1A - & oe ee oe ae Tis Veather Fair, Warmer Details page two * ¥ 2 Po . eels ve wee 8 oe es THE PONTIAC PR 113th YEAR xkkekk BONTIRC: MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 25, 1955+-32 PAGES Gyrations Don't Help ~ Gil. PRESET Fai ae ; ‘ a0 © Pae \ hi / /) ; * Bparks uneral “Thoughtful 46 WILLIAMS STREETs 24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE -(riffin A NAME YOU CAN | COUNT ON Home Service’ DIAL FE 2 Sut , Russian newspaperman who didn't ici, ileal nauseam nal (Advertisement) (Advertisement) Sunburn Pain Disappears Smooth Tan Emerges © Without Peelin ¢ or Blistering Science Discovers New Ointment That Instantly Stops Pain of Sunburn... Turns Redness Into Comfortable New York, N. Y. (Special): A leading research institution has discovered a new medical sub- stance that instantly steps pain) of sunburn... and prevents blis- tering or peeling, so angry red-| ness may turn to handsome, com- fortable tan. Doctors know that sunburn af- fects skin just as any ordinary burn does. They also know the| body needs oxygen for healing burns. The secret of this new sub- stance is its astonishing ability to draw healing oxygen and nutri- 342 New side tuning! New power chassis! New clearer lightweight—you can carry pictures! Compact, it from room to room with ease. . self-focusing picture tube. | y ents directly from the blood. stream into the sunburned area. Thus, the sunburned skin heals completely and, except in unusual! cases, smooth tan emerges. This substance is known as Sperti®. Ointment. ment does not sting or stain. It | He is Mark Weinbaum, editor in ‘chiet of Novoye Russkoye Slovo, I | reaghed power. | + * * | yearr ago called by a woman who was plain- ' this morning and she said she'd | said. Sperti Oint- | is now sold at all drugstores for | 98¢ a large tube. Buy Sperti Oint- ment with the amazing guarantee that your sunburn will turn to a handsome tan, or your money is refunded. Copyright 1955, Whitehsil Pharmacal Company 90 $1.25 Weekly . big, brilliant Table Model TV § | P\ : im Now Only 539 ‘No, Money ‘Down! |New: York, Weinbaum, a cheerful Bob Considine Savs: GENEVA (INS)—"There was one come over her to cheer for. Com- rades Bulganin, Khrushchev, .etc. Russian language daily printed in man but a doughty anti-Commu- nist, hasn't seen eye to eye with the brethren since’ 1913 when he came to America. before they Weinbaum remains a key figure in one of the worst propaganda blows the Communists ever suf- fered. One summer mgrning a few) Mark showed up as usual for work at 9 a.m. at his editorial office on West 56th street. He asked if anything was new and it turned out that the only thing an assistant had to report was that the previous night he had been ly agitated. “I told her you'd be jn: at nine be here,"’ he reported, and leff. A few minutes later q plain middle-aged woman walked swiftly through Weinbaum’s open door and said in a terrified man- ner, “I must speak to you. May I close the door?” A gentlemanly soul, Mark shut | the door for her and bowed her into a chair. She was trembling. “IT am a Soviet woman,” she “A displaced person?’’ he asked sympathetically. FAMED KASENKINA “No,” she answered. teacher in the Soviet here. Please help me. My name is Oksana Kasenkina."” “Tama consulate | Communist world that she wrote te the Soviet Consul General tell- ing him of her feelings and rea- * ly sent a good squad to Tolstoy camp and kidnapped her. Back in the hands of the Reds, was happy to true friends, atime 1c pA OCR ET SO ICORI She had been stealthily reading | Novoye Russkoye Slovo since her | arrival in the country, deaths of her husband and son. It had played a role in her brave | decision. Weinbaum arranged for her to find haven at the Tolstoy farm at Valley Cottage, N. Y., and there in what she felt was the fresh climate of freedom, Madam Kasenkina made an understand. able mistake, Her heaftt was so ‘ pulled by a tug. Of the 52 species of fur-bearing | animals in the Great Smoky moun- | tains, those most frequently found are black bear, white-tailed deer, red and grey foxes, raccoon and | bobcats. filled with a hatred bel the ie Vie ? M E er 108 NORTH SAGINAW Beautiful 10-Pe. Maple Bedroom *39 No Money Down! Large. dresser and bed .. . beau- tifully finished in warm, satin- smooth maple, plus two boudoir lamps, mirror, two pillows, mat- tress and spring and framed pic- ture. Chest available. Phone th Russian Editor Is Big Problem to ‘Soviets she had passed through in the , wouldn't permit the Reds to drag, ing imaginable. ree that curious avenue she | ‘found freedom at last. sons why she had fled, He quick: | IN HIDING ‘her second book, And Weinbaum is one of the few who knows just | the frightened woman was forced where, so certain is she that the to give what amounts t6 a news secret police would still like to conference. She dazedly told New dispose of her for the heavy blow York reporters that it was the she struck at their way of life. | Tolstoy group which actually had_ done the kidnapping and that she | be back with her | intensely eager to see that no ‘harm ~ befell The next day she jumped from guests at her window, a move as symbolic Every reporter and camera-wield- as it was daring, Battered and er admitted within yards of the | bruised, she found hserself in the door used by the world leaders custody of New York police, who was given the most thorough frisk- | FIRST OF ITS KIND — Nearing its permanent location off the | |New England coast is the first of a series of offshore radar stations | after the) which will form a part of the U.S. continental defense system. The | 6000-ton Texas-tower-type structure was anchored on George's Bank, | |some 100 miles out in the Atlantic. Soe It gure would be, to interview her on this and that, r back in the consulate, and ar on a fellow to be ticklish. | like whether she had found any The girl reporters and camera, | concealed chivs, But aj] she'd say ladies? Simple, the Swiss -secret | was, “name it does not matter. | police provide a Jady frisker. Tried! Just Sam. Am Feuille (frisk) lady. " STOP! THINK! MAKE ROOM IN YOUR CLOSET Let Us Clean Your. Winter Clothes & Store © Don’t Wait ‘til Next Fall to Find Moths Had a Summer Field Day in Your Closet Be safe. Store your Winter wardrobe in our refrigerated vaults. We invite you to see for yourself and let us show you how inexpensive it really FURS as Low as $4.00 WOOLENS 75¢ Store Hours: To make it more convenient for our customers The Huron Cleaner’s Main Office will be open 7 a. m. te 8 p. m. No more dark initals marks on your shirt collars. a | , ee HUROR DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY ONE DAY CLEANING SERVICE AT MAIN OFFICE Main Office and Plant: 944 West Huron St. FE 2-0231 11 Neighborhood Stores to Serve You Today she lives quietly, writing The Swiss, a proper race, were their distinguished the. summit meeting. Your Shirts Now Finished the catentane J Ultra-Modern Way ~ ‘seen ed,and Bex 4-HOUR SERVICE at OUR MAIN PLANT. We use the therma seal process— 1536 Union Lake Rd., Opposite Giroux _ 4313 W. Walton Blvd. at Sashabaw 516 Pontiac Trail, Next to Coffee Cup, - Walled Lake 731 North Perry at Joslyn 2297 Auburn Rd., Opposite Pontiac State Bank 14 Main St., Clarkston 3005 Orchard Lake at Light, Keego Harbor 310 Mein ‘Street, Milford : 59 S. Broadway at Front, Lake Orion: & The man-made “‘island"’ is being | | ; ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! PRINTS in Rondo? Percale! ‘ Action-Filled Westerns ' Irresistible Juveniles Leafy Florals Neat Geometrics Cheery Kitchen Prints Versatile Border Prints New Frimea Unecks Sharp Stripes Colorful Plaids Rich Paisieys Neat Foulards Conversational Prints Antique Effects Cafe Curtain Prints y, , Stop! Shop! School Sewing Ahead! See bolts and bolts of the newest high-style percales in Penney’s fabric department ... now!Rondo’s an old friend to millions of mothers who know Penney Quality in fabrics! Ins — new nigre have been de-: signed with all the family in mind, from tots th teens... with the accent on prints for the back-to-books set! There are = abo for the nursery crowd, westerns for little two- rather guys...and a myriad of beautiful florals, stri aids for all manner of school sewing. C range fr from cm jant intensities to soft, muted tones ... . which-. Rondo! ¥. ‘ll be oer eo : io! You 7 ai re i, Mah cont | maliies walle to perfection! 35 inches w i ih iii casa BCA A A AAAAADAAAAAALDDL ae - AT PENNEY’S you never get “stck’” with seconds, Bvorything you bey i + voor ae * . % ‘oa ee a nome ee PR ahepainanita In partmen am r aE ee ae eee ys ji go | ee THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 25, 1955 7 ye ate a .— eo 7 Ly fh SUE ELLEN BEASLEY Parents Announcing Daughter’s Engagement DRAYTON PLAINS — Mr. and Eleanor Wright of Eaton Rapids, | Mrs. Willie Beasley of Drayton Mrs. Gerturde Howard of Milling- Plains have announced the engage- ton, and Mrs. Grace Klingsmith, ment of their daughter, Sue Ellen | to John J. Hess. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hess ot | Eaton Rapids. Clarkston. _ The wedding will take place next | year. Area Tree-Trimmer | Injured in Mishap ROCHESTER — Clarence Gard- | Toledo, was ! taken to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital | at noon Sunday after falling from 5 a tree and receiving compound for Pamela Ann Marshal. ner of 2875 26 Mile . Road fractures of the right ankle. Gardner, a professional trimmer was digging a well at. tree - | | Elvira Sickler Is Wed | CLIFFORD—Elvira Sickler and | John McCready exchanged mar- riage vows in a ceremony per- | formed recently in the home of, ithe bride's mother. Elvira is the daughter of Mrs. Mary Sickler of Silverwood, and silk shantung sult with a cor- the valley. Mrs, Verlin Morgan served as | was best man, ; ; the. Clifford _ Methodist ‘he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Er- a s - ord airs | nest McCready of Clifford. Tie newlyweds will reside in Sil. _Te bride \ wore a rose mauve "Verwood. Deaths i in 1 Nearby. Communities John Betts OXFORD — Service for and | Betts, 64, will be held at 2 p.m. | Tuesday at the Mabley oi Edith Thourlby, St. Clair, and Mrs. Home, with burial in Oxford Ceme- Ethel Carr, Bay City; tery. He died Friday. Surviving are four sisters, Mrs. _ Vera Hemstree; of California, Mrs. Friday. a brother, cousin, Mrs. Irene Smith of Im- lay City. Robert A, Shoup LAKE ORION—Graveside serv- /son of Mr. and Mrs, Harry Shoup, sage of white roses and lily of | j ‘matron of honor and John Sharp Signatures A reception followed the cere + ‘Councilmen OK Dwelling Plans Park Owners’ to Reach’ Tonight | Hazel Council : HAZEL PARK—The Hazel Park — issue over multiple, face a showdown | Council meets to-| { controversial | dwellings will /when the City night. | One hundred protesting residents | | hea ard councilmen at last Friday’s | | Lawn Cemetery, Saginaw. She died , Special meeting approve the build- Surviving are twe sisters, Mrs. | | Harold Arthur. Rochester, and a | ‘ice for Robert Arthur Shoup, infant | | feeling —the | ings by a three-to-two vote. Secretary of the Hazel Park | City Planning Commission, Mrs. Elizabeth R. Grant, and mem- bers of the Hazel Park Home- owners Assn. have been circulat- ing petitions during the week- end te have the law repealed, | apartments would attract desirable tenants. The-issue involves land recent- |ly zoned for: apartment use on! of Oxford, and a brother, James, of | of 111 Grandview, was at 1 p.m. | Woodward Heights near the race | ; today at the Evergreen Cemetery. | track. | He died Friday, Surviving are his parents. Mrs. Malcolm Lawrence OXFORD—Service for Mrs. Mal- | jcolm (E. Grace) Lawrence, 75,‘ of | | 16 Pontiac St., will be held at 2. p.m. Wednesday at the Flumerfelt |’ Funeral Home, with burial in Roc he | iester. She died Sunday. | | Surviving besides her husband is | a daughter, Mrs. Charles Cole, of | Ohio. | Pamela Ann Marshal | MILFORD — Graveside service day-old daughter of Mr: and Mrs. Charles | | H. Marshall, of 2889 Central Blvd., | was held today at 3 p.m. at the Milford Memorial Cemetery, Ar- | ‘required and would présent petitions to the council tonight. |}money in taxes and the building litself act as a buffer, separating | district.”’ his home when he tried to retrieve | a rigging rope from a tree which he had looped over top branches, Gardner reached the rope and had started down when he fell from 15 to 20 feet. ‘Band Slates Rehearsal MARLETTE—Plans for the sum- | mer program will be discussed at | the first summer rehearsal of the Marlette Community School Band | this evening at 8:30. Alumnae are | asked to? attend, |the Detroit Osteopathic , Hospital, | | grandparents, |lip Wardlow of Milford and Mr. | and Mrs. |Mrs. Bert Wardlow, | Marshall of Ontario, Canada. rangements were by the Richard- | son . Bird Funeral Home. Pamela, who died Saturday at |is survived by her parents; her Mr, and Mrs. Phil John Marshal, also of, Milford, and a great-grandmother, | of Milford, and a great-grandfather, John W. Mrs Myrtle Neeley IMLAY CITY—Service for Mrs. Myrtle Neeley, 70, were held Sun- | * if she works: hard enough, OPERA NEXT? — Ann Blyth’s vocal coach has her training for | | grand opera. Her successful career | | in pictures has convinced him that, | Elect Officers During jhome of Mr. | D'Arcy. d William D'Arcy was elected pres- | +@ | ident, vice presi- | i dent, Mrs. Grant she expects to have more than the 295 names of registered voters the The City Council. then will be | forced to repeal the law or put it to a city-wide vote said Mrs. Grant. Mayor Sigmund J. Nipark, when contacted, said he would not, change his vote, ‘that the 300 units .involved would bring more the race track from the residential | D‘Arcy Family Reunion ALMONT—The D'Arcy family re- union was held recently at the and Mrs. Ben C. Frank D'Arcy, and Mrs. Lee D'Arcy, sec- | retary- -treasurer. County Births | that gaces southeast will have a sue “Faces - Residents’ ‘Petitioned Protest neighbor, Lots of Weather at New Academy COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. uP |'—Air Force weathermen are hav- { said this morning) jing a part in deciding the locations of buildings for the Air Force | Academy on the 17,000 acre site north of here. Experts at Ent Air Force Base / in Colorado Springs advised archi- tects on ‘building locations to. re- duce heating costs in winter and insure the coolest temperatures possible in summer. “The site is so large there are considerable climatic differ- enves within the- tract,” explains Capt. Richard C. Burriss, cli- matic conguitant in the Con- | tinenta] Air Defense Command's Third Weather Group. Burriss said a 10 degree slope SWELL HEAD—With heads together are 5-year-old Charles and: a 13'4-pound cabbage. The giant head was grown by Charles’ | , Columbia, Mo., Air Force Gets N. B. Proffer, _féred minor injuries when his car -|Ceremony Unites Doris Hildebrandt | and C. V. Rains TROY TOWNSHIP — Doris Ann les’ Virgil Rains in an evening ceremony performed recently ithe Big Beaver Methodist Church. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. _| Township and he jg the son of Mr. jand Mrs. Virgil Rains of Birming- ham. For her wedding, the bride chose a bouffant gown of lace and tulle fashioned with a scal- loped neckline and fitted basque bodice. A headpiece of sequins and pearls secured her fingertip length veil of net. She carried a white Bible mounted with white | orchids. Mrs. Alvin Ballard was matron of honor apd Janet Robertson, Mrs. Phyllis Stewart and Mrs. Louise Kintner. _ Joel Garrett serv ved as best man iiwooo nochs a high school teacher. ny month longer growing season than the same slope facing north. “Sometimes during the year you | will find as much as 15 degrees! difference in temperature between | ‘one part of the Academy site and | another,”’ he added. “You can even encounter this phenone ‘mon by walking 100 yards or less. On a clear night with no wind you may WHEEL AIRS — find that much temperature varia- Deluxe and Standard tion in a dip in thé ground.”’ Models The academy sile is along the foothills of the Rocky. Mountains, with rolling terrain that accounts verted from rear-wheel to ALMOST—Dr. H. P largely for the varying climatic) Pale ee front-wheel conditions OP propelling, or | ee | f ‘ to chair = A A aie . all $-inc Injured in Collision g Jn casers. Swaze suf- | We ae authorized dealers for collided with a train last Friday EVEREST & JENNINGS Chairs and Accessories in Lapeer : Michigan First hid | McQuarter, Hildebrandt’ was nfarried to Char- | Fred Hildebrandt of Troy | bridesmaids were | | and ushers were Tom Stewart, “Bin and Richard Hilde- brandt. A reception for 400 guests was. | held at the Royal Oak Veteran's .|Memorial Hall, following the cere- | mony. + After a wedding trip to Florida the newlyweds will make their ‘home in Troy Township. in! : Two Homes Being Built ALMONT—Two new homes aré |being built in the area. