—— than fiye hours of questioning in connection The Weather U. 6. Weather Bureau Forecast THE PONTIAC PRESS Saow flurries. (Detalis Page 2) F 115th YEAR * * * * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1957—40 PAGES —“s0cuqep paras oxrrep aEnvite O7O* To UF in Last Lap Wi h 75 Pct. of Goal ° Sheriff Recognizes One Skull — Farmer Not Grieved é “MADISON, Wis. (AP) —Ed Gein, 5l-year- old bachelor, appeared to show no remorse, a Union Officials Seek $2 Million to Defend Hoffa Gein, brecatst to Madison for interroga-| tion in connection with the butchering of | Mrs. Bernice Worden of Plainfield, Wis., faced state criminologist said last night, after more further questioning today. x * * As Gein’s grisly story was being investi-| gated, Sheriff Herbert Wanserski of Portage | County said he recognized one of the skulls’ found on Gein’s farm near Plainfield as that of a long-missing woman. | ~*~ * *& Wanserski teld newsmen that he| defense fund which may with the slaying of a widow and the finding Not to Be Reimbursed of 10 human skulls in his farm home. ; _ Charles Wilson, head of the Wisconsin State Crime Laboratory, said he could not detect any remorse, “just .a sort of detach- “ment.” Pontiac Varnish Resumes Work Uses Machines Not Hit; * Injured Man Reported | ‘Holding His Own’ Trial to Start Friday 4 oe he had taken the assortment of skulls and grisly buman remains from cemeteries. The sherift said: “We have 00d of Teamsters for the’ found the face and head of Mary use of James R. Hoffa, the| Hogan among the objects im union’s president-elect and Gein’s farm home. ‘other teamster officials. He said Mrs. Hogan was a 54) year-old Portage’ County divorcee The Tribune said this was who disappeared in December 1954 disclosed by Harold J. Gib- from the rural tavern she operated pons of St. Louis, a at Bancroft, about six miles from. Gein's farm. ‘Teamster international vice, Wanserski said he had taken! | president. part in the investigation since it) Trial of Hoffa: on a wiretap) started Saturday night after the| charge will start Friday. Federal discovery of Mrs. Worden’s biich- Judge Frederick Van Pelt in New ered body. : | York set the date Tuesday, de-| ADMITS BUTCHERING jclaring he saw no reason: for’ further delay. Hoffa also is under Gein has admitted butchering) indictment on a: perjury. charge The Pontiac Varnish Co. dam-| aged by fire and explosion Monday | hight, is back in production today, | but one of the blast victims is. in critical condition. H. K. Johnson, 44, of 97 Prall | St., is “holding his own” at St. | deseph Mercy Hospital where | he js suffering from third degree | From Teamster Funds; | | CHICAGO (®—The Trib-| une said today that a legal Initial Urban Renewal Area did not believe Gein's stary that reach two million dollars is| being raised by officials of; the International Brother-'! pO Ly ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee a ee a wa gl j burns and shock. The explosion claimed the lives, of. two of Johnson's co-workers: and caused damage estimated be- “~~~ heen S190, and £2000. Faubus Refuses to Put Troops George K. Anderson, vice presi- fent, said today the building's | on Guard Duty SHREVEPORT, La. (® — Gov. basic beams are not damaged, and’ all loose brick has been re-! Oval Faubus of-Arkansas says ‘he will not order state police or moved to avoid accidents. © He said the plant is back—in- National Guardsmen in Arkansas to guard anyone in school. EDWARD GEIN . production using machinery not hit by. the explesion. An in- vestigation has disclosed that some of the mill mathinery was ~*~ * & only slightly damaged and can However, the governor said be repaired quickly, he added. yesterday, Arkansas National | Police are still keeping a guard Guardsmen will have to carry out federal integration enforce- ment orders or “they court-martialed at'the drop of a hat.” ; The Army announced all regu- lar Army troops would be with- _ drawn from the high school and | integration orders would be han- died entirely by federalized Ar- | kandsas Nationa] Guardsmen. Faubus said he wouldn't “take fon sources said today it is pos- | any state police force or National sible thaf Britain wil] receive an | Guardsmen to transport anybody | initial supply. of U. S.