a The Weather , LAC U.S. Weather Buredu Fprecdt Po Partly cloudy and warjer. i (Details Page ~) . With YEAR =o kk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 3 a * : - ~ *&* * % x * * Ike, Nikita 1 im ‘ iaociaitel ‘ * —s 4 ae 4 * * SO. Air Crash Near City Kills 3 From Warreni By MAX FE. SIMON Studebaker St.. Warren; his four- Nosediving into a cornfield wear Year-old | son, Mark, and fobert a light, single-engi,. Sewders, 31, of 8661 Page St plane carrted— s~to_Warren. their deaths Sunday afternoon ' The fight plane, a four-seat Killed instantly, in the crash Pifiér Tri-Pacer, crashed into a were: White Lake Towaship field near Earl A. Trebesch, 29, of &712 the intersection of Fisk read and M52, two miley west ‘of Pontiac Municipal Airport. Debris was scattered about tne area. The plane was demolis\ed Pontiac State Police tri HOpers and Oakland County = sherif’s deputies have not been able to dé- termine who was piloting the SCENE OF WRECK Two poljce officers AP Wirephoto inspect scattered vuins of Nght plane which two men and a 1Jycarold boy. All were from erashed yesterday afterncon into the White Lake Warren. Cause of the nosedive crash had no Towhship cornfield killing its three occupants, been dejermined. Tunnell Is Cleared: Lloyd J. Tunnell, degree murder in the shooting _in Doctor's Murder 53, held for investigation of first of Dr. W. Carleton Warrick, yesterday was released and cleared of any con- nection with the crime. a woe previous lie detector tests had ee We re Brightest City in Michigan Downtown Pontiac Has a Brilliant Glow From New Street Lights Downtown Pontiac just about the area heas beome brightest downtown in Michigan at nighttime. * * * With the new, downtown street light installations nearly coemplet- ed by Consumers Power Co.,- of- fals and merchants are greeting the new nighitime brilliance en- thusiustically. Consumers has installed neary all the 76 new lights en Saginaw street from Lafayette to Whitte- more and on Huron street, Cass to Mill. eh No other city in Michigan is us- Ing street lighfs.as bright as Pon- tiac’s, said Edward L. Karkau, Consumer's district manager, 7° TIMES STRONGER The new flnorescent lights meas- ure 35,000 lumens each in bright- ~— *what police called ‘clusive ness, about seven times as bright! as the former lights. By comparison, similar. fino-. rescent lights installed by Con- sumers on Perry street last year measure only 20,000 lumens, conventional strect “The new lamps have been avail- able industrially for about a year, but have only been adaptable for ‘home at 1755 Williams Lake Rd street lighting purposes ‘in the past,“@S 4 long-time pattent of War- few months.” Karkaw gaid. * * * Karkau describe ‘d the new lights, technically. “incon- results,” Tunnell passed a truth serum test Sunday. The serum was administered by Dr. John L. Abretske, of Wayne, an osteopath, while another. expert, Dr. Jay Bi Zee, a Detroit psycholo- | gist, questioned Tunnel). The test took place at Pontiac ty Chief Assistant Prosecutor George F. Taylor assisted in questioning, Also present were several tectives from Pontiac and Redford State Police post. * * * de- from To Dedicate Mansion - ‘of Thomas Edison WEST ORANGE, N.J. .UPIr — The rambling, 23-ruom Victor’ 2 style"magsion*of the !ate Thomas \A. Edison will be dedicated as a national monument todav. The mansion, recognized as an outstanding example of Victor- ian architecture, will be turned over to the national javk servicer during a ceremony. “nown as Glenmont, it was Edisan'’s home for 15 years and the scene of many of his inventions. 4 and - ® boch were’ ¢ plane. controls. It was equipped with dual * * * Wrecking crews were forced to use cutting equipment to -emoeve the bodies. . Scores of White Lake Tt residents saw the crash. ENGINE SPUTTERED Witnesses said the plane the field and headed. due west when the engine suddenly sput- itered.. The pilot revved-«the moior, ithey said. Then the engine sud- idenly stopped,.and the plane went screeching to the ground The plane flyimg at an jaltitude of approximately 000 feet iwhen it started its plunge. , The time of the crash was 4:20 ip. m + : ywship trcied Was (ioe | Hundreds of curious motorists township residents — con- verged on the area. Trafric was snarled both ways on busy M59. ° Sowders had paid about $300 tor a one-cighih share in the plane ‘only a week ago Reletives of the two men ‘ apparently “is unwilling the unaceountla ly to Nixon | unless Vice president slips in the polls to a point where they indicate one of several Dem- ocratic opponents could defeat im. Some of his strategists have told the New York governor that his Puerto Rieo (UPL, was having their connection with the Governors’ Confer- SAN JUAN, —Everybody dist) annual ence here. * Native Puerto Ricans shouted: “YVankeer, go bome,”” at Mrs. G. Mennen Willams, wife of Michi- gan's governor, when she re irned to the conference hotel. And publie relations exccutives from General Motors were fretting with the treatment their 120 ears were getting. Some 60 cially for use by the governors, were taking a beating as native drivers scraped fenders on high row streets. timing is too late. They say the. reaction to Nixon’s Sovict visit) will be a rise in the vice presi- | dent’s poll popularity at the time Rockefeller plans his decision. But the’ governor insists adam- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Rocky's Son Will Marry State Police post, Oakland Coun. | After 45 minutes of questioning, | Tennell was brought slowly, his hypnotic: sfate. Police said he) had consistently said, ‘The docter was always good to me.’ and ‘I didn’t kill the doctor.”’ Det. Lt, William Nesbitt, mander of the com. Pontiac Police Detecive Bureau said” Tunnell explained why -he had lied in the two previous tests. “At first he told us he didn't leave the doctor's office at 24» ¥, Huron St. after finding Warrick and calling police.”’ LEFT IN FEAR “Tests proved he was lying. Ie told us that he had walked to the | corner of Perry and Huron streets. about three doors away, he-was scared. “Then he denied he left the office for the same reason,"’ Nes- bitt revealed, Tunnel, who operates a rest rick. He was the first ee, to| (Continued on Eee 2, ot ssretanps" "Let's Go Skin Diving “In downtown Pontiac, the: nu- cleats has been established fer one of the best lighted down- tewn areas-in Michigan,’"’ Karkau. He said installation of the fights. would be completed this’ week. * ‘ COOPERATIVE JOB Planning, designing@#nd installa- tion: of the new lamps was done (Contiriuted-on Page 2, Col. 7) In his second in a series of | ‘sports ventures, said | the skin diving sports editor of The Pontiac because | | | | | from | | j ! | | | | Press finds his first trip to the | underWater werld thrilling but Wiso disappointing. He fownd no mermaids! From out of the deptha comes Bruno Kearns’ feature, on pose 19 of today's Press, latest adventute | KR ISTIANSAND. Norway tAP) —Steven Rockefeller and a former maid in his wealthy family’s home plan a late summer wedding in a small Lutheran church in Norway. Gov. and Mrs, Nelson A. ANNOUNCE New York Gov former maid in the Rockefeller tocke- “ENGAGEMENT — Nelsen Rockefeller, feller of delighted New York said they are at their son's Anne Marie 21, pretty blonde daughter prosperous Kristiansand grocer, engarce- ment to tasmussen, ofa AP Wirephote Steven Rockefeller, son of and Anne Marie Rasmussen, househoid, tell of their plans to wed. The.ceremony will take place in a Luthefan church in Soegne, Norway, sand. , a village near the future bride's home town of Kristian- \ “She is a wonde rful girl,’ the governor said. } ‘Announcing their _ engagenvent Sunday, the young couple did not set a wedding date, But a friend of the Rasmussen family said it woud pm be Aug. 22 Tt wit be re aomes i ‘ ie Rev. Olav Gauiestad in the Lutherar Church at nearby sobne The pastor is an old friend of the Ras- mussens. The Rockefellers are: Baptists. ~_* The governor has indicated he and his wife will come to Sean. dinavia for the wedding. “T can’t imagine that 1 would Not participate in the wedding of any of my children,” he told news-| men Saturday. Steven, 23, and the third of his parents’ five children, first met Anne Marie when she came to the! United States in 1956 to learn English and worked for a time as a maid in his home. She left the! Rockefeller employ in 1957 to work in a New. York departmegs store, then worked for an insur- anee firm in New York, FLEW TO OSLO After serving an army hitch,) young Réckefeller flew to Oslo July 10 and met Anne Marie. They, came en to her home by motor- cycle, and the romance rumors) have been booming ever since The girl's father, Kristian Ras- mussen, appeared with the couple at a news conference Sunday. “Tf our daughter will be happy: this way, we will net stop her,” he*said eet ~*~ «© * | Radiant Anne Marie, wearing Fi charcoal grey frock With rose pol- ka dots, showed reporters her modest-sized engagement ring—a diamond surrounded by smaller diamonds and set in platinum ° Steven said forms had been sent (Continued on Page 2. Col 6) 1259-34 iy AG ES Cadillacs and a similar number | - | of Chevrotets shipped here@espe. | who is | curbs and other ears on the nar. | —— 0) UNITED PRESS INTERNA TIO ASSUCI4 TED hice Visits i * * x * * * Khrushchev Due in September; Ike's Trip Later President Sets Meetings With Western Leaders Later This Month WASHINGTON (AP) President Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev will ex- “change visits this fall — » thus’ taking into a new ee BSE,. of diplomacy the East-West ‘differences on which world peace hangs. Khrshchev’s visit here — a historic first by a top leader of Russian Com- munism — will be in Sep- tember. Eisenhower will go to Moscow later in the year. Exact dates for the visits have not yet been fixed. Almost identical anneuncements of the plans were made here and in Moscow — the differences ap- parently only those. of translation. Winding up the peace theme, the final paragraph, in the text leased by Moscow, said: “Both governments — e} Z| hope that the torthcoring AP Wirepheote You may see Khrushchev has iation from President Eisenhower to visit the Unit- “GUESS WHO'S COMING! — Watch for this man. him this fall Soviet Premier Nikita acc ed Sta this vear {n person. DLeG an Invi tes. The President, in turn, will visit the Russian leader later re- hry . iz ve “On my ‘a ar visits will promote the establish- ; ' d ise i ment of better understanding between the United States and AS A je the U.S.S.R. and will further roy | ¢ 6 NcelS the cause of peace.” _ I oi i Eisenhower called a_ special news conference to make the announcement here. Exchanges WARSAW, Poland (AP) = Vice President Richard at this meeting with M. Nixon met for more than three hours today with ‘developed also: Communist chief Wladyslaw Gomulka and Premier 81G 3 MEET SET reporters Jozef Cyrahiewicz. Crowds continued to, cheer him at |: Before meeting with Khrush- ; 7 : chev here, Eisenhower will go to , every turn. Europe later this month to confer About 5,000 enthusiastic Poles gathered to watch with British Prime Minister Nixon place a rose wreath at the Tomb of thé Unknown Harold’ Macmillan, French Presi- At Large | dent Charles de Gaulle and West *soldier in a solemn _ cere- Germany's mony honoring’ Poland’s Adenauer. _war dead. 2. Exchanges on the question Many the of Khrushchev-Eisenhower visits ee have been going on for some ith cries of Bore MaRTenies'0 time; were initiated well before Vice President Richard M. Nixon went to Russia. Chancellor Konrad _in crowd cheered, “live 100 years,” in Poland. An excited. Polish worker bolt- ed through poff*e lines and grab-| | ja traditional cheer | Eisenhower said he told Nixon , bed Nixon in a fierce bear hug. on the day the vice president left F : ; & almost knocking him down for Russia that negotiations in | Polish security agents pried form were in progress looking to- Nixon loose and pushed the man ward an exehange of visits be- roughly aside. Nixon was startled tween Khrushchev and himself. momentarily but quickly regained Eisenhower said he told Nixon his composure. The v.ce presi- not to open the subject of the ex- dent's aides said the man meant change visits, but that there, was no harm and that he wanted to po prohibition on him to discuss- hoist Nixon on the shoulders of the ing the matter once the subject (crowd. was opened up. x * In telling of his plans to go to Europe to confer with the heads WARSAW (® — Vice Adm. Hy- man Rickover, touring with Vice | President Richard M. Nixon, of state of Great Britain, France showed no interest today in his and West Germany, Eisonhower birthplace, the village of Ricki said coordination betweerr the about 30 miles southeast of War- Allied powers has been 200d. MIKE GISONDI saw. But, he added. there are prob- Asked whether he intended to (Continued on Page 2, 3» Col. 4) : : visil _Rickt, he replied: ‘“‘what == elieve Killer = Find 5. Year- Old Boy ¢ Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki author of a plan for a European [) d Off B ch ‘een in Woods atom-free sone which the United rowne ed States has rejected, sat in on Nixon's meeting with Yop Polish ... (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Drowning | Baka, of 3580 E. caped murderer of a Hazel Park: Toll in’39| Kirby St..- was tavern owner and his son was : (una: by an Ue reported sighted early today in a identified: « «'Lim- More Muggy 11 tiny wooded area west of Mar- ; mer in two feet a state Police, sheriff deputies and Damp Weather Bae P on ee pee © = ” Jor by ichi- s * - bes farts om inne 'aee [Son Its Way ete mee conan yg wn on areal More muggy and damp weather Tbe drowning took place at 5 p.m. Deputies said the bey had wandered from his parents and had either gotten into water too deep tor him or fainted while wading. about a quarter-mile square neay! is on ils way to the Pontiac area, Humboldt Junction, about 27 miles the U.S. Bureau reports | west of Marquette ! Partly cloudy and warmer jthrough tomorrow becoming humid Gisondi and his pal, Harold | ionight, is the weatherman’s pre- Hummel, were sentenced to life |, Showe : prison iorusa. ‘te 1953 by. Oak. [diction Owers are likely tomor- rand County. Circuit Judge 4. , : b him go under. offi- He was pronounced No one saw cials reported. Russel Holland for the 1962 “‘re- |The low tonight will be @5 de ‘dead by Oakland County | Deputy venge” slayings of Vidos Vinoku.. grees and the high tomorrow oe Dr. W. C. Gibson of Mit ‘ or row, 60, a fis son, Joseph, 31, in their Oak Gardens tavern, 21630 Joba RR. » One of the biggest manbunts in 88. Temperatures will average about five degrees above the normal high of 83 and normal low of 62 ~ 8 PIER In Today's Press the: Marquette area's history has'for the next five days, It will been under. way since last Thurs-' remain rather warm and humid. eas _ oe RENE day when Gisondt threatened a’ until Friday or Saturday when. Commi: : 6 driver te f Wi , apie a ns | prison trusty garbage truck itemperatures will drop somewhat. County News 2g with a knife, The rainfall is expected to) Gounty News 2 * * * avarage up to two inches in scat- Editorials . 6 Troopers at a roadblock on U.S. tered showers or thundershowers | opi:uartes 23 41 said they saw a pickup truck throughout the next five days Sports 29.29 approach without lights at about * wre ? Theaters % 2:45 a.m. .It stepped about 300° The fowest recorded * terapera- TV,& Radio Programs % yards from the roadblock, they jyre in downtown Pontiac preced Stay Alive Longer i said, and a»man jumped out and ing Sam. was o4. At lpm, the Wilson, Earl aa “Continued off Page 2, Col. 8) reading was 8 Women's Pages 5-17 ~~ € *. ae . » be \ A af ¢ 5 f ZL : ‘ Fall ‘ Cae" oy Ss otk PR ei: i A Oe ee etn, at ; Per 4 . f ; mi | Rae ae * “ : : { ad A oy } ‘ . ‘ ‘ ° : F, \ \ : Z . , Ps : c ee Ray hase y es ; f cof % % : ‘ s ; 4 Misa ' z “ | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3,-1959 pe yo te | : Toledo Ousts ‘Autos Kicks Em Out Plane Crash Near City | es of Downtown Kills 3 From Warren | 45-Day Experiment Is Storted With Malls for Pedestrians Only ‘Continued From Page One) Township. He called the accident | Sheriff's Deputy George Lum. “¢Xtremely unusual. bard. : * = Besides his wife, Trebesch is survived by three daughters. Bev. Controls completety, Silberg satd, TOLEDO <‘(UP1i—The autome- — ae eae ° Even if a pilot let” go of the | The Day in Birmingham Citizens Research Council BIRMINGHAM—Meyer L, Pren-; the City of the Straits Pythian tis, president of the Citizens Re-| Lodge and of: the DOKK, Pyth- search Council of . Michigan, and ians. Thomas R. Reid, director and .an- we we nual meeting chairman, have =| Surviving are six daughters, nounced plans for the annuaj meet-| Mrs. Charles M. _Jones of West ing of the Citizens Research Coun- Bloomfield Township, Mrs. J 2 Hew- cil to be held,Oct. 15 at Bloom- ard Wendorph of Lathrup Village, field Hills Country Club. |Mrs. Loran O'Brien of Manton, x * * 'Mrs. Cidney O’Brien of Perry, aaa +i . and; Mrs. Elsie Knox of Research council members Fla. and iis. Eouls their guests will convene at 4 p m.: Clark * of ‘Dearborn; one son, Lloyd of Man- Sets Bloomfield Meeting -_ Bradenton, em “i 8. Deborah 2. and Carol, the plane would tend to fly straight for a business session. Following : i} bile was ostracized today from the NN era. ey BD me at a leyel altitude the formal meeting will be ar social | tM; 21 J and . 4 : heart of ee Toledo in the Sowders is survived by his wife, - | hour and dinner. great-grandchildren. : start of 4. fday experiment Eve. 31, and two children, Steven ‘ouncil | : we oa) fie ue sos : peune ° oe ir | The Citizens Research Council e . i Ki S aan pa peg ee 10, and Lauri Jean, 18 months. Tunnell Is Cleared | ts an independent, non-partisan, ; Oe any Hod Of tran-PLEW TO MEXICO : | privately supported research the only permitted modc of trans- Fle a : . D ’ M. d agency pet ae. bed acvetion portation . . es and Trebesch were in octor § ul af in attention tw aiiclalinics ves j With all the hoopla accorded the The president of the Lakeland (Continued bron Page One) since its founding in 1916. . British Request arrival of the automobile half a Flying Club is Joseph A._ Gillis . Purpose of the research council - century ago, the pedestrian came Jr. Democratic state representa. discover the doctor moments after is to promote more efficient, eco- | into his own on the mills — the tive and son of a Detroit Record. he'd been shot the night of July 24: ! nomical and responsible govern. Plea to intervene i New area sealed off from trafic The parking meters and street signs were gone and traffic lights ignored. In their places, 10,000 potted plants, 1,000° evergreens ‘and other trees are to sprout. Workmen have painted outlines on the streets where gardens and patios-will be built if Toledo takes to the fea. FIGHT SHOPPING CENTERS Downtown businessmen hope the, majls will serve as the inner city’s! answer to the convenience of shop- ping centers on the outskirts. Like many metropolitan areas. Toledo, a city of nearly a third of a million people, found its downtown area choked by traf- fic. Shoppers were becoming more and more reluctant to g0 | er’s Court judge. * * * Gillis flew the same plane to. Warrick. of 262 Chippewa St Mexico earlier this month, He is'djeq of ballet wounds at Pontia presently on active duty with the General Air Force Reserve at Bakalor night. Air -Force Base, Ind : x * PS Tunnell was arrested a week Gillis is a lieutenant colonel with | 8&0 by State Police and Pontiac the 403rd Troop Carrier Wing Police for investigation of nar- based at Selfridge Air Force Base.| Coties violations. At first it was believed Gillis | After further questioning ane | Was one of the victims as the (the murder, detectives dropped the . ounce A Fe i had preceded him as he arrived in Puerto Rico lane w ist inarcotics charge and booked him) eae t this weekend to attend the Governors’ Confer- ‘for investigation of murder las _ ‘Tuesday. William: Welke, of 752% Pontiac | i, iTrail, Walled Lake, maintenance | officer of the club, said the plane. under his name. * * kw appeared to be in good condition. said, ‘I want to clear my name.” Government investigators were) : ‘to begin a probe of the accident. The tests differ in that a lie today. : detector test can only indicate | The plane was traveling slowly, whether a question is answered ;| Correctly. The serum test makes Hospital’ the following La ” The truth serum test was agreed’ ‘to late last week by Tunnell, who, c Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller four ‘WE KNOW WHO YOU ARE’ — New York’s ad that*his fame the 1960 Repub Decide Whether He’ll Run (Continued From Page One) said, any _— liberal Democrat would defeat Rockefeller. ence. Rockefeller says he'll decide by Nov. 1, on the basis of public opinion polls, whether to seek vob Moe Fe Fy eat we Y AP Wirephote ment. DANIEL W. SYMONS Pythian Memorial Service for Daniel W. Symons, 91. of 544 W. Brown St., Birmingham, will be held 8 p.m. today at Manley Bailey Funeral Home in Birming- ham. bd * * Funeral service will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Entombment ‘vill be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. lican presidential nomination. PS Rockefeller Lets Figures Rockefeller’ Son to Wed in Norway» (Continued From Page One) Mr, Symons died Saturday at | St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pon- tiac, after a short illness. | He was a member of First Pres- byterian Church of Birmingham, | a past chancellor-commander of the Birmingham Knights of Pyth- ias Lodge, a current member of - the malls’ eight archway entrances. identified Pa a, when it started its plunge, wit-| antly he will make no decision un- ’ ;way must be done three weeks, Red Rebellion in Laos Denied by Gromyko GENEVA (AP)—The Soviet Un- jion has rejected a British plea to intervene in a new Communist re- bellion in the southeast Asian kingdom of Laos. British Foreign Secretary Sel- wyn Lloyd discussed the new out- break of violence in what was for- merly French Indochina with So- viet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko Sunday. * ®, * Official sources said Lloyd had told Gromyko that Britain is gravely concerned over the situa- tiongahd that Communist North Viet Nam, Laos’ northeastern neighbors, is aiding the rebels with men and arms. ; | it impossible for a subject to ,.) ¢. Rockefeller clearly is the star so! off Saturday for the publishing of| - ~~ Ee : “ _..,/nesses said. They. reported the, til fall. . 