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bowman and My. and Mrs. Robert Stroup both have residences under coné struction. When You Think of Musio, Think of Gallagher's! | YOU SAVE MORE BY SHOPPING | Easily con-| IN PONTIAC | BEFORE YOU BUY ANY PIANO Rent a Betsy Ross or Galbransen _ SPINET PIANO OF YOUR CHOICE $20 Deposit, $10 Monhtly | Cartage and Six Months’ Rental Allowed on Purchase of Piano | Open Monday & Friday ‘til 9 P. M, | GALLAGHER RKSOLVE TO RELY on Classi- fied ads to solve your every day problems. Phone FE 2-8181 for friendly, helpful ad-takers. | Mich. 3 Doors North of 10-Mile | Invalid Needs—Sick Room Supplies | LI 2-3027 JO 4-6847 1621 S. Woodward, Royal Oak MUSIC CO. 18 E. Huron, Pontiac. , FE 4-0566 there | y City TO BUY A GOOD CAR read the;day afternoon from the Lester | Want Ads!* That's where bargains|Smith and Son Funeral Home, are! ail ‘Imlay City, with burial in Forest ! future. are great things, musically, in her | | Mr ‘ Im! A daughter Michels Marie, was born | d Mrs. Bernard Malburg Mr and: Mrs ' parents of a son, Terry Duane. ORGE Automatic WASHER and DRYER Built-In SUDS SAVER at NO EXTRA COST Model As Iiustrated AE 600 NO MONEY DOWN! 2 YEARS TO PAY! Our -Prices Include: Delivery and Normal Installation and One Year Service at No Extra Cost AT WAYNE GABERT'’S y COMPLETE AUTOMATIC HOME LAUNDRY With Full 9 Lb. Capacity With Trade SHOP TONIGHT ‘til 9! WAYNE GABER ' Your Electrical Appliance Specialist OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS ‘til 9 P.M. T21 N. Saginaw St. ee Maaiidete =, cestieony # SPECIAL TRADE-INS, SPECIAL PRICES > DURING JULY! BUY NOW AND SAVE! Phone FE 5-6189 Martin Frega are cy, | & 4 A masterpiece of AMAZING STORAGE CAPACITY! ° Pay EXCLUSIVE! DOUBLE VEGETABLE BUILT RIGHT BINS IN! rage Spa ig bulky v getables * Soaps. etc., byilt in the doors! Bottles and Soaps. chrome-foshioned beovty Sturdy Heavy-Gauge ALL-STEEL CONSTRUCTION. © CUP HOOKS built in the doors! . POT-LID HOLDERS and Extro SHELVES for Groceries, ¢ Black, Recessed Scuff-Proof Toe Space. ARVEL Kitchen Master UTILITY CABINET $1.00 Weekly Space for Linens, Canned Goods, Groceries, Bread, YEARS OF | SERVICE _ P*FURNITURE CO. 361 poets Saginaw Street | 4: from the outside, o reo! “marvel” of space 2 and efficiency on the inside Big Dimensions: * Gleaming Snow-white Finish, Accented in Brilliant 63-in. high; 24-in. wide! Chrome Handles and Trim. Ample Free Parking — Easy Credit Terms! — §- i - . z ) : i Fe . a ¢ :; Wes F ; 4 fe = t pe 4 i + ware, i | | \ . | , ae ; : ae Ae HF: PONTIAC’ PRBS, MONDAY, JULY 25, 1955 PAM Ee FLT Sen rei sa A - 7 A =a 2 * = Lt.) 2. 2 R- eS ee ee ES —_— = : ee oe ee —— 1. The printed tote bag is ideal os . e ‘4 , “‘pecompaniment for the summer | ; Sel) : Se ae ee | xevr'ia's twee OeXUAL Vevelopment hate DVilters JULY | vides sharp contrast and enlivens | oe “as Ee | ] 4 solid color. | . / | Beauty School! [| — . By MURIEL LAWRENCE There's nothing unusual ‘about flow each other, She makes winter ings into adolescence and makes | i ‘ Sg ; ; Dear “Worried”: ‘this. Though people like every- chill penetrate a day that belongs | adolescence linger on in apron, UP TO 2 We Go | J have your letter telling me of thing clear and definite, Nature he sdeh seo apmbneed ppomacnage| until she's. ready to complete the : " | your great fear that you have not doesn't. She mingles day and and deals with sexual seasons in ¢ nge. , at , for ae ihe pager’ achual develep night in what we call “dusk.” exactly the same way. | If adolescent people. understood | 0 P44 wan develop-| o, makes chang 6 inter-| §& 4e childish sexual fee}. | this, they would be more patient | r She ‘ anging tides inter-' She projects childish sexual feel- 8, they would be more patent, i : j ment for a girl of 1. wen em = = — with their uncertain bodies. | | : FRCEs | And I am glad you've asked me_ | of * *» * j | "Cop e ‘ el ge bli rsa a esas seal oni As it is, boys feel terribly hu- | | cee |less person living with a “heavy | Charboneau | miliated when their voices begin | Nationally Advertised on the | drinking’ father and a grandpar-| became the. \* sentence with a child’s voice— | : : ent who seems narrow-minded" | ; | and end it with the booming bari- 60 | to her can't ask it of them. bride of tone of a man, If fat hasn't ap-| ‘ a * ha . : ! f x ohn C. Xenos peared where a_ girl thinks it) “ve Here's what to do: Sit down to- Jo : should, she tortures herself with i ; ; ‘night and write a letter to the) Saturday suspicion that her body has be- | $20 WAVES | $19" National _Association for Mental evening ii q | ttayed her.’ Yet, as this uncer-| only ....s0 | Health, 1790 Broadway, New York. copes _ tainty of the body is the right q x a ! \ oe ask for the address of the ceremony 4 | thing, impatience with it is most) $17.50 WAVES, § 75 ; if We help them te look meets) WET clinic nearest your Grace | unreasonable, Includes OOLY nc ceecce i their best and smart- town. Second, ask for the name vee Sealy Ae ro P : Aa est. They'll be ready of its directing psychiatrist. When Luthe ran | el pone P us Te Cold Wave $15 WAVES S 85 4 | he f /you get this information, write and Church. aoe 7s ret = Preparatory =f ee ) when you want them! : , . . : . just an excuse for anxiety about only eee eecee : tell him what you have told me. She is the other problems, For example Shampoo pee es He will find a way to get you the! — ; . a = : rAW a tga | : LINT FREE competent reassurance for your daughter of — father’s interest in the di- it you feel uncomfortable in poles | Lustre Rinse $10 WAY ES $ 6°. 7 MOTHPROOF fear. Wr. and Mrs Sree ot eR a ae try outer ielioe suits, dresses Styled Hairdress only, ........ 2, ea ; aes, He . = sed a Pr- or blouse until it's cool enough f Finishing Shampoc = DRY CLEANING In the me are let s see if we Robert "tainty about his feelings for you. wools. “ 7 ° $7.50 WAVES $ 4% |can't quiet it a little. Strzeizynski | Mt could be very easy to imagine : ool. .ccsxsia Sexual development, my dear, ws os | that your body had betrayed you | For transition to fall, fine cot- : 2 is not like school promotions. of Liberty | it you hadn't looked at your fear tons, silk-and-cotton mixtures, and Nature doesn't promote us from street. and | that your father might have be- | MY synthetic-andnatural fiber { : childish sexual feelings into ado- j ; tf | trayed in mind. as oe Fee eo wide sine , naive ne ka ioe Ear ie is the son. . of browns, black, and greens, at-+ DRY CLEAN ERS |) Sect oe = Ber poeece | That’s why I. want you to take ‘raitive particul = in mixtures us from grammar school to high of | your fear to some one who under- |. ae ake . céol Pick Up and Delivery | sehool, She gives us no diploma | Mf, 2 AYE e tarda these Wins a | and all are comfortable on cool | p Phone FE 5-6107 | to mark our graduation into full ir. ane rs.|§ $ : =: /summer days. ‘ rite . : “* S . _ sexual maturity. In nature, all 7 : : eS Samuel Xenos ; So ; 41 N. Saginaw St. Mezzanine FE 2-0531 12 West Pike Street sexual changes interfuse each of West Figure Club Meets t Lt ok EE | other, . , _ ; o make a coat. — — : = MRS. JOHN C. XENOS Vew York | Adah Shelly Library was the al a : setting for the ere 1 , ; 1 Di a nN = Charbon Ca U W e d Figure Ch, Mrs. “basin Kae PHS W iN D-UP OF , , Saturday to John C. Xenos *==="""""| PAUL'S SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE 3efore an altar banked with a hee ae was of crys. COMING Events OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 SALE OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 white gladioli, Diane Sandra Char- Quick Sewing Circle will meet Wednes- \ > Howard Guelker : -ide. | Fitzgerald, 2104 Parkinson §t. A coopera- op + performed the double ring cere.) “ere Howard Guelker, the bride- | tive dinner will be served at 11 a.m by Walkover & Edgerton ” rec | 2 ac Mr. and Mrs. Robert Strzeszyn- French blue lage with white ac- WAITING FOR MEN S SHOES boneau exchanged vows with John skirt was of nylon net. A cascade | day at 2 pm. with Mrs. Alice Jewell, . a - ; Regularly $10.95 to $12.95 Secyen’ groom's brother-in-law, and Wil-) The July meeting ts cancelled | a ski of Liberty street, and the ¢essories and a corsage of pink ; _ _ Regularly $10.95 to $12.95 an bouquet of pink gladioli completed | ® 8 Parke St MEN’S C. Xenos in Grace Lutheran } Tuesday meeting of VFW Auxiliary 4 mony in the presence of 100 guests ; NOW ‘ i lam Rose i ae T COS 1370 has been postponed until Aug. 8 ' i i] t _ Brown & White ») : ‘ Mrs. Maynard Oeste rie sang. “O A reception was held at the Black & Whit . () O ! 8 80 and Te Lo THE HAT SALE || Pc & Whit | $580 | $680 _ $7 Off . t | t ] ' i i Ld Church Saturday evening at seven. Robert Pickett served the bride- ~ T ‘ West Bide Extension Club will meet SI OR SHO S Perfect Love" and “The Lord's home of the bride's parents on ’ o'clock The Rev. Otto G. Schultz groom as best man and the ushers aug 5, at the home of Mrs. Warren en yer * . P * ve * Prayer Liberty street immediately fol- Moccasin - Wing Tip The bride is the daughter of lowing the ceremony, YOU'VE BEEN Table of Odds and Ends DESCOS $1 00 Those in the know drive out to Ted's for bridegroom's parents are Mr. roses and feathered carnations was Val $1 : and Mrs, Samuel Xenos of West’) worn by the bride's mother and alues to > 5 TES ‘ food and fun for the whole family. Come New York avenue, the bridegroom's mother chose a ; $5% to $895 an 2 DANIEL GREEN Fer Foot out soon and join the fun while you enjoy A floor length gown of nylon net 80Wn of duSty. rose lace with which a delicious: dinner. and Chantilly lace over satin was she wore white accessories, pink Woe s] 00 ; ? , : 95 worn by the bride. A Juliet cap © ¢@mmauons and Better Time roses. = . MEN S GOLF SHOES 70% $ he ‘ Reg. $17.95 Sale v bs} Choe i ar | yer 8 “ie 9 fingertip vel. Werung a singh Wearing an orchid linen suit with J Come early as these values 11 All Leather Soles : . strand of pearls, the gift of the white accessories and the corsage | wont last long. - : bridegroom, she also carried a from her bridal bouquet, Mrs 9 “ OPEN cascade arrangement of white “Pes left with her husband for a Your Pontiac Gage Store PA i ws H “rit, .. roses and feathered carnations wm one trip to Nosthern Michigan. 9 P M Family Nights HONOR MAID WEARS BLUE son will’ make their) home. in Roach Millin ery ) 35 N. SAGINAW ST . MON. ea ie Ne x . & Monday & Tuesday Air-Conditioned for Your Comfor* Carol Ann Thompson, maid of Kalamazoo. The bridegroom will WOODWARD at SQUARE LAKE ROAD |. honor, was gowned in blue crys- return to Western Michigan Col- 61 W. Huron Serving Pontiac Over 75 Years, FRL talette and nylon net. The fitfed lege to complete his. studies, Lr sly < Mrs, Garnett wore a dress of or tomorrow ... but do take advantage Soe eas) cocci) cea during our offering of these corsage of white tea roses and show swatch after swatch of excit- ing mew fabrics .. . right in your own home! * All Work Guaranteed for § Years * ssoazies WW ituam Waicut Over 23 Years! pink: feathered carnations. When the couple left for a honey- | moon in northern Michigan and Canada, thé bride was wearing a light blue and white dress of dotted Swiss with blue velvet trim. She chose white accessories and a white rose corsage ——— Sa — ' (66 , ....-home of finer cleaning YOU ARE COOL LOOKING and COOLER too in Ogg. Cleaned Clothes Summer Silks, Cottons, Synthetics and Woolens look and feel so much better when Ogg’s clean them. That is because each garment is carefully classified as to material, color and . $0 that the correct and Furniture Makers & Upholsters 270 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. SAVE $30 WHIRLPOOL “20” Reg. SAVE *30° SPEED QUEEN DELUXE With Double Tubs SAVE £20 MAYTAG DELUXE With New Safety Wringer SAVE $52" EASY SPINDRIER WASHER the big deluxe model you want! sizing or dye . proper cleaning agents are used This is an “extra” with Ogg's .. . but we know it makes whites—so much whiter . . . never yellows $169.95 I Regular $179.95 ~° Regular $129.95 Regular $139.95 them . . makes bright colors really fresh q eeeeeeeen | $ 95 and bright . . . just like new . . . and gets all - $ 77 with $ 95 with $ 95 with ] with the dirt and soil out of the garments “pores” , trade trade trade trade to allow refreshingly cool circulation: of air j about your body. The washer that has to introduce the sensational new eae Roto Matic ZIP-CLIP SWIVEL-TOP Opens instantly—cleans ait over from 1 position of 319% Roll-easy ROTO-DOLLY with 4 rubber, swivel 6 = ball-bearing wheels PLUS - New 4-Wheei ® ROTO-DOLLY SPECIALLY PRICED 95 Complete with deluse tools $99.90 Value FOR ONLY Complete with 8-Piece Set of Deluxe Clip-On Tools Easy Terms — 90 Days Same as Cash! SHOP MONDAY, terol NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P WAYNE GABERT Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 121 N. Saginaw St. FE 5-6189 'on a fishing trip in Delaware Bay THE BERRYS’ By Carl Grubert Seek Four Missing on Delaware Bay LEWES, Del., (»—Four persons were reported missing today. The | Coast Guard said it could find no signs of their 14-foot boat. The missing were identified as Mr. and Mrs, Chance T. Keene and Mr. and Mrs. James Bennett, all residents, of suburban Wilming- | | ton. Relatives reported the two) | couples left on the fishing trip from | Pickering Beach, north of here yesterday morning and were ex- \pected heme in the afternoon. When they failed to appear the | Coast Guard was notified. | Heavy rains and near zero visi- | | bility occurred in the afternoon | | oyer the bay. ‘Korea Veteran Fréed on Charge He Aided Reds _FT. BRAGG, N.C. W—A Ft. | Bragg sergeant charged with aid- | | ing the enemy while a prisoner of | ‘war in Korea was acquitted here | Saturday on the two remaining /counts against him. When the general court-martial opened last week, Sgt. John L. Tyler, 25, of Moundsville, W.Va., was charged on nine counts of collaboration. ; The major charge of collabora- tion against Tyler, a POW from June 1951 to August 1953, was dis- _missed when the trial opened. Two other charges were dismissed be- ‘cause of lack of evidence. * * * i | | | The trial officer, Maj. C. E. Noell, directed a verdict of inno- cent Saturday for the following | _charges against Tyler: writing | pro-Communist articles, attempt- | ing to convert fellow prisoners to communism, circulating peace pe- titions and informing on fellow | prisoners who were planning an escape. Red China Reactivates Plans for U.N. Berth TOKYO, —Red China plans to step up immediately its drive to, get into the--United Nations, a Kyodo news agency dispatch from Peiping reported today. ‘Masaki Nagamine, Peiping cor- respondent for Kyodo, cabled that, the Peiping regime ‘‘plans to cash in on the trend of international cooperation that developed at the Big Four summit talks at Geneva.” ] | | ! | GOOD REAL ESTATE BUYS /are advertised in the Classified | section! For that house, lot or in- come property you want, see the Ww ant Ads _NOW. DEPENDABLE INNERSPRING Clearance Sale -PRICED $9450 $299 $3 430 Store Closed Wednesday Afternoons Open Monday and _ Friday Evenings Our 19th Year of Greater Value Giting MILLER Made By the Makers of ESTOKRAFT MATTRESSES Mt. Etna Volcano Lava Flows Toward Fornazzo CATANIA, Sicily, @®—Two fiery, rivers of molten lava stil] oozed! slowly today from Mt. Etna, con- | tinuing the volcanic activity that | started nearly a month ago. Experts watching the erupting | northeast crater of Europe's high-| est, 10,000-foot voleano said as yet: there ‘was no imminent danger to! villages in the path of the burning lava, The closest, Fornazzo, was far below the head of the | coursing very slowly down the | ; Valley of the Lion. | New Mexico has 2,475 miles of | railroad. | FOR INSURANCE SERVICE See or Call - Maynard Johnson General Insurance 807 Community National Bank Phone FE 4-4523 Be Smart, Look Sharp! Call Fox cleaner, newer for fresher, looking cleaning. FE 4-1536 719 W. Huron years. , a new home. | Our Hearty Thanks... To The Residents Of The Pontiac Area ... Who attended the Grand Opening of our new Main Office Building this past week. Our thanks too, for all the friendly greetings and comments we have received during our opening. It gives us a warm feeling to know that we have many friends throughout the area. Our formal opening is over, but we extend a cordial invitation to everyone of you to visit us at any time. We extend the same friendly service that has won us countless friends. It has built our beautiful new Main Office Building | ¢ and it has more than doubled our total assets in the last two and eee If you have not already done so, drop in at any one of our three offices and . open a savings account. We welcome your use of our free home planning service. We will be happy to tell you how we can help you to build or buy Learn how ample parking:space, attractive, modern facilities can add to your pleasure and convenience while doing business with this friendly institution in our new home office. Savings Insured to $10,000 ~~. Pontiac Federal Savings | and Loan Association : 761 WEST HURON STREET fenopreninnsomners Wes ean fi Current Rate 2% a i ak FURNITURE ee nies bl 16 E. Lawence St. | , : 407 Main St. ‘Where You Honestly Save | ue 144 Oakland Avenue — Careful reg Delivery : “hy | | ; f fi y oe ¢ f Yo f \ . od j . r yi x! : ne? if Fs OM 7 ae i ys Wt oe! : mT Me 2 jar AGAK as i preit fof ae ee ‘operations this summer, using 117 g on Vacation?