatened to sue the city “to make it do what it legally | should do.” | he * * * Walton served as a patrolman! 1943-1952, winning two citations for) meritorious service. He was a city constable 1952-1954. Have Traffic Problem LIVERPOOL, England (UPI) —RF.E. Stoney, director of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents, said yesterday his society is very busy because: it was declared today. | Milton R. | { | it is! i/ a Hotta Charges Kennedy Politic in Rackets Probe WASHINGTON (UPI) — Team- ‘ster boss James R. Hoffa charged today chief counsel of the Senate Rack- lets Committee, has “deliberately ' distorted the truth . _ . in a mad desire to advertise his brother's ‘candidacy for president.” | The chief counsel's brother, Sen. John F. Kennedy setts, for the Democratic presidential | nomination in 1960. | Hoffa apeared on NBC-TV \day” ‘ | \] | i 's “Ton! ster union is run by “racketeers ‘and gangsters who have misused | their position for personal gain. iply. “. . . in a mad desire to! advertise his brother's candidacy, | ithe) has deliberately distorted the truth.” (Continued From Page One) ‘lie detector test this afternoon at’ the Redford Post. “There is something wreng with | his story. I am deeply concerned | with the results.” The officer refused to elaborate! juntil after questioning Tunnell again this afternoon. Tunnell told police last night) [that he left the doctor's office) “after waiting a eid time" for| | Police to arrive. “IT wanted to see for myself | if they were conting,” he said. | He walked to the corner of Hu- ron and Perry streets, then re- = to Dr. Warrick’s office, said. Tunnel] was in the doctor’s of- fice when police arrived. The doctor was shot twice, = the hand and abdomen. The murder weapon, a .45 cal-' iber automatic revolver, has not} ‘been found. ” Investigators from the State | Police Crime Lab, Sgt. Wallace | Van Stratt and Det, Charles — Meyers, combed Or. Warrick’s office for clues yesterday after. that Robert F. Kennedy, | of Massachu-| is among the front-runners| program to answer charges| | by counse] Kennedy that the cor | “Mr. Kennedy is very careless, }with the truth,” Hoffa said in re- | Police Book Tunnel for Probe of Murder | Of yesterday's test, Lutz said: | who expected a strike and want- | THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1958 : | i f . ¢ { ; ATTACK AND COUNTERATTACK — United Steelworkers president; David J. McDonald, points to a U.S. Steel Corp. in- comé report and charges the industry inflation issue is phony. Meanwhile, U.S. Steel chairman, ae Blough, demands a vol- EA ee tgs rape rreypER AP Wirephotes untary strike settlement in return for a pledge not to raise the price of steel. The announcefgents followed release of figures showing that the nation’s biggest steelmaker piled up a record half year of profits. : The Day in Birmingham Kitchen Fire BIRMINGHAM — Firemen an- swered two minor calls in the ity yesterday." Robert E. Clark 1275 Golfview Dr., did an estimated $75 to $100 dam- age, according to Chief Park Smith of the Birmingham Fire Depart- ment. The fire witch occurred at 7:28 p.m. resulted wheg heating grease on the stave ignited and spread to the cupboards above, ' At 9:33 p.m. firemen were called to the F. J. Mulholland Co. store, 233 N. Woodward Ave., to put out a fire which had set the store awning ablaze. Damage was limited to the awning, and Chief Smith made no estimate of the loss. Birmingham's Senior Men's Club will hear a talk at ifs 10;30 a.m. meeting Friday by Dr. Walter Grimala, a professor at Wayne State Univérsity. Dr. Grimala will speak on the topic, ““The American Creed." The meeting is scheduled for the Birmingham Community House, Arrangements to buy furniture’ U. S. Will Ignore Steel Protits House Ponders ‘(Continued From Page One)- the result of increased buying ' @ similar period. earlier in the year by steel users | This amounted to a return of (10 cents on every dollar of sales, and equaled $4.50 a share. It com- aa Se Mave | cneagh stot oe hand. |pared with a previous record of, U.S. Steel reported -half - year; $231,421,308, or $4.07 a share, in | Profits of $254,948,496, more than! the first half of 1957. jany steel company ever earned, Thanks to Power Shovel Operator | F our Children Are Safe | Four children were saved by a; Leonard Hicks, 33, of Livonia,’ fast-thinking power shovel operator! has operated the huge shovels since from .being crushed to death in| he was 15. He was pulling a 1,000 Royal Oak yesterday. The- -young-/ gallon gasoline tank out of the! sters ran off too frightened to say| ground at a filling station yester- The steel industry has refused ‘to grant union demands for wage increase, claiming that any; increase in labor cost would force a-price increase and contribute to inflation. *-* * The union claims the companies jean afford a wage increase with- ;out raising prices, and points to isteel profits in an attempt to |Prove it. x & * The industry has offered to con- sider a modest increase if ‘union would allow it to cut labor Costs by changing some plant work rules it considers wasteful. | \But the union has refused, say- ing that to do so would be to give up past gains. ‘Road Progress for the new Groves Junior-Senior ‘High School at 13-Mile and Ever- A kitchen .fineigt ‘the tome of pe Damages Home, palo Burns pet Terry of Birmingham: a grand- daughter and two brothers. Senators Bargaining in State Tax Battle \ . (Continued From Page One) of materials to contractors gaged in federal projects. Also included was the House proposal te raise the intangibles ° tax paid by financial institutions from 40 te 55° cenfs per $1,008 of deposits, to bring in two mill-— lion dollars, Debt-ridden Michigan’s general fund treasury will be swept bare again this week. Gov. Williams and his. adminis- trative board, guiding the state through the throes of a financial crisis, agreed yesterday to dole out the $20,900,000 which will be available by the end of the week. Only the most pressing and vital obligations will. be paid. The board decided to pay: * * * en- |green roads, Beverly Hills, were | made recently by the Birmingham | ‘Board of Education. | winPProved were the $6,775.30 i of the Brunswick Co, eee education furniture and its $9,815.40 bid for cafeteria | tables and chairs. | In other board of education busi- for | | 2. Four million, thousand dollars for tomorrow’s - 1, ' Thirteen million dollars in Sales tax rebates owing cities and ivillages from the last quarter of fiscal 1958-59-which closed une 30 four-hundred biweekly payroll for some 26.000 |State employes paid from general ‘funds, States Wait Cautiously ness, a slight increase in student | 3. One million dollars against for Decision on Federal Bond Issue WASHINGTON (UPI)—House tax writers debated today whether the, federal government should float a ‘billion-dollar bond issue to keep interstate highway construction going at full speed. * x * A proposal to beef up the federal highway trust fund through bor- |rowing was expected to be voted accident insurance was approved. | |The new cost will be $2 per year, a 60-cent increase. The insurance | covers students enroute to and, attending school functions. dames C. Sutherland KEEGO HARBOR — Service for, James C. Sutherland, 88, of 2146 Brook St., a former Bloomfield Highlands. resident, |Bailey Funeral Home, ham. Burial in White Chapel Memoria! Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Sutherland died yesterday will be held; jat 2 p.m. Friday atthe Manley | Birming- $23,200,000 in everdue bills to | wholesale merchants, coal deal- ers, dairies and thousands of other vendors and contractors. | 4. Two milion dolllars in direct | welfare obligations. 5. Five hundred thousand dol- ars to enable Wayne State Uni- versity to meet an $800,000 pay- roll Aug. 5. bd * * W. K. Pierpont, vice president in charge of business and finance at U. of M.,°said “Arrangements will be made today~to obtain a short term bank loan of one mil- a nica il —_-- nom. | Thank You. |day to make room for a new tank. -*- « at a Pontiac hospital after a long lion dollars which, with funds on. “Any fool can drive or ride a | machine today, and lots of fools do,” Eastern Half of Country | Hot, Humid By The Associated Press The nation’s weather showed only minor changes today as a fiow of warm moist air.-main tained the warm.and humid pat-| They took three bullets and four | shells found earlier in the office, ‘tagether with the murdered man’s clothing, back to East Lansing for analysis. Tunnell was taken to the Oak- land County Prosecutor's office yesterday for a statement in the narcotics probe. He was picked up shortly be- fore midnight Monday at the Sun- set Rest Home, 1755 Williams Lake Rd,, Waterford Township. The rest home is run by his wife, Fontella, a registered and licensed tern Over most of eastern half of| rest home operator. the country. Showers broke out in widely) scattered sections in the tropical/Barry that he had received pre-} air belt Tuesday and during the scriptions: for a synthetic narcotic known as demerol from Dr. War-} night. More showers were in pros- pect in many areas. : = * Fair weather was the rule from the Pacific Coast across the pla- teau region into the northern Rockies and much of the northern half of the plains as.well as much of New England and the middle |County Prosecutor Jerome XX. rick. Dr. Warrick was one of sev- eral area physicians writing pre- scriptions for demierol for use by Tunnell’s patients, said Lt. Ray- mond E. Meggitt, head of the Pontiac Police Special Investiga- tions Unit. Atlantic Coast: Tuesday's shower activity cover- ed areas from the southern half of the plains into the middle and south Atlantic states and the Great Lakes region. Gusty winds were reported in Alabama, with Birmingham reporting gusts up to 50 m.p.h, Heavy rain fell in North Carolina, with Wilmington doused with nearly two inches in a six- hour period. Showers also sprin- kled the southern half of the Rocky Mountain states. * * * The late July cool weather from the Pacific Northwest into the northern Rockies kept tempera- tures.in the 60s and 70s Tuesday. But they soared far past 100 de- grees again in the Southwest de- sert region, with a high of 114 at Needles, Calif. Readings above 100 degrees also were reported in the northern plains, with Bis- marck, N.D., reporting 105. ~The Weather leaving Detectives said Tunnell admitted taking the drug himself. Several doctors had refused to issue prescriptions to Tunnell, of- ficers said, because they felt the drug was not being lised properly. Tunnell and his wife own the rest home at which they live. They also operate the Sunsetview Rest Home, 17 S. Williams Lake Rd., White Lake Township. ” Police questioned Tunnell’s wife last night. She admitted that several perscriptions for demerol had been made out in her name but said she did not use the drug. She was not held. Tunnell told police he went to Dr. Warrick’s office Friday evening Springfield, Mo. Tunnell told police he lied about the doctor’s office oe- cause “I felt you might think I Was trying to run away.” Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly cloudy and humid with v ht e today thr rough temorrow. a! today 3 lew tonight 74. High omsteree | utherly winds 8-15 mites ey and poe ow increasing te 16-20 miles to-| morrow. | Today in Pontise Lowest temperature Preceding § am 7 At 8 am.: Wind velocity m. p. | Bun sets Wednesday at 7-55 pm Sun rises Thutsday at 6:22 am Moon sets Wednesday at 3.02 p.m Moon rises Thursday at 1-17 a.m. Dewntown Temperatures | ssseccoeetd 10 am oc. 4 § am 7 am... , 74 11 am 8 am... : 76612 =m 9. GM-.5..05..:.3 1 pm Tuesday im 1 Pontiac fAs recorded downtown) Righest temperature .. . 88) Lowest erature 66 tempera 77 Weather humid. ear Age 1 in Pontiac ‘wighedt Epaatart a Lowest temperature 63! temperature ........... 73 Weather—Gusay. | Highest and Lowest Tomperatur i This Date ears ves $3 in igie erature Chart | , Z #1 { Beach 87 a4 My 8% 73) oo % He BE 106 bts ch 68 OO Prancisco Hi 4 Beult te. M. i es Sd 76 cht on 88 $ Fire Destroys Store, tfandersnerets mesty ine afterneen or |S Station in Owosso OWOSSO «®— Fire destroyed Ward’s General Store and Gaso- line Station on M21 nine miles east of Owosso late last night. The loss | Was estimated at $75,000. Tunnell told Assistant Oakland upon returning from a vacation in lke Sees an Attitude of Friendship in Reds (Continued From Page One) the Siberian branch of the U.S.S.R, Academy of Sciences at Novosibirsk turned out to be a bust. Soviet authorities allowed him to see only a single build- ing which, they said, is to house their institute of Hydrodynamics. are to be located in the area where many of Russia’s top scientists will work. Nixon learned only. that some 35,000 persons, scientists, technicians and students, will re- side there in a self-contained city. RELUCTANT APPROVAL about a half hour. ; Soviet authorities only reluctant- ly allowed him the visit, Nixon in- sisted on it. The over-all feeling toward Nixon in Novosibirsk was warm, He received there yesterday the friendliest greeting of his 11-day Soviet tour, Throngs, curious Eventually, some 500 buildings’ Nixon’s total stay there lasted| As the old tank tore loose it Idasened the foundation of a 20- foot steel sign. The sign began to topple. Hicks saw the children playing [fie covet the sign” He swung the’ | big shovel over, hitting the falling; | sign and deflecting it from the children. The frightened children, none of 'them touched, sped away without saying a word. “That's all right,’’ Hicks, a fa- ther of two children said. “I was thankful nobody got hurt.”’ Atlas Thunders 5,000 Miles Today’s ICBM Success, Punctuates Denial We Are Losing Race | CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) A revamped Atlas intercon- tinental ballistic missile thundered 9,000 miles last night to punctuate about Americans, a breed they seldom see, all but mobbd him at times. But shortly before leaving Nov- osibirsk he was subjected to some questions from hecklers. One of Nxon's aides said some of the hecklers appeared to have been planted in the crowd. Nixon showed no outward sign’ of being upset at the sharp ques- tioning which came as he toured the big hydroelectric plant-and big scientific center, . * * * But twice he challenged insistent | critics of American overseas bases ‘to “hear the truth” by tuning in on his farewell speech from Mos- cow over television next Saturday. Once he replied sharply to a question, | peace?” “What do you think?’ Nixon answered. “] think not,” said the question- ;er, whom Soviet authorities quick- ly identified as a bricklayer at the Siberian scientific center, “Are you really for, congressional queries into whether we afe losing the missile race with Russia. It was the second straight Atlas success after five consecutive fail- ures. However, a minimum of two additional test flights probably will be necessary before the huge war rocket reaches operational readi- ness. . = About 1); hours after launch- ing, the Air Force announced the shoot apparently was a complete success. An attempt was ex- pected later to recover a tiny capsule carried in the blunt “heat sink” nose cone of the mis- sile. The capsule was equipped te record technical information about the flight. Last night's launching gave a dramatic punch to earlier state- ments by a top Air Force officer in Washington that there was ‘‘no cause for alarm” over the string of misfirings, ranging from Feb. 20 to June 6. The last successful “T suggest you read my speeches again,” said Nixon, ‘“‘and if you! can get your government to stop The flames broke out in the | grocer y Side of the store but the | | Cause was not determined. jjamming the Voice of America, broadcasts you'll get the truth. ‘You! ,are not getting the truth now.’ shoot was July 21. Lt. Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, ‘Air Force research chief, told a House committee yesterday he was confident the Air Force would succeed in eliminating the troubles. iT Compensate Dockmen SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Prob- ably the first major labor con- tract to share the beneYits of auto- mation with workers has . been agreed upon by leaders of 17,000 \West Coast men and 5 waterfront employers, * * # Harry Bridges’ independent Inter-. Longshore men’s lay gy 00 Ay Union (ILWU) and the Pacific Maritime Assn. The old contract expired June Hranne Mew ene, subject to ratt- Wists aR Aedes trcoinest ae ™ se Get Automation Benefits three years. Work continued under contract extension during negotiations. In return for the union's prom- | ise to furnish competent person- inel to man labor-saving devices, the employers agree to coritribtite a 1%-million-dollar fund during the first year of the pact as pay- ‘ment for the men's share of in-/ and creased productivity. Other gains reported include: Wage raises of 11\cents an hour for longshoremen and 1245 ‘cents for clerks, bringing the fatter up to longshore parity within three! years. Improved vacatia@n clauses, imaking jury duty count toward] 7 qualifying time and providing an \extra week for 2-year men under|: | certain conditions. ~*~ * * An added one-cent per hour employer contribution to the wel- fare fund if its balance drops below $100,000. Coffee ain The wage payments are tytrene- tive to June 15. * * * The rates bring dockers’ hourly |upon by the House Ways and There the matter has -stayed, resulting in the shutdown of 90' per cent of the nation’s steel pro-| duction. The union seeks a 15-cent hourly | annual increase, At the time of ithe strike steelworkers av eraged .10 an hour. * * *x The Steelworkers Union and oth-| er unions made similar demands in the aluminum industry, and) they were turned down. Aluminum © wages range between $2.76 andi $2.91 an hour, * * * The Steelworkers Union and the Big Three companies involved —| The Aluminum Co. of America,! the Reynolds Metals Co., and the Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp.—agreed Tuesday to extend current contacts 30 days beyond the steel settlement date, or- until next Nov. 1, whichever is earlier. ,The agreement would be retroac- ‘tive to Aug. 1. It covers about ; 30,000 of ihe Big Three's 58,000 production workers. Reject Turbaned Driver MANCHESTER, England (UPI)—Gyani Sundar Singh Sag- ar, a bearded Sikh, has been refused a job as a bus conductor because he insists on wearing his turban instead of the regu- lation cap. Sundar, 42, said his religion forbids cutting his hair or appearing without his turban. Means Committee, groping for a solution to the highway financing | crisis. A United Press International survey showed today that several states have cancelled new bids on federal-state highway projects pending settlement of the fi- nancing crisis by Congress. Others are adopting attitudes of caution until the problem is solved. * * * The Eisenhower administration | ‘is opposed to borrowing money to meet the need. It argues that this would vio- late the ‘“‘pay - as - you - build’ principle spelled out in 1956 when Congress enacted the pro- gram to construct the 41,000-mile highway network, President Eisenhower is sticking by his request for a 1'y-cent a gallon gasoline tax increase to fill | the gap. ® However, x * the committee yes- terday tentatively turned thumbs| down on three proposals involving igasoline tax hikes and a tax boost | appears to be out of the question. * * * When the committee quit yes-; terday, it had under consideration’ a plan suggested by Rep. Frank Ikard (D-Tex) to match the deficit for the period ending June 30, 1961, through borrowing. iljness. He was a landscape gardener in hand, will enable us to meet our payroll at the end of this week.” (Continued From Page One) said John Hennessey, plant su- perintendent. The flooded Clinton GrerBewed| through the spillway, sending six inches of water swirling aroun ithe plant office. | Harold B, Euler, Pontiac Gen- eral administrator, ‘said the power- house came “dangerously near” ,to being knocked out by the flood. The hospital has auxiliary power in case of damage to the power house, s “Bat it developed that we didn’t have enough pumps to pump out the power house base- ment ourselves,’’ Euler said. Operations at the hospital were not interrupted because of the rain, he said, The basement at The Pontiac) Press was flooded by several inches of water. *® * * Working ankle-deep in. water, pressmen were able to save vir- tually all of about 7 tons of VICTOR’S REWARD daughter Merle Ellen awards a her father, Republican *Hirain L. —— jpay to’$3.08 and - to $2.93. iy 5 \ * f. ning @ U.S. Senate seat in Hawaii’s- ‘first state Eleven-year-old Victory kiss to Fong, for win-. election. The 52-year-old Chinese-American nessman will be the first person of Chinese be westry to serve in ON a mt t AP Wirephote | Pontiac Gasps for Air Atter 6-Inch Deluge | newsprint stored in, the basement. jOnly about 1,500 to 2,000 pounds 10 : { paper was destroyed, Polite reported only one” power line was down in Pontiac, on Por- ter street. | The intersection of Joslyn ave- nue and Montcalm street was temporarily under water and im- passable, they said. Other severe flooding occurred on Rockwell street and Wainut street, accord- ing to initial reports. One parking lot was so flooded ithat water ‘“‘was up to the doors” ‘of the cars parked there, accord- jing to an Oakland County sheriff's ‘deputy. This was behind the WKC Store on N. Saginaw street. | Areas surrounding Pontiac re- |ported steady rain this morning, ‘but little or no flooding. | In Rochester, lightning struck the fire department's siren on top of a downtown retail store, putting it out of order temporarily. In Troy, utility wires were downed earlier today by an elec- trical storm that struck about 5:30 a.m. Only light rain was reported in the Birmingham area. Heat, Shadtlies Plague Queen in Canada FREDERICTON, New Bruns- wick (UPI) — A heat wave took the starch out of Canada’s royal tour today and appeared likely to keep it informal] until Queen Eliza- beth and her husband, Prince Phil- ip, fly home from Halifax Satur- day, * First signs that the 15-mile royal journey was losing some of the have criticized it came yesterday when the Queen went hatless in Frederiction. Otheras cropped up during the day as the temperature soared to 98 degrees and the hu- midity became almost unbearable. The last straw came last night, when the Queen spent nearly as much time swatting shadflies from her face and neck with a race card as she did studying the form charts in the three sulky races she sat through with a crowd of 4,000. Other racegoers gave the Queen and Philip a big hand as they left —still swatting shadflies. Pleads Claustrophobia in Prison Term Appeal «- ST. LOUIS (AP)—A St. Louis car dealer under a four - year prison sentence for income tax jevasion asked U.S. Dist. Court Tuesday to reduce or suspénd his sentence or place him on proba- tion. stiffness for which some Canadians - ee ee a ee eee el eo .. nr ie —— a a. THE rota enase WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1959 Dee J Addn any ur “American Greenbacks Honored Here.” Greenbacks Still Good eo DALLAS, Tex. (UPD—A Dal- las store assured its clistomers today they don’t. need credit cards to live in today’s world. A sign in the window reads: Colorado became\a chief pro iducer of beet sugar'in 1899 when the beets were introduced from Germany. OF THE PORTABLE RADIOS TESTED BY LEADING INDEPENDENT TESTING LABORATORY ZENITH ROYAL 750 all transistor Portable Radic. Sic" high, 8° wide, 3%" deep, weighs 3 Ibs. 12% ozs. with batteries. Complete with Zenith Batteries & Earphone Set! E-Z TERMS | NEW TONE SENSATION | EXTRA VALUE FEATURES RF Stage—3 gang with flashlight batteries ° Mena Condenser to Bring e “Pin Point” Vernier Tuning in more stations better « Zenith Wavemagnet® An- tenna e Zenith 4° Speaker e Provision for Earphone Attachment © up to 300% More Sensitivity @ 400 milliwatts of maximum power output @ up to 350 hours of listening Polaris Chief on the Carpet »ithat there |as |jectives and seven as achieving [the objectives only partially.” Adm. Raborn Called In‘ to Explain Test Failures; for Sub Rocket WASHINGTON (AP) — Rear Adm. William F. Raborn, chief of the Navy's Polaris missile pro- gram, was called by the House Space Committee today t explain recent test failures in the rocket. “We know the Polaris stil] is in the embryonic state,” Chairman Overton Brooks (D- La) told a re- porter, ‘“‘but there appear to have) been some delays and we would) like to learn why.” Raborn is director of the Navy’s Special Projects Office which oversees developménts of the fleet ballistic missiles weapons system. *. * * Navy officials deny suggestions s been any delay in| development of the Polaris, a: solid’ - fueled missile designed ' for launching from submarines whether surfaced or submerged. * * * : * Original plans, they say, called for having the Polaris ready for combat fleet duty by 1965. But, they add, at the request of the Defense Department that target date has been cut to late 1960 by sacrificing some of the missile’s range. “That target date of late 1960 still stands,’’ a Navy spokesman said, ‘“‘but we've had to cut the range from 1,500 miles to 1,200.” To date, there have been 33 fir- ings of Polaris test rockets. Of) these, the spokesman described 24 “accomplishing- all. test ob- Two other missels exploded on launching. One Housetul, iof 150 Cats Gets Neighbors’ Goats GLENDALE, Calif. (UPD—Two —~ women who face trial on charges of keeping 147 more cats than the legal limit of three pleaded today | for ‘‘sympathetic understanding’’. from their annoyed neighbors. ~ “What will happen to our fam- ily,”” asked Aura Hardison. ‘We do, not breed our cats, but merely, provide a home for the homeless.” BUY THE BEST... BUY ZENITH QUALITY PONTIAC Wayne Gabert DRAYTON PLAINS Geed eeabocoins Shop 121 N. Saginaw fas Dl fe igh way ale Pheoss OF FE 41355 Phone: FE 5-6189 23-2601 yoodal Da RADIO & APP. * ti Vv = “omioy Condon's Radio & T Orisa But in court yesterday when the ; women were arraigned, Richard L.| | Vernon, who lives two houses away said: | “I know this is America and the | is IESE W. fe Lak Appli Phone: FE +133 Phone: FI "ibis 138 Rreotys a mee jwomen have certain liberties, but | | Lynn Jewelry ORCHARD LAKE ‘cckGuil Saasamnrs be has gone beyond reason. Ev- Phone:. 5-578) Fog Ayetiance Cramp Wieetea eryone has a right to a hobby but ° EM Sil a 3463 Auburn | ” Hod’s Radio Phone: EM 3-4 this defies convention. 770 Orchard Lake Phone: FE 4-3573 Phone: FE @-5841 ROCHESTER OxForD And Bob Meyer, another neigh- John Stefanski ist W. Heres io0 Mate Stree cease: Television & App. bor, said he attends Glendale Col- Oa Bost Phone: OL #214) Your Savings Earn i ‘ ~ 27° Rate Our best friends, OUR SAVERS, are telling their friends and neighbors about the EXTRA PROFIT and SURE SAFETY that are yours when you save at Pontiac Federal. Current YOU can enjoy these advanta g es by opening your account with us! | Pontiae 3 Federal Savings HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huron St. ROCHESTER: 407 Main St. PONTIAC: 16 E. Lawrence St. ‘DRAYTON: or Dixie mphey * * lege and finds studying hard going. | clip Chis Conpou FREE Sample Bottle of Beacon “THRILL” Furniture WAX —to the first 240 shoppers “that present this coupon. HOUSEWARES DEPT.—2nd Floor “USNR UR Se FR Over 350 to Some Items NE EERSS aun =. Clip This Conpon tiie Genuine SILVER-PLATED—S0c Value Butter Spreader that present this coupon. —to the first 144 customers that present this coupon. 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AYERS 5 EARLY! s BUFFERIN a5 MENNENS #5 KLEEN s a Harriet H. 5 ‘afict come, teat SS TABLETS a ® Electric PRE-SHAVE = = Denture Powder § & Liquid LUXURIA . served while our sup- MM —to the first 250 people + M 432 only. If you shave with M MH — to the first 100 customers : Ms —to the first 288 visitors @ ply lasts. Sorry, none @ that present this coupon. a ~ electric razor, get yours. a -- that present this coupon.’ ‘na 8 with this coupon to our— Hs to children : 4 DRUG DEPT.—Main Floor . a DRUG DEPT.—Main Fioor — s DRUG DEPT.—Main Floor @ COSMETIC DEPT.—Main Fleer s ny % "4 am BIRTHDAY BARGAIN “Plumber's Friend” SINK-DRAIN > PLUNGER Regular 39c Value 21° Limit 1 5%4-inch rubber force cup on 24-inch wood handle. High grade rubber plunger cup will last a long time. Ideal for sinks or drains. BIRTHDAY BARGAIN For Filling or Draining Tubs “DRAIN HOSES Reg. 79c OQ) 2S SSSR, ’ Rubber hose pitir couplings to fit standard laundry tub faucets. 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WHILE QUANTITIFS LAST! ° PAIL . s FREE--Dampening Bag with: Scouring Pad Holder ; Reg. 31.50 “KORDITE” Wire Center - Regular 29c Each : oy mg 9g: ° F €°: Plastic Clothesline : y ne es | cadet e bd tke 4 with a Bandle si gpalie: SA h ubbe rer hain iposanete from : “ry — ru rf ingers tr }\ 50 FEET : tent wisi cuts. ere pa ponte en aided : abe . teeeeeeeccsceesecccceseseccccees : Gloss e eavy Duty x : C : Shower Stall Mats : Cleaner seein) Regular $4.98 Value ° md Hii) Heavy duty all Po R ¢ Genuine ‘KORDITE’ © Hie i | rubber me jnches eg. eee 3 iain fun'or wow: Bg gC. oo dampening plastic cnn, prevents of Limit 2 cans. . WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1959 THE PONTIAC PRESS, { ‘ 121,000 Students Sis. we” S22 Many U.S. Officers . |Finch’s sweetheart says it was Who Pulled the Trigger ‘Mrs. Finch who drew the gun. a in Finch Slaying Case? | / J | * e ; , , Is Queen’s Canadian Tour ms SO d : f ° e d 9 Mtocd kage Calif. CAP)— |roust — _ ~ _—" . a Finch's housemaid says/hearing for Dr. Finch, 41, charg Modern Form o Regi ge saragh og egrof ordre igem pretty socialite was slain, But Dr.'fied Tuesday. .” ‘ WAC AP SCIENTIFICALLY TESTED c that college student loans aver-) , to Apply for Loans ‘aged orily about $150 prior to pass. Likely to BeRetired ; jage of the federal aid law. WASHINGTON (AP) ~— Nearly, | WASHINGTON (AP)—Compan-' 121,000 college and university stu- Ypsilanti School Hea jion bills to let the armed forces’ dents are expécted to seek loans Gets U. of M. Position peste several thousand officers, on, By TOM A, CULLEN :. under. the National Defense Edu-| a : _ |pensions as a means of reducing | LONDON (NEA) —“‘Are they ; cation Act during the next school ime ca. Se te jan Overabundance of them wasjtrying to kill off the Queen?” I year, ee eae, . |passed Monday night by the Sen-|wrote six weeks ago at the start * * * jappointment of Evart Ardis, Ypsi- This estimate was given a news/!anti superintendent of schools, as ate. of Queen Elizabeth's 15,000 mile conference Tuesday by Secretary director of appointments and occu- ~ * * tour of Canada® of Welfare ‘Arthur S. Flemming, Pational information. _ would eliminate surplus I was referring to the crowded who said the total would be about} He succeeds H. Glenn Ludlow regular Navy commanders and program that Her Majesty was 5% per cent of anticipated full, who resigned to accept a position carats and surplus Marine supposed to carry out at break- time enrollment of about 2,200,000.|at Indiana University. \Corps colonels and lieutenant Col-lneck speed. ; eee | re lonels. This would open the way) i fr 5 » yep ie | -} en’ 4 . Flemming said preliminary re-| Columbus, Ohio, is on the east |" a some afbcers:) ary seen mame cng easier ports indicated the loan applica-'bank of the Scioto River. - _| The other would provide new| Would-be regicides than of loyal ‘machinery for weeding out men|4Commonwealth ministers solicit. who hold those ranks in all the ous of their sovereign’s health armed services whose work is, and happiness, I wrote. |determined to be less than top) ability. e Gospel Meeting , A Gospel Meeting is now in progress at the Church of Christ 87 Lafayette St. ‘ and will continue through August 2 ~ 7 PAUL WALKER A young Evangelist trom Lawrenceburg. Tenn.. will be the speaker each evening at 7! SERMONS THIS WEEK: Today, it appears my concern "|was well founded. Not only is Her |Majesty ill, but she is returning [to England with Prince Philip jeartier than anticipate. | Indisposed with an upset |stomach, she was forced to lop [two days off of her Yukon tour, Now the Queen and Prince Philip ‘are shortening their tour even further by flying home, instead ‘of returning in the royal yacht Britannia. Politicos Willing to Name Dam for Opponent WASHINGTON (AP) — Two members of Congress who were ‘politically opposed to Douglas Mc- Kay, former secretary of the in- terior who died last week, want to’ name a dam in Oregon after him. | | * * ¥ LIKE A DOCTOR’S : STETHOSCOPE-ON YOUR WATCH No haphazard watch repairing here! We don't hang your watch en a board for a week or two to check it. No, indeed! When you bring your watch in, we ; | put it on the WatchMaster and this amazing elec- tronic instrument prints a record telling us exactly | eee * * * Anxiety to see their children is the official reason given for the sudden curtailment of the royal Bills to name Green Peter Dam | what is wrong (see the “dad-ot”, above). ee i . |tour. This excuse fools no one . on the middle Santiam River in|, - i i j Wednesday Evening—“The Pot of Gold” honor of McKay have been intro-| We can then estimate proper charges, immediately, Thursday Evening—“What Musi | Do duced by Sen. Richatd .L. Neu-| One only has to talk to those adding nothing by guess-work. When your watch who have accompanied the Queen, ne to look at the: SSSNNGeeesaenavneceeee es WHERE YOUR “INTRIGUE” TAILORED CURTAINS | ... sparkling white or beige Dacron with bands of “Ondule” fibers sheep ON FRONT-END | BRAKE AND ¢ Align front wheels Add fluid if necessary. Ad- e just brake shoes. | SERVICE Firestone DOLLAR BUYS i Rte MORE (eos ove or 3 ree rs | 1'2 | F R FE F COMPLETE CAR SAFETY * Pack wheel bearings | Here's what, we doe | $5.69” INSPECTION AT FIRESTONE . St eae ee Available for all Distinctively design- ed curtains that are sheer elegance at your windows... sparkling white or beige dacron with ‘Ondule’ fiber bands for a charming new ma ¢ FREE 60-DAY TRIAL OFFER Exhaust Tail Pipes > Faulty shock ‘ Priced 29 _~— look => Completely absorbers are extremely from fe washable, easy to * | DANGEROUS, and are | | ws f “P E Priced 8 - care for. From ']), SIZE 6.70.15, tubed type, ||: not easily detected until / lagged me ely Seat 8 Waite’s superb cur- _ plus tax and pipes, UP tain collection, trade-in tire. [| it's too late. See us. 1 ae fnathll thoes. . Be s got : 2:3 rs ceenpeays cot af epi. as Aig 5 ae Ae, see The use of high quality . ; fd batts ae ieee, WN Senaee or re eae seni, aera nasa A i 7 —— ~~ ~~ ~ a a zinc : fore your old one goes ©}: ~ = is _ tos gives long life. a | dead. Save time, trouble. = WAITE’S HAS A COMPLETE SELECTION ° . EA STE at i# hoa oe koe ae, 4 Sight 73 eaninss paar aap cele ' i e $ 0 4 @ 0 @ $ : 146 W : H a : - oe _ OF CURTAIN AND DRAPERY HARDWARE Sok ' : fi ME ae ds Ee . ' ® uron FE 2-9251 | Waite’s Curtains . . . Fourth Floor. . : - - ‘4 1. y . ;' ae 2. eS ——- ¥ bi see 4 i . eg = ¥ + FSS oS a oS ee eS ee eee! ee”) ee ee ae ef Ts - . Al ts Lae ce Me i y pee ee ae» 4 ky iat 6 a egg ge 6 GE Ys SS ger . - “ + : . eine . ' . ‘ Vine ' ae ee ae" - sj 2a i f : ; \ _'THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1959 | Sey Russia Will Send {'ockets “equipped with research State Fisheries Official (Petviser since 196 He will News for Nosy Neighbor| ~ hill ee) apparatus” to other planets “‘is : chief “df the field management) , Peak in Des Moines “} The tot). number of cases“in Rockets to Planets Soon jw quite feasible.” Named fo New Post section of the Fish Division, ¢. ‘f.