» Full Delegation . From Oakland — at GOP. Rally — / By JOE HAAS _ GRAND RAPIDS — When the nominating’ sendin of the Republican State Convention. opened this after- noon, Oakland’ County was represented by its full) - quota of 141 delegates. At county caucuses last night and early today nearly all delegates - were present, and the few vacancies were filled by alternates, so County Chairman Arthur Elliot and Caucus Chairman John Wood are empowered to cast a full vote for the candidate for each of the four places on: the state ticket. + j we si arma had + Pontiac Motor After listening to 10-minute ~ Strike 5 eftf| ed This’ was assured when the legates voted to ob-| ~ serve the unit rule, and prevent the possibility of a - Oakland County’s prestige in somesprevious state con- ventions. from eight men seeking places on the state ticket, the Oakland dele- 7,000 Men to Report} Back to Work: on Usual | Shifts Tuesday "| Strike.at Pontiac Motor Division, which started early Tuesday and kept some 5,000 workers from their jobs, was settled last night. tor General was found to be Vin- * JAMES PURZOR MR. AND MRS, LaRUE GULLETT FACE QUESTIONING — Five persons arrested in ious neous raids late yesterday: face horse betting activities here. Right above is LaRue Gullett, deputy city treasurer and his wife, Gladys; top left, Basil Burke, believed ~ to be the chief of the operations; set epereter, ‘ant Jaman Frame, ee ot te mee Be is a gambler. | Four ( Oe hs Are felled _ Basil Burke Also in Roundup Ae as Troopers, Swoop Down on Suspects What law pater? officials describe as a horse jbetting ring doing an estimated million dollars a year business was apparently broken here yesterday after- ipiiem iat 0 Satie ef Oke: by sate: Hocgene: Sungaee. = and police detectives. | ~ Five persons, including ot Pontiac and his wife, were jailed for lavenigntior of violating state gambling laws. - Lodged \ in the Oakland County jail ‘were:. Basil Wo bets 59, of 29 Salmer Aye.; \301 Dick ° Ave., Baits Ae | +1 |i J Clete , “me in a ent a loeb Walled Lake Motorist na < a, First State Fatality of Charles 'D. Apley, 44, "panes Wa Holiday Weekend \ [alias “Whitey,” also of 29 A. Walled Lake “a (RO EO questioning in a crackdown on sigalg nines | nr Ge and below Charles Apley, gas , 31d Car Sought iin Accident uit Deputies Say” ‘Witness! - Might Clear Up. Crash |: Injuring 2 Policemen ‘21’ Statement Shows: Accuser of show “Twenty-one” have Seigtlik to deve i's come (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) ~ Alint Youth i is Burned in Holly Arson Atfempt i A 17-year-old Flint youth was critically burned in ‘Holly hip in an arson attempt -— this morn- ing,”according to. Flint State Police. - * Detectives inivestigating the incident today identified _-the youth as William - Mosley, -of 3369 Whitney). was not on the level. mient, signed by Stempel March 7, 1957, to New York) County Dist. Atty. Frank 8, Hogan. x x kk Enright quoted Stempel as say- ing in his written statement, “Any questions or answers which I gave were entirely, my. own and no, aid or assistance were rend- ered to me by Mr. Enright -Dan Enright, the producer nor any .of his: staff.”’ : ko & *® Stempel was quoted in news- A. : ‘ Press will Publish ‘ $t.. He ts reported pear : in. é paper this week as saying he was death” in Hurley Hospital, One Edition Monday ‘leoached om answers before he Flin : ; se a on the air.and then was told mn an accomplice, . _— oy ae rhist"S question that enabled ‘2. Mosley and Robert Guth, 23, of 610. Patrick St., Flint, fired a Vacant two-|/ story,..wood. frame “house shortly after midnight Sad a prank, "+ fs (Care van—Doren to ‘eliminate ned statement issued . yesterday by Enright said that “other evi- Contradicts Himself ~ NEW YORK (# — Producers of the ssibveace quiz statement signed by Herbert Stempel, a former con- testant, denying his recent allegations that the show Daniel Enright, co-producer of“Twenty-one,” yester TV ae feleased an 18-month old = 3 z & 2 not directly ‘involved i phe a he clos The other ofifcer, Brice P. Boyd, 29, of 1353 Locke St:, was treated day turned over the state-+ dence is still béing studied by the district attorney’s office.” The New York Daily Mirror today quoted Stempel’as saying: “Enright told me if I would sign the letter he would get me a job on the TV Se Detectives the deputy city. treasurer rite No Stranger Now 59 years old, Burke ducted by the late Judge Southern’ Michigan at Jackson April 10, 1951 to to Trouble Basil ‘Burke, arrested Friday. afternoon .for investi- gation in_ raids on an alleged.