7 : ' : oa : In rejecting this, Gromyko * City officials hope the public will craft “crumpled like a ball” upon| lie, police said. | Gow G. Menne Williahc of Gee "pening 1 iis S the marriage wbanns, which in Nor M other ( lai ms claimed the Laotian’ government did not plan to San . ay. return to public transportation. hitting the ground. It did not burn.| Police said they which will drop shoppers off at) mo Victims were not positively question the rest home operator, for three hours. The/any further about the murder and) * «© * ‘bodies were taken to the D. E.|Were ‘Satisfied he is innocent in The idea of creating, malls where Pursley Funeral Home, 151 Org the shooting.”’ | pedestrians could roam at will WaS chard Lake Ave. ’ x & backed vigorously by Downtown They also didn't indicate further: Toledo ‘Associates, Toledo’s mer-| Robert Forsyth, Sowders fath- jinvestigation as to whether Tun-| chant group. er-in-law, said Sowder$ had sold nel] had misused any narcotics his share of a based at which he had obtained fo ients The idea was suggested 0 | the Detroit City Airport to buy jat his rest home. @ for iis American cities two years 8£° | into the Oakland County ae by Lewis Mumford, writer and ; . city planner, who told the Inter. . Friends said Sowders had ex- national Congress of Local pressed his desire to fly a larger Authorities at The Hague: “Eith- (Plane. er the motor car will drive us all out of our cities or the cities | will have to drive out the motor Japan Volcano Erupts | | KUSHIRO, Japan (UPI)— | * * x | Picturesque 4,884-foot Mt. Mea- | Officers of the flying club were kan in Japan's Akan National completely baffled by the crash. Park erupted for 15 minutes yes- . the ‘Democratic ticket. | ‘TOUGHER THAN NIXON Michigan told a morning news conference he did not consider himself a presidential candidate at this time. Local financial problems, which he termed tran- sitory, demand his full attention, the governor said. Dressed in a conservative dark suit despite San Juan's muggy ‘heat, he kept reporters laughing most of the way through a news conférence in which he said he has no intention of seeking the presidency but— Williams said he had no person-. He wouldn’t preclude the possi- al choice at the moment to lead | bility of completely changed cir- cumstances under which he “T am fond of all Democrats,’’, could become a candidate. ne yaatd | “It was news to him that former ,Gov, Thomas E. Dewey had ad- He said he felt Rockefeller Vised him to make a decision on would be a more difficult Republi. the race this fall. can choice to beat than Vice Pres- HADN’T HEARD before the wedding. But this peri-. ,od may be reduced by the Depart- N ew Under water ee aes if the applicant’ F’ndurance Mark | Young Rockefeller, a graduate | of Princeton University, said he | will return te New York in Sep- | tember and enter one of his fam- (underwater endurance record of | ily’s businesses. 55 hours and 37.11 minutes. “This will change my life com-| Mrs. Dolores Fisher, operator of pletely,” Anne Marie. said.ja" underwater diving school, ‘Everything will become different climbed out of the water last night for me, but what I have brought/4fter a doctor ordered her topside with me from the home of my for an examination. Mrs. Fisher ‘childhood will always remain with| Was reluctant to surface but her me. I will remain the one I am.” |¢o-workers were becoming worried | about the possible effects of the HERMOSA BEACH, Calif. (UPI) —A 23-year-old mother of three children today claimed a new, © had violated the 1954 Indochina armistice, under which Laos was #® remain neutral and establish a national front government with Communist participation. «Britain and the Soviet Union were co- !chairmen of the armistice confer- | * * * Gromyko recalled that the So- viet Union last month had urged reestablishment of the Indian-Cana- dian - Polish Armistice Commis- sion which was abolished five months ago, Britain turned down that proposal after the Laotian {government had refused to accept ithe commission again. The Soviet foreign minister also ear.” . Tonight, the malls, dubbed ‘‘To- ledo Shoppers’ See-way,” will be officially dedicated by Mayor John Yager and Lucas County Commis- sioner Ned Skeldon while a band plays “On the Mall.” = > 4 * * During the next 45: days, Toled- oans will be surveyed and, if they approve of the malls, the idea will be adopted permanently. “One of the plane’s character-| terday, spewing flaming lava .jident Richard M. Nixon. But, he’ Ye et GALS elon, | istics is its basic stability,’ said) and smoke 2,200 feet into the sky. David Silberg, treasurer, of 6321 Police reported no _ injuries St. James St., West Bloomfield; among sightseers in the area. Meets Polish Leader | | (Continued From Page One) Ike, Nikita Reveal Exchange Visits Set ‘Continued From Page One) lems that ought to be talked out ae off right | guard and between heads of government. He € Nix ar lre lee mat FY Ae . asped Nixon around his middle, | re marked that it is good for these almost weeping. Police and Nix- leademg to see each other. ican flag. and the red and white Polish banner. Neither had he heard, he said, | x * * | She said she and Steven would of a prediction by Sen. Jacob K.| ‘Javits (R-NY) ‘that accelerating |live in an apartment in New York) events would force such a decision but that they haven’t found one earlier than expected. \yet. Anne Marie added that she vants keep hous : Yes, Rockefeller continued, he |“ as {© Keep Rouse herself had a lot of letters urging him to run. No, he hadn’t counted them, but they probably ran into the hundreds. What was his re- action to these and newspaper (sure lucky catching this one.”’ long submersion. ‘denied that North Viet Mrs, Fisher was pronounced | assisting the rebels. | in good conditien when she came | ~ | up. | Reported Sighted (Continued From Page One) The old record was 30 |Northridge, Calif. reports of his possible candidacy? | “I’m interested, like everybody road, Nam is | She wore an aqua lung avrine Escaped Murderer ‘ Steven said he will stay with the her stay on the pool bottom and |Rasmussens until the wedding and/|was féd liquids through a squeeze added he would like to get in some | bottle. fishing. Putting his arm around;hours and 2.43 minutes set last| Anne Marie, he added, “I was'May 16 by Mrs. Alberta Jones of | ran into the woods alongside the Herbert G. Klein, Nixon's press Stainless Steel Not New officer, reported that the calls en. on’s aides went quickly to his side! and people in the crowd set up As to whether all this may lead else is,” he said with another wide Stainless steel first came into 2#¥@dsk at Belvedere P alace|tn che 100 ean peaning “may protiinssee in ihe early 1000e/an q this morning and on Parliament, ¥°U lve years. | was introduced by an English SPeaker Czeslaw Wycech were! eee vention. < “very friendly in every respect."’| Grinning, Nixon moved back to- ; x k& * \ward his car, and the procession He declined to disclose what went off to the government offices subjects were discussed. Nixon's for calls on Communist party) -call or Gomulka stretched out! leader Wladyslaw Gomulka, Pre- Mostly Pleasant- . rin. to a summit conference of East & x « * ie ae ae . eitect He flatly rejected suggestions he ture question. ‘He said bch a alent run te Ue UBe Preacency Conlerence wax absolutely in (0 3 ticket headed by Nixon. He : : was kind in his comments, how- Practicalyanless there were ad- over about his potential rival. vance indications of positive | Nixon, he said, “seems to be a FEL leading candidate for the prize." Prospects of Mr. K’s Trip to U.S. Eases Allied Fears GENEVA (AP) The prospect ference, which they still ardently of a visit to the United States by desire. They apparently believe Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev talks between the Soviet Premier * Officers said they gave chase but lost sight of the man in the darkness and heavy undergrowth. The abandoned truck was found to be registered to Leander John- {son of Négaunee, who was away from the home when officers sought to talk to him. They said earlier they were awaiting reports of thefts from . : : os c leased Allied fears today of a dan- and th S; si } farms in an effort to trap Gisondi. Weather Prevai Is through lunch time. The two men | Mier Jozet Cyrankiewiez and For- But, with the prospective collapse He thought Nixon ha handled gerous new flareup in’ the Berlin’ up pect fe ae : p discussed international problems | eign Minister Adam Rapacki. (of the Geneva foreign minsiters’ himself with great skill under crisis after the collapse of the for-|Summit on at ledst ane or two Gieondl:'and Hummel were ¢8- Throughout U S so intently they decided they; Earlier, Nixon paid a protocol conference, it was obvious that varied and difficult circum-' eign ministers conference here. . lissucs - Reformatory at the time of the might as well continue. Gomulka call on President Aleksandr Zaw- By The Associated Press | During the ceremony at the land, and on Parliament Speaker * Fairly pleasant weather pre-tomb, one of the Nixon’s well-Czeslaw Wycech. vailed today in most of the coun- wishers handed the vice president) Nixon delivered a_ letter of try, although it was a little cool his 5-year-old daughter to hold. | greeting from President Eisen- in the Northeast and showers Nixon held the girl in his arms. hower. sprinkled scattered sections. iturned to the crowd. around him| nz kek Cool Canadian air covered the and called out as they applauded:| Wycech showed Nixon the his- northeast __ corner from Maine’ “We must all work for a better toric 5-foot mace used to preserve! through New York and Pennsyl- jife for our children.” ‘order in the Polish Parliament. | vania- and into West Virginia.| k * | “We could use something like | Temperatures ranged from the After placing a wreath of pink te,” 60s into the 40s, far below normal roges on in most of the region. r * the memorial tomb and’ ident commented. |reviewing an honor guard, Nixon) there was opening up now a new, stances” in his tour of the Soviet arranged to have luncheon served.) adski. who had invited him to Po higher level ‘of exchanges which Union and his encounters with’ the Western allies hope may bring Premier Nikita Khrushchev. some alteration in Soviet positions | on the great issues between the East and West. The Demacratic picture was clouded by the reluctance of most | of that party’s governors to speak out in favor of any par- ticular candidate. First reaction in Congress to the forthcoming Eisenhower- Khrushchev visits was favorable, | Although Connecticut Goy. Abra- though not unanifhously so. ham A. Ribicoff insisted that Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illi- Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) that in our Senate,”’ the vice pres- nois, Republican féader, said the is the leading candidate for his; : ,s , ene ; ;.| Negotiations rec s italks if succesful could ‘‘enshrine Party's nomination, some‘ of his cee ot ie ne ee ! The reception Sunday was the the President as the boldest and Colleagues were not so sure. ‘suddenly moved toward the thou- most rousing Nixon had gotten. most | determined peacemaker in| Gov. Leroy Collins of Florida * * * . U. S., British and French offi- cials all conceded that the con- ference almost certainly will end in disagreement Wednesday. The only reservation they make is that some unforseen and _ radical change of position by Russia could alter the outcome even on the fi- nal day, Informants said the West will not change its position, * * x | Our City Becomes Brightest in State (Continued From Page One): Ciry Engineering Department, headed by John Emerson, and ‘to a. standstill, The only Eee ooesement, headed by Gordon A. |West talk scheduled today was a w. Consumers’ Electrical Engineering capees from the Ionia State Vinokurow killings, A break in the baffling mur- ders — the tavern was not robbed. — came when a 16-year-old In- dianapolis, Ind. girl told police the pair had confessed the murders to her during their flight from Mich- igan, cooperatively, Karau said, by the * * * . Besides his escape from Ionia and Marquette, Gisondi, who stead- ily maintained his innocence dur- ing his trial, had once fled from Jackson Prison where he had been sentenced by Judge Holland. He Readings -were in the 60s in a sands of spectators applauding F = mi said hi luncheon meeting between Rus-| Enthusiasm of downtown mer. | i : ; rn a ae plauding For nearly 15 miles, ecstatic many gennerations.” said his state probably will get). iA en Wasysntted) tnushe wagner narrow belt extending from Vir- and cheering him. The crowd gave growds cheered the delighted vice \ 8 Gen, Mike (Manstela ol behind its Sen. George A. Smath-| 54 § Andrei A. Gromyko and, chants was expressed by Gordon prison at Marquette. ginia through the Ohio Valley and cries of “‘long life." One man president and showered him with y oom a : . ae ic €TS as a favorite son. But he pre- |B ier Foreiny Se amt agg Be eee the Great Lakes region into the broke through crying “‘Neexon.” flowers after he arrived by plane Montana, assistant Democratic will ed, aie Bene was, to cel) wn: Merck ‘ upper Mississippi Valley. The 70s were the rule in most other areas He bore down like a fullback from Moscow. leader, came the comment that he ‘dicted compromises. “The merch Seman abn 8k aa : : before and after with Secretary of | reached by which all major can- ae s i didates will be represented on al State Christian A. Herter and Ss are very cate QUIVEY Sees ‘had no doubt Eisenhower's deci- except for the 80s in the southern) and central] plains and the South-| west desert region and the 30s ° near the Pacific Coast and parts. of the northern Rockies The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureag Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly. cloudy and warmer through tomorrew,| more humid tonight and tomerrow with a chance of thundershewers. Seutherly, winds 6-10 miles today and tonight in-| creasing te 10 to 16 miles tomorrew. i a | Today in Pontiac | —— temperature preceding 8 am | | 5 At 8 an Wind Velocity 5 m p h Direction—-Southwest Bun sets Monday at 750 po Sun rises Tuesday at 5 27 a m Moon sets Monday at 7 [sion was prompted by ‘‘good and \cufficient reasons.’’ Mansfield. said there should be “‘no petty, partisan quibbling’’ and that he himself would give the President's decision full support. * * * But. Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R-Ind) protested that “it looks like we're again being taken in by the Russians.” | Khrushchev is expected to visit | Washington for two or three days jto engage in, as the announcement put it. informad] talks with President. Plans are for the Russian leAder state’s delegation, and no one per- son, including Smathers, will be able to control it. ' Gov. Robert B. Meyner of New Jersey, a prospective favorite son with obvious national ambitions, told a news conference he has no intentions now of becoming a can- \didate. But he said that ‘“{ the stream indicated I might swim in a ceftain direction, I might." Quake Shakes Parts of Georgia, Carolina iFrench Foreign Minister Maurice iCouve de Murville. x * * Before talk arose of an invita- ition soon from President Eisen- ,.. : . hower to Khrushchev, all the Al-' brightened up at night, we expect lied delegations here were con- cerned over what Russia would do about West Berlin when efforts to reach an agreement finally col- lapsed. P * bd * ly the British and West German, express the view that so long as high-level discussions are in pros- Now Allied diplomats, especial- pect or under way, Khrushchev |ful to Consumers and to the City \Commission for maing the _change,”’ said Richman, * x * “With the downtown area | there will now be a strong move- ‘ment to make other improvements .down town. * & | “The lights will improve down- town Pontiac’s competitive ability, maing it a more enjoyable place for nighttime shoppers.” Mayor Philip E, Rowston said one of the:City Conimission’s aims was to help downtown Pontiac in- crease its popularity as a retail | Bigger Year for U.S. Cars | DETROIT (®#—A New York in- vestment survey today estimated the 1960 automobile market at 613 million cars, up about half a mil- lion from the current year. In an analysis of the auto indu- try, Value Line Investment Survey viewed 1960 as ‘‘a good year for production; an uncertain, perhaps even a chaotic, year for profits.” It predicted the increased can be counted on to keep his threats against West Berlin in Center. m . a we n 5 Sdoaul rare’ Tecedavie (9244/00 to put in another 10 days or so) j sales will come almost entirely in travel about the United States.' By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Downtown Tempreatures from the new, smaller cars to suspension. “Good street lightin a ; cj i 7o2 ee 19am 4 The hope obviously is that | An earthquake shook parts of; sis x * * necessity for i aed oity a be built by General Motors, Ford $ se §6 12 M 80 | these travels may change some |feorgia and South Carolina early Lloyd and British Prime Mints-| its commercial areas,” he said. and Chrysler. Fe eundesin eons * 83 of Khrushchev's ideas about the ee ‘ae eeltous daca Aes ee ea a| “A poorly’: lighted commercial | The survey said preliminary pro- Highest —— es rosa Pa eee = oe were reported — “ \as “a tiep Weerd = "Summit cn. Sule a ade sae i pear ae ate the dinmllee care Lowest temperature 54 | © y a: Dene: * , * * |__ - ~ S = = =! : ~ ve : ee eee 66.5) Eisenhower smilingly described | The tremor was felt from Co- _— ame: = Pay pean ihe Bie Three's ‘ th ; his announcement that Khrushchev |lumbia, §.C.\ to Brunswick, Ga., Cc ists Walk Out City Manager Walter K. Willman ability to’sell their new cars—the \ Highest temperature - 88 would visit this country in Sep-|200 miles south of the South Caro- ommunists a pointed out the safety factor in the only question is will they make. al 1 : ieee cues 31 tember and that he would return/jina capital of Indian Parliament < | new lights. any money doing it?” a Weather—Sunny ‘ the visit later as one of the worst-,; Two tremors also were report- . * * * . Value Line said that unless the ; Highest asd Lowest Temperatures kept secrets in a long time. ed at Augusta, Ga., where a home NEW DELHI, India (AP) — The downtown area at night \small¢ car niarket should expand j- ee _The Russian radio made the,was shaken and beds. rattled. At should be a safer place for pe- 49 in 1907 | pueter 2 teers Chart announcement about the time the Savannah, Ga., about 120 miles Commanist members walked out of the India's Parliament today destrian shoppers and motorists, by considerably more than 50 per cent, the Big- Three’s' marketing Alpena 1 Marquette 80 65, President was meeting with news-|southeas@of Augusta, the quake|when the government refused to/he noted. ae arn | agro | 4 elec ach a3 men. Also there had been word! was felt only slightly in downtown|make public documents on the! —winman said it is the city ad- een pres el eo ohh B -veville 98 6M waukee TT 64 | jearlier from congressional’ sources | office buildings but distinctly in| ouster of the Communist regime ministration’s hope to extend the pendent domestic and foreign G,, -9g0 79 66 New Orleans $3 1 . ‘that Eisenhower's news conference rural sections, : in Kerala State.. new lighting when funds become |manufacturers.”’ ‘een. oe pes You 8 8 a AP Wirephoto Via Radio all was for the purpose of stating} — * * *£ : wf i , | available, ' Fosiae "@ G Peliston 48 CHEERFUL INTRODUCTION — Vice President Richard Nixon that Khrushchev was coming here., A rumble that sounded like-an| Prime Minister Nehru’s. govern- : : wee 74 63 Bt. Louis 93 7 Nd Polish Vice President Oscar Lange smile as they moter in \IKITA’S BEEN HINTING explosion was. reported at Charles-/ment took over control ‘of strife-| The downtown lights will costiGold Rich Near Denver ved b tobe I Boas Bet Ateric’ % ff from Warsaw's Babice military airport after Nixon's arrival from ‘Guach ” : beuk te | ton, S.C., and within a 50-mile ra-|torn Kerala Friday, It acted un-/the bee “i $5,000 ond : CTR GEREN" S$ Noch Le nvm ime se tray gd°CO"M uy ten ming eg. Ter coal, etl aS, ONE Te et der A Daves City 7 Tray City #4 64 Chicago and once headed Poland's delegation to the United Na- d aay: \weather curced ca 6 . kdjne | authorizing a 6 =“ ‘ _ SP OF gold in peg % Washington 81 61 tone ready and willing to accept an in-|in Charleston shook for” several government unable to rule .in ac-\proved the extra expense early covered in the mountains 100 miles , . Angeles 1 @ a vitafion to visit’ the United States.minutes. re + \edirdance with ‘the constitation. » | : * | north ‘of Denver. f = : ws : é Ne e. ' 4 : be : eT . é = . ? ; . 