|' SAN PEDRO, Calif. (UPI) — DES MOINES, Iowa WP) the county has risen to an even LONDON (UPD o Russia will “We shall soon witness such LANSING (UPD—M. J. DeBoer, Yoder, Roscommon, regional fish-| A sign visible above a flourish- | Health officials said Tuesday the| 1°. With 85 of them in Des Moines. |.ond unmanned rockets to other|flights,” he said. a 4-year veteran of Michigan|*Ti¢s supervisor ae become) ing growth of weeds int. front of : polio epidemi¢ in the Des Moirles planets of the solar system “‘soon,"| Evidence of the “complete feasi-lfisheries work, has been named) = {Sbetes supervisor. a home here reads: “To one of area is past its peak: “Naval stores” ig a trade termja Soviet scientist said Tuesday. “(pjlity” of such flights was “thelhead of a new Conservation De- - my disgusted © neighbors who Dr. James F. Speers, Des for turpentine and resin. It dates} Academy of Sciences memier|precision ‘with which the Sovict|partment section to coordinate} Abundance of rabbits reaches its| yon mind his own business, Moines-Polk County health direc-| from the time when wooden sailing} Anatoly Blagonravov, in a state-\cosmic rocket, which passed mear|work of the Fish Division's fieldjpeak about every 8% years, ac- p ; tor who deseribed the epidemic| véssels needed them to lubricate aon. broadcast by Moscow radio|the moon, was brought onto the de- activities. cording to Australian goverment I will clear the were when I as the nation’s worst three weeks rope to raise or lower the sails. and monitored here, said sending|sired trajectory,”’ he said. DeBoer has been hatcheries oda van am good and ready. ~ ODDS & ‘ENDS | CHUCK-A-BOOTS—SLIP-ONS—TIES ‘6.99 “Still a few outstanding values in sleeeeeetnen meneame aetna annette ee ee " Protect Your Valuable Rersioais SPECIALS ° e-em amet ene th epee ener rte ee ftp hr Se ee ee ee ee 4D. 2 Sweaters Golf Shoee—French Shriners and Bese‘Bhees” en il 7 ! From MOTH DAMAGE and : — HAVE THEM READY for WEAR imag . i MILK q ‘in the FALL . ¥ Caos ‘ GLASS ja | se 3100. _.|m | LUNCHEON \SUMMER-SPECIAL PRICES | Woot Skins’ (HE (effective until August 15th) \/ (Less Than Stk Pleats) 5 Fi Gilt Wrapped Two Locations to Serve You: © DOWNTOWN 26 E. HURON ST. hee a te ie SUB-TEEN PLAYWEAR Shorts Bermudas Slacks Shirts From a | 50 Values to $4.99 See our wonderfully cool and smart collec- tion of; summer play wear. for the subteen. “All drastically reduced. | ; New Fall Dresses. Arriving Dail Milk glass is a heritage of American craftsmanship, and Colony creates . this luncheon'set in the finest tradition. Featuring the “HARVEST” Pat- fa 1 BH tern, a finely embossed design of grapes and i” Be leaves, this set also has the beauty of a won- V, = |e derful moderate price. )) = 15 piece set consists of one 14',” platter; four oe ae esqges th 0 fANK Ys : Piastic MEN’‘S CHIFFON ! ‘ Refrigerator | «- TIES beet re LE he SQUARE | 67° [2 *1") \37% | FREE |BOUDOIR| ‘Siig’ ff | 2 CLARK BARS with 1 Ib. Continental LAMPS DECANTER “ Caramels at lee Tee 15 Piece Authentic Milk Glass LUNCHEON SET p--nsdineetoonedhpeemnapmmuaifamnes tonsnaspeceipennjpemeemtenipsenal pe nanan enantceiintn peatpey ‘ } j a a i aaninninninememenammmnaentiinen maaan edie ee ie ee ne i i a aa ain’ Se ne a ae a Oe oe ey eee aeee nee eee ERNE eer ene PSR ee NS SY rere enrEY eeerner es re fer Sub-Tesa 5 eC i 91%,” luncheon plates; 4 cups, 4 saucers and -Huron Center .- apie aatchiae sugar and creamer. Pontiac ‘ig DOT oer | SE A ee 39° Lb. D tw 5h 295° tem ane ee ee ne en ee eee ee ee oe rr =Sssssee a REET | LADIES” | 120: Sina Bonen if : | feepietesy Cleaned, Whole | mer | | asi <<" BLOUSES ICE TEA ) | | i + | 57c ea. or GLASSES HW Ae 77 | 254"! 8» 77° seeneiind Atiniti eet meee name came amen eee ne —— ee “ ot | ROLLING | Ladies Mesh Large ° H = opIns | PANTIES | | POT. 1 | 29¢ ea. or - HOLDERS | c 00 ‘Ahr | Hi DL | Ae 84) 3 B3e ) tH r Wire Mesh Ladies’ | SF 7 | ip, WH | POT | JAMAICA| AITCHEN fF i | CLEANERS | SHORTS | TOOLS Hi 1 ? for 66° Vk 37° 35 - Metal | CANVAS | M (ANY | snes] coves |stats and Summer 3 pr. for | closeouts : at savings up to 3 La ST 30% | 3-Diamond Solid Light Meat Extra Fancy e | Save 4c : : in| ! sahantineentinte ampeneeenae re ae Sn eee eee ae a anna seen onan LE LET COT CTE LT ET AT TT OT — et oe “ ee eae See ae + i Halve : i ges 4 | | , ait 11 ~ eS es. : oe, | E Hunts Sliced | or Halves IN Gise PEACHES ™ 256° |] q} Break O'Day Golden ares 2 | 4 { B | | Plump, Tender | \Large Ears 7-Oz. Can. Eve ry Day —-more people are awake ning to KRESGE 4 a ; + 4 value > ‘ ane ’ lmee>s . ‘ - Ghee — shame neaederenpeniaaaadeaer Gasenlpeat anadueendene peed ahaamdonsngeenGeendineniprand antpeemadponte anton nahensebreney > ce sae “ > se \ ceteeaielitein pie a Re | i anaes ane : SEA ene ae . ° sald naeeateemtnate ati emanates on gee timo ea eel deen imeiamiea een ci eetinneeineien eeinemeeeeeteniameneemadine etme aiieie ame ameaiasemmamemnemenammamemme ton sma meme cian eae a eS ss niet ees sa eee ome eee = saeiie: tition, ati idee eet ta ~ : ac Ce th SO SO A SU OOD Ee OND VAN a SA HE a page i \ ; of 4 a i \ , ‘ \ i - ee . z ; < ‘ sa \ + F 7 < * ij r ry? X ‘ ‘ ‘ , + ‘ be ve ‘ ‘ = \ ‘ \ | \ : t a ‘ i “ : j i f | ‘ & ‘i . } i | i Stop -Shop and Save MSU Ed aieka wan Tn Ta Bay Ciy izes Sto [a statement last week from Keithlike to Attend Opening wil return to Washington the same) A¢ :\ Formosan Universities — to develop thelr academic P| buch on River Work ass eccemdinge > stb co Pan-American Games ET 6 €.2! AE 8 REI y Agpt t ‘t's a Bas . Pig 4 foo’ | s : a THE PONTTAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, J ULY 29, 1959 % ; EAST LANSING (UPD—A pee| Included in the party are dean BAY CITY (UPL — A speciai|is “almost cettainly dead for at-|* WASHINGTON w'— President The ceremonies will take place Yiminary survey of two Furmosan|of international programs, Glen|citizens’ committee will launch alother year.” Eisenhower will attend the opening|at Soldier Field where the games ities will be made by three|/L. Taggart; Karl T. Wright, pro-|move to break a stalemate delay-| Tanner n State University fessor of agricultural economics|ing «the Saginaw River channel |study . 2. . poo elapse -apchaet’ kakoien omiiee aetaee sured to furnish the| Press Secretary James C. Hag-| Manufacture of plastics began in i Stanley P., Wron-| Committee members were named |federal government with assur-jerty told reporters Tuesday the|the United States/in about 1869 admis tous Gacletd' atbaciete quatre. of chain. tater Gy Vineet lanes’ Tone. ances against damage to two rail- will stay only for the|when a formula was used to make MSU aiding the Uni-/tion. | The appointments were spurred by|road bridges over the river. opening ceremonies. and |celluloid. said the committee willlof the Pan-American games in|will be held. ~— YES, This IS The END-0.MONTE r = “Thrift Scotch Days” at TEL-HURON =|] HEY KIDS! RIDE THE AMUSE-. MENT THRILLS WHILE THE FOLKS ARE SHOPPING. GET YOUR FREE HALF. PRICE COUPONS FROM ANY TEL- HURON MERCHANT REPEAT OF A. SELL OUT Mid-Summer and Transitional Fabrics inctaaing Drip Drys, Wash ‘n’ Wear... . Cottons, Sheers, Blends Val. to $1.19 yd... . . SEW ’n SAVE 2oirc sess TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER TENNIS with Built-In arch supports os 99 || Blue & Red , Reg. $2.99 , , 7 | SRS TCSRENs i tr Butte tuer 6 | SALE OF SALES | fm Tel-HuronCenter [§ +. 1 J ULY at your favorite shopping center EASY-FREE PARKING oe ee enna apn nereneiparnt nde ine Reap tr ne re ee nn a ee nT a a Ce Ce ee eT CT Ce ee ee | Py Sener On een ee ne Ce Cae SAVE 10% on OUR FAMOUS NAME SWIM SUITS $@57. SE formerly $10.95 to $25 | WASH & WEAR COTTON CORD | SLACKS | PRE-CUFFED and READY TO WEAR | SLIMMING LASTEX! QUICK-DRY COTTONS! OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF SUITS FROM MAKERS FAMOUS FOR OUTSTANDING SWIM } DESIGNS. SHEATHS, SIDE DRAPE - “a : SILHOUETTES. IN SOLID COLORS, PRINTS, Berens a NOVELTY PATTERNS. SIZES 32-38. # ° ac t | \ ST Cone enn —s 2 for 5 Waist Sizes 28 to 42 Cuff Lengths 28 to 34 Lt. Blue and Lt. Tan Colors Sanforized A TREMENDOUS VALUE AT THIS uy SALE OF SA | SUMMER COATS and SUITS | DRASTICALLY REDUCED formerly $11 to $39.98 { LONG COATS! SHORT COATS! IN SUMMER-WEIGHT COTTON... PRINTS, CHECKS, WAFFLE WEAVES AND WOOLS! SUITS "IN RAYONS AND COTTONS . . . MANY STYLES! HURRY! — een pentane at ~ At a a et eg i lp ee en a ne —* ee - f RAINCOATS LEATHER COATS $5 formerly $11 to $19.98 - Sy Ans i eee Poplins, tweeds, plaids, iridescent checks. BN S STORES. DURING OUR . SEMI- ANNUAL SALE! SEE PAGE 33 FOR DETAILS! | Imported Cabretta leathers in long, shortie styles. hla TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER . _ open to 9 p. m. monday, thursday, friday, saturday a i i on — oy or Meenas Ses ae ee i is : #1 ‘ai i} we”. | THE PONTIAC PRESS, vanisibale, JULY 29, 1959 | 7 Ei = | ay Ws Prominent Scientist, 61, eins in Pontiac: and Nearby Areas iteimc” {Chicago Mayer, JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) “— Succeeds O'Brien - lot Saginaw, drowned rus”, {| il aaa ‘ V; 3 ‘ \ MRS. HARRY BICKFORD | MRS. WILLIAM KILGORE | Figin Lucas, all of Detroit, Mrs.| — 7 ee Cars’ Tagged | LANSING w@ — Irving B, Feld-|ter at nearby Anderson Park. He ° “Mrs. Harry (Elizabeth) Bick-| ALMONT — Service’ for Mrs. | Esper Calvert and Mrs. Orville | hoard of Varian Associates, died man of Detroit, an assistant at-|“@5 @ 80m of‘Mr, and Mrs. Joseph ford, 77, of 115 Raeburn St., died winiam (Evelyn V.) Kilgore, 78,| ‘Hunter, both of Attica, Mrs.) ITuesday night of a heart attack CHICAGO (AP)—Detective Jack|torney general general specializing in pro- mares of Saginaw, ion — following @ six-month ill jet = street, will be ine | Chasies Laughlin a ea ayes aboard the cruise ship Northwind/Muller, the police department’s|bate practice, has been named act- ae wes ber of the Fi t 1 p.m. Friday at Muir Brothers: 12 grandchildren and nine great-/rear 2 a ee Semen esto tie aie — SS _— a ‘Dar Singer ps tl ie — was a member 0 rs lies Home here. Buria! will be) l | Pervee- tagged Mayor Richard J. Daley’s haba sr ah moelay, wd fay Powe! ced in ale Baptist Church and other church in the Novesta Cemetery, Deford. . dens ceirenyay Mater also nr Associates at the Palo™ Alto, shiny, new black limousine mi “ a ies Sumer G « » = MIRACLE MILE , appointment by Gov, Williams does| resort city last weekend, it was . organizations. | Mrs. Kilgore died yesterday at a |Calif, electronics company said She is survived by ber husband; | (her home cacetes a short illness. PATRICIA JANE SABOV his wife, Dorothy, was with him. day, right in paae ty Hall. |not require Senate confirmation. jreported Tuesday. The Pi By, two daughters, Mrs. Bante Crass 1 Surviving besides her husband} “OXFORD — Service for Path Varian was credited with in-| oon Muller ‘Seote out 2 ticket her death was not learned. She See ey eaucile thar of ate. three daughters, Mrs. Lolaligne Sabov, nine-year-old daugh-| venting the klystron tube, am elec-|foy' the car which he tid’ ween], AB, average watch ‘ticks five pet = all orraana a Pics View . Fl "2 'Parks of Rochester, ., Otiter of Mr. and Mrs. Kornel Sabov,|tronics instrument vital to radar.|, no-parking. zone near the La —_ — Drayton zi - a's Ps od |Shotwell of gees . Jack|of $95 Glaspie Rd., is pending at|/He held more .than 100 patents in!saie street entrance. i sie Seagal our _ "| Powell of Almont; five sisters; 15 Bossardet and Reid Funeral Home microwave electronics and ap- &¢ ¢ , Mol dchild: ich, i % . eee ‘grandchildren, and 24 great- -“grand- here. plied physics and advised several Muller, whose normal i . Hulda Nagel in Sovth Dakota, Mrs | tilaren Patricia was killed’in an auto-/#9vernment committees on scie-| ment is'a far North Side police ASSORTED MEN’S AND LADIES Gusta Lippert in Wisconsin; three ALBERT E. RUDDOCK mobile accident at, the intersec-| % = his brother, Sigurd and | Ustrict, was in the Loop to appear ; brothers, John, Albert and George) arrica TOWNSHIP — Service|tion of M24 and _Destae roads igor Guadel ta cath “heat begpentig hSed pegatie ent A S Frerichs; all ef Pontiac, for Albert E. Ruddock, 85, of 4009/8 p.m. yesterday ‘million dollar company 11 years! eaaee the (iy Comiy teal The body is at Huntoon Funeral ‘Imlay City Rd. will be held at, | ago. and tagged the mayor eae ti 1 Year Cudiuaiee Home. 2 Friday ‘at Baird Funeral/f ; ‘ 4!’ Former Singer Dies | Varian Associates manufactures|93 other autos for being illegally SAMUEL KELLEY - 1 a Burial] will be in the Attica | * 9g ultra high frequency microwave! ed. . € Samuel Kelley, 55, of 93944 Bos-| Cemetery. DETROIT «—Funeral service tubes and has subsidiaries in| Daley learned about the ticket ton Ave., died of a stroke yesterday, Mr. Ruddock, a prominent Attica | will be held tonight for Charles|Boston and Summit, N.J. [when he returned to his office. He afternoon after an illness of sev- farmer, died early today in Lapeer! Cariile former singer billed in’ ‘said it was a surprise, but that ;County General Hospital after a! ] ths a ‘ ; the parking fine would be paid. = hae * acl: employed a prolonged illness, He had been a the 1930s as the ‘‘silver voice of Ex- Detroit Attorney Dies ie a0 tagged the ear of ane member of the Attica Methodist radio.” Carlile, 95, died Monday; ppprorr w—Mrs. Catherine elm Walter E. McCarron. A Surviving are his wife, Rose;|Church for 53 years, jof a heart attack while serving. ‘Donovan, 91, a former Detroit at-| block from City Hall he hung | "2.99 KRESGE SERVICE CENTER 66 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC | (DOWNTOWN STORE) 3-DAY WATCH REPAIR SERVICE three daughters, Mrs. Jay Helton) Surviving are his wife, Violet E.;,as a pall bearer fat the funeral) torney, died Monday of injuries) tickets on two cars which he said of Hampton, Tenn., Mrs. William) seven daughters, Mrs. Matthew\of a friend. He was a native of| suffered in a two-car collision Sun-|were illegally parked by traffic policemen on duty nearby. Ogg and Norma J. Kelley, both of | Quirk, Alberta Ruddock and Mrs. ‘Cumberland, RL day in Grosse Pointe, Pontiac; five sons, Sylvan M. and Sa Ta a Robert L., both of Miami, Fla., ceo a) LAVAWAY gy | EVERY WEEK A BIG »..., SESHE | DRE-SEASON LAYAWAY SALE! yyy'spen vat! = and Luther, both of Pontiac; and) Saturday a sister, . Service will be held at 3 p.m.! 1 : 3 ‘Friday at the Donelson-Johns Fu «a | A. Werth Twice the Price 4 3 neral Home with burial following ° < in Waterford Center Cemetery. | B Q . Hot Drop-Forged imported ORIN LEITNER | Service for Orin Leitner, 64, of | 1449 Oakwood, Sylvan: Lake, will | be held at 1:30 -p.m. Thursday at the Pursley Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Lake, Cemetery. ‘Mr. Leitner died unexpectedly DOWNTOWN Monday in Pontiac General Hos- | PONTIAC pital. DRAYTON & JOHN MELKONIAN PLAINS Service for John Melkonian, 69, TEL-HURON of 57 Mary Day Ave., will be held CENTER at 11 a.m, Friday at the Donelson-| RocMESTER -Johns Funeral Home, Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. neaeett SCISSOR SALE! Snow S2its |: \ — Q98 1998 |, —s ‘4 Pras sou S20 Be RO oe OM A: ’; gene iy hexce at ae coe” * TRAM ES GIR il FB tee I Ion A. 34" Cuticle 8. 4” Mail Clippers C 7° Bent Dressmaker D. 7° Barber iI I LE i ARLE Me STi A ase ome Surviving are his wife, Rose: a MILE Scissors £7" Sewing F. Barrel . son, Richard of Pontiac; three Nippers G. 34" Embroidery Sdssers : = pe 7 serie eo tore an A wonderful collection of cozy togs for tiny people a ee a ; ' born, Mrs. Lioyd J. : ; : : Soli C Made of 4 of Pontiac and Mary Melkonian at Infants’ 12-24 mot ... at budget prices! ‘A wide selection of fully lined acd Gegace mated cael o bell it - . heme; two grandchildres; a broth- r oe 7 : a rue sharp edge. Nickle plated with = er, Sahaz of Pontiac. and a sister, Nylon Teffeta styles in warm, lightweight nylon or soft Dyersburg e gleaming, precision fish = = Ladies . .. : several NOW at our low sale price! a : Mrs. Koron Rahanian of Detroit $7.98 » y i . SER, f- S . oy i Mr. Melkonian died early yes- : $ : bh / Yio ® - aa = 1- or 2-piece styles in bright colors. | terday morning at Pontiac General Hospital of a heart ailment. He had been ill several months. | MRS. WILLIAM DAVIS ; GOODRICH — Service for Mrs. i William (Lyra ‘J.) Davis, 89, of ARMIN NE THURSDAY ONLY! t-6x 2-Piece Snow Suits .. . $8.96-510.98 2-4 1-Piece Snow Suits ....... $3.98 Eating’s good at KRESGE’S : 10285 Hegel St., will be held at 2 ’ p.m. tomorrow at the C. F. Sher- man Funeral Home, Ortonville | - Burial will be in the Goodrich} -—~ Rarer am FOUNTAIN sen is | Rose Marie Reid y, both of Goodrich; a oward H. Davis of Jackson, | Roxanne SLICED BREAST «: TURKEY LUNCHEON is Motorist Shot at Se ? Oe fe ee See ' Dri : : T oo cold turkey breast ices wi to salad, cris ¢ Driving in Troy yl= coleslaw, sliced romaro, hme. | B gtd — A Detroit motorist Childs eta swou’ J Gil 24 made roll and butter. , | ; his truck b -Piece Suit now Suit e ie hn aoe en er) 2Tone Nylow Lightweight Nolen Dyers Pie -) COFFEE with pure ceam......10¢ | | |. Curtiss M. Anderson Jr. told | $9.98 - $5.98 er ‘ police here yesterday he stopped ~ when he heard a noise which he thought a flat tire and dis- SEES "| Back to School Beauties | | at BUDGET PRICES! PAYDAY ‘| LOANS | GIRLS’ 3-6x FINAL SUMMER © — CLEARANC Women’s DRESS ES fcnding \ ‘ 7 ewe Sleeveless BLOUSES ‘OT... 2 For $4 . Men’s | Boys’ | Girl’ | J ti $50 for 2 wks ~»- only 70¢! with 24 mos. to repay 2 CASH You | Reray im | napaY me RECEIVE | 2 Weexs | 4 weexs | Jantzen | | Swim | #) i pe meat See Sd "ASSOCIATES | Wtinkle-Shed Gingham, Plaid, Solid __LOAN COMPANY | little Or No iron Dri-Don Finish in DRAYTON PLAINS: IMPORTED BROADCLOTH a The “darlings” of the deb set... and CALL: OR 3-1207 | mom too, ‘cause there's 40 litle care! : | care! e im PONTIAC: Favorite cottons in several colors with Seine Le ponte : i | 125-127 N. Saginaw white, plaid or solid collar and cuffs, and _ ll \\ : a | | . CALL: FE 2.0214 tic-rac, button or tab trim. Sizes 3 to 6x. . Build your Blotae: wardrobe now a ‘ '| at savings you can’t afford to ‘ i 2255 $. T : ae 8. banged | pass up during our final summer USE A LION’ | | CALL: FE 89644 =| *REGISTERED TRADEMARK eons prices! ARGE | \ OPTION S. S. KRESGE COMPANY a : ' sp Raa SRN . ’ ei is : ii f é Fé { r } y. © 5 | ‘ A £ ‘ ; | t ot | in THE PONTIAC PRESS, | WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1959 ' \ Second Telescope (cs: Saute", ars) They'll Precede Humans