—Let the Follow — Call FE 2-818T - “THE PONTIAC PRESS OT a eee In Days of Davy Crockett— Read it in Today's Press 3 DAY, JULY 25, 1955 PONTIAC . MICHIGAN. ~~ SEVENTEEN DOWN YOU GO — Starting his plunge into a pool of water below is the loser in an aerial pillow fight | of the spectators for its fast and startling action. In ‘at Rovaniemi, Finland. The activity is part of fes-| this event, even the loser makes a big splash with tivities at a log-rolling contest and drew the interest | the crowd. ' | eee a | United Press Phete Navy Readies Huge Arctic Expedition to Construct WASHINGTON, July 23 w—The Navy will run its biggest Arctic ships to send supplies to far north bases and carry equipment for building the DEW Line (distant early warning line of radar), This largest, peaceful foray of Navy ships to the top of the earth will precede by a few months the departure of a Navy expedition for the opposite end of the earth. Five ships leave for the Antarctic this fall on “Operation Deep Freeze,”” an uoreary mission. | a a In the Arctic operation breakers, cargo ships, tankers and Handing ships will leave from both East and West Coast ports soon to crash their way to remote ice- | ‘| Disarmament will meet g 4 to Follow Up Agreements + Leaders Hoping to Ease Tension. All Security, Unification and Disarmament Plans Need Clarification GENEVA (®—The four big pow- ers today began the second stage of their attempt to ease world ten- sion by negotiation. The experts back home in their own capitals started work on plans to implement the directives of the summit con- ference. Each of the Big Four leaders, before leaving Geneva, professed confidence that their six-day meet- ing heré had started them on the right road. Each also stressed the importance of the follow-up. the next few weeks to prepare for the discussions which the Big Four mer and fall. _ They must. take the many vague and conflicting proposals on dis- armament, German unification afid European security and see if they can find in them any basis for ‘future negotiation. If they find such bases, they must try to fill out the skeleton proposals with details. Under the schedule agreed on at the summit talks, the five- nation U.S, Subcommittee on in five weeks — Aug. 29 — to consider the disarmament advanced at Geneva. Four foreign ministers will meet ment, German European security, Thus within 9 or 10 weeks the experts — and their basses, the foreign ministers — must study carefully such’important proposals as President Eisenhower's plan for an exchange of military blueprints between the United States and Russia, British Prime Minister Eden's plan for limited di: . ment in and around Germany, the various plans for new European security arrangements and propos- als for removing barriers between Communist countries. Most of these proposals were tossed into the summit conference in the barest outline form, ing all sorts of questions una red. Outpost Radar Screen — of North America. Each of the| The Navy announcement said several supply expeditions will that beyond DEW Line ‘“‘is the ice | represent a race to get supplies | curtain, implacable, grim, forbid- | and equipment in and the ships | ding—and beyond the ice curtaj back out before the early Arctic|too close for the comfort { winter closes sea routes with solid | America and the free world, is the ice. | iron curtain of Communist Rus- “Perhaps the most spectacular | sia.’ mission,’ a Navy announcement | -)* said, “is moving material in for| The 1955 Arctic supply operation | the DEW line. Shiploads of radar |is under direction of the Military equipment must be taken up and | Sea Transportation Service, com- around the top of the continent, | manded by Vice Adm. Francis C. | through Amundsen and Coronation | Denebrink. It appeared likely that one ol | the first specific accomplishments /of the summit meeting might be | | an agreement to freeze the levels ;of armed forces in Europe and then reduce the nations’ military | establishments. During the week of talks, both sides indicated strong desirfs to reduce their arms burdens.” | yesterday that the conference“had not budged their position on ‘the key issue of German unification. Bulganin, stopping off with Khrush- chev in East Berlin for several days, said: | Gulf and Simpson Strait, and left | 22? 2 at the station sites." | The eight icebreakers will be | Big C124 cargo planes of the | equipped with helicopters to scout 18th Air Force opened the race to | | ahead for likely openings or soft | build the DEW line last winter. | spots in the ice. The announcement | They landed-on temporary snow commented that the operations will strips. before spring thaws began | take some ships into areas never | points along the Arctic perimeter to soften the snow and ice. before penetrated by sea. “The Soviet government has re- peatedly stated that West Ger- manyye inclusion in NATO and the | | West European Union, as well as the acceptance of the Paris agree- ment by West Germany, rule out a unification of Germany on a peaceful and democratic basis.” The experts have much to do in} have scheduled for the late sum- proposals, in Geneva to take up disarma- | unification and / and non-Communist | The Russians gave new evidence | w ALL IN THE MIND — These two Navy men prove that all this ‘nonsense about.hot weather js purely mental. Two-year-old Linda McCurdy of Alexandria, Va. dropped her sun umbrella in surprise Then early in October the Big | when aoe third class Ronald Robichaud (left) and Aviation Store- Galsed Press fae.’ keeper first class Dewey P. Jenks came along in the 93 degree heat recently. The pair had been participating in a demonstration of equip- ment to be used on “Operation Deepfreeze’ in the Antarctic next November. M urder Expert Studying Clues in Kidnap-Killing OAKLAND, Calif., nologist tested hairs and blood stains today in an effort to learn more about the killing of 14-year- old Stephanie Bryan. A University of California student, Burton Ab- | dering the schoolgirl. * * * | Abbott’s attorneys’ meanwhile, went before a Superior Court judge and asked for his release from jail on a writ of habeas corpus. The plea, presented at the home lof Judge Wade Snook, denied Ab- | bott was guilty and asked that | jurisdiction be transferred to Trin- ity County. * ° Stephanie's body was found in) | Wednesday, not far from a moun- tain cabin owned by Abbott. * at * Judge Snook didi not rule im- mediately on the plea. Making the laboratory tests was Dr. Paul Kirk of the University of California. The hair, he said, came from a 1949 car owned by | Abbott and the blood traces were on his clothing. * * The criminologist emphasized that he does not know yet whether the blood is human. Although the school girl's, they have not been identified as hers, Dr. Kirk added. Steamers SEN Ro ae ge oe Le fe SUNT TS cies ide bs Gea acters shorna 0 toon’ track of got faa ing into the plane's belly, The plane, which can carry larger payloads than any- Se ges oe ye “SER | Niseiiaiianind tie ie tout cuosatey: ofthe: thew) een tes * ° e ne ORS Ss Fas Se ea ee tee United Press thing now in use by the Air vert, is driven by four turbo- prop engines: developing atid horsepow er. ' ee w—A_ crimi-| j | | ‘ ‘hairs are similar to the junior high | Mamie’s Helper Supervised All Competent Italian Miss Overseered Activities at Geneva ‘White House’ | bott, has been charged with mur-| GENEVA, July 23 — Mamie Eisenhower was first lady at the President’s Geneva White House, but a 23-year - old Italian girl named Toni was the unofficial oe bady. . “People wens the President's lake-side Big Four home, said the petite housemaid practically ran the place. “I'm here for a vacation,”’ Mrs. | Eisenhower laughingly confided to the Trinity County resort country | aes — upon her arrival in “and I don't plan to do a thing about running the villa.” That virtually put Toni in charge for she, as a servant at the Villa Creux-de - Genthod, was the only person around who knew anything about the place. Andre Firmenich, owner of the villa, was off in Sweden yachting, His tall, hand- some Scottish-born wife was stay- ing with relatives, So—it was Toni this and Toni that and Toni ail the time, LJ a Toni's biggest initial difficulty was establishing a means of com- munication with the Filipino ser- vants the Eisenhowers imported. The Filipinos could speak no French or Italian and Tonj could speak no English or Tagalog. Various people around -the villa acted as interpreter until Toni and the men worked out a language based on okay and nope. But—there were certain things that even the efficient Toni had trouble performing or producing. “Tell her,” said one Filipino, we want to make the table look extra nice. Tell her to get the gardener to pick us some orchids from the y: “Orchids rom the Garden?” asked Toni, ‘Tell them orchids may grow in yards in Manila and Washington but they don’t grow in Geneva yards.” One Filipino encountered Presi- dent Eisenhower sitting in the hall one morning reading a paper. “Mr. President,’ ventured the Filipino, ‘‘why don’t you sit in the library where I left all your papers?” “I was sitting there,” replied the President, “but Toni chased me out. She said I iatestored with her dusting.” |Catholic Congress Closes in Brazil ‘RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, H— Pilgrims to the 36th International Eucharistic Congress started leav- ing for home today. But most of the Latin-American Roman Catholic hierarchy re- mained for a special conference on church “we're having the Russians and | WHAT’S MY LINE? INSTRUCTIONS: Each word is related to my work. Un- | scramble as few as possible to guess my line. Answer appears under errow, reading downward. 1 DIRECT. 2 2 2 1 1 1 ee eR 1 TESS 2 CRATO 3 MADRA 4 ENGINEU 5 MEOCOY 6 TARP 7 LAXMIC 8 DINGALE 9 LADY ° 10 ACTS @ 1955 What's My Line, Inc. Seturdey’s answer: Pedal, string, bAss, teNor, tOne, octave, soUnd, picNe, kEys, gRand. T25 Expect Immigrants, Trial to Affect Israel Election JERUSALEM (® — Israel will elect a new 120-member Parliament (Knesset) tomorrow for thé first time in four years. New. immigrants and a sensational court case bear on the outcome. ‘The Mapai Israeli !.abor party, heading the present government coalition, hopes énough members and allies will be elected to enable it to lead the next Cabinet. But it is up against criticism for defending an alleged Quisling in a court case, which harks back to wartime Hungary, The immigrants, Jews from North Africa, constitute an unpredicta- ble element among the million or so men and women over 18 entitled to take part in proportional balloting out of a population of 1,700,000. * * ° : Nevertheless, it is doubtful the election will basically change Is- rael’s foreign or domestic policy. The pertinent court case involves Dr. Israel Kastner, prominent Mapai party mémber, former official in the Ministry for Commerce and Industry and current editor of the Tel Aviv paper Uj Kelet, printed in the Hungarian | It turns on his behavior as acting head of the Jewish Rescue Com- mittee in Nazi-occupied Budapest in 1944. The Russians then were near- ing that city. The Germans foresaw its capture. But Adolph Eichmann of the SS Elite Guard went on with his task of shipping Hungarian Jews off to death in the Oswiecim concentration camp. Some 500,000 of them died - there. A little over a year ago a Jerusalem hotel owner, Malkiel Green- wald, wrote in a private news sheet that Kastner had prepared the ground for this mass murder through negotiations with the Nazis. Greenwald himself lost 52 of 58 relatives in the Hitler holocaust, He alleged that Kastner had “shared loot” with a Nazi leader. Thereupon the state charged Greenwald with libeling Kastner. Six- ty-three witnesses testified at 73 trial sessions in nine months, and the Jerusalem District Court spent eight months writing a judgment handed down June 22. The court president, Judge Benjamin Halevy, held: the defendants had libeled Kastner in accusing him of sharing loot with a Nazi and fined him one Israeli pound (56 cents). He found Greenwald had told the truth on other matters. * * * return for permission to choose 600 relatives and friends to go to safety, He called Kastner a collaborator “in the fullest sense of the word.” In Parliament, the opposition criticized the authorities for starting congress | the libel action, carrying it on' and appealing. The Heruth and Com- munist parties offered motions of no confidence in the government. Parliament last month voted down both motions, 50-9 and 60-7, Abstentions numbered 29 and 17. Among the abstainers were four min- isters in the-coalition Cabinet, all General Zionists. Prenter Mine Sheudll ant ethie whilik tundboe. Seikdet 0s wen a serious ‘‘breach of collective responsibility” and the Cabinet resigned on the eve of the already scheduled dissolution of the old Knesset. Sharett formed a new caretaker government of all 16 old ministers except four — the General Zionists, The judge said Kastner had agreed to cooperate with the Nazis in E snp nel aera ' a en eo ha i} | THE PONTIAC press. MONDAY, JULY,.25. 1955 2 Army Officers Bear!sObiect . Transit Strike ee | of Search After | FacingCharges |C!awing Campers Ends on Coast Pair May Be Tried SPRINGERVILLE, Ariz. @ — - for Gif Ye Enemy Pa § of ‘Division 1277, AFL Amalga- mated Assn. of Street, Electric Railway jand Motor Coach Em- ployes of America rejected offers of 12 cents more an hour, pe -Yesterday they approved a boost ig e |of 14 cents an hour in three steps New Way Without S) ; ele . — a year. There is also an Public Transportation | escalator clause, effective the sec- , _ Finds Healing Substance That Does Both— Relieves Pain Hemorrhoids __ Bloodhounds today were on the | trail of a marauding bear which | attacked two campers several | ‘ year; paid holidays, four Tie-Up Unsnarls After weeks vacation after 25 years, paid Won't go near a garment that | Army made no announcement, bear was going to drive me into Liles and Kaschko confirmed they | 4 Cr. Then, he said, ‘‘we went back nate Los Angeles’ costliest trans- | portation tieup. The strike, which forced 900,000 One Full Year Guarantee (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all—this While Prisoners miles from each other in the White! 34-Day Deadlock in LA : _ — — — Se , Mountains near here. | jin working conditions. ine Pact) New York, N. ¥. (Speeial) — !” And among these ; : a a J. T. Elliott, of Phoenix,. and | : sg alle 2 |is for two -years. For the first time science peo a ane | FT, LEWIS, Wash., wm Two Wiseu Saasisnnn fal Gaal Conde | LOS ANGELES, ®—The clang) Operators, who have been re-| found a new h ealing substance: some ; j}more Army officers face possible! wore clawed by apparently the | °!, Tolleys and the roar of buses | ceiving $1.91 hourly, return to work | with the astonishing ability to | 10 to gt gee 4 sta : court-martial on charges of giving! same beast yesterday. the hoecks Capea rahe ge city Se a $1.97, shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve All a without te use of , nile |C Sean eran ieaare : today for the first time in lays | pain~—without surgery. narcot — ~“ Gnd conatert to Ge enemy wile | County a . — reported. ‘as the longest transit strike in) ||. Sars ——- | In one hemorrhoid case after gents of : kind, The secret prisoners of war in Korea. — ee local history ended. Mice are kept as pets in many | another, “very striking improve- new (Bio- Lt. Col, Paul V, Liles and Maj.