-horse betting . ring, ‘is no stranger to gambling troubles. has @ record of 16 arrests for petty swindles and gambling starting back in 1924. - His most recent, conviction from Pontiac was an out- growth. of the 1946 one-man grand jury probe of the numbers racket here con-* George B. Hartrick.- He} ’ entered State Prison f0F| niet > i a a yet 7 i 4 be : : ss re 4 «ee e “ - Storms Hit Wide Area PRIMARY ‘NOMINEES ar ~ Rapids are: (left to right) Farrell E. «| Semaine frees the thie Onin Senne cuniiined: “mong Osidand Lodge, ~ district. L again a eiodldgte: Congressman William S. Broomfield; Spay ep amyermtcrmp mp garemar nese) mag oem nominated to succeed himself; Mrs. \Hope Gorman for state repre- ..and-who are attending the Republican a at Grand - sentative from the second (Pontiac City) Oakland district, and | for state repre- Allen’ C. Peet Teaeseptative from the fourth Oakland peti Le Facey S : “From Rockies to Great Lakes | of states from the’ Rockies ae the Great Lakes today while the midcontinent sweltered under “The Weather - Fall U8. West Rares Report cloudy and warm ‘teday and tonight. ges age ge and comerew: ; thw miles today, tomight and Rae le thunderstorms tonight : yin Pe est temperature poseting 8 am more hot and humid weather. - ' Hurricane. Daisy blew itself out over the Atlantic, south of New Foundland and its diminishifig ef- fect on the north and middle Atlantic states was clear skies and warm. temperatures. & The damp. pattern along the Northern border. area brought cooling temperatures, but the more pleasant readings were not ts a.m: _ Wind velocity 5-7 m.p.b o : : (as ree S es eS ie gore “One Year “Age i ip Pontiac ture saad . Sdaegeensae aneuatsssiaese “Senthil 338 expected to bring any immediate \relief to the sultry central section ie the country. , , The rain area was expected to; lena eastward jnto .interior sec- 3 tions of the Northest during the day with a few showers ranging): southward into the mid- Mississippi | Valley. | * &« &- s | Rainfall was light for the most 5|part, although some locally heavy thunderstorms Friday night pro- duced high winds, heavy show-|- ers and hail at Winnebago and *|Pemberton, in south central Min- nesota. Hailstones one’ % ‘two inches in didmeter were Feported af Pemberton. . Showers diminished in the south- ern Rockies’ and ih the Pacific. Northwest. An unbroken~ belt of of the country’s Southern half. Most sections from the southern Plains to. the Atlantic, were™ ex- pected to. receive considerable sunshine today and-fajr skies were on tap for..most of the area west. lof the Rockies. f Krushchev A. “Arms Ban Talks jerally,” the Soviet boss- said. & .& ww: = fT i F i TE i rile J cain United States and Britain failed to step also. Both nations had~“slready an ( Khrushchev. said Rissia ‘‘na prejudiced” by Western tests. They “relieve the Soviet Union of. the obligation it had assumed unilat- 3 Ot st Queen ve Father, 3 Sons Burn to Death; 2 count ROUND LAKE, fil. (UPT) — 46-year-old father and three = his four sons burned to death early today when fire swept their one-story cottage at mosrty Round Lake Beach. : The dead were identified as James Olsen, a Libertyville, Il. metal fabricator, his sons, James dr., 16,-Michael,”6, and Joseph 4, Olsen’s wife, Ruth, was taken to St. Theresa’s Hospital in Waukegan, Iil.,’ in eritical con- dition suffering from third de- gree burns over her éntire body. | A fourth son, Robert, escaped ‘by leaping to safety from bis | ‘bedroom, and sounding; ‘the Round