Into Space : Teacher Charge then Om will ‘be made later in the sunmer. lon Curriculum 100 Into Space. Se nyAnimal Astronauts Get Training} Race Discrimination 7 School Study |e staat see ' _ will study various aspects of — (UP! —The|Project, known as Stratoscope I, FALLS CHURCH, Va. ® - A / oMASHIN pail S aoend will provide them with new infor- tendice @ Jepapler duncadl LANSING (UPI) = Michigan | What is taught in the schools with the view of improving and telescope into the stratosphere by|™ation about how energy boils to} = By JOSEPH L. MYLER tronauts will experience. Elec- “Every effort,” uml Spokes-|her application for a job in the| Parent! saale this year will get troadening the instruction. . -balloon early next month ‘to glean the surface from the sun's interior ; : played ) —- Animal trodes ir bodies will/man said, “will be made to get the h School eq} 2 Chance to help determine what 6 ¢*« * ; and the role sun ts WASHINGTON (UPI — Animal planted in their ies W Falls Chure! s was reject | new information about the fantastic and thelr magnetic surrounings astronauts are being trained for/report by radio how their hearts, monkeys back alive and undam- ly because of her race. Will be taught to their children | areas slated for special atten- -o- + energy released by the sun. ioe a long series of rocket flights which lungs, and other vital organs react aged. Yukiko T hi 35 in the public schools, Superinten- | tion include programs for gifted "Phe 12-inch telescope, aimed and|°? nerey emissio will precede launching of the first) under the rigors of violent acceler- f * & Se : * "| dent of Public Instruction Lynn | children, and the effects of pre- focused frony the ground with the human astronaut into space. ution and the incbetween condition| In the fifth Little Joe firing, a|made the statement in response! wy paruett said today. eae: amarante aid of television, will be sent aloft! Steel mills consume most of the) pic phase of Mercury, the of weightlessness chimp will undergo an ordeal—jto questions about a story on the “Ht is a is ath from Lake Elmo, Minn., Aug. 5!world nickel supply. National Aeronautics ‘and Space| Wallops Island is a miniature|triggering of the escape tockets—jsituation in the Northern Virginia) — SURI Dat thenp te | gree . secre ype manned satellite Canaveral on a sand spit off the which everybody hopes the human Sun of nearby Arlington. roject, is scheduled to get under/eastern shore of Virginia which/|astronauts will not have to exPe-| <4. quoted school : rin- way at Wallops Island, Va., next|the space agency inherited from | rience. tendent Irvin Schmitt Phin seo on the old National Advisory Com-| The “‘abort button” will be! she lost out “simply because I The animal menibers of the tittee on Aeronautics. [Pushed in the WattoPs ana’s cap.| Bot a caucasian,” | ‘Miércury team consist of rhesus In the Little Joe series sition trol center when the ae pa Mre. Tamashiro is a third. The N ewest 28 age Wad, atin gut Hed = . er bat with | pce ge ger al are will generation American born in Or. %) & | wa agency ried into a new. dim : f B ) ky ag ta a on Ady jactual rocket flights. Little Joe|equal the greatest pressure to| Hawaii. She hglds bachélor’s andj] 7§ North Saginaw St. or Baby care, Wheaton oa or of a one-stage solid-| Which a manned capsule might|/master’s degrees from edagseresi ls — oo Frigg gacr = = focket capeble of developing | be subjected in event of an -Atlas College in Illinois, has done grad- no Fed. Tax nes ‘ launching failure at the, Cape. uate work at New York University, = “a going ht training at Holo. [nearly 256,000 pounds of thrust. ay man ag pl — in New | It will be by far the most powerful | This has been figured at 800|and taught for two years in Mid-' Weil. Mexico. rocket ever fired from the little) pounds per square inch, compared | dletown, N.Y., before moving here | : island. ito less than 15 pounds at sea level. ‘last February. | {EN Long before any of the seven The first Little Joe capsule shot/If the escape rockets work right, | | == human members of the Mercury) he th ha-|they will lift the capsule free of Lb. Pears Snached int obit some tb atest ofthe enaoe echir/P gower They wil then be Detroit Steel Production if Exe, Up wy) pss time. in 1961, the monkeys and, jettisoned, and a pre-set sequence ree chimps will have checked out the | In the next three shots, each (of events will drop the capsule at 24 Per Cent Capacity “SPARE RIBS * 29° Meaty complicated systems being devel-| separated by a period of weeks, jand its chimp pilot into the sea) «DETROIT (UPI) — Detroit area) oped to bring them back alive. | rhesus monkeys will ride Little joff Wallops where recovery craft steel production, greatly curtailed | The tentative schedule: Joe rockets in flights extending | wil] be waiting. by the nationwide steel strike, will —Rocket flights from Wallops, 4s me as 120 vasige = and total about 36,900 tons this week or sland by three rhesus monkeys,| 160 miles out to test the cap | — A , only 24.2 per cent of capacity. . ae al dzcaricnn,bor, and one chimp) sule’s air conditioning and other |50 Drown in Pakistan Pat coe the mills cparctad at Bazley's Pork Tender aboard life-supporting capsules i “life-support” equipment. KARACHI, Pakistan W# — About 23.3 per cent of capacity. Cloveriane, NECK - PORK PORK —— hoatiped wo] | These shots also will be a test,|50 persons were reported drowned BUTTER BONES LIVER STEAKS under conditions similar to those' yesterday when a large passenger Atlantic flier Charles Lindbergh The Wallops — celts acl lof an actual orbital flight, of the|boat capsized in the flooded Taw-|was born in Detroit, Mich., but his Lb. ah ms, 10° Lb. 25° Lb. 99° ee see es 3 eit Angus and” stem for recovering the capsule|wai River about 600 miles north|teen-age home was Little Falls, u and its ivi iving ‘occupant. of Karachi. Minn. icontinue for fives or six months. | __ _ PRACTICAL! This new, unique baby spoon is The chimp will test the escape - ee cence nn in the ultimate i tecti y hild’s health hanism for separating the cap-| - ; : e ultimate in protecting your child’s hea _ mec WANT MORE FOR | Your MONEY ous 4 during the feeding. Now with the Tippy Taster ae oe cea — nn | mother has her own tasting bowl built right after launching—and | parachuting in to the other end of the spoon. Heavily silver | it pont pr caring hi ea iball| | : : ee : -—Brief trips by chimps on a plated and smoothly. polished. Tippy Taster is Wiistic missile trajectory of about! scientifically designed for your baby‘s precious 100 miles aboard capsules carried| scientifically designed for your baby’s precious jaloft from Cape Canaveral, Fia.,| iby Army Redstone bodsters: | These trips are scheduled for 1960. | —Similar chimp flights from | the Cape with an Air Force Atlas booster later in 1960. —Finally, a satellite flight by a chimpanzee in a Mercury eapsule hurled into orbit by an _ ]| Atlas—also in 1960 if all goes | well. In all of Gese flights the animals will be subjected to all the stresses | and dangers which the human as- JUST SAY “CHARGE-IT" .. . no money down, pay-out of i incom e with Grants Revolving Credit; more credit as you pay. | JEWELERS 16 W. Huron FE 2-0294 TS a aa ee THE LAST WORD IN PRICE SACRIFICE! | BACK-TO-SCHOOL PERCALES... | 9 | : YA gh yo ~~ CLOSELY-WOVEN IN 75 TUBFAST 5 aia pe iC | | ADT BZ 2 PATTERNS AND HUES Kah i ae | 4500 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD im) {eS : ; mus : : From the Stock Room — Under the Counters — In the Drawers! = Carwren Every Item Cut to Sell! — Thrown Out for What It Will Bring! | | cane) UN pe _ ~ DON’T WAIT THEN REGRET! fl i For | | | i S THA Smail neat prints, grouped to save you time and N trouble. See foulards, figured-stripes, miniature : — : AOST MUSLI oes florals and calico-types that are little girl NS SPECIAL perfect. 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Super- $2.98, as sized, gracefully over- 58 SHRUGS \ ; - Iaid...the mark of a ae better chenille. 7 tub- fast hues, double, twin. . orating your home. \ little or no iron, a tht he \ eas | LINEN Values ' 5 Non-shed in your wash- OE \ Py LADIES’ to NOW y, | Reg. 6.98 iy fl shy ha xe EK ES PAJAMAS sofa NOR ar. | en $T 97 cm OPEN 10 A. M. to 9 P.M. Daily COMPETE 0.8. Post Ww .T. GRANT Co. iis | MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER .. . Telegraph cat Square Lake. Rd. | 10 A.M, FRIDAY G SATURDAY 10 A.M.-10 P.M. ah ‘1 97 LADIES’ COTTON © | $3.98, | See 1 > PONTTAG. PREss! he veh PAG at it \ < J | a \ WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1959. | | eo PONT 1A¢. Mic HIGAN : — ? TWENTY: FIVE Marked | Reveal Date of Project at Cranbrook Save the Children Group to Sponsor International Booths eet oe 8 A number of conscientious and hard-working chairmen of SCF got to- gether yesterday to discuss plans for their International Travelers Market At the luncheon meeting Sept. 19. field Hills. held at the home of Mrs. Edward S. Wellock of Kirkway drive, are from left: Mrs. Rocco DiMarco, Mrs. Edwin J. Anderson, Mrs. George T. Trumbull and Mrs. Arthur Jordan, of Bloom- If you want to buy a piece of jewelry from India, a hand made bit of lace from Switzer- land or perhaps a wooden carving from the. Carolina mountain region, the Interna- tional Travelers Market is the place to go. The Save the Children Fed- eration announced chairmen. for the market, to be held Sept. 19, at a luncheon meeting “yesterday at the home of Mrs. Edward S. Wellock of Kirkway drive in Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. Wellock and Mrs. Robert C. VanderKloot are cochairmen of the affair. * * * Mrs. VanderKloot is a na- tional sponsor of the SCF. Founded in 1932 the group is a non-profjt non-sectarian organ- ization for chttd welfare. It is registéred: with the U. S. State Department Advisory Commit- tee on Voluntary Foreign Aid. Other national sponsors in- clude Mrs. Dwight D. Eisen- hower, Herbert Hoover, Henry Luce, Norman Rockwell and Dr. Ralph W. Sockman. WILL BE HELD SEPT, 19 The International Travelers Market will be héld Sept. 19 at the Cranbrook Pavilion on Lone Pine Road in Bloomfield Hills. The market will have 17 booths, representing various countries throughout the world, each‘ _With its own booth chairman. A smorgasbord luncheon will be served in the garden of Mrs. Mrs. James A. Beresford of Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. Alfred Grann and Mrs. John R. McNaughton of Birmingham discuss plans for the International Travelers Market they are planning Sept. 19. By PAT HERMAN PARIS (UPI)—Greek-born Jean Desses, who has dreuced such customers as Greek Orth- The lv flared’ - Was carried throughout the collection, Coats, worn with hats that had a forward tilt, appeared Pontiac Press Photos setting is the garden of Mrs. Edward S. Wellock’s home in Bloomfield Hills where members of the Save the Children Federation met yesterday for luncheon and a business meeting. in a variety of nubby wools. Desses's favorite colors were lilac, purple, cherry red, and many varieties of brown. He Dresses Sprays Salon With Perfume introduced a new shade which he called ‘‘smoke brown.” * * * fs } | } A James A. Beresford across odox nuns and Mrs. Aristotle Pasion pag iiger gros | _ Te from the pavilion. Advance Onassis, presented a fall col- eclinnes sees Aig bod rio | ) tickets will be required for the lection today that would please e| owstone. Honeymoon low — xatieinnig S bel = ‘ j luncheon which will be served them both . » ’ F sses”’ 2sse WI x0 f embroidered E had an over-skirt d tiered . Y - 7 ; The national director of the Jean Desses”’ (Desses's own) As wn of embroidered’ Eng: underskirt »* > — OOOO Oa ————— federation, Mrs. Alfred E Desses (rhymes with lish organdy was chosen by i . Grann of Birmingham will be dresses) discreetly dropped the Marilyn Margaret Main for her A black bare-backed ensem- C. l Sh W f M l S h 1] b easisied by the» cochairmen hemline, sometimes below mid- marrage Saturday to Laurence ble had a little removable jack- : lves O er Or ISS C e en erg Mrs. VanderKloot and Mes. calf. This would have pleased S. Robertson. Some 200 guests et. over another flared tunic : | | Wellock his most conservative clients were present for the ceremony The effect was three-tiered, 4 , peel : ; performed by the Rev. William NOT MUCH BLAC ' Mrs. Charles Uligian was Schellenberg of Maplewood lores Melnychenko, and Mar- —S Mrs. _ Irving H. MacKenzie x * H. Marbach of the Presbyter- K hostess a a miscellaneous drive, is the bride-elect of R. cia Thomas. is in charge of the program and He also lengthened the tor- fan Church here oon was a notable absence > 4 shower Friday evening at her John Ensworth Jr., son of Mr. Attending this affair were Mrs. Gunnar Karlstrom is pub- so and widened the shoulders The bride is the daughter of ten he = se ray col- “ Starr avenue home honoring - and Mrs, Robert J. Ensworth Mrs. E. E. Schellenberg, and licity chairman, assisted by in line with what his col- Mr. and Mrs. Joe< Main ——- appeared for eve- | Linda Ruth Schellenberg. of Starr avenue. The couple is Mrs. James Brooks, grand- Mrs, Howard E. Hallas, Mrs. leagues have done so far in of South Pemberton, Bloom g. _ : | ‘Miss Schellenberg, the Planning an Aug. 8 wedding = mothers of the future bride, Henry C. Johnson, Mrs. Ernest the new season. field Hills Parents of the The evening array was dazz- - daughter of Mrs. George H. at All Saints Episcopal Mrs. Schellenberg and Mrs. A. Jones and Mrs. Kenneth G. Bu it was an exciting enough bridegroom are Mrs. Hattie ling. There were short-skirted i Women! 5 Section Church. * * * Ensworth, mothers of the cou- ple, Mrs. Ralph Ensworth, Mrs. by the Danish Women’s Volun- teer Service organization. * * * Manuel, ; OFFER SMORGASBORD Desses launched his line in a salon lavishly sprayed with his new perfume, “Celur de collecton to have made even the international set happy, Follows Pontiac Rites Gibson of Pontiac and the late William Robertson. skirts. The tunic effect reappeared again and again with Dessess A black cocktail dress print gowns worn under mink coats lined in the same print : , : ; ; as the gowns, brocaded cock- Fashionette Club sgs"oven'sierook, Mis. Read, Mees Steven Menge qQM@%, Beresford and Ruth SKIRT LONGER wo tal Suits and the magniicnty : Se s s umming wi cochairmen .. . There lots of. interest So eEe ging acce . : Awards Trophy Ronald Hayward, Mrs. George meres and Joyce Melny- + the sthorgasbord luncheon. in the set the ke - the high square neckline and atar ee San eee 'D Divs. Kaci Bowers txt home Schellenberg, Mrs. Robert Ens- chenko. Mrs. Samuel J. Lang is in season. the short sleeves, The floor ° the trophy. for losing the most weight Tuesday when the Fash- ionette Club met at Adah Shel- ly Library. She was also win- and answer session following worth, Mrs. Henry Merz, Mrs. Carl Anderson, Mrs. Wittard Boardman, Mrs. Joseph Fox, Mrs. A, J. Latozas, Mrs, Frank Totte, Mrs. Bernard Stone, and Mrs. Charles Parks, and Concluding the guest list were Ruth Ann Bandy, Mrs. Harry Brosted, Donria J. Bros- ted, Mrs. John Zeunen, Mrs. Charles Parks, Mrs. Martin ment stores have them. They charge of ticket reservations, assisted by Mrs. George T. Trumbull, Mrs. Howard B. : Barker and Mrs, Harold A. will be in charge of the Amer- ican Indians booth. . Desse p tiuttoned, draped, bloused_and flared the skirt. ——_ point usually was be- the hipline or 12 inches jersey or chiffon blouse un- length tieréd skirt of embroid- ered organdy ruffles fell from ‘a bodice featuring a columar waist. Marilyn wore a string of pearls, a gift of the bride- ballerina length skirts featured br:degroom’s mother wore a - known. Everybody has been doing the broad-shouldered, lon g- stemmed silhouette this year and it appeared Nina Ricci’s talking about Crahay as the ner of the monthl ze. Mrs. : arker, Mary Jo Parker, Mrs. Fitzgerald. ~ above the hemline, os Roniad : ; — ‘preny designer Jules Francoi » Edna Mertz took one the tro- a Oian cue tae Harold oabecil "y Pa ng, foe Mrs. Customer escort chairman is” _A loose lilac silk coat was + pt Mes ., a bared (MRS, LAURENCE ROBERTSON ret id done: it fete : rales “phy last week for losing the Cyjifford, Mrs. Walter Laurence Scholten of Ypsi- Calta ert Craig and ae att ke we a Mrs. John R. Main of In. thur, Alan, and Gary Robert- anyone else. most —— _ Schloerke, Mrs. Ford Paddock, lanti. man. i et mail same sivavegte seca. ar tne dianapolis, Ind., attended her son, nephews of the bridegroom x * ' Mrs. Willis picmrprrichted Mrs, John Ostrander, Mrs. "2 # « * & 2 sister-in-law as matron of hon- _—of' Lake Orion, and Joe Strze- Fashion writers get a chance and sate: a aaa George Wasserberger, Mrs. Both chaiines Mve been Another focal point for dekses OF and Mrs. Joseph Strzelecki lecki of Pontiac, as ushers. to see for themselves today i — ane jad he ar in William Vogel, mane Vern Hart- No Bulky Footwear announ as follows: the was the shoulders. Wide-open, 4 of ae served = brides- A dinner wae held at the when four more fashion houses } aaving sicaitene call for the man, apd Dusen cen. tt : oa Junior’ League of Oakland V-shaped collars in long-haired eon = attendee vere eacige Inn rele wf ae show their styles for this fall evening A al shower Was giv- havea look at those soft little C®tinty will sponsor the Amer- furs dramatically outlined the dresses with modified sabri other hone Dion blue silk Moktene tet tae tc ie eect for Miss Schellenberg Sun leather slippers that fold inte a 28M Southern Mountains booth 1959 fall silhouette. necklines accenting a French suit with white feather har iadeleine de Rauche and Coco i t next week's meeting a en iss ellenberg Sun- eather slippers tha old into a and Mrs. Paul M. McKenney Suits ,had long hip-length ecklines accenting a Frenc suit with white feather hat, Chane]. i film on polio with a question day by her matron of honor, tiny leather case. Most depart< jackets. and were’ worn with tucked bodice. Their bouffant and matching accessories. The Already fashion writers were $ = will be featured. bridesmaids, Lois Farrell, De- sesh SOLERO MER E E. SE ROE SR RA aa tuck into a corner of a suifcase.. ee SRS See er eC en Acre OT a eae & = = Mrs. Theodore O. Yntema. heads the booth displaying an- tiques, assisted by Mrs. C. E. Dalton, Mrs. William I. James .