| Plliott said his wife and another 7 | parts fo the world. | meht” was reported and verified | Dyne*)—the: of a world. Harold’ L, Kaschko disclosed Sat-| Couple moved into their car after | ~ | | by doctors’ observations. famous . Al-- urday the Army is bringing the|he felt a bear’s paw strike his | Operaters voted 1,152-493 at aiff en seers yromiptiy. pay SO y 4-9 is in hola = : "hi | head, but “I'd be i mass meeting yesterday to termi- |] | nd, while gently relieving pain : tissue on charges against them. While the) d doggoned if any | mass ey COCKROACHES ae 5 eamnetion an vaseiadhaen pa : " has been protected with improvement was maintained in have been investigated and said} cases where doctors’ observations | their case is now before the com-| to sleep and the next thing I knew From towees, Ape ts, Gro aily find r trans- | daily riders to othe |] cery Stores and Restaurants. Re- Monite Mothproofing. Clothes | manding general of the 6th Army at | the bear’ grabbed my head in his | portation, cost bus and trolley | main out only three hours. No || Were continued over a period of | Preparation H suppositories or sent to Father and Son for | the Presidio, San Francisco, for a} ™outh. I guess the only thing that operators an estimated $710,000 in| signs used. many months! ph prac rr ener oy Cl ; g al Moniten Mot | decision as to whether they will be | saved me was that my head was. lost pay, and the Los Angeles R E C en a Ela “setodlagmab - —_ pon pe ty pment more eanin ar nm ~ | tried by court-martial. covered to keep off the rain.” The | Transit Lines $2,345,000 in lost | rere We 4 MOTH PROOFED , | ; |animal fled when the car's head- | revenue. j Ox x ompan makesuchastonishingstatements | guaranteed or money refunded. The Army earlier brought simi- | @ | lar charges against a third officer, | lights were- turned on, he said. | Lt. Jefferson D. Erwin, 37, Blan-| game : Seema | chard, Okla., also stationed here. | FE 2-6424 | He will be tried Aug. 2. a | Kaschko, executive officer for! |the 15th Field Artillery, declined | | to discuss his case but Liles told newsmen he expects to be court- Plant and Office — 941 Joslyn Ave. 10i4 Pont, Gt. Hk, Ridg, FR 4-0462 "Reg. U. 8. Pat. OF, proofed free. as ‘Piles have ceased to be a at mo extra cost Twice during the tieup members | i Ft DISCOUNT _HOUSEF-® bo iy OPEN FRIDAY and. a PICKUP and DELIVERY SERVICE although a pretrial examiner has recommended no trial. Liles, a West Point graduate and = onetime general staff intelligence martialed as part of Army routine 4 officer in the Pentagon, said he IT 5 THE was innocent of the charges. Ig? ope , “I did nothing wrong and should i e - | itizend an not be treated as a criminal,” he : said. | ° , Liles, a native of Birmingham, , - ;Ala., said he was senior officer "| FOR INSURANCE (noe ee pane Ge NO. MONEY DOWN such pleaded with his captors for) food, clothing and medicine to, save American soldiers. | Hard to Pronounce— Easy to Settle With! Om FE 4-0588 . BRUMMETT-LINCICOME, Inc. 367 East Pike Street Upto 104 Weeks to Pay NO PAYMENTS IF . SICK or LAYED OFF 17” POWER MOWER | ‘Japan Plans Reactor | TOKYO (®—Japan is planning to! | build a multipurpose 10,000-kilo- | | watt experimental atomic reactor |at a cost of $200,000 to $250,000, | SE] wo parmens & TTR EEN: | gee 77ggg, 9-Pc. BEDROOM. . ty OUTFIT HERE'S ANOTHER OF CLAYTON’S JULY ssvinc SPECIALS! See 0 SAVING | S Our Reg. $220 2Cycle1.6H.P. § 195 | $15 Down, Clinton Engine $2 Weekly! . CU. FT. SAVE $100! ALL THESE 9 PIECES! Includes: Double dresser — large clear oblong mirror — harmonizing pane! bed — innerspring mattress and box spring— 2 rubber toam flake pillows — 2 boudoir 8-Pc. 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Se A” 2 $59.50 SPECIAL $ 95 * Open Friday Nights * Visit Our Trade-In Furniture and WHILE THEY 10 LAST! : Appliance Department FREE | WITHIN 100 CLAYTON'S because at Clayton's there is ty of park- - APPLIANCES ing right at the FRONT DOOR, It takes only a few .minutes to drive out to Clayton's... do it now? You'll save more at™ «|. The Middlecoff-Burke marathon ‘|from the other matches, in the easy victories, Tommy Bolt defeat- Dilead | ey ee Be wns @ eo | a PONTIAC P ge ik a bet i ’ alsa: ne Ul piece belek the doctor got his victory. : The match was one of the longest on record in the PGA event, vet- eran observers say. stole most of the day’s spotlight [quarter-finals. Two resulted in ing Lew (The Jaw) Worsham (8 and 7) and Doug Ford taking Fred- die Hawkins (5 and 4). ‘The other semifinal berth went to Shelley Mayfield who -turned back Don Fairfield 3 and 2. : ‘Promise of another terrific en- counter today was held in the pairings which sent Middlecoff Bolt. Ford was favored to retire Mayfield, but there were few who would venture a guess as to the probable. winner “ the test match. Bolt has seed some sient ot so has the doctor. Tommy is ag- ive, a terrific competitor with “game capable of taking it all. However, because Middlecoff seems to get better under pressure, and because of his tremendous “stretch drives,’ this observer will string along with him. Burke jumped off to a 1-hole lead on the Ist green. He added “two more birdies while Cary was carding par of 35, to be 3-up at the nine, with a card of 32. Cary's putter still wasn’t hot enough as he dropped two more holes to Jackie, to go 5-down at the halfway mark. Cary had 36, Burke 34, to give them 18-hole marks of par 71 and 66 (5-under- ‘Dr. at the “l-up” card in the match | Meadowbrook CC) match went into the late afternoon d as he won a 40-hole marathon from| and ended on the 4th extra hole to send Cary into med Burke, The thrilling PGA tournament (at| today’s semifinals against Tommy Bolt. is IT! — weary Sunday > THIS — A dog-tired ‘ a Points Cary Middlecoff Pontiac Press Phote par), respectively. At 27 holes the margin had been whittled to 3-up for Burke, then to 2-up on and to 2 again, on the 32nd. ‘Burke's putter weakened and the 35th and 36th to square the match, as a tremendous ovation home green, His “skyline,” curl- ing putt was good for a birdie 3. The pair matched stroke for stroke for the 1st three extra holes. Then Middlecoff got thé break that won for him. . Both hit good drives into the sun at the fourth extra hole. Cary then banged a 4-iron 50 feet from the cup. Burke was short on his iron and his ball slipped into bad rough below a 10-foot rise. Jackie pitched his recovery out and across the green. |-—-Middleeoff putted close up a) Burke's try went by the pin a half dozen feet. Jackie's fifth shot, (his second putt) hung on the edge of the cup and he conceded the 2-footer to Middlecoff. The Middlecoff-Burxe cards: the 28th, back to 3 on the 30th mie Cary halved the next two, and won | BY came from the humanity-ringed | #i¢¢! Oumr..... tone 54 443 434-—~35 mlddicoor! OUD, veces AD3 443 444-35 . aa ei se eweeene 302 442 434—32 6" oe out.. “4 Whe. G6, ....ccece. . 455 443 434—36 Middiecoff, Wi cscscces 445 334 443—34—68 BurBe, We ..cae ees 844 344 454—37—73 EXTRA HOLES Middlecoff c......00 454 4 A HGDUCAONA ARNE e 446 Bolt, despite a gallery that obviously was a bit hostile, put out National Open Champion Jack Fleck, 3 and 2 in Saturday's round. This match drew the. biggest crowd of the day—es- timated at about 5,000—more than half of the 8,000 on hand. Fleck drew applause, but at times Tommy was cheered fora missed putt. He didn’t like it, but kept his much-publicized temper under control. In other Saturday rounds Doug Ford smothered Wally Ulrich by the tourney’s biggest margin, 12 and 10 for one of the worst lickings in the PGA history; Lew Worsham turned the morning round in par figures against Johnny Palmer, then fired enough birdies to be + under for the match that ended on the 3lst hole; tightest match of. the day, closing on the °36th saw Mayfield Claude Har- mon, Saturday's roun Ford defeated Vinten 12 and 10; Hew- kins Maeleated Ed Purgo! 6 and 6; Lew wi sham defeated Johnn Palmer 6 Don Fairfield defeated Brien ; Cary lecof. e : 3 and 1. Suriday's eur eens) round: Dr ‘iddlecoff — Burke, 1 wu 40 holes; Bolt defeated Worsham ; yiield defeated Pairfield vet ing —— 2 p.m. ee wie Games *‘ BARCELONA, Spain ® — The second Mediterranean Games came to an end today, and France was so far out front in the unoffi- cial team race that no other team had a chance, The French ath- letes gained an overwhelming mar- gin through their fine perform- ances in track and field. LIFE SAVER — A ‘‘downed” Middlecoff in the battle with Jackie on to win on the 4th extra hole. Pontiac Press Phote 8-footer on the crucial 36th (18th) green of Meadowbrook’s course, yesterday afternoon kept Dr. Cary Burke, for a semifinals spot today. And Cary got the “life” as the shot above shows him picking his ball | from the cup for a birdie 3 to square the match at that point. He went ~ Hoad Upset, but ~ hustralians Win “Unknown Brazilian Tops “Aussie Ace, but Team “Moves Ahead “LOUISVILLE, Ky. w — Aus- tfalia’s crack tennis team moved dh to Montreal today, still hot in pursuit of the Davis Cup despite a surprise of top-drawer stature that aw Lew Hoad tumbled by a vir- “Australia’s final margin in the semifinals was 4-1 after Ken Rose- wall of the Aussies blasted Brazil- A) Capt. Bob Falkenburg, 6-2, 6-2, , is the next opponent for Australia this weekend at Mon- . If victorious, it then meets and finally the European before going against the Uhited States. lands Big Crappie Rogers, 5806 Anderson- vee read, fishing in Waterford ue. Saturday, landed a big ie. Rogers, fishing with_his 'D. L. Rogers, also took |, other fish, none as big as the ~. i Nolet n anus ce champion Indians, supported by baseball's best bullpen, appear to be poised for the stretch run which they hope will bring them their second suc- cessive American League pennant. Eight games off the pace three weeks ago, the stubborn Redmen were within one game of the top today following a streak that has | produced 15 victories in their last | 22 games, Now ba) eed OE in a row. Cleveland won two from Balti- more yesterday 5-1 and 5-2 and lief pitching of Ray Narleski and | Don Mossi that cemented the vic- tories. * ¢ @ Bob Feller won his third of the Amer-}season and 265th of his career in the opener, but it took three score- fess relief innings by Narleski to save the victory. Early Wynn reg- istered his 12th of the year and 196th of his career, but he needed help from Narleski and Mossi in the nightcap. Narleski, who has now been in +35 games, has a 6-0 record. In his last 18 appearances, the Indians | have won 15. Mos®i has only a 2-1 record in 34 games but owns once again it was the brilliant re- “points above the Yankees, shut out Relief Hurlers a spectacular 1.71 earned run aver- age, best on the club. * * * The New York Yankees regained first place with a 7-3 and 2-0 doubleheader victory over Kansas City to end an alarming downhill slide that had brought 13 defeats in the last 18 games, The twin triumphs boosted them to a full game lead over both the Indians and Chicago White Sox, who were | held to a split by the fourth place Boston Red Sox. The White Sox, who started the day in first place, three percentage the Red Sox 4-0 in the opener be- hind the seven-hit pitching of Billy Pierce but Boston struck back with a.2-1 victory behind Willard Nixon to stay right in there, only four games off the pace. * * * Detroit's fifth place Tigers, who also have pennant ambitions, re- mainéd 7% games behind the front-rummer despite a split with Washington. Brooklyn's runaway Dodgers still owned their comfortable 13% bulge over runner-up Milwaukee and | thetr 15-game margin over the third place New York Giants. Win District Rochester and Birmingham ‘marked up their 2nd_ victories against one loss in the 2nd_half of the 18th District American Le- gion baseball. season Sunday. However, Huron Valley Boys Club retained possession of Ist | place with a 2-0 record. The boxing fans are wondering why Robinson doesn't box Ralph (Ti- ger) Jones before he talks about a middleweight title bout with Bo- bo. Olson, Sugar Ray never looked worse than he did against Jones in their Chicago match, won by the Tiger .| from Yonkers, N.Y. Gossip from the Coast sets Ol- | craw son-Robinson for the title in Octo- * ber, ? * * Willie Pastrano, recent winner over Joey Maxim, meets Chuck Speiser, formér Michigan State boxer, in the Wednesday show (Ra- dio-TV-ABC) at Chicago. On the strength of the Maxim decision, Pastrano is favoted over Utah, the No. 8 middleweight, and Del Flanagan of St: Paul, the No. welter, % te Rochester, Birmingham 9s Loop Games Boys Clubbers’ game with Wa- terford wag postponed, since the latter was representing the dis- trict in zone tournament play at Flint. Bill Henderson gave only 3 hits and struck out’ 13 as Rochester edged Berkley, 2-1. Henderson had ley a run. A walk and Jack McDaniels' ho- mer-dver the left field fence pro- vided Rochester with its winning runs. Birmingham had an easy time with Clawson, 16-3, as Terry O’- Connor handcuffed the losers with 5 hits, while his mates pounded out 14, Rochester ....s0e-. 000 000 020—2 0 Berkley ...._....... 000 000 100—1 3 1 Henderson and Nordquist; Whalen and a no-hitter until the 7th when 2. singles and a sacrifice gave Berk- | Chie Bolster Tribe Although outhit 29 to 12 in the twin bill, the Dodgers got away with a split against_the Braves, | winning by 9-7 and losing 9-2. Hofman and Willie Mays (No. 30) earned Johnny Antonelli and the Giants a 4-1 decision after Cincin- snap a seven-game losing streak. * * a Philadelphia's onrushing Phillies | Made it 15 wins in their last 16 Late inning home runs by Bobby | nati had won the opener 6-4 to, games, sweeping a pair from St. Louis 6-5 and 3-0. Rain ended the second game after six innings. The Yankees combined effective pitching by Whitey Ford and rookie Johnny Kucks together with time- ly hitting by Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra for their victories. Chico Carrasquel's homer with sixth that gave the White Sox all | their runs against George Susce in the first game. ‘-—— It took a 3-way shootoff Sunday to decide the all-gauge champion- ship for the 3rd annual Chief Pon- tiac Skeet tourney at “Oakland County Sportsmen's Club fields. The event, one of the state’s top skeet tests, is a tuneup for the big National Skeet Shooting Associa- tion title shoot here next month. More than 200 top shotgunners of the midwest area took part in the 2-day event. George Deyoe of Washington, straight after he, Mrs. Carola Man- Caro had tied. Mrs. Mandell went 73-75. Curry dropped out on the 1st round: Other champions named in the event included: 12 gauge—George Deyoe, 100x100 Class AA—Mrs. Mandell, 100x100 Major Leagues AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost Pet. ind New York 6 37 £5 — a ies 37) 64606 (1 Cleveland 38 (604 B 41 573 4 Detroit 43 «(538 714 Kansas City 57 400-2044 Washiiy . 31 & Baltimore 304 TODAY'S SCHEDULE No ome. schedul NDAY'S RESULTS Lene 1. Washington 3-3 ic Cle en nd 3-3, Baltimore 1.2 | velan ¥ New York 7-2. Kansas TURDAY'S RESULTS — 10, Washington 4 (2nd game ppd. Kansas Fy $ 8, New oe 7 «1 innings) eer altimore 2 7 } AY'S SCHEDULE Detroit at Baltimore (2), 5 Blanty. Chicago at New Yor' WORE bi sccdiesoe 010 000 110— 3 5 3 | Clevel at Birmingham 300 026 42x—16 14 1 ee Raines, Ma siti and Malachowski; NATIONAL LEAGUE O'Connor and Podulka. ‘ Won Lost Pet. Bebind iifectuee atacceceuss 66 b+ = 1% SUNDAY’S STARS New Yor sepeveupai 1 $s $28 15 BATTING—Frank TI as, Pi Chicano wegene es i 2 rates, drove in a pair of runs with - “439 Pit ama three hits and scored twice in a 125 first garne victory over the Jerry Lynch with winning run in Pittsburgh's 2-1 second -game tri- umph. PITCHING—Billy Pierce, White Sox, shut out Boston 4-0 on seven hits, making it % 23 innings | Pittswu without npg an earned run. The Red Sox won the second game 2-1, bo ] ‘ Cubs; his single in the 10th scored |. called a of 6th,” rain "pane, » Chicago Pe (2nd- game 10 aris ee : tr Iphia at Milwaukee New York at Chicago, ie’ Fiwtusgh Gc kone, 8 D.C. won the 12-gauge with 75, dell of Chicago and Hamp Curry of | 3-Way Shootoff Wins Top Gun Event for Easterner Class A~Rob Drummond, 971x100 Class B—Dick Parker, 098x100 Class KR. G. Stamper, #32100 Class D—Dave Gerradvzi, 80x100 Junior champion—Ed Brown, 10 years old, Birmingham, 9¢x1 Woman's champion — Mrs, Mandell, 100x100 410 gauge—R. V. Thomas, Akron, O., Poot « on OTx1 gaspar: 303x400 20 «# seegggt et bes yp Tomlinson, Detroit, aameien 100x100 om oe ge—R. V. Thomas, champion, a} mia. gauge, 2-man ‘team—Carla Mandell and Hamp Curry after cae at 190"200 Five man team—Detrott Gun Club (Curry, Floyd Gilmer, George Webster, Tom Tomlinson and Crites), 492x500. Leo’s Mother Dies WEST SPRINGFIELD, Mass. |—Funeral service will be held Tuesday for Mrs: Clarinda Duro- cher, mother of New York Giants Manager Leo Durocher. Mrs, Durocher died yesterday in a Chicopee nursing home at 78. iy - ve noted Ley ; Kaline, 32 two on base featured a four-run| es Jameson-Faulk Win Tournament at Hot Springs Is 3 Strokes Behind in. 4-Ball Test HOT SPRINGS, Va. uh — Betty | Jameson of San Antonio, Tex., and Mary Lena Faulk, of Thomasville, Ga., posted a two-under-par 72 here yesterday to win top prize, money in the $6,500 four-ball Hot) Springs Womens’ golf tournament. Their 72-hole total of 280 was) three strokes better than that | scored by the second place team of Beverly Hanson of Indio, Calif., and Mickey Wright, of LaJolla, Calif. * ¢ * Third-place money went to Fay Crocker of Montevideo, Uruguay, and Marilyn Smith of Wichita, Kan., who posted a 72-hole total | of 284. * * * Louise Suggs of Sea Island, Ga., and Betty Hicks of Palm Springs, Calif., rated as pre-tournament fa- vorites, turned in a brilliant seven- under-par 67 in the final round yes- terday but could do no better than fourth place in the four-days play. The top prize money awarded the Jameson - Faulk team was $1,450. The ninth-place team drew low money of $325. Heavy Scoring in Exhibitions Chuck & Louie, Ashland and Giles Girls Softball Victories Chuck & Louie’s Market, Ash- land Flying Octane and the girls of Giles Realty posted exhibition wins and Avondale's girls won a re-scheduled league game in soft- bali action Sunday night at Beau- dette and North Side parks. Chuck & Louie’s pounded out 10 hits off two opposing pitch- ers to trim Sytvan Center of the Waterford League, 8-4. in the opener at North Side. The win- ners broke a 4-all deadlock with twe runs in each of the 4th and Sith innings. In the North Side nightcap, the Americar’ League’s Ashland nine trounced Louie's Tavern of the Na- tional loop, 9-2, behind the com- bined three-hit pitching of John Geiger and Ed McNamara. Three tavern moundsmen were unable to hold Ashland. Giles Realty collected 13 hits to score an easy 12-5 decision over the visiting Flint Queens in the Ist contest at Beaudette. Effie Seay homered for Giles’ girls. Avondale's “girls tallied five times in the 5th stanza, then man- aged to check Shaw's Jewelers in the late innings to hang up a 98 Post. Bears é — | ‘Chips Shoe’ Friin PGA 7 By JACK SAYLOR NORTHVILLE — The outcome may be in doubt, but there is one thing for certain about today’s semi-final match between Tommy Bolt and Dr, Cary Middiecoff in the National PGA golf tournament tat Meadowbrook Country Club. This match undoubtedly will be | the slowest in the tournament. Both * | take lote of time sizing up shots of all types, but the waiting is often agonizing for them to finish 4.