a ne eG ay i { | | { a j { The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast j Fair and warmer) with thun: (Details Page 2) f 4 ae THE PONTI C_PRE 117th YEAR | kkk ke \ 3 ie TAKING GARDEN PATH TO PARLEY — The Big Four foreign ministers walk up path to villa of French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville at Geneva, Switzerland, for __ Luncheon Diplomacy in Action PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 20, 1959-32 PAGES | 50-100 Reported Slaughtered Reds Rampage AP Wirephote informal luncheon meeting on Berlin problem. Front to rear, they are: Britain's Selwyn Lloyd, De Murville, Russia’s Andrei Gromyko and the United States’ Christian Herter. Narrow Motives West Tries Another for House Arson Berlin Compromise ‘Sage he might have for’ Probers Still Hunting GENEVA, W—U-S. Secretary of State Christian A. New Clues in Blaze at derter and his Western allies undertook today to win Bloomfield Residence The motive behind the deliberate, truce in the Berlin crisis. burning of Detroit Teamster of-| ‘Soviet agreement to a compromise proposal for German ‘peace settlement negotiations during an East-West ‘discuss cold war problems gen- the land redistribution program.’ crops, for the most part, are. de-| Herter, Britain’s Selwyn Lloyd and French Foreign rally. ficial Charlse O'Brien's Bloomfleld Minister Maurice Couve de Murville met at U.S. head-| — ane was narrowed quarters at noon and put* wn to Possible revenge OF the final polish on a plan arson for insurance today by in- f ire; t & Soviet vestigators. or trying to ge Ovie ; “oi ini “oi | Sgt. Orame! O'Farrell, head of Foreign Minister Andrei| the Redford State Police post Gromyko to lower his price , arson squad, and Det. Hubert for a truce deal. Hanley will travel in opposite di-| rections today while working to-| : Pe ward one end—solving the puzzle’ meeting with Gromyko at Lloyd's of who put the torch to the $50,000 house. home last om? a | The private meeting lasted 212 ! O'Farrell will go to Lansing to, "Crs: The ministers agreed to Then they went into a luncheon In Boy, 15, Drowns Square Lake Falls Off Surfboard at Kelly’s Beach | Nixon Assures Nikita He ll Keep Mum Hopes Soviet Premier Will Feel Free to Relay Confidences to Ike From Our News Wires _ WASHINGTON — Vice President Richard M. Nixon ‘|has sent word to Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrush- chev that he will keep in the strictest confidence any discussions they may have |in Moscow. Nixon, who leaves Wednesday for a tour of the Soviet Union, was said to hope that his assurance of secrecy would encourage Khrushchev to transmit to him any confidential mes- President Eisenhower. It was emphasized that the vice president does not know whether Khrushchev will have such a mes- |sage. But if he should, Nixon wants one to carry out his policies while ‘him to feel free to state it and to|he devotes most of his time to| There has been no announce- ment tha Khrushchev will confer | with Nixon, But such a meeting fs regarded as virtually certain, especially since Eisenhower re- ceived First Deputy Sbviet Pre- mier Frol R, Kozlev during his recent visit here, Nixon asked Kozlov to relay to Khrushchev assurances that he in- tended. to. respect the privacy of i Private homes. and on cots in Monitor Cleanup Mount Clemens Youth *Y conversations he might have vith the Soviet leader, 2 * * Associates of the vice president Rain Welcome, More Predicted | Farmers and homeowners throughout the Oakland County area are cheering the much-needed rain which has been falling periodically since Friday afternoon. But they also are hoping there is more to come. | Actually, the “lick and a promise” of the last three ‘days has done little to affect the critical drought cur- frently withering farm ‘crops, lawns and flower | beds alike. ' The best the Weather Bureau ;can come up with is scattered = or evening shéwers de-| | veloping tomorrow. and for | Wednesday? Generally fair with moderate temperatures. County agricultural extension. di- | to Demonstrate Support rector, the farm situation is “still | of Farm Program | critical." He concurred < ¥the | current rainfall can proVe ta» be very valuable if more follows soon. | HAVANA (AP) — Thousands of “Our crop yield this year -will 'Straw-hatted, machete - carrying) pe vastly reduced itewe don't get — a eign d nit! fer & more rain,” he noted, | |demonstration ne lay of sup-| : port for Fidel Castro and his al So far less than .199 inches of rarian reform program. | rain have been recorded for the The revolutionary leader him-/4"€@ since June 1, About .65 of \self was in seclusion today. There ne epee fallen since Friday's ‘was some speculation that he ‘Ua! Shower, |might not take back the prime| tie eo apna ~~ |minister’s post he resigned Fri-| i 0 alleviate the situation, ; Homeowners have achieved a jday. Possibly he might pick Some-' respite from watering the brown |stubble where green lawns once Peasants Flock ° fo Back Castro | existed. Farmers report their \In any case he clearly will con- t inni S- | ‘innas 66 ‘boae Cuba. hydrated and thinning out disas- terously. | In downtown Pontiac the lowest temperature recorded before 8 a.m, was 64. By 1 p.m. the mer- cury had reached 80 degrees. The farmers were spilling into Castro’s capital from as far as 500 miles away, answering the call of their bearded leader for 500,000 to attend the anniversary celebration of Castro’s first un- | Successful attack July 26, 1953, on | Fulgencio Batista’s forces. | The visitors are being housed | | | | Teamsters Try ‘Again to Block government buidings and ware- houses. Havana's norma] popula- tion is 1,200,000, and the city is WASHINGTON (UPI)—The em- crowded. battled Teamsters Union tries again today to block court-appoint- are: | The first 5,000 — from Oriente ed “watchdog” monitors from go- Steel Picketers . REVOLT SCENE — Kirkuk, underlined, in the heart of Iraq's oil fields, is the scene of a pro- Red revolt by an Iraqi army brigade. + ABDEL KARIM KASSEM Asks Court Halt Jones & Laughlin Corp. Claims. USW Members ‘Sealing Off Mills | From Our News Wires | PITTSBURGH (UPI) — Jones ‘Large Number’ of Notables Are Hanged in Riots Strange Radio Hookup Reports Fight Spreads to Second City BEIRUT, Lebanon. (UPI) — Two Cairo newspapers reported today that a Com- munist uprising in Iraq against the government of Premier Abdel Karim Kas- sem in the oil city of Kirkuk was still raging-and that the Communists were hang- ing a “large number” of notables there. The death toll was esti- mated at between 50 and 100 persons. , A clandestine radio calling itself the voice of free Iraq also report- ed today the fighting had spread to the city of Anah across the top of Iraq from Kirkuk and that Com- munists there had made ‘‘another’’ attempt to tapture the city. (Conflicting reports , received in London from the British em- bassy in Baghdad indicated that “the situation in Kirkik now seems to be calm,” a British foreign office spokesman said. The spokesman said the re- ports from Baghdad were dis- patched late yesterday. He said there were no reports of injury among Britons in Kirkuk or of damage to British prop- erty), Most of the happenings in Iraq were veiled by heavy government censorship but the government con- firmed Jast night that the Com- munists began an attempt on July 14 to seize control. * * * Jiily 14448 the first anniversary of the uprising against King Fai- sal. | said this reflected the view Nixon Province—marched up Havana's e nens ‘kes of his expected talks withlfamed Prado Sunday to a brass | A 15-year-old Mount Clemens “hrushchev. They said he feels|hand Many of ound old never boy drowned when he fell off a ye could best serve the U.S. Z0V-iseen a large city and seemed The foreign ministers then went surfboard in Square Lake, Orion *nrment by creating an atmosphere | awed by the capital's traffic, see if technicians at the State) Met again for a working lunch Police crime laboratory have fin-| ‘™errow at Gromyfo’s villa. ished their analysis of four five. TM€Y decided to cancel a plenary gallon cans used by the arsonists. ™eeting set for tomorrow, ing ahead with a cleanup cam- Laughlin Steel Corp. asked the, paign icourts today to break up mass| x * * . \picket lines of striking United Union attorney Raymond Ber- Steelworkers which the company |gan said he expected to ask Su- declared have ‘unlawfully’ im- Major fighting was reported confined to the city of Kirkuk where an army brigade there Com- Before leading this morning he mutinied and joined the ; ; ; * |pected to visit six cities in Russia,, Cuba meanwhile rocked along ties said Marvin C. Schwark, ¢f including four key industrial areas with a standstill government, wait- 20490 25 Mile Rd., was playing in Siberia. A_ tentative itinerary | ing to learn what Castro plans to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) said, “We can narrow this down |/"to a semi-public session at the Township, Sunday. : ieee ——— {alk luxurious hotels and sprawling preme Court Justice Hugo L. Black|prisoned supervisory employes in munist rebels, the semiofficial a alace of nations at 4:02 p.m.| ht ok * es business buildings. rder by the U.S. Court) three Pennsylvania plants. Middle East News Agency re- to two motives, revenge or col- |? _ = P | Nixon said Saturday that he ex-| x 2 * a aoe : ee | rted in Cairo lecting insurance.” (10.02 a.m., EST). | Oakland County Sheriff's Depu- . of Appeals authorizing the moni-| The legal action, first of = po in The Western counter proposal re-' portedly contained a provision that, could provide for the direct Ger- man talks that Soviet Foreign Min-| With friends at Kelly's Beach. ister Andrei Gromyko demanded, tors’ housecleaning efforts. Bergan said he would file the papers with Black because Chief Justice Earl Warren, who nor- six-day walkout of 500,000 basic) Reports today said the Reds held steel workers, came as the 0V-jarge areas of the city and had ernment’s top mediator, Joseph P- \seized an arms depot. Finnegan, was striving in NeW! RIDGES BLOWN UP | “In arson cases,"’ he explained, “there are these and two other motives always prescent. ‘The others are that the fire was set by a pyromaniac or with the pur- pose of covering up a er in Berlin, He was paddling about on the as one part of his price for a truce, surfboard when he fell off and Under the Western plan the Big couldn't reach the board before yo- mally handies appeals in this area, is on the West Coast, York to get negotiators for the) union and industry back to the bargaining table. * Two Cairo newspapers, the gov- ernment organ Al Gomhouria and ® 8 DISCOUN ROMAN ; Legal sources said chances were * * Al Shaab, reported fighting was apeaky eenek a pyro- Four commission could direct the|ing under, witnesses said. He Sale of Mysterious : Ring slight that Black would interfere) y g 1, the nation’s fourth larg-/still under way in Kirkuk and that > maniac in ‘the burning of; ihe| West and East Germans to form a| could not swim. with the monitors reforms until/est producer, filed requests for the Communist-led second brigade O'Brien home at Rm Harrow | SUbcommittee to discuss specific) Schwark’s body was recovered slala . the Supreme Court decides wheth-|injynctions in both the courts of of the second army division had eat |items assigned by the parent com- by Deputies Wil-' er to review the Appeals Court! ajlegheny County (Pittsburgh) and blown up a number of bridges in |mission. But any decision would) | Oaklanu | jiam Jackson and nl ld CS [ | UJ e un ruling. The high tribunal does not/Reaver County. Hearings of the its mutiny against the government. “The burglary motive is very _ still rest with the Big Four. Drowning met again until October. petitions were set for tomorrow in) The “Voice of Free Iraq” in & weak. The jewelry reported | The outline of the counterpro- Toll in °59 Medward Tessier, x e& *® the Beaver County Court and’ proadcast monitored here said missing could easily have been | posal was reached in a strategy department skin-| The three-judge Appeals Court/Thursday at Pittsburgh. Iraqi armed forces had defeated consumed by flames; in fact a session over the weekend held by 10 diving experts, in) The romance of an unmarked package from Corte|turned down the Union’s request J & L charged that USW mem- | (Continued ‘on Page 2, Col. 8) wrist watch has already been (U.S. Secretary of State Christian 30 feet of water Madera, Calif., a valuable lady’s diamond ring, and the/ fr ® stay last week. The court) | 7 through “malicious con- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | A. Herter, British Foreign Secre- Last Year | about 150 yards) .) ing of d th : ruled unanimously that Teamsters 3 or sak cit ie onli, wren tary Selwyn Lloyd and French For-| | te Date: 14| from shore, at! eiping of a needy person somewhere in € Pontiac President James R, Hoffa must nee bike dale verias a aa te the 8 S 7 Admiral Leah eign Minister Maurice Couve de 4:18. area, has proved the beginning .of a new way to con-|follow cleanup directives if federal) Docking delive evuney ate urv1lve a ea y Murville together with West Ger-| The boy was pronounced dead of \tribute to the Pontiac Area United Fund. Judge F. Dickinson Letts, who ap- ers trapped in the plants. - Di f St k man Foreign Minister Henrich von/ drowning by Oakland County Depu-| ‘ re pointed the monitors, approves © : Agon 1Z1 ng 1€S Of OtTOKe Brentano. ty Coroner Dr. W. W. Oliphant, of, 4 Tribute Fund has beent ; them. The company asked that the | Western officials called the |Lake Orion. The drowning oc- Set up for this year’s UF an anonymous hand-written note courts limit picketing to two men H T h . at Navy Center | counterpreposal a compromise. Curred at about 2:15 p. m. | campaign. asked that the dollar value of the fe Cate petal oe oo eat, Irst WASHINGTON (®#—Admiral of; the Fleet William Daniel Leahy, wartime chief of staff to President Franklin D, Roosevelt, died today. Soviets to accept the plan, A Western spokesman described the offer as ‘‘one of the most im- The veteran naval officer, diplo-|Portant concessions the West has mat and senior adviser to thejmade’’ in the eight-month-old con- White House was 84, \ference here on a test ban. _ But few, if any, expected the | | And What Is Missing? LONDON (UPI) — A huge no- tice spotted yesterday outside a Roehampton Church said: ‘This ¢ It all started several weeks ago | when Norman Pattison of 3401 Devon Brook Dr., Bloomfield Township, owner of Connolly's Jewelers, 16 W. Huron St., re- ceived the unmarked package J containing a valuable ring. * * * a The Navy said death resulted from a ‘cerebral. vascular acei- dent,” the usual medical term for a stroke. Death took place at the Navy Center in Bethsesda, Md. Leahy, who was the senior five- star officer elevated to that rank during World War Ti, was a na- tive of Hampton, Iowa, es * During a career which began in 1897, the year of his graduation from the Naval Academy, he served in four wars starting with the Spanish-American War. His next fighting - assignments were during the Philippine Insurreetion| - and in the Boxer uprising in China. ‘ has been one of beauty.” ’ Leahy reached the peak of his eae ee another “discussion of the see Rocks near where the Gree satwice 4, See Navy ie S05! waar: : “ae gt . a adit of Dre | BiekAhii Lethi Ni 0 CIN strike. . eastern Utah he was appointed Chief of Naval ce oy sd ace ee _ | Eisenhower has been getting al- They drove into the rugged, . Operations. F The Tribute Fund will send an In Today S Press most daily reports from Mitchell treeless country Friday morning, After his retirement two years engraved card to the bereaved! - _. | since. the strike: started last! to see the breathtaking view from igraved Eee a as ea OO brat later he served successively as family stating the donor’s name | *=**=smeaeem pmemeirme | Wednesday. Dead Horse Point, a bluff that Governor of Puerto Rico and and that a contribution has been’. Comics .................... uu Rapidly spreading economic ef-| overlooks the convoluted Colorado ambassador to France during the | made. County News ............./, 8 | fects of the nationwide strike lent| River gorge. It’s about 35 miles early stages of World War Il. | f:- 2 24 LL... eee 6 /an air of urgency to the meetings,| southwest of Moab, the nearest In 1942 he was recalled to active) Members of the UF Tribute| Markets ..