3 . | : ° *% a j * ; : i : rae $ od f: / ht aa. o eo a ee 8 ee MONDAY, } F ‘ AUGUST 3, 1959 A banquet dinner. and installation of officers were observed by DAV Auxiliary, Chapter 101, Friday evening at Sylvan Glen Country Club. Four smiling auxiliary members who attended the affair Mrs. Charles Bruno of Detroit, left, State Department officer, was a special guest at Friday’s DAV Auxil- ary banquet. She is pictured with Mrs. new Leslie Cooper, commander, and Mrs. Does Hubby Want Shirts By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: The other day I received a postcard from the lady who irons for -me. She said her church was giving a stork shower for her daugh- ter and she thought I'd like to know in case [| wanted fo send a_ pres- ent. My husband is raving mad. He says if I let her ABBY “work me’’ for a present he will be very disappointed in me. She irons very well and I'd hate to lose -her over a little gift I could buy for $3. You're a woman, Abby. Is my husband right or not? NO NAME PLEASE DEAR NO: This is a new wrinkle! feeling of pleasure, generosity or security to send a gift, by all means, send one. Men don’t always understand these things. If your husband ever tried to iron a shirt he wouldn't get so steamed up. * * * . DEAR ABBY: My husband is the best man in the world when he’s sober — but he hasn't drawn a sober breath in two years, He says he'll quit drinking when I quit nag- ging. But the reason I nag him is because he drinks. Now, Miss Abby, if you will figure out a way for him to - quit drinking ‘so I can quit nagging, I will sure thank you. NAGGING If it gives you the- DEAR NAGGING: If you can’t get your husband to call Alcoholics Anonymous (they are listed in your telephone directory), investigate the group called ‘‘AL-ANON.” They are the wives, husbands, sweethearts and friends of al- coholics who are organized for a common purpose ... to learn how to cope with prob- lem drinkers and eventually lead them back to the road of sobriety and self-respect. luck! ~ * * * DEAR ABBY: [ am in love with a boy the same age as I, which is 14. We have been going steady for two years. We have it all planned to get married when we get out of school in four years, He kissed me last Saturday night for the first time. It was just a peck on’ the cheek. Don't. you think that after waiting for two years I deserved at least a kiss on the lips? DISAPPOINTED You had better slow down, Honey! Get the bands off your teeth before you start thinking about a band on your finger. A peck on the cheek is quite enough for two fourteen-year- olds. . * * * DEAR ABBY: A _ certain married couple who used to be in our crowd suddenly gave us all the cold shoulder. It seems that a rumor got started that they were being divorced. They denied it and tried to find out who started the gossip, but so many people repeated it that it was impos- sible to pin it on anyone. Now they refuse to associate with any of us. I say if there 12 Pontiac Area Students Get Degrees, .Certificates Twelve Pontiac'area students . at Eastern Michigan Univer- sity were awarded degrees and certificates at the eighth an- nual Summe? Convocation July 27. * * * From Pontiac were Cheryl Dee Bruestle, B.S. Degree; Stu- art Alan Choate, B.S. Degree; Robert E. Duff, B.S. Degree: and Gladys F. Levine, second- ary provisional certificate. » Others were Virginia I. Owens; M.A. Degree in Educa-’: tion; Dorothy Lee Smith, state - limited certificate: Fred G. Steinbaugh, Bachelor of Music ‘Education Degree; Marilyn K. Stickle, B. S. Degree; Gerald T. Winckley, B. S. Degree. and Sam Yarger, B. S. Degree. Birmingham students award- ed “B.S. Degrees and certifi- cates were Dolores Sally Boya- jian, and Wilson Hackett: vice a so! in all il Pontiae Press Photos are, from left, Mrs. Frank Lippo, new chaplain; Mrs. FE. D. Edington, Mrs. Keith Traver, junior vice com- mander, and Mrs. John Hutchins, treasurer. Don Schumacher, a past commander. Mrs. B. S. Sneed Jr.. senior organization. not pictured, is commander of the were no truth to the rumor they would have laughed it off in the first place. Or don't you believe, Abby, that ‘‘where there’s smoke — there's fire?”’ EX FRIENDS DEAR EX: Where there’s smoke there is not always fire. Could be just someone smoking the peace pipe. Those who repeat gossip are as guilty, in my opinion, as those who start it. * * * To get ABBY's _ booklet, “What Every Teenager Wants To Know,” send .25 cenis--and a fYarge, self-addressed, ‘Carrier Jr. , Mr. and Mrs. U.S. State Federations Plan Meet More than 500 women, rep- resenting the executive board of National Federation of Mu- sic Clubs, Michigan Federa- tion of Music Clubs and Mich- igan Federation of Women's Clubs will attend meetings of their respective organizations at National Music Camp, In- terlochen this week. An honors convocation will be held Sunday morning. At this time the NFMC and the National Music Camp will pre- sent joint citations to Dr. How- ard Hanson, composer and Dr. Alexander Ruthven, for- mer president of University of Michigan for ‘their contribu- tions to music and music ed- ucation in this country. Also to receive recognition are Six state federations, Mich- igan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin and Texas which have endowed — scholarship lodges at the music camp. Shower Honors Future Bride Bride-elect Joann Hayworth was honored at a miscellaneots shower recently at the North Johnson avenue home of Mrs. Arthur Kariean. Mrs, Wilbur was cohostess. Miss Hayworth, the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Delvin Hayworth of Royal Oak will marry Charles Seidel, son of Allen Seidel of Royal Oak Aug. 29: lroned ? stamped envelope to ABBY in care of this newspaper, * * * For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of this paper. Enclose a_ self-addressed, stamped envelope. Order in Jewel Box Is your jewelry box a tangle of necklaces, pins and brace- lets? It shouldn’t be. Aside from the danger of breaking clasps, the pieces will scratch ‘one another, dimming stones and metal. City Commissioner and Mrs. Floyd P.Miles of West Columbia avenue were honored by members of the Commission Sunday in celebration of their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. Married July 29, 1934 at’ First Baptist Church where they met, they ' Lartfy Scott, The Rev. Wedding Bells Rites in Evening Unite Pair at Lutheran Church risoie crace Some.250 guests were present at the Saturday evening wed- ding of Barbara D. Sahr and J. Mahder of St. Paul Luth- eran Church officiated before an altar banked with bouquets of white gladioli. * * * Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Sahr of Cameron avenue and Mr. and ,Mrs. Weldon Huffman of North Anderson street. The bride wore a floor-length gown of nylon organza fash- ioned with a skirt that fea- tured flying panels appliqued with French sequins and a lace bodice enhanced by a scooped neckline and_ short shirred sleeves. She wore pearl earrings and a gold.-cross and held a bou- quet pf white feathered carna- tions, pale yellow roses and stephanotis. A crown head- piece of pearls and sequins _ held her illusion veil. * * * Patricia Sahr, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. James Hudson, the bridegroom’s cous- in, and Helga Falk. The honor maid wore a pale blue street- length dress of taffeta with a matching headpiece and veil. The bridesmaids wore iden- tically styled gowns in pale pink, All three attendants car- ried bouquets of carnations matching their dresses. Edwin Scott of Flint, a cous- in of the bridegroom, was best man. Ushers were John Pat- terson and Donald Younker * * * Mrs. Sahr wore a_ French blue silk dress with white ac- cessories and a corsage of pink roses and carnations. A light beige dress with persimmon accessories and a beige and persimm6én cymbidium orchid corsage was the choice of Mrs. Huffman. Guests were received at UAW-CIO Hall on East Ken- nett road following the cere- mony. The bride's going-away cos- tume was a white sheath dress with white accessories. She wore a corsage from her bridal bouquet. The couple is _ traveling through Arkansas and Texas and will reside on North An- derson street upon their re- turn. Guests Honor Kay Brantley at Shower Kay Brantley, bride-elect of Jack Pieron, was honored at a personal shower given at the Chicago avenue home of Joan Bee last Thursday. Mary Currah was cohostess. Guests attending the shower were Joan Turner, Sharon Nichols, Gail Marien, Bonnie Vallad, Sharon Stone, Pat Wampler, Mrs. Robert Kelly, Mrs. William Brantley and Mrs. Allan Campbell. The marriage will take place at Baldwin Avenue Methodist Church Aug. 22. Parents of the engaged couple are the Ernest Brantleys of Brooklyn avenue and the John Pierons of West Cornell avenue. have one son, Floyd Jr.,,at home. George © MRS, LARRY SCOTT Meets at Lake Mrs. Robert B. Oliver was hostess to the July-August group of the First Presbyterian Church Friday at her sum- mer home at. Elizabeth Lake. Twenty-six members and guests enjoyed a cooperative dinner and celebrated Mrs. Harry Windiate’s birthday. Guests included Mrs, Jack Patterson, Mrs, Russell Bas- sett and Judith Bassett, MRS. ~ Bennett and William E. Bullard were married Saturday evening at. Church of God. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Willie P. Bennett and Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Bullard. Robbie Grace Bennett and William Eugene Bullard were married Saturday evening before an altar banked with white gladioli and -candelabra Married in Birmingham Saturday afternoon were Janet Hudson and James Faxon. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. ow Frank W. ~ Hudson and _ Mr. and Mrs. : Russell Faxon. #. JAMES FAXON Vows Said Before 300 in St. James Church St. James Church in Bir- mingham was the scene of the Saturday afternoon wedding of Janet Hudson and James Fax- on, The Rev. W. E. Snoxell officiated at the ceremony be- fore 300 guests. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Hudson of West Walton boulevard and Pontiac Press Photo President and gen- eral manager of Christian Literature Sales here, Mr. Miles is active in First Baptist Church, The Gigeons,. Christian Men’s Club, and the YMCA. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Faxon of Dover road. The bride wore a nylon chif- fon gown with a_ neckline trimmed with Alencon lace. The bouffant, floor-length skirt ended in a chapel sweep and the irt was accented with appiiques of Alencon lace. An Alencon lace cap held her fingertip veil of pure silk illu- sion and she carried a bouquet of phalaenopsis, stephanotis and | ivy. Mrs. Thomas Berry of Royal Oak was matron of _ honor. Bridesmaids were Patricia French bf South Haven, Sarah Faxon, the bridegroom’s sis- ter and Mrs. Norbert Capis- trant. They wore identical dresses of white embroidered English organdy with ballerina length skirts, scoop necklines ang taffeta cummerbunds with white picture hats. * * * Mrs. Berry’s bouquet was of shaded blue delphiniums with miniature pink ‘roses. The bridesmaids carried bouquets of shaded blue delphiniums. . Flower girl Sally Phillips wore a white organdy dress and she carried a cascade bou- quet of shaded blue delphin- iums with miniature pink roses, Her headpiece was a crown of miniature roses. John Woodman was best man, Ushers were Darell Adams, Kenneth Weed, Rich- ard Wagner, Richard McKib- ben of Ohio, afd Peter Faxon of California. Following a reception in the church parlors, the couple left for a honeymoon trip to North- ern Michigan and Canada. The bride wore a black and white eyelet going away dress with white accessories. They will live on Seminole avenue. The bride attends Eastern Michigan University and the bridegroom is attending Gen- eral Motors Institute. Mrs. Hudson wore a dress of white organdy over green taf- feta with green and pink ac- , cessorjes and a pink rose cor- sage for her daughter’s wed- ding. Mrs. Faxon was dressed in a gray chiffon dress with white accessories and a cor- sage of miniature pink roses. | \ 1 MRS. WILLIAM E. BULLARD Couple Married Here Under Flowered Trellis at the Church of God on East Pike street. The bride’s broth- er, the Rev. Billy P. Ben- nett, officiated standing under an arched trellis trimmed with huckleberries and gladioli. He is pastor at the Dearborn Church of God. The former Miss Bennett is >the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willie P. Bennett of Crescent Lake road. Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Bullard of LaSalle are the bridegroom's parents. x bd x The bride's floor-length gown was fashioned of tiered embroi- dered silk organza over tulle and taffeta and featured short Sleeves and a Sabrina neck- line. She wore matching gaunt- lets and a crown headpiece with sequins which held a fin- gertip veil of silk illusion. Her flowers were white calla lilies in an arm bouquet. WORE AQUA CROWN Peggy Bennett attended her sister as maid of honor, gowned in a floor-length dress ,of aqua nylon over taffeta in princess styling. She wore an aqua crown headpiece with se- quins, matching gauntlets, and held a heart-shaped cascade arrangement of white and aqua carnations, Bridesmaid Joan Ford of De- troit, junior bridesmaid Judy Bennett, sister of the bride, and flower girl Colleen Bul- lard of LaSalle, sister of the bridegroom, wore gowns iden- tical to the honor maid's. The junior bridesmaid and flower girl wore headbands of ried cascades of aqua carna- tions, and flower girl, Colleen, carried a basket of aqua and white carnation petals. Delbert Rose of Monroe was best man. Ushering were ‘Ronald Bullard, the bride- groom’s brother of LaSalle, Phil Templeton, Bernard King of Commerce, and Harry Ben- nett, brother of the bride. Ricky Gillon of Plymouth was ring bearer. *® * * Mrs. Bennett wore a pink lace sheath with white acces- sories and a corsage of Carol Amyling rosebuds for the wed- ding. Pale blue lace with navy accessories and a_ corsage identical to that of Mrs. Ben- nett’s was the choice of Mrs. Bullard. The 300 guests attending were received at the Roosevelt Temple after the ceremony. The new Mrs. Bullard was wearing a pink silk sheath suit with white accessories when the couple left for a trip to Florida and Havana. They will reside in Dearborn where Mr. Bullard, a Western Michigan University gradu- ate, teaches at Fordson High School. Dinner Honors Her Retirement Mrs. James Bowden of Franklin, who is retiring from Pontiac Motor Division after 25 years, was honored with a re- tirement dinner Saturday at. Devon Gables. Florence Landry gave the in- vocation and Enoch Ely served as master of ceremonies. Guest speaker was Howard Powers and Albert Kray made the gift presentation. Florence Johnson, who was in charge of reservations, greeted some 115 guests. Play Bridge Bonneville Bridge Club met Saturday evening with eight tables in play. Winners were Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Clinton; Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Thomp- son; .Mrs. Norma Keller and Mary Malchie, and Mr. ang Mrs. Sandelmont.. ; Rosburg ~ New Champion Fires Hot 66 for Pro Title Pudgy Bob Shoots 30 Front Nine With on Five Birdies MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)—Bob Ros- burg. the new P.G.A. champion who finaliv von “.he biz one I've been loo’ ing fer ~ wasn’t sure to- day whether his .riumph came on merit or “‘littie Jerry's mistakes.” Little- Jerry is the 43-year-old,, five-foot, five-inch. 138-pound Jerry) Barber, who blew the P.G.A. cham- | pionship yesterday when he bo-) geyed the last two holes. | “] gave the tournament away,” Barber said, ‘‘when I put my. | approaches on the last two holes in sand traps, I blew it.” But he didn’t take anything away} from the bespectacled Rosburg,| who with three children, ages eight, seven and six, wanted to win “‘a'! big one” in the hope he will get| a good job with a golf club so he| Oe k “ont P PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 eee 6 hamp as “erie Bogeys Last Iwo Holes SPOrRm«sS AP Wirephete JUNIOR STEALS THE SHOW — Something has attracted the attention of Bob Rosburg Jr., on the huge cup emblematic of the Professional Golf Championship which was won by his dad in Minneapolis yesterday. Rosburg with a 277 total to edge Jerry shot a final round 66 and finished Barber by one stroke. will be able to spend more time at home, rather than travel the tournament golfing trail. Resburg, who has been making his living playing golf since he Souchak went out of the running, =. Harbert, when he bogeyed three of the first) Don Fairfield, $262 50 te [Brie | seetoen te tle $262.50 four holes. * * * At the nine hole turn, Rosburg had picked up those six strokes | on Barber by going out in 30 Deve, Ragen. ugan, $200. | Dick Stranahan. against little Jerry's 36. That 30 was one of the finest | PGA‘Tourney Results MINNEAPOLIS (AP)—Final scores and $390 rthville. Mich 1 ti, $262.50 Angeles asey, Mon‘ Houstoi 69-74-73- jonel Hebert, T S362 50 Lafayette, La. mM. $200 Calif. 73-71-71-74—289 7O72-75-72—-290| 7¢-72-71-73-290 BERLIN 74-299 auto racing today mourned the | John McMullin, $200 turned professional im 1953, Was mee cane in the National PGA Rob Crowiey ee 76-71-69-75—291 six strokes behind the leading Bob burg. $8.250 . - Weston. Mass. 73-75-71-73—292 Barber going into yesterday's fk, Jerry” Barber grote cael uonees g tl 71-77-72-72—202 nal round, But that four-under- Sand robe 362.50 Se aI aruank. Calif 73-71-72-76—292 par 66 gave him a 72 hole total fiiami Beach. Fla. 72-66-68-72—278 Jim Ferree, $200 bett ha: Dow Finsterwald, &2.500 Crystal River. Fla 74-72-71-75—292 of 277, one stroke better than Jupiter, Fla. 71-68-71-70—200 Jim Turnesa. hearer 299 Barber and 4 ring a. 73-72-74- r vine 5 ue ae a an easel . 70-72-70-69—281 Chauee Harmon, Saal eee ers, one 8 e Bod Goalby, $2,000 amaronec. N. Y. 73-73-72-74— going into the fina! round, card- eA Pet hao River. on . 72-69-72-68—281 Coomera ad a ucha. . - 13-1 0-1 29 ed a two-over-par 72 for the Cece fad x ¥. 69-67-71-74—281 SO elo — 72-74-73-74-293 * second piace tie. | sulphur ‘Springs . _ 71-73-68-70—282 Scudday Horner, $200 : 1c Middlecoff. $1. Montgomery, Ala. 74-71-76-72—293 ® Defending cham-ion Dow Fin-’ “Holl wood. cut 72-68-70-72—282 Wes ellis. *, 3 16-74-70.73-293 sterwald was fourth e* 28). He shot $3 ty cae, Calif. 69-70-72-73—284 Henry eciilliams pt $200 vura74-72 a3 ‘ourth row ie 43-1 Oia na ore ae inv ice : ae! owe a va 75-70-69-71—288 Mac anvill v 75-70-73-76—294 rd, $1,250 anville = . BE st 2 vee ee Evo a é Ford, River, Fla. 71-73-71-70—285 Don genuary, $200 , Souchak, whose putter failed him | piny axwell, $1.250 Denv -. -73-74-74-T3—294 again, Bob Goalby and Ken Ven- 7 cote. $1,050 70-76-70-69—286 Bill Geden. Tl. ..... 73-69-76-76—294 turi. Next at 282 came Sommy| — whittler 73-71-68-74—286 Bo Wininger. al nengen Snead and Cary Middlecoff, 0S Palmer, $1,050 72-72-71-71—286 Prank Stranahan, $200 ne - ope! ham Paul ey. $1,050 rys' ver, Fla. .. 79— = an gp ee ged pty a * sae sessans 74-71-71-70—286, Bob Gajda, " ves among eight who fin'shed at 287./ Buster Cuptt, Bloomfield Hills, .... 74-71-74-76—295) The. othe: incl f ar US|! Fort ith, Ne. 70-72-72-73—287 Al Feminelli, $200 e Ts ded former ous. $775 rater Geo: Mak 70-77-73-75—295 Open chamvion Tommy Bolt and water Burkema. Fie. .. 76-69-68- eo oe neneseiL_a former P.G.A. king Walter Bur-|"“'Stantiin. Mich. ...... 69-72-73-73—287 Bul Ezinicki. $200 k ‘ i Casper Jr.. $775 . * Stoneham, Mass. .... 77-67-76-76—296 Sit |. 69-71-73-74—987 Bud Williamson, $200 Bane Eicnardus. Calif “ ee — Souchak came in with a two-| Bebe . $785 Lincoln, Neb... 72: 78 = . .. 71-73-72-71—287 , John Jae aoe ae ore-per 12 jane, eth bes nig 4. Tex. ...... ‘?5-71-72-69—287 Mike Homa, $200 players left in the feld, there were. ack, Burke Jr. $775 vor.72 = Wann > ae only three golfers in the running ,,, ‘ames Lake, N. ¥. 70-73-7272 waavzate. Minn. . 72-76-72-79—299 | — Rosburg, Barber and San Lakeland, Fla. ...... 70-68-71—287 Wayne $200° ders.| —— $510 ; = Whitinsville, Mass Sanders. . who was in the tour- Fia. ... 72-74-71-71—288 (ee ners $200 ., $510 | nament pe a pass, shot a final- ant naa "Saner. Pa. .. 70-72-73-73—288 gs round 72. He lest his chance Jay ody Fla. ........ procera T R s St when he treepatied trom 2 |Pretencoe. Se” manm [WO RACING HarS 7 Emery. $390 ont = aan eaten, Va 74-74-72-69— 289 be Die in Accidents (UPI)—The world of, jdeaths of international stars Jean nine holes ever shot. He scored ive bird knocking putt on the second hole to start Middlecoff Pays his string. On the 565-yard par! five-third he trapped his approach| High Compliment. to Terry Barber but wedged to within 12 feet of; the pin and rammed it home tr for) another birdie. On the fifth a 10-footer for another bird, ae a six-footer on the eighth and a) three-footer on the ninth for his' other birds. Barber, meanwhile, was hav- ing trouble, His putter, the best | club in his bag, let him down | on the eighth hole when he | missed a two-and-a-half-foot putt | for a bogey. So going to the 10th Rosburg and) a Barber were all even. Rosburg| was playing in a threesome ahead! of Barber. The sandy-haired Ros-| burg bogeyed the 12th when he! was short with his approach, but! matched the card for the other‘ eight holes. He was in the clubhouse when he heard that Barber had parred the 16th..It looked like tiny Jerry was home free. He needed only two pars to win. But on the 430-; yard 17th, he put his seven iron second into a trap MINNEAPOLIS Middlecoff, ‘one of the many- titled men of golf, offered a hand of sympathy today to Jerry Bar- | bee, who was beaten out of the PGA title yesterday by Bob Ros- burg. “Bob deserves all the credit he receives,” Middlecoff said. ‘‘He | played fine golf, But | played in threesome with Jerry on the final day and it made me fee! | sick to see such a fine little guy lose that way.” ‘‘Here’s a little fellow who-led all the way up to the 70th hole. He’s in the twilight of his career. | He’s been playing fine golf the whole tournament and he h&s the wind at his back the final Cary | bd * Behra, France’s champion driv- jer who won the Sebring, Fla., irace in 1957, died as a result of injuries several hours after his |sports car skidded on a wet turn | while competing in the sports car jgrand prix here Saturday. i bd * * Bueb, 35-year-old British veter-| an of the race track, died Saturday jnight as a result of injuries he ‘suffered on Sunday; July 26, when ihis car plunged off a hilly track iat Clermont-Ferrand, France, at \the start of the Grand Prix D’Au- _vergne formula-two race. two holes. Then he had to loose | it. “You've never seen a man get more out of what God gave him | than Jerry Barber." Po AMERICAN LEAGUE on Finsterwald’s Golf Tip: Take Club Away Slowly By DOW FINSTERWALD 1958 PGA Champion The short approach is one of the most important shots, Keep the head Still. Don't take the club away from the ball too fast. If you do, you set up the timing in such a way that your mind will flash to the hole, The body will raise up. Keep calm with the head still and stay over the shot. . There never is too much body , action in a short approach, none | at all when you are close. | Hit thé ball smoothly with the, forearms and wrists and no body movement, if possible. Relax and * * * Selecting the club for a short ananassae ot ee AA dicating the proper club to be one Chieago 2. with more loft. The feet the stance, the toes slightly open. ithe face of the club slightly closed america ‘on the ball. The grip is shortened consider- ably, ~\ are close together in Kansas City 2. Boston Comes From Behind on 2nd Homer | Maxwell's Sunday Blast | Wasted in 5-4 Tiger Loss | DETROIT w—Manager Jimmie Dykes says only one pitch is keep- ing Paul Foytack from becoming a consistent winner. * * * The pitch varies. Sometimes it is a fast ball. Other times it is a curve, or epen a slider. But al- ways, it’s the gopher ball pitch. Two gopher ball pitches, one to Frank Malzone and the other to Jackie Jensen, beat Foytack and the Detroit Tigers yester- | The score was Boston 5, | day. Detroit 4.“And it was the 20th one-run decision the Tigers have dropped, compared with only eight victories by the same mar- gin. x « Despite Foytack’s home run mis- eries, ‘the _ strong-ihrowing right- hander could have griped a little about the way his teammates re- ner Pitch Beats Foytack in 8th sponded to Boston pitching. The | Tigers got only four hits and ex- cept for the wildness of starter , Bill Monbouquette, might have end- ed up with only one run. x « * players have been awarded arships y Detroit including two All-Sé /. Valley backs, Ron Watkins Art Thrash of Flint Central. the Pontiac Recreation Dep? ment starts today at 4:00 p.\’ at Pontiac Centra] courts, Harry Wenzel and Claudia Wa, ‘handling the instructions. to the Universi * * * Colton Weatherston of chard Lake scored 6,165 poi yesterday and placed 6th in th __ U. 8. Junior Snipe champi ships won by Leslie Larson Jamestown, N.Y., with ~_ points. * *« * The tennis clinic sponsored © wt x * * Bob Fiori of Flint fired a 3: to finish in 6th place in th Woodlawn Open golf tourname: in Ramstein, Germany, yester day. John Panton of Scotland defended his title with a 267 total. * * * The annual ‘Meet the Lions’ BACK TO FIRST—Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox bumps into Tiger first baseman Gail Harris as he slides safely beck into first base in the 6th inning of their, @eme in Detroit eyeSieTday: The last time out, Foytack was: a loser when the Tigers got only one run and six hits off a couple of Baltimore pitchers. That day, \the Detroit infield kicked in a pair] ‘of unearned runs to make Foy-! .. 71-74-75-78—298 tack’s task even more difficult. Foytack, whose record now is -. 474 7379-300 9-10, had a 4-2 lead entering the | 72-73-75-85—305 eighth inning, He retired the first | two batters, Pumpsie Green and | | Pete Runnels, on routine ground- | ers, Gary Geiger got an infield single jand Foytack walked Ted Williams. | Jensen then clouted his 23rd home run into the ‘left field seats. ¥ * * Ike Delock, a Highland Parker jand picked up his seventh triumph. | The Tigers staked Foytack to | an early lead. They got one in the second on a walk, Frank Bolling’s double and an infield out. Two more scored in the third when Eddie Yost walked and Charlie Maxwell slammed his 23rd home run into the fight field pavilion. | Frank Malzone got two runs back for the Red Sox in the fourth | when, with two out and Jensen on first via an infield single, he cracked his 15th home run. * * The Tigers added their fourth run in the sixth on three walks and a sacrifice fly by Bolling. The 4-2 lead looked safe until Jensen, | infield single in 12 previous trips in the series, hit his three-run blast. | * * * | The Tigers had an off day toda? | before opening a week-long road | \trip against the Yankees in New. York Tuesday night. Frank Lary (13-7) will work the series opener. | who had collected only a puny! McCovey and Mays Stay Hot; Williams reached first on a walk and then Tiger banquet will be held Monday night August 27th at the Statler-Hilton Hotel. Harry Mehre, ex-Notre Dame football player, now column- ist for the Atlanta Constitution, | will be the key speaker. * * * The 1959 National Championship Drag Races will be held at the Detroit Dragway Sept. 3-7, with a new Chevrolet going to the winner. Church Playofts Start Tonight | The Pontiac. Church Softball League playoffs begin tonight at 6 at the Jaycee No. 2 field with National champion Trinity Baptist playing AL runnerup Salvation Army. First Baptist, which’ won 17 straight as American champion, AP Wirephote pitcher Paul Foytack attempted to pick him off first base. Boston won the game. 5-4. Braves Split takes on St. Johns Lutheran Tues- day in the two-game knockout levent. Action is also set Thursday. Gianis, L.A. Sunday Victors | By The Associated Press ‘Once again Davenport scored. |secgpd 11-5 when Billy Britton hit; Antonelli became the first in The new firm of Willie McCovey The Giants added another run ina pair of three-run triples and the majors to win 15 but he was and Willie Mays are keeping the the eighth off Roy Face (still Felix Mantilla connected for a joined about two hours later "hy |San Ftgncisco Giants on top of 14-0). ‘the National League. They pro-| vided the dynamite Sunday while | Johnny Antonelli’s 15th victory — a six-hitter — tamed the Pitts- ‘burgh Pirates, 5-3. ! x *« * McCovey is_ hitting a Phoenix farm last Thursday. He | went 4-for-4 the first day, knocked vin the winning run the second and. ithen went 3-for-5 satneey- | * * | The newest Willie en his ae ‘major league home run — a ‘blast off Ronny Kline with san Davenport on in the fourth inning. Mays put the Giants out in front to stay with a seventh-inning double off loser Bob Portertield. | Its No Secret Wertz Wants to Play for Tigers DETROIT (AP) — Vic Wertz wants to come back to the Detroit Tigers, and he’s making no secret about it. _* * * | The 34-year-old first baseman is sitting on the Boston bench while Pete Runnels, a second baseman by trade, plays first for the Red Sox. Owner Tom Yawkey ordered a team shakeup Won Lost Pct. Behind , Chicago 62 40608 — BOSTON i ki DETROIT and apparently Wertz and Dick Cleveland 6 4 57 3 Gg le) ¥ Baltimore 33 53 «30011 reen 2) 4010 Yost 3b 3110) Gernert will sit out most of the Kansas City 31 51 5001 | Runnels lb 400.0 Chrisiey rf 400 0) t f ji 1 Nee Wark se oe te Geiger cf 4110 Maxwell if 3212) season, except for occasiona Detroit 31 3548113, | Williams If 2000 Kalinecf 3000) pinch-hitting duties. sees 4 $8437 17% |C-Busby If 0100 Wilson e 2100 waste Shah rae, PETE RRR, 1g 14] | Werts, whe took a tind strike TRATERGAT al RaESUTeS \White ¢ | 4010 Veslss 3001) In @ pinch hitting role against Chicago 3, Washington 2, first game Werte 7000 Porta, 3999 Detroit yesterday, is batting cago ' Baltimore 3, Cleveland 4” first game. 10 M fhoney ss 1000 Bunning p 0000 .280. He has started only some moo Btechens 1000 ~omome 19°90 4 games and has been at the Cleveland 6, Baltimore 3 Saeceio tase aes Boston 5, Detroit 4 Roos UE ____ plate only 186 times. Among w York 7. Kansas City 5 otals 34575 Totals 20444 his hits are six home runs and SATURDAY'S BESUETS Washington Baltimore 5, Cleve ae 2 Boston New Yor 1, TODAY'S GAMES (Times Eastern Standard) n League All-Stars vs. National League All-Stars at Los Angeles, 6 p.m Only game scheduled ‘OMORROW'S oo | Chicago Baltimore, 7:05 a p.m. Cleveland at lage ede ‘i Detroit at New cf 7 Kansas City at Beste: 2° . p.m. —— LEAGUE Lost Pet.” Behind % Detroit 6, night San Francisco Los Angeles po tihleand cakese a ieee ‘itts bur, Cincinnati Bt. —— ‘ Philadelphia 412 YESTERDAY'S RESU LTS St. Louis 4, Milwauee 3, first game Milwaukee 11, St. Louis 5. second gam Cincinnati 2, Chic: ep 0 San Francisco 5, te pe h 3 Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 3 SATURDAY Lvs = Prancikco 9, Pittsburgh 5 Angeles 5. Philadelphia 3. night Milwaultee 8. 8t. Louis i“ - Cincinnats 12, or TODA GAMES (Times Gonters Standard) Nationa! League All Stafs vs American League re. 1 ee at Los sch atreaunee “or Ban Pmeeen 10:15 Cineinnati at — — w p.m. Pittsburgh at : c= Philadelphia, at euncage, § eles, 6 p.m | —Called out on strikes for Buddin in| ine: Be pued out for Monbouquette in 'Tth: —Ran for Williams in 8th; %— Groundes out for Veal in 9th; E-“Flied out for Bunning. Boston sooono cas boo 200 030-—5 Detroit 2 001 000—4 E—Mahoney, Veal. PO-A—Boston 27- 10, Detroit 47-13. DP—Green and Run- nels.) LOB—Boston 4, Detroit 6. \ | 2B — Bolling. HR — Malzone, Jensen. Maxwell. 6—Wilson. SF—Bolling. IP H hy = BB bac |Monbou Late a8 3 Delock 1-6 1.3 1 Poltack L, 9-10 . & 7 |Bunning we 1 0 chy. HBP—By Monbou uette, Yost. ¢ Ha, one McKinney, Soar i eens ‘Coach Killed in Crash ‘T LOUISVILLE., Ky, w — Former| [Bellarmine College _ basketball coach Gene Kenny died Sunday of ipjuries received in an auto acci- dent July 7. * * * The 32-year-old coach was pinned) m |in his demolished car when the steering wheel peceirenet his; | chest, nine doubles and the former | Tiger slugger has driven in 36 | runs, “I know I could melp the | | I'm in good shape. All 1 , to do is play.” Quarter-Midset Thrills ‘three- -run homer. * * * i * * * Los Angeles regained second Rookie Jay Hook and veteran| place, a half game behind the Brooks Lawrence teamed up with Giants by shading Philadelphia a five-hit shutout for Cincinnati's, ,4-3 while Milwaukee was splitting 2-0 decision over Chicago. Hook a pair with St. Louis. The Cardi- gave up only three hits but Chisox Now Games Up; Orioles Dump Indians | By The Associated Press ja shaky ninth inning. It was hid | After Luis Aparicio and Nellie fifth straight. |Fox bunt and run you dizzy, Al! Again in the second game, when Burdette, The Giants’ left-hander has lost only six. Pittsburgh grabbed a 3-0 lead in ithe fourth but McCovey'’s homer got two of them back. Willie Kirkland’s double, followed by Hobie Landrith’s single tied the sensa- Nals took the opener 43 as Lindy walked three in a row in the score in the sixth and Mays put 7149-75-5—2% Bohra and Ivor Bueb who died who entered the game in the sev- tional 500 with 9-for-18 since the McDaniel rescued Larry Jackson. seventh, bringing Lawrence from San Francisco out front in the 74-69-74-74-291 this weekend as a result of ac- enth, kept the Detroit bats quiet Giants moved him up from their:'Lew Burdette won his Hot in me the bullpen. 74-70-72-75—291 cidents here and in France. seventh. Felipe Alou’s ‘single drove in the final score in the eighth. *x* * * Despite Duke Snider’s 14th hom- er, the Dodgers trailed the Phils 3-1 going to the fifth. They rose up for three in that inning, two on Charlie Neal's homer and an- other on Snider’s single and Norm Larker’s double. Larry. Sherry, who had taken over in the fifth, allowed only one hit the -rest of the way, fanning five, to record his second. victory. The smallest crowd of the season, 10,201, saw the game. | Lopez waves in Turk Lown or Bob Shaw began to stumble in x k& 'Gerry Staley to shut the door in‘the eighth, in came Staley to! Milwaukee's largest crowd of i your face. ‘breeze through 1 1-3 hitless in- \the year, 42,732 watched the * | x ‘nings, saving Shaw's 10th victory, | | That is the reason the Chicago 9.3. White Sox are three games out | | iBraves split, They now have won 10 of their last 12. After Joey Jay Washington hit the only home. lost the opener, the Braves opened front in the American League to-/runs. Faye Throneberry got No. ‘up on Vinegar Bend Mizell for 10 day and pulling away fast. Ex-| '9 in the first game and Jim Lem- of their 11 runs in-the second. cept for the runner-up Cleveland on No. 24 in the second. But the milwaukee made four errors in ‘Indians, the rest of the league is Senators lost their 15th and 16th the first and three in the second ‘fading intos the gloaming. Both|in a row, only two short of their, Baltimore and Kansas City, tied;club record set in 1948. for third, are 11 games back. And + *« « ithe Yankees? They are 12 games now has | down in fourth place. * * * Chicago won | game. x «x * Singles by Eddie Kasko, Vada six Pinson and Gus Bell and a double paral and 11 of its last 12 steal accounted for Cincinnati's mes. Since the first All-Star two runs in the third off loser S ga The little men did it again Sun-| \break they have a 19-5 record. |Dave Hillman, ‘day in the first game with Wash-' ‘ington, slashing and racing to up-| set the punchy Senators. Trailing | 2-1 in the last of the ninth, Apa-; ricio opened with a single. Fox! /bunted and catcher Steve Kor- laheck threw the ball away. Apa- | ricio scored and Fox dashed to: ‘third. Two intentional walks load- | ed the bases and Billy Goodman p'unked a fly ball single into left | their 26th by one run. Cleveland lost ground by ing a 5-4 decision to Balti ifn 10 innings, Willie Miranda “beat out a high bounder to the mound, driving in the winning run. That | |Held’s Their opening game victory was! by ar-|High-Scoring Games Feature Legion Play one little hit minimized Rocky There were runs galore in the |Colavito’ as _ homer and Woody District Junior Legion League yes- terday with the play highlighted Sy x by Royal Oak’s 2nd win in as \over = drawn in outfield for @ Tt Francona’s seventh hit of many days. +2 victory. . (the day, a three-run homer off! Bob Lyons of the Oaks blanked a! Billy | O'Dell in the ninth gave Birmingham on one-hit, 40, Sat- Lown, who took over after. Billy in the double and " single before his ‘homer. The only time the Orioles jgot him owt was when third base- {$!132 Wheels Enough to Win‘ Larry Joe Wallace of Pontiac -drove like a ‘'500’ veteran in the quarter-midget races at Miracle | Mile yesterday afternoon. With two laps to go in the 8-9 year old division, Larry Joe’s wheel came off his. racer. He finished. the race with three wheels and won it. racer, was a winner in one of the 11-12 year old races. * * * The midgets will race under the Bill Garcia, driving Griff's Grill |Rey man Brooks Robinson. made ° diving catch of a line drive, ~ ‘ * *® * -Gary Bell won his 11th in the |lights for the first time Thursday second while Al Cicotte lost his pnight at (7:30 Dom. perm es os relief in. the opener. Hort 6-7 year olds-—Ric 4 m Was more’s nner Ung in ge a apart oO and ‘O'Dell, who worked in both use: tary gids Larry Joe Wallace, ren. igames, dropped the second. Cleve- 16 ] ear olds—Alex Kujawski, Ham- land’ s attend soated over the tramek: M "ites Fisher, Toledo; John Mc- ee 9 ae .009,562 with the Ke turnout o gm 8 hr Je pela Me Pea: Elston Howard drove in four Pontiar ‘year olds—Terry Alten, Livonia: runs with two sineles and a dou- hue Dave Reschke./ ble in New York's 7-5 victory over year 0 in Qoreta, Pontiac; |Kansas Citv. Ryne Durer struck iyton , Brends! out seven in 3 2-3 shutout innings ager, as year Livonia; Bobby Boriede, \Detasn- Thomas, Detroit; Jinr over Bob Grim. urday in a makeup contest fea- turing three hits by Ross Gillespie. ey downed Clawson 7-3 yester- day with Bob Lezotte hurling. a two-hitter while getting a pair of bingles himself. He had a shutout until the 9th and fanned 11. . Birmingham bounced back to wallop Milford 19-0 yesterday. Gary VanGeison swatted five of the 17 hits for six rbi’s. Jay Ma- donna ‘socked two triples and George Forrest homered. a gatne marred by 16 errors. The victors went ahead to stay in the 5th with Done Smith winnine in- relief. Rich Billings had a triple and two singlee among, 15 binglee, Southfield beat Berkley 156 as Boh Filar and Dave Bove. each had three hite and scoret three | Monarch, | but Duke Maas was the winner ins. Jim Gatt' horered in Tom |Ridley’s easy triumph. Trov outscored Rochester 16 12 in * ie ee | Finch = » seoitad ber car off ja cliff was thwarted by. the appearance at the, scene of thé Murder a for Tad SS Abs el, | Tregoff carried the “murder LOS ANGELES UPI) —Carole | kit” eontaining sedatives, rope Tregoff, 22, was held .in county | and hypodermic syringes among jail today awaiting preliminary! other oon to the scene. Pre smegrigy on charges that) girs. inch was found shot tn Society Doctor R. Bernard Finch the back on the lawn of the Finch; planned to use in a murder plot/$65,000 home in nearby. West against his wife. \Covina. Miss Lidholm, 19-year- The attractive red-haired divor-. ‘old Swedish exchange student, cee was arrested and charged. ‘said she last saw Mrs. Finch be- with first degree murder last ing chased across the lawn by week after testifying at Finch’s Finch. preliminary hearing. ' The state’ charged she helped Finch plan ° the slaying of Barbara Finch, 33, U. S. Output Shocking last July “a ie the ayia later | WASHINGTON — About 42 per marrying the 41-year-old physician.| ont of the world’s total electric The original murder plot of jenergy is produced an the U.S. Injecting a Sedative into Mrs. | mainland area. BE SAFETY SURE! WITH A COMPLETE CAR. _ FRE E SAFETY CHECK “Firestone = Drive with complete confidence that your car is — Safety Sure. Let us give it our free bumper to bumper safety check for your protection. Our safety inspection. covers tires, brakes, front end, battery, © lights, muffler, cooling.system, suspension, fan belt, * and other danger points. Cars in safe condition get our free “Safety Checked” sticker. Here's what we do: 1. Adjust brakes 2. Add brake fluid if needed 3. Pack front wheel bearings 4 5 Brake and Front End Service . Align front end . Balance both front wheels _ Monro-Matic SHOCK ABSORBERS ually FIRESTONE MUFFLERS | Custom engineered for the re- quirements of the car they PRICED 8s | UP | are built to fit...the right FROM muffler for your car. r Here’s What We Do: 1, Inspect front wheel linings 2. Pack front wheel bearings 3. Inspect brake drums 4. Adjust brake shoes 5. Add brake fluid if needed 6. Test, adjust brakes BRAKE || SAFETY-SER CE | DRIVE wii a _PEACE OF MIND ETS NS) *Size 6.70-15, tubed type, plus tax and your rec@ppable fire ALL TIRES MOUNTED FREE 146 West Hire. - FE 2.9251 ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST’, 1959 Co GM Tests Cars for Road Wear With New Device road and is important to study of suspension, systems and other factors. - The Ride Simulator is some- thing like the airplane flight sim- ulators used in pilot training. But GM’s device is meant to deter- nage rg WARREN , Mich. @— General Motors is using a new: gadget ta test driving effects on a car with- out taking the car onto the road. A tape recorder and instrumen- tation transmit the bounces and pitches of a rough road onto a standard car body that stands stil, The body has no wheels, GM calls its development a “Ride Simulator.” It was ex- plained at GMs technical center here today by. Robert H. Kohr, vehicle dyNamics supervisor of the corporations’ research labo- ratories, mine car riding characteristics, not -to, train drivers, No Damage Revealed TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — An artillery battle broke out near Matsu Island at the northern end of Formosa Strait today when Communist and Nationalist war- ships appeared, the National- ist Chinese Defense Ministry an- nounced. Nationalist warships suffered no damage, the ministry said, and it elaimed no hits on Red warships. committed to a policy of aceept- AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — King ing all immigrants Hussin of Jordan is patching up diff th President : me ASA tase of the United 5 Truck Roadeo Winners Arab Republic and the two Arab/to Compete Nationally nations soon will restore diplomat-} DETROIT (UPI — Five of the! ic relations He announced t decains Sun-jsix winners in yesterday's 18th an- day at a news Conference. ~ |nual State Truck Roadeo will be) Premier Hazza Majali said the’ eligible to compete in the national Sept. | move would be before the end Doe at Louisville, Ky., this month, in time for the Arab 2426. League- meeting in Casablanca ~ * Sept. 1. Hussein also said he is willing! chowski, to meet Nasser, or any or all the Peter Stumpo, Dearborn, Arab leaders—including Iraq Pre- axle tractor, Semitrailer; Alex. Detroit, straight truck; three- | this with a pledge to fight at Nas-;macher, Belleville, five-axle trac-; Hussein Patching Up|ser'sse‘sssinst trac Quarrel With Nasser neces-'tor, semitrailer; sary, He repeated Arab chalges Cloutier, Willis, that Israel must expand by seiz- ‘Raymond Copley, Allen Park, auto |Ger rman state ~of Nort ‘in the ing Arab‘territory because it is transport. nent of There is only one towh * __Lynn Joseph'whose name is “Mars.” tank “truck; and) hamlet. of 78 souls in tDepart- Iw ‘estphalia,, _spent in Winners were Stanley Wojcie-| f apes ay your payments, debts or bills when Pig midcnioa’ CREDIT ch UNSELL Ors and arrange for payments ie in afford regardiess of how much or how many you owe. are unable to NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ~ ~ ONE PLACE TO PAY Member American Association of Credit Counsellors u ¥ “Let 14 Years of Credit C Hours: Daily 9 to §. seling Experience Assist You ed. and Sat. 9 to 12 Noon. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS FE 6-6 Faulty shock absorbers are extremely DAN- y GEROUS, and are not FREE | a easily detected until it’s 0-D AY 74 too late. See us. 6 OFFER i} TRIAL B ” ‘Firestone Kohr said the simulator pro- There was no mention of naval|mier Abdel Karim Kassem. |Manapace, Saginaw, four - axle 716 Pontiac State Bank Bldg, duces the motions of a car on a gunfire The young monarch underlined tractor, semitrailer; Ernest Ha- NEXT TO ° WRIGLEY’S PRICES SLASHED TO COST & BELOW LEAN- Sorry Not All Left- Overs At All Stores ) YANKEE STORES [ UT THEIR SUMMER a Women’s Wear Left- Overs | Lawn-Garden Left-Overs SOME OF THE TASTIEST BARGAINS EVER DURING OUR LEFT-OVER SALE PLENTY OF FREE PARKIN OPEN TONITE & NITES ‘til 9 SUNDAY 9 A.M. to 6 —— = to [ WORRIED OVER DEBTS HURRY TONIGHT! Marlite Rigid Backyard“ Pool Or Sand Box $10.95 value a ee ee *6" 45 LADIES DRESSES $ 3° Sleeveless and short sleeves, All sizes *T 33 100 WOMEN’S SKIRTS $ 3 47 eae eens Dan River Wash & Wear. Sizes 10 to20...... LADIES SWIM SUITS Girls’ Jamaica & Pedal Pusher Sets Sizes 7 to U4 cookie in en oo Oe SRE eeu we Girls’ Sleeveless Dresses Sizes 1 to 3, 4 to 6x. Left-over prices at ...... Cee wa ee woe ow Girls’ Pedal Pushers, Slim Jims, Jamaica Shorts Boys’ & Girls’ Cabana Sets TOTS’ BOXER JEANS Durable - 2 pockts. Bar tacked ..........0.0. TOTS’ BOXER SHORTS Denims, twills, prints. Navy-red-brown-charcoal. . GIRLS’ SWIM SUITS Everglaze cottons — Sizes 7 to 14 TOTS’ SUNSUITS Washable cottons, sixes 2 to 4... .....00000. 19° *] 33 19° [ MEN’S WEAR LEFT-OVERS | 25 MEN’S SUMMER DRESS SHIRTS Short sleeve, cool mesh weave. Reg. 2.75 ee eran eene *] 66 48 MEN’S SWIM TRUNKS Boxer and brief styles. S-M-L. Values to 2.95 .. | 33 35 BOYS’ SWIM TRUNKS Boxer and brief styles. 6 to 16. Valwes to 1,98 . . 95 MEN'S 115 MEN‘S' WASH WEAR | FAMOUS MAKE SPORT SHIRTS | SPORT SHIRTS Reg. $1.98 R . eg. $2.95 ironing Ste 88° to $3.95 1 66 XL. 52 Prs. Men’s Summer Pj’s Short sleeve, angle length. Reg. 2.95 47 75 Men’s Denim Hobby deans Wash and wear — Tan, blue, green $ to XL. . id Dd 93° Attaches to garden hose and spreads weed kil- ler ete. 5.95 ROBOT GARDENER KIT $9 CAPE COD PICKET FENCE SECTIONS 3 foot sections painted white Adjustable Hose Nozzles Now at this left-over price of .............:. 50 ft. Better Plastic Hose 5 year factory guarantee. Just 174 left........ Revolving Lawn Sprinkler Throws 40 ft. circle of spray. Just 75 left. .... ce ere ee $89.95—24” Deluxe Self-Propelled ROTARY MOWER * $16.95 American HAND MOWER 12 $a sq” $497 $ 3° 47 [Picnic & Backyard Left-Overs] WICKER PICNIC BASKET With hinged cover. Just 47 left over.......... 4.95 Insulated Picnic Bag Vinyl! with scotch plaid design. Metal lined .... Light Insulated Ice Chests Now at this low left-over price of ..........0. Just 14 left-over 3h6* |: Compr’sd Air Tank Sprayer For spraying lawn and garden chemicals........... 3.98 6 ft. Patio Torches Chrome finish—keeps insects away 50 ft. Rubber Garden Hose $5.95 quality. 110 left-over ............... 2.98 Bridgp’t Weed Kill Gun Complete with supply of weed killer Just 9 left-over eee eee eee Cae 68 6 6 8's Kids’ Picnic Table & Bench | = $997 $8.95 sy 7 6.95 Aluminum PATIO CHAIRS With weston Rieevy over. vee 54s value. Just 27 lett 4.95 Jug-0-Matic Picnic Jug With automatic pouring spout. 47 left Kids’ Backyard Plastic Pool faflatable vinyl 0.00.6 cee e eee: *] 67 73 Men’s Bermuda Shorts Plaid, plains, stripes. Sizes 28 to 42 \.......... *] 77: 16.95 Wire Supported Pool $Q488 260 gal. capecity. just 9 left-over 9 a | VACATION LEFT-OVERS | Adult Size Swim Fins 99° Values to 2.98. Now only ©. 8 Om 8 8) ww © © «wi 6) a ew 8 Children’s Swim Fins Now at this low price of Ce er i ar | [LEFT-OVERS for the HOME | a" 17 34.95 20” Portable Window Fans 8-Ounce Glass Tumblers 15¢ size. Heavy base eee eee ee ese eeesn eres Enamel Cold Pack Canner Heavy duty motors — 3 With lid 6 speed switch. od fee se $ 88 . Mee. i 2.98 Elec. Bug & Fly Killer Complete with insect killer tablets @ wy (me) os wl Bg Gs 24 Only Baseball Gloves Genuine leather Little League Baseball Bats Fine quality woods 87° ‘2 18) ai we Hel Gol ca WY ects, a) ©) wt va G: fe) aN Suk eS Wilson Baseman’s Mit Fine quality leather. 12.95 Glove . 2.49 Wilson Official Softball BOYS’ OXFORDS } Regular $3.99 Men & Boy’s Black TEAMS SHOES a Canvas Pumps Blue, red, and black. $444 Quantities Are Limited | ya | BASEBALL LEFT-OVERS | $1? ‘ Sy ; [SHOE LEFTOVERS || eS perforated ee , _moc. Oxford 7 9} ; Cid ee ne neni Oe : _ = 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 + To Aidan, 71, Is Governor-General . Os | | S'bnch ‘Canadian Gets High Post confe ‘Space Capsule for: Man lor Telephone Calls _ a MADRID, Spain’ (UPI) — The! According to the U. §, Depart- government announced Friday a|™ent of Commerce people in the to Be Tested in September United States last year spent in WASHINGTON (AP) — ‘The conventional Atlas, 75 feet;€4rly 100 per cent boust in the 1 Loignborhood of $6 billion to first man-carrying type of te tall, climbs to altitudes of several Cost of telephone calls as part of -o5air their autos, appliances and capsule is scheduled for launch- ihundted miles and delivers its|the plan to stabilize the nation's’ ‘other house furnishings. To inform unoccupied, next menth. lwastesd at speeds of more than economy. these people of the latest facts re- It will be sent up from Cape 15,000 miles an hour over a range The monthly basic rate of 60 ‘garding new products and servic |Canaveral, Fla., by a vehicle of up to seg miles.‘ pesetas ($1) was increased by 53 ing information advertisers ‘ast ore Ae One old iter (Adela He also was Canada's fifth equally excellent English from dry. n't fade away is Canada’s} ambassador to France. his Irish mother. ————vernor-general of French) «7 wouldn't do anything differ-| -He studied law and went to Ot- STATE ion, Tl-year-old Maj. Gen. bate Co g Philias Vanier. His career ¢Dtly if I had my years. to do tawa to serve as aide-de-camp to pact tllrs aligugh Gen, Vanier advocated are Sakdament in the League of Na- violated and saw France fall in 1940, jurisdicted to rouse his fellow French- Stite w¢ians to war in 1941 and aa tt? as Canada’s envoy to Gen. or their patron St, George — Vanier learned fluent French from his French father .and Pee famed Roya] 22nd regiment that saw long-term duty in the front line trenches, He won numerous decorations for bravery and was wounded twice, the second time losing his right leg above the knee. downward. With its mighty engine still sat: ting out full power, Good Heating \tilt at right angles and aid it will thun-| \der down a slanted course through | ‘the earth's thickening atmosphere. | NOW! fam ine pthe Hier, diplomat and: attorney|#8ain,” Vanier has said. . two governors-general and to mar- ‘called Big Joe, essentially a mod- | ~“* * setas. The. increase foll»wed year invested over $3 billion in o: Norfasses four decades. Born in Montreal on April 23, |Ty a judge's daughter. ified Atlas Intercontinental Bal-| Big Joe, by contrast, will rise other price hikes on “gasoline and dally newspaper advertising! “sedition — the day En en . | With the advent of World War) | listic Missile. ivertically to about 120 miles, then Se nes Of ee! Pefition|) © * * 1888 e day Englishmen hon I, Vanier helped organize the CHILDREN 25c—ADULTS 80c ServicgleS De Gaulle in London and 260B | _- ‘’ * * Despite the loss of a leg, Vanier was appointed second in command of his old regiment after the war and went to Geneya as a delegate to the preparatory disarmament commission of the League of Na- tions. His diplomatic career began with an appointment as* secretary to Canada’s high commissioner in London in 1931. All Passes Void During This Engagement * * * Vital {0 Schools. The purpose: a maximum test ‘of the ablation or heat erosion of ithe outer space of the space cap- Comfortable Classroom sule’s nose. he space capsule atop the At- Necessary for Efficient las in Big Joe has been built by : ithe National Aeronautics and Learning ‘Space Administration at its Lew- ts~Laboratories, Cleveland, Ohio. * Although parents tend to judge’’ It is a faithful copy of the 12 _a school in terms of curricula and produced for Nasa by McDonnell is iching staff, proper heating plays Aircraft Corp., St. Louis, Mo. | THE FOUR FRESHMEN The Four Freshmen will be the attraction at Walled Lake Casino Ballroom on Saturday night. The Dukes of Dixieland will be the feature on Friday night. M-G-M_ presents . His appointment eight years : . = an important role, There is a def-| * b * AUDREY HEPBURN later as Canadian ¢nvoy to inite relationship between comfort} It is the same weight — 2,100 ANTHONY PERKINS France was soon. followed by LOVETd S eS and learning efficiency. ito 2,200 pounds — and will have j ine France’s capitulation -in 1940. Several heating industry organi- the same _ instrumentation and bs : Vanier managed to get his wife ;zations conduct continuing re-|pressurized compartment as the } ONS” and children to the Bay of Bis- ‘search programs for more facts McDonnell capsule but ill not COMEMASCOPE » METROCOLOR cay. where he herded then | for ot \C 0 ars about good heating, in the home have the environmental equip- LEE J. COBB aboard a sardine boat that event- as well as the school. iment required to keep. a man : ually rendezvoused with a Brit- lalive. Proper school heating is now a concern of engineers, school | boards and parents because heat- ing is an integral part of school construction costs. ish destroyer which took the fam- It may be preceded by Little ily to England, |Joe rocket launchings from Wal- lops Island, Va., of from Cape Canaveral, some carrying rhesus ‘monkeys or chimpanzees. The rising construction costs are, The Little Joe series will be The first day in school is a mile-jreflected in the local taxes paid followed next spring by the first, stone. The new student's experi- |by all homeowners. Thus heating rocket’ launchings of men into” ences in the nursery or kinder-| jin the school involves two ques- ‘short flights in space capsules, in will it aid stu-) ‘prep: aration for eventual orbital — Fred MacMURRAY Jean HAGEN TOMMY KIRK ANNETTE FUNICELLO - a KEVIN seme CORCORAN ‘Keep Comfort in Mind When Purchasing Fall. School Wardrobe ‘ 25c ‘TIL 1:00 P. M. Returning to Canada as war- time commanding officer of the | Quebec district, Vanier stumped Ww. C SMITH CIRCUIT the province, campaigning against TODAY & TUESDAY Lost Stream anti-conscription nationalists | GEN, GEORGE P. VANIER among French’'speaking Canadians. * x ™ BENEDICT BOGEAUS parsents _ TAN ARES NE POMEL» Hear te pit theme 5 D. ENCHANTED sSLAND” ADVENTURE Patrolman PHILADELPHIA ® — Is there such a thing as a lost stream? i A tragedy has revealed that BY THE AUTHOR OF MIGHTY MOBY DICK’! ncr'v there is. ; , x « * . It all started Saturday night when patrolman Joseph Reiss, 35, jwas checking a reported cave-in * like a |Sw allow S Toward the end of the war, he|S27te" classroom are unlike any- |tions for parents: served in the London headquarters of Gen, De Gaulle’s French. com- Mittee of liberation and moved with De Gaulle to Algiers in 1944. |Twelve days after the liberation of Paris, Vanier reassumed his duties as ambassador to France. He retired in 1953 to take up char- itable work in Montreal. Vanier has three sons and a daughter living in Europe. A fourth thing he’s _experienced before. ident performance and what will | ment late in 1961 or in JE: Mother Gan make life a lot eas-! it cost? ier and pleasant for the child by| The hot water heating industry using just common sense in pur-jis concerned with these questions, | Bridge Bout rie | chasing fall garments-to start the, too. According to the Better Heat-| child on his road to learning. ing-Cooling Council, the industry: * * * recently developed new ee, Since children in this age pane techniques to reduce schoo group devote a major portion of | heating costs while ms their day in play en the floor high standards of ‘performance | and with paints and crayons, the |@"d quality. CHICAGO (# — The American Contract Bridge League's annual Some new school heating tech-|SU™mer fouimament today 7 nai 2 Teams Unbeaten | oto] ea rte son is a trappist monk in Oka, Que.| most appropriate attire for both ‘rowed to 12 teams, two of them jat a street intersection in north- niques come from developments, Vere ._.DRIVE- -IN Meo EAE 5-450: boys and girls is the coverall |' : : undefeated. ‘eastern Philadelphia. M lj or shirt and slack outfit, Since —s ged ee pee ce xk « | Suddenly the earth below him! arria e ICENSE| most of these are drip-dry there ese Include such innovations! wm. two unbeaten teams are AS : ‘crumbled without warning. He| g is laundering problem. as forced circulation hot water re , of N amines TELEGRAPH |\was swallowed into a gaping hole A lications ns sf ; |heating, baseboard heating panels, moe cle, Oswald seco ot New , OLXK. ¥ Ud \43 feet deep, 60 feet long, and 60 pp . George Rosenberg advises moth-| smaller but. more powerful boilers | os A ic oy In gs : feet wide. There has been no trace) peneid E. Goyette, Detroit ers to select Clothes with eiasir (heating plants), use of smaller ae NOW SHOWING : lof him since. Janice M. Smith, Birmingham cized waistlines to Bye a coM- size distribution pipes (as small] The Jacoby team defeated the . ‘ i. * & Sennen Lace SiN. hadereoe fortable fit. as % inch). Sidney Silodor squad of Phila- eee : City Water Commissioner. Sam-| 3#rbara D. Sahr. 770 Cameron And try to select garments with) The principle of increased effi-| delphia yesterday by 11 inter- | James G. Rowe, Clarkston Myrtle Guilds, Clarkston EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING! TWO MAJOR FEATURES! | Joun WAYNE Se HOLDEN }uel Baxter said that the cave-in | was caused by the collapse of an) |11-foot arch over a_ forgotten jstream that had been turned into ja sewer 75 years ago. The area ‘has a history of cave-ins but this om was the worst. Georgia M. Tipoit. N. = Gary W. Leidler, Fort Knox, Ky. Mary K. Hubble, Oxford zippers down the front. The little) ciency and reduced size hag been folks become more confident when applied to school heating with con- Eimer f Caston. 210 they are allowed to dress them-| siderable savings. Bi ingham Neacy! M Brotemes, Soe selves and find that it is easy to do. Donald O. Ewald, Orion Nancy J. Lee, 905 Mt. “Clemens * * * national points. Mathe’s team | downed the New York City quin- | tet of Arthur Miller by 22 inter. | national points. '7-Nation Treaty Governs| The Jacoby and Mathe teams square off today. Five other Troops i in West Germany | |matches will be played today and BONN, Germany (AP) — A sev. tonight among the remaining 10 Keep in mind not to buy clothes: that are too big. Not only do they) make the child uncomfortable physically but psychologically, too. onzales set George G "Merrimac ey, : ot Tene Wey Oxde Fe Waner Gre Most of the outfits made for €n-nation treaty on stationing. of Sduads, which have one Geteat / 3 hild thi North Atlantic forces in West Ger-,€2ch. | se / er 7 Ne a David E. Witt,” Troy children in this age group are kk *& | v} o4 4 rare eet S Georgina A. Matthew, Rochester popular priced, durable and can Many was signed here today. e cs & ay stand the rough wear the average! Four thick documents, which A team defeated twice is elim- child gives them right through a have taken 3% years to negotiate, inated from the contest. season. | set down in detail every condition | The winning team in the blue | Once the child does not feel S°verning the stay in West Ger-| ribbon competition will repre- Frederick A. Raible. Orchard Lake Rosalie Hall, Orchard Lak Thomas E. Weber. 109 Hudson Shelby M. Hahn, 113 Hudson 2 — AT 10:15 ? Be WALLED STEWART GRANGER Richard E. Kront7_ Ferndale Patricia J. Hart, Clarkston q Donald C. Arnold. Lansing * Rosalind A. Latham, Birmingham ful of soiling them, he is off to| restrained in his clothes or fear- | many of NATO troops. The pact was signed by the West! a healthy and happy start at. \German deputy foreign minister, sent the United States at the bridge Olympiad in Rome, Italy, | next April. Seventeen other coun- | } is Se ns . RIDES WHERE ONLY THE GREAT ONES GO! SOHN FORD'S THUNDERING SPECTACLE! - COLOR by DeLune - reieees sv UNITED [EJ ARTISTS Hilger von Scherpenberg and the . ; ambassadors of the United States, tien set be xepecoentod. : Britain, France, the Netherlands,| The bridge league’s summer. . 7 Ya Belgium and Canada — the coun-|tournament began July 25 with 88 | arge river tries whose troops are in Ger-teams. The team averages five or, : | many. : ; Gilbert E. Zellers. Orion Donna R. Shafor, Royal Oak . 4 tsix players. : Larry R. Rickard. 705 8. Cass Lake With Murder of Boss - NOW. ald L. Johnson. 3400 Mann school, Don Lois L. Ruffner, Rochester Harry '.. White. Rova] Ok Dawn E. French, Birmingham Robert J. Arold. Detro Frances E. Fortner, Farmington SU SeENSE TERRIFYING! tet thru FRI. Virginia J. Everett, 557 Lowell | Roger K_ Duddles. 25 F. Ann Arbor. | WARREN («® — Police today, Maxey] Wott, ele Greer recommended a second degree! en edn 7 fea murder warrant against James Gerald D. See. 2220 Commonwealth Bolden, 46, held in the death Sat-| ford urday of the boss who fired him |} 4 Pig OE OE canteipt = . > seein ae The Adventurous life Story of HARRY BLACK Frances E. Drew, Oxfor , , . DON't.ce Anthony C. Fernandez. 18 Esther Bolden’s employer, Leo S. Rovin,| Shows Start Don’t... g/pse Carolyn Legg. #14 Monticello furniture store owner, died after a! at 7:00 & 9:10 Don't... Tell { Kevork, Toarice 00s meres Harbor reported altercation with Bolden, ' The Ending! ° us = his delivery driver whom he had 3 ADULTS Arnold G. Mercier, 463 'N. Saginaw disch Madonna R. Dalgord, Keego Harbor ischarged. ‘ A . 70c Kerry E. Croteau. 112 Marquette Linda J. Powell, 179 Dresden Macomb County Coroner Stanley CHILDREN : 20c K. Schultz said an autopsy showed, that Rovin died of a heart attack. | Charloite F Newcombe. 126. Oxtord| Detective Sgt. Walter O’Bee said Gerald 8. Genel, Farmington ) wwvvrTVvVvVvVv VY JoAnn C. Tucker, Farmington , ——STARTS—— PONTIAC PHONE FEDERAL 2.4851 Features At the heart attack Id h be | ° 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, F e heart attack cow ave been’ ? OAKLAND: 2 7:40, 9:45 eta 31 Mechante induced by blows. | DRIVE-IN THEATER ¥ Eo Johan O. Gavelin. Birmingham 2435 Dixic Hwy. FE 5-4500 Carolyn Nilson. Birmingham | THURSDAY : ‘ Lynn R, Creith, Commerce Second Explosion Hits Pe Ree Ame : ay FQ MAGNIFICENT NEW MOTION PICTURE! | "THE ROBE” 11:25 - 3:45 - 8:00 P.M. CHILDREN 25c “GLADIATORS” 1:40:- TOMMY KIRK - ANNETTE FUNICELLO TIM CONSIDINE : KEVIN acm CORCORAN “* PLUS & Jein SIMMONS. Dororay MeGUIRE irom AES Ok s/o CASEY ROBINSON / HENRY KING / EDWARD MUL A UPIVERS INTERNATIONA MorURe 5:55 - 10:15 P.M. A CLOVER PRODUCTION. A COLUMBIA PICTURE ‘DEMETRIUS and Gladiators’ * ' NEX® ATTRACTION: LIFTON WEBB “HOLIDAY FOR LOVERS” -| ~ ; SORRY, MERCHANT PASSES CANNOT BE ACCEPTED DURING THIS ENGAGEMENT x Jeraldine V. Kulongowski, Commerce THEATER | [ : A b . Home of Negro. Couple | Ge LT DISNEYS Me wae ok ee 9 P — if : ‘| Or aes : Qe we NA 4 Emest N, Helsel Clarkston ara een “ie polar PULIT TTI TET TTT 7 \ an Bel, smun ome-of the only Negro couple in} os ‘ LM J the formerly all-white suburb of | BLUE SKY —_ TONIGHT — wi i ye oe Collins Park has been hit by an|g a MN che ; One Dead, Two Missing explosion for the second time in|@ a tory Vrs leet | ) fas Cea aac in Fire in Wild Gas Well less than five months. e{ DRIVE-IN THEATER Box Office Open 7 P.M. » story him and Pista” WALT DISNEY’S eaten The latest explosion Sunday RREV ALCS ASeeeaan Show Starts 8:20 P.M. | ota ~ yourself i . kb : HOUMA, La. (AP)—Oil crews/|buckled the walls and tore a large} . ° ; : Prices for this Attraction GRAND DOORS today tried to choke out a firejhole in the front ut the $13,500/ -< mans | memes | GANYON? | crmear |2umse in 2 eas well that blew [home of Mr. and Mrs. George g . jonsin j \ out of control, wrecking a big drill | Rayfield. They were ao at home gi HOW WOULO a Onging } 12:45 ~ rig valued at some 1% million|at the time. a YOU UKE a ? and a | \ eee killed, t Stat “8 Ti re ra A- 1 Weer 7 aa “Til be waiting [ T me man was killed, two are; State police sai e house an _& FATHER OF | = STARTS FRIDAY! | missing and presumed dead, and its furnishings are a complete M™ Ta ¥ sea me . Woman F é call me up AUDREY HEPBURN ‘five were badly burned. loss. The National Assn. for the Bl %& GGEp006? = secret when I’m The men were“on a barge and, Advancement of Colored People P a ‘ alone nm FRED ZINNEMANN’S prooucrion oF a tugboat attempting to salvage|said it would help pay for recon: = hunger! and see!” Ps the sinking drill rig when the wild| struction of the house if the Ray-) | < THE NUN!'S STORY [pec srecd torn fields could ‘ot afford i Walt Disneys _/j : t PETER FINCH TECHNICOLOR® PTTTLLLL tL ttt rrr tt rrr reer 4 Tw Pe ic is DAME EDITH EVANS DAME PEGGY ASHCROFT DEAN JAGGER wre mupreo ounnocn || fl SHAGGY aL A: me oy ‘ Ait Racked ; ee ; : - a j 4 e “ a yo a . | orannine aS THE VALLEY OF THE SUN...» ‘ Z a —Reguler Prices BNE SETTLE eee, ADULTS 80c ' a a a a a a a a a a ad ; a) a. a a a “a a epelisage _ " on A VINTAGE PRODUCTION , PTITIIti tii de SISNGSTSTETEICCTIICOTEETE Pay casie c ropping - eS ==, FF FF eS a ee, See ee ORR a? or a ere Ee ee eee ee ee a ee ee \ "By JACK VANDENBERG UPI Automotive Editor inc u.try’ sources said today. But the industry appeared to be right on target with its production sch: Jules and sales as it prepared for closing out the 1959 models and bringing in the 1960 cars. Thé industry's sales during the second 10 days of July climbed | 32.7 per cent above the first 10 | days of the month but were still | well below the similar period of | dune. This was exactly the way the industry had it figured. Car and = truck production, dropped off 4.5 per cent this week! from the previous week but again it was a planned drop. The automakers are preparing for the end of the 1959 model run. They want to keep a big enough inventory of 1959 models so cus- tomers can get the cars they want but keep stocks low enough so there aren't many 1959- models left around the showrooms when the 1960 models start moving in. All Chrysler Corp. plants except Lear Ready to Top All in Grand’Rapids GRAND RAPIDS (AP) — Lear, Inc., now Grand Rapids’ second. | largest employer with more than | 3,700 workers, soon may be in! first position. William P. Lear, | board chairman, said today. Lear said at a press conference that the company’s steadily in- creasing business in both military and commercial fields could dou- ble facilities and production at its new airport plant here within five years, American Seating Co., special- izing in school and church furni- ture, now is Grand Ranids’ largest employer with approximately 4,000 “workers, In 1959, Lear said his company will have done 80 million doilars worth of business, 90 per cént of it with the military, and expects te have a 90-million-dollar back- log ‘by Jan. 1. The outlook for 1960, he added, is | promising and by 1962 his com- | pany should be doing business in| excess of 100 million dollars a/ year, with commercial work ex- panding to 30 per cent. Discussing new developments, said the company has men in its Grand Rapids’ and California laboratories working on a flight control system for a: nuclear- powered airplane now in early stages, and also working in a field of solid state physics expected to produce a flat plate television _.