Lake Fire Chief Wil- tfam Harrison said the blaze did $8,000 damage-to the frame building. located about three blocks from the lake. Dag, Egyptians ‘to Talk CAIRO (UPI)—foreigh Minis- ter Mahmoud Fawzi said, today U. -N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold will meet leaders = starting Wednesday. The talks;.a part-of the U.N, éxech-. tive’s. Middle East peace mission, will be. extended “as. circum- stances may determine,” ‘Fawzi. an. ae oe aa 3 Sin has. many. tools; but a lie is-the handle which fits them any Faviie: GOP Leader (Eye Candidates Back Four New Faces is Convention Opens GRAND RAPIDS Four new- comers to statewide politics ten- tatively were approved by Repub- lican leaders today for as many State ticket vacancies to be filled by the Michigan Republican con- vention. While Jason L, Honigman, De- troit attorney, and Allen Weather- wax, Jackosn druggist, appeared| ¢ sure shot choices, the possibility et Ot Se Oe be upset in delegate balloting late in the day, 7 °® * * On_shakier ground were Arthur 13, Hannah, Grand Rapids poultry |f breeder aspiring to the. secretary |c of state nomination, and Jehn Vaughan Clements, L'Anse insur- |: ance man, rufining for auditor “ * jeral. Honigman, 54, had the attor- ‘may ‘penersll wartontion ot bet “| wrapped up. Weatherwax, 51, was nearly as strong for state treasurer. Hannah, a brother of . Michigan State University Pres+ The lineup took shape during a series of conferences of party lead- ‘ers ‘lasting into the morning hours. tt + *% * The .huddies were held in the |hotel suite of Paul D, Bagwell, GOP governor nominee, . At about 3:30 a.m., Bagwell told newsmen he would welcome all four. to the-state ticket he heads by virtue of nomination in the Aug. 5 primary, along. with U. S. Sen. Charles E. Potter, seeking re- election, and Rep. Donald A. Brown of Royal Oak, GOP choice for lieutenant governor. Bagwell also put the accept- able tag on Donald J, Addy, 33, of St, Claire Shores, bidding for the auditor general spot and said him if Addy carried his = Mint to | \the floor. _ As -the formal convention open- ing neared, Vincent J. Murray of |Detroit also kept alive a drive for auditor general, although it appar; ently lacked steam, * * * s State Sen. Robert E. Faulkner (R-Coloma) declared he was still in the running for the secretary of .State nomination. Mark Zarbock, 33, of Kalamazoo refused to give up his push for attorney general. With the leading contenders Apia just over 50 years old, it appeared the revolt of youth heralded in some ——— | speculation had fizzled, As he had promised, ‘Bagwell ued his influence. in. the slate making sparingly through the try- ing early morning hours) when secretary of State posed # knott, nen. i Y for State Party Ticket ident John A, Hannah, is 53 and’ "| Clements 45, Aan ae ¢\1,000 advanced on the federal district attorney's office. With tear gas and clubs unable to stop them, \police fired shots into the crowd and was — But : reported leaving and a travel agency official said he feared cancellations by incoming tourists would begin soon. Full Local Delegation lat GOP Convention lican vote is the primary problem. * * * The Convention Resolutions Com- mittee also got an Oakland.County nod for its work. .Our people iseemed determined to present a united front in the campaign and election. They feel that divided een, ra recent elections. It can never be said hel i ‘any- thing emanating from Oakland |* County ‘will create an adverse Re- publican color in the vote on Nov, 4. : Beulah Bureau Is Caught Short $1,250 Missing in Audit] " by Sec. of State Office ‘After Branch Closes LANSING (UPI)—A shortage of more than $1,250 in the Beulah tary of wap ence: Deputy Secctiary of State Bill Farnum said the shortage was found after an audit of the branch office, The audit was prompted by an unauthorized dosing of = of- it was perfectly all right with | agreeing! on a’ Suitable choice 16r) five. a * * * Farnum said the. office was closed last Friday and auditors checked the books on orders from 