« der big fur toques. A smart-looking tweed had a tunic effect, and a -liwaist- length jacet that buttoned high cummerbunds and bustle back streamers of aqua taf- feta. Both carried fan arrange- ments of pink carnations. blue print silk dress with white hat and matching accessories. Both mothers wore corsages of pink rosebuds. chief challenger to the House of Dior which has dominated ‘the Paris fashion picture since 1947 when the ‘‘new look”’ came | ‘ ’ BS ir x & * Before departing for Yellow- Hd ; over the skirt. parting for in. | She. Talks’ to ’Em for Psy choanaly sts and Mrs. Henry C. Johnson as . ‘eaten Attending the bridegroom stone National Park, Wyo., the What Cray did yesterday oc ee ‘ « TUNICS PROMINENT were ‘John R. Main of Indi- — brigé changed to a charcoal on the third day of the show- | : Dog's Life No Mystery to Her By DOROTHY ROE AP Women’s Editor Aan There we understand “that a dog must have freedom EE Re RS Other booth chairmen are: Mrs, Edward S. Wellock, Bel- gium, with Mrs. William D. Singleton as cochairman; Mrs. Eric Fromm, Denmark, with a ‘ : Mrs. Fred H. Johnson and Mrs Fid Z if h to be : : : ; it’s sehubiz" vaca ‘woe ye — i ee een body stole his favorite bone~ Mrs. Henderson has spent ae paral atiiraccs Filan, when he was a puppy. ~~ most of her life understanding ‘ ar Min. Gao 7 Rossel. If he chews the iture, dogs, as an ipternatignal breed- france . , he’s expressing frustration er, exhibitor and judge, a writ- Continuing the list are Mrs. complex, and huiger for affec- = be sats the rug, it's be- he feels insecure. * *% * “an this can be corrected by scientific psychological treat- ment, says Yvonne Henderson, of London, a dog psychiatrist. Mrs, Henderson is in New York to explore the possibilities of establishing an office here. “I am appalled at the lack of understanding of dog emo- tions here,’ says she. York dogs lead a dog’s life, shut up in apartments all day long, left alone, with no com- panionship, no freedom, no love, It’s no wonder they de- velop traumas and bite people. EVERYBODY OWNS ONE “In England everybody owns @ dog — they're as numerous as cars. in America: And pub- lic rules and customs are geared for consideration of the dog population, a "You can take a dog any. where in taurenits,, hotels, trains pt er for dog magazines, canine correspondent for the London Times and friend of all dog- dom. * * * She breeds French bulldogs, and has some of her prize pets in New York with her, together with their trunks of blue ribbons. How does*Shre-psychoanalyze a dog? “Well, I don’t usually use a couch,” says Mrs. Henderson, “but if the dog likes to lie down, he may. I just talk to the dogs and fing out what's worrying them, you know. “WE UNDERSTAND” “How's that? Why,c ertainly I can understand what a dog is saying, and dogs always un- derstand me. “lf a dog has a high 1Q., it’s simple to work with him and iron out all his troubles. With a stupid - dog, it takes longer. “But I've never yet met a dog with whom I couldn't hold a’ conversation.” John F. Gordon, Germany; Mrs. Edwin G. Anderson, Hawaii; Mrs. Rocco DiMarco, Holland, and Mrs. VanderKloot, India, with Mrs. Manuel as co- chairman. * * * Concluding the list are Mrs. Herman D.: Scarney, Italy, as- sisted by Mrs. Carl Zuber; Mrs. Merritt D. Hill, Orient; Mrs. Ernest A. Jones, Sweden; Mrs. Percy K. Loud, Switzerland, assisted by Mrs. Hugh D. Backus and Mrs. Arthur Jor- , dan. Mrs. Harvey Kresge Jr. Will be in charge of the Thieves Market with Mrs, Robert H. Taylor as cochairman. Proceeds from the market sales will be donated to SCF. Not Unsightly Now Women who wear glasses now have a broad selection of , Hattering frames or no frames “at all via contact jenses. It is important to select frames that are up-to-date and flatter your features — of their shape or color. The tunic effect’ — some- times belted, sometimes slight- anapolis, Ind., brother of the bride, as best man and Ar- Discussing the celebrity tendoot to be held after the Pontiac Town Hall series which opens in the fall are from left, Mrs. Clyde Dearing, R. H. Martin and Mrs, D. B.E Eames. Mrs. Dearing is chair- N grey sheath with yellow ac- cessories, ings was less sensational but very effective. Pontiac Press Phote ntan of the celebrity luncheon program, Mr. Martinis \. - manager of Pine Lake Country Club - Mts. Eames:- is, assisting Mrs. Dearing.’ PM eda aera ts THE PONTIAC- PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29,1959, A bo ¥ v Dear Abby Save No! No! # 2 2 EB Embodying a world of fashion news is this fluid crepe dress by Young Viewpoint with feminine | | strategy in its| The set-in drape. = grosgrain yoke) is accentuated | with glitter. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: All my friends think I am nuts but, Abby, an. We were married and divorced twice, We are apart now and I can’t stand it. I support her and her son by a for- mer marriage. I give her more than the court ordered, but that doesn't matter, She can have everything I own. She says she doesn’t want to live with me because she feels no love for me. But I don’t care. I would live like a brother to her just to be near her. Am I crazy for want- ing to marry her again on her terms, which are separate bed- rooms with a lock on her door? CRAZY FOR HER DEAR CRAZY: I would nev- er advise marriage under the circumstances. To go through the sacrament of a marriage ceremony and live as sister and brother (with a lock on . can't it without this wom- ABBY get a job. But I Hate to leave my mother alone. I quit school last year (I am 17) to stay home and care for her as she takes dizzy spells. My brothers and sisters say — I have to stay home and take care off Mamma forever be- cause I am the one who made her so sick in the first place? . I think I am entitled to a life of my own but don't know how I will ever have one. Please DEAR ‘WANTING: Your ‘brothers and sisters have as much responsibility toward your mother as you have. Since “you are the youngest in your family, you are probably too timid to stand up for your rights, so ask your clergyman to help you speak your piece. Arrangements can (and should) be made for you to have’ a life of your own * * * help me, I pray. every night but God doesn’t hear me, WANTING TO LIVE DEAR ABBY: We _ have a lady in our crowd who is Doctors Seeking Clues to Accident Prone Tots MONTREAL (AP) — Doctors determine whether their mishaps) someday may be able to spot te into certain patterns. youngsters who are prone to acci-- For example, he said, the dents—the greatest killer of chil-' studies seek to determine whether dren. ‘factors are ‘certain forms of} Personality may give one clue. discipline, the rate and manner in This possibility is being raised which parents foster independence at the ninth International Con- in their children, the sex roles gress of Pediatrics today by which parents prescribe for their speakers who say that records children.” a © ‘| ~ \ He’s Crazy Abont Her... but Why? : very nice, But when it comes to the subject of smoking, she’s impossible, She has a large car and is generous about picking us all up. But no one cares to ride with her because she makes such a fuss if anyone wants to smoke. When we go to a restaurant, if someone lights a cigaret, she takes her food and mpves to another table and sits alone. She claims smoke gives her bladder” attacks is not nearly possible or is she making a big thing out of it? What should we do? HER FRIENDS DEAR FRIENDS: Whether smoke gives your friend “gall bladder’ attacks is not nearly so. important as the obvious fact that it is a great source of annoyance to her. Good friends would respect her wishes, * * x DEAR ABBY: Not one week after the death of my beloved mother I received the notice of her obituary (just as it was printed in our home-town news- paper) encased in plastic. On the other side was the Lord's the average housewife can't take hours to train her voice, she can check occasionally to see if her, speech is pleasant and without! Lcaanietink Che ck on Voice wii and actresses know the value of a well-trained and well-modulated veide. Miho GEORGE'S Peanleg Center of Pontiac | HERE’S THE SALE ed HAVE WAITED FOR... ALL |: (Cua Moria, et SWIM SUITS . her -door, yet) is to make a ishow the most susceptible to) Dr. Harold Jacobziner, an as- Prayer. There was a request Comes in mockery of marriage. Why not /accidents are: the “inexperienced sistant New York health commis-| to.either return it or send a rent her a room in your home [creeper among the very young sioner, said that nearly 7 of every| dollar. I think commercializing black only. and pay all her bills? and the “daredevil types” of older ‘10 accidental injuries to children! on the death of a loved one is 3 oa oa 2: | children. une 5 years of age occur in the} disgraceful. One. hesitates to | {vailable | SEAR ABBY: I telephoned a | Childhood accidents do not ‘home. throw away anything as sacred YOUR CHOICE... WHILE THEY LAST!— locally friend of mine and made ar- |occur by chance, said Dr. George’ «The inexperienced creeper or ik ~ ees fai tieg 4 Sy ocally. nts to visit her one |M. Wheatley, a vice president of toddler is the most susceptible,”| °° paca ose waa 4 oe 15.95 ROSE MARIE oe 10 63 5 afternoon at her home. I nev- |the. Metropolitan Life Insurance he said. - | a this? DISGUSTED SAVE 5.32... NOW..... aisetdcs ° 2 er stay more than an hour Co., in a speech prepared for de- | . we : because while my time is my livery to the 1,600 delegates from fF t th St h DEAR DISGUSTED: You are 17.95 ROSE MARIE REIDS ] T 97 own, many of my friends have (3 nations. < + or ge e€ otarc er ne oa) to peel SAVE 5.95... NOW........... ‘ . . * : . . . ‘ "No on oe fter I “One study of nursery | _ When you XK away your thing you did not order. The | ¥9.95 ROSE MARIE REIDS 13 30 dct a taegnces meee = children found certain personality, S¥mmer cottons, don’t put only effective way- to discour- SAVE 6.65... NOW........... soooc ° waa hee sister. My hosteas |characteristics associated with a ree wey Stamthed. Bat oe age this type of exploitation is ‘ 22.95 ROSE MARIE REIDS 1 stayed on the telephone talk- tendency toward -eecidental in- pe ? ge thevte taht Sa to — x ‘ SAVE 7.65... NOW............. ; 5.30 ing sheer nonsense for thirty. |Jury.”’ he said. ; ; one ey on was . | Cc s Just Say “Ch ” five minutes by the clock. I Wheatley said impulsive, up and wrinkled all winter, the For a personal reply, write | ome Save... Just Say erge It sat there like qa wooden Indian |€™Motional children were hurt or wrinkles tend. to set and | to ABBY in care of this paper. | all the while. She made no killed more often than youngsters they're much harder to iron | Enclose a_ self addressed, | apologies. Now, what would who were passive, cooperative,, when you want them again. stamped envelope. i & you have done in a case like |¢ager to please and not inclined| ‘ ~ that? : . jto engage in group play. | Airing and cleaning a rug is! The time to bu; your first pair PUT OUT | But the new trend of research, only part of the overall job. Don't of fall shoes is late summer. Try DEAR PUT: I would have he said, is to go deeper into the forget to wash the floor before black suede to wear with your 74 N. SAGINAW ST. , . . FREE PARKING concluded that my “hostess” ifamily life of accident victims to putting down the cleaned rug. transseason cottons. | ee ~ cared very little for my com- (|~ pany. And in the future I would ‘ offer it sparingly — if at all. Spock hates dirt, because dirt x *« * threatens the health of his DEAR ABBY: When I was Hose Yourself favorite people—children. born I weighed 13 pounds, I gave my mother a terrible %, an 2 rat 2. : z [= aa Se Sie paee eee ie a i ee in SESE ome He Hates Dirt! The famous Dr. From everywhere the aieall set shop... | Rochester’s | NORTH HILL PLAZA ! time, She lived, but my father Tested Tips to Stay Cool} FREE PARKING FOR 850 CARS... OPEN | died. I am the youngest of 9 . : | ] THURSDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS ’til 9 children and have a chance to By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN clime. I have lived where the hot ‘played bridge in our slips in the [) TEN STORES : I suffer from hot weather in such 4ir was so loaded with moisture basement because that was the|f| Wrigley'’s—S. S. Kresge Co.— Young Men’s Wear, Inc. — =| an extreme way that I have been that every breath and every move- coolest placg in the house Cunningham's — Welch's Gifts — Richards’ Boys’ and Girls’ | accused of having a busted thermo-,™Ment were an effort. — Wear — = Shop ak D. = ay Shop — Mereury / stat. Very high temperatures! I also have lived where the air) AS you already have guessed ee es oan eee make me feel like an invalid com- was so hot and dry that we could ‘is was before people had air- ee at TIENKEN ROADS |pared to my usual pep. jnot use fans because it was like Conditioning. When we finally put ad as Ss a as ranecot eet ace Having been married to a géolo- blowing furnace air down our it in one large glassed in porch gist for many years I have ex-|throats. Those were the days when I always could find the whole perienced every kind of torrid we gals took our dresses off and family there, along with friends I had not seen for some time | and a few people I had never | met before! * * * With this little personal sketch you can believe that I know a lot of tricks about keeping cool. In the first place, even when there is a breeze, it is often a mistake to open the windows in the middle Benjamin Spock points out that whatever your child's most beloved toy or other object may be, it aught to be kept clean! Dr. Anchovy fillets give a fillip to hard-cooked eggs to be used in salad or sandwiches. e en Swim Suits Only at Alvin’s . . . such a complete selection! ROSE MARIE REID of the day. Open them at night ROXANNE jand close them early in the morn- | ies resents . . JANTZEN " ing. Draw the shades. ‘USE THE HOSE Also, “do not forget your garden| ‘hose. Don’t use all of the water on the flowers. Blossom out yourself! After being sprayed, off and on,| ifor a half hour or so, you will, feel cooler for hours, This prescrip- | ition can be repeated every day as joften as necessary, right in your lown yard, Do any errands you must do early in the morning before the | heat rises. Definitely take a noon- | time siesta, Eat lean meat and | ‘seafood and vegetables and fruits | and drink fruit juice, Forget the rich, calorie-packed, heating items. Drink more liquids than usual and season your foods well with salt unless there is some | reason for not doing so. Sater Art at ts Finest ’ Whether it be fruit-pies made with the choicest of fresh fruits in season or rolls or french pastries, beautifully-trimmed and made with the finest of ingredients, you will find them all oven baked fresh daily. Dress up your table and give your family-a real treat. Place your order now. Our doors open to serve you at 7 a.m, “Specialists in Wedding and Birthday Cakes“ 1360 S. WOODWARD ° BIRMINGHAM Between 14 and 15 Mile Rd. MI 6-7664 NANI OF HAWAII ALIX OF MIAMI Ys Off Further Reductions Summer Dresses ll ln hl Mi Ml Mi Ll i, i Ml Li Mi i, i Li i i i Mi i i Mi di, di hi di di de 4 HAIR FASHIONS ... for Summer Require 4 A PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT WAVE § In the hot season, drink more liquids than: usual, rrr Ye YS ms ' } , Regular to $19.95 2 CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP; C h e ; lthat Awful, Ugiy, Flabby Arm.” J oho hss pwwvervrerevrtrTtT TTC heaps, $7788 4941488 Regular to $34.95 Now $15.88 to $19.88 perfect | pair | Les a short cut to Beauty!... THE NEW LIVING COLOR with “Young- Hair” "Texture WE TONE FOR ANY SHADE. Let Tony tl ag that color you always wished you could have. See the new Champagne Blonde. ‘ewrrrrereeTTTTTTTTTT tt 't't*'"'T"TTTT'TTTT "T7107 0777 NO Oe ee Ow OO OOO NOW OPEN!... Tony’s New Budget Department on Tony’s Mezzanine Floor, Riker Bldg. $ 550 and $9750 No Appointments Needed! ( SHAMPOO and SET....$1.50 . MANICURE. . . $1.50 All Under Tony's Supervision (OCCT TT TT Ce Te eT ee ee eT Te ee ee ee ee ee ee ee eee Nat ite DORI ORO VOM te DRE ey a Gale Fantastic Buys Coats and Suits Regular to $89.95 $9 O88 ORANGE BLOSSOM BRIDALS i a il Permanents Complete, Only. ‘wewrrrrevrerfetyTTTYTTVTTTrTrTrCr rT ee weer? rrTjjfenTgT*'vwvv7"T"7"7777770700007" lll i i i i i i i i i and yours Park Free g “a sso _ REDMOND’S iste cal in et HURON at TELEGRAPH _ Tewelers— Optometrists © ony’s & 81 N. Saginaw St. ’ FE 2-3612 Main Floor Barr Riker Bldg, in Mon, Thurs., G Fri..10 to 9—Tues., Wed., Sat, 10 to 6. rae RP FERNS Pee Re ee - ty a < 2 - ag we FET te y % a ff am ee | | A : THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1959 + Pe im 1 Child Can Discover How to Deal With Fear {to, they may not discover their own capacity to do something about By MURIEL LAWRENCE 3 . screaming, Mommy turned, .| On the way home from the store seized the dog and said to him, nailed of! teacetild end ented by patting the dog herself with such a glow of achievenient that her : ees dase at teen at Ne, feel aw we PP) as joy in the red sneakers couldn't — ’ = with it, t's not alw: fi that makes cause she was wearing hew new cemuins cast i ’s se atreia | -omrere it, ; c. dhardigein pln rorgeriqey red sneakers, Not only did they match the cherries in her sunsuit but made her feet look so exotic that she had to walk slowly to sa- vor her pride in them. the fear herself wouldn't have oc- She had just given a little skip) Soon Emmy stopped screaming,| ured to Emmy lof delight when a Huge dog bound-|Next to Mommy, the dog didn’t * 4 ed around the corner, barking fu-|seem as big as she'd thought he riously, and pelted straight at her.