&creert within three years. He indicated the solid state physics preducts are being built fm Grand Rapids. Lear is a manufacturer of auto- matic flight control systems, such as automatic pilots, and other guidance systems. j One Loss, One Gain DETROIT ®—The Detroit De- partment of Street Railways said Friday it lost 477,469 passengers in the first 27 days-of its new fare increase. The DSR raised bus fares from 20 cents to 25 cents. . General Manager Leo J. Nowicki said the passenger loss was 5.27 per cent, but that fare revenue in- . 11.48 per cent in the same period. 4 v DONALD DUCK -apidly D the Plymouth plant at Evansville, Ind., already are shut down on downs for model changeovers. - DETROIT (UPI) — General Mo-' 1959 model production and’ that) Production for the year to date, fs may id up the introduction Plant will complete the ‘1959 model now totals 4,610,777, compared) of its 1960 mode! cars a week pr Un early next week. Studebaker- with 3,091,557 at the same time a 10 days because of rapidly dwin- Packard also is shut down for mod-'year ago. dling stocks of 1959 models, auto ¢! changeover. * American Motors and Buic will begin the changeover of ma- chinery fer 1960 model produc- tion next week, Other producers were gradually reducing their | work week in preparation for closing out 1959 model preduc- tion. . * * * » nly year ago, despite-the earlier shut-,a daily rate of 17,100. compared |with a daily rate of 13,100 in the same period a year ago. General Mators accounted for | 46.4 per cent of the industry’s sales in mid-July while Ford : ..; took 30.1 per cent, Chrysler Corp. Despite the upsurge in sales this 4, , per Nout. iepelra Moke week, sales during July were! 73 t d : trailing 19 per cent behind June| Packard 25 per cent sales and the industry expects this margin to widen just a little more! Although current production when the sales figures for the final rates indicated. an annual rate of 10 days of the month come in. |6,135,000, introduction of smaller JUST A NORMAL DROP '1960 models, coupled with the good Sales normally drop off toward showing of American Motors and | | ke * During the week, the industry the end of the model year and Studebaker-Packard in the small THE PONTIAC“PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST 8, 195 Work turned out 142,851 cars adhd trucks sales this year were still well car field currently, was expected ‘compared with 149,565 last week and: 79,122 in the same week a |above last year. During the July to boost this figure in the. final { | ! DEMPSEY. DIDN'T MEAN HIM NO HARM~HE'S JUST, SORTA PLAYFUL LIKE! THIS‘LL FIX COLONEL HIPPLE RIGHT UPS vA 4 at MASOR. < © 1950 by WEA Service, tne, T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. {11-20 period this year cars sold at'months of the yéar. + BOARDING HOUSE HOLD IT/ UG-AWK J awe 2 THE MASOR'S | (ABANDON SHIP SWALLOWED MORE ] \ MEN,WE'RE GOING WATER THAN A ~~ULP/! I FEEL CHANNEL SWIMMER LIKE A CANDLE /— | IN A RAIN STORM/[-] THAT'S BEEN LOOK, HE'S TRYING A BURNED AT BOTH 1TO SPEAK! /] ENDS/AND WHO IS /—~ = /_| THIS STRANGE WATER BEARER ? —~\ LVE NEVER SEEN HIM BEFORE! Y Ls ip ts OUT OUR WAY OOOH! AIN'T THEY BEAUTIFUL? DID YOU EVER SEE PRETTIER HORSES? TRwiams 8°35 t 1989 by NEA Gervice, Inc. * By Walt Disney ei by King beat ucee Sy nctivat+ 4 By Franklin Folger a For real) chewing satisfaction be sure it’s WRIGLEY’S SPEARMINT America’s Favorite. You'll Find PROF. ABLE OPPORTUN:TIES Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way to solve your buying and Selling problems. To Place Your WANT AD Get DIAL FE 2-818) onthe . | “You can put them back in your pocket now!” ? ys i * | fo: 'M. Reg. U.8. Pat. OF. By Carl Grubert DIXIE DUGAN By McEvoy and Strieber SUNT mua FE ALLY WE Gn a 7 ~ DONT yout E BEFORE WE GO ANY PLACE ry A SUBJECT “| {YOU JUST ALLERGIC 1 WANT YOU To GET ONE THING year TO ME ? nuent NOT GOING ag PPB a EA RLEASURE , ie milly By ‘| poms ile or iA: i iat v YW}, i. & iit rm 4) NY , ed = al ‘ ore = aa ©; _ Rishi ) | oe \ ALLEY OOP IF YOU DONT GET A MOVE g ON, THERE WON'T BE ANY- v- \. THING LEFT TO BOTHER ABOUT! BUT DOC WONMUG DIDN'T GET IT..THE TORNADO DID <\_ WITHOUT GOING THRU fxs OR LOSE THAT PAINTING TO.A SADISTIC FEMALE! BUT WHY ARE YOU DODGING a “A TO WNOID JUST SUCH PERSONAL QUESTIONS! L HAVE BUSINESS IN THAT VICINITY, TOO! THIS SMALL ROAD WILL TAKE US BACK, TOWARD THE CASTLE JO THE VILLAGE! NANCY WITH HELPING: A-ER~ CRIMINAL ESCAPE: MAY NOT RECOGNIZE ME! ANYWAY, I NEVER THINK OF MYSELF AS YOU DON'T HAVE VERY GOOD TASTE SEZ EVERYBODY ).3_- , PLAY NUMBER TEN---THATS MY FAvorRITE IN MUSIC US Per OR. — Alb rights reseed or 1959 my Untied Femune bymdbeere, tne, By Dick Cavalli at, © 1960 by WEA Service. inc. TM. Reg. U5. By Charles Kuhn (NO,SIR/ DON'T GUESS I'LLEVER FLY IN ONE ©’ THOSE THINGS / ooo TO TH’ ROM ONE LANDING NEXT/ ry a. & ca e 34 To Aid “Dry’ ‘Alcoholics JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) —A divisién of the State Education Board is sponser for a five-day conference, opening today, on meaps of helping Mississippi alcoholics. Mississippi is legally dry. STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- bate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile Division. | In the matter of the petition concern- ~~ Dawe, minor. Cause No. 16831. | ©: Norma Kelly Schofield, mother of “said id -phild. tion having been filed in this Onn alleging that the present where- abouts of the mother of said minor child are unknown and the said child has violated a law of the State; and that sald child should be placed under the jurisdiction of this Court. In the name of the people of the State of Michigan, you are hereby no- tified that.te hearing on said petition It be held dt the Oakland County ervice Center, Court House Annex, 1260B West Blvd., ip the City of Pon- tiac in said County, on the llth day of August A.D., 1959, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and you ‘are hereby com- manded to appear personally at said pearing: t being eh ae to make personal service hereof, this summons and no- tice shall be served by publication of a copy. one week previous to said hearing in The Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed and circulated in said County. Witness. the Honorable Arthur &. Moore, Judge of said Court, in the City of Pontiac in said County, this 318t day of July, A.D. 1959. (Seal) ARTHUR E. MOORE. {A true copy) Judge of Probate ELSIE J. VASCASSENNO. Probate Register, Juvenile Division August 3, 59. STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- bate Court for the County of Oakland Juvenile Division. In the matter of the petition con- cerning Richard Scott Anderson, minor... Cause No. 16532. ah Harold Anderson, father of said child Petition having been filed. in this 7 Court alleging that the present where-| heat. abouts of the father of said minor) ——-———.———_____.___— child are unknown and said. child is | dependent upon the public for support, | and that said child should be placed, under the jurisdiction of this Court. | In the name of the people of the! State of Michigan, you are hereby ro- | tified that the hearing on said petition) will be held at the Oakland County Service Center, Court House Annex, | 1260B West Biyd., in the City of Pon-| tiac in said County, on the lith day of! August A.D. 1959, at mine o'clock in the forenoon, and you are hereby com-' £ manded to appear personally at said! fe hearing It being impractical ta make personal | as hereof, this summbns. and notice! shall be served by publication of a co - one week previous to said hearing n| The Pontiac Press, a newspaper print taal New York Stocks and eirculated in said County. i Witness, the Honorable Arthur E | Judge the (Late Morning Quotations) Moore, of said Court,. in City of Pontiac in sald County, this 30th Figures after decimal point are eighths 4 f Ju 9 a : Gay of SUI AD: te UR £. MOORE Admiral 203 Isl Crk Coay 39 | The following are top prices ‘A true copy) Judge of Probate Air Réduc 87.2 Johns Man a7 1 covering ales f locally ¢ ELSIE J. VASCASSENNO, taled © us ea Jones & L 79.5 Covering sales of locally grown Probate Regisier. Alum Lig, 303 Weltes’ Hay * 49 produce brought to the Farmer’ Juvenile Division Alcoa VW ee! 103.2 = we Sues “8 Am Airlin 29.2 > "682 M re 2 Kimb Cik 682 Market by growers and sold by | | spgneingneenreensenatnir ae A r 45.1 5 ; ; STATE OF MICHIGAN In the Pro- Am Cyan 435 gro. 312 then in wholesale package lots. | GOP Senators Tonight ° bate Court for the County of Oakland. Am M&Fdy 96.4 LOF Glass . Ait ane packag ‘ P| ht Ti U L a Jusents Dison. con | Am Met Cl 26.2 Lin McN&L 13 Qiwlations are iurnished by the a Oo He p toose Mena I of the Pages con: Am os on oe Ligg & My 912 d { k cerning ana Lynn an nda Kay! Am Smeit f . ‘ 2 Fe a miners Gouda Me iaeos An deb Tel 197 Lockh Airc s12 Detroit Bureau of Markets, as ot Ends of Pac age To Gerald D. Allen, father of said Am Tob 1006S icne 9) Cem ” Friday. children. [aneconce 3 Lone 8 Gas . 421 . Gee ee Ba oe Achico SU 16 Lorillard 44 és . LANSING (®—The 1959 Legisla- abouts of the eer of tata children | Armour, & Co a ee a Detr “t Pr d ture, apparently destined to end are unknown and sald children are de- FS ‘ Inte f A > bow ae one pendent upon the public for Support. [es coe ea en a O1 oauce jits work oyn a jow key of interest, and that said children should be placed, Reth steel 371 May D Str 493 FRUITS comes back again tonight to. try under the jurisdiction of this Court | Boeing Air 36 Mead CP 46 i 5 In the ae of the people of the! Bond Btrs 226 Merck go Apples, Dutchess. bu $27 once again to get it all over with, tate o chigan, you are hereby n9-| Borden 6.4 A " 7 fppies, Hed Bird, ou. , 3 4a > tified that the hearing on said petition | Borg Watn 474 Mole wenn *: os Apples Tiausparents bu. c 3 25 Their eat fight concluded, the will be held at the Oakland County! Briggs Mfg 115 Minn M & M 1473 Blackberries 16 ats 600 lawmakers needed chiefly! to tie Service Center, Court House Annex,; Brist My 402 Minn P & L .. 36 Blueberries, No~ 1, 12 pts 3.75 loose ds f dis: : ' 1260 B West Blvd. in the City of Pon-| Brun Balke 1004 wfonsan Ch... $53 Cantaloupes, bu 659 UP J400se ends of disagreement tiac in said County. on the 18th day of| Budd Co 284 wont Ward .. 43.5 Peaches, Red Haven, bu ‘0 over adjustments = the business August A.D. 1959. at nine o'clock in the, Burroughs 34.7 aot Prod _, 60.4 Pears, Clapp’s. bu au forenoon, and you are hereby com-/Cal Pack - 30 Mot Wheel .. 10.6 Pears, Sugar, bu ae activities tan. , - manded to appear personally at said: poe & H . 27 ~~ Motorola 124 Raspuerries, Red, 24 gts oo 25 hearing. oe =— Soup a Murray Cp 30 Watermelon, bu. a . 3.00 It has been a foregone conclu- It being impractical to make persona! Cd oo 20 Nat Cash R 62 | : . service HICSS os ames and no- Capita’ Alri fine Nat Dairy $25 | Sion for at least 10 days, since tice sha e@ serv y publication of a Sf aan Nat Giyps 5 oy et ae . ; 6 . . " > copy_one week previous to sald hearing | Carries Cp 422 Net Lead 1322 VEGETABLES House Democ rats surrendered in ane Folie et a) erecape: Cater Trac | 110 Ret eet 12? Beans. green. fat. bu. ..§225, Wholesale on the income tax is- printed and circulate n said County !Ches & ae Oth Ss : Beans, grepn, round, bu . 225 > 9 ; x Witness. the Honorable Arthur E chr sler 633 aoe $) Beans, Ky Wonders, bu. 4751 sue July 24, that the revenue Moore, Judge of said Court, in the City Cities Svc 573 Nor Sta PW 53° Beans, Roman, bu 350 answer will be built around a of Pontiac in said County, this 30th day Coca Cola 154 Ohio O 42-4 Beans, wax, bu. 2.50 = : . 4 of July AD 1959 Colz Palm 4.7 Gwens Cng 886 2¢ets. toppea ou iio! USe (sales) tax increase. (Seal: ARTHUR E. MOORE. |Colum Gas 21.4 Owens Tl! G1 102 2 Beets, No. 1, doz. behs ............ 90 (A true copy! ge of Probate, Con Edis 647 Pac GRE 65 Broccoli,” No. 1, doz. bens. ........ 250 Some observers contend Demo- ELSIE J VASeASSE NNO, | Gon N Gas 51.1 Pen AW ie - 99.9 Cabbage, bu. 200: ate ware : “aller ee Prunes (Regier | Consumers Pw $65) Pann Ey qo 4 'Caohaee. Curly be. ig Crats were hopelessly beaten as Juvenile Division cet Bek Se Parke Da 48 4 Cabbage, Red, bu. . 1.50 long —ago as June 10 when the _ August 3, 59.) : a faa 6Penney, JC ..112.2 Cabbuge Sprouts, bu 130 te 7 bake Cont Cop & 8 144 pa” fF oo, Piggy Back" income tax was de- NOTICE OF SPECIAL ELECTION | Co2t Met M2 Pepsi Cola 312 Carrols Bu. AS ayaa : wa cia Tact | j 5 a 2’ Carrot 92 Fs * Ae 2 To the qualified Electors in that part con ee ae Pfizer 38.6 Cauuniower De — 3 35 foaled. fou ihe “second: and STast of the Evergreen Sewer District lying Curtis Pub 131 D5pelps 80 ‘Celery, pascal, 2'2 doz. 2.75 time. . within Pontiac Township, Oakian 672 Paine De aus Celery, doz. stks 100 The 116 illi doll: core meee: gira thal Speciei pe C Seag 36.2 Proct Fee ; ne Corn, Sweet 5 a0s. mee cro Roe 1 do e milion dollar use tax r en at a Specta 4 “4a 4 Cucumbers, dill a 3.75 ps age 2 f *= Election will be held on Tuesday, August Dour ete a ie Oil eae Cicimibert Pickle, nid ; 5.50 oes set pul fogs Uler by ine Re 18. 1959 ot the Fire Hall on Auburn ny pont ‘978 Republic St!_..°76.4 Cucumbers. slicers, Fancy. bu. . . 2.75 Publican Senate majority will es Road in Auburn Heights, to establish a pag: Air L 39.2 Revlon Divay | Hi dos) bens) ©) -- ee 1-00 ready for deci rote he Special Assessment District for the pur- East Kod “o44 Rex Drug ” 46.4 ‘Eggplant, ly bu. . . 27 0 a cisive vote when pose of levying cost ts of installing sewer paton Mf ‘97 «4‘Reyn Met . "1B Eggplant, Long type. pk. , 1.50 ‘the Senate returns at 8 p.m., ex- extension vergreen Interceptor to F1 auto i ‘59.7 Rey Tob... 544 Kohirabi. doz ochs. ...._ » 1.80 cee Oy Pontiac “ewoship dn. s6\0 gy w adus 2-7 Royal Dut. 446|Leeks, doz. bchs.. ae "495 cept for the BAT element. oti “ Safeway St 367 "3 ace Notice relative to opening and closing ee He Reg Pap . 52 8 Gnicner reen, doz. a fa big Giestion oe EINECS of the Pole on the day of any elec- ex Cell : Scoville. Mt : 26.6 Onions, Dry, 50 ib. bag m4 taxes was how far the Senate was a e polls sha opene at 7:00 : e} . 4 : — Geleck in the ferencoa ona shall. be eo 143.4 Sinclair 61.2, Parse: eure: Flee bens. . bs willing to go to meet House de- Satnoca and ue longer aly valtfied EOF? Mot 80 Sou Pac | 43-6 Peppers, Cayenne, “Dk . *200.mands for a 20 million dollar re- alified ector present and in line at the polls Frock aa 3 Bede aur : peo) been: seeet bu - 350, venue increase from this source. at the hour prescribed for the closing Gen Bak 125 Bd B G --: 28-1 potatoes, New, 50 ib. bag ; A House members, nominally thereof shall be allowed to vote iGen Dynam 545 Std oi eat ; es Radishes, red, doz. ve veeeesee oes “Ny OREN Towing Cesk Gen Elec . 81.2 Std Of Ind.. 47.7 Radishes, white, doz... : {09 Scheduled to meet tonight, were en Pd: 5 arb outdour dog bchs......... . August 3, 4 '59. Gen Mills ....1144 Std Gi OR ° 243 Squash, Acorn, % bu Betis ase cxpected to spend the night at SS ” moi we = aaa Gen Motors .+. 575 Stevens JP | 331 Shee Bulvernat, Ms bu. ; 2.50 home and show up at their desks OTI 752 Stud Pack .| 125 Squash, Delicious, %¢ bu. .. ....... i snsVotice, ts hereby given of @ public hear- Gen een ae Git co Ue medask Ieee or Bu re i 199 8t 10 a.m. Tuesday to review o be a e Waterford Town- 'Ge : 7 : a es Ee t % bu. . 2 > - = ship Hall, 4808. Weet Resa ke Won oe na Swit & Co : 451 oe ee *, bu. 2 te whatever action the Senate takes. ford Township, Oakland County, Mich- Gerber Prod 596 Texaco _ §7.2 Tomatoes, outdoors, 14 Ibs. > 1.00} ied from the hours of 7:00 PM. to 9:00 Gillette 504 Tex G Sul 20 Turnips, topped. ou 150. M. August 10, 1959 to decide upon the Goehe! Br 34 Texteo ; ‘99 Turnips, topped bu. ee 2.50. question of creating and/or hearing ob- Goodrich 952 Tk RB so : Be ee a ections to costs of lighting certain pub- Goodyear 145.6 Tra; yA. af GREENS | ing | te highways in the Township of Water- Grah Paige 49 Tran hale ar ues ford. It is contemplated that. the afore- Gt A&P 423 atl Con 389 Cabbage. No. 1, bu. $1 said special a astrssment distries shall con- Gt No Ry. 547 Un Carbide 1472 Collard, No. 1. bu. 133 | oat - the fo lowing described property Grevhound ... 215 Un’ Pac a8 Bale. BW. ecscmes conewes 1.75 Oar 0 uCca ion. Gulf Oil . 117 Onit Air Lin.. 433 Migrant No. 1, bu. -yi2s ACK. FAG iHammer Pap. 342 Unit Ai Me Sorrel, bu : 2 00 Wen 17, W334 Hersh Choc. 771 nek Peat : as Spinach, bu. ...... - 175 : . | ILLIAMS LAKE GROVE SUB Holland F 135 Un Gas C 36] Swiss Chard, bu 1.75. A special Waterford Township Lots 1 thru 8, 26, 26. 84, and 85 Homestk B31 US L Pp 32.9 Turnips, bu 125 B j j a rs sel eee ‘Hooker ‘Ch 46 US Rab 6a, *9 Board of Education mecting has tats ti ira ag ee eR 8 pagan Bo) US Steel ie SALAD GREENS ee) scheduled for 8 p. m. Thurs- s 70 thru 75 es 4 «34 Celery Cabbage, doz. day with non-teaching emploves LAKE WILLIAMS GARDENS SUB [inland stl S21 Van Raal 4 Endive, bo... nent 1905 ok alte wee Pa eae, beige oat ‘Interlek Ir 29.6 West Un Tel st Escarole, ou 9 Of Local 1295, agcording to Rudolph ssessments , a sr 3 Lettuce Bibb, ok g ; isac + @ : : JAMES E SEETERIIN, 2! Bus Mch 126 | Westg ABR 347 cettuce Boston mK 25. C. Lisac, presigent of the Local. Waterford sp Clerk int Nick.” 1044 White at. oT fettnee head. bu ros| The Becal hag filed a grievance oe _____ AUmUst 3.1959 Int Paper 130.4 Wilson & Co. 45 Lettuce. leaf. bu +39 With the board,."protesting the hir- SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE oF [Mt Shoe ..... 357 Woolworth 584 “ing of two paintrs instead of NEW YORK, COUNTY OF ONONDAGA {nt weal are pounet Sued wes ” “ee DONAL J “mr cinit nt Te el 377 Zenith Rad . 1176 riving the present, employes an - | Poultry and Eggs opportunity] to prove thmselves REVO SMITH HALE. “STAMBAUG Hq, ‘. = worthy of the job ACTION’ FOR ABSOLUTE DIVORCE | eWS in rie i DETROIT POULTRY ‘ Petengent DETROIT, July 31 ‘AP)—Prices per oe = Le) a Pas Plaintiff designates | Ive poultry: sealer Be: 7 ase Pomice State ONONDAGA County Billy Moore, of 348 Russell St., . Heavy type hens 16-18: light type hens as the place of trial : oe ; -10; heavy type broilers and fryers 3 ONONDGA County in reported to Pontiac Police Sun- to 4 Ibs; whites 19-20: Barred Rocks 21- ihe Governor ount “ 22-23. ck- To the shove named Defendant: day morning that he was “strong fings 2278) ONT * 1S 22-23. duck- Ta « ou are hereby summoned to ans Wer . the complaint in this action, and to armed” and robbed of $60 by two DETROIT EGGS Wed 50 Years serve @ copy of your answer, or, if ‘hs unidentified men at the end of eErTRoIT, July 31 \AP)—Eggs fob complaint is not served with this sum- mons, to serve a notice of arance, | on the Plaintiff's avroreey within twenty; days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service: and ini case of your failure judgment will be taken against you id default, for the relief demanded in th bade aaah Hess street. urday that someone broke The beach in walecor Hosnente has parting | appear, or answer,/ St., reported to Pont iac Police Sat- into 2 _ PLENTY. OF ROOM FOR ALL — An aerial view of Pontiac Lake Beach emphasizes the spaciousness of the facility for Oak- land County residents wishing to eseape the scorching summer facilitics for _THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST 3, 1958 KE Av cinta STATE OF NEW YORK coenrt OP ONONDAGA SUPREME DONAL J. STAMBAUGE, fe i Piaintirt REVO SMITH HALE STAMBAUGH fendant CTION POR pate: Oivone TO: “REVO SMITH HALE STAMBAUG 107 North Saginaw Pontiac, Michigan THE FOREGOING SUMMONS is served upon you by publication pursuant to an Order of Hon. Frank Del Vecchio, Jus- tice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of Onondaga, dated the 15th day of July, 1959 and filed with the complaint in the office of the Clerk of the County of Onondaga, at Syracuse, New York |Dated: Syracuse, N.Y July 15th, 1959 | Yours. ete. HAROLD A. MANHEIM, ESQ. ' Attorney for Plaintiff | Office and P Address 600 Loew Bidg. Syracuse. New ork July 24. __ 21. aus 3% 10, 17. 