°................. 25 Nearly 90 per cent of the coun-} community. duty as chief of staff to the com : , Fund Committee include Mfrs.| Obituaries ................... 4 |try’s steelmaking capacity is shut ipl Song ar a turns _ mander in chief. In that capacity; =sMYSTERY BENEFITS “UNITED ois : Suliens: Petes Cucte pe T. Norvell, owas nibs Stay Alive Longer ....... . e ma pat onagerare pee — * wat “ oy Me pated ——— por a % Clie 7] ‘Rel oto potion ‘Norman Pattison of Connolly's Jewelers, 16°W.: came to Pattison throtigh the mail from Corte iA: Mes. debe Blamey, 28 W. on ae t en ae, |tetaled bout 24 million dollars.| for trucks or jeeps. Seott said the ode i ioe Conihiand Chiets which| Huron St., presents a $125 chéck to Mrs. Ralph Madera, Calif. The. anonymous sender asked Iroquois Rd: Mrs. Robert Eldred,| TV & Radio P ms .. 31 | A half-million striking steelwork-| car's radiator st; He drove on, « included sénior officers of prin-| Norvell, chairman of the new UF Tribute Fund. that the ring be. sold and prqceeds given to 339 w. Iroquois Rd.; and Mrg,, Wilson, Eatl ............... 31 [ers counted: pay losses an thinking they were nee are cipal allies of the United States.’ The $125 was raised by the sale of a ring which charity. Jack Habel, 22 Miami Rd. , Women’s Pages .. 13-18 [to some 50 million dollars. (Continued on Page 2, oe is ch-ch, What is missing?': - : e as ring be given to charity . The note, written with pen on the inside wrapper, read: “Value $125. Please sell this. Ii means nothing to me anymore. My loved one’s dead. Keep the money or give it to charity.” * * * There was no hint as to who sent the ring. ; Today, the heart-broken person who sent the ring has something to rejoice about. The sale of the ring for $125 marks a major con- tribution to the UF fund campaign and has led to the creation of a Tribute Fund. The new fund will be devoted to aiding individuals and fami- lies throughout the Pontiac area whose personal tragedies have come to the attention of local social service agencies. Dollars can be donated to the Fund through special bequests by i } | Racing Midgets | One of the area's newest and most popular ‘s for partici- pants and spectators alike is the Quarter-Midget :racers involving boys and girls between 4-15 years of age. Crowds as high as 5,000 have watched the midget racers at Miracle Mile on Sunday after- noons. A picture page story of the Quarter-Midgets is found in to- day’s Press on Page 17. ‘Her Life One of Beauty’ WHITEHALL, N.Y’ o — An 81-year-old former schoolteacher, Miss Alene Manville, is reign- ing as beauty queen at the bicen- tennia] celebration of this Lake | Champlain village. In crowning | her, principal Ambrose Gilligan | said: ‘‘Miss Manville’s entire life and in motion, It asked a bar to jany form of intimidation of per- sons entering or leaving the prop- erty. Should the injunctions be granted as outlined by J & L, even a “jeer” by a picket could be construed as contempt of court. * * * The petitions named as defen-| dants all of the union’s internation- al officers, including USW Presi-, dent David J. McDonald, and of- ficers and committeemen of the local unions at the firm's two plants at Pittsburgh and one at nearby Aliquippa. Finnegan and three key aides went into a private morning dis- cussion with contract negotia- tors for the basic steel indus- try. A similar session with the United Steelworkers Union’s team was scheduled in the aft- ernoon. President Eisenhower met in Washington with Secretary of La- bor James P. Mitchell today for * : MOAB, Utah (AP) Eight parched people and one pint of water, a spoonful at a time...a burning sun with only a disabled car for shade...a little salmon- egg fish bait for food. ..and, fi- nally, a thirsty child’s question: “Mommy, what does it feel like | to die?” | That was Diane Scott, 9, trying |to sléep after almost two days of this. Mommy, 33-year-old Laura Scott, answered gravely: | “It would be like going to sleep. | You'd just go unconscious and i gradually ie “Will the water in Heaven?” “Yes, honey, all you want.” Diane didn’t die, Neither did Mrs. Scott, her husband Virl, 37, ior their five other children, ages ‘4 to 12. A search plane spotted them Sunday, where their car had _ stranded them for two days in the iremote Country of Standing } \ ° 96 in 1926 oe 51 in 1947/sure we couldn’t have made it; Sunday's Temperature Chart through today prayer and the: SENEVA. (UP » Alpena 77 56 Marquette €8 56\1 ord hel us... .” | GENEVA (UPI) — Secretary | Baltimore 92 T3 Memphis % 70) elped us. ... | of State Christian A. Herter made | ‘ Miam . 1.) in om 5 4 - : | Brenevite $3 18 Mites” pad) Scott works in a factory in Salt)’ it to the summit yesterday—only | ne s Minneapolis B94 Lake City and lives in Murray, a! to discover the East Germans | st 5 7 ‘ew Orleans 4} id ‘ | : ; Chicago | 78 66 New York @6 72/ Suburb, were there already, Herter and | ereomnd ae “ mabe 24 rH He said a doctor told him the) some of his ‘aides took a cable Betrort % 63 Phoenix 196 79/Children were in better condition! car to the top of the 11,500-foot | FL Worth 77 73 ge sy se than they should have been after! high Mt. Aiguille dy Midi, and | Gre. Rapids 8 3 8 wrascteco $i 43 such ,an ordeal. Besides Dtane,| were met by East German For- t ¢@ 664 8 8 arie ~ : gerksonvilie, 90 74 Seattle aa «i the children are Virlene. 12: Laur-| eign Minister Lothar Bolz who A iy 6 5 ‘with e Led Lanting aie + 4 Seco t 7 Me ene, 10, Byron, 7; .Duwayne, got there-two hours ahead of _ Los Angelts 8 67 Washington 93 63 4nd Leland, 4, i them. , C p— AN Picnic 7 r ‘ . ae ene ‘ : : f q : bah f , d ee | a + ii MONDAY, JULY. 20, 1959 _ THE PONTIAC PRESS. ~ Draws Thousands EGG-CITING — All the action wasn't on dhe kiddie front at the annual outing, as it shows here. The ladies were competing in an egg and-spoon race, and if the —<$<$—$<— 4 scrambled. Home Arson Motives Narrowed by Probers (Continued From Page One) found in the rubble,” the investi- gator said, O'Farrell said the lab reports; had not been issued but he hoped they would be ready today Discounting previous reports that no fingerprints were found on the cans, he said, ‘‘The fingerprint findings aren't even filed yet. We may have no report on them for several days. We won't know until then if there were prints left.”’ Det. Hanley plans to continue questioning neighbors. Saturday, | questioning didn’t turn up any new leads, said detectives. O'Brien's mother, Mrs. Sylvia Paris, 41, who owns the housé, was staying there while O’Brien was in Wyoming on a combined busi-| ness-pleasure trip. MOVED CAR She wsa asked Saturday. by police why she drove her-car to, a neighbor's house about 100 yards | away and left it ther@ pbout 1's hours before the fire broke out. | “I had intended to drive to a meeting,”’ she told detectives. “Instead, Mr. Schjolin drove.” She referred to Mr. and Mrs Hans Schjolin, of 127 Stoney Brook Lane, with whom she attended a ook eens Police said they Police haven't talked to him | ‘ er again. | since Friday and don’t plan to | Another big development police’ question him today. expect to unfold today is the! ; | identification of a “mystery re-| Mrs.-O'Brien nad two children! pairman.” are visiting her parents in Kansas | Mrs. Paris said a ‘man came |City, Mo. to the huose last Tuesday and) x -* said he was a telephone company | O'Brien has been staying with) repairman. ja close friend, Gordie Howe, De- itroit Red Wing hockey star. | He said he was lost and look- ain . ing for a house on Big Beaver | (recast « map and ster nin FAMILY Of 8 Survives The man, she said, was coving Desert Sun, Thirst | directions, an unmarked truck, Police. expect a report from! Michigan Bell Telephone Co. today! telling whether this was one of their man or someone posing as a repairman in order to check the interior layout of the O’Brien home. pins =) PASS THE MUSTARD — Sharing & table at the picnic were the families of Roscoe Helsel, retired trim department employe, ————4 ! saw the car,’’ O'Farrell reevaled. O'Brien, 23, is business agent | | for Local 299, in Detroit, and a | close friend of James R. Hoffa. (Continued From Page Onv) Moab—by now more than 49 miles’ to the northeast. Then the crank-! case oil pan ruptured and the car quit, “We survived by keeping cool | little woman brings your CHECK MYSTERY AUTO The ‘mystery car’ seen driving near the house shortly before the fire is still under investigation. M¢s. Paris saw it, as did the Schpolins. under the dirt,’ Scott said after, their rescue; ‘drinking water—| about a pint from the radiator, | one spoonful every 21 hours. All! we had to eat was some salmon! leggs, and we tried to eat cactus REACTION TESTING — Youngsters got a reaction “No other neighbors questioned but our mouths were so dry we kick out of the GMC driver ~—— couldn't swallow it. hibit at the annual picnic held by Truck & Coach “We gave the children the ———————— —-—4 The Weather radiator water after trying to Full U.S. Weather Bureau R t parity it by straining it... it aONTIAC AND VICINITY Fair this had a permanent type anti-freeze Keeps Eye on Wasp peel outs €2, Tomorrow ciety shoud in it’’—not the poisonous dena- and Runs Car in Ditch rT Ww = » ie Sowwts Gavelugtog tm afternoon, hick’ cs | ture alcohol type. , Satin: = ares ds northerly 5-19 miles today be- c.. ; Patricia A. Hrycko, 17, of 34825 coming light, variable tonight. Scott explained that the family : Dequindre Rd., Troy, was taken eiitiur wentes buried themselves in sand up to their necks, to avoid the burning to the Avon Medical Ls = Pata temperature preceding 8 am Center with wat s am: Wind velocity 10 m ph rays a sun. Relatives in Moab'a friend Sunday as a result of rection—Northeast reportec e Se ; = >» Gon sets Monday at #04 p.m ae Min ccace eaten When paying tao much attention to a, un rises 7 5-13 IC eC f 14ay. . “1 lieta ls Tee = : wasp, said Oakland County Sher- Moon rises Monday at 815 pm Iwo fliers, searching for the iff's Deputies — Scotts. saw the ec: ear an ; ; Downtown Temperatures “e en oe 0 i i ) ' 6am ‘. litem , S-O-S" sign made of rocks. They’ Patricia was driving south on ' 7 a.m -- -@% ain 76\r¢ > . 7 : ~d - } j 1 sch > =F ah 6\radioed Moab, then landed a few Rochester road when a wasp flew : = ss miles away to take watet to the in an open cer winddw.7 She told Les a t < WS LEECTE * fe e ‘ et family. A pickup truck reache : ea} Sundas in Pontiac nes pickup truck reached ‘officers she was keeping an eye ‘As recorded downtown) them fater and drove them to a A : : Highest temperatures “- : on the wasp and ran off the road Lewest tempreature g4 Spot where twe other planes Jand- into a ditch t * n « meen _jompesatere Coe is ed. The planes flew them here + it a j nr : cient A she ant rr C fi € | — When fwo filers reached us . f n ey companion Dianne | Highest aoa in Fontiac this morning,’”’ Scott said, ‘‘the a 18, of 1750 E. Maple Lowest temyprature a 54 jkids were bursting with laughter d.. Troy, were treated at the center and sent home Mean temperature | : 65 Weather—Sunny and then they started to cry—and Highest an@ Lowest Temperatures This) so | id we. I don't ace how we sur te in 86 Years \vived as long as ‘we did and I'm E. Germans at Top First " BA wad re } eggs that way in the morning, we hope you like them * : ss re oes é % be) : and Clifton Persful, of the sheet metal department. Brief showers and high humidity didn’t stop appetites. Chester Walled Lake. Barth takes a turn at the wheel, front, and his Louise, center, also enjoys the test. Division Saturday at test ex- sister, CHECKING DAD'S JOB — Michael and Timmy Kelly; sons of Mr. and Mrs. D. L; Kelly, takea look at a new GMC Model 5301 Coach, one of the first to be produced at the plant.’ The work passed their inspection. Almont Couple NamedinLien — U. S. Government Says | | $1,095,103 Owed by, | Glenn, Mary Averill | i | A federal tax lien of $1,095,103 for alleged unreported income, pen- jalties and interest has been filed) | |with the Oakland/ County Register ‘The Day in Birmingham Appoint 13 Teachers; Teamster Buttons Are IT BIRMINGHAM—Appointment of, Leyal Legion of’ the United 13 new elementary and junior high| States and of Sigma Delta Cal school teachers for the 1959-60 Journalistic Fraternity. school year has been announced} ae by Dwight B. Ireland, Birmingham 444 4 son, Richard of 1900 Fair- superintendent of schools. view, Lane, Birmingham: Ireland also announced the resig- | The family requests that any nations of eight teachers from the’ memorial tributes be sent to the Birmingham system and clerical) tyoly Name Church Building Fund, iving ,are his wife, Mary, appointments for the coming year, Birmingham. lof Deeds office against Glenn and | Mary Averill, of 6330 Boardman 'St., Almont, The case covers a period from 1950 to 1956. S. R. Cash, internal revenue officer of the Flint district of- |. fice, reported that Averil] is a | retired Detroit police officer and | ) presently is a land property own- | Paul Schaller, clarinetist. er in Lapeer. | The program is cheduled for| Cash said that similar liens, of) 4:30 p.m. at the Cranbrook House the same amount of assessment,|/Gardens on Lone Pine road in) have also been filed in Wayne, Ma-! Bloomfield Hills. The final con-| comb and Lapeer counties. ‘cert of the Summer Festival will! « * * follow on Aug. 2. “Averill owns a farm and other| properties that border on the boun-| New collecting and trading items) dary lines of these counties,”’ said | are circulating among Bifming- Cash, ‘‘We don’t know as yet how! ham youngsters. much, if any, of the properties are} The items are Teamster Union in Oakland County. The separate jane) buttons, claimed by children liens have been filed as a precau-) ,. salvage after the Thursday Donary measure. inight fire at the home of Team- Averill could not be reached ster business agent Charles for comment, He is reportedly. O'Brien, 205 Harrow Circle, Bloom- vacationing with his wife at their field Township. 2 A simmer cottage in Canada. * x * One 11-year-old seen in Birming- ay proudly displayed numbering three, with two clerieal ijresignations accepted. The Cranbrook Summer Festi- val will continue Sunday with a concert featuring pianist’ Ruth | ist, Gordon Staples, violinist, and According to James F. Deane, assistant director of the Detroit ham yesterd internal revenue office, attempts an even dozen of the blue and gold are being made to reach a settle-, buttons attached to his cap. ment with the Almont man, * *® * Henry T. DeHart “We'll try and work out a settle-| Rosary service for Henry T. ment with him to pay this liabil- DeHart, 65, of 310 Southfield Rd., lity,’ Deane said. “If suitable ar-| Birmingham, will be held at 8 rangements cannot be made, we p, m. today at the Bell Chapel of will then have to seize any assets| the William R. Hamilton Co. he may have."’ | Requiem Mass will be at 10 Deane said criminal charges a.m. tomorrow at the Holy Name against Averill are possible. 'Catholic Church in Birmingham. Averill cannot dispose of any of puria) will follow in Holy Sepul- his property of holdings as long chre Cemetery, Detroit. jas the federal government has the, Mr. DeHart died at his home lien against him. _| Friday after a short illness. | The amount the Averills owe in : |taxes, penalties and interests, bro-| |ken down successively for the years 1950 to 1956 are $119,794; $275,710; $196,568: $225.980; $106,836; $99,- 1591; and $70,623 | — _ as merchandising manager of the GMC Truck & Coach Di- vision in Pontiac. He was a member of the Military Order of Many Governors Avoid Naming Election Favorites | WASHINGTON (AP) — With!J. Hugo Aronson of Montana, John lthe presidential nominating con-|E. Davis of North Dakota and lventions still a year away, half Harold W. Handley of Indiana On ithe nation’s governors say it’s too|the Democratic side, ~Govs. Abra- learly to commit therhselves to any|ham Ribicoff of Connecticut, Fos- potential candidate. iter Furcolo of Massachusetts and | In their respective parties, Vice Joseph J. Hickey of Wyoming said President Richard M. Nixon and they prefer Kennedy as_ their iSen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) party's candidate. leach got the nod from three gov-| * * * ernors willing to name a_ single) Twenty-four of the 45 governors choice in an Associated Press can-,who responded to the canvass vass. Many of the governors listed wouldn't name a favorite at this alternative choices or none af all.|time. Twenty of those who * * * | wouldn't make a - public choice | Nixon's support came from Govs. | Were Democrats, including gover- - $$$ nors of such politically strategic | 2 | states as California, Ohio and Pennsylvania, ‘Assures Khrushchev + * * | Conspicuous Republican holdouts ’ included Gov. Nelson A. Rocke- He | Keep Mum | feller of New York, a possible 'strong challenger to Nixon for the GOP nomination, and Gov. Wil- , ; liam G. Stratton of Mlinois, re- calls for him to visit Leningrad) ¢arded-as a vice presidential hope- ‘and the Siberian cities of Novosi-} ¢y)_ birsk, Sverdlovsk, Nizhni Pani and| Democratic Govs. S. Ernest Van- Beloyarsk, 45 wellvas) Moscow. diver of Georgia and Orval E. Nixon will spend four days in |Faubus of Arkansas support Sen. Moscow where he will open the | Richard B. Russell of Georgia, American National Exhibition | who hasn't indicated that he is Friday, After opening the Ameri- | running. can fair, he will confer with top tov. Gaylord A. Nelson of Wis- Soviet officials, visit the Russian | consin named Kennedy, Adlai E. |. agricultural and industrial exhib- | it, and see housing projects and hrey (D-Minn) among the most | | j i] (Continued From Page One) | | other government works. \likely Democratic nominees—but Nixon's official party, including|he did not choose among them. ‘his wife Pat and Vice Adm. Hyman) Washington's Gov, Albert D, Ro- |G. Rickover, will take off Wednes-/sellini added Sen. Stuart Syming- iday from Friendship International|ton (D-Mo) to this, list without |Airport near Baltimore aboard a/stating any preference. . luxurious VIP version of the Boe-| Gov. James T. Blair. of Missouri ing 707 jet airliner. They will use)said he is for Symington. Gov. Meckler with Paul Olefsky, cello- | He had retired early this year | [Stevenson and Sen, Hubert Hump-| Reds Loose Revolt Against Iraqi Regime (Continued From Page One) | “previous criminal attempts’’ by Communist agents to seize the city of Anah, It said the latest attempt came last night but was foiled by an army patrol. * * * “The Communists opened fire - and the patrol retaliated,” the broadcast said. * * * “At this very moment a military reinforcement arrived . .. and joined the patrol in the fight. “The armed forces succeeded in forcing most of the Commu- | nists te surrender, but some of them managed to escape.” | The Middle East News Agency reported the Communists in Kirkuk executed a number of persons and But in London the Iraq Petro- ileum Co., announced its 500 British civilians were safe. * * * Kassem, in a radio appeal to the nation, asked Iraqis to avoid \“blind fanaticism’’ that might lead to further civil war. x * * | He warned that his government /would ‘‘settle accounts” with the ‘Communists and other antigovern- ment forces but expressed hope no further force would be neces- sary. | Heavy Baghdad censorship | kept most of the details from | the outside world, but reports reaching Cairo and other Middle East capitals said antigovern- | ment flareups occurred through- out Iraq with the heaviest fight- ing at Kirkuk, 90 miles from the scene of a major antigovernment revolt last March. The March revolt in Mosul was crushed in a week of heavy fight- ing in which the Iraqi government said the rebels were aided by Egypt and Syria * * * The Damascus Newspaper Al |Wahdah said the Communists be- gan “fierce battles’’ in Kiruk |three days ago and that Commu- nists and Turkmen tribesmen bat- tled in the streets. ‘HANG EIGHT CORPSES’ “The Communists hanged eight of their corpses on gallows and dragged the remaining two in the streets of the city,’’ the Middle East News Agency reported in Cairo. * * * | It said army units rushed to restore order but one army unit, the second regiment, defected to ithe Communist side. | It said the Communists assas- sinated the anti-Communist sec- | ond-in-command of the defecting unit, dragged his body through the streets and then seized ‘‘con-. trol. . . of important sectors | of the city.”’ | The communists have become jincreasingly influential in the Kas- sem government since’ he came to ° power last year and Western dip- lomats have expressed fear they would try to take over the oil-rich nation. * * * Reports from Iraq today indi- cated that the Communists’ major jeffort may have started. Castro Supporters Converge on Havana (Continued From Page One) do. But the new president, Dr. [reese them through the streets, - [Soviet planes to fly between Rus-|Ralph G. Brooks of Nebraska said/Qsvaldo Dorticos, told a Boston sian cities. Nixon’s office said final details! on the exact installations he will} visit will be announced in Moscow after the vice president's arrival. | Mrs. Nixon is expected 2 schools and hospitals and meet! with women’s groups. ; | The vice president’ssreturn date! is uncertain but his office said he) probably would be back about Aug. | >. ae ~*~ * * a Nixon has told friends he wants| ito pepper his talks with frequent | proverbs when he,meets with So- viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. He has been impressed with Khrushchev’s flair for proverbs. Nixon and his .wife have been getting a concentrated course in Russian from Alexander G, Bar- mine, chief of the Russian lan- guage section of the Voice of ‘an . , Fish Fry Must Move * MEMPHIS, Tenn.. (UPI) /& Firemen chased’ a column of black smoke to the top of a nine- | story apartment building Satur- | day night expecting to ‘find a | major blaze, Instead, they found | a family firing up a portable bar: | | becue grill for a fish fry. The ; | firefighters strongly urged them ‘| | to cook elsewhere, | j he is for Stevenson. Gov. A. B.jradio station by telephone that’ he (Happy) Chandler of Kentucky,'considers Castro. still himself an aspirant for the nomi-| minister. nation, said he believes Stevenson * * * will wind up again as the standard; The 40-year-old lawyer also said bearer. that former President Manuel Ur- is prime x *& * \ Sen, Lyndon B. Johnson of\Tex-|office Friday, was in no danger as, Senates Democratic leader, has/in, Cuba and probably would re- the support of Texas Gov. Price|/main in the country. Urrutia was Daniel. _ jat the heavily guarded home of On the Republican side, Gov./his brother-in-law outside Havana. Christopher Del Sesto of Rhode|Dorticos said the guard had been Island said he expects Nixon will| requested by the ex-president, get the nomination. But he made x & * no final commitment. Govs. Rob-| Castro accused Urrutia of near ert T. Stafford of Vermont, Mark /treason because he had spoken of O. Hatfield of Oregon and George |a Communist menace in Cuba aft- D. Clyde of Utah said either Nix-jer the ex-chief of the Cuban air on or Rockefeller would suit/force, Maj. Pedro Luis Diaz Lanz, them, {told a U.S, congressional commit- ; jtee that Castro and leaders of his Cj ( .: 8 jgovernment were Communists. ity Commission —* + ok : | Castro's attack on Urrutia found to Get Project Plans |Strong support among the Cuban A |Masses, but the reaction in some . |middle and upper class circles was Estimates on road, sidewalk and|4dverse. The president, a former sewer projects will be presented|Judge, was considered a moderate, for consideration at the regular|@nd the business community felt meeting of Pontiac's City Commis-|his departure had removed a sion tonight. j|brake on the revolutionary forces. , Also on the agenda is a resolu-| k« *« &* , tion to amend the civic disaster} The new. president,- who jhad plan ‘laws, said Saturday night, “1 most The meeting will be held 8 injbeen~ minister of revolutionary the City Commission chamber ir certainly am not (a Communist) City Hall. ' Jand neither is’ the government.” ’ . \ af \, ae rutia, whom Castro forced out of © be ies illite le et en aN Te a Movon a —— oe ~ -s5o0n Co. eT ea ee ee RO Oe RE EE EE mL Pee eS eS = Cemetery there. Arrangements are by the Huntoon Funeral Home. JOHN YUNGK John Yungk, 74, of 45 Lewis St. died today at Pontiac General Hos- pital. JOSEPH P. DERPEN Joseph P. Derpen, 73, of 2269 Square Lake Rd., Bloomfield Town: ship, died today in East Side Gen- eral Hospital Detroit, following an! illness of one year. Funeral services will be held 1 p.m. Wednesday at Donaldson- Johns Funeral Home, with burial following in White Chapel Ceme- tery. MRS. EDWARD HATHORN No. 4, Hartford, Conn. Mrs. Edward (Mary F.) Hathorn He is survived 1 by his wile, Chris- 75, of 591 E. Walton Blvd., dieq/|tine; a son, John Yungk Jr. of Wy- Sunday at her residence. andotte; two daughters, Mrs. Ray- She is survived by one son, Ar-|mond Stief of Clawson, Mrs. James thur with whom she*lived; two|/McCollum of Pontiac; and six sisters, Mrs, Louise Cline and Mrs. /grandchildren. Two sisters and a Sophia Knight, both of Keego Har- brother also survive. bor; and four brothers, Carl) Service will be held at 2 p.m. Schwartz of Detroit, Albert of Pon-/Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Fu- tiac, Henry of Kendallville, Ind., neral Home. Graveside service at and Fred of Walled Lake. White Chape] Memorial Cemetery Funeral services will be held at|will be conducted by Masonic 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the First|Lodge- No. 21. Open Bible Church, with burial| —— , eee following at Mount Park Cemetery. MES: FLOYD AUSTIN DRAYTON PLAINS — Service The body is at Farmer-Snover Fu- neral Home. ‘for Mrs. Floyd (Delores Joan) Aus- itin, 29, of 4031 Meigs Rd., will be WILLIAM H. MINTER held at 1 p.m. tomorrow at the William H. Minter, 44, of 2078 Coats Funeral Home here. Burial Paulsen St., died Saturday of a/will follow in Ottawa Park Ceme- heart attack. tery. He was employed by the Fulker-| Mrs. Austin died Saturday in St. Joseph's Hospital, Pontiac, after Surviving are two children, Lin-jan illness of five days. da and Billie; and four stepchil-) Surviving besides her ‘husband dren, Donald and Junior Murphy,|are two daughters, Cathy and Sha- and Robert and Janet Carlson. jron; two sons. Danny and Steven; Funera] services will be heldifour sisters, Mrs. Jack Barker and 1:30 p.m, Tuesday at Huntoon Fu-|/Miss Carol Noe, both of Pontiac, neral Home with burial in Rose-|Mrs. Howard Andres of Tawas City land Park Cemetery. and Mrs. Richard Sowles of Dray- ton Plains; and two brothers, Gary _ WILMER SMITH ~—_sland David Noel, also of Pontiac. Wilmer Smith, 47, of 195 Fishers; per parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar St., died July 16 following an ill-/Noe} of Pontiac; and her grand- ness of two years. . parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rogers Formerly a construction work-|of Qrion Township and Mr. and er, Mr. Smith is survived by a : ; Mrs. Oscar Noel of Romeo, also wife, Geraldine, a daughter, De- survive. lores Smith of Pine Bluff, Ark., and| a sister, Jessie Finley of Pontiac. MRS. EDWARD CARLSON Services will be held at 1 p.m.| HOLLY — Service for Mrs. Ed- Tuesday at the William F. Davis|E. Baird, will be held at 2 p.m. Funeral Home with burial follow- ing in Oak Hill Cemetery. MRS. CLYDE WOODLAND Mrs. Carson died this morning Mrs. Clyde (Katherine) Wood- at the Green Valley Rest Home land, 80, of 203 Cedar St., East after a prolonged illness. She was Lansing, died this morning at Pon- ‘a Michigan Bell Telephone opera- tiac General Hospital following anitor here for 30 years. illness of three months. | Surviving are several nieces and A former school teacher, Mrs.! nephews. Woodland is survived by a daugh- ter, Mrs. Manley Young of Pontiac, | and a son, Ralph Woodland of Lan-' sing Graveside service for the infant Service will be held Thursday son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. at George Luecht Funeral Home| |Curry, 1282 Round Lake Rd., will) in Leslie, with burial in Woodlawn ‘be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Oak | ~~ — | Hit Cemetery with ce | SUMMER ye inva dea Saturday in St. J h Hospi BOOK CLEARANCE Strvivine besides nis parents. are t Bo d Si ALL THIS WEEK! [03 3 cscee niin and ches Light Reading mana |topher, all at home, AMES K. II for Your Summer Vacation yy eae LAKE — Service for (Including Modern ce, James K. Ii, 64, of 1634 S. Com- Library) Originally 1.65 99 i|merce Rd., was to be held at 1 ;p.m. today from the RichaiJson- OLD PROF’S BOOK SHOP Bird Funeral Home, with burial in 9 W. La St Oakland Hills. Cemetery. ——— He died Tuesday et Ford Hos- \ of the Musicians Union and the Home. Burial wil foow in Lake- side Cemetery. BABY BOY CURRY WHITE eon “Built to a Standard of QUALITY” Check Our Prices Before You Buy Monuments from from - $3500 $1 75° Pontiac’s Oldest and Most Reliable Monument Builders INCH MEMORIALS, INC. | Telerbone FE 5-693] 864 N. Perry St. Markers Wednesday at the Dryer Funeral | Masonic Lodge, St. John Chapter}. lrestaurants in New York, Califor- pital, ‘Detroit, month illness. Mr. Ii is survived by his wife, Eoin; a daughter, Shirley, at home; two sons, James Jr. of De- isliowing a one- |troit and Lawrence of Plainsfield, | | Ind.; A former supervisor at Pontiac | Motor Division, Mr. Yungk had re-| tired in 1950. He was a life member’ and five grandchildren. | Deaths Elsewhere CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)—Dr.| Bronson Crothers, 75, clinical pro-| fessor of pediatrics at Harvard! Medical School, died Friday. He had served as president of the American Pediatrie Society and also the Academy of Cerebral Palsy. He died at his Sorrento, Maine, summer home, | | COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP)— Col.