| their work on the green. Middlecoff's oO. surveying of shots paid off in his great come- back 40-hole quarter-final victory over Jackie Burke Sunday. Putter trouble put the Memphis dentist 5-down at the halfway point and Burke seemingly had Doe over the barrel when he birdied the 30th hole to hold a 3-up lead with 6 holes to play. Middlecoff got one back with a birdie on the 32nd, but still was dormie 2 at the 35th (17th) tee. By this time, most of the huge gallery, which had been riding with under- dog Burke, switched to the Middle- coff bandwagon as it sensed that a remarkable comeback was in the | making. * * * Burke looked like a whipped man when the last of his once big lead melted with Middlecoff’s birdies on the last 2 holes. There was drama on the 1st 3 playoff holes as both players had long putts stop just short on the 1st green, and Burke rimmed the cup with an 8-footer on the 3rd. The finish itself was anticlimac- tie as the ex-tooth puller pulled his win out of the fire when Burke's 2nd putt missed by,an inch. Many observers feel there will be no halting Doug Ford, who blazed to the qualifying medal and ‘has never stopped his relentless barrage of pars and birdies, He was on virtually every green in regulation and his putting has been phenomenal. He canned a 2- footer on the 1st hole of the after- noon round to start Hawkins’ down- fall after a close morning match. * There are very few “Doubting Merrins Wins Western Test Robbins Blows 3-Foot Putt on 36th, Loses in Playoff ROCKFORD, Ill. —Eddie Mer- rins of Meridian, Miss., went into the Western Golf “Assn. record books today as the player making backs in the 56-year history of the Western Amateur_ tournament. Merrins, 22, a cool, methodical player, yesterday defeated Hill- man Robbins of Memphis State, 1-up on the 37th hole with a sen- sational trap shot. Robbins had blown a 3-foot putt on the 36th hole which would have meant victory. On the 458-yard 37th, Merrins hooked his second shot into a trap while Robbins was short of the green in two. Robbins, 23-year-old National Intercollegiate champion of 1954, chipped seven feet short of the hole. Merrins blasted from the sand to within two feet of the cup. Rob- bins missed his putt, taking a 5, and Merrins tapped his in to cap a sensational rally. Old Timers Drop High-Scoring Tilt Toledo’s Old Timers outscored the Pontiac Old Timers, 18-11, in a battle of hits and runs Sunday afternoon at Toledo. It was Pontiac's 4th straight defeat in the International Old Timers Baseball League after a season-opening win Toledo started tast, scoring five | 76 runs in the ist frame. Pontiac fought back to take a 6-5 lead, only to see T pour seven runs across the plate in the 4th inning to put the game permanently out of reach. Each team garnered 15 hits. R. manager Bud Leslie picked up three safeties to spark the Pontiac ym ti verdict at Beaudette in a league pa —— game. cause. “CHICAGO (@®—George Kell and Walto Dropo, a couple 0: guys who once switched uniforms in the same player deal, have Chicago White Sox fans buzzing about a pennant. The mere mention of the two who have been instrumental in Chi- cago's surge to second place, one 24 | game beflind the New York Yan- kees, , brings a quick smile to the face of Manager Marty Marion. Not too long ago, both Kell and Dropo were questionable starters oe batting averages in the low | ers, * * * “Those two,” says Marjon, “have been 50 per cent of our of- fense, Wé always_expected Kell to come through but Walt had us worried, fet “All he needed was a little con- fidence. One day he went up there and got a couple. of hits and he’s been going like that ever since,” said Marion.) * * te Kell came to the Sox from Bos- | 5¢8 ton last year for Grady Hatton and an estimated $100,000, Dropo was acquired from Detroit in a five player deal last winter. Kel] went to Boston and Dropo to Detroit in 1952 in the same deal which also involved six other play- ge benched for weak hitting eartter in the season, has hoisted his average to .286 and has been moved into the cleanup spot, “That's where I- like to bat,” Pipe Kell, Dropo Are Key Figures in Chisox’ = Drive to Pennant Contention in American League anything different. I’m just meet- ing the ball and everything up| M there looks big. I've been getting | cinnati, a lot of hits to right because they're pitching me outside to keep me from putting the ball into the seats.” Dropo leads the White Sox in home runs with 13 and has 50 runs batted in, Only Kell, with 5%, has, ae more RBI's on the team, Kell, currently hitting .311, hopes. says Dropo, “I haven't been doing oa || Bolt - Middlecoff Match Sure to Be Slow One | 3-0. The | fanned 16, while Leroy Nicholas one of the most brilliant come- | Barb collected four hits and player- | Kansas, Cit gave Bolt a terrific match a Oo were even at the end of 28 holes. A bad tee shot on the ae and a 3-putt’ green on the Y2th cracked the match, though, and when “Thunder” holed a 14- footer on the 14th (32nd) green to go 3-up, Fleck’s minutes were numbered, * * + Shelly Mayfield, who tackles the red-hot Ford today, thrilled a big gathering around the 6th green Saturday by barely missing a hole- in-one. His tee shot took one hop, bumped the pin and fell 2 inches away. Waterford Nine Bows to Flint in Zone Test Fine Comeback Falls Inning Short in Legion Baseball Tourney A great comeback bid for the American Legion junior baseball zone tournament championship fell one inning short for Waterford Post-;431 Sunday as Flint Buick | Post captured the 2-game knockout title. Beaten in its Ist game Friday morning the Waterford nine fought its way back by eliminat- ing Imlay City Friday afternoon, and ousting Livonia Saturday morning, 5-3, as Jerry Kruskie scattered 7 hits and struck out 12. Flint whipped Saginaw, 7-0. then eliminated the upstaters 3-0, Satur- day afternoon while Waterford re- ceived a bye. In Sunday morning's game, Chuck Gillis spun a 7-hit shutout as Wa- terford handed Flint its 1st loss, Waterford southpaw led the attack with a double and 2 singles. In the title game Sunday after- noon, Waterford’s Kruskie and a scoreless duel, which was score- less for 7% innings. In Flint’s 8th, 2 walks and a sin- gle loaded the sacks and Jerry Radenbaugh and Larry Sargent un- loaded 2-run singles, and an error brought in another, Waterford rallied 'n the 9th as singles by Dave Latta, Tom Bryce and Kruskie, scored 1 run and |another came in on a_ sacrifice fly, but the uprising died with the bases loaded, so Flint will repre- sent the 3rd Zone in Department (state) finals at Ypsilanti this weekend LS eo-cor d : . 100 9900 08—3 7 4 lord 013 000 10x—5 1 WSiteriet. Williams and Stewart; Kruskie and Kind Flint Buick ........ oon pong oo—o0 7 3 Waterford .. 000 000 12n—3 7 6 Leos marys oe) bam Gillis and Kind Waterf ee 000 000 012-2 5 3 Fitnt Bul 000 06n—5 6 1 nn Kruskie aa Kind; Moore and Miller. Solunar Tables John Alden Knight's solunar tables, prepared especially for this area indicate the best times for fishing on Tugsday and Wednes- day, as follows: TUESDAY Minor Major —/ Minor Major 11:10 6:00 : §:20 WEDNESDAY my Minor Major Minor Mejor 5: 6: League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE Pieneodg “0 Aves --t Fd os mee at — Detro’ Detroit Smith Cleveland ‘and oer Kansas Eity, a4) ‘ion Chie 2. Detroit Mantle, 733 eo ome = iii rat Se ws, boone” Detrot 2: Berra, New York ‘es; Mantle, New Detroit, 136; smith, ; Fox. Chicago, 119; Kuenn, ashCity, 122. an, Kansas baad = ir, . end Piersall. Boston. TRIPLES — Mantle and Comey York, 8; Finigan, Kaneas City Chicago, Kal Detroit nt New oaey he HOME RUNS — Kaline, Detroit. Mantle, Hemel prank. 21; Zauchin, Bos 2; Jen Boston and Zernial, City, a whom | BASES —. Rivera, Pn ne on 15: ——. Boston a — ils bi ton. Kansas York, IKEOUTS — Gove, M7; Turley, New York. ae M2; Host: Detroit, 68: Garcia, Cleveland, 86; Pierce, Guicags, a. eases LEAGUE Ab Lg Philadely ia, ose: Snider and Campanetie, Broo 331; Post, Cincin- “ qa“ ae Cincinnati — 4 Siam, okt iy Mays, New York, 6 and Kluszewski, Cin- RUNS BATTED IN — saiter, 101; rg Philadel nin, ae touts, i Mays, New York and Sewanee. 122; Post. innati Milwaukee, 118; eo Milw soaee snd Mueller, New York, Morgan, New ictusgewst Musial, DOUBLES Logan, | Milwaukee. rs Snider, B ; Reese, Brook! ; Bruton, waukee, Ashburn, Ph ia and St. Louis, 20, . kee t] ag » Ss Seren Oe vin oe r, Brooklyn, -345 Cae Cincinnati, 33; Mays, New ‘Banks, Chicago, 27; Post, Ome St, Louis, | 17: Flint ace Jim Moore hooked up in — A ~ Discount House All New and Rebuilt Parts LOW OVERHEAD LOW PRICES Motor Mart Auto Parts FE 4-8230 Tiger Box Score FIRST GAME WASHINGTON ae | ABR EH Kuenn.ss ry } Yost,J> 311 Tuttile,cf 4 i Umphiettcf 4 0 0 Kaline,rf 33 Vernon,ib 5 0 1 Torgeson,ib 4 3 3 Sievers, 1f 5 0 1) Debingct 3 1 3 Cournmeye St ing..c f | House,c - 3031 ‘be 463 Hatfield.2> 4 0 1 Vaid'elsoss 2 6 0 Bunning.p 3 © 1 McDermott 1 0 0 Birrer,p 0 © © Chakales.p 0 0 0 wininels 100 amos, p 2006 vets 1 6 1] Kline,ss 6 06 7 Groth t 3 Totals 32 712 Total @& 37 3 Ty he'll probably have to aoe with Social Outcast before the season is over, The Helis colt, winner of six of his eight starts this year, apparent- ly least until the racing secretaries stop loading the King Ranch 4-year old with so much weight. But with Social Outcast it is a different matter, : * * * While Helioscope was beating High Gun in the $83,550 Monmouth Handicap at Monmouth Park last Saturday, Social Outcast came from far back to edge another King Ranch color bearer, Rejected, in the $110,500 Sunset Handicap at Hollywood Park. Helioscope and the Alfred Van- | derbilt 5-year-old can settle mat- ters in the $100,000 added Arlington Handicap at Arlington Park Sat- urday. Both are eligible, along with High Gun. Perc’s No-Hitter Not Enough to Win for Shaw's Percy McConner hurled a no- hitter and lost as Shaw's Jewelers finished runner-up in the Metro- politan Beach Invitational softball tournament Sunday. McConner’s masterpiece was to no avail as Shaw's bowed to Model Cleaners of Highland Park, 1-0, im the championship fina!. McConner walked none and struck out 10, but an error in the ist inning resulted in a costly, unearned run. Wipning pitcher, Wambecki, allowed only one hit. Shaw’s fought its way to the final with victories over Hubarth- Schott of Mt. Clemens, 2-0, and Pfeiffer's of Roseville, 2-1. Clell | Morse did the pitching against the Mt. Clemens team and Glenn John- on saw mound duty against Rose- | ville, Howell Still Master of Gay-Day Track Benny Howell continues to run the Gay-Day Speedway as though he was the only entry. The Pontiac hardtopper racked up his 5th straight victory on the Lake Angelus track Sunday night as he raced home in the 25-lap feature ahead of Bill Schultz and Chuck Partello. Howell also won the dash, pur- suit and his heat race. Chuck Allen captured the semi-finals, while the other heat winners included George Rhyndress, Ross Heichel, Partelo and Bill Gabert. Boston College football roster lists seven tackles of 210 to 250 pounds.” has High Gun’s number, at} Kathmar Leads Yachting Race today in the Port Huron-to-Mack- inac race. finish line. Straw, Glory Bea, Happi-Ness, fore 8 a.m. (EST) today. hour winds battered the fleet Sat- | morning. 38th for Rangers Ivory Rangers trounced Straw- berry Hill, 8-3, at Ivory Field Sun- day, for their 38th straight outdoor polo victory, Jack Stefani led the Rangers with four goals. FUEL KIDS YOU CAN CUT HEATING BILLS RIGHT NOW WITH OUR GOOD OIL, Take advantage of the slack demand for fuel oil and order yours today. Fair prices ... full meas- ure from metered trucks. Phone FE 2-9181. SHOPSMITH BROWN.-SHARPE QUALITY TOOLS ATLAS © CLAUSING e@ DELTA PORTER-CABLE © SKIL @ DeWALT @ MILWAUKEE RENTALS GLENN WING POWER TOOLS 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD AVE. Five Blocks North of 14-Mile Rood BIRMINGHAM MI 4-0444 DAILY 8 to 6:00 — FRI. 8 to 8:00 * a FORDOMATIC BANDS AND LINKAGE COMPLETE FLUID CHANGE ALL LABOR SPECIAL a 2 ADJUSTMENT BRAKE ADJUTMENT | Fords Cy Owens, Inc.| 147 S, Saginaw St. +. winds ranging from fresh gale) force to dead calm, 42 yachts of Tuttle and Harvey Kuenn swatting | a starting fleet of 68 remained) home runs. | _ The 47-foot yaw! Kathmar out of Detroit's Bayview Yacht Club | held the lead as it passed Middle | Straits Island, 20 miles north of | Alpena and 70 miles from the | Sighted off Thunder Bay Island | south of Alpena were Falcon, Last | Tigress and Albacore in that order. | Race officials at Mackinac Island | said a finish wasn't expected be- | Twenty-six vessels were forced | to quit the race after 40-mile-an- | urday night and early Sunday | rookie pitcher Jim Bunning his Ist troit’s 5th shutout of the season. against nine victories. Kaline’s homer, his 22nd of the | season, gave him a margin of one | over Mickey Mantle of the New | York Yankees in the Americ an | League home run race. Kaline | j leads league batting with .365. Yesterday's twin bill was sched- | ;uled after Saturday’s 2nd game PORT-. HURON W — Beset’ by | with the Senators was rained out. | Detroit took the opener Saturday, | 10-4, with Kaline, Ray Boone, Bill | Washington's Pedro Ramos and | |Bob Chakales were battered for | 12 hits in yesterday's opener. Ra- | mos gave up the three home runs | ome Run Blasts Help Tigers to Split and allowed a 1st inning run on a Frank Lary gave up three Na- | sacrifice fly by Kaline, Detroit got tional runs in the nightcap on | its other two tallies off Chakales in six hits. in the Ist six innings in | the 8th when Kaline scored on a going down to his Ith” loss | wild pitch and Torgeson slipped ‘home during an infield out after he and Delsing pulled a double steal. Ramos was marked with the | loss, > Eddie Yost’ scored Washing- ton’s Ist run in the Ist inning in the 2nd game on a force play. Clint Courtney drove in the 2nd tally in the same inning. Nats added their 3rd run in the 6th when Courtney doubled and scored .on Jose Valdivielso’s sin- , ® The split kept Detroit 344 games behind 4th-place Boston, Tigers open a three-game series against the Baltimore Orioles. in’ Baltimore Tuesday night. Only Three Rookies Miss 1st Lion Drill YPSILANTI (UP) — Only three | ( rookies were missing today as the Detroit Lions prepared for physi, cals before taking to the fiald for ' their Ist pro football drill, Twenty-nine of the 32 rookies ex- elhote ve * Ll 3 : COLLISION WORK ¢ ike How £ OLIVER | MOTOR — ewe, @ Collision Shop 36 W. Pike Se. FE 2-9101 See Robert Rectar. Mgr. tor Free Estimates on All Makes of Cars Ne Wistance Yoo (irest (within reason) DAYTON’S ROAD HAZARD = gy GUARANTEE ‘ . OPEN YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT <8 BY TELEPHONE! Offering You One of the Tread Sale ~6.70x15_ ~7.10x15_ ~7.60x15_ ~8.00x15° $36.45 ~ $40.30 $44.10 $48.50 All Prices Pius Federal Tax and Exchange Size 17.95 — | $19.95 — $21.95 _ $23.95 LOOK! RAYON CORD TIRE! ASK YOUR DEALER .. ALL CARS THIS A FIRST-LINE, ALL-RAYON SPECIAL! Motor Tune-Up NOTICE! Market Tire SELLS ONLY First Line, all-ra cord, tiginal equipment tires. yon WE REFUSE TO SELL eny second line, cotton cord, reclaimed rubber tires! BE SURE THE TIRE YOU BUY IS A FIRST LINE, ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT QUALITY, ALL- - POINT BLANK .. . IS RD TIRE? é $395 All work done on our brand NEW ‘1955 SUN ANALYZER! LABOR and MATERIAL GUARANTEED! CHAMPION SPARK PLUGS FE 5-4101 25% OFF and all other parts Reg, 90c CHAMPION PLUGS. . WW Cc .