24. 58 — a NATIONAL BANK PONTIA c Po stad Michig NOTICE OF SHAREHOLDERS MEETING Notice is hereby given that, pursuant to call of tts directors. a spectal meet- ing of the shareholders of Community |National Bank of Pontiac will be held at its banking house at 30 North Sag- ‘inaw Gtreet. in the City of Pontiac, : State of Michigan. on Saturday. August 22nd, 1969. at 10:00 am, for the purpose | of considering and deter.ntming by vote whether an agreement to merge the said bank and the Romeo Savings Bank, located in the Village of Romeo. State of Michigan. under the provisions of the laws of the United States, shall be ratified and confirmed: and for the pur- pose of voting upon any other matter incidental to the proposed merger of the two banks. A copy of the aforesaid agreement executed by a majority of the directors of each of the two banks providing for this merger. ts on file ‘at the bank and may be inspeeted dur- jing business hours. Jualv 17, 9. | A. G GIRARD. | President “ i July 18, 20. 21. 22. 23 24, 25. 27. 26. 29 ° 30 and 31 & j Aug. 1,3 4 5 6 7, 8. 10. IL 12, 13. , more than 1,500 cars. Between the parking lot and the water is . Exclusive! Pontiac) Press Aetial (Paste |e 000) 80 end) 18 33 a recreation area complete with. swings and slides for the kiddies, sands who go there seeking relief from the heat and for a cool, | 3579732—20 aie Gate icni PUBLIC and picnic tables for outdoor gourmets. The sandy beach, one of refreshing swim. Ai ORAM ce Aeual e102 tt is acc é e Dodge Sta. Wen, serial number 385) is long engl to accommodate the thou- ae “eo ca ree apps ge eee the finest in Michigan, MARKETS “troit in case lots federal state grades large Whites—grade A extra large 40: medium 31: small 2}; receipts of government graded Commerctally graded: 42; eggs grade B large Clayborne Carry, of 324 Hughes 32: no brown eggs reported Total weekly July 25 through the 31st were 8.655 cases Whites—grade A jumbo 38: extra large his home and stole miscellaneous: 5 to 36; large 34'2 to 364%: medium 29 Dated, December 10, 1959. t lued 84 . 0 30 Rrowne ciate A jumbo 38 extra HAROLD A. MANHEIM, ESQ. i ems Value at $ 0, ines 34 to 36: large 33'2 to 36, medium Attorney for Plaintiff 29 to 30%; grade large 27. 800 ew Bide Office Address| Best Carpet Cleaners. Owned v oa 4 me 5 and. operated by Jim Bradford. A| . . July oo “1 “hug. 3, 10, 17, 24, 39./number of years, experience with) Livestock Tae —— one of Pontiac's largest carpet | STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- ~ |cleaners. Quality cleaning of car-. DETROIT LIVESTOCK _ Court for the County of Oakiand,|peting, rugs, and furniture. Free prtrRoit July 30 (AP) (USDA) — sents drone the pagent con lestimates at our convenience Cattle ealapie ie Supply limited to concern-| ' cows. grass offerings and fed offering: ing Bereee All, minor, Cause No. tans! oa it your elf, Call it FE virtually absent ian early supple cues ‘0: Ali, father of said chil ie dv. moderately active, fully steady: utility Petition having been filed in this Court | 1700-1800: canners and cutters 13 50- alleging that the tgleen apirtge of the father of sai child are wun- known and said child has violated a law of the state, and that said child should ~ our under the jurisdiction of this | dened Waterford Township. 1700: utility bulls up to 23.00. Compared slaughter last week good and steers under 1100 Ibs |strorig to 25c higher: steers o choice along with heifers. over 1100 Ibs steadv to 25c lower; utility and standard | steers and heifers steady to 50c lower: | Hope to Settle HOLLAND (UPI)—Former Lt. Gov. and Mrs. William C. Van- denberg #f{ Holland observed their, a0th wedding anniversary today The Vandenbergs wil] be hon- ored at a family dinner tonight and! will hold open house tomorrow aft- 'ernoon and evening in the same ,home where the parents of both | celebrated their respective golden weaaing anniversaries. Vandenberg, long active in Hol- land civic affairs, served three terms as a State senator and was lieutenant governor from 1951-53. He dropped out of politics follow- ing his unsuccessful canipaign for the Republican nomination for gov- rnor in #952. He is, vice president n the name of the people of the State! cows 50-100 lower: bulls 50c low Ft enor 1 BY I of rent an, you are hereby notified that; to Award jeral loacs high chotce v0. 1070 Ib. steers and assistant secretary of Hol- the hear ring on said petition will be ead | 28 75-29 00, two lots high choice to prime Jand auto agency . at the Oakt and County Service © ent | 1080-11 10 ib. steers 2925: several loads | (2NG aulo agency jce steers 1100-1175 Iti steers | the City of Pontiac in 9 0 one lit , or of Au “hey Dash, on d A $5 si a ge will be award- 28°80. n . 2830. few Toads low choice | Grain Prices nine o'clock in the forenoon, and you ed tonight y the Waterford steers 1125- 1150 Ib. steers 27 50-277 are hereby commanded to appear per- most good ow choice steers wnaee sonally at said hearing [Township Board for construction ‘leo ref 36.06-97 60: ciacderd tc iow good | OPENING GRAIN TABLE It ag J mprtactical to make personal of a 640-foot water main along steers 22.50-25.50, utility steers 2000-| CHICAGO. Aug (AP) ooevie ereof, this summons and no 1 2200: most on 790-830 Tb. heifers! WHEAT OATS (New Type! 8 smal a oerven Uy Qudlication of « OF ear Lake road.’ Four bids 26 $.75-27 $0. good .to low choice heifers Sep 190% Sep “68% 2 : Pontiae Press, @ newspaper prin have been accepted for the job. ae ate Since: atiity coms Ge foets Mer ae Wither, the Benorabie arth . The project is an extension to iV oe. Rettity tana 22 erases vou cacy) ant iow! Lill =23.0 ie ; yg Ray EM County, thie the Guy Stringham School to rectify a con- in week up to 2350 and 24 00 ary 2? cone =" sep YF 133 ¥\taminated well problem on the >wlls 2000-220. Sep 119s Dec 137 of a A.D. sea RB MOORE. | school P | Vealers—Salable 25. Not enough offered Dec 1 13's Mer 1 3834 1A tree copy) dudes of Provate econ ito test trade. Cotmpared inst week choice Mar Vit. Ma 1 36" nse J. VASCASSENNO, | * * |atid prime vealers 1.00-2 60 higher; iower May 1.18% LARD (Drums) ter,, The d grades steady to strong; Sroet” ‘¢hoice OATS (Old Type) Sep 8 778 Jovani rising Board meeting will be at and prime reners, 38.00- 40.00, individua) Sep. 56 Oct 897 ; e up to. standard ary ~ N 9 0 leek - August 3, Pp. m. in the Township hall. 5600-38 00: cull and’ wrility, 1700-26 00. See es ° f bd . i ‘ . . 2 a et t . \ < | that address is stored ey August 3, 4, 1959 ~ — -—|ward Ave., Perndale, Mich., | being where the vehicle ;may be inspected. 3612913—10 Secretary of Labor Dubious PUBLIC SALE on August 10, 1959. a Negotiators Set 2nd J Oint Berti Session in Steel Strike eng Resutes Weapons Fight ‘that address being where the vehicle is stored and may be inspected. August 3. 4 1959 . Opposes Too Much NEW YORK ‘AP) In the; “This is no way to bargain,” Reliance on the Maiss wake of a sha 9 bic rebuke by said Mitchell, who is serving as : Secretary of Labor James P. Mit-) President) Eisenhower's — fact-find- 14 to 1 Destruction Types chell, industry and union negotia- er in the strike. “They cannot Z tors today hold their second joint reach agreement unless they talk . WASHINGTON tP—The Army re. Session since the nationwide stecl to cach other.’ is today ifs campiaicn es strike began July 15 * * * too great a reliance on murs de-| Today's meeting had been ar-' Spokesmen for the industryand: siruction weapons, contending that ranged by federal mediators _be- of America denied they were not \ properly equipped land forces ean fore Mite a accused both sides trying to reach agreement They | R conquer without destroying an en-/ef failing to make serious efforts did not offer to alter their posi- i — to settle their contract dispute tions in the deadlock Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, Ar . * * * The industry called a news. con- my chief of staff, sonned this Mitchel! neted in Washington ference today — two hours before keynote at the outset of the three- Satt ireay ‘ehiat the negotiators had the joint bargaining session — in day annual convention of the As- met Just once—and for only two a move to SUBpOF its contention escrtion of the United States Ap DOES = last Monday that an increase in steel labor], my. The group is composed oi Sos esd tale iataboe. | resent and former Army men and * Ls ie packets ot ANDY policies. [ | k R k Indtistry spokesmen said that at 0Ca an an § the luncheon they would make ‘ The ventral dep eee pubhe ‘thousands of letters” sup- another point the Army long has No. 215 Nationally porting the anti-inflation * conten- jrmade, the possibility of a nuclear tion, The letters were written in, . talemate arising when both the! NEW YORK —Since the end of Tesponse to,a recent industry ad- Fvery home buyer has fire insur- - United S.ates and the Soviet Union 1958 Community National Bank m Yertise ment in newspapers, ance—every home buyer should could totally destroy each-other Pontiac gained 31 positions to a Today's joint negotiations were have mortgage insurance. For fwith those Weapons, rank of No. 275 in size, as meas- arranged last weer by Joseph F. whitewne home sa bucking. lock: Lemnitzer said: that “a modern ured by deposits, among the na-, Finnegan, director of the Federal ae larmy is capable of conquering tion's banks, it was reported today Mediation and Conciliation, Serv- teen home buyers are dying without destroying, of defending by*the “American Banker,” the ice. Finnegan has been meeting without reducing the defended land daily newspaper of banking. in its Separately with both sides, be- to radioactive waste.” ‘midyear tabulations as of June 30, fore and since last Monday’s joint He added that ‘the physical pres- 1959, of the largest banks in the © alks, which he = arranged: ence of armed men on the ground | U. S. and in the Free World i can exert more effective and_last-| ec san banks in this veritable / . ing control than the threat of mega- © ‘Blue gk of banking are listed’ Queen Mary ; Skipper Dies in Southampton before the mortgage is paid, If youre paving for your home, you ll want to know about Life of Virginia's mortgage redemp- i} ton plan. Let me tell.you about S it; it's available at smal] cost. tons of firepower that may never according to size, as measured by be used.’ ‘deposits: eas oe : At another point, Lemnitzer said; |) waronal Bank of Deron 1.798.761.4792 SOUTHAMPTON, England wh — ' that in the not too distant future, : a Detrort Bank & Trust Co 867,440, Me Capt. Andrew MacKellar, master ROBE T HAMM . Le b, cturers Natl B . intercontinental ballistic missiles. Manufacturers Na 768,864,607 Of the liner Queen Mary, died iast 1080 W. H s can become so numerpus and rela- 5! Michigan National Bank 481 687.293 night in Southampton General Hos-' 08 - Huron St. = iy ansing : 687,293 . ‘ tvely invulnerable ih counterat-| 34 Bank of the Common- = pital. He was 62. FE 2-0219 tack that it would senseless for an j23 Ope Perot cg + 329.003.8385 MarKellar had been under treat- enemy to attempt surprise attack. 3 Grand aries : 229,612,455 ment at the hospital since June! ~ ° 9 | en & . Land power, primarily repre- Savings Bank, Flint .... 157,465,564 When he became ill during al . des ates 179 Michigan Bank, “ ; + sented by the Army, is vital in Datro * 147.859.771 voyage ) THE strategy, the general declared. 198 City Bank, Detroit 138.452.9715; He joined the Cunard Line in! LIFE . . ae Genesee Merchants Bank a = 4 ; INSURANCE COMPANY — & Trust Co., Flint 123.416.7909 1924. and was given command of C DAV e ee ey atel go.ss4isg the passenger liner Ascania in / OF VIRGINIA] . ounty 2785 Community National . 1950. He was the master of the SINCE 18716 RICHMOND VINGINA . Bank. Pontiac 95,836,005 ee oe ‘ i Mauretania when appointed to, Elects L J. Keys command the Queen Mary last Death Notice o™ 1 — Commander The Oakland -County Council ef = DEBORA LYNN WALTERS | Disabled American Veterans has SHELBY TOWNSHIP — Service - elected uiber ad _Kevs. of 2628 La- for Debora Lynn Walters, infant )peer Rd., Pontiac Township.” @8 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon sh their commander for the coming Walters. 46149 Waco St., was to veal: . be held at 11 a.m_ today -from the e = presently judge advocate Wiliam R- Potere Funeral Home Unwanted Weight ot Pontiac Ray ( pape 16, has’.; Rochester with burial in Utiea® | een a member of that chapter for Cemetery : seven years and a member of the Det be dicd ‘Sttueday at chil Has Been Lost by 4 ier . Rea san »0TA ed S12 ay < I- 7 as Oakland | Toney Hoof Vet dren's Hospital, Detroit, of birth Michigan Women in the Others newly elected and their: Complications She x born Fri- First Year HOUSE of VENUS positions are: Payne VanDevener day . . of Hazel Park, senior vice com. Suaviving besides the — parents Opened in the State mander; Edward D. Edington of are four sisters, Shirley, Linda, Pontiac, junior vice commander, Carolin and Gui]; two brothers, and Alex Dutko of Warren, finan- James ahd Steve, all at home, RESOLVE NOW TO JOIN cial secretary. - maternal pr: Adfather Wilham Shan Edington is a member of Pontiac of Detroit, and maternal grand- HOUSE of VENUS Chapter 101. The other two officers mother, Mis Opel Wilfrod also of be long | to Royal Oak Chapter 19. Detroit And Reduce . as Thousands of ‘ ’ a " Reel’ Hoods Startle Housewife | as Sctistied Women : ’ Have Done Dark Figures | Aan XPOSe Coast to Coast UTICA (AP) — A startled housewife pulled back into The Famous House of Venus Guarantee her driveway as two cars shot past. One was labeled “police” 3 MONTHS FREE | but the occupants clearly were sinister characters, It we fail te get the follewing results Mrs. Shirley Desaele, 27, of suburban Sterling Township, in 60 days: . | called state police. Her sister next door called the Macomb OVERWEIGHT: UNDERWEIGHT County sheriff's department. Three squad cars sped to the nye Cites perce scene. and Waist Bust * * * Take One Inch Improve Posture Off Ankies and Re-proportion Body Measurements FE 4-9582-3 TRIAL and FIGURE ANALYSIS without Obligation. Pick Up Your Phone NOW and get that slender figure YOU have always wanted — He has always admired. House of Venus Figure Salons urs: Mon., bill ara _ 10-6 Miracte Mile Shopping Cen &. Telegraph a4 Square Lane B Ra. Obviously there was dirty work afoot for the sight that awaited the officers was right out of a reel from “Scarface.” Eight figures in black derbies, trenchcoats and puffing big, black cigars milled menacing around ‘two cars. One of the vehicles had the crude letters ‘Utica Police” painted on the side. A red lantern was perched on top. ‘ .* * * ° The figures dropped their cigars and began to run. When officers rounded up the hard-looking group, it turned out that they had interrupted a creative endeavor. The “gang” was made up of boys from 16 to 20 years of age. They were making an Al Capone film with a home movie camera. ° * Police were tolerant. “We just told them not to make any more mens. " one said. * * ‘ 4 r - aerate, “ , ie armen Se cae OE 5 aati acnais eat teill ae ree _ ee ae a ae x sec ' 6:00 (2) Movie. x a a \ Lae ty sa} e: THE PONTIAC ‘Pp / . * @ RESS. MONDAY, AUGUST'3, 1959 -- Today's Television Programs -- Programs furnished by stations Gsted in this column are subject to change without siotice - t Channe) 2—WJBK-TV Channel 9 CRLW-TV TONIGHT’S HIGHLIGHTS (4) All Star Baseball. Secon All Star game. “Strange Witness.’’ Repeat. (4) It's a Great Life. (7) Curtain ‘Time. (4) Theater. Drama: Based- (7) Music Bingu. (9) Popeye. *on-fact drama of couf‘age in (9) Movie. 6:30 (2) News, Weather. peacetime aviation will be|1:30 (2) As The World Turns, (9) Farmer Alfalfa. presented in “Obenauf ; ° Sains Joan. : . . Story.” (7) Topper. sad @ Bee ereivar (7) Top Pro Golf. Julius 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 6:45 (2) News. Boros vs. Sim Sneed at Sea |2:00 (2) For Better or Worse. (4) News. Island Golf Club, (4) Queen for a Day. (7) News. (9) Boston Blackie. (7) Day in Court. 7:00 (2) I Love Lucy. 10:00 (2) Playhouse, Drama: Lee 2:30 (2) House Party. (T) People’s Choice. Comedy, Sock decides that marriage is wonderful institution for other people. (9) African Patrol. Adven-| ture: Beautiful woman is key in baffling murder mys- tery that sends Derek deep into uncharted jungles. Channe) &—WW5-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Joan Crawford stars as un- faithful wife whose youthful lover kills her husband in J. Cobb stars in ‘‘Trial at Devil’s Canyon."’ Set in re- mote Arizona Tertitory com- | | munity shortly after Civil War, the drama _ centers about unorthodox actions of sheriff who arouses hostility | . of young Army Officer. (4) Playhouse. Drama: Sen- g 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. ’ 12:50 (9) News. 1:% (2) Our Miss Brooks. (4) Court of Human Rela- tions. : (7) Gale Storm. (2) Big Payoff. (4) Young Dr. Malone. (7) Beat the Clock. (9) Movie. (4) From these Roots. (7) Who Do ‘You Trust? (2) Verdict Is Yours. Arranged Stock -{Q. Maberry as he testified Friday Deal for Leahy Firm H e ad Testifies Former Coach Made $100,000 on Sale WASHINGTON football coach Frank Leahy made $100,000 on a stock deal arranged by a Colorado oil Co.,~its presi- dent says. The deal was detailed by John before an examiner of the Securi- ties and Exchange Commission. Maberry heads the Hamilton Oil and Gas Corp. of Denver. Maberry, said the. company ar- ranged for a major stockholder to sell 100,000y shares of its stock to Leahy last year for 50 cents to sell 100,000 shares of its stock most of the money for the pur- chase, Maberry said, and then | Former) -- Today's Radio Programs - - wie, (26% UKLW, (aves ww, (960) WOak, (1130) WXFZ, (1770) WPRUN, (1480) WIBK, (1500) _ CONIGEY | | 11:00— WIR. News, Sports WWJ, News, P. Elizabeth WWJ. Network Time WXYZ, Breakfast Club 2:00—WJR, Showcase 1—WJIR News i feorite News WXY4 News Surrell CKLW. News, David WWJ News, Maxwell WWJ Newer CKLW, Hopwocd WJBK, News, Reid CKLW News, Davies WJBK. News. Don Mcleod | WUCAK. News ache News! Martre WCAR News Bennett WPON Music , WPON. Lark WJBK Reid WPON News Sports WJBK Stereo oes PRG wR oh au inter 1-20 WIR Mnste 9:40--WJK. Jack Harris s é:90- IR vInoer Date CKLW. Knowles CKLW Mary Morgan CKLW News, Shiftoreak WWJ, Bob Maxwell —— 10:00—-WJR, Music Serves 3 Stations ‘By JOHN-LUNDQUIST BALTIMORE — An unusual three-channel television “tower — which looks like it might have been built upside down—goes into opera- tion Aug. 9. What makes it different is the ungainly appearing triangular structure which sets on top of the skinny 625-foot long steel legs. From each point of the tri- . Pel angle looms a 102-foot antenna. _ ‘ They look like three spikes that would provide a- dandy anchor if the whole thing was turned over and driven into the ground. ‘The $1,125,000 tower has caused neck-stretching Baltimoreans to gawk with awe during the past two years it was being built. Now jt will pay off in living room comfort with better TV reception. xk wk * silences,” he said. serious about rum (due to the ihelp the many make it even better. Puerto Ricans love one juke box and three bars. “I come here to listen to the The Puerto Ricans are so taxes) that they have a “pilot -|plant” where chemists try to distilleries Gov. Munoz-Marin but wish he'd TUESDAY MORNING WWJ, News. True Story 3:00—WJR, Composite : WRYZ. Peter & Mary WWJ News, Maxwell WCAR Page's Party . WP ON Candlelight G:00—wuk, voice, ot Agric | GREW. Joe Van WXY2 M Shorr WWJ, News, Roberts : we. Rela, CKLW. Joe Van 1 Se oo pa gl Ade lithe a 10:30—CKLW, Myrtle Lapbitt | WJBK. McLeoo CKI.W fewis Jr WJBK, ows! deus WXYZ. Around Town WCAR, News, Bennett WJBK, Jack, Bellboy WCAR. News. Sheridan WPON Bob Lark WVAR Woodling WPON Ffarly Bird 41:00—WJR, Dear Shirley ep Caretieliant WWJ News. Theater $:30— WJR, Composite 6:40 wJK Muste Hall CKLW Joe Van CKLW Bud Darl 1:30—WWJ 9 star Extre CKLW, Eye ner WJBK News, Reid Sul WXY2. Night Train WJBK, News george Sa Sa News, Martyn WWJ. News. Hageart CKLW Bud Davies WCAR News WPON Chuck Lewis WPON R. Compsait 8:00—WJ dad 7 7:00- WJK. News. Music 11:30 WJR, Time tor Music|] ¢ : : . : . ¢:00— WIR, WWJ, Bet Your Life. WWJ News, Roberts CKLW, Mary Morgan vee oe p WWJ, Dick French 8:30— WWJ, Monitor WKYG Newa Wolf _ ‘VJBK Jack, Bellboy pig ff bens) bt dg a — Se : ews. George WJRK New v Se WCAR News TUESDAY AFTERNOON WOAR Went Benne 5 ewn sev we fage Trad WUAR Woodling pam ic 12 00 — w AR. News wae ‘ON. Carriag ade 280 -WJR, uste Ral) , News: Hagegart 4:99) WARK. ' 9:00—WJR, News, Topic WXYZ, News Wolf CKLW Joe Van CKLW Bue Davies" ‘ fi CKLW Gporte. David WXYZ, Paul Winter CKLW Bible WJBK News. George WCAR. News, wurse wear ; News 9:30—WJIR, Report WPON Nite Sounds WWJ, News. Roverts WAY4 M Snorer “ CKLM, World today CKLW News Navid 12:38 WJ Time Out Music] CKLW Sports, Davies . WJBK,. News. George CKLW Myrtle Labbitt WJBK. News, McLeod WPON WNewa Casey WCAR News. ‘feon frnie 16;00—WJR, Symphony : 1:00—WJR, Showcase = ’ WWJ: Concert #20 WIR Muste Had WWJ News Prench 39 WIR M Hap That’s earl, brother. sy pl Knowles Joe Van CKLW, News, Davies | S W288, Sorrel 9:00—WIR, News. — WJBK. News, Berd . WCAR, Sports | a= 4 8:00 wWJH News, & (iuest WJBK. Kinestey “wPON News. % ee Stereo, : Lewis 5:00 WJR, News WWJ, News, French drink rum instead of scotch. He agreed that as a compro- business hours. The trouble is, drink during business hours. xk *k * For those who care about such things, Ed Gardner's tax deal in Puerta Rico (long ago abandoned) won maké a plane. plane.” mise he'd drink rum during he doesn't MUNOZ-MARIN ’t be repeated, the Governor has told friends. He said he signed his approval without | pprporr — Massey-Ferguson, studying it much because “somebody told me Ed had to “That. experience decided me,” "the Governor said, “nevcr pelled combines, has set up its & again to sign something for somebody who has to make a United States -service headquar- TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Bert Lahr is such a fisherman he Cnet dreamed he was out in a boat with Brigitte Bardot and all she was wearing was a towel and he got 4 10-pound bass . (Copyright, 1959) . * dealers in the United States and! m8 Pace Tune. Filmed) sitive lady in delicate health) 4.99 (9) Brighter Day. Leahy sold the-stock for $1.50 a It will also mean local viewers highlights. | falls in love with lively, ag- (4) (Color) Truth or Conse- share. won't have to fiddle with their (7) Youth Byreau. gressive ghost. Michael ‘aerials to get reception from three ee | sats quences. Leahy, former coach at Notre aerials to get recep 0 (9) Million Dollar Moavie.; Wilding. . ore age : Young boy and trainer-in-| (9) News (7) Bandstand. Dame, had been named a director different directions. Came ‘oldlap (pamnbeoker oe ivecediecs j 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. of the company. Maberry said the’ ; x &® * . borrowed { i 10:15 (9) Weather. 