| Fred Moritz, 55, superintendent of! the Ohio Highway Patrol since} 1957, died Saturday. He assisted| in selecting the original 60 men) who trained to form the patrol in| 1933. A state official said Moritz! had cancer although the cause of death was not given. | MEMPHIS (AP)—Herbert Par-! sons, 51, exhibition marksman for, Winchester-Western Arms Co, who ruled the ranks of professional shooters for some 30 years, died Sunday. He had suffered a heart attack after an. operation. His home was in Somerville, Tenn. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Patrick C. Burns, 72, head of the | cattle purchasing department of | Armour & Co. for 20 years until | his, retirement in 1952, died Satur-| day. He had been with the pack: ing firm 49 years BRIDGEPORT, Conn, in-Sace| uel Bickford, 73, founder of the Waldorf luncheon chain and board chairman and head of the exec- utive committee of Bickford’s restaurants, died Saturday. A resi- dent of Newton, Conn., he had nia, Florida, Pennsylvania, Mas-| sachusetts and Maryland. PITTSBURGH # — C. Robert Fay, 59, a director of Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. and vice president in charge of the company’s paint and brush division, died Sunday. | Before joining Pittsburgh Plate, | he was an execytive with Westing- house Electric Corp. Halls of Capitol LAKE TOWNSHIP — |! | | wife of Leon Slavin, paper manu- in Lansing Silent LANSING w — Only the hum of /a vacuum cleaner disturbed the deep silence in legislative halls of 'the Capitol today, There wasn’t a lawmaker in sight. | Tomorrow night legislators will | return for their 120th session and what they hope will be the final round in a six-month battle to write a new tax program for Michigan. There was little else to do. Only 63-bills remained on the House! and Senate calendars and most of) these dealt with minor matters. | Mrs. Slavin, Racetrack Owner’s Wife, Is Dead DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)—Services for Mrs. Dorothy Graff Slavin, 56, ,son Harness Raceway 'Mich.) and of River Downs Race |Track near Cincinnati. He and his facturer and racetrack owner, will ibe held at 2 p.m. today in the| ‘Slavin Auditorium. Her husband is president of Jack- (Jackson, brother, William, own the _Haw- thorne Paper Co. in Kalamazoo. Col. Walter Brown Dies LONDON, Ont. (® — Col. Walter James Brown, longtime secretary of the University of Western On- tario and onetime YMCA official \| the YMCA 'in the United States, died Satur- day night. He was’ 86. Brown had bredgce as educational director of iin Chicago and St. | Louis. ...eat eve: you diet milk.. ntbat's all. backside, hips and thighs. thoritative fashion magazines. You can get Larson's . S.M.D., the complete New 24-Hour Diet Takes Pounds Off Big Eaters Big caters now can lose 10 to 20 pgunds and more and still enjoy big meals of fine food. Swedish Milk Diet. It is an on and off ‘diet. Eat today ing just like you now eat. Then tomorrow or 24 hours taking Larson’s $.M.D. with e No calorie counting. No exegcise. No mechanical mas- sage. 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MONDAY, JULY 20, 1959 ge cemeeatee seman wa y Lapeer Brothers Gone But Prefers Shorter Sermon | * hands nervously, Long heard Dr., When ia man complains that his a ; P —— : |W. Herschel Ford thunder, ‘You wife doesn’t udderstand him, you * N ws a can't live with the devil six days can het tha she deel. _ This, ul ac Ory Car OTT | ong ] gets at ervices and ‘live with the Lord on Sun- ss vd New Englander, is i Af day,” as he attendéd services at/S2YS a shrewd New Englander, 1s “the First Baptist Church. jal, you cg “ agparcoag ~_ MARLETTE (P—''Fort Sieger The fert was the result of a. EL PASO x (AP) — After) The care eee a ; * * * jeconomics: your outgo excee s hardt,”” the makeshift basten of ceurt fight in which the broth- aidar a veka , AI _ mer A hi a _canéelled m After the services Long sai your income, the upkeep will be } ‘two elderly brothers in a ng. ers refused to pay assessments day of telephone talks and at- planned second trip .to Juarez, “That's good preaching It, was|YOUr downfall. —Earl Wilson. peseitem sone evictior “is et ee . = ee i oe ne Gi Sun- ee owe the a ae only .35 minutes long, In the coun: - their farm, has been stormed ome surance ¢ y- e Gay, GOV. har . Long of Louisi- from here, Sunday night is plan try they us t reac P- more—by industry sity was sold to satisfy the court ana planned, at last notice, to go to go to Denver today also upset he ' an - i semi jor SPECIAL TRADE ALLOWANCE : ° : , at fas ay a pset hour and a half. That’s too leng ON MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS i The farmiand it 4 Radgements, to Denver toda) for an old ma sleep.” 4 be fermiend |G ; ay a previously announced itinerary {Or an old man_.to sleep. E-Z PAY RENTA! Lapeer County has been purchased he others fought evictier i rs * that was to take him to Phoenix, en : a 5 cred es a : et wes ‘ x, LAYAWAY 3 by Henry Drettman, a Deto mys WariheStateneolicesand He had reservations, it was Ariz., Colorado Springs, and Mon-| The. Soviet Union put 35 new i lustrialist deat? s depwlie cenk to put them learned im the Colorado city’s terrey, Mexico. | television | stations on the air in EDWARD’ S 18 S. Saginaw The stecl framework of a 3 Brown Palace Hotel. Sunday morning, twitching his 1958. foot by 75-toeot building is suing . eral attempts, the evic- eect os : ce neon cen up near the old sand bagged . i . fortress home of the brothers. wus carried out. The farm- Chris and Paul Ziegeahardt. ers adviser finally landed in jail Drettman said the farm: wil be Chris died two years ago. Paul the site for an assed t for how lives in Marlette / “special vehicles of some — He did not specify en Se: Last year. more color ads ap- I statisnics it faily newspapers than * * * | OO duly newspapers | ‘ Mobile omes \ SL und Canada } a some. spec ition of over the automotive now offer : | : specialty” Drettn pers ns 5 ) = ; PROPS A'PLENTY — Workman examines the triple screws on \ model of the atomic-powered icebreaker Lenin, installed for Soviet \ op a kin S 0 exhibit at New York's Coliseum : : 7 e ( : | WHERE aa WHY | t Meise L do you itch? E ementrary asses Face @ Allergic Itch ~ Until more school buildings have py two rooms at Webster School. . E @ Nervous Itch been completed in Waterford Sixth graders of the Williams Lake t ; * E Itch Township, many elementary school School will also attend classes in \ 7” Under Arms @ Eczema Itc tee .,, two rooms at the Webster School., ' @ Rectal Itch pupils will be assigned to build- Sixty-six pupils from Waterford £ @ Insect Bites ings other than they attended last Center will attend Stringham ' Heat Rech year, according to Supt. William School. i @ = as Shunck The disposition of pupil over- @ Poison Ivy Some 8) pupils in the Jayno loads culminated months of geo- _ @ Sunbyrn itch Adams fifth grade will be ac- graphical study, Shunck said. g © Prin commodated at two rooms in the There will be two sessions set " Se ee Sixth grade = up for Waterford High School 2 sat plis Wi have wo rooms in tne upil: : “and, although they vill CALAMATUM Drayton Plains School, and kinder- Stead eppneciataetts Jie Peica ; e BRINGS RELIEF BEST garteners will have half-day ses daily, this does mot mean they . : sions at the Church of the Atone: will be on half-day schedules, A NR MI Ny a t 7 ment Shunck explained. New formula contains 6 anti-itch ingredients Arrangements are being made = pupils in the ‘10th and Wth — to soothe pain, speed healing, stop itch fast! with officials ef the Christian spades will begin at 7:40 a.m. and 9 ‘ Science has developed a remark- on spreading itch like poison ivy, Alliance Crerch, Seated nan finish at 2:30 p.m. Seniors will able new formula that combines 6 because it helps dry open weeping from the Isaac E. Crary Suntor pegin at 7:40° a.m. and complete anti-itch ingredients to relieve all lesions, prevents spreading. Pre- High School, to rent four rooms ineir classes by noon. 9 kinds of itch in seconds! Called vents risk of infection from scratch- te accommodate approximately Another shift will begin at noon 5 de CALAMATUM® Ointment, this ing, foo, because CALAMATUM 140 pupils from the Leggett nq end at 4:30 p.m. Studyhall] © © © = = = = x & new medicated cream actu- turns into its own pink bandage School. This will include the ang junch periods have been = es Re ee ally stops itching and burn. -—wont rub off until you fourth, fifth and sixth grades. eliminated : —soathes wash it off! Get cooling, soothing — ; ee +) a oe pain and aids healing CALAMATUM Ointment at all . Sixth Stade Pi ce, of ; oe ak . ’ oven yin ams i | orecve eves uptores mow prexnpvon. Shy wiv rear’ Jot P Charge Astronautics | } : FORMS ITS OWN PINK BANDAGE * * * ; aut . © 1959 Isodine Pharmacal Corporation, Playtex Park, Dover, De’ Fourth graders who attended the p st) B g § | TP eg ee ns sox as : Schoolcraft School will now occu- [0 ram ecre 4 Pan unde RS in the lakes to Suddenly, Mrs. Colon said later, “there was a big light, like elec- In the event of a forest fire, tricitv. It was like fire from the each flying boat would be cap- sky, I heard a big noise, I looked) able of dumping 35 tons of up. Then I looked down. and J water in the burning area within saw Antonio.” minutes after the blaze was re- * * * ported. | Lightning had struck the tree. 4 spokesman for the company| tearing a huge slice of bark from which bought the planes from the the trunk, and killing Mimi’ and Navy as surplus told United Press poet ec tr International they were negotiat- ing with an unnamed Canadian Cockroaches lumber company in regard to the) Written Guarantee “project. The planes became outmoded From Houses. Apartments. Groceries. Factories and for Navy use and were retired in| ; \1956. They were purchased from) Restaurants Remain out only ene hour No signs used. ‘the Navy in April for a total of| Rox Ex Company | they cost a total of 10 million idollars to build during wore $23,243.23—almost negligible since | 1014 Pont. St. Bk. Ride. FE 8-455" War II. i | ee —— AP Wirephote _MONDAY. wu LY 20. 19. 59 Fire, Smoke 400 Subway Riders | NEW YORK (AP) — Four hun- to the dispatcher’s office, and they mittee says his group’s two- week | dred passengers faced the mount- ing threat of panic for 30 minutes” Sunday when fire trapped two sub- + — e Threaten ‘summoned help.” Power was shut off as soon as ithe fire was discovered. The cars way trains in a tunnel under the’ began filling with smoke. East River. After the trains finished the trip! screaming,” ‘from Queens to Manhattan, 63 pas-| ‘engers were ifor smoke poisoning. | The fire started around a sec-, | tion of the electrified rail. A sub- |way spokesman said later that \sparks apparently ignited grease, and dust. * * te “F was looking Queens, T'd run up to Grand Central. ‘(Grand Central Terminal in Man- jhattan was the next stop.) T went Great Salt Lake Has New Bridge 12.6-Mile Span to Cut 43 Miles Off ‘Frisco to Ogden Rail Run LITTLE VALLEY, treated at hospitals out the front |window,”’ said Nicholas Aldorisio, | 9G. # bank clerk from Beechhurst, “and I saw this little fire} jumped onto the tracks. I told him) Utah (UPD—| “Women and children were! said John Kulas, 57,| a Manhattan shipping clerk. | People were coughing. Older ipeople were down on their knees| praying. Some passengers lay on the floor, where the smoke was’ not so thick. The lights went out when power was shut off leaving only the dull) glow of the emergency lights. * * * | Severa! passengers got out and walked back to the Queens sta- cor tion, about a 15-minute trip on on the tracks. “The motorman); , tried 2 re GSO bu ~ van People began opening windows! stopped. The motorman anc land doors in an effort to get air but the conductors ordered them to keep them closed, since they only let in more smoke Finally the trains started to move. The next thing people knew, | they were being helped off at! Grand Central. Police with port-| able oxygen units gave first aid to the coughing passengers, many of whom collapsed on the subway) Find No Wrongdoing} by Retired Officers - ‘said. ‘“‘Influence—what is if? When jis it bad?” j ' | His main hope for the inquiry, Hebert said, is that it will result jin legislation to clear up the; am- WASHINGTON (AP) — Chair-| |biguity of the aii situation, Iman F. Edward Hebert( D-La). of. a House Armed Services subcom- ‘Cops’ Weren't There (UPI) Th t } investigation ha&n’t yet turned up _ VERGENNES. Vt. rt ae There wasn't a single ‘“‘cop any cases of undue influence by! g,ound when 175 graduates of retired military officers on de-|\the FBI Academy held their an- fense contracts—and may never! {nual convention here. They said do so. |‘‘professionally trained lawmen “We're dealing with something | arent ‘cops’ any more; they're both _nebulous and _elusive,” _™ law enforcement | officers.” SPECIAL RECON DITIONED “Rebuilt by Curt's Appliance Using Gur Own Parts” Guaranteed Attachments Included . $1.25 Week Free Home Demonstration—OR 3- 9702 Complete —_ and Repair Service on All Cleaners! We Sell What We Advertise! , CURT’S APPLIANCES ‘ 6183 Jameson platform m, WON Grell] Molds hial tt ee espe Genuine Automatic ZIG ZAG A train ride between San Francis-, co and Ogden, Utah, usually more| ‘than 700 miles, is about to become | CLAIMS HE WAS LOST — Harry Kennedy looks at a map of Denver after he claims he came down out of the hills to look at a tet NR aad MORTGAGES the big city, and got lost. Kennedy came equipped with his, mule to be an old time prospector, he also said that he was just celebrat- \43 miles shorter. | The short cut, a 12.6-miles ‘and * Pay Off Existing Mortgages 12 to 15 Year Terms FREE APPRAISALS") "iouns's pay 24 HOURS A DAY Free Consultation Service Ask for Mortgage Department Big Bear Construction Co. 92 West Huron Pontiac (Advertisement: ‘Advertisement: ~ Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain’ New York, N. Y. (Special) — For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, stop itch- ing, and relieve pain — without surgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another, ‘very striking improve- ment” was reported and veri- fied by doctors’ observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or re- traction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all — this improvement was main- tained in cases where doctors’ observations were continued over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thor- ough that sufferers were able a problem!” And among these sufferers were a very wide va- riety of hemorrhoid conditions some of 10 to 20 years’ standing All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- gents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne*)—the discovery of a world-famous research institu- tion. Already, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. This new healing substance is offered in suppository or oint- ment form called Preparation H.* Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H sup- positories or Siwparation H ointment with special appli- cator. Preparation H is sold at all drug counters. Satisfaction a a | C. Vaughn of Akron, Ohio) opens this way: | earn, finally, Ohio, to Rep. William H. Ayres (R- “Dear Mr. Ayres, I am 8 years old and I am very sorry | to trouble you.” Petricia plaintively writes that some time last May she checked out two books from the Maple Valley Public Library in Akron—“The Happy Prince and Other Tales” and “Wicked John and the Devil.” Now tragedy: Her puppy chewed the corners of the books. “But the pages were undamaged. The puppy was not to blame,” she writes. Conflict: “Mrs. Vinepaul and Miss Coleman (the Ubrar- jians) said I must pay $6.70 for the books.” “Daddy said I must work and pay for these books to teaclk me a lesson.” * The righteous way: washing breakfast dishes, $5.00. Cruel reverse: The library said the $5.00 wasn’t enough * * “IT am getting 15 cents a day for * mowed lawns and swept floors ¢o she paid the $6.70 because they were government prop- erty @nd “would be destroyed.” “Please sir, is there something you could do that these books could be given to me. I worked so hard for them. I have learned my lesson to respect other peoples property, and I will never forget it as long as I live.” Plot thickens: Ayres worte Akron head librarian Rus- sell Munn, received a reply from Munn that he had no authority to sell the books and besides, they cost $6.70, not $5.00. Happy ending: Ayres ordered the books from a Wash- ington bookstore. Patricia should get them soon. And guess what the bookstore here said they cost— said the Air Force had _ satis- |Lacin, Utah, a 102-mile distance of | |which 31.5 miles went across the . Land Contracts ; WASHINGTON (UPI)—This is the story of a little girl, | lake. " ow Have Reasonable Equity | a librarian, a puppy dog and a congressman. | The ecer treatie, built on 2 bed | * Low Interest Rate A letter written in pencil on ruled paper from Patricia | of solid rock, cost $49 million and © required four years of construc- | ies work, The top of the trestle | ja about 18 feet above the lake | and 38 feet wide. ; To conquer the quicksand- like: |pettom of the Great Salt Lake and | reach a solid base, more than) '16 million cubic yards of ‘material was dredge. This created a trench 175 to 480 feet wide and 20 to 35] feet deep. Thirteen barges, some as long /as a football fiel, were used to fill| | the trench with rock and gravel. | The earth fill is covered by rock \loosened in a series of dynamite explosions, including a 1,069-ton| ‘blast in August 1957 that is con-| {sidered the nation’s largest non- | Thar's Gold in Them © but Patricia was told she coludn’t have the books even if | ‘atomic explosion. Thar Bags This Year BOULDER, Colo. (UPI)—Gold | rado—two bits’ celebration. It’s the idea of a Boulder en- gineer named Kent Schneider, who panned the dust from what's left of an old mill, mixed it with what he admits are a “few impurities’’ and packaged the stuff in small plastic bags which he sells for 25 cents. a quarter’s worth of merchandise. earth | dust is legal tender again in Colo-| worth to the sack) —as part of the state’s centennial} i |Portable Sewing Machine “Tony” carrying his prospecting gear. Although Kennedy claims | rock causeway across the | for Home Improvements | ing Me Oueeds ‘Rush to the Rockies Centennial’ a bit early. bears cg oer ae wife il penis . a _ S$ . ig kL | s and CONSOLIDATION of DEBTS | by SAVE °30” = ——_ ‘ ame + . * * & te Improve Your Home | Cong ressman sy mpathtic The new causeway divides the We Do the Work , ‘lake from Promontory Point on the, . ‘east shore to Lakeside on the west! % Consolidate All Payments | Little Girl VS. Librar jand replaces a 56-year-old wooden =o —— a Save All That tnterest Money trestle that helped link Ogden with: Ps it sake | ® Sews on Buttons i @ Embroiders ® Appliques Regularly Sells for $89.95 NOW ONLY... | Does All This Without Attachments! ® Makes Buttonholes ® Sews Backward and Forward ® Automatic Bobbin Winder ® Sews Over Pins and Needles ® Mends and Darns $59” to make such astonishing state- | guaranteed or money refunded. | $2.50 each. . ments as “Piles have ceased to be Reg. U.S. Pat. OF nts | Scluweiler aio) flees the gold NO DOWN Ph F ' | | lin each sack is actually worth 26) ia Besides eliminating the squash |cents, arranged for business es-! } (ADVERTISEMENT) Congressman | court and indoor pool, estimated |tablishments throughout the state) PAYMENT FEderal to cost nearly $250,000, Reuss |to accept the bags in exchange for 2 \Squashes Plans | 3.7114 } HERE’S THE TOTAL SELLING PICTURE AVERAGE WEEKLY ATTENDANCE AT US AND CANADIAN MOVIE THEATRES EXCEEDS 47000,000 ADMISSIONS A WESBK. IT ALL ADDS UR HERE'S THE TOTAL DICTURE.. TO FIND OUT “WHAT'S NEW?” AND WHERE'S IT PLAYING?” MOVIE FANS TURN TO THEIR DAILY NEWSPAPER EVERY DAY, READERS PREFER ADVERTISING. IN NEWSPAPERS, FIND IT CONVENIENT AND RE- WARDING TO “SHOP” THE ADS. FOR ALL ADVERTISERS \ THE TOTAL SELLING MEDIUM /§ THE DAIL Y NEWSPAPER! THE PONTIAC PRESS — 7 fon Air Base Frills’ - day Force over what he called ‘‘cost- in Wisconsin. said he had been notified that \first child — 2 girl — about six! factorily explained to him other facilities he had questioned. These included a Turkish bath and massage room, Hi-Fi shops | and bowling alleys. WASHINGTON (UPI) — A_ ongressman reported victory to- in his battle with the Air y frills’ planned for a new base iLike Mother, like... | \OLEAN, N. Y. Rep. Henry 8S. Reuss (D-Wis.) Donald Neuland gave birth to her CABINETS " Scheirich Bronze Glow Birch Finish Stop in and see our display. of Scheirich Kitchen Cabinets Today © INC. EE Lumar: Buithors SUPPLIES «FUEL ou N SAGINAW ST. Pontiac I Mich Tee FE4-25211 @ | (UPI) — Mrs.. |= United States lumber production jfor 1958 was an estimated 32 billion | = = | Open Tonight ’til 9 108 NORTH SAGINAW 12 of IN ¢ H CUITING HEl¢ NO MIXING OIL AND GAS xHTS RECOIL s i the Air F 7) ill build , PEOPLE IN SEARCH OF sites ‘ ~F — court net an in- ‘hours before her mother, Mrs., THROTTLE ON HANDLE 9 ENTERTAINMENT SPENT =_ HH] Wa Ov Py ; door swimming pool at Bong |Lawrence Keller, gave birth to) Se Le a Rca ogc IN 1957 Air Base. Both projects had ‘her 1th child, also a girl, at St.) OVIES. aroused the legislator’: s ire. \Franci§, Hospital. 3 Hi ? 4 CYCLE ea aaa Tae aa ener ene = me . eis CHROME La ry ENGI POWER MOWER CLOSEOUT! STARTER AND HANDLES YOURS for ONLY A fa Lifetime guarantee! Jumbo 3 H. P. 4-cycle Clinton engine with recoil starter and finger-tip control hand- throttle! Phone FEderal 3-714 108 NORTH SAGINAW / ) i Kalamazoo Pro Captures State Title With 285 Tommy Watrous Shares Second Position With Barnum, Zakarian GRAND RAPIDS ® — Dave Hill, a slender 22-year-old assistant pro from Kalamazoo, played steady golf through a 36-hole final round grind yesterday and won the 37th annual Michigan Open golf tourna- ment. * * * Hill, who played on two state championship high school golf ve Hill Wi eS ee of re WL es ene. teen, = \ i SS, J , ee 2 2 x * * oe _____ THE PONTIAG PRE ‘Michigan Open ~ k kO*® Hayes Jones Scores 110-Meter Hurdles Victory - PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — The} Olympic hammer throw champion! greatest all-around athlete in the Harold Connolly by Russia’s Vasily world is a Russian, but the men's, Hademow, the sree s - ond team of the United States still is Place in the hop, step, and jump the greatest track.and field power. | by Ira Davis of Philadelphia. The two day track meet Saturday) Hayes Jones of Pontiac ran away from his closest compet- and Sunday ended with victory for the American men, 127-108, and itors Lee Calhoun and Russian The United States went into the Sunday half of the men’s meet with a 59-47 lead and nev- | er faltered. The clinching points came in the 1,600 meter relay when anchor man Eddie Southern who won the 400 meter run on Saturday, ripped off a 46.2 sec- MONDAY, JULY 4 x * * U.S.Wins Despite Decathlon :10.3 seconds on Saturday and the 200 meters Sunday in 20.7 sec- onds. The U.S. men won all running levents up to 1,500 meters, where 19-year-old Dyrol Burleson of Ore- | gon continued his march toward | world fame with a 3:49.4 eyelash |win over Jim Grelle. The Soviets L- | ’ = \ % A OWN ies 4 A defeat for U.S. women, 67-40. ’ The combined score was 175-167) in the Soviet’s favor, but the! U.S. considers the male and fe-| male events to be separate. Regardless of the score, dark- haired Vasily Kuznetsov proved | | Anstoly Mikhailov after he cleared the final hurdle in the sprint to the wire in 110-meter event. His winning time was 13.6, Calhoun, the favorite, was | second, Record honors also were evenly, divided—Parry O'Brien of Los An- ih tinea "ares ta. fron tee os all long distance events. . . The only two U.S. victories in Ray Norton of San Jose State,, women’s events also were in America's’ new claimant to the | sprints, Barbara Jones of Chicago title ‘world’s fastest human,” was, taking the 100 meters and Lucina the only double individual winner.) Williams of Nashville, Tenn., the He took the 100-meter dash in| 200 meters. 20, 1959 HAYES WINS HURDLES — Pontiac's Hayes Jones (far left) clears the firfal hurdles of the 110-meter event which he won for the United States in the meet against the Russians in Phila- delphia over the himself to be the No.-1 track | teams, won his biggest purse, star of the world. $750, in finishing three strokes ahead of runners up John Bar- num of Grand Rapids, Joe Za- karian of Detroit and Tommy Watrous of Birmingham. Playing cautiously, Hill had a morning round of 71 and posted a geles eclipsed the world shot put ‘record with a heave of 63 feet,| Only a drenching thunderstorm) 215 inches; Russia's Tamara Press that hampered the last three events) pettered the women’s shot put mar kept Kuznetsov from breaking his! with a toss of 55 feet, 63% inches. own world record in the decath-| Neither mark probably ever will be) lon event yesterday. The Rus-| recognized as a world record—| sian ace was 74 points ahead they were better than the listed) of his own record pace going into world marks but not as good as, ligers Limp Home for 13-Game Stand AP Wirephoto weekend. Jones ran away from Lee Calhoun, center foreground and Russian Anstoly Mikhailov (right) in the final sprint to the wire. His winning time was 13.6 seconds. From The 72 in the afternoon, finishing the) 72-hole tournament with a 285 total) over the 6,374-yard Green Ridge Country Club course. * * * Barnum, defending champion, Zakarian and Watrous each had 388's, good for $416.67 in prize mon- ey. , x *« * Hill, who finished fourth in the event at Atlas Valley near Flint) last year, started his afternoon round with a 34, two-under-par for the course. | He bogied the 170-yard 10th | hole, fidbbing a chip shot, and also picked up a bogie at No. 12 where he hit his tee shot against a fence and was forced to chip out by hitting a shot against a fence and was forced to chip out by hitting a shot left handed. But from there on he played it safe al] the way. * * * Play yesterday was marked by) the disqualifying of Wally Burke- mo, former National PGA cham- pion from Detroit. Burkemo called the disqualification penalty on him- self when he signed an erroneous scorecard, * «* * Burkemo’s lith hole score on the card was a par 4, but he had three-putted and never noticed the error until] signing | the card and turning it in. * * * Watrous, whose father Al won the State Open title six times, turned in rounds of 73 and 72 yes- terday in gaining a share of the second place money. The top 20 scorers and money winners in the 37th annual Mich- igan Open Golf Tournament: Dave Hill, $750. Kalamazoo ceee sens oe MOT2-T1-13—285 Tom Watrous, $416.67. ? Birmingham An .» 6T-76-13-12—288 gen Le gh oe Pte ran Bee e ees T3*T3T1 Tl Joe Zakarian, $416.67 ~ Detroit .............. 75-74-70-69—288 Moet — $300 75-71-17 WON on 0's siawswaene ess -T1-72-71—26 A-Bob Zimmerman, ‘ : Jackson ...... os. ss. M4-T0-76-T10—200 John Dalrymple, $262.50. Detroit ......0....00, 12-77-10-12—291 Gene Bone, $262.50. Grand Blanc .......... 70-73-71-T7—291 83.33. Grand Rapids ... ....173-16-71-72—292 Tom Talkington, $183.33. RIDE occcesenisccs 13-16-@1-12—292 Ro: on $183. "tad DoS Cone ean 15-13-71-73—29 = Markham, $130. : oy ae eeaceee 16-75-76-66— active Conroy, -” Birmingham .......... A-Hermie Miller Jr.. ———~. G prance 1T3-72-14-14—293 rand Rapt William Zyistra, $95. ‘an pids .... ..15-75-73-72—205 14-T5-14-72—296 Ernie Forgner, $95. Sault Ste. Marie . me are A fae. 1 Tan PIGS ceciccss 5-76-71-74—206 John White, 7 Adrian » 14-15 -T2-15—296 A—Denotes amateur. ~ Doctoring By DR. CARY Le game!” has confided in me that h learn to hit the ball right. I can sympathize, because I have felt the same way myself. What I think golfers in this frustrated state of SSDNA AE a tat aii nobody — but nobody! — | ever really conquers the game. Golf is really a game of misses, Three or four real- ly fine shots per 18 holes * is about the most that _ even the greatest experts ever hit. The rest of the shots are, to some degree or What you must do is THINK on the golf j swing., : : Overall improvement in ia way—and also more pleasure in your game. PATIENT’S COMPLAINT: DIAGNOSIS: That's true of us all. TREATMENT: Many a temporarily frustrated golfer game because he is convinced that he will never really mind fail to realize is that — provement—not perféction. Realize that you're go- to hit some bad shots every round, but try to make them fewer and less costly. Try to improve. the way course, as well as the way those three events, but then fin-' ished seven points shy of the mark With 8,350 points. x *« * “The weather prevented it,”’ said, ‘Gabrial Korobkov, coach of the Soviet squad. ‘‘He will do better the next time.” The top U.S. rival to Kuznetsov, former world record holder Rafer Johnson of Kingbury, Calif., missed this meet because of in- juries in an auto accident. But Kuznetsov looked yesterday as if he would have beaten even a healthy Johnson. As expected, the Russian wom- en scored a 67-40 triumph in their meet against the best U.S. girl athletes, Last year, when. the two. nations clashed in Moscow, the Russians combined the point scores of men’s and women’s events (illegally, ac- cording to the U.S. claim) and claimed an overall victory, 172- 170. This time, if they chose, they ‘could make claims of another “overall” win, 175-167. x * * Korobkov hinted at such a claim when he said, ‘“‘we won the corn- bined meet mainly because of the women.” Final figures on this year’s meet and last year’s were strikingly similar — both times U.S. men won 14 of 22 events. Russian wom- en won six of 10 events at Mos- cow, eight here. , The surprises were about even- ly divided—the defeat of American previous performances by O’Brien) awaiting official recognition. x * * AP Wirepheto SOVIET ACE — Vasily Kuz- netsov (40) Russian decathlon ace was individual star of the U.S.