The: Weather ©. & Weather Berean Forecast Thupdershowers ; ,. (Details on .) wee a . Soot Be pies =t Bt EA a = ae icicles! sone és 117th YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1348 PAGES x * * . x * * * ££ * n° x x: nie Broil This Time Missing Girl From Detroit Safe in Jackson 3-Year-Old’s Journey, Shrouded in Conflicting) Statements | JACKSON (P —A sleep- ing 3-year-old girl who van- ished in a car reported) stolen in Detroit was found today wandering naked: through the streets of Jatk- son, 75 miles away. Dr. F. I. Van Wagen, Jackson health director, said the child had been) molested, but she could not. recall being assaulted. The child’s mother, Mrs. Joan Roland, 23, reported her daughter, | Debbie, and her car missing last night, | She said she and a friend left the child in the, ear while they | went to get a drink of water, near Detroit's! Waterworks Park. | She said the car) was gone when ™ they returned. * Mrs. Roland was held for ques- | tioning by Detroit! . police. | | OFF TO GOOD START — Robert R. Eldred. general campaign director of the 1959 Pontiac Area United Fund, is shown here as he spoke to more than 40 community leaders at the ad- vance gifts solicitation: breakfast this morning at the Community National Bank. Seated at man. The 1959 | Advance Gifts Coming In his right is Glenn H. Griffin, advance gifts chair- background. Eldred concluded his talk by presenting a check for $7,000 from the Com- munity National Bank to the United Fund. Ou Heat Wave to Crack Tonight inCold Front — Mercury May Dive: 40 Degrees in Some: Parts of State Midnight 77 Sam. ...76) 2am. ...76 10am. ..84 4am. ...76 Noon ....89° 6am. ...76 Ipm. ...91, The beginning of a repeat. performance prolonged heat wave for Pontiac: and) vicinity should be nipped in, the bud by a rapidly ad-. vancing cold front, the weatherman said today Temperatures soared in the 90s: Sunday, Monday and Tuesday with | the mercury expected to climb to’ a high of 92 today. But the Weather Bureau says the cold front, sweeping across | Minnesota, lowa and Kansas ts expected to arrive in Pontiac | and southern Michigan late te- | day. | The cooling mass, which should cover the entire state by Thurs- day morning, is expected to drop, Michigan's blazing temperatures {by as much as 40 degrees in some jareas Pentiat Press Phete U-F campaign poster forms the * * ; _ The weatherman reports. it {s likely that the cold front will be jaccompanied by scattered thunder- |storms, some of them possibly se- first told him she came from) Cookeville, Tenn., but later ad-| mitted she had been living at a, trailer camp at Clark Lake, near Jackson, / CHANGES sTORY Evans said he was trying to de- termine whether the baby was kid-! naped by accident or taken to) Jackson by a friend of the mother. | Me said Mrs. Rolacd first | denied having been in Jackson yesterday but later told him she that city about noon left fer Detroit with Alrmah Gary Brooklyn, Mich. with her in Detroit ith was when He had been ‘stationed at Self- ridge Air Force Base but had been transferre dto. Traux AFB near) Madison, Wis, He was to have been) at the field today but was de-'/Emmanuel Christian Schoo! on thet baby disappeared. in the Pontiac school sys-* tem. 4 are aes S| AP Wirephete ‘BIG JOKE’ ATOP ATLAS — ‘Big Joe, an experimental un- manned model of the type of capsule that will carry the first American into space, is shown in place atop an Atlas missile. It was rocketed high over the Atlantic today and the capsule was quickly located. ‘Big Joe’ is 94y feet tall, 6 feet across rounded base and 20 inches across the top. It weighs one ton. = _—_— ~ = St High State Officials | | Fall School Term Begins United Fund -ae2sEtis at Trooper's Burial in City, County This Week Pontiac and Waterford Township public and paro- More than 375 youngsters will,;roliment,’” Whitmer said. ‘Such begin the first day of classes at has not always been the case.” | When Whitmer became super- tained in Detroit for questioning. Friday, St. Michael and St. Fred- intendent’ in 1954, ‘the Pontiac Mrs. Roland said she met Smith erick schools began formal class school district had 25 schools draft, sessions yesterday, at Clark Lake about a month ago. His home is near the area. She said she and her husband. Leslie, 26, are estranged. Debbie was found by a wom- an employe of the Aeroquip Corp., in downtown Jackson. The parking lot, Police said it ap- | peared to have been ransacked. with a reasonable capacity of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) The enroliment of more than Gets Check for $7,000 M4 in eastern upper Michigan. ‘WARMER ON WEEKEND “You're all déaders of this com-| The cool weather for Pontiac munity and veterans of the United and Oakland County should last It is expectéd to dip as low as! ~ HOWELL (#—Alvin W. Knight brooded in a jail @eil 42 in western upper Michigan and today as high state officials and relatives gathered at Test Turns Out Success Despite Flop in Distance Destroyers Rushing to Pick Up Model Which Returned All Signals ' CAPE CANAVERAL, Fila. (#—An unmanned model of the vehicle an American will ride into space was rocketed high over the At- lantic today in a test which promised some success de- spite a mechanical failure. The huge Atlas booster rocket failed to fall away as scheduled after spend- ing its force. The resulting drag cut the flight short of its planned 100-mile height and 2,000-mile distance. But observers at this testing station counted up these elements of gain: 1. The capsule itself was quickly ted afloat on the & prespect of recov- ovean, SANTA MARIA, Calif. (UPI)— Busy switchboards, lack of ac- commedations and a barbecue party indicated today that the first operational firing of the Atlas Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile will prebably be tried by a Strategic Air Com- {| mand squadron today. | ery and vatuable information | from its lead of instruments. 2 That meant the capsule had isurvived the searing friction of jre-entry into the heavy atmos- phere | 3. Telemetry signals, described |by missilemen as good, reported throughout most of the flight on ithe performance of the vehicle and the conditions it efcountered. A MAJOR STEP The director of Project. Mer- | Shaina om Page 3 Sa Courthouse Bids a tiny town 45 miles away for the burial-of a young trooper he is accused of shooting. Knight, 48, was charged yesterday with killing state Being Opened Fund. You know that our commu- through tomorrow and Friday with policeman Albert Souden, 29, with his own gun in a chial schools are opening their doors this week as ap- nity needs all-the services of the temperatures ranging from 74 to proximately 34,000 students flock to classes for the. 1959-60 year. | The fall term begins tomorrow for 20,000 children) \lars and cents.” | | “Capacity is now equal to eM) vance gifts chairman of 1959 Pon- agencies supported by the Pontiac 78 degrees, Area United Fund. A warming trend was forecast | “Now, let's really get out and) ¢ urday Sunday, how. | translate our conviction into dol-| paligee= wth temparete ies re- | turning again Monday, | The recorded high temperature tiac Area United Fund campaign rece” yemeryay ‘wee 3 de. this morning to more than 40 ad-; * * * vance gifts solicitors at a break- Today will mark the fourth fast sponsored by the Community straight day of 90-or-above tem- National Bank in the Club Over-) (continued on Page 2. Col. 3) So spoke Glenn H. Griffin, ad- $22 MEY Choe sa Ga eee og The advance gifts section of “°°? (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) In Today's Press | Detroit Firm Enters general murder warrant is-*————— sued at the request of Liv-) ingston County prosecutor, News Flashes Wilfred Erwin. | Held without bond in Livingston nee County Jail, Knight has refused one oe oe oa to make a formal statement since: day a bit increasing the federal strte police quoted him Monday gasoline tax a cent a gallon Oct. as admitting he shot Souden last 1, The money will go toward Thursday when he went to Knight's’ financing the interstate bighway home to question him about @ $5 program. burglary Knight led police to an to.” lated area near Argentine, north ion issued a call today for Red LONDON @&—The Soviet Un. | lower Figure Than 2 City - Companies A Detroit firm toda yentered the lowest base bid for general construction in the proposed Oak- land County Courthouse. The bid from 0. W. Burke Co. | Was $2,061,000. | This was lower than bids en- tered by twe Pontiac firms, the | only other bidders. | 4. A. Fredman, Inc.'s bid was | $2,993,900. Schurrer Construction “T slept all the way. I don’t know pr Dana P, Whitmer, superintend-, ‘(Continued on Page 2, Col. &) How to Get the Best Education for Your Child They said the: child's story of being driven to Jackson by a wom- an differed from that of a woman living in the area where the child was found. aa By DR. BENJAMIN FINE AND LILLIAN FINE Should you send your child to nursery school? Or would it be wiser to save the money to pay college expenses later ‘on? You may get some help by asking yourself the follow- = ing questions: . ASHINGTON (UPI) — Pres. iL. Is my son or daughter strong and healthy cio cal Te the caaetele- | enough te start school now? = : the President probably would | = §& D6 1 need some help from a trained objective are to Khrushchev and can- _ 6... Does he show sigtis of being too dependent and matic developments, or sudden : a oe ee ; solutions of cold war problems. If you answer “yes” to most of these questions, your Mt ghee was considered likely | clilld probably needs the experience of attending a good | me Eisenhower a nursery schoo. pe io Bid ne toe +l yp Mag lta fictals ‘what schools are available within a reasonable dis- eaaane tn the Pontiac area | 2nC0. The best schoo! in the world is hardly worth trans- at 7:26 p.m. Pontine time, It will * * * { be on radie at 6:29. af Investigate thoroughly. This means stying through 4 o least one session and observing carefully the physical con- ditions, the teachers’ attitude, the behavior of the children, and the general “atmosphere” of the school. Find out how much training and experience the teach- ers have and what. they try fo accomplish with the chil- dren, ’ is the school overcrowded or understaffed? Is there plenty of space indoors and out for vigorous neisy play? is the play space protected from traffic and intruders? ls thete a variety of. toys and play equipment suitable for young children? Does the school have a piano and a phonograph? Few nursery schools are as attractive as parents, might wisn. A good nursery s¢hool may be located.in a off. old- | fashioned house or in a church hall. If the place is clean | and reasonable safety precautions have been taken, physical conditions are probably acceptable, Far more important than equipmént are the teachers. | Genuine liking for children, a sense of humor, energy and tact, plus the ability to think fast are. needed. DO IT YOURSELF The head of the school should have considerable ex- | perience and formal training. A strong-minded, forceful director will probably insist no maximum control and no A. nonsense; for some children such a school may be too re- strictive. A wishy-washy. director may be too permissive and | let the children ran wild. Of course, a happy medium is desirable. ‘ The personalities and behavior of other children in the school should be considered. Is your youngster likely to be | Gverwhelmed by ndise and aggressive tactics of the others? | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Ve 12,200 students in Waterford | here, where he showed them | China and India to settle their | Company's bid was $2,161,000. Township has already begun, | . | the shallow grave in which Seu- frontier dispytes “in the inter- | These bids, plus ethers for ene regular school agra ral It has come to the attention of the Pontiac Press [O° rrr * den's body lay. | ests of both countries.” mechanical construction of the es * | that -on several occasions recently, photographers | Comics cesses saves @@ | Gov, G. Mennen Williams and proposed courthouse te be opened Friday. Sunter and cunlor pape i have led lieve th County New 34 (other state officials were to at- : : later today, will be studied by returned to classes this morning. | ave led persons to believe they are representing this OOMRY OWS Seen seen ae — : Americans Tour Russia supervieurs fer several days. ipe . ‘ * ¢ publication when they have no connection with us Fditortats : . 6 ‘tend burial services for Souden ! Gg ek ok. co Tt REOUMONR Qk icieei sf ican | today rant, a Ss 1 C , sCOW (UP — ern. | The Pontiac school system is in| &¢ all. We regret any inconvenience that this may nies . posed lat ri ae oviib uirggeil mil moet aa | A group of Oakland County su- the best position ever f meet the have caused, and assure area residents that this Sperts 23-29 | spent his boyhood. eae that Pages American tour. |PCTYi80rs today began opening new needs of its students returning to] Practice will not be tolerated, and legal action will Theaters: _ 39 | Knight told Prosecutor Erwin its visited the Soviet Union in \Segest phe sig page the a classes tomorrow morning, said] be taken to end it. TV and Radio Programs .. 47 _—syesterday: ' the last seven months compared cont thou Proposed Wlisen, Eari a7 -| “Whatever I have done or said , 1 | Seon COTES | : : _ with a total of 5,000 for all of | Ria. being opened were for gen- lady ent of the city’s schools, j Women’s Pages ....... 13-16 | 1958 5% _. eral and mechanical coristruction. The electrical jhas been signed. | Tt is hoped that bids can be tabu- ‘lated and evaluated in time for a recommendation to the full Board of Supervisors Monday that new contract already Money for Nursery School? Or Save for College! 222222== ere. county corporation coun- ] se 2 Opening the bids were mem- | bers of the Board of Auditors and | three supervisors’ committees Ways and Means, Building and | Grounds and the Special Couft- | house Committee. - | Previous general and mechani- cal contractors pulled out of the } f ~ Sewage Grant Commission Not Sure City Is in a Financial Position to Qualify City commissioners voted last night to seek federal aid jn con- struction of more sewage treat- ment facilities They're still not sure how Pon- tiac will be in financial position to qualify for it. But next Tuesday is the dead line for applying for funds this fis- cal year, so City Manager Walter, kK. Willman recommended that the city enter its application. | Willman said Pontiac, as a large city, normally would be eligible for $250,000 in federal funds, the maximum amount available, Commissioners adopted a resolu- tion, prepared by Willman, which asks the State Water Resources Commission to give Pontiac high priority on 1959-60 funds available s from the U.S. Public Health Sery ice The Water Resources Com- mission controls distribution of the grants. * * * \ Pontiac probably will get a high priority, since the Water Resources Commission alveady is concerned with the city’s pollution of the Clin ton River. ‘The state body has or- dered the city to have new facili- ties to curb pollution in operation by the end of 196] Pentise Press Phote school gus at the [ftochdale subdivision stop. Pupils ih the lower grades reported to school yesterday, and junior and senior high students | went back to classes today. SCHOOL’S IN SESSION ~— Loaded down with books for the first day of school in Roches ter this morning were (from left) Joanne Bal), 12; Beverly Tachick, 13; Patricia Avery, 12, and Mary Beerbower. They were waiting for the Cost for more facilities was estimated at $3,300,009 Last | spring when voters for the third | time turned down general obliga- tien bonds to construct added fa cilities, : | Willman said an initial meeting M . ed with members of the Water Re- ay 0 0 ads orest ire as es sources Commission staff and the | State Health Department indicat ciimiare sans uae" "This Weekend Across Deadwood | He said it may be necessary to construct more aeration facil. ities than originally planned, but added that this is not too expensive, Sull unsettled is the question of DEADWOOD, 8. D (AP) — A plugged nickel for the whole town forest fire first circled and then of Deadwood at four o'clock," skipped across this historic gold said Rapid City Journal reporter rush town Tuesday, taking a few kken Jumper homes and businesses, U.N. Group Agrees It Is Vital to Probe Charges On the Spot Quickly financing. The city could turn to 7 STORE, SL OSE roaring unchecked into unpopulat- Jumper, who had fought fires the voters again for approval " a a. A Mea, - ; ed timber area to the southeast. with the Navy in Florida, said “it bonds, or could issue bonds Itself " ye URE MEE SII * * was the damndest thing I've ever ifter defaulting on the Water Re fact finding group may gel «a Aes). Sties Forester Tom Tor seen | oe . er team off tao Laos by weeks end . ‘ ‘ a By i trees saae attic on 7 little t ' frie state tay ted invasions den said- he had heard no con- ' me pills looked mere ar . officials see | oO | he “ L Aye > f es “ak y “ So far, city 0 } lev from neighboring Red North Viet firmned reports of serious injunes vad been raked by tracer ets chance of defaulting on the ue 4 am neigh ‘ I ur deaths with Christmas tree lighting as, before July 1, 1960, the date the Nam * * * The same shifting winds that far as XJ an he said. Water Resources Commission says turned the five into town helped j AT _ subco tee, wet by the ate Tuesd: - - sti canatruction contracts should be i { . melt wie ited a jet ininiize damage by lofting the Late Tuesday night, an estimat- signed Security Council over i blazes into tree tops and produc. 4 2,000: fighters: were digging a But if federal money is ty be peotestt: met Tuesday ve noun ing w scattered pattern of fires. ide line several miles ahead of obtained this fiscal year, contracts cil President Egidio Ortona of A * e the fire, sacrificing the timber in nav ioe Bie tS MAY Italy, da: mmnke (plana: for the tale between to try to stop it there. | If an election is called, it will sion he before March | next year, the, city promised Rockies to Send The flank of the fire was halted three fourths of a mule from near: irop) (in windsleusiing near 45 é € ; € by Lend, home of the famous ® f B & Ortona mp.h. at midnight | ; : ; - ’ Homestake ygokl mine “ : Te ie Hag attat to carry! Deadwood's 3,500 reidents were SECOND BLAZE BURNS " evacuated but some were trickling) A second fire burned wild in out its tusk as quickly as possible aly : timber southeast of the hamlet of The West proposed the inquiry back early today * * * said the four members C ] Bi , Some of Leud'’s 6.400 peaple also Nemo. It apparently did not 4a as a compromise the So ; ; oo EEZES eingees ns toe oe were evacuated threaten populated areas, | 7 ’ = nm * * ' fo Some Areas ly. Laos had called for UN & STRANGE FIRE on a * si a troops to meet the alleged Red , a he two blazes ad co un e By The A iated Press | in the me way that [emily een 8 an estimated 16,000 acres. The y e Ase ®. AZZ eSS OTD * SH 3 ay ‘ = : = . ; = - - . 7 Cool air held in check several the Western powers rallied to the In sdwood barn had a oil per days by a high pressure area Will defense of South Korea against . , imeter ha - es y Ps l MIs fig uv bringing re (4 i. ‘ore v0 F | | B | push through toby. ‘ve ither to Communist Noxth Borer in 1 a erm e ins in | Temperatures of 100 plus Go| The Western plan ran into im inte 4 emit le f North . viel Nem elie dacineed thie: abt City, County Schools lief from hot, mugs ome sections of the country Cooling breezes will push cast grees, a long siege of drought and humidity at a near record low of five per cent set the stage for a! ward and southward fom the ting up of the fact finding group bad ‘bulti northern and cot ere : 10 was illegal (Continued From Page One) : the northern and central prans A . ‘ + Mississippi Val . . . 