'the Detroit office. The audit, completed yester- day afternoon indicated $1,251.05 was short and the secretary of state will confor with Benzie County Prosecutor Marion Paul next Wednesday on the question of possible prosecution. The branch manager, Mrs. Don- na Grandstaff, returned to Beulah Wednesday, Farnum said, and of- fered -no explanation for the short-| age., She said she — ‘husband were on & wee neces of -State’s Office Bing if othér reports were des- troyed of mialeia, additional amounts—may—be- discovered ate i = The state would lose. no. money in event the money was not recov- ered hecause the loss w be covered under the oe ng contract, = - \the ‘te in: bilgi” ue ti i g ef operated at the corner of Perry jpn Water streets, Apley was rr. was veresjed doeytly afterwards when he entering ‘the station, ‘All those arrested were taken _—" a struggle, -Lt. Robinson Thé. raids were carried out in a complete air of secrecy under State Police direction. Even Police _jChief Herbert W.. Straley did not ‘The raids came as ‘such a sur-}: | |prise that detectives, after they had -made their entrances, swered several, calls from bettors casi § to. know it their - horse pet eut of business,” Pa- trolman’ Richard A..Navarre, a member of the Pontiac raion | ‘view squad, told a caller to the Gullett five-room brick home. *'who led the raid on Burke's Auburn Heights hide- out, reported —— eo tance fice for questioning. Those waiting to be questioned posed for photog- rr ee On Sept. 7, Embury . Methodist] Church will begin holding two morning. services at 10 and 11:15. The First Presbyterian Church Among _the__first the church societies to reopen fall programs is the Women’s Missionary Union of the First Baptist Church. Members will meet at 11:30 a.m: Thursday at the home of Mrs, Earl Bram- blett, 161 Lone Pine Rd., for a buffet luncheon, 3 Dr. Emil Kontz will report on the annual Baptist convention held in Cincinnati,, Ohio. Mrs. Kontz will lead the devotional hour. ° Mary Jo Clark, founder Mack Laboratories “in Detroit, has recently opened a branch at 256 perform ‘all types of clinical tests for hospitals, dottors and wvaal lab- oratories. Mrs, Catherine Rotirer of Har from — that horse racing bets| made up the great majority of the ring’s business. _Around $4,000 - was taken’ trons persons arrested in Friday's raids, |White Lake Inn, Ormond Rd. and In addition, Robinson said that “every place we hit we ‘got evi- dence of horse betting.” page search warrants were signed late yesterday by Pon- tiac Municipal Judge Cecil B. Mc- Callum. They were also signed by. State Police Detectives Stephen Galat, Thadeush Niewiada, and -|Charles V. When the No. 1 apartment of the »|Apleys was raided, Mrs. Apley-was ill in bed, and was not taken into custody. Betting ee See in the bedroom and dining room. Detectives entered No. 12 Or- a : .a by the Burkes cabinet drawer he ting slips, pari-mutuel tickets, and racing forms. Mrs. Burke, who jsobbed hysterically during the search, Ne hee ee Ls “I'm a gambler,” who handled the questioning. “That's all I’ve ever been.” | Taylor said Pruzor confessed to $50 bets with Apley, with each taking a cut of the bookie cost of placing the bet. Apley also signed a confession, Taylor said, admitting he had been a bookie for the past five years. Both Gullett and his wife refused to answer questioris of detectives. Both City Manager Walter K. Willman and Director of Finance Oscar Eckman expresséd surprise when they learned of Gullet's ar- Picts who under the City Charter appoints all finance per- sonnel for the ‘city; announced “he'll hes suspended until further “T never had any suspicions at all about him. He was always on a a eo ee) ee Eckman ‘said Gutett was moved into now City Treasurer-Walter A: branch office in Benzie“ CountyiGiddings’ old deputy’ job in 1955, has been discovered by the Secre-|when Giddings replaced Murray Third Car Souchh (Continued Freda Page One) “They said today that Venos and Boyd had agreed to meet at the Jackson Bivd., in White Lake