-Soviet track meet in Phila- delphia where the American men whipped the visitors, 127- 108. Kuznetsov finished seven points shy of the world mark by scoring 8,350 points in the decathlon. Yanks Out By The Associated Press Just when you get ready to count the Yankees out, they pop right back into the thick of the Ameri- can League fight. A week ago, after losing an en- itire 5-game series in Boston, they jwere dead. On Friday morning 72-14-73-14—293 they were very much alive with! son. /a series sweep ver Cleveland. { | The magic of Early Wynn and Bob Shaw gave Chicago the first two games of an important week- | 'Stengel’s office door. | x * * But the Yanks knocked the lid Your Golf MIDDLECOFF ; “Tll never learn the e fully intends to quit the : 5 other, misses. keep on striving for im- your golf score comes this © ‘| game Still Cant Consider of AL Race |off the coffin Sunday by sweep- ling two from Chicago. The ex- | Plosion knocked the White Sox out jot first place. The Cleveland In- ,dians, who had been eased out of ithe lead by the Yanks, regained '‘control’’ by .001 percentage. New /York is 5% back. | This should teach people a les- From the looks of things at |this stage, nobody is going to jromp off with this American | League pennant until late Septem- jber, Each club has a vital weak- 75-72-73-75—298/ end series, Once again they were ness ..73-73-14-75—295 | Teady to hang the crepe on Caseyy | x *« * Stengel found help from unex- ‘pected sources in his Sunday | sweep, ending a streak of eight ystraight Sunday defeats dating ‘back to June 7. In the first game jit was 43-year-old Epos Slaughter, joldest active player in the majors, hitting a pair of two-run homers in a 6-2 victory for Whitey Ford. + \In the second it was Eli Grba, a ~|6-2, 200-pound rookie from the all day. * « * The rain that left them slipping and sliding around Yankee Stadi- um in the late innings, gummed up things at Boston, The Red Sox nipped the Indians in the opener 6-5 on Frank Mal- ‘|zone’s double with’ two out and called because of rain as Boston came to bat in the ninth. and Miss Press which still = Eastern Swing out both Ford and Grba, but Chi-|! cago did not score an earned run|£. interrupted and __ finally |& Nets t Victory The. annua] Hall-of-Fame cele- ‘bration takes. place today in |Cooperstown, N. Y., where the es in8Contests Maxwell's Sunday Hit, Not Enough to Prevent 2-1 Loss at Baltimore DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Tigers limped into town foday try- ing to pick up the pieces before opening a 13-game home stand to- morrow night against the Wash- ington Senators. The Tigers ended an eight-game invasion of the east yesterday with a 2-1 loss to Baltimore. Even slugging Charlie (Paw Paw) Max- well couldn't pull the skidding Bengals out of their current slump. Maxwell came through with his 10th home run. of the year —clearing the right field fence off Baltimore starter Billy O'Dell in the fourth inning, It was his 2ist round tripper of the year and a cut a two-run lead given O’Dell in the first inning. Neil Chrisley delivered a pinch- hit double in the seventh off Oriole reliefer Billy Loes, (O-Dell re- tired in the sixth because of a) ae: ~~ the pickoff play works with Vic land applying the tag in the 7th PICKOFF PAYOFF — Vic Wertz of the Red Sox is too late sliding back into first base as Pirates and Kansas City play an ‘exhibition game. Zack Wheat will ‘be the 84th star, to have his name placed in the “Hall.” * * * Jack O'Malley, of St. Francis College, is the 7th player to sign his 1959-60 contract with the De- troit Pistons. * pe * After an absence of nearly two years, professional boxing returns to the Detroit Olympia, September 25th. * * t= Detroit police regained their tug-of-war title Saturday but lost | the track and field championship to Toronto police, 81-77. * * * | Sally Sharp of Birmingham and |Joe Grace of Lathrup Village com- bined for a 77 Saturday for a two- | stroke victory in the 15th annual ‘Plum Hollow Mixed Invitational golf tournament. It marked the |4th straight year that Miss Sharp has shared the title in the selec- tive drive — alternate shot event. * * * Olson-Voorheis Drug outscored Pankey’s Hangar Grill, 13-11, and the Lakeland Barbers defeated Ryeson’s Market, 5-2, in Water- * SS AP Wirephoto out and the bases loaded. Pitcher Gary Bell rifled the ball to Power. The Sox still won with a 9th inning rally, 6-5. Power of Cleve- inning with two blister on his pitching hand) and | Frank Bolling singled in the third! Saturday. for the only other Tiger hits. But it took Baltimore 40 minutes to get the final out. Loes retired Brooklyn-New York Rivalry Flourishes Again Maxwell and Chrisey in the) ninth before the game was delayed by rain just as Lou Berberet came up to bat for Red Wilson. Berberet ran the count to 3-2 before popping out as the rain started again. A ; F By The Associated Press _ Baltimore got to Jim Bunning for! yi. just like old times for the its two runs after two were out in nog gers. Duke Snider and Gil So $A lis Satie ‘singled Hodges are hitting home runs. and stole second. Gene Woodling | Clem Labine is winning in relief. weleeayens oe Triandos lifted ®) And an important series with pop fly behind second base. the Giants is coming up next. Harvey Kuenn, Johnny Groth The old rivalry that flourished in and Bolling converged on the ball. Bolling made a swipe as the ball have lost little of its vigor trans- threw to the plate. But Pearson Angeles and San- Francisco. was across and Woodling scored all the way from first. Bunning gaye up 7 hits in absorbing his eighth loss in 16 starts, Ray Narleski relieved Bunning in the eighth and gave up one more safety. O'Dell received credit for his} sixth victory in 13 starts. A—Doubled Walked for Zernial in 7th; C—Bunted| one beg ores into force for Miranda in Tth; D—Called| Baltimore 2, ee tia cau out on strikes for Veal in 8th: E— peace oa ho & Grounded out for Bunning in 8th; F—| Cleveland. 08 innings, rain 000 100 900—1 SATURDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore és Wasa siste w wee 000 00x—2| Kansas City 10, Washington 3 E—None. PO-A—Detroit 34-5, Balti-| Cleveland 7, Boston 5, 13 innings more 27-9. DP—Bolling, ‘Veal and) Chicago 2. New York 1 arpa aboot (unassisted); Loes and Patou 5, Detroit 2. first game twi- oyd. roit 4, Baltimore 7. & ; Detroit 2. Baltimore 0, second game. night Peer diccongs Chrisley, HR—Maxwell ODAY'S GAMES O| No games scheduled O'Dell (W, 6-7) a : rie * ar TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE |Loes .... .........3 1 © 6 2 1)New York at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Bunning (L. 8-8) ..7 7 2 2 3 3| Washington at Detroit, 8:15 p.m. Narleski ..........1 1 9 Boston at Chicago, & T—1:55. A—8.886. NATIONAL | Midgets List Point Champs It was trophy day at the Wol- _ » 6 0 0 6 re eed U—McKiniey, Soar, Chylak and Sun? | Baltimore at Kansas Twievk a Pet. mers: Won Behind San Francisco . 52 a — Los rr ey wae 3 a ro 7" , Milwaukee : : tsburgh ..... 48 43 527 4 5,000 Watch Races ae St. Louis “4 : a Cincinnati: ..... 0 So 444 «(11% Philadel: 54 393 «6 ia 35 s YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 8, Philadelphia 4, first game Philadelphia 3, Los Angeles 2, secon ame, 5% innings, rain Pittsburgh 3, San Francisco 2, first — San Francisco at Pittsburgh, secon st. Lous 9, aay a eo Pontiac. Alex Kujawski of Hamtramck was 9-year-old vic- tor; Eddie Ross of Detroit the 10 year olds; Terry Allen of | Sah Franc! a Livonia in the 12-13 bracket and | Em's, Chesgo ft Bobby Thomas of Detroit in the | *- Louis 6, Milwaukee 5. nisht 14-15 bracket. ( Eastern Standard) Nearly 5,000 fans watched the bos Ape redale (its) vs. antoneli day, : : j . Louis & p.m.—Hobbie (10-7 midgets race and the only driver "ve. Brogiio “co ie casualty’ was a bee sting treated by Dr. Charles Bowers of Pontiac. Second rower (34). ee ia at Pittsburgh at) a coded by completion of cuspened” cm a. ; ti at Milwaukee 8 p.m. 1 half schedule begins . area Sunday August 2nd at the track. {os "Angeles at San Francisco 3:20 p.m Los & bounced up from the ground and pjanted 3,000 miles west in Los The Giants’ National League) Expect 150 in OCBC Regatta Like Old Times for Dodgers ,lead measured 2!2 games with the only two innings before it was,work. Eddie Bouchee’s two-run second place Dodgers coming to, postponed because of the Sunday double gave the Phils a 3-2 second town Monday for a two-game ser-| curfew, game, cut to 5% innings by rain. ies. x «we * Milwaukee continued its tail- | Pittsbrgh shaved the Giants’) Los Angeles gained ground al-|spin, losing its sixth straight. as ‘lead a half game Sunday when though it had to settle for a split St, Louis mounted a 16-hit attack {Bill Virdon's eighth-inning home at Philadelphia, Hodges’ ‘run beat the pace setters 3-2 in run homer and_ Snider's ‘bleheader. The second game went'er 8-4 behind Labine’s relief homer, Don Blasingame had four runs with two doubles, * * * minutes in Wrigley Field before nati and the Chicago Cubs had When the APBA rejected an ap-! entries will be plication for a July 26 outboard, classes. regatta at OakJand County Boat) club, on Sylvan Lake, club offi- taken in all | It took 5% hours to play the three rain delays interrupting the ratta is a one-day affair, start-| Regatta is a one-day affa battle between Vern Law aed Sta ; : ing at 1 p.m. July 26, over an}... ‘ oermae a“ maeniiaee hw Cials moved to the younger Racing oval coarse ot two-and-a-half miles. | Miller. Pittsburgh led 1-0 after Yost 3b 3000 Pearson rf 4120 Outboard Drivers Assn. of Ameri- mpi. 5. sparture’ { f itwo innings of the second game Kuenn cf 4000 Boyd Ib 4010 oo This is a departure from OrME! | hich must be laved Maxwell i aii) Dropo 1b ces A ce (RODAA) for fons ven layouts, designed to bring the fast| ‘pee ry = aye : f-c'rs'ly rf2010 Wo ling If 3120 say rue { Behind) «: * a action nearer to the spectators. |, Bes omer clinched the Wilson c 3000 Triandos ¢ 3012) cieveland 30°" a seg e™é) “The APBA,” says John Ben-|” , regatta ball is set for Satur-| 5st game for the Dodgers as it eeeree erg ee eee chicane -$1 39 367 — |son, chairman for the regatta, and! gay night, preceding the races |came with Jim (Gilliam and Snider A 1b. ¢ @ © 0: Revinsen 0 3 0 1% Rew Yorn 4% 4 505 5% |OCBC commodore, “wanted us to4+"Q¢RC clubhouse "\on base, They ‘started strong in Veul he 1008 Obed p20 0 0] Wanmetn 43 47 478." operate the inboards, so we had” priverg will compete for total tM Second game, but the Phils i 000 me ; . >. | “ ate D-Lepcio 10 : 0 Mirepts = -s 0 o| Kansas City .40 49 449 10% jto make another mov e. Our re awards of $1,000, split into 3-places got to Johnny Podres for three Bridges ss 0000 C-Pilarc’ Boston ......... 40 830 «646444 °«I tt » ganct d by th : Ibi s while Tayi Philli unning p 2000 Creqi ss 0000 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS {sate 2 now fancumied Ny SC for each, event. ee ee Narieski p 0080 aIGSe vox & coats < ceomad, tale Benson said that all entries are te ed effectively in the clutch- | Washington 7, Kansas City 0, first game; The speedboat test here will be of the ‘‘Alki Group,;* their fast) ~°;,. \ : Pate vod “yd yet icon ae Pe 2 fe 2 Kansas City 6. Washington 5, second: ee Vinegar Bend Mizell won his | all outboards, and all seven motors using special fuels. . | ford Junior Baseball League games three-. for a 9-5 victory. Curt Flood drove ~ | blast in three runs with a homer and — Brooklyn and New York seems to the first game of a scheduled dou- helped the Dodgers win the open- double, Ken Boyer hit his 18th * hits and Bill White drove in two About 30,000 fans waited for 90 . a doubleheader between Cincin- * to be postponed because of rain. — 3, sécond game, 1) d| An interesting race was that | classes will be raced, with many | Among top pilots, coming from of the midwest's (Region Six) Canada, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio> drivers expected to be on hand. Illinois, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Benson said a field of 150 or Wisconsn and West Virginia, will be more entries is anticipated. Post Ken Saunders, of Detroit, RODAA i ——$ >_> 7 |commodore, and Harry Demski of Midland. ° Other regatta officials, besides WLYA Skippers Switch Boats \secretary, Robert Bullard of De- troit, both Region 6 officials: John Pemberton (OCBC), gxpunds; Jack races for Watkins Lake Yachting docks, and reagatta ball, Don Kelly Assn. skippers found many shifts (OCBC). ~ in positions. Bill Wells, London, Ont., in three Delhi, Ont.,; Phil Barbour, IIli- ‘nois; Ralph Dowling, Cleveland; Clint Gieth, Ohio, and Nels Kirtz Benson, will be Fred Hershey of Detroit, chief timer -and starter; in Sunday Race ‘Skelton (OCBC) manpower: Ken Sailing in light winds, Sunday Peterson (OCBC rear-commodore) iclasses; Jerry Kerns, West Milton, | between Dave Green, sailing \Ohio, (3 classes); Jack Dertinger, Glenn Fries’ lightning, Jo-Dee, | and Fries in Green’s boat, the Green’s Dream. Jack Berlien won the race in Vava Boom, with Green second. } , j rere: | WEEKEND FIGHTS In other races winners were: OEUR DALENE. Sache terry Lewis. Snipes, Ray. Frankel in Bottoms, 235. Spokane. knocked out Sandy ‘Up, Neil Wheeler 2nd in Little "4,193", Francisco. 3. a. : ‘HOLLYWOOD, Calif —Auburn Cyptiens, Faster, 3rd Art Hoover in Guy 128, Los Angeles, iutpointed Billy Thomas, Duffield’s G-Whiz. _Thistles; Don, NORWALK. Conn. — Chico, Veins, 156, * 2nd amiord, Conn i oy r A i. by with H Gill Sd ged | eae MRES-Oriand pa ta, 136 wi arm an an »! Ss —Oriando Zulyeta, ‘ wage ; , 14%, Carl Kreitz in Kritz-Kraft, Ciba. end Jain Gine, 134% itop drivers. 126%%, San ‘ancisco, 10 \ Zannoth' in Seaweed. ord. Comp. Argentina, | drew, of Elkhart, Ind. are among the. S80g- llth at the Braves’ expense but had to leave the game after seven ei Rw first game at Pittsburgh with = innings because of a pulled back * muscle. Marshall Bridges held the fort although touched for homers . | by cock in the ninth. Konchis and Boykins Hurl Shutout Games side Royals, iseven-hit pitching of Fred Konchis ‘in City Softbal] League action last night at Beaudétte Park. The game’ iwas a makeup, from a July 6 'rainout. \ | All three Stadium runs were scored White’s solo homer igniting the ,rally. Walt Travis hurled four-hit iball in defeat. | | In a wofmen’s e at Northside Park,| Katie Boykins twirled a two-hit shutout as the CIO Local 653 feam of Pontiac ‘trounced the Flint Herald Exam- | iner club, 9-0. Margaret Liddy ‘paced Pontiac's 12-hit attack with va homeér and single. | . behind the steady Eddie Mathews and Joe Ad- © | Stadium Ibn shut out the Lake- 7% in the 6th inning with Ray - bition contest © {of THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 20, 1959 dé. 4 - Wert Awaits gm Gangsters Gun [| —-—— "Mad Dog Killer, + Ve tino ye Beer Distributor}; oy Wee Charge Missouri Youth With Slaying of Former County Judge, Girl | | Near Death in Chicago; Indicted 2 Months Ago’ by Federal Grand Jury Open End q : , \ CHICAGO (AP'i—A beer distri- > ibutor indicted two months ago by ‘a federal grand jury lay near death today after being gunned idown in what police described as Gp sage 'a bobbled attempt at a gangland- ‘ style assassination QUAKER, Mo. ‘AP) — A coro- ner’s inquest and a murder war- rant today -await a 19-year-old youth accused of the “mad dog} slaving of a former county judge and a teen-age girl Rebert Carr, Washington Coun- * * * ty prosecuting attorney, said a! | Victim of the attack Sunday by We ar . f = - . . . € * * first-degree murder warrant will jtwo gunmen, their faces blacken- abe pre oud to offer these tr uly be filed today against John Gump, jed in disguise, was Joseph Bronge, open end mortgages. This is w described by Sheff Thomas b 50 of suburban Melrose Park. He I gag 8 i | What Alien as a “hard boiled punk.” is the only person indicted to date they provide: * * * by a special grand jury which has Carr said Crump’s 14-year-old been seeking possible links be- ' - Sanlice lokn dwat - Davis. tween organized crime and beer 7 La U t . ah i « “ R: would be charged with delinquen- distribution } Cc) Police Chie! Marvin Giles of . . | “Autnories . Law Main S r wha kad tives Mi te oer cence all cases 2 16 E. Lawrence 407 Main Street ifirst of the year in which speeds e SA 4, Cy | utive sets of twins. She was too, S_= Ny, 4% a . . busy caring for her own four con-/of motorists were clocked by squad| = ASYS 4416 Dixie Highway, DRAYTON. PLAINS ra) | secutive sets. cars. Mrs. Hendrickson was unim-| The sheriff's department discov GEN EY DRY CLEAN ERS ° | pressed when told that the odds of ered it has been using a squad 12 W. Pike St FE 5-6107 such a thing happening were about|car in which the speedometer was Pick- and Deliv Park N 100,000,000 to one. “I thought it'12 miles an hour off. Sek Babee oe Seer Oot Dent ‘ o but Kroger has 5: hot dogs... @%-%” Plus Tp Vile Stamps BULK SKINLESS Who ‘but Kroger has 5¢ Hot Dogs? Nobody . . . Yes, make your own for a nickel 7 . . . here's how! There are a ten Hot Dogs to the pound at 3!