* MARKET x OPEN 9 to 9 tc “Pontiac's Motorist Headquarters” 77 W. Huron St., Corner of Cass Ps STRONGEST TIRE GUARANTEES IN THE WORLD! Blemish WHITE SIDEWALLS IMPORTANT! READ! All tires, regardless of make, are guaranteed against defec- tive workmanship and materials. BUT experience proves that less than 2 out of every 100 tires on the road fail because of defective workmanship or materials, With every Dayton Tire purchased, you are given 2 WRITTEN ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE against ALL DAMACE due to: Blowouts, Cuts, Stone Breaks, Impact Breaks, Glass Cuts, Spike Holes... OR ANY AND ALL ROAD RAZARDS! ASK YOUR DEALER .. . POINT BLANK. . . DOES THIS TIRE CARRY A ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE? Sead BLACK K SIDEWALLS ' Size Reg. Price Sale Price 6.00x16| $21.75 | $13.95 6.70x15| $23.75 | $15.75 7.10x15| $26.30 | $17.75, 7.60x15| $28.75 | $19.75 ' All Prices Plus Fed. Tax and Exchange ° FREE Front End. Inspection Complete front end alignment .» « includes: Caster, camber, and toe-in. All work done on our BEAN VISUALINER. : ) ; * FREE PARKING FE 8-0424 asl tan ae a hc ga ~ mye PONTIAC PRESS, ‘MONDAY. JULY as, 1065 bese Gade to 1 com lower, Sep- tember $2.00%; corn % to % lower, September $1.34%; Oats i to % lower, September 59\; 14 to 1 cent lower, September 9985. ans 1 to 24% lower, September 32.2644: and lard 2 to 10 cents a . pounds lower, September Peaches: Calif. Elbertas 1 bu bskts.| areas of the market displayed a $10.60. : Ab %, eS a wa bei seccrt pao mixed tone. No major division “Dealers who don't normally pact 24 . choles fs ne Neere CEBCAGO GRAIN es = SS 620: %% Bo. tekts 2 im UP was definitely lower. . = “ CHICAGO, July 25 (AP) — Opening | Peppers: Bu bskts. bell type large 2 ' * ) h Saying discounts ‘‘may. be the) : 62M Shoes raeta: M oda flat erts. 6-128 New York Stocks Pontiac eat § biggest thorn of all’ in the out- 3% May Uenccece 3% 1 Potatoes: 100 Ib. a D8, No, b size ‘Late Morning Quotations: | 2.5 . — hy cleanup, Automotive O2'2 ye | A. washed unless otherwise sisted: Calif) ,imiral ..... 24 Int Tel & Tel 30 : ews adds: (A Ss PS ey enka, 0 Ba Ele coal” 3 ¢ Mrs. Myron. Heichel “This year many dealers com. bbe] lar coon 106% 265; reds, st 3.50: Ariz, reds. = : chases’ Man ...845 . | plain they have ae ore’ nto Fe gare tags [ee BLE Sova So IS aka Sepcros | Allin Chalmers, 131 Jones & i... 422. Mrs. Myron S. (Rosettie Rose) | such heavy discounting all. year 133% Oct (.7°")""105 150 Katahding 115: Mich. 50 Ib. sacks} Alum Ltd 1084 Kelsey Hays... 344 Heichel, 49, formerly of Pontiac, that they have nothing left to give Dee $3.1..5.20.45 | round whites, 1.00.1 aioe ee cce en died Saturday after a long illness s/ iv eeaes 59% , Ragishes’ “High 24-8 on, film sacks| Am Airline . 211 Kresge, 88. = eunean teen ee Dae .. 1903 | 2ay 0 clean out sluggish models. ” 8w 5 o van... 60 FP Glass... 852 ous . 6 ¢ | mares potatons: Le. St o> crs Perte/ Am Sieani e16 Li Menat.. s16|in Tennessee, the daughter of| .. | . | d c ld Sti Al bskts. yams 3.50-4 00 Am M&Pdy . 301 Ligg & My... bea Thomas d Ellen B Rai About the only cleanup al fed ou j e Tomatoes: 10 Ib bskts. vine ripened: | Am Motors .. 102 Lockh Airc... an n Bryant Hains./ dealers see now is the widespread Ohio 90 cents, fair $0 cents: Tenn. 100.| Am N Gas . 555 Loews ..... 26 | She married Myron S. Heichel in| expectation of higher prices of new | _——_ | gigiagmelond: Southern, per melon can: | am News. 343 [eee ness... o&|1929 in Bowling Green, Ohio. sts” OW 0 cents; Congo 34 tbs 1.00; 23 Ibs 85) Am Beatin 325 Mack Trk... 30 Surviving besides h husband ae cents. 25 Ibs. 65 cents; Long Greys 32 Am Smelt .. 526 Martin, Gi 25 . ee ee | as D oT «Ns be 08 conte: 38 2315-00 cents 21: 18| Am Tel&Tel 187 cenraa HM . to a < ages beelegp at home, five) . ETROIT (INS)—A treaty be- | cents Pl Mihai Amma | Geush ues 122 * 931) brothers and one sister, including | B N t tenn the United States and Cans | ee Peppa 88 be Mergen ‘Lino. . $16|Robert Rains, of Pontiac; Mrs. USINESS 0 es ada to ban political discrimination ® Anac WAC .. 586 Xivls Hon... 594|Bernette Hesto, of Detroit Her-| Cited today in Milwaukee for in television programs was pro- Armour & Co 1g; Monean Ch...138 | bert Rains and Frederick Rains, | outstanding life insurance selling posed to Secretary of State John [ all US eS Atchison tan'g Motor Pd... 25 {both of Cincinnati, Ohio: Harry | was R. R. Gaunt, 2469 St. Joseph Foster Dulles today by Gregory Au Cst Line 481 Ler ppail inlet 344 | Rains, of Robin, Tenn., and Louis’ st., a local agent for Northwestern Pillon, of Detroit. soon ate. uta Murray Cp..-. 35.4 Howley of Chattanooga, Tenn. Mutual Life Insurance Company. “Pilon, an unsuccessful candidate Banana Sales Bendix, Av’. sia. Nat Cash R... 406) Funeral service and burial will/ The company’s Bronze Button ‘ 16 WwW a i for Congress in 1952, made the Booger. it pi me? - ras — ns panies Tenn. The | was presented to Gaunt by Vice proposal to Dulles in a letter Boeing Air :. 60.3 Nat Lead...... 386) CY le a oper Funeral | President and ‘Director of Agencies ! ALA a ea. ; which was aimed at the CIO-| Growers Are Aiming at Boha Alum 231 NM contel... 687 Home, Oneida, Tenn. Grant L. Hill during the 75th An-| enn United Aute Workers Sunday pro- ; Borden ee ee nual Agent's meeting at North- gram. “Meet fe UAw.-cio,”| Expansion of European, | Bort Warner 48, Novam av... s¢_| Charles J. Long Sr. western’s home .office in Milwau- which recently moved from WJBK-| Latin Markets ona ae Nwst Arline. 23.4 Charles J. Long Sr., 73, of Clea Kee. TV i 4 . 2 7 331 .L 13) ‘ear- . . Win soe eet RIO : Sarreashs oh Suens ti Gi 125 | water, Fla. died suddenly at_home | At a board of directors meeting dsor. DE JANEIRO (UP)—Brazil | catumet_& Ho131 Pac @ Els. $08) July 22. recently, Elmer E. Hutcheson, 1025 Pillon said he had previously | hopes to sell a bumper banana} C®™p_ Soup aly Panh Epl.... 82 Born in Pittsburgh, Pa.. Dec Lake Park Dr., Birmingham, was Campb Wy 37.2 rg Ee asked the Federal Communications | crop in Latin American and -Euro-| Gan Dry 16.9 Param Pict... 422) 4990 he was the . f J Cc. elected vice president of the Gen- Commission for an international | pean markets this year that trade| fon, UN". - 4 Penney uC... 912 ‘Long. Mr. Long alti eae oon ais eral Motors Acceptance Corpora- commission to govern the telecast. | officials hope will produce a 25 per | Carrier Cp .. 54. Peo Cola... 2¢3|@8 superintendent of the tool and | tion. Accordin gto Pillon, George C. Mc- | Cent increase in foreign sales ater Trac. 532 Pfizer ....... 487| die department of the old Oakland| Hutcheson, a Detroit regional Connaughney, chairman of the | Volume. Qos Oe ae Philco Be 38° | Motor Car Co., now the Pontiac | Manager, joined GMAC as a Chi- FCC, recommended the proposal| Trade estimates are that the Cities Bei Ee 53 on os — 32. | Motor Division. cago credit man in 1922, and was) to Dulles. current crop will exceed 14,000,000] Gtk, "a"'P 334 Pillsbe: ‘wun 80.6] He was a member of Commerce |"@med regional ‘manager of the : ea 2 pre igeel aes = Cos Pom. 3 Proct aa 100 Masonic Lodge 121, F & AM. Chicago area in 1935. ici . ne a ® oo ccee ure Bren : r India Outlaws Official | $99 aon oP S| ee itaca b Besides his widow he is survived! Recently returned from the Wi- Con ation in Trade GUY, U0, . Con Rare $03 pact min y two sons, Charles Long Jr., of nona School of Photography in In- not Jose Pires de Almeida of the | Gonsum Poe 495 Rex Drug |) 97 Pine Lake, and Robert D. Long. of | giana was Wilbur G. Seconder Jr., NEW DELHI (# — There will be| Sao Paulo Coastal Rural Asso- | Coo Pw pf 4ts it) Rey Met 8. Mae Sarah C = la ree Mrs. photographer for Haskill Stu- no president hotel or republic | ciation, the principal planters’ | Cont Mot 10 Rock Spa .. 298 onner, of St. Petersburg. | dios. theater in India. It's now against | sroup in Brazil, said that with a aed a cm on Pres Land : sie Fia., and Mrs. Belle Conner, of Seconder was awarded a certifi- the law to use any with an official | boost trom the government trade | Beets. +: 83 Stociis Bre | 388 —— : cate of merit for his work on a connotation in connection with @ authorities, sales could be inm- | Dis c ag. 403 Beab Al RR 806 Apacs will be Wednesday, at course on direct color photography. business, trade or profession. erensed this year by abeut | Dow Aire... &i San Mo og Honorees a ene Photographers from the U. S. and. The object of the regulation, said $7,000,000, Du Pont ......239.2 Rinciair O|.. 878 ome Barney Canada attended the courses. ..an announcement, was to prevent | Almeida said the banana export: | #35, ct"... 84 feetpast™ «S| Rospcke of the Community Pres “unscrupulous” Pi ia OR export. “Auto Lite. 1 484 Rou \*: g¢¢| byterian Church, Orchard Lake, ; . ® Persons from ers want bananas moved up ‘n the | Ei & M . 41 Btd Prana 496) will officiate. The Co: — customers by using terms | scale of bonuses granted Brazil's | Emer Rad | AC 149 ma ou. Cent vo Lodge Birmingham. will proce ews in [ 1e ich might indicate ‘official pat-' exports by the government. Ex-Cell-O ..... 475 ata NI ..1372 A * ronage. Paird Mor’ 276 hte 4¢3| the Masonic grave service at Aca-| Elmer McLennen, 39, of 464 . Pvecarg a: gene EN Pood Mar s Rtevens, IP 3 cia Cemetery. Auburn Ave., paid a $75 fine and Crater Inke in Oregon,is general- | cruzeiros above the official rate of | Preah Tra i... 481 cwite © ei 1. a18 ar Ae Sees ee ee a : ly believed to be the deepest lake 18.36 cruzieros for e doll. m Bak 1°39 Sylv E! Pd 475 Mrs. William Ritchie guilty to driving the a on the Notth American continent. | earned very ar Gen Pynam.. - $86 Texa: Co ..... 104) a wil ence of liquor. He appeared be- . ; Sen Pas citer 82.3 Ellyn} a7 R ols — (Sarah Ann) fore West Bloomfield Township | ‘ueyd Uorsuad © uy qeak yxou aon said the camel ae Gon Mile... Time R Bear. 974) a ee of oes Baldwin Ave.. | Justice Elmer C. Dieterle. NOTICE OF SPECIAL ELECTION wants the top bonus of 31.70 cru-| Gen Tei QS tren . : ay at Pontiac General meceyrnation a» VOTERS zeiros to further it's sales cam-| 9°P Time...... 384 Twent Cen zn Hospital after a one-month ‘illness.| Charged with reckless driving, | pe nese me” electors of the Village of Lake | paign. Oiiletve more a ; Te Guide: "gee Pied = rag Ireland on Feb. | Richard Dudley, 19, of Royal Oak, | . Un Pec 11163.4 . 1877, tl laughter of David| was sentenced to eight days in| given that a special Goodrich ../. | 66 : Village eeton cieton win be he at Sng ree — Brazilian n exporter want Goodreat an inn lea 2{/ and Elizabeth McGaihey Wales.| Oakland County Jail after he/| Seas ast etc estas: | fo, weremethem and expand hele | Ge Fare gt Eom kor: Hf She married William Ritchie in/pleaded guilty Saturday before iin rat itasiass eas Ved] ld last year by Went Germany |Srrisiet.<: 1, be hitter: 12, Pomtise © years ago sane igi omase hain of : Gall O88 ... ce : urvivin; sides her wit franchise eek, &, cereain public! and England. One of the prin- Holland ; 1s Us Too 7"). fs¢/are two sane and two Mervany William Henn, 32, of Washington, “ston rig ga By the 14th pooch seams Almeida said, is neoa ne wi 3 went! + 4) George, of Watkins Lake: Wilfred | P@id a $25 fine and $15 costs Sat- Salers bee een a fe eens hy Bete Pac. Ba | Tomas, of Drayton Plains; Mrs. | SA Striving tetore Aveo Towne Inance. om ing to sence is also interest in explor-| miand stl. Westg A Bk... 28.2 h Crocker rs. Se Sr PSSA lth Cnn or | eA HY Se he | ty tt, ba rn, aoa? Zr Ler © rn i. gas mains, es, among which raz as * "ilson & Co.. 127 4 grandchildren, , Regular ‘i a eervi Int Nick....., 75 ‘ gular membership meeti f Under the highways” ets, alleys, (‘fade relations with Hungary, | Int Pe'-r.....1064 Yale wTow a4) _ Funeral service will be held the N.A.A.C.P. willbe held’ on dos fecal gas business fe the Vilage | Czechoslovakia and Poland, with Int Stiver oo3 Yourss shh T 314 — at 1:30 p.m. from the | Monday, July 25, 7:30 p. m. Base- inans for Anonins, Onijene County, -Mich- Samay _. appro with oe = Mech 138 Zenith Rad... .125.4 Ga aee a with penta e oe oe Trinity — On the date of said election, the polls — we ser ineny) Unter ; sino A _——* will be open at o'clock in’ the fore- study. | STOCK AVERAGES Marie -Rundell of thé Communit soon thereafter as may be. | NEW Y¥ YORK, July 25--Comptled by the : 'Y| if your friend’s in jail and needs “ B | Associated Bible Church, Lake Orion,.- anc ‘will be Kept open until 8 ° relock. in = ut a prime concern of Bra- Ho os! | eaticlase’ will pail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-403! aa they will be finally closed. s planters, exporters and gov Indust Rails um Stocks Tig Vilage? Clerk will be in his office | ernment trade officials is the oan | Week feo ai aed aes faa 103 ae og ea fo tahenaninainy date being the “inirtieth day, as deter. @entina market, which Almeida | Month ago... 237.4 mt oe its Gust Vardus see White ‘Bron omni mene com cada ateesions —_ the purpore ot poo be said could absorb 10,000,000 of the 1988 nigh ee 247.2 1301 75.3 1764! Gust Vard 72, of 3-7118. —Ad ing the registra registering 14,000,000 stalks Brazil hopes to: ee 3.1 1149 67.2 1488 _ 1625 Wood- ™: wuoh Gf the quattried sleetors’ of the ised Wen ie [3g 3 1882 ward Ave., died Saturday after a ( Village A ell Glee ed tl ee export this year. 1964 low ....... 143.9 778 58.4 108.9 long illness. y hich registration may be mad -_ Tel h Work a a TV Commer ial Assist | . P He was born in Turkey in 1883. e ep one or ers Standard Tim home be | cials Assis ommunity National ee ee oe ee ; : _ ROBERT W. HODGE. | Two-Year-Old’s Reading aielaginepistael obegensg ori Opening Wage Talks By Order of Villige Commission. | estos T - ss | Bank Ranking Jum 5 — = home with Mr. and Mrs. iy ug. 1, >, enn. _ ‘on ames Crantas, —— supreme, mer fie comoercils a lsat” They |The De sa eC at Mate e|commercials as a nuisance. | continued~ economic heal uneral uesday . at . x Township | of | Inde mic th negot today coun y, Biithinan dopey hold pets taught him to read. - of the area was again reflected 2 p.m. from the Melvin A. Schutt Cl iations with the ke AP aged “archi Pcs Sethec, pais fticer Frank today. — — with burial in Oak | 4 eon Workers of r , Says vith | ' . ‘ Wyenshis enter Bashi ac Metgtt | Story. says Kim started out with| The Communiyt National Bank sp Walter Schaar, CWA district di- & proposed, ment to y- | SUC g S as xachioro- | here now ranks 278th in the na- , nesse “Ne 2, the Township of Inde-|phene and chlorophyll. After that | rection for Michigan and Ohio said p phy: tion, climbi Hee Seiteg Gromaeee’ i having | ane . mbing 28 places since Jan- ct UAW A some 18,000 Michigan Bell em- capened, iat Sub- -section (2) of the little ones come easily. 'uary, according to figures released pe nswer ployes will ba Gevcivad tn the ed by the addition of a nee Sab ection |. Kim now reads almost anything. by the American Bankers Associa- tions. newe- nea a en bee dire teal baad Chrysler Offer ©: equipment shall be operated. and no| Self by identifying various makes! tot9) assets for the bank aslot The principal demand will be ruck, traiiere or other a of automobiles. The youngster! june 39 were $84,648,299.33. an-| for a 35-hour work week with no Sand District during the hours between still checks the commercials but nounced R. R. Eldred , i east ‘DETROIT w — The CIO United reduction in basic weekly pay 7:00 o'elock p.m. and 700 o'clock a.m.|ignores the programs a Kh. OR. » Senior vice | Auto Workers union is expected to] rates. he said A_map showing the proposed changes : ~ president, Eldred said the bank | give a “yes or no” answer today -—_ im Zoning Districts may be ccamined at rs i g a yes or an: . the ip Hall duriog reeuiar Tow®-| There were 82 degal executions |"1ed 2M estimate two or three| to an undisclosed wage offer by| Other demands include a “rea- ship a mene in the United States in 1945. 45 of million dollars since the first of the | Chrysler Corp. sonable’’ general wage increase; iy BORED ea vasa | which were in Tema. ; year, which probably accounts for| Negofiations on a new contract | @Stablishment of company-paid hos- f MARKETS I ips the end ef the first |? Produce PRODUCE “DETROIT, 25 ior maoee Detroit “Seana tderate Bho og A a ents: cents. ou Western, jbo erts rn é.0- 14 B.se: oe 5.50-7.75; 27s, §.00-9.00; 3s, 0-10.00, Carrots: Calif, WVa, erts 6 doz behs small to medium, 5.00-5.25; topped an ry ig 3.50- 00-2.15 < Ce 1, 2-2% doz, Calif, "Tas'450, mostly €50; Mich, 2.75- Cucumbers: N.J., bu bskts, 2.50-2.75 swnmes: Direct receipts Calif lues seed- less Ariz. seediess 3.75-4.00; flar S003 95. "reds 3.50-3.75 Ferenc cote Calif, fat erts 9s, 4.25; jas Te ttuce: Western, ctns oz 259-3 89, mostly 2.75-3.00; ae doz 2.76. Limes: _ 1/5 bu ctns 1.00-1.25. . % bu bskts, small oe a + Market Ahead, Gains Not Big NEW YORK uw—The Stock Mar- ket advanced today in early deal- ; aa ee aly See ng ot Deen :| in the list Retlishem tecl epmed: on-2 ‘I block of 4000 shares up. 3% at 158%. Directors meet next. week, and Bethlehem long,has been on the roster of split candfflates. Most gains in the market went to around a point at the outside, loses were fractional, U.S. and Foundry was an excep- on the losing side. The stock gained $44 Friday on a split pro- . posal and today it opened on a block of 1,000 shares off 2 at 107. Among the better acting divi- sions Were steels, motors, mail order issues, radio - televisions, railroads, oils, and airlines. Other and Pipe tion ‘BUY WHAT PAY WHAT YOU OWE! YOU NEED mach can afford w repay ovens men and women—married or single—en- “Why Certainly!" oY ool venies first es sguoely teen, Giies at came in. the bank's higher national ranking. 