4:30 (2) Edge of Night. deal was arranged to help Leahy'| _ AP Wirephoto’ | The tower reaches far above the . Alter Gorings lithe pro golf tournament -on CBS-/on the penultimate hole and then 20. very ¢ titi A - — termined to establish warm o 3H. (ona | ANA, } ! pee Hailed to dunk a 14-footer on the{27e.Very Competitive in matters of WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. rapport with Bud and Kathy (0 Night Court: lice and federal troops — CaITY-| jyanprip. spain (AP) — Two! fo yn a. business, competition for audience, Charles A. Halleck (R-Ind), criti- Ppo Lio eee . : . ing tear gas and fixed bayonets— paar oe = * & final hole that would have given and things like that. ‘cizing a pending House labor con- who look with jaundiced eye TUESDAY MORNING fired over an anery- crowd sun- brothers-in-law who are bitter ri-| CBS-TV devoted an hour on Sat-|him a tourney tie. . : mpc: : : upon her overtures of sis- 5:50 (2) Meditations : é gry ut vais for ihe itle of th vids 4 ; oe : But insofar as projects for the trol bill as weak, says he will vote : wai les oe day night after Baja California’s! ¥® © title on the word's {op urday and 90 minutes yesterday to) pnig time, fhe TV camera |public good a d, we h ainst any bill lacking what h terly love. Repeat. (6:55 (2) On Phe Farm Front. tatewi ti 'matador were both in the hospital f the 72-hole competiti Mate bas ar 8 re concerned, we have against any bill lacking what he statewide elections. : portions of the 72-hole competition Scr ia a dittceent . ld veloped tt fe : ae : d Tales of Wells Fargo. : 5 ltoday, recovering from wounds hoe. caught Barber in a different pose (developed a pattern of cooperation considers effective provisions. (4) Tales s Farg 7:08 (2) TV Co'lege. A young girl was gravely! y, g aoe from Minneapo- lack \that j te : » (7) Bold Journey. True ad- 4) Toc . wna isuffered in the bull ring, i Pal a ._| —body slumped, face slack and |that is somewhat unique. * * * J (4) Tocay. wounded by. a ricocheting bullet.) . . lis and from this, . | | . ; venture: 10,000 mile tour of (7) Big Show. “The crewd was composed of, Antonio Ordonez got a three-inch mass of play = with dolor before he re- | ew *« _ The House Republican leader _ Mexico with 450 people in 3:30 (2) Cartoon Classroom. members of the Natonsi ‘Action 22S in the right thigh from a bull, there issued two| covered and unleashed a forced | The antenna tips will reach 1,049 Plugged instead for a substitute 7 caravan of 200 trailers with’ (7) Breakfast “ime party, which was secking gain SE sia ee Mallonea SSatuety | momentsiof me) = feet above sea level. They couldn't Pil ae ae age a * Wally Byam narrating. 9:00 (2) Movie. control of the state government|Doctors said no vital organs had) | dium sublimity. | It was the sort of thing TV does a Bry Tighex Deealise of DOs. | rittin Te Aaich ‘an pris F. 9:00 (2) Frontier Justice. Drama: | (4) Bozo the Clown (color). jfrom the Party of Revolutionary ocr injured and predicted he : . first. took best—drama caught on the wing,|Sible interference with aircraft! A ‘ 5 . : i porn es are Y' would be abl he‘ ahoue | k condehin Kennedy (D-Mass) said Sunday Dewey Martin stars as Doc 9:30 -(4) Life of Riley. Institutions. | would able to return to the"; place at the an event happening in the now, | taking off or landing at Friendship coy a Holliday in ‘Man of Fear.” (7) Stage 3. « *« * es Ne about 10 i adwal close of hos- uncluttered, bare-bone#, extrava- a anaes Airport. night prevent final action’ nate Visiting his friends, th eee (4) Dough-Re- Mi. Prof. Zeferino Snachez Hidalgo, and. a Se ae gots tada tilities Saturday gantly raw. ‘s Siete te wd ihe tower | abor bill this session Brands. Holliday finds that) 10:25 (9) Billboard. - |PAN candidate for mayor of Tiju- ic f her-inlaw. Louis Miguel an when Jerry Bar. It put to shame all of the waxen,/C@n__ wit stand hurricane force: tik ¢t love has turned to loathing 10:30 (2) Sam Levenson. ana, was arreste Tederal 6) ine me see ee _— er. a wee {cl counterfeit retread filmed drive}|¥/nds up to 165 m.p.h. | oe jana arrested by federal po-' nom renin ber, a 5 | Th before the H in household because Lee (4) Treasure Hunt. lice on a technical charge of dis- car; Fe Ghee catlersd cn Valen) = AED low who had that littered the channels all week: | About 500 tons of steel were used Se eee ca em Brand is paying protection (9) Special Agent: | . ; serious goring suffered in Valen-' oo rae ee jin the ‘tower and 2,250 tons of later this week. MN ; ee |turbing the peace a half hour be-|¢jq July 30. never won a major tourney in 20 end. ‘cement were poured t hor it} Kennedy, author of a Senate- money to save ranch. ; feBs uu News: ' fore the polls closed. News of the; Dominguin suffered a deep horn|years of competition, potted a %5— land the 12 ets of | wires a passed bill, gave his support to (4) Peter Gunn “Agventure: | (ee (2) 2 [ave icy. arrest swept through the city, and thrust in the abdomen, Doctors|foot putt on the last hole of the CBS-TV’s Stripe Playhouse) stretch lik se a8 ae vires wien ithe measure approved by the When) “watertiont inane | rm ae is fase Hidalgo’s followers flocked to their| say he will be out of action for|third round. ‘trotted out on Friday a number ¢ land me cobwichs! avek 1 Beres House Labor Committee. Halleck eles OF ete io ree t aa Cacielia headquarters in the downtown dis-' several weeks. The putt pitched Barber ahead of calléd ‘“‘a Ballad to Die For,” a| While such Cooperation among |*2id Kennedy's bill is weak and sie: E book b- | :; , ee : ‘pilot film for rojected western ’ ; ill is w - little black book, next prob-| 1:30 (2) Top Dollar. Soldiers marched into the crowd Series filmed by Jack Webb's Mark ‘Tee Competing stations is un. the committee bill 3s weaker. able victim is old woman. a Concentration with their bayonets at the ready. : Al fem esual, & a ste unique. A similar, Craig Stevens stars as Peter’ . oreign gionnaire. The crowd dispersed but quickly * - «= ne 5 ower in as, rising some 1,500: Lag: s . Gunn. ee (7) Detroit Today. reformed and had to be broken Well, Atter All, Visi tors ines about w wandering t inose feet, sends cut the telecasts of Can't See the Forest... (7) Play of Week, Drama: , 7 up again. . qa /WO. Stations. RE 7 : | TUESDAY AFTERNOON . . hero of moderately grotesque! REGINA—Of the total area of Department store skiptracer ; M t Sh Pp t t Sys! ee : : | ‘ Saskatchewan : ; x with no guts suddenly finds | 13:00 (2) Love ot Life i 5 us OW a T10 1sm IEMs & plays —_pHuBE ue Bie d bo proves Gn Moret hurten susnect | a ee eee Tomah utomation Hits horse, shoots villains -by richochet- p A d f a, about one-third is given over ae "Wiitcon S aeue| a oe the Bane’ p jing bullets off gravestones, kisses ropose men men to forests _either under govern- Wilson discovers Viepows! (9) World Passport M oder Nn Ar my S By EARL WILSON igirls and- skedaddles off—and is . . ment or private control. racket of company which 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. (7 d Post PONCE, Puerto Rico—My becoming a rummy. . . I mean anetner ern a ombine the a fo Void Integration —— charges large amounts for (4) It Could Be You. omman rum-taster . . was just patriotism, that’s all it was. waves . : g _ a loans. (7) Pantomime Quiz ee ; * * * ~~ WASHINGTON WASHINGTON \P — Some of = I (AP) — A con- ‘ a | Pate 9:30 (2) Joseph Cotten. Drama: (9) Serial Theater __| the secret wrapping was taken | How would it look if I said no when this Commonwealth THE CHANNEL SWIM: Mas. Sttutional amendment designed to ACROSS off an Army battlefield of the that so proudly flies the American flag asked me to become querade Party, which gets the ax|@"nul the Supreme Court's school | j pos a | (0 if {pe | 9 pd fll future project today—an auto- an honorary rum-taster? What would Nixon say? SoI didn’t at NBC-TV on Sept. 24, may wind mceration decision comes up for) ~ JO 8 Beef —— i FH T mated command post developed | say no. I said “Yippee!” : lup in a Wednesday night spot this 2° 18 ead before a Senate Jude - ‘Member of Electronics Assn. . Pepa by Ford Motor Co. Hall on ABC-TV... Jack Lemmon|°27Y Subcommittee. ! FE 4-1515 14 Sleeveless Using electronics, the installa- 4 My V.W. (Viewtiful Wife; it also stands | : ad in “Whe ~~ ek & C & V ELECTRO MART eres 4 i 7 g ; . turned down the lead in ‘What Th he 2 : 15 Mouse genus i tion can process and transmit for Vodka and Water) was fully as patri- Makes Sammy Run,”’ the two-part | ] e subcommittee meeting nos ey ee 8 9 ) visually to a commander and his otic as I was when we toured this pleasant |NBC-TV special set for Sept. 27 Iver tD-Tenny in advance aa i | SS Se 2 teveres 7 7 12 staff information from the battle- land, which was discovered by Columbus and Oct. 4, because of other com-| Judiciary Committee Ae vat i a Held )im = suatier_of seco: in 1493, and again by Ed Gardner, for in- _mitments. The female lead in the which a third attempt was to. be Yor Waele) Re) am ad 24 Invasion Y 7 |B |4 The information takes the form : ¢ : Budd Schulberg drama jis being’ , So ae Se ae hare | of projected maps and tote come tax purposes, in 1949.“ Puerto Rico sae eh eens ee * made to bring a civil rights bill . nr i Hl | | Boards, Certain information also) _ usually produces 86 per cent of our rum en eee and Robert UP,f0F consideration. Sales and Service = Rosttatee iy ia is stored in electronic units and — - . or “rawn,” as they call it. . . though Preston will star in “The Bells of the eee eee SWEET’S RADIO-TV eater used for calculations. | the figures may be down a little this year |g ygary's” oe ome ty, Sored by Sen. Herman Talmadge 38 areup of mins x1 A 34 4 ; St. Mary's.” the 90-minute CBS-TV (D-Ga), would give the states ex- 36 Suffix na | ess aay psc tone as | due to our tasting tour. , spee slotted for Oct. 27 | . Dick clusive control over their public Open Mon. & Fri, Night ttee Army Tactica rations Cen- | s cnt | ; + varments tral (ARTOC) wae developed WILSON To our surprise, after we flew here to meet, ares pcgmning ace eee schools. s 422 W. Huron FE 4.1133 40 Foothold Fe 44 5 |My 47 [4g hy Ford's Aerenutronic Diviai the 50 or 60 members of the wealthy Serralles family that “OW. "Or@ Of fatent, having : 41 Accomplished iV 0 Ss Aeronutronic vision. z —— Jack FE sonar . ‘ 42 Declaim ' The Ford division is located at (makes Don Q, we saw a vodka sign. pleted see eeoaed as 2 Shedd, hdd hod dhe dhedeur) 45 Shared at 49 50 iW ‘i : permanent panelist, is¢now looking : The People of Oakland C 49 ceasing Newport Beach, Call: * * * for a female plank sitter—the third ° oe jouaty a . ; ‘ : . ia : 61 Fastener 1 i} ‘ aid egos ge e ste and “Oh, sure we make vodka,” an executive said, “from suzar panelist on the show will be a % Who Never Finished % 53 Bhield can be moved quicly from one | cane. We call it Serranoff, based on the family name. The swing guest. 54 Pull (suffix) i 4 1 ; area to another. Smiriott people in Connectieut object eS g % % 55 Graf —— ve . : 4] ee 6 Ground 23 Titles 38 Controvert ‘ Naturally, we had to be patriotic about the vodka too. “4s are invited Pestle re dea comet: Boa ed Ye Co Morning 7 Knowledge 24 Be borne 40 Oklahoma Farm Totals Dwindle . . British Seamen Pp 4 ’ soncecls soak one part 25 ees 41 Garment ) ; ; The rum, light dry and 80-proof (the present trend) and- AT HOME IN SPARE TIME 1 Arrive 10 Fencing sword 27 Amoeba foot 43 Harvest WASHINGTON—There are 4,790,-| low in calories, is being promoted as a romantic “lovers’ ‘Donate Bl d Tetra ES ee eo - 2 Burden 11 Espouses 28 Glacial ridges 44 Church recess 000 farms in the U.S. now com- drink.” : | OO AMERICAN SCHOOL P.P. 8-3 7 Pha 17 erate 29 yoene and : py hr d ith ; f 6.812.900 pL oe Kensington Branch, Ea —— abr wis y é be 4 ‘ j 4 La of bie 1S be niae 4 ee Ai Eienehisizer a soerationg pa Sle, A colorful member of the Serralles clan, red-bearded Tito at Every. Port ies “Seng me your VERE 59-Page High School Booklet. = Sscounts So Nobeultable 50 Ornament : wu: Wirsching, took us by launch over to Coffin Island, which is, Name igs 7 : . | it ed Pee eee ears eweeerverseeneee se MES vaenscatecene oeee very primitive, having only praeeies =@ | BOSTON (AP) — ‘A_ practice ® aaa \ ORR iio claiols sive vale cieivicieinipiciels uvivcin cess Goncoce: Pheme.....-..sc0ccce * jwhich will defy imitation by most \folk is being pursued by a group .of British tars, members of the ‘crew of HMS Victorious. The big/ aircraft carrier is en route home é today after taking part in exer-§ % —STARTS— ° 2 PONTIAC jcises with the U.S. Navy. 3 | While she was tied up at Boston PY Ss DRIVE-IN THEATER three of her crew appeared at the 3 saae ‘New England Medical Center and 2 2435 Dixie Hwy FE 5-4500 offered ‘blood. They said they made such dona- tions at each port they visited. In) * |proof of this, Richard J. McCol- ough, 35, of Newcastle, England, | ‘displayed 14 donation cards: Har-! ry Barber, 24, of Sheffield, 10 ,and John Stephenson, 23, of Birm- jingham, 8. Many distant ports were repre- |sented, including Hong Kong, Sing-). © apore and Malta. Detroit Will Become | Tractor Service Center — the of world’s largest pro-) tractors and self-pro- one of ducers ters and a new ‘service training in Detroit. HI The Cry that Rocked THE VALLEY OF THE SUN.. omer | 7h775 EARTH 1s MINE! } programs for the company’s 3,500 CimemaScope © recu Canada in agricultural equipment. ‘and ,in industrial equipment, Ni t run for Congress in 1924 by _Labor Department and-she served until thee Ist Ww to Congress GREENWICH. Conn. ‘AP)—The first woman Democrat in. Con- gress, Mary T.» Norton, is dead at &4. She died “Sunday of a heart at- tack in Greenwich Hospital. Mrs.. Norton rose through New Jersey politics and was named to Frank Jersey organiza- Hague, who headed the City, N.J., Democratic tion. She was elected, and stayed in Congress for 26 years. On her 73th birthday, in 1950, she an- nounced that she would not seek re-election. She made the an- nouncement from the Bethesda, Ma., Nayal Hospital, where she was recuperating from a combi- nation of influenza and pneu- “monia. * * * Her career in government ‘was not ever, however. Secretary of Labor Maurice Tobin appointed her a special consultant to the on power,” end of the Truman administration. in her early years in Congress she drew eonsiderable attention by ealling for the repeal of pro- hibition, at a time when most congressmen were avoiding the subject. She introduced the first resolution calling for repeal, Her congressional career set a record for length of service. by a woman legislator. For five years Bhe headed the House Committee on the District of Columbia, the first woman to ever head a con- gressional committee. * * * She was also named to the House Labor Committee and in 1937 became its chairman. held that post for 10 years. She was,a strong New Dealer, helping to. guide and later defend’ the Roosevelt | administration’s wage and hours legislation. She also championed the fair employ- ment practices act. In 1947 she was named standing Catholic Year.” She Woman of the * * * i She was married to Robert F.' Norton, a businessman, in 1909. He died in 1934, Their only child died soon after birth. Mrs. Norton came wich three years ago. She leaves two sisters. Mrs. Jo-| seph McDonagan of Greenwich and Mrs. Ann Hopkms of New York City. Credit Card Plan Now Being Used on Eastern Buses | ALLENTOWN, Pa.. (AP!}—Plain old money is losing out to the credit card on local buses. | The Lehigh Valley Transit Co. announced Wednesday a ‘ a-fare’ plan for bus rides in this northeastern Pennsylvania area. Passengers may use any one of. three types of cards, depending on the service they want. Com-| pany president A. M. Williams, says the credit plan will create; bookkeeping problems, but also: boost business. to Steel 10 Per Cent Cost DETROIT — About 10 per cent of. the cost of an automobile is the price of the steel that goes into it, | according to estimates of the in- dustry. Dams Control River NASHVILLE—The various dams on the Tennessee river and its many tributaries make it one of the most controlled major river systems in the world. . PAYDAY LOANS { \ I | i $50 for 2 wks only 70¢! other loans to $500 with 24 mos. to repay CASH YOU | REPAY IN | REPAY IN RECEIVE | 2 WEEKS | 4 WEEKS $25.00 $25.35 $25.70 $0.00 50.70 $1.40 laverest charged wt 2° per month on belences vp te $50, 7'/,% per month between $50 ond , amd 1% per month on emy rome nde ASSOCIATES LOAN COMPANY in DRAYTON PLAINS: 4494 Dixie Hwy. CALL: OR 3-1207 in PONTIAC. 125-127 N. Saginaw CALL: FE 2-0214 2255 S. Telegraph Mich. Miracle Mile CALL: FE 8-$641 - “womun- ° “Out- Dead at 84 “MARY T. NORTON ; He. __ Queen Returns Home, "=" After Strenuous Trip LONDON (AP) — Queen beth returned home her 16,000-mile trip America, .describing it” as uous. but intensely interesting.” The Queen and Prince Philip [wes met at London airport by -their children, Prince Charles and Eliza- from across North Sunday “stren- Princess Anne, Queen Mother Elizabeth and Princess Margaret. * * * Several thousand people cheered as the smiling Queen stepped out iof the blue and silver Comet jet. on hand to greet her was Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and Home Secretary Richard A. But- ler. matr Dem Flectéd. Union to Teach Magazine, | , . Criticizes Latin Workers CWA Plans Courses in Democracy to Offset Red Growth in S.A. — WASHINGTON (UPI) dent Joseph A. Beirne of the Com- munications Workers of America — Presi- (AFL-CIO) has announced today a} teach Latin American “vigorous industrial De- will be opened at Front school workers mocracy ” to toyal, Va., Aug. 14 A CWA press release said it would) be “a new experiment in international relations combined with a unique education program to. aid in offsetting the growing menace of Communist penetration ‘in Latin America.” j \ . Five North American affiliates of Postal, Telegraph and Tele- phone International (PTT1)° will cooperate ‘in the program which will bring 16 young Union leaders from Central and South America to the feae union institute sat The visitors will spend 90 days studying and learning the funda- entals of effective industrial De- mocracy, the press staterhent said. It added that the sponsors belHeve the leaders will return to their own countries, equipped to train other leaders * * * Secretary of Labor James Mitchell and William F. Sehnitz- ler, secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO, will greet the visitors at an official opening ceremony. The classes will be under the direction of Prof. James Carper, formerly of the University of Min- nesota C The students will come a pe from Ar- gentina, Chile, Peru, Uruguay, | Paraguay, Ecuador. Colombia, ' Costa Rica, Honduras, Guatemala and Puerto Rico i | | i } ' + | | | iChina China’s Mao. HONG. KONG tant magazine AP)—An_ impor- in Communist! has published an article that people like Mao Tze-tung can make mistakes. The leader of Chinese communism is conceding ‘generally spoken of by his follow ers as infallible. ‘The article, appearing in the authoritative New China semi- mofnthty mentions Mao through out a lengthy discussion of prob- lems and mistakes of Commu- nist agricultural and industrial policies * * * Mao ts not mentioned by name in the critical passage saying .a great man cannot always be cor- rect, However, the writer used a Chinese word for great “wel ta” — that is always reserved fo Mao. This provides styong support fer speculation abroad that Mao faced a storm. of criticism over his handling of China's “big lead for- ward’ production campaign and his establishment of the barracks- type commune system last year * * * Both programs ran into trouble and have undergone revision. Excuses apparently are in order now The context of the | startling statement about Mao indicates . however, that he has so far weathered the storm and _ still is very much in command. kt ke Mao resigned as head of the Chinese Communist government when the problems came to light. But he kept his more powerful post as chairman of the Chinese Communist party. National advertisers’ annual ex- penditure in newspapers since 1950 has increased by over 220 million. Green- | “charge-| SS ONE-COAT Hou SE paint 3 LaTtk pase H concrete foo aes Cnamel oe te 8; _ MASTER: wiKeD