/c each and eight Kro- SAVE = ger fresh baked, sliced wiener buns to a package at I!/, ¢ cents each. This enables you to have the 5 cent Hot Dog. A tasty n' economical meal 8-CT. LB. to serve anyone ... any- PKG. time. KROGER SLICED WIENER ¢ | Monday ey Tuesday Special ! Made & Tuesday Special : CLEANED PAN-READY CHICKEN : YOUNG TENDER CHICKEN | 4 bre t WITH . 49: Legs: Thighs: 39 reasts *: FRESH HOMOGENIZED \ Ye-GAL. LIBBY'S YOUNG TENDER TASTY Borden’s Milk ae 3 by . ROSEDALE 303 £ ~ Peas BRAND CAN 1 0 Whi FRESH SLICED 20. : hite Bread 2 oe 39: ° CHUNK STYLE SPOTLIGHT FRESH Koxsren TAR KIST 612-07. & rue Force 2 DHS “otfee.. is 53° CIGARETTES | be FROZEN REFRESHING REALEMON Popular Brondk: Comal, Pell Mail, WinrenPeos (oo Lemonade « | LIBBY'S FLAVORFUL TOMATO. {) | . | > | | : , 1602 ay OC i uice st 7 We reserve the vight to limit quantities, Prices and items effective at Kroger in Detroit and Eastern Michigan thru Tuesday, July 21, 1959. ‘\ = A oo | | | me | Stock Prices Recede Slightly NEW YORK (® — Stock market} prices receded in moderate trad- ing early today. Steels and motors paced the retreat which lopped a few Gents tory worker was held today for in- vestigation of manslaughter and} leaving the scene of a fatal acci- dent in which veteran Detroit news- | paperman Cecil Betron and his | wife were killed Police said a car driven by Norman Glover Saturday side- swiped one carrying Betron, 59, and his wife Jessie, 57, The Bet- ron car spun into a concrete abutment on the westbound Ford Expressway. Glover was arrest- ed more than an hour later three miles from the scene. Betron was a feature writer for the Detroit News from 1925 to 1952, when he retired and became news editor of the weekly Dearborn In- dependent. At his death he was news editor and feature columnist for, the Dearborn Guide. Of Italy’s, one million licensed drivers, only about 40,000 are women. ‘MARKETS [Rain Weakens The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown zoe brought to the Farmer's Market by growers and sold by, them in wholesale package lots. | ‘Quotations are furnishéd by the |Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of! Friday. | Detroit Produce lagainst a young father accused of! drowning his infant son in a creek, ‘to get even with’ his divorced! | wife. j Det, Pau! Montgomery said Gale! ‘Henry Schall. 27, unemployed De- troit roofer, admitted slaying his two-year-old son Gary Saturday. The baby’s body was recovered ifrom shallow water of a creek in Trenton, * * * Montgomery said Schall wanted “to get even with’ his divorced iwife June, 25. The couple was idivorced last month. Mrs. Schall The father had weekend visiting privileges with the baby. The continental Divide- in the ‘the futures prices of those com- charged nonsupport and cruelty.) Grain Futures CHICAGO, (AP) Reports of | weekend rainfall over fairly large‘ areas of the major corn and soy- bean producing areas weakened) News in Brief Best Carpet Cleaners, Owned , and operated by Jim seeiee, Rs number of years ¢é one of Pontiac's cleaners. Quality clean peting, rugs and furniture. Free estimates at your convenience Call ‘Eugene Saunders, of 121 Henry Clay St., reported to Pontiac Po- lice early Saturday that he was held up at gun point at Bagley and Wesson streets and robbed of $75. Kenneth Hoskins, 21 N. Paddock St., reported to Pontiac Police over the weekend that: his ‘home was burglarized. Nothing was reported missing. Burglars broke into the Barefoot gas station at 714 Baldwin Ave., it i\was reported to Pontiac Police of car- has been notified | iby the Polish government that he |must leave the country this week. * * * The reason assigned involves an erroneous attribution of part of a speech by Wladyslaw Gomulka, leader of the Communist Party in Poland. A dispatch which Johnson filed last Thursday from Sosnowiec, Po-, land, erred in quoting Gomulka as: saying that President Charles de, Gaulle of France “‘may be com-| pared to a dog who barks loudly . but is nevertheless only a tooth- jless dog.” ient at Warsaw, MODERN WOOD Yet, it’s true. | | is only $8.40, insurance for * * * etteck rewults in are included at no extra cost. At No Extra Cost Immediate payment of $250 it polio strikes. Payment of on. edditionsl, ‘$250 in. event the polio key shares. A handful . sae eRurrs modities today on the Board of | over the weekend, Nothing was re- ° Ae ‘ae s d in : ollar of Reeverrts 5. No B 12 pts. ......... a Trade. ported meth, ou e downtrena, (Cherries sour, 16 gts ceeeesscls © 2 ss ffs ; Al : n a i ined: tant Cherries, sweet eae wide eonininl’o ac ou : pen a Of upon “ cent a { the downswing sustaine s . fe QUS. ....ceseeeees $25, bushel within the first severa . G r MW Etee saocosescsos 62 . : - - week's market decline, touched \Raspberties. ouek uaa so9'Minutes while wheat adv anced | Ex NBC TV Executive off by the national steel strike ‘Raspberries Red. 24 gts. 750 about a cent on a good demand ‘to Run MSU Station and fears the shutdown would VEGETABLES which appeared to include the | be lengthy. Beans. greep. Wal, DU... .... $215, most active mil] buying in several | EAST LANSING (#—Brice How- : Beans, green. round, bu 3.00 | gays ard, a former NBC television pro- Among the steels, both U.S. geets.” topped ‘bu is ‘ ducer, has been named raid or Steel and Bethlehem sagged aboutBeets. No.1. doz bchs 8 Private advices said the rain- Fentine Press Pheio | { Michigan State Universi ‘ . a dollar. Republic Steel, Youngs-| \Cosece. We, t dcs coe 2-79" fall was a soaker in parts of the THE REGAL COURT — Selected from present patients at the Sanatorium's former patients Sunday. Left to right they are: caisnnal celovigin ciaton WEEE town Sheet and Tube and Jones’ caspase: Curly. bu 175 drouth area where it was needed | the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanatorium, the above King and Irene McIntosh, Louis Dorris, Queen Pat Carpenter, King Robert Hoctive Sent. 1 S enon Ne & Laughlin fell fractions. \Cabbage Sr Sprouts, ou 2 00 ie At some points it measured ; Queen and their court reigned over the annual homecoming of Sees and ae Brown. e hen nA + Hunter wholes Motors followed with Ford andicee eae) bchis vores go Up te an inch. : — a : . Wh A Mt jown cl Se Celery ay BL 100) a ; serves as manager and director of merican Motors down Close hi Ric Celery, doz stks ‘90 Wheat was 7s to 1's cents a broadcasting, will continue in the dollar. American Motors, which Corn. Sweet 5 doz — 1.50 ) higher ; i : : l . g cucumbers, dil. Fancy 1-39, bushel higher after about an hour latter post. slumped sharply at e openin Cucumbers, Pickle, bu 525 July $1.87; corn ‘ss to 4% lower, ye phe. it orreros. eq Howard, former executive pro- on several large trading bok cee ae ee aes * 3 July $1.2412; oats '4 lower to |ducer of the NBC educational tele- rebounded a bit later. {Kohirabi, doz bchs. ........... 190 higher, July new type contr Aci 18 Mi hi vision projec a 90 higher, ’ ’ l r project, has been a lecturer x *« * poione dis ides eee ee vq 675%; rye %%4 lower to \%4 mage Tr, ives in IC gan - at MSU since September 1958. Rails, whieh worked steadily | Farsicy. moet aes 20 July $1.27+2; soybeans unc hanye , snes ac “900 to %4 lower, July $2.20', ; i lower last week, generally contin- [Feppers eee PR one 2.00 a le ) By United Press Internatiogal jat the Oceana Herald in Shelby, | | There are approximately 800 ued to decline. Southern eee ee wee reas ib. bag ey : : Traffic accidents du r-i-agy the was fatally injured early yester-; | astronomers in the United States. og ae eee But neginee ie da a Grain Prices Waterford Board Will weekend claimed 14 lives “afd 4 day ‘when his car ran off a road | Dominican Labor Leader sneak eae noel alias oe ral all took modest losse adishes.) wilt) cont AGO G : ms drowned, for a total of in Benzonia Township of Oc : , [Rhubarb autdoer dos behs.....4. «0 CHICAGO GRAIN pete = 20 2 ‘ ownship 0 eana | : New York Central crept a notch) S™urarP nutcenr 198| CHICAGO, July 20 :AP!—Opening Consider 2 Major Items i8 deaths in the state. ‘County and struck a tree. Believed Instrumental. higher |Squash. Summer. 42 : 100 grain Toni h / * y | : R | . P li 4 : 1 ost at ers a Tamaties. hothouse’ 8 ibe. ...>.--- 00 "Wheat May ris. Ot Tonight's Session Two persons were killed in each, x *& * |; IN Relaxing Folicies |Tomatoes. outdoors. 14 Ibs. 2:50 jhy 1.86" Oats ‘old type f four . te ident ac-| 4 = ' | “ New York Stocks Turnips, bu. P 150 Bep . 189'4 Jly : 6542 of four separate accidents, ac-| Donald Estep, 21, Imlay City, . Li i t . DY. ....e8ee. > > . 1 s ' . on ‘0 o * ej¢g F; . - “hiewe ’ zs ' (Late Morning Quotations: eum osmee ; Mar Lone ae _fpew OPE) When the Waterford Township COURTING for eight of the traffic died Saturday in Flint's Hurley) NEW [YORK (AP) —The New Need This Figures alter decimal point are eighths GREENS a Mae mp nie wile aie aed Pi Board meets at 7:30 tonight victims ‘Hospital of injuries received Fri-' , York Times said today the mys- b N 1, b : $1.75 960 Cro} 0 ec BB" . . a > naresk cn Air Reduc 686 Jones & L156 Collard, No 1. bu 225 Jly *) 79%, Mar 70% a zoning change and blacktopping) Cecil Bertron, 58, news editor day night when his bicycle was terious death of Dominican Labor Valuable Ase oon isa.7 Kennecott lca we we el born ae 1292, of a parking lot behind stores on) of the Dearborn Guide, and his ‘struck by a car on M93 near Im-| Minister Ramon Marrero Aristy Allis Chal 315 Kresge, SS 30 Sorrel, OU ....... seseeeeeeeeeeners 200 Jly 1.25 Dec 132'2\Dixie Highway will be major items, wife, Jesse, 56, were fatally in. |!ay City. The driver of the car|ended’ a ‘long, lonely struggle’’) Alum Utd onto Lobe & P84 eee chard. bu. 238 Dee Lae tara ‘drums on the agenda jured Saturday night when their Said Estep did not have lights on by the progressive minister to lib- Brochure o* & ss 7 : » : ad ud co fens ae $02 Libby McN&L 12 Turnips. bu 2.00" Mat aes DeEThy Dee ote 900 | A request to rezone five lots in car Was forced Into an abutment ar pao Pope ; ‘eralize dictator Rafael Trujillo's ea Au Cyan * 603 Pigg @ 3 SALAD GREENS 7 the Huron Gardens subdivision’ on the Ford Expressway in A reure etroit ire Depart- regime. Ae water ‘e Lone 8 Ge. sy aimecarie, be erent eine 9 00 Will Deluge from residential to commercial Dearborn. Police held Norman Ment captain, Edward Beitinger,! Marrero and his chauffeur were] Here's news for 4 out of § T +3 wee 5 SCGrOs, VU. .-.+.---2e- ee esener-s % : AS N Gas 3 Lorillard. ' an Lettuce Bibb. vk sowldge vise seco 1% will be discussed. Glover, 34, Detroit, for investi- = _ ape ae eh Posed pamed a _— Let in| ate There's a valuable and Am News 6 s. 5 Lesecenseccncwes att is hee . car veered into ight pole after|the mysterious crash o eir au- | informative brochure that’s j ‘ae’ 19.7 46.1 Lettuce head bu ...... eonntoacan OL k M : ation bf manslaughter in the fa- ure that’s just Am Tere se Manning. : \Kewuce. eet, bu. ig SUC y otor ist The one block of tots fronts o accident. . striking another auto in the rear tomobile on a mountain highway. | out, especially prepared "ae Anaconda pot gen Ss, | Romaine BU 28 oe ceeee es ie Wi th P t Voorheis Rd. between Pioneer . a at an intersection. no details of the crash. | fathers. It is Life of Virginia’s Apes Co 313 pose ¥ a Poult df I resen Ss and Tilden streets. If approved, Mrs. Virgil Byrne, 32, Grosse Danny -Allen Ott, 7, Saginaw Tad Szulc, Times correspondent Protection Check-List. JOE pre 30, Mergen_Lino 60.4 oultry an ggs | it would be the only commer. Je, and her father Jeremiah L. Seal eae ms = Bae wae ne who was forced out of the Domin-|| CORNICK, Life of Virgina’s rep- c 7 a ’ = "eh _ ec rici . , | “ Balt & Onio 452 Mpis Hons 142 | ner an ae ie ae aia ST. IGNACE (UPI) — A lucky) ¢jally-roned block in the area, Fuller, 77, who was visiting here Sue ccuudmereats rind ye ‘ican Republic Sunday, reported|| esentative, would like to pro- th Steel is R uly (AP) —Brices P > 70 7 - : a in S > sbur s h . . . 5 : , Boeing Air... 341 Minn P&L .. 343 per pound f.o.b. Detroit for No. 1 qual- eaotorist will be aeluzed iim iets) The zoning change has been ap corn :bis Bore in St esis co County, Police said the boy {rom Miami that Marrero, 45-year wee ou this procera. 16 ip Bond Strs ... 226 Monsan Ch 22.5|ity five poultry jtoday at the Mackinac bridge. right a te Fla., were killed Saturday in a y- ie boy | ld d labo ial simple, but thorough, way of Borden . ...++ 79.6 Mont Ward 48.7 Heavy type hens 17-19; light type) 7 l shicle to Proved by the Wate rford TOWN: | oo-cae-collis Frie Township "aa into the path of a car on ld newsman and labor specialist, hecki ' int ji Borg Warn 44. Mot Prod 65 hens 9-11 Leavy type broilers and fryers, ne =6two-millionth vehicle to : = ; wo-car Collision in Erie Township was convinced Trujillo's regime| checking every single point in Briggs Mf 10 petorols Brass 284 s% ate ote _fes. whites 18- ~ —— cross the span linking the upper ship Board and Oakland County \of Monroe County. Police said their M65. could weather the crisis now fac your family security plans. It ee mules 1982 Nat Bise ... 524 breeder turkeys, small type (includes and lower peninsulas __ since’ oon Commission. t car was sideswiped by another’ Marvin C. Schuark, 15, Mt. ine it only by becoming more lib-! om yen) ecactty what you Budd Co ao et cern BY es es Beltsville Whites) 10-23. ‘it opened in November, 1957, is ex- or more than a year business: ayto on the Detroit-to-Toledo Ex- Cleme d should. know — and do — to "* 9g. Nat Dairy 53 . ; 2 emens, drowned yesterday at era n agi pear H | 232 Nat Gyps .. . 585 DETROIT £GG8 |pected to reach the-bridge about Men in the area between Frembes pressway. Kelly's Beach on Sqyare Luke in| 1 and wiping out spreading] protect your family’s future. Can Dry 20.6 Mat] Lead .. 136 DETROIT. July 1, sar) — Kass 1. ©. ©. | noon. street and Seeden street have been kt ¢* as Oakland County, Officials said the! teen among high officials. | a h Can P 29.5 entral . . 28.1\Detroit in case lots federal-state grades: | é Th to beli re’s no~charge or obligation 3 Norf & West . 22 Whites—Grade A, extra large 40: large) . attempting to have a_ one-acre oe ; — . nae “ ere is reason to eve Mar- Oe ae ; Capital ofr! eS Sam AC 1 alse. Whites—Orage A. extre laree Cab ©The driver of the milestone Ve- varkiitg lot_blacktopped A Grand Rapids couple, the par- youth fell off a paddle board | irero may have looked. on himself\f for this interesting brochure. ‘ é « om e . “e j vs p , : Case. a 323 = Pac ot $2.3 large 31. sade ~ Ae S hicle will get more than $2,000 ents of three children, were killed into deep water He didn't know | as a possible leader for the re- JOE CORNICK would like to Se im pf 32. Ohio O11 él 40.11/38: medium 28-31; small 21. Grade B,| worth of gifts, including a year's | They have finally collected §5,- Saturday when their car skidded how to swim. |public if Trujillo's regime col-! gid eee | ee aaedel Telephone Ches & Ohio . (it Pac G&El ..” 61.6) “Total weekly receipts of government supply of gasoline, a refrigera- | 350 toward the project and the oUt of control after being hit in’ Nine-year-old Larry P. Leonard, | jansed. him today. It's valuable. It’s Cities Sve... nn Panh Ep! ae a ereeed eae ea 8.655 cases tor, a set of whitewall tires, a | township has agreed to pay the the rear and struck a tree on Jackson, drowned Saturday in =) The Dominican regime is under free. ploy Param Pict .. 