| was. Instead of rushing at Mommy, children their anger, jealousy and She screamed. She ran—and oh,/he just danced around her. — other emotions that we find dis- relief! Mommy whirled, grabbed| Suddenly conscious that. sitting) oi. fears or requiring them to her up and set her safely down on|on the carrots was uncomfortable, |+:31) the sensation of their fears two bunches of carrots in the shop-|Emmiy wanted to test this new UN-/ Wien we do, either by jeering at! notions of virtue forbid us to feel. ping cart. threatening impression of the dog. thir fears or requiring them to/So we have to be careful about Then, while she was still So she asked Mommy te take act on them before they are ready forbidding them to children, If Mommy had said, “Don’t be afraid” and insisted on Emmy pat- ting the dog while she still felt fear, the idea of doing something about sistance to feeling them, In war, soldiers who allow themselves to feel their fears develop great * of courage require them te deny their fear develop psychoneurotic disorde: rs. , So.do we. We develop ulcers, hand tremors and all other kinds ./of poor solutions to fears that our Just as we have no right to forbid _Manicure’s Easy After Your Bath > One of the best times for your weekly manicure is right after your bath — or after washing the dishes, It’s much easier to push back cuticles and wash away imbedded soil after your hands have been Don't Discourage Junior's ‘Artwork’ a brush, and large, (12 by 18 or 18 by 24-inch) inexpensive By GAY PAULEY Summer Fashions soaking in suds. NEW YORK (UPI)—Junior’s ( trok th all sheets of manila paper as a And just remember that . are tie citer af ceesiies starter. The parents might in- - at are the strokes of creative talent. So encourage the child’s creativity—don’t “‘cripple’’ it— even as you mop up signs of small artist at work. “The best art materials are the messiest,”’ said Dr. Howard Conant, re-affirming what every mother knows. Conant, a native of Wisconsin whether. you wear nail polish or not, you still need that week- ly manicure to keep your hands soft, well groomed, and young looking Drastic Reductions! hay fl Mahan Now We never carry merchandise over until the next season... . so here clude moist modeling clay and crayon, although he = said crayons call for more mus- cular coordination than most tots have. “Everything in life tends to shape us to confirmity. I shape us to conformity. I would rather my children de- - Pontiac Press Phote Mrs. M. M. Cummins of Bloomfield Hills prac Biggest Mink id graduate of the Uni it veloped into individuals with tices a few putts on the new putting green at Forest : to Star on wie ae — i am abstraction. | Problems than into well- are fantastic reductions om our Lake Country Club. Mrs. Cummins is wearing one of |, Broadwa ist who works in oils, has two | @djusted lite robots. femainina much it is used determines to which Miss Page plays the Conant lives with his wife, ummer Gd s a great extent the nation’s role of a declining movie (a non-painter), a boy of four NOW 2.88 3.22 a7 0p ; : star who insists on one-of- and a girl of 12, at New ‘ : er years of research, two a-kind in everything,. the- Rochelle, N. Y. i : | Melbourne firms and a govern- producers wanted to cte- ~ - & Your Choice of 200 Brand New Summer Skirts t ‘ Full or Slim Because he believes that ex- pression of childish imagination should not be “crippled,”’ he opposed parents purchasing “stereotyped”; art materials— these, he said, include those painting-by-number sets, the coloring books, the drawing books which encourage a child to trace the work of others. ment research organization have evolved processes giving wool the drip-dry qualities of nylon, dacron and other syn- thetics, ate an exaggerated Holly- wood s#ersion of the mink stole. , k& & & Originally, according to Michael Forrest, executive vice president of the manufacturing. firms, the request was to create a mammoth stole of dyed Formerly Sold to 8.98 Sportswear — Main Floor Complete Close-Out! Entire Stock...600Prs....Below Cost |) QUAKER HOSE ; * * * The firm of F. R. and C. H. Fogarty says its fabric has a - ripple effect resembling that of seersucker cottons. The drip-dry attribute is Formerly Sold to 10.98 woven into the material. : | a ear ae willing, but it ae meatus for Se ee F | So $ ne eee oa could nicl be! readied foc ability—"Children possess art ormerly Sold to 15.00 Originally 1.35 and Pr. a a © - Ti the pre-Broadway open- ability as a birthright, and with 1.50 a Pair ce woolen garments, absorb moisture, and are cool in sum- mer and warm in winter. ing,” he said. Instead, the rare and natural Blue Iris skins were used, the proper guidance it can be developed,” he said. - He believes parents should All in fhe season’s newest styles and colors. All LINDA MAEGRATOPP |. | : The ack ave mills is The engagement of Linda . *- * * encourage creativity as soon Straws, Laces, Organdies, Rowana’s, Milan, Toyos, Brand New, Special Purchase! selling processed fabric to Mae Gratopp to Merle Lee |= “This is a oneoee hold. cuit oan and wants = LI N GERIE Evans has been announced by |*. fur piece, to be . hold a brush or squeeze model- her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rob- ‘comments Mr. Forrest. ing clay—nine months to a year. And even tots can be trusted with paints—‘‘if mother - will be patient enough to clean up later.”’ Conant advises children be given tempera or poster paints, Prior to this, he said, the largest mink stole his firm had ever’ created was made of twenty skins. ert Gratopp of Rochester. The prospective bridegroom, the son of Mrs. Evelyn Evans of Ir- win avenue, recently was dis- charged from th: U. S.:Navy. No wedding date has been set. \ 4 Ff YOUR HOME Slips, Gowns, Pajamas, Baby Dolls | || an Originally to 8.98 ‘|= 3.88 5.88 ALL TOPPERS Were to 39.95, NOW ‘ ‘14 Clearance of all SUMMER SUITS Were to 39.98 “7 «6*11 6418 SPRING SUITS were to 49.98 et es eee gs Oe ei ee senmaaaa i ES, U3 or Including Rose Marie Reed, Brilliant, Roxanne, ete. " ‘Today Tomorrow 19° 13” were to 79.98 were to 99.00 The ONty Ate ‘24 *33 42 oure ‘aint w | ecis an asuais 95 98 For Wear Now Through Fall. Save More Than Half! seiacomeapiaary Regularly to $18.95 in Al 3 3 Vitolized Oit® $ _ 13° g30 Boys’ and Girls’ Wear 5 a i : DRASTICALLY REDUCED! 30 Ss enon ; 10° | | © Coats © Skirts 95 £97 © Dresses ® Co-ordinate Sets © . 8 5 © Blouses © Boys’ Polo Shirts © Don’t miss out . . . celebrated makers’ exclusive stunning trims, shoes of excellent fit! Hi and little heels, cushioned wedges. Leathers, mesh, styled-in-Italy straws. White, lustre, © Boys’ 3-Pc. Slack Sets ee FE 5-644] tropic and year-round colors and ¢ | , ¢ — All sizes in the group, . aa aaa 48 North Saginaw St. FREE PARKING @ * ie yi \ ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, J ULY 29, 1959 and G ordon in the glassware line is the “Chip 'n’ Dip” dish. It has a expectedly brings a Steam Matted Rug * Non but do not touch rug with iron. Write,-phone os call in person tor Free Pamphlet ummer an in : Guest Can | Summer and Skin Married} : ite at oi Jutdoor summertime living Use a steam iron to raise the | . fo ; Join You is such fun, but do take time { nap of a carpet that‘has been | There are three ways to pack Saturday ej out ‘to beautify your skin, Al- | matted down by furniture legs, fruits for freezing — dry, in sugar \at First By JANET ODELL to Eat Out ways’ take a soapy shower or | Hold the iron down ee the ‘or in syrup. : - Pontiac Press Home Editor : . bath after swimming or sun- Meth vodist Nothing takes the place of \ By EMILY Post ning. And use a well-lathered PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL Church were glass for tall frosty drinks that 7 backbrush to smooth’ your back 1% & Ruth Roche | lok as cool as they taste. New “Dear Mrs, Post:,What can | and to wash away sand, salt, Ye &. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. i one do when one’s husband un- | and perspiration. / Enrollments Available in Day vr Evening Classes - friend home to dinner and there isn’t a thing in the house to eat, She had planned on their going out to a restaurant to dine that evening." special section just for the dip. PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 The larger space takes care of the dibpers. We didn’t go to the summtr furniture shows, but we've had rene Be Composer George Gershwin was) } arkinson. 39 when he died in 1937. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles ~ Parkinson. MRS. GORDON PARKINSON Ruth Roche Wed in City to Gordon Parkinson Ruth Roche and Gordon Parkinson were married Satur- day at First Methodist Church. Parents of the couple are former Pontiae residents, Mr. -and Mrs. Charles Craig of Royal Oak and Mr. and Mrs. Merle Parkinson of Owosso. } | The bride's gown of scalloped embroidered nylon organza featured an Empire waistline accented with satin ribbon and an intermission length train. A crown of pearls held her finger- tip veil of pure silk illusion and she carried a’crescent bouquet of pink and white rosebuds. lots of publicity about the new trays stacked on the other. Each tray opens into a snack table. Kroehler makes the ar- ticle. * * * Have you seen the interest- ing new closure that is taking the place of zippers in some clothing? It's called ‘‘touch closing’ nylon tape and has infinite possibilities, especially on slipcovers. You can miter the corners of it and sew it around curves much more easily than you can a zipper. | Look for it in notion depart- ments, either in a package or by the inch. Some publicity came in this week about a new inexpensive ‘carpeting called Candycote. A combination carpeting and padding, it has a cotton fabric by ferme Halows CUT. A beautiful figure sew- easily with .this shapely playsuit. Wide straps conceal bra, slim-boy Answer: Under the circum- “Dear Mrs. Post: We are in doubt as to how to arrive at a fair division of the wedding invitations, My family fee] that they can afford, at a limit, only one hundred and _ twenty-five guests at the reception. So how do we divide the invitations be- tween the two families. Does each family get the privilege of having half the invitations, or may we’be allowed a great- er number as it is my family who are paying for the recep- tion?’’ Answer: Each family should have half, the invitations, but if the groom comes from a dis- tant city, his family will prob- ably want only a few and your family can have the rest. And even if both families live in the same city, many of Shoes REDUC selected styles... Craig and products. One that intrigues us is a cocktail table. It has a we there a pare’ any- Mr. and Mrs.) jower shelf with space for posal ae “Situation aid invite Merle magazines on one side and him to ‘line ca wit fee « three removable plastic-topped ors ej m ALL ONE PRICE $' Women’s Florsheim Shoes -ED 5 Summer sinters ca ‘ot hone Doe top bonded to a foam base. Use Shorts sensei ela thighs. Back the same names, will be on ° . maids were Jan Farrell of | it.as @ rug in specified sizes |2ipper, pockets. Choose Pique,| 114 tists which will mean that Discontinued Patterns Clearance Clarkston, Elaine Shepard of | 9% &8 wall-to-wall carpeting. linen, cotton. Tomorrow's pattern: |! your family and his, will be Reaul 17.95 19.95 | Owosso with Diane Dillingham x * * Misses’. able to invite more of their eguiar $ . to $19. P; 3 Printed Pattern 4600: Misses’|} friends than at first seems pos- 19.95 to 24.95 Handbags, Gloves, Lingerie, Blouses, Sweaters, Skirts and of Owosso as junior bridesmaid and Nancy Jo Schmidt of Fow- Isn't it annoying to have a stain on a dress? If it is wash- Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 “sible. sheets lerville as flower girl. able, you hate to go to the {takes 2 yards 35-inch fabric. a : x * * expeme of dry cleaning. Try Printed directions on each pat- en tee post a Peis Their pink taffeta dresies liquid detergent first. tern part. Easier, accurate. yhich will take place i we featured balloon skirts and We had good luck with it on wae 2 pee i two 700 WEST HURON Beauty: Clinic | by Edythe McCulloch POSTURE Don't make a fetish out of they wore headpieces of pink sheared taffeta. They carried fans with baby pink carna- tions. Clifford Doane Jr. of Bay City was best man. Ushers were Jack Wolf of Detroit, Floyd Olmstead of Owosso, David Dillingham of Mason, David Shepard and Robert Collier, both of Owosso and Norman Tery of Port Austin. spots oh a wash-and-wear suit. You rub the detergent lightly into the dampened spot (cold water, please). Then wash as usual. If the stain is deeply imbedded, work the detergent thoroughly into the fabric. You'll be pleasantly surprised how many greasy and non- greasy stains this removes. Dept., 243 West 17th St., Number. Keep Rag Dolls Send_ Thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-class mail- ing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Ad- dress with Zone, Size and Style weeks. I have a very pretty white dress which I had planned to wear but a friend of mine tells me that it is im- proper for a guest to wear white at a wedding because it #ietracts from the bride. [ have never heard of this and would like to know if what she says is true." Answer: You certainly should not wear all white, but if you Reduced to $11.90 Shoes for the Entire Family 20 West Huron St. Pontiac — FE 2-3821 ONCE A YEAR SUPERB SPECIALS espe pie) Eire epee || nila IM Well Groormed | sia solo to your ‘ress, such . . ; ‘Iti er as ers or a colo tired at the end of the day if} A reception was held. in the When quilting never lay scis- When making a rag doll, be Sasi actiy/weuciigl cowed BUDGET WISE...F ASHION RIGHT you sit,.stand and walk prop- fi l sors on the quilt to use in ; ; . erly. | church parlors. Before leaving | 1 oad cutting. These may | Sure that it will be washable— | accessories, it would be quite for a honeymoon to the Upper | ooretimes make the quilt sag. | oth the stuffing and outside | all right. . Custom Don't complicate it all by}} Peninsula, the bride changed Indica of eclasoré - . - fabric. Then. dolly will be pre- standing stiif with knees locked f} to a black sheath dress with blade for Uiead cutthe Tazo! pared to become a litte girl's “Dear Mis. Post: How doa and a, your = bene white accessories. They will et 24-hour companion. one include several young chil- ( ‘old Wave Datente each pat of your body {| live in Alma. No Pastels in Fall | arm be.kissed and buczed, | dren in the family on the same : t f the other. Pull yo x *&* * Oo Fastels in Fa dragged acrv.s the floor, and invitation sent to their par- hedd te cand upward. Draw an ents? Should the phrase ‘And complete head in and upward. Draw an imaginary line from your ear Jebe to your shoulder bone, shoulder bone to hip bone and hip bone to ankle bone. Dis- ibute your weight on both feet. It's as simple as that and you will find that your chest The bride is a graduate of Central Michigan University where she was a member of Zeta Chi Zeta sorority. The bridegroom attended General Motors Institute. Mrs. Craig wore a pink and Pastels are pretty in spring and summer but nothing looks _ worse in early fall. Put yours ' away and replace them with fall cottons in deep, glowing colors. taken lovingly to bed. But a regular “‘bath” in soap or de, tergent suds will keep dolly as well-groomed as her young mother — and, even more im- portant, a safer plaything from a hygienic point of view, Family’ be used?”’ Answer: Correctly, their names are written under that of their parents on the inside envelope, according to their ages: *15 Wave row *10 ~ $90 Wave vow 12" white embroidered nylon sheath with white accessories |@%* for her daughter's wedding. “Mrs, Parkinson was dressed in a powder blue silk taffeta _ with matching accessor- : is lifted out of your rib cage and your stomach muscles are contracted. . Relax . . . don't sag. Phone Edythe McCulloc - Beauty Shoppe, FE 2-7431, 68 Pontiac State Bank John, Mary and Arthur | Ever add drained cooked or -|canned whole corn kernels to corn- meal muffins? Double flavor tastes double good! OA RAI oe oe ROE TEER Pr ae a) Have You Tried This? ‘Mixed Fruit. Cocktail OUR SALON IS AIR CONDITIONED Open Monday and Friday ’til 9 P. M. ei ys See eras aes Reet “— 2 large cans fruft cocktail 1 bag small colored marshmallows Drain juice from fruit over- = = : : night. Fold fruit and marsh- : oe ees . . mallows into sour cream. Let salad. It will look pretty on a summer luncheon plate. * * * Mrs. Charles West of Long ¢ é No A ppointment Needed! Immediate Service! 