14.887, The enroliment, however, . tates and upper ISSINSIPT The Hane; government — also wan 169i in pace apsu e . ’ 4. Hey charged that the Southeast) Asia * . * Treaty Organization (SRATO! Since that time. the pupil ea- ° Kast of this section. the hot headed by the United States, plans pac itv has been ine reased by near 0d on an Ic muggy weather a the direet intervention. in’ Lav: ly 5.000, a 4 per eent increase Veathe area sane : : ev ‘ > . ars * ; \ ‘ he : I ue saat in “ti The Red regime said the only in five year (Continued From Page One) empera a sd ‘ amd City way fo cease fensian cine the South HAS 94 SCTIOOLS ons plains states Tuesday Rage enst Asia kingdom was to enforce , : , . ie Phillhps and Pierre ST). all had the Goneca agreement of Tae thal The Pontive Sehool District maw a man into orbit in 196), rated the, -uTces : ae — has Tl schools with ¢ asonable rece Tint ably 1M degrees, Bismarck, \ 1), a ended the Indochinese war and "| ; ; cana ‘ani . Say reentry sual . probably a P = 7 ' . x “apacity rn) gq « , r ; 105, Fargo, Jamestown vn Dic to restore the international con. o"! | a ; ; | rae major step forware i i akota als c yee wot eipated enre e . inson in ere is OL ATSO Pe eal commission it rovided “ M re than oan schools in Oak He sald the primary objective | ported over 100 degrees MMA i « ‘ an! st the trial was to “i the | * * * | * a! land County will accommodate Ae ae. er Ag ; A spokesman in thnot dented ie ong student selarniraiorclneer The highest reading was " that North Vietnamese ' sludenta returning t0:¢ * and shock of coming back from | : 3 7. Needles. Calif, AM for the 1959-60 year aA hes nd, Ari eed ; troops are fighting in Laos ‘ a sinwilated érbital path. ral i hy . ~ . = FI beat fhuilstones Approximately 6.300 teachers) aie puat-off came at 2:19 a.m. Tampa iy ua a will provide the education for ; a ae nearly to inch in diameter. Show- tt ; ‘ in 3 hool Less than four hours later a * 3 Iso hit Mer enthaler Awar nese youngsters In St achOOl arch plane reported it had ers and thunderstorms also” hi systems in the county | - other sections of the state Tall . _ sighted the floating capsule, sev- ahassee had bt 27 inches of This number includes 200 addi- eral hundred miles short of its shaver hod 127 tes of on Minas Announced inch at Jacksony ille tional teaching positions above last gyal veut | Rear, Adm, Harry Smith, com. The inter American Press Assn s k& mander of the recovery operation, | today announced the 1959 winners Twenty five new school buildings told a daybreak news conference | lof the IAPA-Mergenthaler Awards, and 36 additions to schools have of the sighting by a Navy plane. | before * * * | of Borden said fighters hoped for, @Nd sister, Joan, 23, both of 33 Au- which is aimed at putting Sept. 8 was recorded in 1883 at capsule stood up under the heat jabove normal. Normal high is 75, THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 \Vote to Continue (Ohio Wildcat Strike Mennen Williams and his wife United Auto Worker? Union em- |The Day in Birmingham tg AKRON, week ithe addition, to be leaders |‘ over the city’s estimated cost of| City Commission Rejects | io a — serie Bids for Library Addition ; Would have a solid foundation. | Since the city is determined not The sian wee wads betes exceed a cost of $151,800 for the jlibrary addition, city architects Polish people are faring under | their Communist government; | and seven days in Germany, be- | ginning in West Berlin, where he wants to study Germany's amaz- ing recovery and economic growth and the role of education Truck Hits 3-Year-Old' | in Pontiac; Others Are. Injured in County Two persons were injured in an accident on W. Maple road, in West Bloomfield Township, last night and an Orion Township youth mother, Mrs. Louise Turnbow, on Paddock street near Mechanic” street yesterday afternoon and ran| into She path of a passing stake truck. bey. ' Robert J. Piper Jr., 29 of 1023 W. Maple and Drake roads when a_car driven by Raymond L.! Swartz, 21, of 3010 Woodlawn St.,| Walled Lake, struck him from be- nd, Oakland County sheriff's deputies reported. ® * * Piper's mother, Delphene, 56, burn Ave., were treated at Pontiac General Hospital and released. The three-car pileup also in- volved another driver, John W. Parkkila, 19, of 6782 Drake Rd., Walled Lake, All three drivers were uninjured. New Heat Wave fo Crack Tonight (Continued From Page One) peratures in this city. Pontiac sweltered under 90-or-above tem- peratures for 10 consecutive days the latter part of August. Yesterday's 94 reading was the highest for this city on a Sept. 8 since compiling of weather data was begun. Sept. 8, 1922 came close with 91 degrees, } The lowest temperature for a 37 degrees. 4 DEGREES OVER NORMAL The five-day forecast for Pontiac and vicinity calls for temperatures to average about four degrees normal low, 56, | Winds at 10:15 this morning, were south to southwest at 5-8 miles an hour, Seventy-five was) the lowest temperature preceding) 8 am, in downtown Pontiac, Cie “The average 5-year-old has other things to learn than how te tead...’’ fuse =.= Nursery School Needed? ‘cara, Or Save for College? (Continued From Page One) Or will his carefully developed confidence make him appear overaggreasive in a group of sissies? Suppose there is no nursery school available. Well, why not start your own? That is how many of the best nursery schools began. Mothers get together and. assume certain responsibilities. * x * . One might prepare lunch, another tell stories, a third take the children for a walk, and so on. These co-operative ventures have the best chance when a fair amount of cap- ital is available and’ at least one trained person can be hired. * x * . On a less formal scale, parents can devise substitute activities. A story hour for the neighboring children, an oc- casional visit to the zoo or museum, birthday parties — all | these can provide children with meaningful experiences. DEPENDS ON CHILD When is the best time for a child to start nursery school? The answer depends on the child. If a youngster has de- veloped some ability to look after himself, if he seems in- terested in the school when he visits it, and if the director feels he is ready for the experience, it should be safe to en- roll him, with the understanding that he may be withdrawn after a trial period. What if a child doesn’t like nursery school. Try to find out why he is not happy. Let him stay home for a few days and then try again. Talk over the problem with his teachers. If after a fair trial and real effort a child is clearly not benefiting, it is | best to withdraw him. Later, another school may be found better suited to his needs. After nursery school comes kindergarten, and most of what has been said about nursery schools applies to kinder- garten classes. : In a few schools, kindergarten is really a kind of fraudulent substitute for the first grade. Instead of provid- ing the supervised play and development activities appropri- ate for 5-year-olds, teachers coax and nag youngsters to learn to read and do simple arithmetic problems. x *& * Research offers convincing evidence that it is not a | good idea. The average 5-year-old is not ready physically, mentally, or emotionally to read. * * * He has other things to learn: how to get along without Mother for a while, how to get along with other children and how to build his strength and develop muscular co- | ordination. You can help your children get the most out of kinder- garten by maintaining a happy, relaxed atmosphere in the home and cooperating closely with the school. Tomorrow: What if Johnny can't read? A (Condensed from “How te Get the Best Education for Your Chi.” Copy right Jo . The Weather Foll U. 8. Weather Bureag Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Palr an continued het today temerrew. Cooler tomorrow winds 10 shifting to northwesterly 76 tomorrow High today #!, it, bigh temorrew 78 Today tn Pontiac g Paper's “unceasing fight against School year at a cost of $31,000, but said two destroyers were rush- Partiy cloudy with dictatorial trends in the scattered thundershowers tonight ending Southerly 18 miles today and tonight, low tomight | ‘The awards are for the news. been completed for the Seginning| He did not pinpoint the location! Western 000 as 10,000 new students report ing to the spot, They were ex- to classes, pected to arrive about noon. * * * HALF DAYS DOWNS A few minutes earlier Smith an-! The annual Ottomar Mergen) “signifieantly, every sear in the nounced that a search plane. had thaler plaque went to Prensa Li jast 10 vears, there have been picked up radio signals from the, Memisphere “ are busy cutting the job down to Only construction bids will be 're-advertised, Bids on equipment are being held in abeyance until ‘the building specifications have been reduced to meet the budget. $43,200 OVER BUDGET | The lowest construction bid. sub- mitted was for $195,000 or $43,200 over the city’s. budget for the | project. In other action, the commis- sion approved the installation of Maple and Chester streets as the result of a traffic survey conducted by city engineers, On the recommendation of Po- lice Chief Ralph Moxley, the light bey be in operation only during the hours pupils would normally |be crossing the street.. ‘BOARD GETS REQUEST A request to permit construction of a neighborhood swimming pool in the Forest Hills Subdivision, sub- ‘mitted by. D. K. Simpson of 292 Henley Dr., was referred by city commissioners to the planning board and the city attorney for a jreport at next week’s meeting. x * * If the project is approved, plans call for the organization of a non- | profit association to own and oper- jate the pool for the resident-mem- | bers who would pay for construc- ition and maintenance. Also referred to the city planning |board for its consideration was a request by Frank Van Fleteren of 412 E. Frank St. to rezone his property from multiple family res- idence to non-retai] business. United Fund Gets Check for $7,000 (Continued From Page One) | the commercial division solicits those commercial] establishments which in the past have given more than $100 to the Pontiac Area United Fund. The advance gifts solicitation takes place during the three - week period prior to the kickoff o fthe gen- eral UF campaign. Almost 40 per cent of the com- mercial division's goal of $179,000 is made up of advance gifts. Robert R. Eldred, campaign | Chairman, noted that with the ad- feaece gifts section goal of $78,795 successfully raised, the general sol- licitation can't help but whiz by the overall UF goal of $647,698. | This year's advance gifts goal of $78,795 is a 4.2 per cent in- |crease over the amount raised by this section during the 1958 cam- paign. , As an indication of the expect- ed success of the coming cam- paign, Eldred presented the Community National Bank’s ad. vance gift of $7,000 to Griffin. This gift is a $1,000 increase over the bank's 1958 contribu. tion. Griffin. and Eldred teamed up with Karl W. Bradley, Pontiac Area | UF executive director, to outline ‘to the solicitors their duties dur- \"s the 21-day solicitation period. The general campaign officially kicks off on Oct. 1 with an early evening parade down Saginaw street followed by a torch lighting ceremony. Governor Atfends Burial of Souden | (Continued From Page One) to date I have done out of syit- pathy for Mrs. Souden, I have ‘not cracked or weakened. If it hadn't been for Mrs. Souden, I would rag cio East Lansing HELD OUT 3 DAYS a traffic light at the corner of . ay a ee ih i ot Lowest temperature preceding & am BYP. Havana, Cuba. Individual jess children on the half days capsule Then he received the re- Knight had held out under in- » Prizes consisting of a scroll and gince the year before,’ saide De Port of the sighting. S00 mvarded to William) J. Iemersen, county su * * * /perintendent of schools At first it was believed that the: At 8 am: Wind velocity 2-4 mp Direction. South-routhwest Sun sets Wednesday at @€ 53 pm were Suh rises Thureday at 6 67 @ tn Jorge Quintana, Bohemia, Ha Se eee i sai ‘uba; , re test of the capsule designed to| followed a dra- Moon rises Thursday at 2:22 po Veen: Cuba; Andres Botrene There was a time when we catry he ASE SUS Stee RS matic personal plea by Mrs. Clara J Cos arry th Iry 1 Dewntown Temperatures La Prensa Lbre, San dose, Co would have as many as 7,000 . : Souden, 23, the dead trooper’s wife fam. Fy... "ihe *’ ta Rica; Horacio de Dios, La | kids going to school on half days SPace had been a complete Sam dpm #1 Razon, Buenos Aires, Argen- | only, | don't think we wilt have [ilure. Knight has a police record dat- 9 O.m.....-065. . fina; Peter Aldo?, El Tiempo, | 1,500 puptix on half days this | The booster stage of the power- ing back te 1930 and once was ‘oe _ ee Hogota, Columbia; and Angel | year, This is 400 less than last ful Atlas rocket failed to drop off & mental patient tn Obie canny im Fenton Edmundo Font, La Gaceta, | year. biel art 2 “uae 0 Justice of the Peacé Exic Singer rach tperatar caneen Su 8 1s Tocuman, Argentina. “The voters should be compli | said the degree of murder will, be ? cesses ots The : “e » for The extra weight prevented the determined Mean temperature soni The announcements were made mented for approving millage for ed by a jury or the judge Weather—Sunn Jes by William) M Pepper, Jr (The | new schools to handle. the in- _ body ~of the rocket from hearing the case, No date has Mighell eoeee ss Gainesville .Sun, Florida) Chair-!oreased enrollment problem.” [traveling its full distance under, ‘been set for B. Lowest temperature ... 01.00... $8 man of the TAPA awards commit: ’ + + ithe power of its sustainer =o | before “Justice Singer. ee aeccay tee which amet in Stem) Beach, ty addition to the 165.000 students FALLS SHORT OF TARGET. 4 * A. * Snel Mla, Aug. 1 to study the nomina.- “lags . " : i Knight asked a court-appoint- | t.and Lowest Temperatures beginning classes in the county's. Robert Gilruth, Project Mercury ™ neath Date in 81 Years js teas HONS and select the winners public school systems, approxt director, reported that the missile ‘ed defense attorney and Circui Gccthas's Tasmerstare Chart + * * mately 18,000 children are enroll flew low and failed to obtain the Judge Michael Carland said he Al . re € Marquette 8 62)0|(6UThe: «awards $ will be ‘delivered ing this week in private and pa- desired velocity. For that reason | would name one in two or three Be e OF G7 Memphis | 02 13 during the TAPA’s annual meeting rochial schoolx in the: county iit fell several hundred miles short ; Gays. Bismarck 105 48 Miami Beach 88 177 4 | ¢ | Brownsville 3 - Fi ane 91 72.October 6-8 in San Francisco,| oa ee emt of its intended target area 2,00 State Police Commissioner : Chlenee, Bs ie Kew Qrieane €1 78 Calif Yeast Cells Small jmiles down the Atlantic —_ auctioned apy oy tee pba yo » Cleveland 93 7) Omaha 80 73 —— | range, “| ry Gear” Belton 8) Coal Supplies Electricity ST. LOUIS — The cells of the The Atlas was supposed to boost Alpena bookkeeper Miller Wallace, Duluth 9 9 Pittsburgh = 67 yeast plant are so small that if the one-ton capsule to a height of 32, who was beaten to death with fort Worsh ii § Brancisco 62 6 PITTSBURGH—Bituntinous coal 3,000 of them were laid side. by 100 miles. Gilruth ‘said he did not| his hands tied meee eg hang ‘ 70 $8 & Ste. Marie ratés about 65 per cent of the side on a straight line, they would know how far up the Atlas acti- Police believe Wallace our- LF sey 53, eneratés abou per cen side § , they Pp A . a Hansen City 92 73 Hashington B } 72 nation’s total supply of available’measure only about one inch in ally went, but it was considerably! State Fair Commission. He's shown being adopted brow and cheeks after placing @ Chieftain’s (prised a burglar and was over. rising ” HA] Tampa electric energy. ‘Jength, combined. below the 100-mile level, | intg the Chick-a-ga-mi Indian Tribe by 18-yearold headdress on his head. powered. ; . po : : ; < . | $ at a ci . % : . s . ‘ { u i r , ° : * , . ry ee ot . iuatinapesaaa etter | \ , THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 | r % THKEL . Integration Spreads ing, two FBI laboratory experts!white families have moved from moved Ark., to|the district since then. assist in the probe of three bomb-| At Tampa, Fila., applications ings linked to token integration at|pils seeking ‘reassignment to all- schools . By The Associated Press Racial moderates were blasted by Gov.-elect Ross Barnett of into ‘Little white schools, Officials interpret- Florida pupil placement law. ed the move as a new test of the|admitted Negroes to previously Fea received from 18 Negro pu-| white schools, bringing to_ 80 the Quietly Throughout Southland Two more Virginia communities number of Negroes in integrated * s new ‘cases was. reported, com- \Whooping Cough Cases —_ ee on Increase in Detroit jot 1958. Thus far this year, 910 eases have been reported in De- DETROIT, @®—Health Commis-|tyoit. ordinance — integration| sionet Joseph G. Molner said in public recrea’ facilities, Mu-/Tuesday a large increase in the). ; nictpal eiiicale —_— not to me [number of whooping cough cases ’ An average American consumes open the parks while an integra-|bas been reported in Detroit. 222 pounds of wheat and about 75 tion threat lingers. | During last week a total of 88 | pounds of corn during a year. ai i i A gli ni A oak ee ‘i ll Re A me Mee CN ID! Oar ae Becher ine. teen: SOE te there. class rooms. “The state's cubtic spread quietly and A $25,000 reward was posted for schogl system has $00,000 pupils. ! bea ry additional South-| ciution of the dynamitings Mon- & *£ @ : ern communities. day night of the school board Twenty-one Negroes joined Barnett charged moderates planned to move into his state in the next four years as part of a campaign to pick off! Southern Citizens Councils to a attempts at integration, he said. * * * Barnett told a Citizens Council meeting at Jackson, Miss., Tues- day night that moderates ‘‘are nothing more than Southern bur- glars. They want to rob us of our priceless heritage, and they tell us that we shouldn't complain as: long as they steal it a little bit at a time.” * * * He said token integration ‘was “just a sort of token burglary.” About the time he was speak- building, the mayor’s office and the fire chief's official car. Police armed with riot guns patrolled the icity streets and guarded the ' schools. Telephned bomb threats. re- ceived at two rural grade schools. Pupils were evacuated but a search of the buildings turned up no explosives and classes were resumed. * * .* State police were alerted in southern Delaware for the start of grade-a-year integration in largely rural Kent and Sussex, counties, Gov, J. Caleb Boggs, a Republican, said his people were law-abiding and would honor the federal court order. Many schools in the northern area around Wil- mington were integrated without ‘incident five years ago, * * * * * * John Francis Shaughnessey, 77, of At Nashville, U, S. Dist. Judge 5 City parks remained closed at 3 Holcomb St. will be held at 10 William E. Miller reproached pub- fontgomery, Ala., after a federal a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady of, lic school officials in Tennessee judge ruled unconstitution: al a city) ithe Lakes Church, Waterford. | for not complying voluntarily with iBurial will follow in Lakeview, the U. S. Supreme Court segrega- tion ruling. more than 300 white youngsters at Warren County High in Front Royal.. There was no violence. However, a car carrying several white men drove past the school and one of the men yelled to a policeman “You better guard _ them coons."’ At Charlottesville, nine Negroes attended formerly all-white Vena-| ble Elementary and three regis- | tered with more than 700 white’ pupils at Lane High. | About two million children start- ed classes in Texas where 101 of the 1,646 school districts are de- segregated. Two Negro couples tried to enroll their children in white public schools at Fort) Worth. They: left without protest! when officials said Fort Worth | s¢hools would remain segregated this term. Ex-Bank Head — jwas a retired secretary. i Cemetery | Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas land Donald M. of Terre Haute,!Harvey Walker, 77. of 4808 School Service for Mrs. Edith L. Davis, Ind; 11 grandchildren and one ‘St., will be held at 1:30 p.m. Fri- 75, of 3235 Columbus St., Dettoit, great-grandchild. ‘day at Muir Brothers Funeral aad Also surviving are four sisters, Home, Lapeer. Burial will be in wit be et ze 2 ane ny Mrs, Geraldine McCracken of Ox- Oak Hill Cemetery, Pontiac. jat the Pursley Funeral Home wit jford. Mrs. Jennie Leonard of Mr. Walker died yesterday at burial following in Oak Hill Cem-'syjvan Lake, Mrs. Margaret Brown) Suncrest Convalescent Home near etery lof Lansing and Mrs. Mary Lock- Lapeer after a brief illness. A former Pontiac she Wood of Keego Harbor; and one! Surviving are his wife. Jane: brother, Herbert, of Oxford. two sons. Lowes of Metamora and Surviving are two sisters, Mrs | aa . ‘Maynard of Jackson; two grand- |Edna J. McMyn of Royal Oak and! cgemiek ie children and four great-grandchil- Mrs. Florence Miller of Galva, 1l,, METAMORA — Service _for'dren. ee ee and a brother. ane oncn 7 Mrs. Davis died Monday after, ut eS ae Rt Fe Shop SIMMS for HIGH QUALITY at the LOWEST PRICES This Weekend! MRS. EDITH L. DAVIS resident, an illness of five years, | JOHN F. SHAUGHNESSEY CLARKSTON — Service for SHEET BLANKETS be at 8 to- | Rosary service will “Why don’t they act instead of . : mght at Sharpe-Goyette Funer a - 69 x having to be forced?’ he asked Out of Prison, Home here 7s SEND FLOWERS during a hearing on a suit to ad- . Mr Shaughnesse, died yester-| jmit 16 children of Negro airmen Drives Truck day at his home after a month. by Wire at Sewart Air Force Base to an long illness Pieshabic 160 (per cone SOTTON mh all-white county school at Smyrna. ELLENVILLE, NY. AP) - Surviving are his cousin, Mrs. | quailty. Lilae color in T2x8$-inch sine. Delivery and Quality Miller = ce nai commis- William Rose. whose financial aid ma of crkston ee teed sion a week to submit an inte- exit fer yrothers, John o ravion Plains ; Guaranteed \gration plan. Only thre Tennes- — closed his on and! and Theodore of Wisconsin: and a Choice of 4 Styles of the *s mos isee public school systems have sent him to prison, is now driving sister, Mrs Fula Wall of Detroit ANKET by eet | Started integration, They are at a truck for a man who used to voniK ANDRE inne SHEET BL. S i 'Oak Ridge, Clinton and Nashville. work for him Ee enthy W ASHLEY Look in Yellow Pagec | * te * Rose started delivering bottled , OXFORD TOWNSHIP Service | Values 99 . . ee . George Andrew Ashle, 69 ? The first integrated public ? gas Tuesday. People in this town '°! to $2 Frorists’ schoo] classés hagin without dis- ri of 5,000 or so hardly noticed. The formerly of Sylvan Lake Is pend- 7: jorder in Florida, Four Negroes 4 attitude seems to be to forgive a at Bossardet & Reid Funeral ie Gai, Keak Kote was ‘chelzs ‘ j u - ) 72 > strip T leec ELEGRAPH jentered Miami's Orchard Villa) AP Wirephete and forget vn aan ea vv the Stephene a 5, oon oes. eet oneece Deuivery |Elementary School with eight! THEY GO TO SCHOOL — Two sisters, Jan Errol, 9, (left) | 4) oi * Pel ¢ iw tion Comvalextctt! Home: bere sie in iec pesiee All fire quality . |white pupils. There were 130 pu-! and Irene Amanda, 8, (right) are two of the four Negro children ome than S million ailare ae prolonged illness ; ‘pils when the last term « ended but to enter Orchard Villa Elementary School yesterday in Florida's tthe peoples money in the now Surviving are two daughters DOUBLE BLANKETS = | first integration of public schools in Miami.: Entering the building | gefunct Home National Bank was Mrs Myrtle Kingsbury of Port SHEET TREE DEMONSTRATION with the sisters 1s their seeteldoa Mrs. Irvena Prymus misapplied through overdraft Huron and Mrs Margaret Kelley | he 0 30 PM a | foans of Clarkston. three sons Richard $4.00 98 Septem r 1 , ae rou * * * MI. and James | both of Oxford Value | Junket to End All Junkets! | Rose, who was president of the : : Lesson One : ibank, said he merely tried to help #464 wornes ‘@b}p siiich edges. Fieocy: MM ee out struggling industries in this dow ancom colors, first quality. PES | in > Senators Off to Hawaii? area and received no persona! ann ae id Famous brand name 100% cotion . . | benefit e ies ivesaa | = | . . The 53-year-old bachelor, sen- 9 ' y WESTERN or PLAIDS Genuine BEACON Brand : & WASHINGTON (AP)—A junket to surpass all junkets jtenced to five years in prison. was ANN ARBOR vu — Clarence W Blended Blankets Sette Blankets : | —a free trip to Hawaii for the whole Senate—is getting ‘paroled after less than two years. Kellogg. 7). prominent Ann Arboi SHORTHAND _ enthusiastic consideration from some senators. ie came home last week jattorney, died Tuesday | ein Gite 388 tovanar ot OF 488 * * * He was a member of a Detroit | orn ae od sed ays oll Theory in 6 Weeks The taxpayers would foot the bill under terms of a dall 8 d law firm ‘Monaghan, Crowley, | nea (size carted eaters . resolution drafted by Senate Republican Leader Everett Kay Kendall Burie Reilley & Iellogg) for 0 years : Mi TIN pe com y ere in dh : . 2 DAY OR EVENING CLASSES M. Dirksen of Illinois. It calls for an outlay of $200,000 to Quietly Near Notables (befor scoroig Mee Hie. Pu lie 3 Mm ») per sa “ : Secretaries and Stenographers in great demand! cover members’ expenses on the trip. | LONDON «—Kay Kendall, the plete Street iM BROTHERS Basemest © Learn quickly, easily! Gov. William F, Quinn of Hawaii cabled the invitation |. )):i.n film beauty who died Sun-, - : — es . . . . for all the senators to take part in a thanksgiving ecele- = Gay of leukemia, was buried to- ' ee No Signs — No Symbols — Uses ABC's | bration for the 50th state. The Senate Republican Policy (day in a graveyard adjoining St. B PLASTIC HOUSEWARES @ soe ean — ccnniasiaaienaiiameaiaeeneaineeanin caacan | , Committee received it Tuesday with “hilarity and exuber- (John’s Parish Church ON SALE ae | : . ance of spirit,” Dirksen reported. The grave of 32-year-old wife Bri eco, y Shop for These LOW PRICES Thursday he Business Institute If the trip materializes, Dirksen said he doesn't ex- | o actor Rex Harrison ts next ¢ | to those of Sir Herbert Beer- P . pect senators would be required to bother turning in ex- | pate (van! @) ated acter aan | ! of Pontiac | rene accounts } sau ooo ed Miami, sea er IE ! : _. oF x *&® * George du Maurier, the author | a a . 7 w. lawrence street — federal 2-3551 | The GOP leader added that from Hawaii “it isn't very | and artist who died in 1896. . Full Fashioned 60 Ga., 15 Den. . : far around to Alaska” and some senators might want to Miss Kendall's funeral was held free employment service go there too. bpsrvately with only relatives pres-| LADIES’ lons nt. : : oes | rat. Nylons | Harrison had asked that no flow- B (/nhreakable PLASTIC . ers be sent and people wishing to 5 e $1.19 i ; : pay tribute to his wife should send. er Basins ) Li C 400 Needle donations to the imperial cancer) Quality m1 SEAMLESS. Nyl TO U research fund. PAIR a Leukemia is a form of cancer — Quality of the blood. Selle FIRST QUALITY ia new eee include 4% a ehades ar seams a Michigen Made Sugar lifts up your energy fest, becouse 140, w 12 a 5 inch besin for and self seams. All sizes er Pvp ar ® sugof supplies energy to the body foster than ony other food. lt p th Fl h dishes, : aby baths, laundry # really helps give you that get-up-and-go feeling . - thot pep ond da 5 SEW ere basket, smooth protection for SAME ERE SEER: 2 RE omed vitality that makes, work easier—play more funl ae 6 Beat Sistas phe solos cre ot Some Nylons Some Coucas = CHILDS’ Highly Absorbent i _ Conn, ( \—Maj assorted color: yout 15 5 : ae Gen. Oscar R. Cauldwell, 67, Ladies’ Brassieres |©§ © TERRYCLOTH Panties USMC (ret.), World War II com- $1.95 Yelve t Reg. 39 | mander of the 3rd Marine Division 5 € in the attack on Bougainville, died! 7 { : 59 e Tuesday. An. Annapolis graduate) " 20¢ in 1916, Cauldwell retired from the | Sines IA : | Marine cops aaa ‘ na } Limie § : CHICOPEE, Mass. (AP)— rece areaviasiile i ect Feces : . a Thomas J. Grady, 84, known as sits, weating eualiues White 4 Whites audi pastel colers ta coins ithe Chicopee Flyer and world oaly ite 4 champion bicycle rider in 1901 died Monday night + 98 North CLOTHING Sagina B DEPT DETROIT (AP) — Thomas 'Hupke, 48, a member of the De- troit Lions National Football League championship team in 1935, died Monday night after a long illness, He was a graduate of the University of Alabama SROTAERS a BIG 36-QT. PLASTIC 4@ Waste Baskets iE THURSDAY ONLY SUPER-SPECIALS! 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS * * * : ae 5 MALTA, Ill (AP) — George $ 4.49 188 Reduces House Noises — Protects Stair Steps Veenker, 65, football coach at Value Curved Front Edges for Extra Sofety | lowa State from 1930 to 1935. then, athletic director until his retire-| ment in 1945, died of cancer Tuesday. Large 36-quart size basket with rolled rim, rustproof, flexible poly plastic. Choice of assorted colors. Stands 1744 inches tall. 9x24" Rubber STAIR TREADS Regular 45¢ Sellers 2%... Black or Brown Durable heavy rubber stair treads give protection to stairs . helps reduce house notses _tibbed tor extra safety. No ’ limit at this low price- SOSCOSHSHSSSHESSSSSSHHOH HHH SHHHHOHHEHEHOHEEES American aerial photographers \were so accurate that they were le to estimate within 40 men the 4,000 Japanese soldiers stationed on an island in the South Pacific. ; 96 N. Saginaw —Zad Floor ARTIST ‘SERIES VeUerEreeleceeeereererires VlltlEEerg) verre eee Hew | Craft Va aster e / aT Nurshered Oil ' a ‘LUCKY LAD’ Cotton Braid For Filling or Draining ° ae, | Clethesline—30 Ft. s Draining Hoses Painting sets Sema rs Michigen | Reg. 60c @ © better, because Sugar is nature's own pure-food sweetener. Regular C . 3 9: W wot erty add te oom delcios tne, bw brings othe $2.00 Ne 35 $ best favor of other foods 5 Sellers eee ° Rubber bese. wt 3 : ae a Duy the hag with the big rod Michigue Made seen tee atinai erst traiea, toe § : ik Sin tube wah cheanat. hap “Salant . tt. @ kar. ae Se chines. MICHIGAN ee i oat pe ai eee ‘, : grown ood a & creatiy Simm)... eae — Setond Floor vn SAA ly a . "ae 5 c ‘ be f “S gs x THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 J ~ —— —— — — : - < med | Apparently Past Peak | WASHINGTON (AP)— The rate given off by a gram of radium of radioactive fallout from Jast|and a micromicrocurie is a mil year’s nuclear weapons tests ap-/lion-millionth of a curie ~ parently has passed its peak, the; Jy April the level ranged from . Atomic Energy Commission re-'9 t) 11 micromicrocuries, and in! orted Tuesday. May from 6 to 7 "Latest available samplings of ae AEC statement also in| Wie nation’s surface air show fall) cluded a progress report on meth- out levels in June were ax much adi tor aemoving’ | Grantogs; children’s 2-8 "yoo 298 Grantogs dress slacks are Wear-weight denim: no- little boy perfect: soft, ‘ i : warm, durable, Care. AS SEEN IN LEADING MAGAZINES...NOW = | SX2R3BAE Setters « eee _ | dyed It blue, grey, tan, At 3 CAMPUS STYLE _ : BULKY ORLON® | 24% : > y . a | 3-stripes.on little = #) i wwe 4, ML UuTy 7 | boys’ warm cordigans ) Pu: Cable stitching plus V- |: neck eee varsity look for a F és F machine washable cardi- “¥ry ¥ gans. Another topGrants _ buy. Roomy 'n full. 3-6X. * LJ CHILDREN'S : : ANKLETS . ~ e Machine Washable Durene” N Mercerized cotton ; is : 3.18 prs. : FinequalityGingerLane anklets, nylon reinforced ~) @ > § heels, toes. Permanent knittop. In sizes 6 to 9, J | Sold individvally__39¢ pr. ‘ i THE “MONTCLAIR” SOFA $199.95 Treasures in Traditional Styling by Kroehler _— the mood of your entire Ifving room is sure to be a pleasing one when you select : your sofa from the Traditional collection by Kroehler. Select now from an exciting . : array of very new fabrics and decorator colors. See these lovely sofas today, | . 10% DOWN | Your cnoice 0 TERMS OF COURSE | fa FOUR CHILD WITH sofas 3 FIT YOUR CHILD WITH } 7 BUSY BEAVER SHOES... ¢ || || ; COMFORT, LONG WEAR ‘ peep non we buy for style, fit, construction! Supple leather ‘ uppers, long wearing soles. Idea! 99 for school or . Choose from ; latest styles | nd colors, 8%-3. VISIT OUR NEW CAMERA DEPARTMENT / “24 HOUR DEVELOPING OPEN 10 A. M. to 9B. M. DAILY W. T. Grant Co. THE “CORONET OFA $ 5 THE MAYFIELD. SOFA $199.95 + I 2 ML ISIS pi Mie PON MR A TO ng ig ia" ee , : ae i> . 4 3 ss j had re PARK BEHIND STORE — IT’S FREE OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS ‘TIL 9 |. an Mica 5. Telegraph ot Sqeore Lk Te Mirecle COMPLETE NEW. U.S. POST OFFICE NOW OPEN S. Saginaw St., Corner of Orchard Loke Ave. ° angie cto AO mS a as Pug ad senna insane THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 ‘Maria Callas ~ Calls It Quits of 10-Year Marriage [If U.N. Doesn't Resolve Laos Situation ; . The U.N. subcommittee’s in Claims Onassis Is Not tigation will provide at lan to Blame for Breakup ‘™Porary delay for any SEATO action. But the organization might still be called to act in Laos if the probe subsequently gets no- MILAN, Italy (AP)—Fiery so-|Where in the U.N. in the face of prano Maria Callas has called ©@*tain future Soviet obstructionist quits to her 10-year marriage fo | metic the elderly Italian : who guided her rise to the top in| United States, Britain, France, opera. industrialist | The eight SEATO members—the | Australia, New Zealand, the Philip- But the 35-year-old soprano said pines, Thailand and Pakistan—are Aristotle Onassis had nothing to Onassis said the same thing, but added he would be “‘flattered if a woman with the class of Maria Callas fell in love with someone like me.” * * “Now I am my own manager,” Miss Callas told newsmen in an- nouncing the breakup of her mar- riage to 62-year-old Giovan Bat- ing for a long time.” Attorneys for Miss Callas and Meneghini are working out details of their marital split. ONASSIS FLIES HOME Onassis flew in his private plane Tuesday to Venice where his wife was waiting for him aboard their yacht. He said reports of a ro- mance between him and the tem- peramental soprano were ‘“‘fairy tales—silly inventions.” Both Miss Callas and Meneghini were in Milan Tuesdy but they did not meet. She is here to com- plete a recording. He came from their summer home near Verona for a meeting of his attorneys with his wife's lawyer, Woman Drops . 5 Floors Into ‘has only a small army sufficient ig-| borders. the only member state near Laos, to maintain order within its own Representatives of the SEATO nations discussed the Laotian crisis here Monday with acting Secre-. tary of State C. Douglas Dillon. Diplomatic informants said they agreed the U. N. approach was the best way now to meet the situation. Employment Hits High GRAND HAVEN (UPI) — ployment in the 46 industrial in the Grand Haven-Spring Lake- Ferrysburg area has reached 4 462, a two-year high, officials of the Ike's Pleading Is to No Avail president-of the Steelworkers Un- ion, and the presidents of the 12 firms involved. after negotiators met for 45 min- utes in New York, then recessed until Thursday to prepare for ex- panded . subcommittee _negotia- tions , McDonald promptly told the President that the steelworkers have been seeking and will con- tinue to seek “good faith, uninter- rupted, ~wholehearted bargaining reported today, Economic Development Committee; with the objective of achieving a settlement.” ers for an additional 45 students. Quebec Likely to Get Premier Tomorrow QUEBEC (AP) — Quebec prov- ince probably will have a new premier Thursday. Well-informed. sources said Lt. Gov. Onesime Gagnon will call. on a Cabinet minister to step into the post a few hours after the funeral of the late Premier Mau- rice Duplessis, Paul Sauve, 52, youth and wel- fare minister under Duplessis, ap- peared the almost certain choice. reasonable . McDonald said “representatives Sauve was the premier’s right hand man. ctnro } SLO vs PAYDAY LOANS $50 for 2 wks ~»- only 70¢! other loans to $500 with 24 mos. to repay in DRAYTON PLAINS: 4494 Dixie a CALL: OR 3-1207 *. ny | FEDE FEDERAL * AL DE OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Mondoy through Saturday TEEN'S, SCHOOL Buy them now at big savings i cons 2° A. Teens’ brown, black B. Teens’ Black//white saddle, 4-10. C. Child’s foam crepe sloe oxfords, 8'/2-3. D. Child’s black/white saddle, 82-3. E. Li'l boys’ brn, bik, sport sole. 9-3. SETAE CES OE A ELE AEGON RET IER tg PT. STORES CHILD'S SHOES roamer, 4-10 AA-B. 2 j 14 width x 48" oo... 5.99 pr. Double width x 45" ........ 7.99 pr. Single width x 63” .......... 3.99 pr. 1% width x 63” ............ 7.99 pr. Double width x 63” ....... 9.99 pr. Triple width x 63” ...... . 16.99 pr. Just measure your window! We have the size! Nubby carnation cloth WHITE DRAPERIES A new kind of textured draperies . . . white on white to give a spacious look to your home, room to room! And they co-ordinate with every- thing! Federal’s has all the sizes you will want! | = AUS ste 3] —=— 2 < 49 ». by'8S inckew 36” cefe tiers ................ 2.99 pr. Federal's has drapery and curtain hardware for all windew needs Sturdy, comfortable foom rubber seat and back DANISH MODERN CHAIR | ) Just picture this specially low-priced chair in your living room, sitting room or den! Danish walnut frame is handsome, long lasting. Has loose cush- ion seat and back. Choice of decorator fabrics. 29" portab FOLDING TABLE 7 Even @ child can carry it! Folde-teble is just right fer picnics, laundry rooms, parties. Acid, burn resistant. Buy nowl 30x72” metel felde-tebie, | 1.99 Reg. 3.99 steel shelving - 3% Baked finish, 42x28x10". Braces, four shelves are easy to onemble. Extra storage space for gorege, besement, viility rooms, etc. Seve nowl © Sturdy folding steol 9% i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMEEL 9, 1950 ene ea set RR SREB eo ie aR ERR oa raga NO LIMITS — BUY OWE OR A CARL 47) . Ui LZLEA bhi Chl if ‘THRIFTY ALWAYS STRIVES TO GIVE THE SELF-SERVE “areas Super DRUG STORES . ee a sae af eee SS A € — Specialists @ Bock Supports © Elastic Stockings @ Orthopedic Appliances Private Fitting Rooms Woman Attendant Reg. 89c . Fast Acting r 59.67 .= LAVORIS SALETO 17 DICALCIUM \ BLE PARKE DAVIS 5 Mouth Wash T AE LETS CAPSULES | Bottle | , ot '100 69° Bottle of $29 « UPI Phete Bottle y, COLD COMFORT — No heat wave bothers Dick Lenhard, who Telephone and Telegrapli orporation’s Federal Electric Corp. rests on his own cool little island, an ice floe, after a swim above unit, he works on the distant early warning (DEW) line in the P Al the Arctic Circle. Lenhard, from Lodi, N. J., is wearing a skin vicinity of Barter Island, Alaska. It was his last swim before winter diver's suit over nen ienceweer. An empiiye = inet closes in and the ice begins to lock together. nn — - $1.10 SIZE Capitol Sessions ‘Hardly stow Rules Against | ane me a wont eAY aos | = 183 Value t a Time for Swim, Says Senator Biasin Parks _| we See 69" | GELUSIL | ne "Hote ate”. % os « WASHINGTON u — The Sen- rusually manages about 20 minutes “I am sure T look about as bad ate’s oldest member said today his'of sitting up exercises before tak- as any one else.” Segregation of Races The Vitamin and a -~¥ main complaint about early andjing a trolley to the Capitol, Allott directed hig remarks to . DL, eaaN . 