474) Whites—Grade A, jumbo 38: extra case of beer each month for a | balance of the $11,000 praject. bese Rapids’ South eagh oa vic- Cut River in Roscummon County’ strong pressure from opponents at "153 arke Da 44.6\large 3349-34; large 32-34: medium 27. | , tims were identified as John Ru-| Coe ie 407 Penney, JC ..113 2. Browns—Grade yh gumbo, 38: extra| year, a five horsepower outboard — Osficia) action tonight is expected ae hed es Joey Ee jwhen he stepped into a hole while|home and in Cuba, where a num- Colum Gas a4 Pras =e ok targe 32: large 31-32: medium motor, $150 worth of hunting and ito get the w ork under way immedi , at, F Their eve a children | 4 ber of anti- Trujillo men have tak- Cam bw 8 Leng gee 38.1 Livestock | fishing equipment, complete '- | ately ‘were also injured in the or ash. Dr. Vladimir Illic, 30, Royal Oak, jen refuge. Cont Can 47.1 = | surance coverage on the vehicle - a“ e eras. drowned Saturday while swimming| In espousing some of the oppo- Cont Cop & 8 144 Proct & G 82.1) . ‘ —— — Cont Meter 11.3 Pure Otl .... 40 DETROIT 5 eas for one year, an electrical ap- (MIO COUPLE DIP lin Lake Michigan at Holland State | ‘sition demands for changes in the i 544 RCA 615) DETROIT. J TAP) (USDA) — : Cont Oleng 235 Repub sti Sl commectelshee, See moderately, Pliance and a complete set of Milford Woman Hurt Another single-car creah claimed | Park. His body was recovered. | dictatorship’s policies, Marrero Bosre pup 635 Reyn Mot inal active. steady, im & clean ting wey aesieesl teae beet as Car Rams Into Tree the lives of Walter E. Lalone, 70,; Rufus P, Sears, 29, drowned made many powerful enemies. = ‘ d ‘g| and standard steers and heifers; utility ‘ E . , Ret Obese 35 eal Dt a 52-6 Steers and. heifers 21.00-24.00: utility) Lawrence A. Rubin, executive _ ~o ee a his wife, Beatrice, 54, Mio. Nate Friday po Wash- | However. he en ee ee Doug Are Ge Saieway St ... 37.1 pallial a nad eanpers and cutters secretary of the Mackinac Bridge Mrs. Ada Allen, “ of 603 Eliz- They were killed Friday night on tenaw County. Sears, a lieutenant | to Trujillo, sear the 66-year- Jow Chem: Pi sie: Ob 7 | “ .< : . > . j . j mm, ‘- Ce Pont 254 LES e 24.7 steers under, 1109 Ibs. ey stener ere Authority, said motorists by the abe A St eailiom: ish isted in poor M72 near Kalkaska when their car} in ‘he Air Force, was livi ing in old dictator the. cong best per at Kod || (035 Shell | Oll ..- 78:2] choice 25-50c lower: standard and good/hundreds converged on the bridge condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hos-|missed a curve on a hill and Ann Arbor while attending sum-/$0n to run the country. a ad j4 Socony ....-. 43 pee ee ee tiers steady: | during the weekend when it was|Pital today with chest and rib in-/crashed into a tree. poet ett classes at the Univer-| There were some indications, ' a fe Mus a a Ms : 2 | choice steers uader 1108 Ibs 3282>- 29 80. 80: | ‘disclosed that the two-millionth jurie q pattered in an auto accident) Charles ¥J. Rogers, 67, Bridge- Sity of Michigan. He was a na-/Szulc said, that Marrero succeed- Emer_ Rad by eso | several lots and joads early | Saturday ort, died last night when he tive of Norfolk, Va ed in persuading Trujillo to relax, Erie RR 13.7 Sperry Rd ... 2511/1100 Ibs 27.50- late: good to flow! crossing was approaching. . ; port, a iast’ nig when he ' : pe: 4 Ju 4 A 7 50.6 choi 6 r j { ‘ pe oe me) ; ‘ | Biesear 14> Std Ol Ind || 641] 94.0026 98. uttitiy "zs 00-24 00: "etoiee| But the heavy traffic volume ©: akland County ot s Dep- fell from a_pickup truck driven his policies a bit, | rood Waem $02 Sd SU. | goad dor fow engen 0 S827 08” santa tiled to produce the two-millionth 4, ven by her husband, Russell Poets fell fon the ton nt Burglars Back Se heedom and siowen ss akan Freevot. Sul 29 Stevens, JP... 32.4) 24.00-28.50; utility | 21.00-24 00; utility crossing on the weekend. oe ee ee ad ie Rogers fell from the ate it ‘ Looks eg ee bed Representative Frueh Tra 978 Stud-Pack 118! x canners and cu — 55. on Commerce road west of turned out of a driveway in @ridge- T k T . work without censorship ause } ; 12.4 2g 1/ 15.00-19.00 —— . : 2 \ of : ay g bec Gen eS $11 Swift & Co 28-1) Vealers—Salable 25. Not enough ot- Bogie Lake road, Commerce Town- port. take ypewriter of Marrero’s efforts. Then strin-\] FE 2-0219 1080 W. Huron St. Gen Elec at) Tex.G Sul 201 fered for @ market test ware the i) swoek There are more than 569.000 ship, t gent curbs were placed on corres. T Gen Fads 24 Textron :..... 3771 \g507? = choice a im i > oil wells i us Ralph E. Ward, 33, St. Clair R ; >| HE LIFE - INSURANCE Gen Mills 105.2 TEXTE car 234 2800: wood | 30.00-34.00: standard 2600- producing oil wells in the US Allen said he was passing an- air, ON Crum a ndents after Szule on Jul 12) Gen Motors 54 5 a - a 2s 30.00: cull and utility 17.00-26.00 They are located in 30 states and ther car and lost c _ Was killed in an accident in po y Gen Tal 713 Trans Wi ste jother car and lost control of the) 4 a : sent a dispatch about corruption Gen Time a7 Teent cen | 364 | produce an average of 12.8 bar-jcar, running off the road and strik-| air County, Burglars who don't succeed at!in the government. COMPANY Ganesco 334 pee Teena ers Esca @ lrels of oil a day each. ting a tree. He was uninjured. William Schultz, 20, an employe fitst sometimes try again and get) Informed sources told Szule f VIRGINIA Joebe! Br 3.4 Un Pac ...:.. 341 D what they're after on their second | |Marrero’s car had fallen off al 0 > i 96.6 Unit Air Lin... ; gece’ 1466 Unit Airc... == attempt. mountain top and that the minis-| Sian eracee i) et cs 3) When Car Overturns liad thin Weekend at the Sarjec\ totes bored nein ton “ue Greyhound ... 222 UpJohn . ... jins this weekend at the Sarjac burned beyond recognition. Mar-| ; Guif 1101 US Lines .... 3: Hersh Choc. 2 US Rub” 36.41 ; ‘Steel Supply Inc. offices, 115'reo was buried with military hon-| a es Holland F .... 13.1 os Steel ; An Ortonville teenager escaped Branch St. | ors i fhoGent 472 vee heal al with minor injuries Sunday after- meee Indust Ray ... 28.3 West Un Tel. 421|Noen when the car in which she Thursday night someone en- Tatand st ae roe , 33-6 was a passenger struck another tered the offices and pried open ; : int eee en ‘ * Wihte Mot - 36 auto and overturned. the ants, bat on was taken. | DISPLA MANAGER Int Nick .... 1018 Yitton, “r5w.. 37a; Wanda Robinson, 17, of 69 Viola The burglars returned a second Y Int Shoe | * 35.6 et aat : | Lane, was treated at Pontiac’ Gen- time the next evening. yous Man ele Zenith Rad | 121 leral Hospital and released. She was * * * MAN or WOMAN yOTQCK AVERAGES eee ith pales Rn yh - They stole an office typewriter. q 6 y 20.—1C oy < yav sor - - t . . eee en come Sauk ighway, Springfielc and a man’s suede jacket. The | Must Have Good Imagination, Be Creative and Be Able to Do 0 15 15 60 s . : A = . Indust. Rails Util. Stocks . : total value of the two items was | Free Hand show Card Sign. Good Opportunity for the Right Net change Lt =8 24 8 Klump told Oakland County estimated at $167 dollars. Party. Apply Store Manager... ¥ 2? 2? . t noon we 3482 so oe aio, Sheriff's Deputies he saw a car Police believe the same bur- Week aro Hoa ee a4 ED stop ahead of him as he drove glars broke into the Pontiac Waste WwW Month MeO 3837 108.8 81.9 1809 east on Davisburg road at about Material Co., 135 Branch St., the ° T. GRANT Co. 1959 High .....3507 147.6 1026 254.0 ¢@5 miles an hour. He hit the same two nights 1939 Low ......3061 1338 03.7 2115) ™ . : 8. : ‘ “ 1958 High | ....3120 1365 95.7 2143. brakes and they didn’t work, he The first time the burglars: Miracle Mile Shopping Center. $. Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. _ 9 iv] by 5 i | aa 1958 Low 234.7 80.9 (72.9 156-6 olated: dragged a large floor safe out the | F after decimal points baby eighths . * and into > yar ‘ | aiaiindiias peHigh Low Noon, To avoid the stopped auto, seh Ge the yard behind | Allen Elec. & Equip Co. ., eas 34 the building, There was nothing of Aaliwin Rurber OS. et. = 18 amp swerved into the westbound value in it. however Ross Gear Co 78 40 @ | Iane, careened off the right front . 7 a Howell Piectric. oe: oT * a1" 12° |fender of an oncoming car, and The second attempt to burglar- Peninsular Metal Prod. Co. * 124 13-1) overturned in a field. No one else se urge The Prophet Co. ..15.2 15.2 15.2 ize the firm also flopped. Nothing Rudy Manufacturing Co... 11.7 11.7 11.7| Was injured, = ou Toledo Kdison Co. i. 163 16.3 16.3) was reported missing. it costs so *No sale; bid an as e ~ To Seek Murder Warrant IPoland Tells Newsman : Hold Man in Auto Death £5, ‘Get Even’ Fathe | little to insure of Cecil Betron and Wife | on "Get Even! ‘ From U. S. to Get Out __ DETROIT #—Police said a mur- NEW YORK w—sStaniey Join. Your Children with — i z -,der warrant will be sought today) ane a : DETROIT —A 34-year-old fac-|@er sw g 7 son, Associated Press correspond- E MEN The yearly cost of a $2,000 Junior life insurance policy if your child is under 5 ycars i of age. “Premiums are slightly higher at older ages. Investigate now the many benefits of Modern Woodmen Junior et NTIE your children. Polio benefits ee rippling ‘atter-effects or’ in death. The error arose through a -mis- translation by an Associated Press eonpers 1 Pla FOR FURTHER Mexican border and leaves the country at 114 degrees, United States starts at 108 degrees, | 45 minutes west longitude on the utes west of the Canadian border. | translator. . . UPI Photo | M. E, DANIELS, CONSTANT COMPANION — Putting their in a‘stall af a raceway in Yonkers, New York. Pitan neoinaree _— Teer 563 West Huron 04 min-} beads together, Nonick Rainbow, a three-year- Susie and Honick are constant . companions ‘States to -be published west of the! _ Mississippi River. @ A : 3 5 \ « old pacing filly, and Susie the goat share supper around the paddock. ‘ Modern Woodmen of America, Home Office, Rock Island, Til. i INFORMATION CALL OR WRITE Dist. Mgr. FE 3-711) | ! / ; | | ij ie Sones Wi sent up a column of smoke visible y | for 20 miles : = * * W n De artment Store The fire spread over the one arre Pp ne story building 10 minutes’ after ; closing time, It attracted a crowd | DETROIT P—A 1 Mo OF i which police estimated at 15,000 fire ripped through whelescle Ils Whol i Department persons department store > hight Mile and R 1 Wa Jack Sarnow, general manager, ren yesterday Fou ipioxes Nat- desfroved 0 ! mich Ol Said damage would run ‘well over rowly gscaped be ih ATTN fee : the air and 4 millon dollars Jim Perry, 35, manager of the diamond department, said the fire started in the carpet de- partment and the houseware and Limit ] Lb. to a , oe oo a i | BUTTER i 49° a ea a 6 Meat Purchase ben : ee a lea cargo lan small appliances section, I sturted fo gather up some of the diamonds and jewelry. I oF seme, but not enough, then ymie body rabbed sleeve and said, ‘Come oan. the whole ool TUESDAY SUPER SPECIALS at BAZLEY’'S | 00714 : * * * CENTER o, | One fireman and one Voluntee: CUT, Lb. c Were overcon by &make Fire WELL men Joseph Sucaet and Ross Bon TRIMMED & Hie iY were treated at tlolv Cross — — Hospital PORK 1 c | PORK 19° NECK 1 cy; | seu PSey Ped txt y erat FEET LIVER ’ ‘S BONES party in Birra mbep itd : eu THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 20, 1959 YOU Way it ARE SEEING DOUBLE looks Specially This is the East's toll roads when you pass a “‘double-bottom q. ‘wo trailers hitched to a single tractor. In use expenses. Thruway authorities report in Western states for some time, the double units culties with the huge units and only are now in use on the New York complaints from motorists ' SEAR’ ae tee wer ty ROEBUCK AND C REDUCED *13 NOW Craftsman Paint Sprayer Designed for Heavy Duty Regularly 82.95 8 8 $7 Down e atomizes ari tk WITT Siliconized Snowhite Enamel 2.25 7 Shop Sears TONITE Until 9! Quart Paint Department. Basement LEAD FREE Ove (os HOUSE PAIN! qe Af ji | i 4 . 4 i ‘ Lj , / ae y +} 1“ é i + | a a Z jm. at J eg 14h 2410 2 — a Berane ei — ‘i 5 ~ — — ~ Snowhite One-Coat House Paint 6.39 Master-Mixed Enamel Dries in Four Hours Quer = 2,19 Workmaster Economy Stepladder su 4.49 Gallon 8 COLORS Beautify With Our Finest One- Coat House Paint Gallon 6” CHARGE IT WON INE, AM mABL PAINT AND RNISH REMOVER Tw i, mee a ‘ MASTER-MIKEL Ow ¥ yy Oe HOUSE PAINT. avd tameal a: Vert <2! | E Quart. 0.277? Master-Mixed Paint- Varnish Remover 98< Quart Ge, i jf guncauinn— = / |} compound § ./ \ han pre fp \, wt a‘ Lf Stop Rust, Stop Peeling with Anti-Rust Finish Phruway, the first time they have been allowed on any of the equipped ea tractors hauling two trailers doubles payloads and cut few diffi- scattered Dale Jones * down the nd through eut Manhattan Takes a in New Yor Manhattan You Just ‘Can't Win directors ; The old Chicago directory had PHOENIX, Ariz. — Fat Phone Book Title 2123 paces, but the Tlinots Bell Martin, 26, was drivins ‘ relephone Co. cut the sive by using street when a mounted wheel. fell CHICAGO uF Chicago jis ced ve columns of listings perv page off a siation wueon, rolled onto the mv to New York the heneor of ha, nsterd ef fo hood ef Martin's car a ing the world’s fattest telephone di Cu roo ett a . the most the wondahield rector listing ibout ore lis in Bevices sufiering a The new Chicago directory has directory c red with 776.000 In Martinewas ctied for 1.779 pages, compared with 1,836: the Manhattan book out a licen ‘of Southerners hand, v driving with- Senate itself, t Seek Strategy — rett M. Kirksen of Hlinois also has urged action; but he said re- cently that any) civil rights bill probably can be talked to death in the Judiciary Committee . by Southern opponents. He offered to join, any, move. initiated by John- son to. Short-circuit the tee, “aS Was done in 1957, and take up for Senate hearing any civil! ights pill the House passes Bill in Senate Group Will Test Resistance to Civil Rights Measures ' . a 9 Packing Still Problem RICHMOND, Va. parking lot here: By JOHN CHADWICK W—Sign in a WASHINGTON (AP) 2 Propo- nents of . civil rights | legislation “Wheri Noah sailed the ocean looked to a Senate Judiciary Com- pine ‘ BES He 5 today for a UP- “He had his troubles. same as off on the’ strategy of Southern vou opponents. “For 40 years he sailed his ark The closed meeting ‘is the first “Before he found a scheduled since a subcommittee park.” approved an abbreviated two-point bill by a 4-3 vote last Wednesday 4 ~*~ *%* * The move to take the measure up for consideration will test how much resistance Chairman James QO. Eastland (D-Miss} and other Southern Democrats on the com- mittee are going to offer to any kind of civil rights measure Two years ago the committee proved to be a graveyard for all such legislation. Congress succeed- ed in passing a bill only after the! Senate voted to bypass the com- mittee and aet directly House-passed measure. * * * Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex) has said he place to SPECIAL alti *) on oa Ring Mountings Beautifully 95 *: expects the committee to approve Carved 14 ‘ a bill this year - The track was cleared for to- |, SS day's. committee meating when me cr . en Johnson’ obtained agreement last \ ee ae cek not to have a session cf the : - ; a Watch Repair Dept. Main Floor Senate Republican Leader Eve- a TT _ Hurry! 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