9 pe gl lu Leftover Menu Makes Confetti Salad |) MEET for LUNCH w left- . | Sled os YOU | ot.haineaten || a7 saver ope, ae ic wingias oraew || RIKER FOUNTAIN | 61 Beauty CSalon = Phone | gumme-m7s — |! eek Don't let leftovers get |), Today's recipe is for a dit. conFerm saLap || Popular Prices 2nd Floor Pontiac State Bank Bldg. spoiled before you get around ferent version of the sour By Mrs. Charles West 2 Riker Building Lobby IMP ERIAL to using them. You know your cream-marshmallow fruit 1 pint sour crea 4 family's eating habits and can plan accordingly. — , BEAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ave. Bottled cranberry juice makes a SACRE Sh NRE ee RR — eee a. ‘good ee ise both comet Lake shares this recipe with stand in the refrigerator at = —____ ai . —_ : y = i eae Sem” _ tage 404 seer le ae ne to) us Stee end peron, lest on tour Deore serving, | | — is Jaskataiecateniiandan | i} NEWGE § PAULFS = Combination ff sg es —— Refrigerator- §& \ Semi-Annual Shoe 4 7 gerator ‘ | on 7 Freezer @ Automatic-Defrost | Refrigerators , ; | @ Zero-degree Freezer. at top (STILL IN PROGRESS) ©@ 3 swing out shelves _ : < @ Ice Ejector trays and _ ice storage container butter |) FURTHER : con LY e Egg rack ... meat pan REDUCTIONS! Qo ... twin vegetable Us e 7 $338 —< . drawers . . . removable, 12 Cubie Foot BH-12S adjustable door shelves ... foot pedal door opening ... magnetic safety door. Your Dealer for: ®Nunn-Bush® Pedwin .. ®Red Cross ¢ Edgerton NO MONEY DOWN Only $4.50 per week. e Coupon : Offer: SUMMER HOURS: Monday-Thursday 8 2. m. to 5:30 p. m. Friday-Saturday 8 a. m. to 9 p. m Closed .All Day Sunday PEACE ORAL COMPA 59 ORCHARD [AK wo DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETRONT pre INTERMEDIATE romns: 7 * With this - Hampton Electric Co. nt — Open Nightly *til 9 P.M. | 825 W. Huron Street FE 4-2525 coupon get a complete Camera-Flash- Film-Batteries Set; for $2.99 | PAULDS SHOE STORE 35 N. SAGINAW STREET pen Friday Night — Pontiac Over 75 Years Peril 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, _WEDNESDAY. JULY 29, 1959 - small city hall here and sweltered bridegroom, both of Lake Orion. eego | oters to Deci de Urban ‘9 I Issue Heated Session Spurs Council Crowd Jams City Hall to Give Pros and Cons at Special. Meeting KEEGO HARBOR — Whether Keego Harbor will apply to the federal government for urban re- newal will be decided by property owners in the city at a special election. . The decision to put the contro- versial issue to a referendum vote of the people climaxed a} special city eouncil meeting last night. A tinderbox crowd jammed the through 100 degree heat for one and a half hours. Tempers, shortened by the intense heat, flared up several times. The special meeting had been requested by the Keego Harbor Businessmens Assn., ‘mainstay | of the urban renewal proposal. The group ‘presented petitions in favor of urban renewal signed by 3872 persons. Oppo- nents to the plan also presented petitions. They had 225 signa- tures. A motion by Councilman Sam- uel Whitmore that the council proceed at once to contract with planning consultants for an urban renewal master -plan lacked a sufficient majority of council members approval when put to a vote. Whitmore’ then moved that the council! place the issue before voters in a special election. The resolution was seconded and ap- proved by the council, with the date to be decided later. General opinion expressed last night by those oppesed to the plans was that urban renewal would force low-income fam- ilies out of their homes either, through condemnation proceed- ings or by higher taxes later. XY Proponents of the plan explained that according to federal govern- LEG WORK Congregational Church’s ment regulations, those living in substandard houses would be given the opportunity and funds to re-| locate in the community better living conditions. Those in favor of urban renewal | are of the general feeling = urban renewal will enable them to upgrade the community, mak- | ing their expenditures on home | improvements worthwhile and possible at. lower finance rates.” The Businessmens Assn. is | ‘anxious to put urban renewal through now so that the $500,000 the city will spend on a central | sewer system can be utilized as the community’s share of the costs. According to law, if the federal | government approves Keego Har- bor’s urban renewal plan, it will put up $2 for every $1 spent by the city. Legally the $500,000 for sewers can be used as the city’s share) if urban renewa) and the sewer projects can be dovetailed time- wise. The council did not know what Oakland County's deadline on the sewers would be, although the earliest it could start presumably would be sometime in September. Double-Ring Rites Unite Couple in Orion LAKE ORION — White mums banked the altar of St. Alfred Episcopal Church here for the marriage of Mary Anna Thorn- burg and Michael John Shagena. The double-ring, candlelight cere- mony was performed by the Rev. Raymond E. Bierlein of St. John Episcopal Church in Dryden. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thornburg of Des Moines, Iowa, and Mr. and Mrs. Milo Shagena, of 655 Miller road here. The bride wore @ white lace sheath and her cap veil was trimmed with white velvet bows and seed pearls. She carried a bouquet of white carnations on a lace covered prayer book. * * * Mrs. Edmund Miller, the bride- groom’s aunt, was matron of hon- or, and Edmund Miller, uncle of the bridegroom, served as best man, Ushers were Shardon Allen and John McGee, cousin of the Following the ceremony, a recep- tion was held at the home of the bridegroom's parents. The following day the couple left! on their honeymoon for Bain- bridge, Md., where both are at- tending radio school at the se soe States Naval Base. Romeo Gasoline Station Burglarized Last Night | cilities to house about 2,800 visitors. Mrs. . |Treland, t'To Sub fer Murrow — Visitors to the Immanuel “Futurama Fair’ Oxford this, weekend will have a chance to toss rings over a shapely leg sticking through this ars mural of a woman. The large painting as designed and executed by = el = in Regan, of 1760 Lakeview Dr., shown putting on the final touches. The fair wil be held at the Oxford Junior High School on Friday and Saturday and will feature a parade through town at 7 p.m. Friday. | | Head-On Crash Hospitalizes 2 ‘today sent two area men to ‘liam Oak. Opens Friday at Oxford Rochester Man Suffers Multiple Chest Injuries «yturama Fair’ | Friday and Saturday at Oxford ; Junior High School. Listed as ‘Critical’ MADISON HEIGHTS — A head-! on auto collision here at 5:28 a.m. | Hospital, Beaumont Roya a Emil C. Siegler, 62, of 813 First! St., Rochester, is listed in critical condition with multiple fractures of the chest, and left wrist pad fracture of both knees , Clarkston, driver of the other | is reported to be in * * * The accident occurred on Ste- Brace Beemer, Lone Ranger, will make one of | | his rare public appearatices as a | gi R. Nichols, 21, of 157 Roth| participant in the parade. . The fair, sponsored by th ‘fair’ pregational Church, will officially, |condition with a fractured left beg.|open at 10:30 am. Friday. It will ifeature such traditional events “as, pony rides, |Phenson highway just south of 14 | walk. | Mile road. | had been drinking. Neither have been able to make a state- community, -said .parade cochair-| imen Louis Coryell and Donald G | Tripp. Inc luded among the entries will Be Moats, Pontiac Press Photo Oxford Township, “"" 95th Seasion at Simpson Park Slate Camp Meeting Near Romeo ROMEO — The 95th session of! the Simpson Park Camp Meeting, | oldest interdenominational _ relig-! | ious gathering of its kind in the State of Michigan, will get under way here tomorrow and continue’ ia. through Aug. 9. The camp is lécated on Camp| | half-mile north of town. The caMP jg, |site covers 19 acres and has fa-) There are about 40 cabins and | be Dr |Ground road, one mile west and 8 dent filled to. capacity with over 3,500 the Middle East and Africa in attendance at sions last year. The daily camp program will in- ,c ude preaching services at =r FEATURE SONGS and at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. /One of the visiting ministers willl evangelism, Mr. and Mrs. Charles presl- Sheppard, af the Asbury ee = '_pards,”’ m. J. C. McPheeters, eminary in Wilmore, Ky., es in California. : Others will include Dr. C. boys’ and giris’ dormitories. The Armstrong, missionary evangelist large open-air tabernacle was “Who has recently q HOLLY Honeymooning in northern Michigan following their marriage in St. Rita Church here .| are Mr. and Mrs. Dennis L. Rap- son. The bride is the daughter of Elizabeth Boylan of Dublin, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rapson, of 7023 Groveland Rd. are the bridegroom's parents. The Rev. Cyril Rancourt per- formed the morning ceremony. The bride’s ballerina length gown of lace and tulle over taf- feta was designed for her in Ire- land.: She carried a bouquet of carnations and roses on a white prayer book. Janice Lee Jackson of Pontiac served as maid of honor while Marcig Jéan Cameron and Shirley Ann Jackson also of Pontiac at- tended as bridesmaids. Serving as best man was Harold O’Brien of Swartz Creek. Ushers were Gerald Schedlbower of Pon- tiac and Jick Brasher of Fenton. Donald Gidcumb of Elmhurst, I11., | Newlyweds Honeymoon Atter Holly Ceremony MRS. DENNIS L, RAPSON returned ° f rom _ tis ; an special ses- Dr. William Arnett, professor doctrine at Asbury Theologic: = Seminary, Specialists in missionary-song “Fhe Singing also will take part in the |1l-day conference. They are world founder and president of a aa travelers who have done evangel-\ 15 |. \istic work in Africa, the Middle) ©:"0™e - East and Europe. Miss Faith Francis, a mis- sionary on the Mexican border, will be the pianist, Miss Ger- trude Cooper will return again | this year to take charge of the | | children’s work. The program for young people| |between 12 and 23 years of age one of the most phases of camp activity, Ted Hastings of Flint, youth pro- ,gram dean said. Over 200 were | enrolled last year, he reported * * * One of the high points of the camp meeting is Missionary Day on Aug. 4. Three interdenomina- tional missionary societies will be, represented, They include The Oriental Mis- ,Sionary Society at the 10 a.m. ; service, the Kentucky Mountain 'Holiness Assn. at 2:30 p.m. and the World Gospel Mission at 7:30! - p.m. was heading north ‘quite fast’’ | and drove his car directly imo | the path of eseeere southbound car. Police said they believed Nic tools | ment yet. Both cars were a total loss ‘Area Truckers to Compete for Road-E-O Prizes SOUTHFIELD — The 18th an- nual Truck Road-E-O will be held Saturday and Sunday in a parking ‘lot at Greenfield and Northwest- ‘the Michigan Trucking Assn. Fifty | ; | Shep-| { | i i i Camp caretaker is Burten Hew-: ett, who makes his home on the camp grounds. Editor to Speak in UP IRON MOUNTAIN ( — Worth, editor of the ‘Daily Press, will be the featured | Speaker at the annual Upper Penin- isula History Conference here Attg. 114-15. Jean Escanaba} jern Algeria, ern highway. The Road-E-O is sponsored by) Colorfully decorated booths will) Madison Heights police said a ibe set up at which aprons, pillow witness, whose name they are (Cases and other household articles withholding, stated that Nichals | will be sold. Members of the Women's Fel- lowship will | chicken dinner | baked ham dinner Saturday noon. “The Friday night parade is open men | to all ‘Futurama Fair’ OXFORD — Special attractions, band, clowns, bicycle tiders and| Glesler - 14, and junior queen are planned for the fourth annual! children with dolls and pets, Prizes will be awarded to chil-| dren through 12 years of age wear-! ing the most original costumes and most interesting pets. Among them will be a gala pa-|There wil] be a boy and a girl ‘rade which will.form at Immanuel ‘winner in both classes. Wil-| \Congregational Church at 7 p.m. 1! 7 and end at the school, ac-' cording and James Teays, general cochair-| men of the two-day event, to be staged! ihaving the Jack Valentine' Mrs. to Twe queens, selected from the i Barbara Specht, 8. of the school, . DANCING VARIES Mr, and Mrs. the original Con-| games and a_ cake’ serve snacks, a Friday and a | interested persons in the _Gecorated cars, a Slated A street dance, open to the’ pub- ‘lic free of charge, will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday on the street south “It will feature square and mod- Sunday School, will ride in the ern dancing, Caller will be Sam | place of honor in the “parade. | Joan. They ate _senior queen ‘Nerma ihave charge of the event. Jaek Reid ay ers who had competed in com- | pany runoffs will p< urticipate. First, | second and third-place winners tro-| |phies and $150 to pay expenses in | the National Truck Road-E-O to, 'be held in Louisville, Ky., Sept 24 26, will be awarded. | The Road-E-O will begin locally | at 7 a.m. Saturday and at 8:15! ‘a.m. Sunday. Dave Carlson, safety director for , the association, said that road-e-os | are being conducted in 27 states | j and winners of each will compete | ie the national meet. Congregational Church Group Schedules Luau ROCHESTER — The Congrega-| tors Club of the First Congrega-| tional Church here will meet at! of Mr. amd Mrs. Donald | \J. Campbell, 2745 Tallahassee St., | for a Hawaiian luau at 7 p. m.| | Saturday. - The purpose of the feast is to! help new couples in the church, lget acquainted with their fellow | |members, according to the pla ning committee. In charge of ar- rangements are the Maynard Rem- | ers, the George Carsons and ihe |" important |Campbells. {= the Rev.| Guests at the luau will sit down in typical Hawalian style to eat barbecued chicken and other Polynesian delicacies and drink punch from a carved-out water- melon to the accompaniment of Hawaiian music. After-dinner entertainment Barbara and Marilyn Curtis. They are the daughters af Mr. and Mrs. Robert Curtis, St. Algerian Rebels Attack -ALGIERS (AP)—A rebel com- 7 mando Tuesday night attacked an : open air feast at Bougie, in east-' and for a few mb-' ménts held the crowd under heavy |. fire. Two children — one Euro-' pean and one Moglem were, killed and 11 other people injured. ® Diamond-bored, bronze valves! ® New and meget detergent tank! FIRST MODEL CHANGE IN 12 YEARS Fits any sink! Dishmaster, always the world’s most popular dishwasher, now washes even faster, cleaner and more DEMONSTRATION, SALES and SERVICE ° = will mapa stop valve handles eliminate e sian sure-lock wane holder keeps hose in place! NEW FACTORY BRANCH on WOODWARD at ~~ LAKE RD. FE 8-2588 /MICHAELEEN A. FITZSIMMONS MARY SUE TAYLOR * Plan Wedding Oct. 24 | A January wedding is Announcing the engagement | planned by Michaeleen Ann - _ Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Grinnell, | Fitzsimmons of, Cleveland- and of their daughter, Mary Sue, of 375 Coats Rd, Lake-Orion, | Philadelphid and Charles F to Brian Langley, are Mr. and announce the engagement of | Comeau. Parents of the cou- Mrs. Joseph P. Taylor, of 301 | their daughter, Louige Milli- ple are Mr. and Mrs. John F. Indianwood Rd., Lake Orion. cent, to Robert Lee Glaspie, | Fitzsimmons of “Chetwynd.” The fiance is the son of Mr. . foster son of Mr. and Mrs, P.A. | Rosemont, Pa., and Mr, and and Mrs. Edward Langley of ; Rose, also of Lake Orion. The Mrs. Fabian L. Comeau, of 292 Midland. No date has been set ' couple plan an Oct. 24 wedding. North Lapeer Rd, Oxford. for the wedding. i i NOW DO DISHES FASTER, CLEANER New Imperial DISHMASTER’ p tr 4 . will |: feature the hula performed by): of 7952 Elizabeth |~ 4 .3 % 4 Near Massena, a mine exploded] : while four Moslems riding don-' keys were passing. All four were; i killed. 5 was ringbearer. Following the ceremoity a recep-| tion was held in the Grange Hall’ here. Upon returning from the honeymoon the couple will reside, on eaceem road. } State Commission OKs 4 County School Loans Included in a rash of school borrowings approved yesterday by the State Municipal Finance Commission were four in the Oakland County area. Holly schools were given the ‘green light to borrow $79,000 in anticipation of taxes, North Branch schéols for $40,000, Ar mada, $45,000, and Imlay City, $23,900, NEW YORK (AP) — -CBS-TV OTICE During REMODELING SALE YOUR CAR NEED ‘NOT BE PAID FOR! NO sederalt sable SEPTEMBER | es is 4 eg L ” ea Pe a Outside promoters sell merchants on the idea of offer- ing free services or merchandise, to the Dye to attract business. The free offers are made thr ough coupons, which the promoters sell in book form to the public at no expense to the businessmen, except free service ot merchandise. Often a business or service is confronted by so many ; coupon holders at one time that it cannot fulfill it; — Coup é } romotions! obligations without going bankrupt. Your Business Ethics Board strongly disapproves of coupon book sales promotions. You Cannot Get Something for Nothing! - BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD | of the Pontiac Area Chamber, of Commerce _Phone FE 2-9625 ae Hours: 10-12-13. “4 Waldron Hotel Bldg. = on Book seeps PEGS RPE OR hae Es F é . | \ | \ | | THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29,1959 °° . | | % | ee \Stay Alive Longer! The Right Foods Can Be Enjoyable, Too “the reeling’ in the steak mobilizes the fighter’s energy resources so that he can stay in there punching ~funtil the final round. EATING FOR PLEASURE Horse, Thief Basin - is a city | park of Phoenix, Ariz., and main-| tained by the Phoenix Parks and | Recreation Department. Yet it is located miles from the down-| town of Phoenix. | | WALLED “LAKE, PARK /asdeu - "The father ani uncle’ Ellington, famed orchestra seilbe. were both butlers at thé- White “House. | amaica,Wants | Manley Again | a" True ‘fri Seer ees. | Med pweers heise . —* ack: Into Power for’ 48 ‘PIPER'S MAGAZINE OUTLET _ Another Five Years . | Eating Plan DORSEY ORCHESTRA™ Directed by Lee Castle FRI. and. SAT .. WANTED 1,000 COMIC BOOKS ; Author Has [4 wted tote 35 Auburn Ave. If you are seeking that alive- | —<--—-—|} KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP)'— all-over glow your body radi- By the time you reach the age WINIPPINPRORNS remier Norman Manley swept, ates when you are in excellent jof “fifty you will have spent three . r PONTIAC | back into power today with a big! health, why not try “belord jof your years eating. To make ' «.~ DRI iVr- “IN ; ii ' Kordel's Better-Eating Plan. It your eating hours enjoyable—with- WA D cada ™ jmajority in Parliament to carry is designed to give you the pro- [out denying yourself the pleasures LLE I AK E opi lls 5/ oh Jamaica's socialistic govern-- teins, vitamins and minerals jof food—you need a new _pbhilos- CASINO BALLROOM ophy. Plenty and variety, the en- your body needs for dynamic joyment of food, of taste, and of living. another five years. 7 7 ment for votes to be) Phone: MArket 4-1881 | With only a few : _ counted, unofficial returns indi-| You may have a copy FREE | /new, natural flavors, are the keys ated Manley’s People’s National | by sending a stamped self-ad- (to this new philosphy. c ‘ = ex , . 