5 T B late sessions is they “hardly al * te * 'Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) who! on Montgomery City Mincral Candy . A LETS low a man time for a swim.” 4 Green, who will be 92 next |is fighting to keep Congress in| Grounds Held Illegal But 91-year-old Sen. Theodore! menth, attributes the drive to | session through next week to act e Francis Green (D-RI) said he) adjour Congress this week to a ON legislation he thinks should not! j ~ | desire on the part of members be neglected | MONTGOMERY, Ala. (®—U.S.| Dist. Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr. $7439 “to talk to constituents and get Dr. George W. Calver, the ~ . around to other work that needs | Capitol physician who has been ruled Tuesday that racial segrega- | to be done,” rather than to | feeling congressional pulses for jon sited city oreo deans | physical strain. 30 years, steered away from any |‘ onstitutional. He also he n- ith his (Valid @ city ordinance which pro- “A person can get terribly tired) part of a controversy w rubies geo eh Ee No Contract doing nothing,”’ he told an intet charges. eye — viewer. | “I know they are all getting a ~*~ « * Necessary Hlis remarks grew out of an ob- little tired,’ Calver said in talk-| Johnson's ruling does not mean, Reg. 69c 306 = N Call Today servation in the Senate today by ing with a newsman, ‘But these ” ANACIN BROMO.- . ; sordon Allott (R-Colo), ' things they've got to do. It| however, that Negroes can use TUMS, 3 3 Rolls . Sen, ( are cera theee k jwhite parks, since all 13 of the) | Gregory Oil Go. noe + sy Sar net ade "arabe bene we | TABLETS SELTZER tat Banas Looking over the chamber, Al Hime We try to kees the member ithe first of this year. Ph FE 5-614] lott noted “the fatigued faces of . . sd be P mere *| 50 T. Le. one - the: wentlemen in dis room. asl” good shape by frequent exam- | The judge made it clear that ablets c — = c : ‘ +, inations a | he has no authority to order the ‘he expressed it, and acknowledgec | an : | And besides, he said, “What's! Clty to reopen the parks. But if | they are reopened, he sald they the difference between sitting up| f in the Senate and going to some cannot be segregated as they . of the parties and receptions 50 | have been In the past. | jmany have to attend when the) * * * Senate is not in session?” | City officials are sworn to keep | * * . ithe parks closed — as they have Green, a bachelor who fre- [been since-Dec. 30 — so long as U40 | REGULAR 10ce ceveetcs " quently shows up at embassy re-|there is an integration threat, 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET | ceptions, suggested that “only a — F U40° ) PROT-ZINC | fragile man" shuns hard work “VIGORETTE 7 Meaty gad ioag’ hours: Says Soviet Scientists U40° NPH........ ceueee | “We are not in need of rest,” to anaon ice rice iV, SPARE Cc jhe said with a cheerful smile womens and ~ i Uso REGULAR PD ci lek nc LES “Most members are under an| MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet~tclen- incra ORF I OT- so08c Ri BS lb. ‘emotional strain because we are|tists who manned an arctic ice} yg USO PR ZINC ... ~ eecce5uene ‘taking an unnecessarily long time| floe for 40 ths are being evac- Hae »d Q5 ; : ; getting our business done.” uated, Tass, the Sovet news agen-/Red| — Wide wncYorn JM oT Tt a 7 eae cy, said todaly. | CUPS ini-Test TABLETS..... SLICED | : : * 8 ; Foresters Plan Meeting Known as “North Pole 6”, thel $1.98 LILLY’S TESTAPE.... .$1.69 | ; s. | MARQUETT w _ 5 by 8 mile floe was first occupied j 1 BACON for MARQUETTE Ey est ‘in April 1956 when it was about : } - aa | ‘nual meeting of the Wieconsiss| : j oe “< Michigan section of the Society of| 200 miles from Wrangel Island off) % f ‘Ame rican Foresters will be held) [esperss povleainy a ot ed 25.000 Units “ $ te y, Mar » Se : P Be es BAZLEY’S ni . aarquette Se pt. 11 aa The | iTass said, after drifting more) VITAMIN * | : PHILLIPS latest’ developments in current forestry research avill be the rrent | than 8,400 eine * 2 Milk f{ Ma ia topic of discussion at the meeting. | Tase said the floe wa ' : | NA PRINS. >. BOX OF ad L . 0 gnes : . i aaa Ee “a ‘ o oe a eee OLEO Ses | Bottle. abandoned because its About nine million U. 8S. chil- drift made it useless for further dren have vision trouble. _observations. ; * x a ance anata meee } : -Ib:ROLL 2 § SPACEMAKER 30) ‘INN | Mg STERILE COTTON snip ! _o . MURINE : ' 1.98 Ybwenalyl Model J-303 : PES 97 86° we aye Wonderfully convenient and a | ey —_ eo Pan amiaade _ e7 wonderful buy. Brings you G-E’s ff Reg. 98c Be ee « eo ie big master oven with new auto- - BAN . 3 / a en matic timer that’s so easy to set, wee 4 _ ~ ere ‘ “ , starlight grey oven with flood- Bm. ROLL-ON ( , ait cet.” | . Sy of With New Easy-Set Timer light, a big 8 extra hi-speed | 9 lighted |f{ DEODORANT CREAM DEODORANT... surface cooking unit, backsplash, kitchen clock and eo minute timer, timed appliance eee —EeEeEeEe ae v4 outlet, full width drawer and the ee seven famous G-E features. In four mix-or-matched colors and white | — AW@g Ting bearer, A dinner was held at Ameri- ‘ean Legion Club in Wakefield this Saturday also jat Acres Community “Club in Commerce. ~ Mrs. Rydeski wore’ a blue ard- Berg, lace dress with pink accesso ries and Mrs. Baynes was ~ dressed in rose beige lace with Leon and Regene of N . and Mes. oe Cook of Cadillac. € When an American maps out a journey. to the Soviet Union, he wants to’ know if it is really so . * eold in Moscow that people get chillblains on their feet, if the tap water is safe for drinking, and whether it is true that men and WO ,Shate sleeping conipart- jet trains. a hundred and one abdit how to survive in here must be at least as Many gthe minds of Soviet visit- to the U.S., even though they t&\be Russia’ s No. 1 family. “Will it be summer or fall when we get to the United States, or a troublesome combination of both?" “What does one wear for strol- * cornfields of Sees Rae Rey ge ington America. with us, or stick to high heels for the sake of elegance?” * * The Soviet Embassy in Wash-. has by now given the Khrushchevs a detailed itinerary of their tour, and Nina Petrovna is busy matching her and her hus- band’s wardrobe to the many — events on the program. Mrs. Khrushchev usually dresses in Soviet-designed rayon or silk prints in warm weather, wool in winter, Her husband has several custom-tailored Italian suits, which - he occasionally wears at home and probably will bring with him to * Nina Petrovna weather the ‘strain of planiing in good fashion, She has an even cide what presents to bring their hosts in America, * Three years ago on their trip to Britain, Nikita Khrushchev and Nikolai Bulganin, who was then premier, gave Queen Elizabeth a sable stole. They brought the Eng- lish some Mongolian horses and a baby bear, which was promptly to * * installed in the London Zoo. * In 1958, Khrushchev presented American. industrialist Cyrus Eat- on with a troyka and three hand- some horses to go with it, probably will 5 ARE EA Re SRR ASO @ Pontiac Preas Pheoie Tricker of the ticket committee; Mrs. H. R. Lilley, one of the models; Brenda Boushell, page boy; end Mrs, Shirley Kalbfleisch, another model. St. Joseph Unit to Present Paris Fashions Sixteen models will show these fashions when the review gets under Way at-1:30 p. m. They are Mrs. H. Guy Moats, Mrs. Ronald Schmeiding, Janet Marie Pearson, Mrs. H. R. Lilley, Mrs. Shirley Kalb- fleisch, Mrs. May Knoob, Mrs. Pearl Bearwolf and Mrs. Leo Robertson. * * * Others are Mrs. Joseph Ruva, Mrs. Edwin Dobski, Mrs. Henry Sokol, Mrs. Rich- Mrs. S. J. Ponia- towski, Mrs. John Cagey. Mrs Albert Chandes and Mary Tan wouski. Brenda Bouschell will be page boy. i & Tickets may be purchased at ‘the door or by calling Mrs. Forrest Rorabaugh, Mrs. Rob- ert Tricker or Mrs. Arthur Kinney at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. * * * There will be a Dixieland band for entertainment and forty- door prizes will be given. Phyllis Jo Shook Wed in Evehing Phyllis Jo Shook and Gerald T. Winkley Were married Fri- day evening at St. Luke Epis- copal Church, Ypsilanti, The Rey, Sidney §.-Rood officiated at the double ring ceremony before 200 guests. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Clark.M. Shook Ceremony pearls, a gift from the bride- groom, Mary A. Scott of Ypsilanti was maid of honor. She wore acoral crystalette gown trimmed with -a deep coral chiffon sash and matching picture hat. She carried a bouquet of teal carnations. * * * Attendants were Caro} Lynn Shook and Sandra Ann Shook, both sisters of the bride from Ypsilanti; and Marilyn Jean Winkley, the bridegroom's sister. All were. dressed in crystalette dresses accented with turquoise chiffon sashes * * * was Joseph W. Remington of Pontiac. Ushers were Maxe A. Obermeyer of Ypsilanti, Paul R. Sobol of He RR a ha aOR Gardeners Install Officers Dirt Gardeners held their annual meeting Tuesday at Carrie Lee Tea room, Officers for the coming year were in- stalled. They are Mrs. James G Weaver, president; Mrs. Le- roy Small, vide president; Mrs. Frank Hickson, treas- urer; Mrs. J. Robert Hancock, secretary; Mrs. Kenneth Gid- ley, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Donald C. Gilchrist, historian * * * Hostesses for the day were Mrs. Hickson and Mrs. George Quine, Mrs. Dora Walker of Long Beach, Calif., was a guest. Civic project adopted was landscaping one of the new schools Four pages today in Women’s Section Khrushchevs Prepare for Visit to US. By COLETTE BLACKMOORE NEW YORK (UPD—If Ameri- cans could. eavesdrop on the. Khrushchev household as it pre- pares to visit the United Stated, younger days, remember too much of it. Sergei, 24, is a graduate of Mos- cow University, where a large pro- portion of the students study Eng- lish. He got some language prac- ¥ tice while he was in Britain with his father in 1956. The daughters, s Rada and Julia, probably also have * a smattering of the language. English, ao & ace. jamas Club aA exeuoians PSR ewaas ame SU Ee St =| . Fs 4 | disposition, and is gentle and at- will no doubt want to make at : tentive with people. She is shortish least as grand a gesture to Presi- = and very plump and her face is dent Eisenhower. - broad, rather severely framed by *~ *« *«- : gray hair, The Khrushchevs also have to Besides ‘the worry over clothes, bone up on their English. Mrs. the Khrushchevs also have to de- Khrushchev taught English in her 4 but she may not * * * Nikita himself understands some but it is not certain how many words he would be able to utter if pressed. Sr Se oa Bey x CARREEN McCLEMENTS New president of the Traba- is Carreen Mc- Clements. Other officers are Sherry Gremore, vice presi- dent; Carol Campbell, trea- surer; Carol Mihay, record- ing secretary and Kathleen Weitz, corresponding — secre- tary. The formal banguct will be Sept. 30 Denton-Gibson Nuptials Held-in Floral Setting White —chrysanthemums banked the altar of St. Vin- cent de Paul Church at noon Saturday for the wedding of Joan Gibson of Henry Clay avenue and Ronald Denton of Elizabeth Lake road. Parents of the couple are Mrs. John Gibson of Dundee, Scotland, and Mr, .and Mrs. Thomas Denton of Clare. The bride was given in marriage by Dirk Van Emmerik. * * 2 The bride’s floor length gown of embroidered silk organza featired a Bateau neckline and long sleeves. A crown of silk . organza held her fingertip veil of silk illusion. Sharon Aho was maid of honor and Liza Lopeze of De- troit was bridesmaid, They wore gowns of cotillion blue moire taffeta with scooped necklines and short sleeves Their headbands were of _ matching material. * * * James Marshal of Detroit was best man and Elvis Den- ton of Clare was usher. A reception was given at the home of ‘the Ray Dentons of Elizabeth Lake road, Before leaving for a honey- moon in Toronto, the bride changed to a toast colored dress with matching jacket, brown accessories and a cor- sage of white roses She Gets Scholarship Wayne, and Jerry E, Slusser of . Chelsea. A reception wag held in the del Former West. Bloomfield High School student Sandra Lemon was presented a schél- arship award from the Busi- ness and Professional Women’s Club Tuesday evening, Mem- bers of the group met Tuesday at Hotel Waldron for a dinner. Sandra was secretary of the Michigan State University Hostesses for the everiing - were’ Vera Bassett, Gertrude Barrett, Julia Dimond, Made- line Fox and Fritzi Stoddard. Si ee et Plights Troth ’ 5S RII EAP Be ae The bridegroom graduated from Michigan College of Min- ing and Technology and is now attending Chrysler Institute of Engineering ‘ MRS, RONALD DENTON NSS Stl EE THE He - eS ag Mrs. A. A. Dodd, left, of Drayton Plains and Mrs. J. A. Rammes of Sylvan Lake are “among members of Town Hall who are work- ing hard to sénd out.tickets for the fall ‘THIRPEEN _ Svea, Kline, sculptor, who studied wader the late Carl Milles, is working with Mrs. W. G. Wright to make sure the Swedish booth for the International Travelers market will have an effective setting. and Sweden chandise from Norway Mer- will include skiing sweaters, cloisonne jewelry, Orrefors glass and engraved Anives and scissors. ; Travelers Market Saturday Saturday, Sept. 1%h is the day of the International Trav- elers Market Cochairmen Mrs. Robert C. Vanderkloot and Mrs. Edward S. Wellock are busier each day as the day of the benefit for the Save the Children Federation ap proaches. Among » 17 booths at the market, } all, our newest state, will be much in evidence. Mrs. Clement C. Richard, sponsor of this booth, promises that visitors will be greeted by appropriately dressed rep resentatives of the Islands. A , coconut hat or handcrafted monkey pot ware are just two of the intriguing items on sale Mrs, Edwin J. Anderson is in charge ef the booth. Assisting her will be Mrs. Edward A Schirmer, Mrs. Thomas C. LeMessurier, Mrs. Thomas B. Adams, Mrs. Henry G. Little, Mrs. John L. Wiant, Mrs Fotis Takis and Mrs. Alfred D. Fortier. The American Indian booth, sponsored by Mrs. Paul H McKenney, will offer Hopi Crafts Guilds cuff links, belts, necklaces, bracelets and sad- die blankets. Dr. Willard W. Beatty, an authority on In- dians, and associated with the SCF, has been helping in the selection. Also assisting Mrs. McKenney are Mrs. John FE. Blomquist, Mrs. James K., Campbell, Mrs. Donald J. Oatman, Mrs. John H, Roehm, Mrs. Ralph E, Zimmerman, Mrs. George Cavanaugh Jr., Mrs. Frank B. Audette, Mrs, J. Glenn Brozo, Ann Osborn and Jacqueline Brozo. The Junior League of Bir- mingham is spofsoring the Southern Mountain booth. Yt was in this location that the SCF began its work 28 years ago. Handcraft of various kinds, for which Beréa College in this region is noted, will be on sale.’ Finland has given many outstanding artists to Cran- brook Academy of Art, among them Maja Grotell, the late Eliel Saarinen, his wife Loja and Marianne Strengell. Mrs. Saarinen is chairman of the Finnish booth which will fea- ture contemporary objects of | art. She has the support of ‘a + series. the many Women's Section fitk eer ee ee | This will be the first Town Hall that Pontiac has had. For ticket information contact Mrs. © ecil - hovel Callum or Mrs, Leslie R. OF T. VAN DUSEN MRS, C, . Mrs Eero Sarrinen, her daugh- Virs and her grandson's wife, Robert S. Swanson The Denmark booth. under the direction of Mrs Eric Fromm, will offer Royal Copenhagen figurines among many other items. Mrs. Alfred PF. Grann, who is assisting Mrs, Fromm, is a member of the national board of directors of the SCF Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Von Reis are sponsoring the Swed- ish beoth and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones is chairman. Helping her will be Mrs. David R. Burton, Mrs. Glen A. Carlson, Mrs. Phil F. DeBeaubien, Mrs. Roy E. Hawkinson. Mrs. J. P. Judd, Mrs. Thomas King. Mrs. Lawrence R. Nelson, Mrs. Gunnar Karlstrom and Mrs. } Robert F. Swanson Mrs. ler ’ W. O. Newlander. In the Dutch: booth there will be a variety of flower arrange- ments in unusual containers. also crystal cheese dishes and molds imported from Holland. Mrs. Rocco DiMarco is chair- man and working with her are Mrs, A. C. Girard, Mrs. Robert W. Englehart, Mrs. E. E. Fisher, Mrs. Harry L. Win- ston, Mrs. Jehn S. Mahony, Mrs. James G. Shannon Jr., Mrs. Clyde Hagerman. Mrs. Walter O. Briggs III and Mrs. William J. Scripps. ‘Rain or shine, the market is on. Make yourself comfortable in low-heeled shoes and enjoy the beauty of the Greek Thea- ter and its grounds. - Better bring your Christmas shopping list also—there will be attrac- tive. itents for everyone in your family. aedat PSR Ne MH ge 3 Pati Prsn Paste | ite i ee iW j “ SN ete ONG : By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR: ABBY: You are my last hope. I will be frank with , you. I am a 15-year-old girl who has been = going steady with a 17 - year- old boy. If know it was wrong, but before we could con- trol our- selves we went too far. I think I am pregnant, but I’m _ not sure. If I go to a doctor, he will tell my mother. Neither my boyfriend nor 1 have the kind of parents you can talk to. I heard if I am pregnant they can send my boyfriend to prison because I am under age. We don’t know which way to turn, Abby. Please put this in the paper and tell me what to do. I can't sign my real name. FIFTEEN DEAR FIFTEEN: No mat- ter how ‘impossible’ you think your parents are to talk to—they are the first to help you when you are in se TOUS trouble, Believe me. they are vour best friends. Tell them at once. This problem is dis cussed in the September issue of McCall's in an article | wrote entitled, ‘‘Things my mother never told me” I hope you will read it DEAR ABBY. I resent your nae PLANNING A CRUISE THIS WINTER... if eo, then the time to make reserva- Bree ig now. TO DELAY I8 TO BE DISAPPOINTED. BIRMINGHAM TRAVEL SERVICE here PLUMMER REILLY 379 Bam) Birmingham MIT ash, | | > » > > dentist? statement that “the only way a respectable lady gets a black eye is by walking into a door.” . * * * 1 consider myself respect- able. But when my drunken husband came home and with- out provocation socked me in the eye—was my eye black! I also lost two teeth in the bargain. I suppose you'd tell me that the only way a re- spectable lady loses her teeth ischaving them pulled by a ty 1 However, the black eye and | the missing teeth were good | | evidence in court. And now I | _ am happily divorced. And still | | respectable. LUCY | | *® *® DEAR ABBY: | ter who is the world’s worst | correspondent. She's married | | and has four children and lives | | about 600 miles from me, May- | be I'm at fault for being a | | worry-wart but when I don't | | | * i I have a sis- | t | hear from her for a couple of months 1 get worried and call Sharon Marie Millar Wed Saturday Morning Sharon Mare Millar and James Thomas Hennessey were married Saturday morn- ing at St. Mary Magdalen Church in Hazel Park. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence W. Millar of Waterford Township and Mrs. Edna Hennessey of Madison Heights * * * The bride’s gown wis fish woned of French Chantilly lace and ruffled tulle. It featured a fitted basque waist and long hand tapered lace sleeves. The boat neckline was outlined with «a setin yoke of tulle and the floor length skirt) which formed @ chapel train was ac- cented with lace front and back panels and side panels of tiered ruffled tulle, Her il lusion fingertip veil was held by a Jullet cap and she cai rie da bouquet of white cal nations and glamelias Beall of Waterford wus maid of hoor. She wore a pale yellow chiffon floor length dress and a matching picture hat. She carried a col- onial bouquet of lavender car- nations and glamelias * e St Bridesmaids were Stottlemeyer of Waterford; Suzanne Carolyn the CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 North Perry FE 2-636! HAIR FASHIONS .. . for Fall Require >» A PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT WAVE | bridegroom's sister, Patricia | Hennessey of Madison Heights, | and Patricia Williams also of Madison Heights. They were | dressed like the maid of honor in pale lavender and they car- JAMES HENNESSEY MRS. ried colonial bouquets of yel Hlennessey was dressed in pale girl Cindy Wood. | craft of Berkley wore a floor. | Flower length gown of yellow organdy with a matching poke bonnet and she carried a smal! bou Phone FE 4-2511 or Mail Your Order! Wash ‘n wear cotton... Proportioned Percale Shirtwaist nt Suse *3.99 Here’s a perfect-fitting dress that belongs in every girls back to school wardrobe! Fine cotton percale _that never ‘needs ironing. Choose this gay print on aqua or brown. Sizes 12 to 20. t Waite's ‘Deytime Diesses... ort 10 to 18: medium and’talt Third Floor quet of lavender chrysanthe mums * * * Michael Ferguson of Madi- | son Heights was best man Ushers were Thomas Hen nesrey, the bridegroom's brother of Madison Heights, Kenneth Martin of Royal Oak | and James Godman of War- | ren * * * | A wedding breakfast follow- ing the ceremony and | ning reception were held Veterans Hall, Royal Oak < *® ® * Before leaving for a honey- moon to the Upper Peninsula, th® bride changed to a hunter green sult with matching ac cessories, The couple will live | in Royal Oak, | Mrs. Millar wore an olive | | an eve at green lace dress with beige accessories and a corsage of bronze chrysanthemums, Mrs Hennessy was dressed in pale | blue lace with navy accessor. | ies and wore a pink rose cor- | sage. | Diamonds, classically a_ girl's best friend, are now reoruited to score for leg glamor in a new, style seamless stocking for dates, dining and dancing. It's a stocking with a diamond lace texture. Dia- monds come in umber, barely! black and topaz shades. \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 ~ od 15 -Year-Old Possibly Pregnant her long distance. Now the tew dollars won't break me, | but my problem is: When- ever I cal) her all I get oat of the call is hearing her four kids scream. For some reason the minute my sister gets on the phone her kids make such a fuss she has to spend all her time (and my money) shout- ing them down. My insides start to boil. I'm no good for three days afterwards. Have you any suggestions? SIS DEAR SIS: Call her late at night when you are sure her children are asleep. * * * DEAR ABBY: I am fifteen years old and don't have much of a figure. In fact, F don't havé any at all. The boys won't even look at me, They call me ‘Pancake’. Please don't tell me to go to a Health Studio to build myself up as | can't afford it. PANCAKE DEAR PANCAKE: There is more than one way to “build yourself up”. Let the lingerie department fill in where Nature cheated you There is n@ reason for a girl to concave where she should convex * * * To get ABBY s pamphiet Wher Every Tee.ager Wants To Know ” send 28¢ and a large. srif-address ed. stamped e:velope to this paper In this day cleanliness it may be strange suggest additional cleanliness and age of hyper- to It Wheeler Needlecraft Book. has been discovered, though, that lovely designs to order: many of the old diseases are creep- dery, ing up on us because of laxity. quilting, toys. In the book, a- spe-| | Remember to wash vegetables and cial surprise to make a little girl) fruits thoroughly before you eat happy — a cut-out doll, them and rinse off cans and bot- tles before opening.. St. Michael Units Plan | ‘hook, PTA Executives Map Year’s Work Plang for the coming school year were initiated at a meet-:- ing of the Emerson School PTA executive board held at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Curtis, president. Members of the executive committee voted to postpone and to hold the first meeting of the year Oct. 14. Mrs. Curtis annotnced that pA vote by last year’s board granted an additional donation of funds to the school for play- ground equipment ‘purchased last year. The money was earned through various proj- _ ots S during the year. | Nadon’s ‘for Juniors Sizes § to 15 | Micesle || Mile Shopping Center = ph at ores 2 the Ga. Small bust...in-between size? You need PETER PAN Lew. ea Prices on Custom Draperies The YARDSTICK MIRACLE MILE by CasraWhedls | She's a real playmate — 17.) ‘inches tall! A gift to thrill little | imothers of all ages. She's easy to make — floppy | arms and legs, all in one with body. Pattern 901; transfer of! face; pattern for body, clothes; di- rections for 17-inch doll. Send thirty-five cents (coins) for this pattern — add 5 cents for} each pattern for Ist-class mailing. | | Send to The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., P. O. Box 164, | Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly Pattern Num- ber, Name, Address and Zone, | Send for a copy of 1959 Laura) It has| embroi-| | weaving, | crochet, knitting, clothes to color. Send 25 cents for this Activities Future of Church units were * when Altar Society members held fall Tuesday at the church, ’~ & t, Group members were notified that their group will meet Sept. 15 at the home of Mrs. Carl Garchow on Cor- win court, and Mrs. Gayle Coulson announced that the Little Flower Unit will hold a cooperative dinner in the par ish hall on that date. Additional announcements included notice of the North western Deanery meeting at St. Vincent Farrar Church in activities of a num ber St. Michael Catholic announced theu first meeting St Rose Basin Can Be Wonderful Toy In the hands of a run-about, a brightly colored plastic basin can become .a toy of infinite variety. Set it on the kitchen or bath- room floor, fill it with warm water, and add some soap or detergent. Then let a vivid young imagination — and busy hands — take over. The sudsy water can serve as a white-capped ocean for sailing boats — or merely as ‘a “sink"’ for washing dolly dishes. Smark. YOUU HATASTYEING Created by ANDRE You Get All This: ‘\ ) @ Luxury Perm . @ $2.00 Gamin Cut @ Conditioning Shampoo @ Styli Consultation @ Personalized Set, Custom Cold Wave DO complete No Extras OUR SALON IS AIR CONDITIONED No Appointment Needed! OPEN MON. AND FRI. TILL 9 P.M. Andre Leauty Salon 2nd Floor, Poritiac State Bank Bldg. PE 5-9257 | q ° T | Lined Up— C4 , GOLD-FILLED WATCH Madison Heights on Sept. 16; a bazaar which will be spon- ‘ *79.50 sored by women of the Altar Good taste and simplicity are Society on Sept, 19 and 20; | characteristics of Hidden Treasure makes up the difference bee and a smorgasbord to be | the Omega “Classic” series. 14K * tween the less-than-perfect and the perfect A, sponsored by the men of the || White or yellow gold-filled case, _ . Band C! Can’t-Curl band never binds, cuts or Adds fullness, confidentially, without pads! The world’s first and most popular contour bra! we Soe See etn. 2 ite oak 4 : rienaslianiatiaie 2 Be ake , ae seh Bobs: -faees 3 ee + SE ACT eeeig. ee SORA ES DS, parish on Sept. 20 at the parish} eacl with raised 1QK gold hou- } & wrinkles. Fine pima cotton broadcloth. White, nal, i] markers, 17 jewel movement. i on : Proceeds from the benefits | black, pink, blue, beige, red. ¥ 50 will go to the Athletic Assn. | , : ony 3 of St. Michael School. | . 5 * *® * 4 On Sept..30 a Deanery card | a ° party will be held at the par- of ace ish hall of Guardian Angel 8 * ‘ Church in Clawson. REDMOND \ a : ¥ October events include ai | et = meeting of St, Monica Unit | a rs at the home of Mrs, Lynn ! rr en Strong’and the Annual Day of | Jewelers -. ee Recollection which will be | ; . . fe r ZS; observed at Mt. Mary Catholic Optometrists * r. 7 Church in Detroit = ; Be CUB ite * & = pe Members of the St. Rose , & : : Unit served refreshments at | 81 N. Saginaw Street :* ae Tuesday's meeting. Hostesses ; ae * were Mra. Robert Gallo, Mrs FE 2-3612 Live action control for the young-in-figure! Lewis Swartz, Mrs. Adam Kra- : | ~ , vetz E and Mrs. Blanche Blust. THE EC hen. POM PADOUR Low —little—and lovely! The type of shod that ™ STRIPES are woven in! Gives 1. FIRMOLASTIC you fortified control at tummy, hips, derriere; eliminates girdle weight, bulkiness, rigidity! 2. AIR-STRIP INTERPLAY assures cool comfort! 3. SKIN-SMOOTH! No overlapping seams, no hems, no bulky panels — as smooth inside as outside! 4. STAY-SNUG DIP WAIST can't wrinkle, roll, bind! S. WHISPER.LIGNT! 8 ounces of sheer power, this little panty girdle makes you look pounds lighter! G6. RELAX- 3 a eee we ody perfect AAR every body needs Peter Pen | S. a, li, ent a ae, 3 | TWENTY-ONE CLOSED SUNDAYS AS Seen ALLGOOD BRAND—AGP’s Own Fine Quality Sliced Bacon 1-LB. PKG. ith Way yy “in yh i} : Vill . . SR - ALA ALi \ WV : inayhigyt Hy \VVAh peeiha, \ il i 44) WAAL V4 ty, Th \ Th Wil Wi OMELET NAAT AE NN \\\\) \\ ® ' , } it 1 1 hidl Why \ Vibbhl i\\ Vie Super-Right Fancy Sliced Bacon Super-Right Thick-Sliced Bacon 2 » 3% ns 49¢ » 89¢ CALIFORNIA GROWN Bartlett Pears .... 2 us 39% THOMPSON, CALIFORNIA HOME GROWN HOME GROWN Seedless Grapes . . . 2 » 39¢ Acorn Squash .. .. . um» 10¢ Help Your Child in y . hie A wt ‘ GOLDEN BOOK Wee Vhistiated ENCYCLOPEDIA Ni HII] T¢ (ft tq EASY BOOK-A-WEEK PURCHASE PLAN | ee ae CALIFORNIA RED FLAME TOKAY GRAPES Fst ofthe Season! 1B, 10° Egg Plant... . 2... mn 10¢ hoo GOVERNMENT INSPECTED—TOP QUALITY CUT-UP FRYERS ib. Zc CORNED BEEF sveesr SPARE RIBS BOLOGNA CHUBS RATH’S CHOPETTES “SUPER-RIGHT” Luncheon Meat MIX or MATCH SALE 8-OZ. 3 PKGS. 1.00 Olive Loaf @ Old Fashioned Loaf Spiced Luncheon Loaf @ Cooked Salami Liver Loaf @ Pickle & Pimento Loaf LESSER QUANTITIES SOLD AY REG. RETAIL WHOLE FRYERS PLAT POINT cur 69c ‘cur é “SUPER-RIGHT"—2 TO 3 LB. AVG. a LB. “SUPER-RIGHT’ QUALITY BLACK HAWK " 8.07. rey a ween 49c “SUPER-RIGHT” Genuine Spring Lamb Selections Leg 0’ Lamb Roast. . » 69 Lamb Shoulder Chops = 69c Lamb Rib Chops... = 99 Lamb Breast... .. » 19¢ @ PKG. SPECIAL THIS WEEK! JANE PARKER Potato Bread Cherry Pie Jans parxer, tasty crust “SCY 45¢ Hard Rolls “waior'rorer stm Ors 25¢ REG. 1-LB. 2le . LOAF 15 Pecan Rolls sane rarxer, caramn %% 33¢ White Bread 24nt ranxer, suceo ast, 39 Green Giant mK or MATCH SALE ! OREEN GIANT : Niblets Corn 12-02. can GREEN GIANT Cream Style Corn 107. can Green Giant Mexicorn 12-07. can 5-5] OREEN GIANT Cut Green Beans GREEN GIANT—WHITE SHOE Peg Corn 12-02. can LESSER QUANTITIES SOLD AT REGULAR RETAR 16-02. CAN FROZEN FOOD BUYS NIFTY BRAND Waffles .... + 10c Birds Eye Peas....... ros, 39C Birds Eye Cut Green Beans 2 ros. 49c Birds Eye Whole Kernel Corn 2 rxos. 39c Birds Eye Orange Juice . . 4 cans 99% Mor turty 4 rxos. 89¢ Morton’s Pot SUNNYBROOK, GRADE “A” Small Eggs 4 = 99c Kraft’s Deluxe Cheese Slices ‘xo. 27c Silverbrook Butter ae 69 Sunnyfield Butter... ... . ams 7Ie¢ Fresh Porch Fillets ‘an... CAP'N JOHN’S 3% LIPTON'S—10c OFF LABEL—CHICKEN-NOODLE Soup Mix 3 = 29% Iceberg Dills AUNT JANES , eee Pe ‘2% Waxed Paper rssnmr . , . 4 tous 89¢ Fancy Tuna ‘vir. e7e. 4 “Gins 99¢ 4 Big Pontiac Stores to Serve You 25 W. Pike St., Downtown Pontiac OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 f185 N. PERRY et MADISON 4724 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS 949 W. HURON ST. nr. TELEGRAPH RD. All prices in this ad effective thru Saturday, Sept. 12th CHICKEN-OF-THE-SEA “SS boa Fish. Cokes i es > THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY Tone Fish cium srvu,itmar 3 ‘cans 89¢ Graham Crackers wanonat sscun ‘35¢ Be Sticks 1001 ) a nr : Krispy Crackers SUNSHINE, 4 5 6 pon 28 Nestle’s Quick ‘ee cede . con 47¢ Fish P ti 10-02. uper Ma rkets Chewing: Gum curs, aunavors oso 29¢ “Instant Coffee “AS coAKee. “ar 93. Tena Fish CHUNK STYLE, LT. MEAT 3 x8? 89 Pizza Mi: Sc OFF LABEL « » oe « Bape Oe 3 n= 1,00 1859 AMERICA'S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT 1959 a Streined One Cent Sele Laundry Starch Seve ot A&P Shedd’s B-1-Y Mix Comee Save of A&P For the Dishes Baby Food SweetHeart Soap Linit Liquid Keyko Margarine French Dressing Copper Cleanser | = Ad Detergent Liquid Vel 10 “ce* 97¢ 4 cam 45c) 2 im 49¢ cm. 55¢ ‘x §=—.23¢ - me 39e ‘ne, 83¢ ‘ny 37C Xen 69 : -s TWENTY-TWO i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 States. He is scheduled to arrive Khrushchev Plans Visit Leaders Started -Humbly ; in New. York Sept. 17. fo Roosevelt's Tomb The grave is a national historic! raomerny. sy rowan EY gan hower, Khrushchev Records viet Premier Nikita S. Khrush- ice. The service declined to com- 93 chev will visit President Franklin ment on the report of Khrushchev’s D. Roosevelt's grave at Hyde yjsit Park, N.Y.. the Poughkeepsie New Yorker said today. It said the date of the visit has not been determined, Autos .on Farms Rise DETROIT — Back in 1910 there about 30,000 automobiles on Date 1890 Khrushchev is due to arrive were By UNITED PRESS Eisenhower and Khrushchev through the years: EISENHOWER Born in Denison, Tex. INTERNATIONAL | KHRUSHCHEV 1950: Named Supreme Com- mander for NATO. 1952 Elected President of . United States. 1953 Korean War ends after Eisenhower visit. 1956 Reelected president of ~ United States. 1958 A 1959 Khrushchev comes to Washington. Brought to Moscow as top party regional leader. Stalin dies. Khrushchev) emerges as one of top Com-. munists, Exposes Stalin's party congress. Becomes Soviet premier. Eisenhower goes to Russia. faults to Leaver Walive village (or big Russians Invite Hemingway to Visit There MOSCOW {#— The Literary, |Gazette Tuesday printed a front | page invitation to Nobel] Prize win- ‘ning novelist Ernest Hemingway to accompany President Eisenhow- er to the Soviet Union. “The arrival in this country of a writer as popular here and in the | magazine continued. | course get a reception befitting | in Washington a week from to. U.S. farms. The number has | Next year family moved day on a tour of the United grown now to about six million, | to Abilene, Kans —— =, 1894 Born in Kalinovka, Ukraine. 1902 Selling vegetables house Shepherd boy, minding no- to house from horse and _— bleman's sheep and cows. buggy. 1907 High school, not too Learning locksmith's trade: good student but star in hasn't learned to read or) football, baseball write 1911 Wins appointment 9) West Point city, Kharkov. Gets job in factory 1915 Graduates from West Due to begin military service (FOR THE WHOLE FAPAMLY) Point. in Czarist army but excused _ as coal miner mM avor | 1916 Posted to Fort Sam Making revolutionary speech- y f es Houston, Tex. Marries es in Ukraine. -) Mamie Doud ~ s 1917. U.S. enters World War Bolshevik revolution starts. I. Assigned to tatnk Fighting with Red Guards corps training. Does not against White Russians. gO Overseas. 1918 World War I ends Khrushchev joins Bolshevik (Communist) Party. First meets Lenin . 1920 Sent on first overseas Fighting as Bolshevik guer- $299 WIDTHS duty, Panama. rilla in Ukraine. N-M 1922 Marries fellow student at agricultural school WOMEN'S SIZES [1925 Army General Sta!f Spotted as pro-Stalin man tn 4 to 10 School at Fort Leaveu- Ukraine and marked for ad-| worth, Kan. vancement. * * * 1928 Sent to Paris on first Brought to Muscow by Com Furopean assignment munist Party 1929 In Washington as aide Studying at Joseph Staiin to Gen. Douglas MacAr- Industrial Academy in Mos- thur, then Army chief COW . | of staff. 1935 Goes to Philippines with Appointed head of, party MacArthur. committee for Moscow. Seen with Stalin. 1940 Back in US. Wins note Head of Communist Party inj} during Louisiana Army Ukraine maneyvers 1941 Pearl Harbor. Called to Hitler attacks Russia. Party Washington by Gein. commissar with army In George Marshall Ukraine "1942 Named commander for Helps draw battle plans for : North African invasion defense of Stalingrad + 1943 Named allled command Still with army in Ukraine er for invasion of France j 1944 Allled Invasion of ELu- Assigned by party to recon- rope. Ike commands struction in Ukraine. * * * | 1948 Named president of Co- Premier of Ukranian govern- | lumbia. University. in ment. New York. | ] | a i See Osmun’s Fashions Presented at 12:30 P.M. Each Wednesday at Kingsley Inn " hat SPORTCOATS °".°'""5 wise) tre ill e SLACKS (olive or otherwise) from SWEATERS (5:0: 1s: «0» 89,95 | pal > ~ 4} \ HATS iclive or othe: wie Downtown Pontiac Open Mon., Fri. Campus Shop OE AE ny oan rr you a handsome collecti: omplete group of hurmontzing Stop in at Osmun's downtk Let Osmun’s show you “Shop the Stores til 9 P.M. (olive or otherwise) the Compromise on Quality” Tel-Huron Center Open Mon., __ sane is where vou | find we... the ackrowledged leader whio the trend Olive :al air—We'll n ol olive suits as a certain well os olive access: ries from sox to wh or Tel-Huron store soon 49.50 from °5.95 doin 5.95 first st That Never Thur., ti] 9 P.M. Fri ; Sat. entire world as Hemingway will; meet with enormous warm hearted | interest and general approval,’’ the ‘organ of the Sovtet Writers Union | said, “We hope he will come,” the “He will of a welcome guest.”’ Hemingway was awarded the (Nobel Prize in 1954 following pub- heation of ‘The Old Man and _ Sea.”’ (ff ie" ») ~ AND SAVE Remember, Everything you buy at Neisner’s is completely gvaranteed. lor volume. | The body of “an average adult about 2,000 man hours of work, not iperson contains about one gallon,including the labor needed to pro-| measured by|duce and process the various raw imaterials. i more of blood, Port of New York Has (Can Deduct Taxes Its Busiest Day of Year | wasnincTon — In 25 of the NEW YORK «— Customs in-|94 states which levy income taxes, spectors had to hop today as the/the taxpayers are permitted to de- Port of New York had its busiestiduct their federal income tax pay- iday. of the wi ; aon | year with incoming! ets in computing their state in- Ten major vessels came in trom|°%™€ 1X levies. | Pieces of luggage carried by the IBoxcew Takes Work Europe and the Caribbean, bear- ing 9,118 passengers, The customs. Wheat service had to marshal all 260 in- Total Average spectors at its command, plus WASHINGTON—The U.S. wheat helpers recruited from its clerical | crop has averaged 1,075 millioa staff, to inspect more than 36,000) bushes the past five years. | passengers, COUPON © Sollia or Seaall Caboa HEEL LIFTS aiden 39¢ pr. NEISNER’S ST. PAUL — Construction of an ‘ordinary railway box car requires | I MONEY TO LOAN TO IMPROVE OR MODERNIZE YOUR HOME and at the Same Time PAY OFF YOUR PRESENT BILLS LOWERING YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS FREE APPRAISALS and CONSULTATION BIG BEAR CONST. 92 W. Huron—Pontiac FOR EXAMPLE... iF YOU NEED $3,000 =. fe o fer any ieaprove- ike reom dition, fe you wee °9,GQQ Sts si cota“ w you nee 52,000 Fe 2. iu ine decter, eto. WE WILL 500 ‘° LoAN FOR. ARRANGE +6, PER MO. 12 YEARS es 6% This is AN You Pay For INTEREST and PRINCIPAL CALL FE 3-7833 N f Girls’ 2 piece Flannelette < PAJAMAS $o comfortable, so pretty, so eary to launder. Tailored by Greencraft to guarantee satisfaction. Choice of coat style with cordena trim collar of ski type with combination ski print and stripes on top, and cuffs. Striped pant with elastic waist bend. SIZES 8 TO 14 NEISNER’S ' EISNER’S\= 5¢ TO $1 — VARIETY STORES FAMOUS MAKE |, FLANNELETTE SLEEPERS TODDLERS’ AND CHILDREN’S Kiddy prints and solid colors in white, pink, blue, or maize. One or 2 piece with feet, button front, high neck with closed feet featuring plastic dot sole. Easy to launder. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Designed for comfort and freedom. SIZES 1 TO 3 AND 210 8 TODDLER’S 4 PIECE Flannelette pPALAMA SET Have pajama, will travel! Adorable striped flannelette set includes: jacket, ski pants, nite cap, booties, in plastic drawstring bag. Little tots will want to go to bed just to put on this set. Sizes 1 to 3. 42 North Seginew Street Open Daily 9:30-5:30; Mon., Fri. 9:30-9:00 ee et li eee { ‘ i | eo ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 | | ; _THIRTY-ONE Orange Juice a Base f=" “Facts You Didn’f Know About Cantaloupe s|susae ates _ for Cool Fruit Drinks Orange Renpberry Fret = te saver between the Imperial Valley was picked before it was ripe.) oo with When you cut a mid-summer pepper er fresh lime or lemon: juice. The half-shell is cantaloupe, ~ te characteristics peng : ena © seen Ce are revealed: It r vie Thick meat and relatively small seed " oe attractive, apricot color (often — Ps ou sopetinar, as dessert Pineapple Cooler “Rich, rech, bragrasco—aever musty. or mid-morning or afternoon re- freshment FEe F i Py i e g if i B i : i : Hh : pee i | i E e F F a if Heit : f : } | | i bee i? | 1 t i : Grapefruit and Apple Mist “isang SLR tae | Se, Ry forme: ’ r home of the Pope near 200,000 erything. | Combine grapefruit, apple andiserve, pour over crushed ice in|Rome. It is here that these melons| “uns ~_—— plete: Tt combines beautifully with alld one tablespoon sugar if de. ij = tteld-tresh sweet flavor: il until serving time. Add gin-|with lime slices, Yield: 6 servings.|monks The ariewal melons une | *uiPped from California. Ee oe eg er pe ey eige eeg a eee and aria: eo mets serving. Pour longer found. The present types; Mid-sum mer cantaloupes are)" "California mid-summer canta- ie most common way of serving bonated beverage, in the bottom 3 z § E | Fy i i F | i F E I 2 i 1 i g i ch f any Eg a E iH [ ; you get started your imagination over, le tall glasses. Yield: " Vegetable Medley closely resemble them, although hand-picked when, and only when, loupes are a good source of as- it; and‘ for -calorie counters, sher-|of a soda glass. Fill 24 of the way - con- Put odds and ends of cooked vine-ripened fruit is quickly crated! Orange Apricot Duo tions to enhance the quality, flaver 40 calories in the average half-icream.: For entree service, fill the Suggested in the following reci- ori,ct® if. cumces) froaeu concentrated | Vegetables together so that yoUland texture of the frat and loaded into refrigerated cars.| en heap/cream, and fill to the top of pes are combinations of —— rn core eo ect have abouf two cups; heat them in! California leads in cantaloupe|Ripeness is protected during ship-| i. via summer canta {favorite chicken or seafood oat oraet cot nectar, raspberry sherbet, 12 oun ipingersie a cup of medium white sauce.|production, followed by Arizona | ment by ice. loupe is delicious “as is” with mixture, apple juice and gingerale. The | CO™Mbine orange juice, apricot add g topping of grated cheddar 4"4 Texas. Some ae are) Beige color and high, well-de-| mothing added. Unlike many | To chill or not to chill? Mest If your macaroni products have refreshing, pure orange flavor nectar and lime juice. Chill until/ cheese and place under the broiler} Se pae Ge the ‘fined, close net are the chief visual| fruits, it requires no “extras” | people serve cantaloupe well a way of being sticky after cook. predominates. in each and in- ae time. Add gingerale just until cheese melts and begins to, promenes is omnia. icharacteristics. They are clean at such as cream or sugar for eat- | chilled. Many people maintain, ing, )ou may be using too little sures a healthful drink. ‘before serving. Pour over ice in'turn golden-brown. in the early 1900s, California Ithe stem end. (Ragged bits of stem! Ing enjoyment. On the other | however, that California mid- water for their initial boiling. & _ Who but Kroger has such Week long LOW PRICES rrisweerwice Pure lemon juice. "(PLUS FREE TOP VALUE STAMPS) eae 10° SWIFTN'ING All purpose vegetable shortening. at us. 6/< Pond's COLD CREAM Beoutifies as it cleanses. 314-02. 8 3 JAR ds, NET me 7 iY de em iy HEKMAN GRAHAMS ee ' e)) \Tt > lp. t 1 4 t S cee 43 Fresh, delicious and crisp. me. O/* wTarl j ~ PCTATOE Ab aie ter LEMBRO COOKIES ~ ) ie Gon One of Independent's products it 29 DELICIOUS SWEET KROGER , | gn, ,MMONIA = COCKTAIL a bs € uER 6c CAN - BABO CLEANSER : : uss 43: OE TE TE PIECES & STEMS—CAVERN KROGER ae SE MO oy made hs itis Boone ies Be * Molen oer cinienevoutme * Mushrooms . . % 105 Pineapple Juice an 10° LINIT STARCH LOW PRICE ON CACKLING FRESH EGGS Powdered fr etticlney PACKER’S LABEL CUT , VLASIC )2-02. c = Green Beans.. 2 10° - Sauer Kraut . . 2% 10° 2 ves, 35 & hah eh ck wnt ie AMERICAN BEAUTY PACKER’S LABEL Keyko MARGARINE fj i—- 5 Kidney Beans. . 2 10: Spinach & 10° ———— tsa , $ aa 315 pe CTN. E SH E G G Ss = CLOVER md AMERICAN BEAUTY z FR " Pork’n Beans... 2% 10° Tomato Soup . . 2 10° SALAD DRESSING s MEDIUM SIZE SMALL SIZE * Shedd's Italien I aad we | € . € « ahve We OY ¢ CANS 8-01. c ~29° 4-99 | AVONDALE PEAS = 10° ,*.” 4 _ | STAR KIST TUNA Econemicel fomily size COUNTRY CLUB = EE SAVE 9¢ ON'3 CANS — PACKER'S LABEL Nee. 3 =f ten sisted sae e's 59° . TOMATOES a 10: | 39 “ = : ——— — ; eeceeeveee . 3 | ) | 3e OM Star Kist brand. U.S. NO. | . a ee na og 3 ‘tier 80° P | 50 Extra vu: Stamps | ano otatoes 7 eee enanlll One of Kreft’s products. ; GRAPEFRUIT JUICE @ | —— repens ear te ae Roadside Ferm Selel ! cancers SE] |S AM Seema begee yew can compare ow Gow euiyendwes* PEPPERS. .... ace 2¢ ONIONS .., sence 4¢ [meme mm] LOUID CHIFFON U.S. NO. | MICHIGAN WASHED & CLEANED aie ayy emo 50 Extra vin Stamps 1c Of this economical size . . SOUASH .. +s mace 6¢ ~~ RADISHES... Hs? Be PO sc crs pecan i “~ Potatoes ..... 25 % 69 Cihrots us 10: CRUTELOWER m2 | ue 2 | axe : ' | [ coxren sae at Rrooce, im Detrott ane | LIQUID CHIFFON WIN up to $60,000! BLUE CHEER 6 ee me me me me ey Mt ting dtr. es ue: tow te wit iat com ° | SO Extras vith: Stamps ‘ae 34° Get your entry blanks at Kroger air AG: Wh Ths Coup ond Paes of l 6 -L HUNGARIAN RING 2 | DURKEE'S [ som mts eons at FAMOUS . REGULAR | | E R 2 aire ee oe gt ywchen Powe oosding SAUCE d = ircond cueak + With meiled Be coupon seve 9c. fo. 25 es an EXTRA BONUS from Kroger's! '2,500° worth of Au 4 aE Seti cca (a rs oaLciOUs Groceries if your entry blank has Kroger namie on it 8 =—s_—s _cnir coors | |B ey , 71 SNe Gren S AE Tee Seen eae ial ted Rate Medion cate ison eesti comm ence ciableney ? orange ules, Toca soncemraied | Let's get the facts straight about seatidioejel Gildablish “oie akan & cuilgups”iaky Saddle. UL. tana, some people prefer to| ‘There is novel, seasonal good , an a cantaloupe, recognition is com-| » cake: wits innate lapple juice concentrate, undiluted: —_ i THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 > ad met aia | sla * a an \ , | Boosts ‘Liner Status’ Will Aid Px al = app ps 5 if Muskegon’s Shippers foe e of ree ech | las Draw CKSia. ‘ee MUSKEGON (UPI)—The port of | N.Y. Minorities scien. etre ete “ * for overseas By ARTHUR EDSON erate quarrel between Johnson|wrong he will show the same meena Py beat ‘nervously on pe siya ASHINGTON (AP)—Sen. .jand Morse ovee-what Johnson) fairness. his upper lip. ° v. said : Po B. Johnson ne te thought Morse had said about a| To a practiced eye, it looked| The mutinous crewman sat Says Puerto Ricans, — i gee da ae is ‘onsent|P2zUamentary procedure, Morse|about as affectionate as two box-| alone most of the time. Negroes Should. Get important single step yét achieved say that, if unanimous consent! ..i4 ne hadn't said it. The record|ers touching gloves before the} Conspicuously on his desk was On Post in Eve 3) for the port and for Western can be obtained to take up an is- was sent for and examined, start of the last round. the Senate rules manual.” In [-] ry Michigan ©: Cede paid sue, the Senate can do almost +_ * * As the leader responsible for|Morse’s, or any other, knowledge- “liner 2 pars 1 that_ foreign anything Johnson said he was wrong and|keeping the Senate on Course,|able hand, it's one the most; NEW YORK —Rep. Adam to will : Joh: i rudent | Morse was right, and he was hap-| Johnson looked more worried than/formidable weapons in legislative|Cjayton Powell (D-NY) predicted notify the port in advance of their Since ete ae aa hat, i{|PY to make the correction. Morse| any of his crew. His left hand re-|warfare—and all the Senate knew/today that the 1960 census would dase dye MUaggesind be a said he hoped that when he’s|peatedly came up to pat his|it. show that 50 per cent of Man] _ presented an odd sight tained, the Senate can do almost or Puerto Rican. nothing. : That’s the problem bothering Rp dhe a news en that ; the historic old debating society sab one of every three lective | appointive political posts in ; “” the area should be given to mem- * * * : The leaders would like to wind it up and get out of town this week. Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) is in no such rush. He says there are plenty of chores to do yet, atid he wants to see the senators stay around until these are done. So he asks for a strict interpre- tation of the rules, objecting fre- Your Headquarters for TILE! City’s five boroughs, had a popula- | tion of 1,960,101 in the 1950 census. - Powell said that if he and his supporters were elected to Har- lem district leaderships in next Tuesday's primary they would ~., quently to what have become work. to increase the political routine shortcuts. representation of the Negroes and The role of the objector isn't Puerto. Ricans. easy, especially if he’s working alone as Morse is. He has to hang around constantly, alert to every- thing that goes on. * * * If a senator makes a common- place request, Morse carefully ex- amines it for gimmicks lurking in Powell is seeking to dethrone Elijah L. Crump, who has the backing of Tammany Hall, the) Manhattan Democratic organiza- tion. tye alt SARs NP LP 8 SEAL re ~*~ «+ * Negro congressman said Tammany policy is to replace an The | PLASTIC the language. ar This leads to strange results. outgoing official with one of the ie eagh Here's Sen Leverett Saltonstall same racial and religious back- » Ae ar | (R-Mass) asking unanimous con- ground. bb: at C sent to — He said this practice had been aw Morse can't hear, What's the outmoded by the growth of the | — 4 ms af request, senator? Negro and Puerto Rican popula- i ' * & t tions. 2 7 Saltonstall repeats jit, Morse ' says he has no objection, and e ~ . ms that's how the ‘Congressional First Negro Named L mI Permanent, chip proof, water Record’ was able to report on to High Gary Office proof, color clear throughout. what Saltonstall called the first business agreement ever drawn in GARY, Ind. UA Negro was] knows that he has only himself to blame, or to credit. The Senate proudly insists that it’s the last! citadel of free speech, the one spot on earth where a man can say ee) plece in full \lieved to be several hundred dol- * * * The rules are there to ote used, | 2 Liquor Store Managers ise Burke said there was no basis mime eore etl Fired for ‘Pushing’ Brand tae Dae er itd America, by the Pilgrim Fathers a nted to a top Gary city office 1 in 1627. ~ os first time. aretvent © Reet CLOSEOUT! GOLD SEAL All this ean 7 of d ¢ t Mayor George Chacharis ap- — TILE ' tienabe TILE funny or absurd depending on AP Wirephote erage Hers Echo, & gms TILE ” x 9 how you look at it ; any ’ chy attorney Sia a A a CALM WARRIORS — Sens. Jacob Javits ferring to juvenile crime in New York City. The | Piazza, who resigned because of ares Cc Yet each senator who protests) (p xv) teft, and Strom Thurmond (DSC) have two had to be called to order for some of |ill health. their remarks during a squabble in the Senate Juha settled down a bit aftér their recent clash on the Senate floor over remarks by Thurmond re- Schell had been assistant city attorney since 1953. A native of Atlanta, Ga., Schell came here in 1924 with his moth- er, who retired from teaching in 1950. He was graduated from Fisk University in Tennessee and the Quality 12° cae cine Qe RUBBER TILE me 14‘ We Have PONTIAC’S LARGEST SELECTION of Sandran Vinyl THE FLOOR SHOP 99 S. Saginaw St. For Further Information, Phone FE 4-5216 WE LOAN YOU THE TOOLS— NO CHARGE for criminal action against those | involved since nothing actually Morse told his‘ colleagues he| was taken from the state, = ry since 1939. knows an overwhelming majority) LANSING UW — The state liquor, Brady, 42, of Charlevoix, manager Although the two managers were lg steel city has a total popu- probably wish to go home. control commission Tuesday sus-| of the Petoskey store. supposed to push the sale of prod- baer to 0.08 baer ite. ~*~ © * pended a Kentucky distillery from) “Nevertheless,” he said, “the doing business in Michigan for 30) Under the suspension order, pur- ucts of the distillery, ho rise in| groes. rules are in the rule book for the/days and announced the firing of chase, sale and distribution of sales was noted, Burke said. use of a member of the Senate|two state liquor store managers|“lenmore products will be pro- when he belioves the course the for ‘unethical practices.” i hibited in Michigan starting Sept. majority is following is a course) The Commission said that agents pian contiraiing for 20 saya. of action that is not in the public ‘of the Glenmore Distilleries Co. of| a n interest. It is a decision each sen *| Loulsville had paid money to the The commission said a distillery pointed by the town council six! ator must take.” liquor store managers to promote Spokesman said the top manage-| The Eiffel tower in Paris is the months ago admitted Tuesday , * the sale of their products. jment of the company had no third highest in the world ex-'night it has never held a meeting. | So the Senate knowledge of the irregularities and! ceeded only in man-made struc. \Rach of the three members said was contemplating action against tures by the Empire State and|he thought one of the others was | * * * Ile said other state fence stores | | were checked but no evidence of \Similar practices wag found, ‘Say, Who's Our Leader NARRAGANSETT, R.I, (AP)— A } * * Tuesday morning| Investigation disclosed the ar- More senators were around, Tangement had been operating |,” ,., . nployes responsible |Chrysler buildings, both located| than. usual—the informal count) for three years prior to last Jan. | George L. Burke Jr liquor | jin New York city.” ) la mecting. = po > oa . in . ; o . ‘ * *? y a was 42- and hardly a happy face 1 | commnlasiones business manager,! + = was to be seen anywhere. Discharged were William) M_|said it was hard to determine the ff * * * | Hoxie, 65, manager of the Traverse exact amount of money that Things sturted off with a mod-'City liquor store and Homer L. ichanged hands but said it was be- SETAE FOI OOOO IOI tk ty BUY NOW and SAVE SPECIAL 5 DAY SALE!-THURS. Thru MON. GUARANTEED 1 Full nek Thick bb ad io \ @ Full Length Plans Hinge @ 1 Screen—2 Glass Panels @ Full Weather Stripped @ Pneumatic Door ¢ loser Tax @ Knob Lock Incl. @ Storm Chain @ Deluxe in Every Detail INSTALLATION CAN BE ARRANGED NATIONALLY ADVERTISED ALSCO sis ii ACTION ALUMINUM Heavy Extruded Aluminum Never Need Poi i6® CASH & CARRY Reg. 169.95 Deluxe 3-Piece Suite. Medern Double Dress- er, Mirror, Bookcase Bed and Matching Chest. Now only Big Savings! Walnut finish Bedroom with Triple Drese- er, Bookcase Bed. Murry for this one ...4.. 129 eeeeteve Reg. 149,95 Ae mg , Bot room! with Sener’ hie Mate and Bookcase ching Chew od = $409 Pree ereeeseeereresyreeseeeeeeeerey evbee eee "Pike St. OPEN ck Free Next to Either Store! ie? tender Huron St. Juaotage n> , ‘ | \ . 4 , oe ? ; : , oe : : 4 : ; r a Gil ; i ALSC SIDING | Labor & Material “A450; : 2536 DIXIE HWY. OPEN SUNDAY 12-4 P. M. STORM WINDOWS ato YOU PAY Only FOTIA RR I IOI A aC R.ARS a & J ALUMINUM 24'x22'x8' Housekeeping. Gables and Dormers Blighty Additional 3 Blocks N. of Telegraph | Coll Fiderel 4-8200 After 6:00 P.M. FREE ESTIMATES 524.00 NO MONEY F.H.A. TERMS NATIONALLY ADVERTISED COMPLETE HOUSE ALSCO CALL OR 4-0388, 9-6 P. M. CER HKA RE REEEE H K ee eee ee eee rd ~~ £ . FF a THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 Ve A i » F | |] A: = AArO y a wire — it et ie tein , : SOKSOSOSSOSSSHSSSOSSSSOLESESEOSOSEOESELESEEEE ° Vataale ger. THE SHOE WITH THE BEAUTIFUL FIT. 8000S FOS OO9SOEOOHHHEOOHOOEOHSHSOTHOSOOEOOCOSE Completely Cleaned, Plump, Whole, Fresh FRYERS — Gov't fa Cut-Up. Inspected b. 33° Lb. U. S. No. 1 Michigan Sand-Grown POTATOES Kool Krisp Cc 10 Lb. All Purpose #7. Bag SOCSOSOSOOOSOSOOOOEROOTES ODO OCOOOOOSOOOTCOOOOOOOSOCOOOOEOOSS 100000000000000000000000000008 SEPTEMBER SALE SPECIALS! 36” Printed Flannel Lovely new Fall patterns for pajamas, ¢ robes, gowns, shirts. Washfast—Stock 3 3 yard. < up now and save. Home Economic Students — Go to the head of the class in “Chino.” See Us 6 FA RB I J O US’ Beautiful assortment, all the best 98 for all your ; shades for Bermudas, Jamaicas, jack- Campbell’s Condensed LL ets. Fine combed cotton, completely yard. Necessary washable. Sewing Supplies SEW >] SAVE FABRIC SHOP Li Ph. FE 5-4457 TOMATO SOUP PILLSBURY FLOUR or Gold Medal soe te FQ Pillsbury’s White, Chocolate, Yellow, Spice, Orange CAKE MIXES fashion 0n@ slim _ pump mid-heel So light and comfortable you can wear them from daylight to dark...and never know you had them on. So pretty... they flatter your foot from every angle... TEL-HURCN SHOPPING CENTER : OTT IIT II III III IIIT III IIIT TTT TTT Try yr ert eeseeeseoecsgoesessaeseoceoseseese Seleeeooesesesevesososseessesgveseese eesescescooeseeses COOCCOOOHOSSEOHEOHEOOOOEEOEOCEEEOOOEEE SOSCHCHCHHREESESESSESCESOESSESEEESHOSEEEEEESECS SPECIAL SALF! Tel-Huron Store Only Kresge's La SF to 1.19 Values Polyethylene BASKETS PAILS and Smart all weather coat of windproof poplin with toast warm orlon pile linging, in beige and willow green POSHSHSSSSSSSHSHSSEHSSHSHSHHOESS SSS HH SSSOROHOSSSSOHHHSSESOHOSSOHSHHHOSHHOHOHSSHSHOSHOHHSEHOSESHSEEESEEEEBES Bleck Calf Sizes 7 to If Black Suede Blue Calf — Brown Calf $] 3” 10% to 11 $14.99 (4 Ed. Tap-quallty, heory-dery plastic Bust-preef, loch-greel, cubrechaily Sensanona! savings on these plasrse dah pans, pesls cod wee baskes. Beaury ead eniwy combine with foots 14 qe wane besker; 1 qt. peil and 12214” duh pen. EACH WEEK WATCH FOR OUR ANNIVERSARY SAVING! $ Pkgs. Reg. $22.00 SALE “19” —Save 32c-— . SSHSHHHSHSHHSHSHSSHHHHSHSOHSHHSHHHHHSHHHHOHEHHOSHHSOSHHHSHHOSHSOSOEHHSHSESH OOOH SOHOSOSEHOHSOHOEEOOHOHE ESOS SEO ESEEEE SOHHHSHOHSSHTSHSHOSHSOHSSSOHSHSHSH HOHE HSHOHSOEHEHOSESOHSEHSOCEHOOOESESHOSEESS SESSSSSSSHSSSSHSSSSSHSSSSSSHSSHSHSSSSSSHSHHSSSHEHSSSHHSHHESSHSSEESESEHSSCHESOSESEEOEEECE © OOOO OOOO OOOO OOOO OOO OOD OOOO OOO OOOOOOOOSEOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOS OS OD OOS OOOOOO OOH OOOOOSO OOS OS EEO ED OOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOO ESOS OOOO OOSOOSOCOOOCCES SSHOSHSSSHHSSSHSHSSSSHSHSSHSSHSHSSSHSSSHHSSHSSHHSESSOEHHSSHEKSESSSHSHOHEEHEHHOSHSHSLOEEEEES SSCSSHSSHSHSHOHHSSSHSELSEOSSeSESESESESE Tel-Huron Center 175 W. Maple . . FE 4-0259 Pontiac Birmingham 2 SALF | BOYS & DADS (qe -nneni? BONANZA ’ | DALE « world of ren | PURCHASE Oale! : exciting new dresses :: shoes you ever 33 uusreoul ° se SIMULATED ba : = i] PEARLS may : Diachi BE oa iw AM AE : $7 5 et * : * cul tea hgiane vem) } } Puppies by WOR WuRenE ) : Newsmaking? Just look Boys’ Cha-Cha Boots $7.95 : : at the trend-setting | Sizes 2% to 6 Youths 10 to 2% $6.95 — Men’s $9.95 IN SIX BEAUTIFUL COLORS designs: jacket dresses, one- and two-piece styles for juniors and misses. Wonderful wools: sheers, jerseys, novelties, solids, prints, stripes, plaids! And look at the price! , left: stripe jersey sheath. blue, green. 