Township, after Venos got off duty at 11:30 p.m. Saturday. . times with a bartender_ there I, sald deputies. After a short while an unidentified man a ae aan ee ee who had arrested him at one time, Venos told deputies. was going to make trouble the of- officers," said Hirt. . @&.42 x When, outside, the. officers said the Oldsmobile approached them and the driver asked directions to Elizabeth Lake road and: M59. driver into Pontiac. - About 11, miles east of Ormond road_—on M59 the accident oc- curred. Boyd said that Venos was in front of him and the other car behind. “I looked at the speedometer on i Then I looked in the .rear view the car behind,” Boyd said. “Suddenly there was a thud and across the road.”- Deputies believe Boyt car struck the rear of Verfos’ auto, sending both out of control. Tire marks also show the possibility that a fourth car coming from the the accident. fell to the pavesnent, deputies reported. . Boyd was cows fon his car onto the road shoulder. The un- involved but didn’t stop. crossed the exact point. of impact. |** Deputies are trying to ascertain whether it crossed this spot before, M. Ashbaugh as treasurer. between the cars took place. Martin St, The firm is equipped to) - the next thing I knew I was flying) ; \Churches Set Sheiuies for Increased Attendance. . " BIRMINGHAMEWith” th te ‘indie street and Mise Joann me of vacationer papery esa net Old Court are ee Red Chien Pounds viremia sees, Offshore Islands ‘(Cootioued From Page One) time because of the U.S. interest in Nationalist China,” Brucker tld : newsmen at the airport. Brucker was acéomipanied — Taipei by Gen. 1. D, White, com mander of U.S. ‘ground forces in. the Pacific, who’ will sit in at most of his conférences. The sec- retary meets Chiang tomorrow. . I etre ning US. officials ra a ible Red invasion of . the Nate: off- shore islands over the Labor Day Such a mhove would bring a showdown whether the United States intends ‘to defénd the islands and become involved in combat with Red Chinese forces. the comma Undersecretary of State Christian Rt. Herter, kept. its Far East working at their desks or on call at home during the three-day holiday, Top officials were away as a hew tenseness continued to build ip in the Far East in the wake of -|Red China's heavy shelling of mene Nationalist once . is- in ‘Accident Probe | Arch il a a for minor injuries and released. In-|ing holiday at Lake Ontario and \ vestigating the incident are Depu-|Walter S. Robertson, assistant sec- ties Kenneth G. Hirt and Bruce|retary of state for Far East af- —— fairs; was not expected. back from ew. ke vacation until Tuesday. They planned to talk over old |1,.. decided to draw the line on with they had gone to |°7Y 2geressive expansionism by. flatly whether this meant the U S. : 7th Fleet, now on alert in the: Formosa Straits, would fight to .jdefend Quemoy, Matsu and other "offshore “Nationalist islaid out-. “When the man looked like he posts jeopardae thelr standing as pale GAMDIING Suspect Has Prison Record (Continued Fxom Page One) The officers offered to lead the never saw him except once in 1951 before he was chief.” Burke also was offered employ- ment with a Flint trucking firm ot his release, but he entered — the University: Hospital instead of taking the job. ; Last night Burke, visibly shaken t registered 55 miles an hour.|°Y lis arrest six years and two months after being released from prison for the same offense, told mirror and saw headlights from lice very little, i caulk: ed to talk to his Joos Sy . Burke did break his silence ‘long enough to say he selfs for- eign sports cars for Louis C, Lin- He said he drives an Italian. car registered in the ame opposite direction may have caused! o¢ rinteau’s wife. . James Pruzor, who is charged ro Venos’ car ‘skidded dapeaye investigators with picking up. bets’ and struck a. tree upside down {and delivering’ them to Apley at-- as it went into a roll. The rear {his gasoline station on South Perry. part broke off and the front |street, and referred to as “China-: portion