4 Workman Finds Picture of Brother in Old Door » MAGNOLIA, Ark. \(#—Carpen- ter Mack Burdins removed a door facing while remodeling a build- ing. at Southern State College— and found himself staring at a picture of his brother, John, show- ing him in a 1917 soldier's uni- form. John recalled giving the picture to a girl at Southern State—then Magnolia A. & + M.—nearly 40 a egiel dormitory. But neither’ one could figure how the photo got in the door. Lose. SOMETHING? Place a “Lost i to get it back! Dial FE 2-8181, . aa , \ } ~ | ; t 2 " ; é 2. f { | ik f fi; | Fa Pa |Sale Come-ons Boomerang Into Car Cleanup Season DETROIT (%-The trade paper Automotive News -said today: “As new car dealers swing into the cleanup season this year, some express fears the very factors that havé helped to push sales to record levels may turn’ into. major snags in the clearing of inventories. _“Among these factors are the myriad exotic ¢olors, far reaching styling changes, souped-up engines, a wide range of power options and —not the least—diseounts. “Some dealers say’ a strange psychology grips buyers at clean- up time and turns these sales boosters into drawbacks, “Actually, the key to all clean- up dangers—real or imagined— appears to be linked to the moun- tainous inventories, Never before have dealers had to unload so many new cars jammed into va- cant lots, warehouses and — farmers’ barns. were recessed a week ago to per- mat 4 the UAW to study a Chrysler wage package offer. They were resumed today. Neither side would disclose con- tents of the company offer. The UAW has demanded a lay- off pay plan‘similar to that ne- gotiated earlier with Ford and General Motors. Under it, laid off workers are guaranteed 60 to 65 per cent of their normal take- home pay from a company fi- nanced find. . Company supplementation of state unemployment compensation years ago when the building was can continue for 26 weeks, begin- ning next July 1, The fund is sup- » There are about 10,000 species of lichens, ; stampede in the face of overly ample stocks are inclined to be a: bit edgy this summer and to snipe at the factories for the tremendous outpouring. ‘ “One dealer, whose factory is on the verge of building out its "55 run, summed up the color difficulty thusly: 2 COLOR SNARL “I have 28 cars in stock, about two fewer than my average has been all year. I can't begin to carry the possible color combina-: tions on those 28 cars. “ ‘Funny thing, though; when a. customer knows he can get any color he wants by ordering it from the factory, he'll usually settle for something we have in stock. “‘Now, with the factory not building any more, the same guy wouldn’t take any of the colors I’ve got. It’s not that he doesn’t really like what I’ve got; it’s just pitalization. medical and surgical benefits; a union shop; elimination of a no-strike clause and improved pensions. The guaranteed annual wage is not an issue in negotiations. . Current weekly pay schedules for telephone operators in Michi- gan range from $51.50 in smaller towns to $64.50 in the Detroit area. A Bell spokesman said the cur- rent contract expires Sept. 3. Just.Getting Even ST, LOUIS — Police thought Dale cd “Bonanzagram’ Have Fun! Win $100! Here “Bonanzagram’”’ is an exciting new puzzle in which the Pontiac Press offers both fun and a $100 cash prize. BUT before you try your hand at ‘‘Bonanzagram’”’ be sure and read the rules at the bottom of this page. Solution will appear in the Press Aug. 5. «CLAIM CHECK Below is a duplicate of the “Bonanza- gram” entry you send in to contest headquarters. It is ESSENTIAL that you fill it in and save it until the correct solution to “Bonanzagram™ No. 21! is published Friday, Aug. 5. Unless you _ do so, you will be unable to collect the prize it you should send in a winning solution. Check the rules. below tor further details. e- Bonanzagram No. 21 Story Clues On the first warm Sunday of summer, M:. and Mrs. Smith and their son set out for a day at the beach. Junior, aged ten, had been cooped up, recovering trom chicken pox, and was eagerly looking forward to the outing. The beach was crowded—a mass, of people, umbreilas and beach chairs. The Smiths found a good spot and rented an umbrella. They swam and loafed and had their lunch. In the early afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Smith dozed off- When they woke up, Junior was nowhere to be seen, They thought nothing of it at first; the boy was tilled with natural curiosity, liked to explore everything, and made triends easily. But it, came time to go home, and still no Junior. The parents were in search of him, one go- ing up the beach, and one down. They ar- rived at their umbrella without finding him, and discovered that, during their absence. he had returned and lelt a note—a newsy account of his adventures and of where to find him. But the note was scribbled on a piece of waxed paper lett over from a sand- . ich wrapping, and needed a good deal of filling in where letters had failed to show. However, they did succeed in figuring out the message, and located their wandering boy Can you, too, work out what the boy was telling them? cs) Ped eis a KID ON A FINE PIE__ FISH HE _ OOKED A HOT 00G AND ! HAD TWO CO_LES “AND SOME GU__ NO __UN UNDER THIS UMBRELLA | W_NT TO GET A __AN | SA__ AND PLAYED WITH CASTLE AND __OAT AND __AIL MET A w/KE HIS DAD'S LUNCHROOM HAS HE OFFERED ME A __UNNY __AVE ME A SANDWICH FOUND A C__RVED PIECE 90D FOR MY SET TO 1_LET YOULL SEE __HERE A BIG __FLLOW TOWE__ NO __UN UNDER THIS UMBRELLA | W_NT TO GET A __AN | SA__ AND PLAYED WITH A CASTLE AND _ OAT AND __ Ail MET A KID ON A IKE HIS DAD'S LUNCHROOM HAS FINE PIE HE OFFERED ME A __UNNY FISH HE _ OOKED A HOT 0O0G AND | HAD TWO CQ_LES AND SOME GUL __AVE ME A SANDWICH FOUND A C__RVED PIECE OF SLflL 00D FOR MY SET TO FIND ME ACE TOWARD | LET YOULL SEE HERE A BIG _ FELLOW TOWE__ Se eS eS SS eS SB SBS SF SS SS SSS SF BeBe eS eS eB eee eee Pa ie ” aaeaner " aah om rears aa CIRO OOO See SSS o000c. w_N A RAFT AND A GANG OF LEN w= A RAFT AND A GANG OF __EN ATHERS BA__K UNDER UMBRELLA WUATHERS BA__K UNDER UMBRELLA WITH RO_£S P_INTED ON IT 1M WITH RO_ES P_INTED ON IT I'M | PLAYING WITH SOME __OYS PLAYING WITH SOME __OYS : 27. SaaNY ti fey SUNNY | otc a oe ni a — toad i aaa ‘ ry r ' | ‘ : ' 5 r) ' ’ IMPORTANT: . Name. oeee ee eee ewe ee eee eee : ' Address... .sscsceccececee: ‘ 1 KR Save This Claim Check Hl City....--.--. Pnone...---- 8 t Until Solution Is Published! |! Check here if you would like the t ' Press delivered to your homel ‘ ’ “4 ' we w meena anenanewecesnwnaussssancasnoanseseooneeessesn ds How To Play Soive the “Bonanzagram” by filling in all the missing letters, as indicated the underscores, in the messeqe. Insert only one letter above each underscore. Many clues to the missing letters are hidden in the story ot anecdote. accompanving the message itself, and. in a few cases. the contestant’s general knowledge should provide the correct letter. The contestant will note that the messade ts anpunctu- ated. Punctuation will help solve the mes- sage but is not necessary to win. ‘Bonanzagram’ All missing letters must be correctly inserted to win a Bonanzagram [essed yer Gl rg epee hoy Sagan correct answer. When oroperty filled in, the ” will spell out a clear will will contorm in every wav with fm many cases it will seem that : one word would be the correct one. That's vart of the fun! You ~ clues and select the BEST possible in each case. How to Submit Entries 1. After solution is completed. “Bonanze- gram” should be clipped and pasted to Cece nent od ed ond el address. 2. Entries will be received at the Pontiac Press office. 48 W. Huron St.. until 5 p. m. Tuesday, Aug. 2. Mail entries must be rostmarked before nidnight Tuesday. Aug. 2 for Bonanzaqram No. 21. Address — % Pontiac Press. Pontiac. ic! one to a family. or other unofficial mechanical reproduc- tion ia forbidden. How to Collect the Prize The entrant must work out and keep duvlicate solution as a claim check. When the solution is oublished in the Press. he should compare hie “claim check” with the oublished solution. and. # Sia claim check te Identical. he should . call in nersop with hie claim check at the - Press office. 48 W Huron St. betore 5 “ated here. About Eligibility, Information, Ete. Anyone te eliaible tor the polis contest —- —" Prone oot members ot tererediate formilies. a, 4. Only one winnina entry trom « family will be eligible tor the prize. but there is oo limit on number of entries. ove 5. The Press retains the right to correct typographical errors. & fudaes’ decision will be final and cons. festant’s submission. <} entice indicates acceptance of these rules. ‘ 7. No lability accepted for enttes thet - ——tatite reach we. &. The Press reserves the ida ic int rules and/or discontinue the contest at its 3 ii io " — ee mm es maa Pa — . ne in eal THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, J CLY 25, 1955 Big ‘Bands -- Today's Hedio Dich cara -- Programs furnished by stations liste? tm this. column are subject te change without notice Wie, (760) URLW, wen WW, wie WAR, (1130. WEYZ, (12%) =6WJBK, tee = WRUN, (1408) coc "wes Telepbous pom Pi} Wan Valee ft Agriclt. awa Minute Perate 6:00-—W. Joseph Haintine e ir if o a rade WW), News be wxyYz, Volee of Firestone| WWJ Maxwell WXYZ, Breakfast Club WXYZ, Wattrick. McKenzie] CKLW, Top Secret Piles WHYZ, News Ace, Wolf CKLW, News, Toby David CKLW, News Ww News, Party Line CKLW, Ni Ww. Tom George WJBK, News, Don McLeod| WPON, News. Zee, vi WJBK, News. Frolic WCAR, Rhythm Roundup WCAR, News, Ace 9:30—WJR, Amos Andy WCAR, Cottee with Clem WPON, WPON Goes Calling Aries S News wets Band of America WPON, Rise Shine 10:00--WJR, Arthur Godfrey 30— Bob Reynolds 1 ' 7:00-—WJR, — Vinal WWJ, McBride, Peale WWJ, Jim Deland CKLW, Eddie Cantor Show] ww4J, Bob Maxwell WXYZ, My True Story WXYZ, Bill WJBK, Party Line w News, Wolf| CKLW. News, Homechats CKLW, Eddie Chase WPON, Zee and ‘Orville CKLW, News, Toby David WJBK. News, Tom George WJBK, Don 10:00—-WJR, essee fe] WJBK, News, Frolic WCAR, News woe es aeaien weve noe se lag narod WCAR, News WPON, News po nts 2 . . P. WPON, News, Rise 'n’ Shine a 7:00—WJR, Guest House CKLW, News, VanKuren | 7:30 WJR. Music Hall Sewa oe WWJ, Three Star Extra WJBK, News, Party Line WWJ, Bob Maxwell ¢ WXYZ, Whispering Streets WXYZ, Stars at Sev a eee | WXYZ, Osgood News. Wolf} CKLW. Mary Morgan CKLW, Pulton Lewis Jr, | 10:30-—WJR, CBS Orchestra | CKLW, Terrence O'Dell WJBK. Tom Georg WJBK, News, Al Negler WWJ, News bf Lewis WJBK, Mews, Protic WCAR. Music All the Time WCAR: News Ace WXYZ, Top of the Town WCAR, Coffee with Clem WPON. Pontiac Part: WPON, News, Don Zee CKLW, Rockin’ with Leroy| WON, Nose’ Rise *n dada 7:30—WJR, Sum. Serenade WJBK, Party Line 8:00-—WJR, Jack White 11:00--WJR, Arthur Godfrey WWJ, Morgan Beatty WPON, Zee and Orville WWJ. Bob’ Maxwell wws. Strike It Rich WXYZ, Stra: 11:00—WJR, Joseph Hainline| wxyyz, good News, Wolf XYZ, Companion CKLW, Gabriel Heatter Ww, Bruce Mayer CKLW, News, Toby David CKLW, Keepin’ Company WJBK, Party Line “WXYZ, Sports, Town WJBK. News, Frolic WJBK, News, Tom George WCAR, Musie All the Time CKLW, News, Musical Airs WCAR, ews WCAR, News Ace WPON. Don Zee WJBK, News, Party Line WPON, News WPON, News, Party 8:00—WJR, Mr "Keen, News|, WPON, News Papen rts | 8:30—WJR, Musie Hall 11:30—WJR, fake Up Mind WWJ, Henry J. Tay! {1:30—WJR, Midnight Musi¢ | ww: Bob Maxwell WW), Phrase That Pays WXYZ, Show Stoppers WWJ, Bruce Mayer WXYZ, Osgood News, Wolf WXYZ, Curtain Calls CKLW. 8e Preston | WXYZ, Top of the “Town CKLw. Toby David CKLW, Queen For a Day WJBK, News, Party Line | CKLW, Jim Dunbar WJBK, News, Frolic WJBK,. News, Tom George WCAR, Music All the Time WJBK. News, Hill —— WCAR, Coffee | with Clem | WCAR, News Ace WPON, News, Don WPON, Cap, Gown Concert Ri Shine WPON, Pontiac Party 8:30—WJR, Talent Goeuts TUESDAY coniane: oer wike William Sheehan 12:00—WJR, Jack White WWJ, Dan'l Boone 6:00—WJR, Jim Vinal) WWJ, Minute Parade WWJ, News by Cederberg WXYZ, John Wattrick ee News WXYZ, Breakfast Club WXYZ, Curtain Calls ] CKLW, Broadway Cop XYZ, News Ace, Wolf CKLW, News, Toby David CKLW, News, Three Suns WJBK, Party Line CEL Jim Dun bar WJBK, News, plop George WJBK, News, Tom George WCAR, Sign Off WJBK, Morning Frolic WCAR, News Ace WCAR, Music All the Time WPON, Don Zee WCAR, TBA WPON, News, Magic Carpet WPON. News -- Today's Television Programs - - Channel 2—WJBE-TV Channei 4—WW3-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW.-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(7) Soupy Sales Comedy. (9) Circle 9 Theater, Johnny Mack Brown in “Land of the Outlaws.” (4) Sonny Eliot, Variety, 6:15—(7) Dinner Theater, Little Rascals in ‘Mama's Little Pirate.” (4) News, Paul Wil- liams. (2) News, Jac LeGoff. 6:25—(4) Sports, Bill Flemming. (2) TV Weatherman, Dr. Everett Phelps. 6:30—(7) PGA Golf Tournament, from Meadowbrook County Club. (4) Matt Dennis Show, Music, saree Bob Maxwell. Colorcast. (2) News, Doug , Edwards. 6:45—(4) News Caravan, John Cameron Swayze. (2) Julius La- Rosa Show, Songs. 7:00—(7) TV Reader's Digest, Jeff Morrow plays “Blackbeard the Pirate,” in tale based on the buccaneers actual deeds. Million Dollar Movie, Joan Greenwood, Hugh Williams in “Girl in a Million.” (4) The Fourposter, comedy of marriage by Jan DeHertog with Jessica | Tandy and Hume Cronyn. Color- | Burns and Allen, | cast. (2) George agrees to take care of neighbor's pet parakeet . and Gracie lets it get away. 7:30—(7) Voice Program, Leontyne Price, William Warfield, soprano | and baritone sing songs from Gershwin's “Porgy and . Bess, Kern's “Showboat” and ‘‘Mo- zart’s ‘“Magic Flute.” (2) Talent Scouts, Arthur Godfrey host t to} new talent, 8:00—(7) Pee Wee King Show. | Country musie and comedy. (2) Those Whiting Girls. Barbara gets the silent treatment from Margaret and their mother when she and her best friend fight over a boy friend. Return,” comedy. (4) Robert Montgomery Presents. Doctor is faced with problem of trying to save child's sight but losing his professional reputation in ‘“De- cision by Morning!” with Charles Drake, Augusta Debney, House Jameson. (2) Ethel and Albert. Ethel decides to take friends advice and take a plunge into the stock market. 9:00—(9) Boxing. Welterweight Bout: Danny Joe Perez vs, Gene Poirer. (2) Studio One Summer Theater. Constance Ford, Martin Rudy in “A Tall, Dark Stranger,” mystery tale of sinister stranger, ex-convict and a beautiful woman. ° 9:30—(7) Hot Rod Races. Fred Wolf describes races at Motor City Speedway. (4) Secret File USA. Maj. Morgan hunts killers of king of small country near Pakistan in “Mission Barah,” starring Robert Alda. 9:45—(9) Ringside Interview. Christ Schenkel. 10:00—(9) National News. (4) Mayor of the Town. Bad cold helps the mayor get re-zoning ordinance for a factory site in “‘Doctor’s Orders,"" with Thomas Mitchell. (2) Backstage. ‘Por- trait of a Lady,” drama. 10:15—(9) Yesterday's Newsreel. Films of past events, 10:30—(7) Wrestling. Films. (9) Heart of the City. Pat McVey, Jane Nigh in ‘Secret Past,” big (9) | :30—(9) Abbott and Costello. ‘Tax | town adventure. (4) It’s a Great Life. Denny, Steve and Earl prove more hindrance than help when Mrs. Morgan wants to get a driver's license. Michael O'Shea, William Bishop, James Dunn star. (2) Movie Museum. “Fire Bug,” ‘Winter t -Strawride.” 11500—(7) Dee Parker Show. Mu- sical variety. (9) Good Neigh- bor Theater. Burgess Meredith, Betty Field in “Of Mice and Men."’ (4) News. Paul Williams. (2) News. Jac LeGoff. 11:15 — (7) Armchair Theater. Warner Oland in “Black Camel.” (4) Little Show. Julie Lawrence, Frank Albertson in ‘‘The Re- turn.” (2) Miss Fair Weather. Betty Wright. 11:20—(2) Nightwatch | Eddie Albert in “Strange Voyage.” 11:30—(4) Tonight. Margo and Eddie Albert, Frank Fontaine, Miss Universe and Miss United States guests of Steve Allen. TUESDAY MORNING 7:00 — (4) Today. (2) Morning | Show 9:00—(7)—Todd Purse Show. (4) Romper Room. (2) Garry Moore. 9:30—(2) Arthur Godfrey. 10:00—(7) Wixie’s Wonderland. (4) | Home. 10:30—(2) Strike It Rich. /11:00—(7) Story Studio. (4) Ten- | Theater. 