7 A The Cry SOREL var ot The Pintiac: | Lan fo-apareciate in your veg- js GNsSaRSuSunsananaiaennnueeneun. party would have 28 of the 45 seats’ Zz in the new House of Representa-| : tives. KORDEL, care of The Pontiac Press. All requests must be made. in writing, Please don’t phone. Copies are not available at The Pontiac Press. SOUTH END UNION LAKE ROAD. and HAGGERTY OPEN 7P.M. EM 3-066! etables the flavor that nature be- |stowed upon them. Once you dis- cover.the exquisiteness of natural tastes, real enjoyment of eating can be yours. The answer to your weight problem will be a new mar- riage between art and science. By LELORD KORDEL i * ot * * ee Instaliment Fifteen | The delectable natural taste of Voting was brisk and compara-, Sam Morris came to me because’ Many foods will oifer yqu a new tively orderly after sporadic cam-jhe was fat and miserable. Fear of kind of flavor—flavor that has been paign violence in which one man Josing his wife and the knowledge hidden from you under sauces or was killed. that he was no longer attractive distorted by traditional combina- Manley, 66, an Oxford-educ ated in her eyes made him a deter- tions. Science shows you what food lawyer, led the People’s National) ‘mined man. ican do for you. How well you use party to power in 1955 after 11) pis home and his future happi-| ‘the knowledge is up to you. years of rule by the conserva- ness were at’ stake. | Choose pleasant surroundings, tives headed by his 75 - year - old} «ye done everything I can to add good conversation, then eat cousin. Bustamante, a former sol-| |please my wife,”’ said Sam. | slowly, and chew your food thor- that Rocked the. . VALLEY ff ‘wTYrrvwvrvewrewrewrewTtY?Y al i il ll eh ht i eh pewwvuevvvvvvde?T' pliner ntl Linc ih, i | | | * * * conservative Labor party; jed by his cousin, Sir Alexander) Bustamante, appeared to have! clinched 16 seats. One inde pendent was elected The LAST TIMES TONIGHT 2 OF THE OUTSTANDING PICTURES OF THE YEAR. AT THE BIG DRIVE-IN ‘ew WK EARTH is Mine! AUTHOR PREPARES SNACK — Lelord Kordel concocts a _wrrrrwereVTVTTT TTT ee Te eC eC CCC CCT eC eee al ln la Al A A i in Mi At Mi Mn Ml A i i Mis Mi Mi i i Mi hi Mi th i Me i ie it dis din A ll i i hi Mi Mi i ie Ni i i Mi i hi i Lin Mn Me. Me Ml Mn tl Me the ht hh te het . ae dier, policeman, gency pnd “Except lose weight,” J remind-| oughly. This allows time for CimemaScopeé TECHNICOLOR trade union ee the year ied him. blood-sugar changes, which ap- | favorite mixture of pineapple juice, almonds, malted milk powder by en ce _ vet “Well, yes,’ he admitted. “‘But) pease your appetite before sec- | and ripe bananas. ee 5 ecction was the first I wasn’t exactly skinny when I) ond helpings are oftered. 5 r] Jamaica gained internal” Started going with’ her.’ | Blunting the sharp edge of appé- mind, be sure to drink at least|Eating Plan: Address Lelora since - te . ‘ ‘T asked him to get on the scales, tite by changes in eating times! gi glasses of water each day.’ | Kordel. care of The Pontiac Press. a ~wTrrrTeeeeeereeeereeY* -wTeyrvvVYVYYrrewrrewerrewre+ywTeerfefte'T'rfT:,..'’ www???" ago WAAPAPIPPIAPIPAAS? 0.1 covernme He two years , and he almost broke them which serve to raise: the blood-| from the British, who have ruled : “Vou. aa j Water’ ia wacdéeary tor Xt th _ F : ; n ou,” I told him, ‘are the Te- sugar level is known as meal tim-| mend |) enteral i hd © _ All Rights Reserved. Adapted from th 2 2 | Coot | K EEGO aa ane iol a Sees a at sult of a lifetime of overeating.’ jing. When you are on a reducing| life processes within the living | book. “Live to Enjoy ae Mens Goa - ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! - | retain con ¢ ; “y gue ss that’s right,” Sam! diet, ‘cence ‘ dullin celis of the body. The glands use |} a wedle. y Lelord Kordel. Published | 7 fairs y an succeed in dulling joy W ia ¢ * POSITIVELY! LAST DAY | ; _ ‘agreed “I was brought up on athe nagging pains of hunger, the) W@ter to elaborate their various | — a ‘ : , dairy farm and we all loved to battle is nearly won. secretions. Water is also used Tomorrow: Tension, a most } In the wonder of HIGH FIDELITY STEREOPHONIC SOUND Ar entine Plant Bombed eat , for the absorption of digested | deadly and contagious game. A : ‘ama TURNER g » « ¢ FLUIDS—A MUST! | Seutet! Yeu used ohent twa quacte || Allee of Cah ty. LLLP ee IQHN GAVIN BUENOS AIRES W—A tw o- hour | “I'm going to:put you on a high- . “Do you drink whole milk, of -water every twenty-four hours Seen eee ee ene eae ‘ sure by etal workers DORE yt it told Sam, “fr |SAM7" asked remembering hia| for your body rqureiens 7 Iby a bombing at @ metal working sever at Feeeooa: 1) on es “Sure.” he said. “Always have.| Dr. Jean Mayer, of the Depart- Ma rriage License ow é Fl RS I ‘Plant. itionately the lowest calorie count! een at paging — ae oS ol pony, ianiige sine Appili Cc ati ons ~ _ f all foods. (2) A high-protein diet oe TUNE ee amoun ic Health, says> “‘Combat- 4 | During 1958, Canada produced ‘supplies you with i areugt and ae mt it?” ‘ jing overweight by diet alone is} Pin“, ° ghee Rochester + ° FEATURE 7:15 and 9:30 ‘more than 70 per cent of the energy you need. (3) Such a diet ' a “Geer oaks ae ya, Same. like fighting with one hand behind! Gene W wtuier. 592 Over! FORBIDDEN in the City 1 nickel output of the free world. allows you to cut down on cal- sai ne cupful of whole milk Sharon \. Calter. te tee Th bee : cles Ayour back. Exercise is the other : lanto ® — Gries! yields 9.5 grams of fat, That’s why | ch et : of Pontiac! aries w ke | NOW! at 7:00 & 9:2 i 7: -00 & 9: 20 | Protein furnishes specific dynam- {°F any adult, I recommend skim | fist that enables us to deal the Anne C Donaldson, 304 Ottewe - a lie action for your body, in addi- jmilk—either fresh or reconstituted} knockout blow. Thesigh M. Johasee. 0 8. Bewlerael j tion to giving you all the necessary from the powd@ed variety avail ey eRCISE HELPS Rosa R. A. Watkins, 12 Beaudette ‘material for replacing your fat able in all food markets.” Moderate exercise promote s| Willem B. Pfaff, Birmingham von WANN! with muscle tissue. : ~~ & * : [| Marthe Manz. Royal) Gak “O.K..” said Sam. ‘Skim milk mental alertness, provides an out- Howard E. Fitts, Wellesley Hills. Mass Specific dynamic action gives foe mn ” wen chou h it’s what we let. for the frustratiorfs of com-| Susanne Shanklin. Birmingham “ (es pep one patarance: By S8C- | sed to feed the ho s back home, Petition and creates a feeling of] Jonn D. Werles. Orchard Lake | ing your body to use its energy ot come to think vee th h *| well-being. When you feel like, Sve = Roseberry, Prankitn +} : | materials. It takes a steak and al veal well on ee Hy: ROSS NOE | blowing up, exercise provides you! Dale B. Hill, Clawson | econ = rm not a cream puff to make a win- “Another reason £ bal 4 With an outlet that reduces ten-; “%¢"7t? M Paull. Troy 3 | Bing fighter. reducing What? | tad Sem, “et | Sion. | Red L Purney Jr. Lake Ortes a “HOWARD HAWKS! The specific d@ 's '0\ Were you a college football hero? | - oe ee ynamic act x “ ; pute ae ic_Betiog of (prevent constipation. With that iin you need rhoré-qxarcise teo| Sati 7 Soe. Breen AUDREY ANTHONY RIO BRAVO 1 |keep ee ei " than ve book | | fames A. Fitzpatrick, 33 8 Roselarn | HEPBURN . PERKINS ; ; 1 worm des. You have built up ig | Flora C. Block, 740 Robinwood e = MA 4 3135 muscles, and if you suddenly cut | Stewart C. Terrey, Rochester GREEN MANSIONS” —— ; DRIVE-IN aa down on your exercise, fat will in-| Cleo E Shananan, 153 Washingloa «. » The Forbudden Forests Beyood The Amazon! ~ ING SOON filtrate all those masses of muscle.| Harley O. White, Birmingham eocteges THEATRE O British pt . logi t tells us |} Edith BE. Ehlert, Birmingham HA . a as o ne British physiologis S US, SESSUE HAYAKAWA - HENRY SELVA ——— | The Shagsy Dos While it may be better to Nave | carole J. Zimmerman Rocneste cramascort ona wetoCOLOR | " “ | : OV an ost, t y is , : ; { ALIAS JESSE JAMES : | Starts Friday better to have exercised and | wou eg ge . stopped.” rari ner l } | “SOUTH PACIFIC” , John WAYNE Deen MARTIN Ricker NELSON * * * ~|°Mary B Hunt, Leke Orion , Walter BRENNAN Back at the turn of the century,! ,:cnipaid N. McLean. Roya! Oak i “IMITATION OF LIFE” 66 9 IN | people walked or bicycled wher-| Kathryn B. Buell, Birmingham aoe RIO BRAVO ever they went, unless they could | Arthur EB. LaRose Jr Troy COLOR afford a carriage. Today almost) N#™cy |. Kitson. Troy | Pome everyone rides. Overweight has/ Sao, Onti® whit’ cco ‘grown with our prosperity: The | number of persons joining the meter ©, drat, tre Pat = i [ranks of the obese has increased) os 2 seed. Rochester” | Se at an alarming rate. So have the; Karen E. Yekey, Rochester | mortality rates increased for the tine 8 Os, BAY diseases of the obese. Mary L. Kennedy, 34 Allison | f * *° * rt J. Bernhardt, Travis AFB, OPEN WAS P.M. = SHOW STARTS AT DUSK . Fat is a killer. Remember to, oro E. Westlake, Troy } Do it as such! = b -o0| Ward A. VanWagoner, Rochester SHOWS at 1:00 c PHONE FEDERAL FEATURES At NOW. Do you want to subtract Marlyn C. Calhoun 5: o 1:40. = 3:40 _ hong! EXCLUSIVE | calories or more from your daily | Laurence 8. Robertson, 610 Second > OAKLAND: 5 pr a4 40 FIRST SHOWING lintake? For the high protéin diet Marilyn M. Main, Bloomfield Hills 7:00 - 9:00 it Garland D. Hays. Lake Orion _NOW.. .FOR 1 gave Sam, agrees 5 6 1 a Beverly A. Couch, 29 W. Rutgers YONE “"Merse Soldiers’’ isi special eating chart of high calorie! 1144: a. Ccubba. Rochest Shown At : DR IVE-IN TH EATER and unnecessary foods that I told | Alves A. ‘Bolas, “bes nal — A Magnificent NEW 8:20 P. tA. & 12:05 THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN him he must eliminate, send a| ary R. Lingle, 346 N. Paddock Motion Picture from Walt Disney j . ns | staynped self - addressed envelope} sschere 4. resins, tne Sam ot . Cor. Willigens Lake-Airport Reads—Bex Office Open 7:30 P.M. —jjfor your free copy of my “Better-| Judith B. Eldred, Drayton Plains . ae PCCD DDL ob blabla blllalale a lalallalaleetats | NOW SHOWI in T | | NG H “TONITE! | ! | BLUE SKY §& . | a IH IRA Mate eis eee box Office Open 7 P.M. | J] THEY GREW INTO GIANTS AT RIO BRAVO! |5 EMO Show Starts 8:20 P.M. | « o ’ ‘ ae a BG GE s They're tote and nothing can tear’em apart! = c : rm 15” v . a ¢ , a : JOHN WAYNE-DEAN MARTIN: gat THE HORSE : RICKY NELSON ome | oe a JOHN FORD'S 4 . | THUNDERING SPECTACLE! j 5 , CAR by ose somes Sl eat DONE WATER DREW BOND reSomecocome@] 1 | —— — AN ARMADA PRODUCTION « Directed and Prodused by HOWARD HAWKS nos: ALSO s TODAY Sin A io Open 10:45 FIRST PONTIAC SHOWING : ust ont | Ee ' JOAN. CRAWFORD — © ROSSA NO BRAZZI SHE SHOULD HAVE | THe STORY or ESTHER COSTELLO a s ” Ww : : SAID “NO” WHEN SHE " PLUS! KIM STANLEY in “THE GODDESS” ; SAID “YES”! . ent Taw ——— ; ‘ s A ARIA PROOUCTION Brrected ond Procuced by HOWARD HS = STARTS TOMORROW! #; 7 2 5 rm * Pp LUS * HERE is your opportunity te see the great screen assteoledit ; that -~ ——- made entertainment history, ‘THE ROBE,’ on the same program with a . 0C.0_an ; , ite great seqtel, ‘DEMETRIUS and the GLADIATORS.’ The pertect = ae / AS A S-S- SCREAN, show for the entire family. DON’T MISS IT! ‘Too Groon’t ae . ~~. * Br ide — fora de = : e VIRGINIA I | cal tee ig | i ; : a ; : piny “The mons” 6 Freee phon Loot sf muito ARTISTS PICTURE a Lf E 4 Tompess Fulm Proaeetion + Reienses ty 20th Centiny +e: Pi a ¢ ae ee. . : Hi ‘ t = STARS FRI. SHAGGY DOG” " “PME ROBE” at 1:25-3:45 & § ~ “GLADIATORS” ad 1:00 000-1815 - LPrITTITiTleT rte eee eee ry 2 By PHYLLIS BATTELE | NEW YORK — Everyone these days is a collector, i. It is not a hobby. It is the curse of présperity, ‘© What we collect are. wonderful, modern, ingenious inventions of imid-century Americanism. This is ‘all to the good, as who would care %o be caught flat-footed these days ‘without the feet having been treat-) ed by a handy-dandy $39.95 elec- ‘tric home pedicure set? ". But the curses of collecting _wonderful, modern, ingenious in- ventions of mid-century Améeri- -canism are the papers that come. with them, The guarantees, The directions on how te open, The « instructions on how to ‘operate. The reminders’ on how to care fer. The tips on where to order parts and refills. Our apartment is one sprawling filing cabinet of folders, tags, cer- tificates and instruction sheets. We are afraid to throw them away, partly because we might forget liow to change those grids on the waffle iron, or between cases. of dyspepsia we might forget whether to take a teaspoon or a tablespoon,| and was it before or after meals? But mainly we hesitate to throw papers away because we didn’t un- derstand them in the first place— and someday we'll get around to muddling them through. Like the floor-polisher brochure that begins: “Congratulations. Now that you | are the proud possessor of a ——— polisher and_ scrubber, give it regular care. Every three months, remove the thrée screws marked ‘A’ on the underside of *the base, then turn machine. right - side up and remove screw in cen- “ter of handle swivel plate. Turn field lead to rear of handle swiv- _el and, . .” This is where our mind wan- dered. So we tucked the pamphlet in the dictionary, our favorite fil- ing site for difficult memorabilia, and pushed a button and scrubbed. But it’s been two years now since) “we've proudly possessed this gadg-, ét and someday that field lead will have to turn,: | ~ More understandable iristructions | ‘(like “Hello there, my name is: I'm a pot cleaner. Soak! Daydreaming May Get OK, Says Speaker NEW YORK \ — Perhaps, in — some schoolroom of the future, | students will be reprimanded for | not daydreaming, For dreaming is an essential | part of the creative process, - “says Michael Radock, manager. | of educational affairs for the | Ford Motor Co. | He was a speaker for the com. | pany’s 10th annual industrial | arts awards program Tuesday, | The winning entries, he said, | show. that high school students | “today have added a fourth “R” | “to the. traditional three — re-— ~ sourcefulness. ; i They show, he said, “that the teaching of skills is not enough.” | .. “Emphasis must be placed on ..creative thinking and problem. . solving,” he, added, “for the -- future cifizen needs toe be edu- .. cated to use his mind to think, to reason, to dream, to create,” “His survival — and ours — may depend on it,” said Radock. os be J Don Mix. now living in Bristol, Conn., made the first contact by radio from the Arctic to the’ United States when he was aboard | the Arctic- exploring schooner “Bowdoin” in 1923-24, ». + DONALD DUCK jand starchable and others not. * "Je r a ee ee a ae be 1g \ ge ee ee ee ee ee a ae 3 fl + « ‘ a. { \ me well and use'’) creat a prob- lem, because they must be filed away, There are some pot clean- ers, you know, which den't want to be soaked well and a- housewife can't be expected to remember their idiocyncrasies. One has to keep tags from clothes, of course, because some should be washed in hot water and some in cool, some ironed and some dripped, some bleachable Our system is to mark these in- struction tags with hints as to what they came with (“his blue shirt,” “her plaid shorts’) and toss them in a drawer with the drugs direc- |before which meals to take what, after what meals to take which, how to open castor oil without spill-| ‘ing (turn cap gently, do not tip) and so on. - This particular drawer is so flooded with literature that if we were not careful we could bleed to death before laying hands on the “How. to unwind bandage gauze’”’ tip sheet, Scattered even more haphazard- ly throughout the apartment, as we discovered in a recent annual search for the rules on how to oil the electric knife-sharpener, are more than a hundred other ‘‘how tionals, In this latter line are included) the tips on how to apply corn pads, mysterious brochure on safety with structions. ito”’ pamphlets: collected . through ‘TURN BASE GROOVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1959 ions for Gadgets! a Marlin model 55-hunter shotgun (mysterious because we don’t own | a gun), was a booklet without a cover, Fascinating, too. It read: ‘Carefully turn base groove (X) on end, affixing match} thumb nuts (B and D) to bolts (CC). Now hook guy wires (RR) to...” But our mind wandered again. What it wandered to was our fil- ing cabinet, where all these ac- coutrements of modern invention should neatly and accurately be stored away. Trouble is we've never been able to use the filing cabinet properly. We bought it sec- the months. One, located under a ond-hand, with no guarantee or in-/ > A BY BEA FARMER! BEFO 7 E'S GETTING IN SHAPE TO 7-29 1959 by NEA Service, ne. TM. Reg. US, Pet. OW. BOARDING HOUSE.~ RE HE THAT MY MOLARS EVERY TIME LT THAN MASH {I'LL HATE TO MOVE OUT) BE PREPARED SY OF THIS WIGWAM! My & FOR THE WORST, BTEETH ARE SO WEAK & BOYS ~~ THE GOT THAT BLMPON THE HE: ADY FROM YEARS OF HASH & MAJOR WANTS SOMETHING TOUGHER BEFORE EITHER= . l \ BENDY| ME TO VISIT RY Y A FARM WITH HIM 4 TOMORROW! ED THAT NEVER HAPPENED ‘ts OUT OUR WAY TLL FIND OUT WHERE THOSE BOLTS WENT TO! = ™ Reg. U.S. Pat. OFF. WHY MOTHERS. GET GRAY ® 1969 by NEA Service, ter. 7924 JTR.WILLIAMS By Walt Disney rarer Le id ‘ 1 KNOW iT NEEDS A WAX JOS, )} MAO! TLL WAX YOUR CAR seed BUT I CAN'T AFFORD IT! FOR FREE! YOU SPENT A oT a ae | Mi 4 THATS BECAUSE YOUR MONEY ON. CLOTHES! Ses NOW...NOW DON'T GET Lt. L— okay READY VZ TO GET STARTED... TOSS ME OUT SOME OLD [RAGS FOR POLISHING“ yj mF 2 729 ~ ~~ Bisatoehed by Reig Peskeres yadinate | DS ut VINEL— * THE GIRLS e By Franklin Folger oyrerty 4 Enjoy { ¢ America’s Favorite—} t WRIGLEY’S | t SPEARMINT t { “or Ge “9 40 SE *R OO EF t cHEwING GUM You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way . to solve your buying and selling problems. To Place Your _ WANT AD DIAL FE 2-818] Srey ee pee e@ Warm, shining walnut finish Folding Aluminum Chair, Priced Low 4.44 at this price you'll want a rhole yard tull. Sturdy alum- ho tubing frame plus gay wipe-clean plas tic seat, back. Reg. 6.95 Reg. 99.95 3 colors Convertible Sofa AT 22.95 SAVINGS @ Wipe-clean Vinyl covering, | @ 55-coil spring unit for extra comfort © Bronzetone steel frame converts easily ‘77. @ All drawers are dovetailed 518.98 Deluxe Webbing Gliders 919 Sturdy aluminum frame, tive plastic webbing. One pas- "or twin- "Plenty of service smoothly textur 42%