then struck another tree, |boy'’ was mentioned in testimony throwing Venos seven feet into }of Robert P. Scott before the Sen- the air where he hit the tree ang jate Rackets Committee this month. é * * * Scott, former Teamsters official and now-a bitter foe of the union’s t, James R. Hoffa, said i . Pruzor had approached him and , identified third car evidently wasn’t ked him to set up William Hofta; James’ brother, in the numbers Tiré tracks show the fourth car ’ swerved off the road and. then|T@cket in the county. Scott said he. “Letter carriers’ uniforms are a- after, or at the moment the.impact —— of the Union Blue and, Conf : te Gray. Little Rock Board Undecided “s "LITTLE ROCK,-Ark. i — The Little Rock school board today pon- dered a question important to the South and the nation: When will Central High School open for the School Supt. Virgil Blossom. an- nounced the board will decide: ‘Mon- Wrapped up in tits point is the} ’ question of whether Central High opens as a segregated. institution with federal court blessing. | It it opens Sept. ‘ine date previously set. by the board—it ee —-4¢-the-boaAd bet the fall term’s| start at..Sept. 15, the U.S. Su- preme Court may have ‘by. that time ordered Central High to con- tinue desegregation - for a second straight year. |Faubus does not sign the bill, the Blossom . said, is the Saree ‘When Will School Open? th Richmond, Va. Virginia’s pupil Court’s erroneous assumption|Placement Board, which by state school will not open until Sept. 15.|law has all authority to assign For this reason, Chief Justice Earl| pupils to public schoos, had indi- Warren Thursday called for a sec-|¢. cated it may inject itself into the ‘ond hearing Sept. 11 on whether|Norfolk and “Charlottesville ‘inte- Centra] High should integrate im- ox cases. mediately or follow lower court rulings giving Little Rock a breath- kt * * 4 The board was in session here. er. en yesterday when school officials it’ The school board itself asked the| Norfolk told Federal Dist. Judge courts to permit the delay. Dem-| Walter E. Hoffman they were onstrators rioted and federal troops| ready to assign 17 Negro pupils to were called in last fall when nine| white schools. At the conclusion of Negro children entered previously| its meeting, the placement! board all-white Central. . law, It-is prepared to promptly “Thus, if the board stands pat and|in every case in which it has been properly supplied the necessary int ‘ Supreme Court will be confronted] formation to justify its actions. un- with a-ségregated Central davai be-| der the pupil carey law of Viti . Fitguring if the board's, decision, fore it can act. : _ |ginia.” \ 1 genannten = — + AB hg in a la li ec. A . Sia eo ae PONTIAC PRESS, <. Raromall ee UNE. E.WOLOR . Explorer ve (Harness Horses ‘Their Passion > , npc nents Collided: “The first: stage booster rocket | had separated after burnout when a ed. in the vacuum of space] ot one it's little extra thrust, Von Braun "This sped it peso if hit’the in-| strument part of the rocket, knocke|- ing the final stages off in the wrong direction from an orbit. All remaining stages of the rocket had day. fired perf Von Braun, the German-born di- ‘Tot Takes Potent Nip -. DENVER u® — Scott Calahan’s parents stopped in at a used car lot Here to look over some ‘Scott, something more interesting. found’ it in a . can sampled the contents. Scott Denver General Hospital, 3 years old, looked for ‘in it three | cars, He and is in doing pe. well, Here IS a for YOU! i Union. Savers for the years were PAID. Credit Union | Anyone may SAVE in this Credit past 3 4% DIVIDEND. as in institutions of higher y orem W, CORNELL AP Religious Writer se ae rocketry:| Religion is assuming: a larger re toa ee a on place today in, the American edu- most unlucky incident.” cational process. When schools open this fall, mil- At the grade ‘ocheal level, as well or nae ih Wins : ; es is nies esl coleiaed ob learn- B _|weekday ‘‘released time” classes. tor @ tong t -jeducation for the National Council ‘tot