-1,500-mile | to school and guard them while miissiles within a year. | they are in there.” at the plant to keep curiosity seekers away. Last night the fire’ department made a run to the. plant when the night watchman’ reported flames on the second floor, but no fire was found. U.S. Missiles to Britain? ’ WASHINGTON (INS) — Penta- . Plainfield. will be | the 58-year-old widow after drag- ging her bloody corpse from the| Moffa is charged with con. | hardware store she operated in| *Piting to tap illegally the tele- _ phones in the Teamsters Union Detroit office se conversations | He insisted, however, he did | of underlings ¢ ould be heard. not remember artually killing | | Mrs. Worden. | Gibbons, who was not immedi-| ‘ately available to confirm the! saying that he didn’t know any-|ing he hoped to receive $1,000 cdn-| ithing about Mrs. Hogay’s disap-| sritatiodn from 2,000 union officers | pearance, jin 800 Teamster locals throughout! INSISTS SKULLS LOOTED | the Oneey and - a Gein, a handyman and some-| 7 : time baby sitter, has maintained "iS mony cmt i used: by y Hoffa and any other Teamster ce gan iraves “while T'was who finds himself in trouble with| in a daze-like.” the federal government and the ‘Senate investigating: committee,’ Gein's attorney William Belter the Tribune quoted Gibbons. said he had_not verified reports ve that parts of 15 female bodies ‘We decided to set up this littie | had been found in Gein’s house. | Pool becnuse all “of us are being | investigated and none of us has | He said an officer at the Gein) money to finance a legal farm, whom he did not know, oe defense.” told him there were some “‘extra”’. ‘human noses found. Belter added| ithe officer told him “they didn’ He said the defense fund would , be raised through promissory notes! ‘seem to go with ‘the faces.” * tor $1,000 and a $40 interest pay-| Lpaset that would be “made avail-' HEADS SKINNED fable” to all Teamster officers. | Sheriff Wanserski told newsmen|The notes, to be paid at the rate ‘that the heads found in the farm- house had been skinhbed. The de- itached portion, he said, made up (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Gein was equally D , x = wv © WHIT TE MORE Vy; “A . TTTT////) n “\ . N Aer 4, 2 ° | / m : Ag ty “ . . i Hj LL fff / OSMUN Thig is the area selected by Pontiac's plan- ting consultants as the imitial site to undergo a $4,030,372~ rehabilitation program. The city last week made application to the federal gov- - ermment for a grant of $1,705,346, the govern- ment’s participation in the program. : will not necessarily be torn down. They also say that it will be several years before actual physical work commences. The city's first urban renewal program was drafted by the ‘firm of Geer Associates of Birmingham. David S. Geer said the 155-acre —" arte?! Was chosen becausé Of its proposed use as a civic center, potential increase of more off-street parking, deterioration of homes, and the fact that it must be 55 per cent residential to qualify for federal aid so that continued surveys and plans be made to continue the program. Officials have stressed that all structures in this area — termed cen- tral business district fringe mumber one — Topple Car Trailers on Mackinac Bridge Wink i he Across Michigan, Kill Man ‘6 Days to Moke Push to Achieve $612,000 Total $463,454 Collected One-for-All Campaign to Aid 55 Services With only six days to go, the Pontiac Area United ‘Fund has reached 75 per cent of its $612,000 goal. Dr. Dana Whitmer, cam- 'paign chairman, said today ‘that $463,454 has been pledged or collected.. He urged the volunteer work- ers to “dig and dig deep to collect the remaining 25 per cent” by next Tues- day’s final report and ,award luncheon. | The Industrial Division leaped to the fore among the campaign groups when an additional $32,000 was turned in today by employes of the 10 Pontiac Manufacturers | Asse. plants. ! * * George Watson, division head, ‘said his team has now taken in 81.7 per cent of its $404,273 quota. j | Other divisions are not faring | * well. The Commercial] Divi- ston, headed by Carroll Qsmun, has the next best record with ¢1.7 per cent of its quota in. The di- vision has recorded $101,413 out | ofa $164,280 goal, Osmun stated. He called, an. emergency meeting for noon today at which his di- ivision leaders will report. their iprogress directly to Dr. Whitmer. HOME CAMPAIGN LAGS The Geographic Division, which does the door-to-door solicitations, is straggling with 64.4 per cent of jits $21,548 quota in to date. ¥ * * Major trouble, according to Mrs. |George Eldred, division chairman, is in Waterford Township where | poor weather and Asiatic flu have jeut results to only 34.1 per cent of its $6,820 quota. The Pontiac area reports 52 per cent of its $14,728 quota is in. Mrs. Ralph T. Norvell with 18 | bs By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |Upper Peninsula was due to get Mackinac Bridge traffic patrol kept district captains is conducting fhe hicles moving at a normal. pa High winds whipped across Mich. jmore snow today. Ania pha ae Boats were sheltered in the St. Mary's River at Sault Ste. Marie as 50 m.p.h. winds hit the area. not bothered by the gusts. The high winds hit dhe state at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday. The Weather Bureau said continued high winds | toppling car trailers Gn Muskegon, reported 60 m.p-h.