11:30—(4) Feather Your Nest, (2) Search for Tomorrow. 11:45—(2) Guiding Light. TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (4) Ding Dong School. (2) Ladies Day. . 12:30—(7T) Beulah. (4) Hour of Shows. (2) Ladies Day. 1:00 — (7) Lunchtime Drama. (9) Shopper’s Mat. (2) Robert Q. Lewis. 1:30—(9) Shopper Show. (4) Good Cooking. (2) Linkletter's House party. 200 — (7) Stars on Seven. (2) The Big Payoff. (4) Ted Mack’s | Matinee. 2:30—(9) Tuesday Matinee. Bob Crosby. (4) It Pays to Be! Married. 3:00—(7) Heartthrob Theater. (9) Tuesday Matinee. (2) Brighter Day. (4) Hawkins Falls. 3:15—(4) First Love. 3:30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. 3:45—(4) Modern Romances. 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Take a | Look. Puppets. (4) Pinky Lee | << | 4: 0-19) Howdy oody. | come Travelers. (4) Doody. | 4:45-2(7) Ricky the Clown. i Ee :00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Justice | Colt. (4) Mr. Twinky Presents. (2) Wel- Howdy + (2) | By JOHN BARROW CHICAGO (INS) — Stan Kenton, ‘whose ‘big- voiced “Artistry. in Rhythm" band sent World War II GI's jitterbugging the world over, says big bands are coming back. The lanky pianist - arranger is) channeling an 18-piece band—10 of them horns—over CBS's television network. It is a summer - long program caled “Musie '55." Interviewed at a Chicago club where he is playing between plane trips to New York each Tuesday for his TV show, Kenton mopped his brow and said: “Il think we've — * Since other hands have crashed video on yariety shows sharing billing with acrobats, comedians and other acts, Kenton feels his show is an achievement. He said: “Television as a mass medium can help music—and musicians. I fee) it has brought a big enthusi- asm for big bands.” With a wry smile he added: “I hope it’s not temporary.” In an era of “swoon bait’’ and singers, sparse bookings have re- trenched many big name _ band- leaders to combos of four or five players. But Kenton, who invaria- bly thinks in terms of five trum- pets, five trombones, five saxes and up, has been an individualist as long as he has been in business. COURTS TEENERS Now, he hopes to wean the teen- agers away from the ‘rhythm and blues” kick, In telling of it, the 43-year-old Kenton speaks as crisply as his percussion section in a voice as resonant as Vaughn Monroe’s. Millions who remember Kenton for such orchestral hits as Eager Beaver, Peanut Vender, Septem- ber Song, Southern Scandal and Laura, agree he’s got a “‘sound’”’ started a | that's stictly his own. Even as a teenaged piano play- er in Hollywood with night club and radio bands, he was studying i Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Bartok, 'and Ravel—and dreaming of a new sound."' Sometimes it was eerie. Other times it was scream- ing, like half a dozen trumpets hitting notes so high they didn’t even, exist, But it always had “emotional impact.” A tired, yearning look comes into Kenton's eyes when he explains it. He said: * * * “Jazz should express all emo- tions, just as other art forms do. “But music is one art that many people feel should be strictly sen- timental, should have a_ tune. They’re used to listening for a melody to sing, When they don’t hear it they're puzzled."’- (2) Sagebrush Shorty. Reconciling Plans LANSING (#—The reorganized | State Turnpike Authority planned to sit down today with the State Highway Department to mesh their road building plans. George N. Higgins, of Ferndale, new authority chairman, indicated he would preach the theme that the authority can fill at least part of the gap between the three-and- a-half billion dollars needed for re- building Michigan's trunkline sys- tem and the two-and-a-half billion. dollars currently expected from a combined federal-state tax pro- gram. Higgins said the authority can provide almgst half a billioh dol- lars worth of toll roads without cost to the state and free consider- able gas tax funds for other trunk- line projects. The. conference was scheduled in an attempt to find conflicts be- tween the construction plans of the two agencies and to eliminate them where possible. — Vardale smashed two large plate glass windows at Patrick's Grill, 382 N. Saginaw St., owner Chester Patrick told Pontiac Police Sun- day. Patrick said the vandals used three stones about the size of base- balls. No damage estimate has been made. One of the world’s largest herds of elk lives in the Jackson Hole country of Northwest Wyoming. Vandals Smash Windows | nessee Ernie. (2) Valiant Lady. | 5:30—(7) Laurel & Hardy. (4) | 11:15—(2) Love of Life. | Rocky Jones, Space Ranger. | ® * | Pike, Highway Heads Talbott Facing Public Scrutiny Senate Probers Start Questioning Income of | Air Force Leader By LEE GARERTT WASHINGTON (®—The work Harold E. Talbott has done for a $50,000-a-year private income while serving as secretary of the Air ‘Force comes under public scrutiny today. The open hearing was called by the Senate Investigations subcom- mittee to look into Talbott’s activ- ities a8 a special partner in Paul B. Mulligan & Co., a New York efficiency engineering firm. Tal- bott severed other business in- | terests but kept the tie with Mulli- gan on taking his government post. He has sald he would accept no profits the Malligan firm makes on contracts with. firms “predominantly” doing govern- ment work. The secretary has testified he has “tried to be helpful to Mulli- gan,” but has denied that he used his government post improperly for that purpose. He said he re- ceives about $50,000 a -year from the firm’s profits. His Air Force salary is $18,000 a year. After the subcommittee voted Saturday for full public hearings, Chairman McClellan (D-Ark) said he thought they would be in the interest of “both the public wel- fare and Secretary Talbott him- MUSIC EXPERIMENTAL He brightened and added: “I think they're coming around, though. My music has always been experimental. And with such | things you have to stick it out | several years before it beqomes established. I think we'll be doing jazz music a good deal of good.” Born in Kansas, Kenton moved to California when he was five and calls Hollywood his home. He studied music under several private instructors and moved from piano te saxophone to trumpet to banjo and back to piano before setting out to earn his own keep. . The first Stan Kenton band was launched in 1941 and three years later he hit the national scene with a hit “The Tears Flowed Like Wine,” featuring. vocalist |Anita O'Day. He built his band from 13 to 19 piéces in 1945 and _ introduced |; “progressive jazz"’ selections like “Elegy for Alto.” Violins and harps moved in later for such in- ovations as “City. of Glass." He found himself with two bands —one for dances and radio, and a showcase ensemble hor concerts. cs * In a trade rocked by more dis- putes over hairline shades of dif- {ference than the French Assem- bly, Stan Kenton stands adamant. He calls his music “Modern Jazz.” Some devotees of Dixieland call his music “a nervous breakdown set to music.”’ Others, including serious musical scholars—and fans in Sweden, Holland and England —regard him as an American Stravinsky. Elect Flint SL Man MACKINAC ISLAND (#—Roland E. Parker of Flint was elected president of the Michigan Savings and Loan League at the group's “| 4 PR yd ] | w” § Green végetables f i 5 ] “ er annual convention over the week- Virginia —~ ee m end. He succeeds W. L. Royer of 12 Scent Detroit Girl Killed Battle Creek. ape how, aula LONDON, Ont. (#—Annette Sut- 17 Prohibit ter, 18, of Detroit, was killed last | Elect Lansing Girl 19 Combatant : night in an automobile-truck col- . i CHATTANOOGA M Cas+ $3 Gate lonch lision on a rural road 10 miles ; W—Miss - F Gouid be =< a Falls. N.Y. was Saat amas * 7 Se dishwater f the National Secretaries Assn. 3 Mistrenter toot Injuries Kill Detroiter at the group's annual canal 36 Res INDIANAPOLIS (#—Walter G.| Saturday. Miss Margaret Treanor 34 Colorer Sheppard, 2, of Detrolt.§ died |ot Le was elected national wer “wee V teed | Th when he was run over 8 pf mee by a bus while running through a} There are 391 schools for prac- #6 Cn busy Indianapolis -bus terminal,--{tical_nurses in the United States. S Bale’ $¢ Scoundrel i * 57 Pre tor of emery capreciens fess fy 1 Prolie henge aeneneanerceategtee } Poiding beds 11 Market . 30 Musical $Priena 20 Tardter 31 Scot 3 face bee ‘calt.FE 4-1515. Jt ‘ nd 40 hero Upon gouresof'tears HEBuppim SB Teiephoneparts 1 Drmkneanity’ |] CGY TY Pontioe 993 Mt. Clemens 10 Bad cry | ree 46 Rodent ‘BS Before ssa root, e \ Be SU \ Nal ee . - A w > ae / We | mentioned. CGamabatk Seen Be From / . a longs for a well-rounded education; “I’m in a small class . men will ask to carry my books home from school.” “Which old wedding ring do you wear?” I asked. ~ “IT don’t know which one,” laughed the remarkable and beau- tiful ex-wife of Charlies Chaplin and Burgess Meredith, who, by the way, never looked stunninger. “Are you very advanced?” * * * “In French, yes; in years, no!" replied the gal from New Jersey who, it is said, has more dia- monds than Tiffany’s. “I have an apartment on the Left Bank and I speak only French.” Marshall, asked her to make “Each professor has a special that she wasn’t married. * Anyway, Miss Goddard had THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Jane Keen role . Talbott’s The Art royalty at ~EARL’S PEARLS .... WISH FD SAID THAT: Jane “Wishful shrinkers.” TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: earl, brother. | Paulette Now i kamning About French Students By EARL WILSON ; PARIS—Paulette Goddard, who is very well-rounded physically, King Umberto of Italy, she graciously took time out to tell me how she's working her way through college. ~- “I go to the Sorbonne, all day long, studying French,” onnounced the co-ed whom every professor wants to keep after school. . . and fortunately it’s all of young men. ee See eee ee oe speak Hollywood French, she rhose to learn the language. How nice to find an informal class of six young diplomats, with such pleasant absent-minded professors! F forgets. what it is,” she explained. “You take a subject and discuss it for 5 talking about a perfec vacaion, said his idea would be to meet a film star in his class, ask to carry her books, and. know positively “T was a little embarrassing.” * “I may take a two-week vacation from class soon,” Paulette “You don’t have to ask permission. You just go.” Paulette will return to the U, although we hope her French accent won't be too noticeable. King Umberto. What a linguist! Now she's got to study Italian. Producer Tony Farrell, now talking of keeping ‘‘Ankles Aweigh” open for 20 weeks, made overtures to Martha Stewart to take the . . With Dick Haymes working, Rita Hayworth may never make another major film . . Stockings” briefly, due to the critical illness of his father in Kenosha, Wis., has returned. Toots Shor boasted to Cincinnati Mgr. Birdie Tebbetts of the managers who's been -hired in his place. in here too,” retorted Tebbetts, never mention those!” Ever since Monmouth Park named a race after her, Magda Babor’s been reading the racing sheets .. . Ralph Meeker’s phoning stripper Nannette Hall in Toledo . . . Gloria get her a long-term contract. . . - Bob Hope flies to London Sunday for the “Seven Little Foys" premiere . . The Hotel Woodward sign goofed and read “Hot.. Woo the London lead in “Pajama Game" oil company put on a show-—with a chorus line and six acts—for visiting Middle Eom. Why is it, asks William Feather, that in public a woman without a man looks forlorn, but a man without a woman looks romantic? At the New Campus they told of the wnew change-making machine in Texas. You put in a quarter and ‘out come two dimes and a nickel—neatly wrapped in a dollar. That's (Copyright 1955, Post-Hali Syndicate, Inc.) so before her cocktail date with PAULETTE Paulette said Michele Morgan’s husband, producer Bill a French movie. Rather than subject he teaches and each one minutes. One student, * S. in October, possibly for TV, te go and keep her date with - Don Ameche, who left ‘‘Silk “A lot of 'em get fired “but you werk in “We've No Angels” ~~ Buchwalds will adopt another child cena . . Lisa Kirk was offered .. An the Waldorf. Pickens has a name for dieters: ¥ 2 Women Plan Jaunt to Alaska Driving ‘02 Car LONG BEACH, Calif., —Two housewives who've just driven a 1902 Sears-Roebuck motor buggy here from Pennsyivania now plan to pilot it to Alaska. The ———— e igh t-horse- Beach, and Mrs. Margaret Wand- baugh, 42, of nearby Compton. “Family tradition” was Mrs. Partridge’s explanation of the 26- day drive from York, Pa.; where she and Mrs. Wandbaugh were childhood chums. Her father J. J. Ruth, of York, drove the car across country and back in 1948, Her late great uncle, Marcellus Diehl, of York, drove it |Report No Casualties to San Francisco, she said, about 1906. Mrs. Partridge said that after they rest up from the 3,100-mile trip and overhaul the. buggy they'll head for Alaska — probably in October. “We'd like to see the Alcan Highway and see how far we can go,” she explained. : Quake Jolts uae : TAIPEI, Formosa @—An earth- quake of varying intensity shook Formosa early today, but caused only minor damage, No casual- inutes, strongly |: east coast towns of Hu- Shinko, where terrified people ruhed into the streets. The quake also was felt in Taipei, : STORE HOURS DOWNTOWN STORE Open Monday and Friday til 9 PLM EL-HURON STORE xen Thurs . and Sat nlOPLM J ti f OSnw? yy) TONIGHT es OPEN 19 P.M. | iia Actors Vote to Strike _| able than Russia to deliver nuclear Stars May Walk Out Aug: 1 Unless TV Film Producers Hike Pay HOLLYWOOD, @ = A strike, against the nation’s television film | producers was authorized last night by a unanimous vote of about 2,000 Hollywood actors and actresses. The producers are .deadiocked with the AFL Screen Actors Guild in contract negotiations. The guild said it had mailed 10,000 strike authorization ballots ‘to members throughout the nation. The mail ballots are returnable next Sunday. If they support the authorization, guild spokesmen said, a_ strike may start Aug, 1 or soon after- ward. * * * Walter Pidgeon, guild president, said the Board of Directors had recommended that members au- thorize it to call. a strike “‘if necessary to obtain a a = decent contract.” The guild .contract, covering actors, singers and announcers in filmed TV. shows, expired last Wednesday. The guild asks $90 daily for actors. The producers offer $75. Pay was $70 under the former con- tract, The weekly. minimum for actors and singers was $250. The guild asks $300; producers have offered $265. Doubts U.S. Ability to Deliver A-Attack . WASHINGTON « — Sen, Ander- son (D-NM) says he has doubts whether the United States is better bombs to potential wartime tar- gets. Anderson, chairman of the Sen- ate-House Committee on Atomic Energy, said yesterday in a CBS television interview: “We may be ahead in physical numbers of atomic and hydrogen bombs, and I'm quite sure we are, but I’m not sure we have the means to drop them in any large su- periority.”’ BIRMINGHAM LOCKSMITH SERVICE KEYS 1... LOCKS§.2"~~ YES! BLAKE » RADIO-TV 3149 W. Huron FE 4-5791 gress, filed on = ‘Quick serv’ al of saws. Bring your saws im today. Old saws : D. W. Fitzwater m FE 4-2687 ve. SYLVANIA — DUMONT EMERSON — CBS HAMPTON.-TV 825 West Huron Sr. FE 4.2525 rTrvvwveYTYeeYeeeeeeeeeeee SAFE sts Call Us — Ml 4-7939 320 N. Woodward Ave. at Oakland JOHN |ONES—Your Locksmith eh hee bt ttt ted tee . 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Nehru Asks Portugal = fo Close Legation NEW DELHI, *—Prime Minis- LEARN TO DRIVE Pvcnee dees ane — County ori yore’ id Return of } en 7 Days a Week Michigan Driver Training ter Nehru asked Portugal today to close its legation in New Delhi by country’s “persistent refusal” to negotiate India’s claim to Portu- guese India. Closing of the legation would mean virtual suspension of diplo- matic relations between the two countries. India closed her legation in Lisbon in July 1953 because, Nehru told Parliament today, his govern- ment felt “there was no advantage in keeping it open.” : Sisters Feel at Home —All in Maternity Ward COVINGTON, Ky. « — Mrs. Anna Durr, 24, felt “right at home” yesterday when she gave birth to her third child, In the same hospital were two more sisters: Mrs. Julia Black- burn, 25, and Mrs. Loretta Geiger, 2 Mrs. Blackburn's third child was born last Thursday and Mrs. Gei- ger’s first-born, a girl, was de- livered Saturday, or divorce disrupted Death 1,076,000 U.S. families in 1954. Ever Feel Like You CAN AVOI Remember these times when the and suddenly sent your fuel bill Aad, remember—that tn addition Bills Unexpectedly Rocket Up? Our New Budget Plan! Call FEderal 5-818i—or drop in next time you're passing by! tal fuel off obtainadie, YOU ALSO WILL RECEIVE This When Fuel D IT Now WITH Winter thermometer went down .. . searing up? 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