Churches. _| Anave in any whole, rounded edu- til the mid-1800s—has been through “It's the answer to a need that a * said Mrs. God-} dard, director of weekday religion “Public schools can’t teach re- ligion- as such, but the weekday program can fill that niche. It’s a way, at last, by which religion ‘ean be given the place it should cation.” An. estimated 3,509 community school systems, with about 3% million pupils; have launched such programs, and the nunéber has been rising: steadily. — years ago, the total was tt a third what it is‘now. < shichiet * tant, ‘Jenin une penne Catholic! organizations each provide teach- ers for separate classes, which are| ~ held in facilities otf school prem of people have felt|ises. thieany tas bene 4 reek lo: eons ee school time, during children of all parents who authorige it are excused to £° te their respective Fels ON. classes, spect said, ‘‘It is essential to these relationships." and out'of the courts, the opposi- ‘ Jafter lengthy ‘litigation and re- “This allows fe diversity and re- for all,” Mrs: Goddard safeguard Development of the procedure has not. been: without friction, in tion baséd’on claims that the sys- cabins: This decision came’in 1952, adjustments, | ~ Milch of. the program’s has come sitice then, with its great- est expansion in the New England jstates, ‘New York, Pennsylvania, Dlinois, Ohio, Thdiana; West Vir~ ginia and Virginia. a found little usage so far in the deep South, 5 es Boys’ State to Be. Shown NORTH BRANCH — Movies of Boys’ State will be shown at, 3 Legion Post No, 457 meeting. The boys who represented the local - It also is spreading through many} / other states, including the plains)” and far West. But ic has|/ | Those ordered to p-m, Tuesday at the ‘American ‘lpost at. Michigan State University ap usa, will attend, Area Trattic growth Lose Driving Privileges | 3s The onsen th tli ; oo weg ry 2 pe OF “five Re a Gers! es Ae i jseparation of church and state. Under, the formula, local Protes- THEATR EAST OF WALLED LAK a DRIVE-IN apis AD MA 4-3135 3—F EATURES—3 = 4—CARTOONS—4 mm Last Complete Show Starts at 10:15. E “Thoughtful Service t¢-Wiltiame St, Phone FE 2-541 24-Hour Ambulance Service ~ pending onthe cirev in this country for restoring re gion to the educational realm — “from:the edge” . Of your seat i" you'll see... The ® DIXIE DAREDEVILS Who Became the HELL FIGHTERS of the PACIFIC! ROBERT WAGNER . Y , Tear. — DRIVE-IN THE FAMILY WATERFORD THEATER Phone Ore’: _3-2683 DRIVE-IN " Cor, Williams Lake ~ Airport Roads—Box Office Opens 6:45 P.M. NVARD \ V WAYINE “THIRD. THRILLING FEATURE! --TONITE mo , a HUGHES PAXsAED , aft THE CONQUEROR prea eee oe ee. —a-— Fa 2nd BIG HIT! MIGHTY IN SCOPE! fee 5.1 = SAT us COMPLETE TS AT eee? 15 3 FEATURES — GIANT CARTOON PARTY — 3 FEATURES BRITE IE BARDOT . r>Z—O-mO / Nigeroes; violent, freak!” r>Z—-a-70 = ZO-uxzm<. AcCoazC The Sensetiona! “SBRIGITTE CaZzc . * | | ZO.—-nunwm< “SIME. NEW SIN ® THATS er ANKOW UN THE WILD PART. Y like it). 7 he —— mos q +) we , alfedh : - ie 4: Lig Kr ‘ —_— BARE-HANDED CAP- TURE OF A MORAY EEL. . ATTACK OF THE UN- ERWATERD LANCERS. THE BONE-CRUSHING fee LEAP. 4 ’ Me iW PERSON a PM ieee ee ae ‘ as ce tem encroaches on the -traditional However, the U. S, Supreme Court has upheld the formula as legal, so long as school: facilities | EXCLUSIVE! f has all the thrill gf _FIRST RUN! Starts S UN DAY “Allied ne SNOWFIRE = Walt Disney hitl” “ amme LOUELLA PARSONS ning Fiore ae fomed peal a fom. e- tein: ten COLOR sree DON WEGOWAN MOLLY McGOWAR*SS “Gnd. GRAND. HIT oi LONDON, The Dog end FLEECIE, The Lamb | SYARAW7éEp with suobY HART © WENDY STUART : ex “ } ENTRY. RULES — “1. Any boy or girl, under 12 years of age can enter. — DRIVE-IN THEATER cok Anes ie THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN io rachel cloeatbend wate M. ae ae A. German Pol | “POLICE PUPPY ENTRY BLANK. | | Bree oe ] »/ PUPPY Ale. RO ee of “Given to-some - -PLADDRESS: .eveee es ely ans are aga Hie ei _tueky gr or boyy Ns20 Anat Be ed Teter Lf tent te cheer te te " aed a : : ° Ve