7-15. right: 2-piece print: black, royal, taupe. 12-20. [ld ‘TEL-HURON SHOPPING open to 9 pn. monday, thursday, friday, saturday 4 PToT TIT Lrir ii rererrrrririririiiiirirriiiyy in ; ‘ . Traditional BACK-TO-SCHOOL ‘CAMPUS SHOES © 3 te § ROW GRADUATED BIBS © OVAL SHAPED BI8S 2 AND 3 ROW UNIFORM AND GRADUATED CHOKERS © MULTIPLE STRAND TWIST NECKLACES ° EARRINGS TO MATCH Every ome of these exqtiisite simulated pearl costume-pieces should be selling for mere’ The daeeting rhine- sone laspe plone are Worth tne full price of the nectlaces! Choose from over 40 spectacular designs—many with sparkling high fashion crystal and aurora borealis bead accents! Sorry no phome orders . . . Better hurry! But quick! - The Store Thet GIFT WRAPS FREE JEWELRY ; , : ° CORSO C OTS C ECOSOC EES OHOOEOESET ESCO ES OSER ESO OSEHOSSESOOSESEESOEESOERES i \ ‘ ‘ (‘= re. TEL - HURON CENTER Telegraph at W. Huron — Open” Mon ‘There.’ Fri. and Sat. , ‘a1 9 P.M. SOSSOOSOHSOSOSHSOHSH SOHO SOSLOHOSOSHOOTHS1090 908908 90S8HOSS90O9HOHH8H00080000O0H0000OOSOHHHOHOOHOOSOOOO OO OOOOOSODOOODOCS PPODPSOOOSOOOOOOSOO ODO OOSOOOODDSEROOOSOOOO DODO RODEO DODO DODO OD ODDO ODD ODORS ODIFO DODO D ODDO ODODE EEO eee eeeDocoeceeeeee bad iain tie Inert dietiedincdin deeded daatndiaa ada da dda deeded ded dede ded dd ddd ddd ddd dd ddedad dd dh i teehee ke tate rire yy YY YY SOOSSSSSTOSHHSOHSSHSSO SOOTHES HSHHSHSOSO OSE SHSOHSSHSHOHSHH OHSS SOSOOOSHSOSOSSESSEESES TAA IIIT IIIT TTT iT TrriTi CCRDSOOE SESE DET EEO EEES EEE EO CEES EOHECESOROOS \ x Se fr VHIRTY-FOUR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN | WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 Orion OKs New oni ng Ordinance \* Many: Changes Put Into Effect Ruling Throws Out Industrial District, Calls for Off-Street Parking ORION TOWNSHIP Township Buard zoning ol the ion passed its new dinance after striking out proposed manufacturing district) along In dianwood road and making other minor changes Passage of the new law cli maxes years of work on the project. It will replace the one in effect since 1948, Trying to keep abreast of an ticipated growth and raise its build ing standards, the Zoning Board upgraded residential districts and made higher specifications fot each district The new Jaw requires off-street parking in the business area and a ‘‘green belt’ between manufac- turing and residential districts At the public Zoning Board hear- ing Aug. 12 residents on Indian-| wood-Baldwin road area appe ared| en masse to voice their objections | to the proposed rezoning. Board bowed to their wishes Lot area changes made after complaints were registered by de velopers and realtors include the) __ Confirm Mrs. Stone \Hartlein-Hinkel Vows Washington Twp. Exchanged in Rochester lowering of lot size from aan square feet to 9,000 where they at served by both sewer and water For those with water only, the | size wag lowered from 12,000 to| 10.000 and without sewer or water, they will remain at 14,000 feet All the above changes apply | to Kesidential 2 classification. Under Residential % lowered from 12,000) to 11,200 square feet where there is sewer, and water service, with water only) from 14,000 to 12.000 and with neither service, the lots stay at 16,000 feet. Two areas where clinics will be built were designated as ‘'special land use” areas The ordinance also provide: that 300 feet on each side of M24 (except within the village lim-; its) be zoned for business. A strip 70 feet wide on both sides of det NEW GIRLS’ SCHOOL — This architect's concept of the Bloomfield Country Day School for Girls now under construction wt 1050 FE Square Lake Rd., Bloomfield Township, illustrates the current trend to replace institutional-type school buildings with a natural environment for learning. The new school was designed by architects Eroh } and Pinan of Pontiac. It will contain 5 Youths Face Court Action ‘Farm laa Rules Hearing to seven classrooms, a science laboratory, library-study room and a kitchen adjoining a social room to be used also as a refectory. The building will overlook a private lake and accommodate 100 students. Planned expansion will include addition of classrooms to serve a total of 200 students. Bright colors ‘and open vistas are features of the architects’ plans. P Water Rates Will Go Up Oxford Gets Planning Commission OXFORD — The Oxford Council a hike in water rates, pl WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP— The! Washington Township Board last! Mis. Farl L. Stone, 61, West St. as township treasurer She will serve of her late husband's term which expires in April, 1961 Mr. stone had been elected | to the treasurer's post last spring after being appotnied to the of. fice In November, 1968. He died unexpectedly on Aug. 4%. In other action, the ed Mrs. John M, Thombs, of 61995 Mt. Vernon Rd | lot size was Night Confirmed the appointment of Hinkel of 7344 were joined in marriage Saturday out the remain-' board grant. permission to, Baldwin road from Maybee to Jue! lereate a park for religious serv | dah Lake road is also zoned for business Players Will Repeat Successful Drive WEST BLOOMFIELD TOW N-| SUIP—The West Bloomfield ‘Town- ship Players troupe reports last) month's membership drive meet-! She has 12 district ices on her property jacres in an agric ultural jane 25 zoned for mining Boy: Club Will Hold Open House Friday WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Named to serve on the Village The jast night approved the appoint-,Planning Commission were Ed- iment of eight members of the new ward J. Bossardet Jr. planning comimission and favored C and Gerald for three-year terms, Davidson and Clarence Olrich Dr. D.C on the commission ag provided in the ordinance. The council] elected fellow mem- ber Edmund Unger to represent ithe village governing body on the L., Borst for two years and Fran- ‘is Baldwin and Robert E. Lang- lord for one year. The staggered terms will as- sure a continuity of experience ROCHESTER — Sharon Adele and Robert C. Hartlein by the Rev. J. Douglas Parker at St. Paul Methodist Church. | * * * The bride is the daughter of |Mr. and Mrs, Hollis W. Hinkel of 2135 Perrydale Rd. Parents of the ‘bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs, Hil- | bert Hl. Hartlein of St. Clair. For her wedding, the bride wore a white organta over satin gown designed by her mother. It had a bodice of Alencon lace, a Sabrina neckline and lace outlining the full skirt which formed a chapel train. She wore a fingertip veil of French illusion silk secured hy a ;crown of seed pearis, and carried a cascade bouquet of white roses ccutared around a corsage * * * Patricia Nieman pf Rochester at | — An tended the bride as maid of honor ing was so successful that a repeat Open house will be held at the The bride's sister, Lynne, served performance is planned for ‘Thurs.;White Lake Boys Club from 7 to'as junior bridesmaid, and ie Schedules Canada Films day at 8 pm. in the West Bloom field Township Hall Those interested in any phase of| theater work are invited to attend. | A workshop on the play ‘Tiger at the Gates” will be held after the mecting Black Hills Rich RAPID CITY, of South Dakota be the richest 100 square miles in| the world, producitig about one twelfth of the total known gold output of the United States SD —Black Hills 10 pm Friday to mark the group's third anniversary. Visitors at the open house will see the boys working on the many projects available to them at the club located on Cooley Lake road at Union Lake road. The club, which began with six youths meeting in. the Mr, and Mrs. Wesley Ashtdn, grown to 122 members, and Clubs of America in age from 10 to 20. Refreshments will be served dit ing the open house. home of) has, Howard, of Rochester, is Smith of St. Clair, are reputed to affiliated with the Associated Boys! bridegroom, Ronald Bowen of Ann The boys range! Arbor and Start th 17 W. LAWRENCE ST. ‘ the right tools, very important! SPECIAL SCHOOL VALUES @ Maple Leof, 50 sheet, qual- ity Paper NOTEBOOK, 8x10, hard cover @ 3 RING NOTEBOOKS, Quality black cover. themselves how te use it definitions are clear, simple end ac- curate. 2,300 illustrations. .. Your School Supply Headquarters General Printing & Office Supply 1e kids off to school with The first days are 45Se @ PASTE & CRAYONS 10c up @ PLASTIC RULERS, 12-inch 10¢ @ Wollace Quolity Pencils, choice of 4 degrees, 2, 2'2, 3, 4, good eraser, dox. 45¢ 3 Dos. $1.21 New Webster Secondary Scheeo! Dictionary. Students can easily teach and the More than 125,000 entries. $5.75 PONTIAC 27¢ | Engler, Joyce Tolhurst and Su anne Craft, all of Rochester also, were bridesmaids * * * Duties as best man were per- formed by Cary Slack of Mid- land, a cousin of the bride- groom. Ushers Were the bride's brother, Dennis a cousin of the Edward Decker Jr. of Detroit * * * A reception in the church parlors followed the candlelight ceremony. The newlyweds then left on a honeymoon trip to Niagara Falls and New York renee in ee _ [p.m ibers, went on a week-long canoe itrip through the forests of Cana- jda, starting at Algonquin Park. oo in new commission. And Village Man-| ager Ralph Precious was named, administrative official. The ninth member of the com- mission is the village president. Suggested as the first item for consideration by the new commu nity planning group was setbacks in the commercial district of town * * * The council also proposed that the new commbssion study the idea of changing Oxford from a village to a city, Last night marked the first read- ing of the amendment to the wa- 4ter ordinance raising the mini- mum quarterly charge to $5 for 10,000 gallons of water. WATER RATE SET The new rate scale provides for increases of 50 cents per thousand for 10,000 to 25,000 gallons, 25 cents per thousand for 25,000 to 50,000 and 15 cents per thousand for 50,000 galons and over. * ® * Another provision is that com- mercia) establishments using 50,- 000 gallons or more a month be billed monthly. Apartment dwellers will be billed one half the minimum | rate, According to the village man- ager, the new water schedule will increase the water sales income by $3,170 per year. * * * COMMERCE — A colored film) ‘Instead of breaking even as the party has been scheduled at 7:30 Village would have done if either of the other two proposals pre- jsented last night was accepted, |there will be $1,000 a year profit, ‘said Precious. The new rates are scheduled to go into effect upon publication of the ordinance. Church 3 in Commerce Friday at the Commerce} Methodist Church to show the ad-! ventures of a group of teenagers | taken on a trip in northern On. tario ths summer, * * * Thirteen youths of the church, accompanied by six adult mem. Plan Baked Ham Dinner , LAKE ORION — The Women's Department of the Reorganized others in-|Church of Jesus Christ of Latter viewing some 60 Day Saints will hold a baked ham icolored slides and a 20-minute dinner tomorrow in the church at colored movie have been urged to) ‘531 E. Flint St. Family-style serv- attend the affair. ling will be from 5 to 7 p.m. So ee aS A aoe ee Ne em * * * Parents, friends and BACK with 4 } — "It’s only * 986. re, 17 EAST LAWRENCE DON’T GO PaPER: «BREE BUS TOKENS — FREE PARKING GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY TO SCHOOL out a Paper: MATE “— =. : ‘It won't. 2 a skip | 2 Writes on anything © N °Q9” ity T° ° . ° L ° e < FE 2.0135 jens, two of them remaining in | |jail while the other three are out tion, and oer employment stan- Crime Investigation in Romeo Area Leaves 2 | *#* cultural leaders will center on PrOPO-! i, @ifficult to defermine what in Jail, 3 Free on Bond Department ; sal setting farm labor regulations. the prevailing wage may be in ROMEO All five area youths w .¥.2 farming. ‘ The regulations would require rounded up in a recent crime in- ae A number of welfare organiza- any farmer who. wishes-to use vestigation by local and state po-' services of the state and*federal| tions ate recommending the regu- lations, saying they needed to as- lice here have been bound over,;employment services. for the re- to Circuit Court in Mount Clem-| cruitment of foreign and domestic; sure farm workers of adequate wages. WIN A 1959 RAMBLER the employment area. The federation contends that it on $1,000 bond. ¥ * * Two youths from Romeo are charged with breaking and enter-' ing in the daytime. , dards. Action of the’ Labor Depart. eet eaerens ee Oe eT | tal bor field has aroused criticism of some farm groups and some They are Robert Mulholland, | 1 a he eet ee a | ae * Spencer, 18, of 11333 30-Mile Rd. | ~*~ 4 Plus Spencer is still in jail. Generally, this criticism is based, 7 ‘ ‘ << *« +* on the argument that the Labor 500 Gallons |Department is without clear-cut legislative authority to regulate farm labor conditions, CONGRESS WATCHING Congress itself has been look- ing into the situation with the idea of determining whether such regulation is needed. The Ameiican Farm Bureau Federation is leading the fight against the proposal. - “Few governmental actions pro- posed in recent years have cre- Bert Beal, 21, of 19'2 S. Main St., Romeo, and Rodney Bird, of New Haven, are charged with pos- session of stolen property. Bond was furnished for both. * * * The fifth youth is Patrick Daugh- erty, 23, of 2030 Grace St., Ro- chester, who faces a charge of breaking and entering in the night- time. He remains in Macomb Coun- ty Jail. Mulholland and Beal waived SPEEDWAY 79° Gasoline! Get Details and Entry Blank from Your Rambler Dealer Speedway "79" PV om mm, Cea’ s&s Students or Station WASHINGTON « — Interest of léss. than the prevailing wage in over soon ater th are |ated such widespread resentment rae farmers,’’ the Federation ~~ * has said. ‘It is our recommende- The other three were * pound over tion that the proposed regulations yesterday after appearing for ex-' be withdrawn in pet caret: " amination before Macomb County * Justice of the Peace Francis A. RENTAL PLAN MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS $10 for 8 Weeks school requirements met The riggalations oes require / EDWARD'S 18 S. Saginaw |Castellucci in Mount Clemens, ithat recruited workers be paid not for the whole family with PHILGAS* An automatic Philgas water heater gives you all the hot water you want, day or night, at the turn of the faucet. You'll never have to skimp on hot water! Or even have to wait for it to heat up again! It's always there when you need it. What size heater should you in- stall? That depends on the size and requirements of your family. A 30-gallon tank is adequate for an average family of 5. Philgas is easy to install. Inex- pensive, too. No costly wiring job required. And once you in- stall Philgas you can easily add other gas conveniences. Even if you live beyond city gas mains you can enjoy all the comforts of gas . . . with Philgas. Call our office and ask about the different kinds of Philgas service. If you use Philgas: for all your fuel needs you'll find the“ Bulk” rate saves you money. And your Philgas service man will keep yourftank full. You don’t even have to telephone! So stop in at our showrooms and talk things over. Look at the different sizes and models of automatic Philgas water heaters. There is a size that will fit your family’s requirements. r ' *Philgas is the Phillipa Petroleum Company trademark for ts high-quality LP-Gas (propane, butane). =~ PURLLIPS PETROLEUM COMPANY _ 2625 Orchard Lake Rd. P.O. Box 49 Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: FEderal 2.9195 Manager: Mr. G. W. Kieffer THE ALL-PURPOSE FUEL Fe THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, -- Today's Television Programs - - ‘ Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice Channel 2-WJBK-TV' Channel ‘-WWITV Channel —WXYZTV Channel 9—CKLW-TV SEPTEMBER 9, 1959 | oo i" me on ms TV News and Reviews | Yep, There's Something Different About Tightrope ie” TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS (7), MacKenaie's Raiders. > of Family Showcase. . By FRED DANZIG tion show, Ti 6:00 (4) News. (9) Sheriff of Cochise. __ <1) Ozzie and. Harriet. NEW YORK (UPI)—Déar read-| unrolling Pid iches — oe ‘ : (i) Curtain Time. 7:15 (2) Baseball. 9:00 (4) (color) Dave King. John- ler: The next time you are called|hero is an undercover night, = (9) Popeye. \ 7:30 (4) Wagon Train. “The Kitty ny Mercer’s songs « high- re a Apne fice wi males such Lapres os Oe ce _ . et or Fates wee —— cealed weapons—"‘frisk ‘em,” as|that his gun is tucked in his rear eas’ & bee cacaniil by Story nt Omet moe atrict Attorney they say on TV—please be sure to Waistline, without a holster. Oe eee wae” aby - “| feel the beltline in the back. wha ites; guns Aided: “at 6:40. (2) News Analyst. (9) Movie.”“'Knute Rockne—|9:3@ (4) Bat Masterson, ‘‘Tum- : * ; * * ; _ they missed the gun completely, (7) Sports Headline.’ All American.” Pat O’Brien, bleweed Wagon,” Fay Spain, This urgent information istpassed you see, and were quickly sub- 6:45 (2) News. Ronald Reagan. i Gene Barry. along because on the CBS-TV ac-) dued by the nameless undercov-— (4) News. 8:00 (7) Court of: Last Resort. (9) Waterfront. “‘Tailor Made | @r pelice officer who is played (1) News. “The Jim Thompson Case.” Trouble,"’ Preston Foster. | by Mike Connors, 7:0 (2) Tiger Warmup. 48:30 (4)-(eolor) Price Is Right. (7) News. | The reason tor all this detail (4) I Married Joan. Bill Cullen announces winncr/9:45 (2) Scoreboard. = n y e as shout & shirttall ews chase i tar. > . 10:06 (2) U.S. Steel. “The Case of jas near as can be figured, that’s Julia Walton,” Nina Foch as | the only distinguishing mark about career woman separated from her police officer hus- band because of his off-hour). drinking. Son idolizes father Historic Old Deadwood Reports Laos ““"" Otherwise, he’s all the crime- Deadwood to watch a deadly for- est fire creep to its doorstep, and Born ef the 1876 gold strike ‘in the Black Hills, Deadwood mush- roomed to 25,000 miners and hang- ‘All's Well’. then stop. ; * * * Deadweod, nestling high in the Black Hills of western South Da- ers-on, It drew notoriety as a wide-open town of gambling and other pleasures, , * * * It also drew famous Western figures, of whom the best known were perhaps Wild Bill Hickok! and Calamity Jane Higgins, Both, are buried in Deadwood’s Mount! Moriah Cemetery. j It was in a saloon on Dead- wood's narrow Main Street that Hickok was shot in the back Hayden Writes on Wanderer SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (UPI) — Actor Sterling Hayden, who took cruise to th® South Seas in defi-;Poker hand known ever since as) ance of a court order, is making the dead man's hand. plans for a return trip to Cali- His killer, jack McCall, was) fornia. acquitted by a miner’s jury, but} later was hanged by federals. eer cablegram fo the Sen McCall's trial is re-enacted = Independent-Journal, . : 42-year-old veteran seaman wrote, | matty for summer tourists. “. . , Leaving Tahiti Oct. 3. Deadwood today is a somewhat Should arrive California middle of | sleepier town of "3,500, strung out, November, fate willing. All well.” jiong and narrow along Deadwood| * * A superior court judge ordered tightly on either side, and were Hayden not to take his children 'a gateway for the fire that near- on such a cruise on grounds the ly Jeveled Deadwood again Tues- 98-foot schooner ‘Wanderer’ was |day. too old for such . journey and; On Sept. 25, 1879, fire did vir his crew was too inexperienced.|tyajly level the city. A quantity Nevertheless, the actor set sail | of black powder in a hardware with the children last. Jan. 18. | store exploded. Without a water * *« supply, miners and townsfolk Hayden and his seven-man crew watched it burn. * * * ees his four children on a sailing | While holding aces and eights, a Mis ‘Guich. The Black Hills hem it in ° (9) News, Weather. 10:20 (9) Sports. 10:30 (4) U.S. Marshal. ‘‘The Mon- ster,” John Bromfield. (7) Burns and Allen. Burnsges and Morton take trip from California to New York, Gracie mistakes salesman for famous scientist. TWO CAN PLAY — This seems to be the at- titude of the smiling Mrs. Aritotle Onasis as she dances with Italian Count Brando D'Adda in Aritotle Onasis, Callas in Milan (9) Movie. “Stand By For Action,”’ Brian Donlevy, Rob- ert Taylor. 11:00 (2) News. (4) News. (7) Soupy’s On. 11:10 (2) Weather. (4) Weather: 11:20 (22) Movie. “Meet the ~ Stewarts,” William Holden. (4) Sports. 11:30 (4) Jack Paar. ‘ THURSDAY MORNING (2) Meditations. (2) On the Farm Front, (2) TV College. (4) Today. (7) Big Show. (2) Cartoon Classroom. - (7) Breakfast Time- (2) Capt. Kangaroo. (7) Johnny Ginger. (2) Movie. (4) (color) Bozo the Clown (4) (7) : 10:00 (4) Dough Re Mi. 6:0) 6:55 7:00. 7:30 | (2) Sports. Ingemar to Sing Venice. Her husband, wealthy shipping magnate rocks. to her manager-husband appears headed for the _ By FORREST EDWARDS | -VIENTLANE, Laos (AP)—Many | |'Red shadow patrols were spotted | filtering past jungle villages ‘across northern Laos today, but army authorities reported only one clath. They said two Laotian soldiers were killed. : The skirmish — first reported jin three days. — broke out near Moung Pao. A small government force engaged a Pathet Lao rebel unit at the edge of the six-mile-' _ Wide strip the guerrillas hold in- AP Wirephete | has been dating opera star Maria recently as the singer's marriage ! With Dinah Shore “rarweos es - oe With Big Foreign Aid. Cul | gemar Johansson is going to sing| with Dinah Shore on her NBC-TV 9¢_949 ERB-—SENATORS SLAM in which it provided $3,218,813,000, The organizations are reported literary creation, WASHINGTON (AP)—The Sen-/for military Committee sistance abroad, a scant $95,313,- the rebel cause. This was the in the Du Pont Show of the Month show Oct. 4 “When I was in Sweden this ito Appropriations summer, everyone told me how struck a new blow at President well Ingo could sing,” Miss Shore Fisenhower today by calling for said Tuesday. “So I brought some . gash of $648.182.000 from his Swedish songs back with me and he'll sing both alone and with me." original requests fgr aid to allies abroad this year, It was the deepest cut ever pro- posed by the committee in the an- nual battle over spending abroad Fall From Dock Fatal * * * 10:2 (9) Billb 10:38 (2) Sam Levenson | PORT HURON «@ —Norman! The Senae will take O’Neal, 25; Detroit, drowned to- measure Saturday up the _ \side the North Viet Nam-Laos | | border. | x *® * Elsewhere along the Senators Slam President ‘0%. =» | reported setting up political-mili- tary organizations in some 8&0, Villages which government. forces. abandoned in northeastern Sam) Neua province in face of the |Communist advance last week and economic as- designed to unite villagers behind 000 above what the House voted. pattern the North Vietnamese | Eisenhower had asked restora. Reds used after seizing villages . ne une in the Indochina war with the tion of $376,267,000 af the House- French ‘cut funds. He got only about one- * * * ‘fourth that amount, and no in Information Minister Sisouk Na ‘creases for military aid or defense Champassak said Tuesday Com- support funds. Fisenhower has munist troops were massing in said it may be necessary to cal]/three staging areas around Sam) Congress back into a special ses-|Neua. Rebel patrols have been’ sion if his foreign aid requests striking to within 12 miles of Sam ° busters you've ever seen, He's Has Close Call in Fire and opeass mother .| But Red Patrols Are jaan” SS me HES — divorce and remar- Spotted Slinking Near Aishemes —— are concerned . ite. Li . *s sociable and available. He DEADWOOE ©. G\(k) ~ : ‘atm: Rr | Sib eae ee | Tice Sat” | Bepei down i's tiger wand nk 1, bot for naman te Shetland ansas CKLW. News jenppeilngg ots WOM, “Newn Casey 1%0—wW, Bod Maxwell | “What else do you do?” I inquired. Current State Debt RUG-CLEANING ye sg * peed WISH I'D SAID THAT: Rob’t Q Lewis tells of the doctor. 4 tame tae so old-fashioned that he still calle a cold, @ cold... . That's tag ° wack Bell earl, brother. ' ' ’ a] ee Fe Miusmte . | Sica! (4) It Could Be You. $10 for driving with inadequate il | Tee was recovered from the Detroit (7) Pantomime Quiz. To Eddie Albert, this is the height of , 7 brakes, _ arststcmy [River Tuesday, about 50 feet from) (9) Comedy Time. hospitality. When he handed me a $4.98 Part of War on Youth Crimes SID A 2] oil NIN] bin oo, feta eer (2) Guiding Light. bottle of protein pills to prove he was sin- RCA COLOR TV | VISPIPelariiirigiAl |said Lodico, father of five chil-|19:59 (9) News. cere ) : Br] FEBS] (Ea) [aren apoarenlyaived from a cab: tg (2) Oar as Brooks in i teneronity, 1 took out three “Plan Work Camp in NY. | ieee ( ees |. ight | and stuck them in my shirt pocket, so he : . SS he ogy only had 1,789 left. I trust the supply . SWEET’S RADIO-TV ——— (7) Music Bingo. the rest of th for Potential Hood! : | : | (9) Movie. lasted him the rest of that day, but I ums . Z p c ] 6 i 17 {0 it 1:30 (2) As’ the World Turns. can't be too certain. Open Mon. & Fri } ! +d | ‘ os 7 ag beth “Bob Cummings eats pills for lunch, too,” new con (AP)—Gov. Nelson detention facilities and increasing Sooo ) Eliza . “WI said. \/ kefeller says the state will probation and le vision 2:00 (2) For Better or Worse. : parole supery . {e : (4) Gass for a Day WILSON “Bob Cummings must eat a hundred of|move immediately to curb juve-| “Rockefeller’s youth camp pro! SPECIALIZED 9 0 (7) Day in Court. \ these. a day and he's a ball of fire!” Eddie ae —_—e. by ae Se gram calls for two types of insti-| SERVICE pied 3:30 (2) House Party Albert was running around his hotel room in circle proving cae camps for potential ‘ ogg ~ - Seoeen for sien, ; (4) Blondie. that the pills were wonderful and that now he wasn't nervous; pp,’ on state lands and forests. Poten-] e Ty © HI-FI © RADIO : Rockefeller announced a pro-| . F/I aw Gale Storm. or upset of at all concerned at all about anything and espe-| gram includins this, and. other apie ape are fo voluntar- | © TAPE RECORDERS 24 Pruit drink (9) Kennedy’s Corner. cially about the TV show he ae fter the meeting with’ 2. camps opera y the Con-] e P. A. SYSTEMS 71 — tea i 3:00 #2) Star Showcase. mirereres ser Weener |Servation Department cooperating | @ OFFICE INTER-COMS Soun< x (4) Young Dr. Malone. was going to do in a few hours. Mayor Robert F. Wagner and! with the Education and Social] © WEBCOR FACTORY SERVICE 34 Pay no ; pe (7) Beat the Clock. “How, do you eat these pills?” other city yap officials tO) Welfare Department, Youths ac- 30 strsishtened 8 - 4 (9) Movie. I asked. cuss New York's violent crimes! tuany sentenced for minor of- BL AKE 38 Bristle 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. “What pills?” Eddie Albert nvolving youngsters |fenses would go to rehabilitation . ft (4) From These Roots. ; 'camps operated by the Correction TV 20 Stal T Te (7) Who Do You Trust? asked. “Ob, these I have in my 4 City police continued their) Devartaceet : i] RADIO- 3 Ms ner a 4:00 (2) Day. hand. Oh yes. Well, I put a crackdown on teenage toughs by Th deci | 3149 W. HURON 44 On the water (4) (color) Truth or Conse-| fistful in my pocket and I nib- arresting scores of young loiter- cc te heat ; bagi ed oS: FE 4-5791 | brcwc asasa ; quences, : = ble them most of the day. ers in the Times Square “rea mid a a & progran. ‘ remem 53 Hawaiian . (7) American Bandstand. ; Tuesday night. Most were released wreath “I find if I don’t use ‘seni 4 Schoo : 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. after questioning. Since the crack- x Guteast C l Citi 4:30 “O) Edge cf Night. them,” he laughed, rather down staried Sept. 1, more than See the New 1959 . 88 Throw at dice (4) County Fair. hetiowly, “What 3 gut inte 350 youngsters have been arrest] RCA and ZENITH: Radios and Televisions amg ia) 6 ee Sit" (9) Sherwood Forest. ~ political arguments — 1 ed. * 2 | at Stroplens ® Drinks 26 Newspaper 46 Toward the 15:00 (27 Movie. . take either side—or 1 find In Brooklyn, Judge Samuel S. STEFANSKI Radio & Television Be if Roocks se atenmmpote 91 ereers” 4M) {color} George Pierrot! fault with the manage- Be ee eee enue ty] 1187 W. Huron St. FE 2.6967 ' 1 Rock lightly 30 Range 48 Per (prefix) Presents. ment. 1 just keep popping ries not to be influenced by “ ) 3 ener - ee 3 wemeree wees” (9) Looney Tunes. ° in i “erackpots, do-gooders and starr “|= _ - - | 4 Talk idly Swit 35 Hinges $1 Bnateh 5:30 (7) Adventure Time. : them to my mouth all ALBERT eyed professionals"’ who he said! i | eee mag > Seraaie os te 5:55 (4) Sports. day and...” , were responsible for lenient laws. sr “Did you ever try ‘Tiger’s Milk'?” I asked him. ¢:39—WIR_ Dinner Date THURSPAT MORNING wes, weve. Mastin that. I happen to be a fittle tense today. I try to keep the Rises to $104 Million. FLOOR POLISHER WWJ, Gob Maxwell ¢:00-—WJR, Agriculture Rpt.| 1.68 WIR, Music WwW joe ¥ Fi | AY ie Se ert, es Wile Sees Geermas | Wear, Rew”, | *heolesterel from clogging ap... | | SCRUBBER-BUFFER ) _ WPON. Candieine CKLW © Rooster Club CRLW. Jee Van pan ee 4 Eddie ‘explained that doing the Jack Paar TV show tend-| LANSING . — The state's ris- ; : . 1:00—WIR, Baseball WCAR. News WCAR News ww, News i jed. to tense him up. One night when he was subbing for Jack,|ing excess of bills over cash to All CHUN Poliat Lewis J eg resse—cmuw, Myrue Lavin) Wink Bestau””” he had both Ben Hecht and Sheilah Graham on Lis panel. He |P&y eo ee oe Woan ‘Woodling "SIaR News. George’ 10 8 esr sniriey | Woon bop tare cuned oat Pd _——, oon a ment Kt at og a sectinn ours fund bel. for j : ‘ tae * | acters, ve quite a 4 ‘o as ent, hn of | edivéd toward Medel we ms fowe "Whey Men, Rober exw Yes = om we. Cement loved everybody that night. — once again nosedi Only ae} WON Tone 2 wean i * * * Treasurer Sanford A. Brown] NCLUDES ALL ATTACHMENTS ‘he WW* Monitor “So all you can do on that. show,” he said, “is to wake came up with the — arsed ee E> , caw. «eg up in the morning, and start to worry, and when it’s getting| Wher the , State meneraive @e eS Wool Feit : WOAR Woodting : 4 ( | ' j | > THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1958 To Be Part of Shopping Center Ht od for Forcits Rorrow,$2.4:Milion , | wageneren = toe ge Building Store in n Draylon et ay gu trmnee oe of Agriculture. lin state terrace ye chy payments, ne : A noe S0Ndeh MADINA sth ch 0: fal Wasuana costing went to the State Municipal (Advertisement) wader constpuction ia: Pivlyénn $13,500 Henanagreener yf = yy A A Million Dollars to rune. Ground was broken last te Id F | Servi Relieve Itch of Piles on Dixie highway Reng: Wiliams) old Funera! service — taxes. ‘They are. unable: to 7 r 35 State’School Units Land Good for Forests State Payments Empty Treasury Universities to Have Share of $15,500,000 Money Disbursement borrow LANSING —Top stale admin- the Crown Furniture Store, cause of a flaw in the’aid bill, “cases to relieve ited of piles. Yet ¢rug- istrators Tuesday released $15,- * ‘+ _ 4 |Service-was heid Tuesday for John) First payments for the current gis, te you that cooling, astringent 0,000 to state universities, sup- ihe |H, Gemmen, 60, president and gen- fiscal year also will be held up Peterson's Ointment soothes pile torture pliers and schools and to meet . a pra Pnesdb posh mun te eral manager of the Allendale on the —— can, correct ie minutes. #46 hos or tie tale appten- Niureinu's ci een , | Belephone Ca, who died of = heart, measure when it comes back - Thursday's payroll, once again jude several other chain stores, | ful reliet from itching. Be delighted os cleaning out the state treasury. - * ‘attack Friday. ‘on Sept. 16. a Bote beck. the new store will have more Pa The disbursements ewill use up all state general funds on hand or in sight through next Monday. Of the total, $6,500,000 was Nevember. i vee ‘ : ] August building permits also tn- NOW DO DISHES FASTER, CLEANER | alloted to universities as a | cluded a commercial permit issued Tt ecient asoe ema Ss lee ial DISHMASTER’ aes Sa caves tt cies Sa phanoiens is the leader of ment to Valentino Schuank{ of De- N ew Imper la i state payroll purposes, $1,500,000. to, suppliers, $600,000 for debt service and $2,500,000 for past troit for a $3,500 office building to be added to a garage building) the pro-Communist Pathet Lao rebels in Northern Laos. The AP Wirephete Petrulli of Valley ina Moscow hotel A COUNTRY — a suburb of New York City, sits whether the Russian parliament wil) grant him Petrulli, a 38-year-old World War I veteran, MAN WITHOUT Stream, N. Y., waiting to see Soviet citizenship Nucholas due vocational education ebliga- tions. University of Michigan will get, three million dollars, Michigan’! State $2,300,000 and Wayne aad $1,200,000. State Treasurer Sanford § A.| ‘Brown told a special meeting of' Laos government has requested U.N. military aggression by Communist North Vietnam troops operating with Pathet Lao rebels in the north- | ern area. jat Telegraph road and Dixie high- intervention to | , stop what it claifhs is direct jvision repair shop was issued. to iJohn L. Satler of 2256 Crane St. way, * * * A perrmit to build an $8,540 tele- The shop will be built on Hatchery road between Airport and Crescent , Lake roads. The property has been turned in his U.S. passport and renounced his American citizen the State Administrative Board if dential to com-. ship last week. Nuw he feels he did a ‘stupid’ thing in renot yp i that the state's cash shortage cur- Wacky Walks maetal Ge. his American citize i ip and he wants to come back to the U, rently stands at 104 million dollars, _. PisAiteiiows of the Mavonathn ‘ : Our embassy offices Vosco avi leu! js t of the hari ! . ; sid a tm ihm Wa hung . it { vet wite- fielen ( tie pei fontrotier dames W. Miller | Have Official Baptist Church at 1520 Petrolia - ” “_ Se uO yee” said the general fund deficit, in- . Dr. have asked for a permit to Iyes re he i” a pen ium mee eos uy Exe nn if m cluding obligations now going | Crying Blue build a $16,390 shabeh on 4, is FIRST MODEL CHANGE IN 12 YEARS Mouwd slay home anc & ZOOK 1WEDANG ane ather, she woul through state financial lines, j | meres of i on Jay st t, . ; take him back. Petrulli is now virtually penniles is about 114 million Ati -BALTIMORE (AP)—Baltimore pear Cooley Lake rosd. They Dishmaster, always the world’s most popular dishwasher, now washes icity officials have censored a side-| said they. plan-to do the werk even faster, cleaner and more economically! Advertisements (Advertisement) The voce ational education money ‘walk painting. themese? . @ New, larger detergent tank! is “ARON-HUNGRY BLOOD’” will yo to universities and school! The designers of a new down- | Memteserves. © Expensive tempered nylon parts! ' districts in reimbursement for ex- town wanted na ~ * * © Handles that never drip! office building MAKING YOU penditures through last June 30 yaint the sidewalk a soothing Another permit for a church par-, pd eat wr = —_ silver cover! “a aa Before the payout was wrdered, eohin's egy blue |sonage was issued to members of © Ne extra charge — nat ‘ation! ’ ONLY. HALF A WOMAN? the state was $2,300,000 behind in| x * ithe Weslyn Methodist Church, 67 Are You So Run-Down You Can't Give Your Husband end Family settlement of bills by suppliers | The - six-story building, which N. Lynn St., between LaSalle and: NEW FACTORY BRANCH on WOODWARD at Square Lake Rd. Real Companionship? Then Discover The Wonderful ‘involved in transactions of unde: lwili house the Internal |Reverue| |Boston avenue, The permit was for| DEMONSTRATION, SALES and SERVICE FE 8-2538 Blood-Strengthening Action of This Special Iron Tonic for Women! —-$.0, 000. [Service district office, will be the a one-story six-room brick dwell-' How tragic when a woman feela “Thus quickly help build rich, red | SSS SS same color — —— — 80 tired. 50 weak and run-down blood to bp perh strength and real * As * ahe cant be a real companion! energy 80 you feel fine again fast! : : . | Luckily, it's often due to “Iron- Pinkham's unique formula can Big Rapids Oil Well | “Why, if we allow them to paint Hungry Blood” (*simple iron de- ficiency anemia). Then it's need- less for those women to suffer such awful weariness Now, @ wonderful iron tonic ean help relieve this condition {hus renew your vitality! Its If Lydia E Pinkham's Tablets, only jrorr tonic made especially for women! Rich in iron, Pinkham's Tablets start to strengthen “lron-Hungry Blood” in one day! also bring biessed relief from functionally-caused monthly cramps and “Hot Flashes” of change-of-lifel No wonder so manhy women use Pinkham’s Tablets all through their lives! “Lron-Hungry Blood” has left you weak and run-down — only “half” a woman—get Pink- ham's Tableta from druggists. Then see if you don’t soon feel “all” woman again! Storewide Sale Event Starts Tomorrow! May Be One of Best ithe sidewalks blue,’ exclaimed | | William L. Chilcote, deputy direc- GRANT (UPI)—The V. E. East tor of public works, “the man in Drilling Co, of Big Rapids has'the next block will want to dye | ‘brought in what may be one of his sidewalks green. 'the best producing oil wells in the) * * Grant area “Somebody would come along The well came in with a 40-foot then with a request to install gusher with a good grade of oil at linoleum on his sidewalk. Where y - the 2,238-foot level on the William _would it end?” FOR FEMALE AILMENTS! Doctors’ taste prove famous Lydia Pects farm near Bridgeton, north-| Chilcote and other officials de- | Pinkham s Vegetable Compound (liquid) also brings quick relief west of this Newaygo County com- cided it wouldn't even start. They ' from diseomforta of monthly pain and ehange-of-itfe 4 | . ate ty ays y ee y munity. ROEBUCK AND CO ‘washed out the blue idea. — Lu We're Holding the Line on Prices! Compare Guarantee, Price and Quality... You’ll Choose TUBE-TYPE ALLSTATE NYLON SAFETY CUSHIONS Our Shield of Value continues to keep prices down! ——~Proof you shop at Sears and save! SEARS RIE DAVID BRADLEY 20-IN. GEAR DRIVEN CHAIN SAW GIVES INCREASED POWER CAVE ‘50 GUARANTEED FOR 18 MONTHS TUSE-TYPE BLACKWALL TOBE-TYPE WHITEWALL Size | [n'feck, Piac Tex | Size | Price With Trade- LAST YEAR’S LOW PRICE 6.70215 |...... 13.99| 6.70215 |...... 17.99 REPEATED WHILE 30 SAWS LAST 7.10215 |...... 15.99| 20x15 |...... 19.99 REGULARLY ‘199 7.60215 |...... 18.99| 760x158 |...... 22.99 SIMILAR SAVINGS ON TUBELESS TIRES e Guaranteed coast-to-coast e@ Super strong Nylon cord for 18 months against all for safer more comfortable types of road hazards. driving. NOW ONLY y 149 $15 Down #13 Month '57-'58-'59 Car Owners! 14-In. Tubeless NYLON SAFETY CUSHIONS CHECK THESE FEATURES! 24% Ibs, less chain, guide ber, Buy it today and save $50. TUBELESS BLACKWALL COMPARE THE PRICE! . on Sears Easy 99 WHY PAY MORE? “d,. Payment Plan SHE Rein Bae ex , My, ' : 7.50u14 CORO eee ee te ne 18.99 V.bert CAN ieee 8.00x14 .....