-wind gusts there but said the full ve- Henry Kortman of Grand Rapids j,city wasn't recorded because, most areas by tonight. Drivers of cars reported they were Donald White is W row (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) jean with up to 12 inches of snow. was killed when a tree blew dowm/ Willing to Surrender Treasure to Rearm Statue | jon a farm south of Allendale. some of the weather station's wind-! laway. Winds measured at 30-35 m.p.h.| ja him as he operated a bulldozer | measuring instruments were blown struck the Detroit area, knocking] idown utility wires and smashing Pontiac geographic drive, and Mrs. < (Continued on Page 2, Col. Car Renda Suit Opens in Detroit were expected to diminish in— Imlay Boy Offers Bayonet for Union Hero The Press reported in Wednesday's paper that the gun’ istolen from the statue a few years rearming of Pontiac’s Civil War, ®8° had been found by patroling) ® — hero, whose bayonetless rifle was! Wate Township police = Friday, a letter reached Theivoy want it. If you want it send| - returned to his waiting hands last] Pr®- Press from Ricky Bogart, son of, la card to me.” is oat ret t ful nd M a : week. | | was — to its right = a rs. Homer Sie o ‘ANTIQUE WEAPON Ricky turned out to have not | ‘only an authentic bayonét, but a! U. S. Army issue, 1851 Harpers. Ferry muzzle loader. * * * “Ricky's father, a foundry work er at the Alma Manufacturing Co..,| By DICK SAUNDERS F * A 10-year-old Imlay City boy has! gallantly offered to complete the last} owner in the park at N. Saginaw (260 Belle River Ave., Imlay City. St. and Oakland Avve., minus | Ricky said he had read ‘“‘that| | the bayonet which had originally |you needed a bayonet for your Ci- vil War rifle.” | He continued,-“I have got one if years ago so he'd have some-) thing that none of the other boys) had. The gun. went to Ricky’s| brother, Larry, 16. Mr. Bogart explained that he had found the gun and bayonet in the loft of his father’s barn in Imlay City about 35 years ago. He doesn’t know hw much arund just as a family heir- Ricky picked up the paper last week and read the story about our more than I did so’ 1 sat and wrote the letter.” : DECLINED OFFER snow, | Winds up to 80 m.p.h. were | recorded at the Mackinac Bridge | = a peak of the storm. Two | t trailers were tipped ever bet as aa Gas uence: Muskegon reported gusts of 60. 'm.p.h. Lake vessels were kept in| harbors because of high winds| sweeping .Lake Michigan. Iron Mountain reported a foot of Snow Flirries Due, With Continued Cold Mostly cloudy and cold tonight flurries is the serernss for the |Pontiac area by the U, S. Weather Bureau. The low tonight will be near 26-' 30, and Thursday's high will reach’ around 36-40. Precipitation will) total around one-half inch, with ye snow flurries tonight and Thurs- day and rain about Saturday night and Sunday. The lowest temperature preced- ing 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac wag 32 degrees. The thermometer registered 38 degrees at 1 p.m. The eastern part of _the : Despite the trailer mishaps the several plate siass ere: Tigers, Athletics Swap 13 Men DETROIT (INS)—The Detroit Tigers and Kansas. jetty Athletics today completed a 13-player trade, one. of the biggest swaps in the history of the major leagues. The Tigers sent outfielders Billy Tuttle and Jim Small, pitchers John Tsitouris and Duke Maas, catcher Frank ‘House, and two minor league players to be named gave him the bayonet seve ral \and tomorrow, with scattered snow later to the A’s. In return, they got infielder Billy Martin, Catcher, ‘Tim Thompson, pitchers Mickey McDermott and Tom ‘Morgan, and outfielders Gus Zernial and Lou Skizas.| Six American League teams reportedly have been \Lidding for the services of Martin, the aggressive 29-. ar-old infielder who played five seasons with the New York Yankees before he was traded to the A’s last June after the “Copa inci--————————_——————————~ dent.” He hit .252 last sea- runs in three straight gamers at. son and connected for 10 Briggs Stadium. honferuns. Martin Aoportedly will be used at! 'disappointments for field. The seasoned Zernial, with 2% “homeruns in his lifetime, includ- ing 27 last year, is expected to play left field with Charley Max- Tuttle joined Detroit in 1964 and hit a promising .266 and the next two seasons before slip- ping to .251 this year. Tuttle and House were ma. r! hae the eae | Renda was once charged with the House, signed for $82,000 and two) shortstop and Harvey Kuenn will cars in 1948, never hit more than vam |be moved to first base or right/2.60 for the Bengals. xe | The youngster was “willing to} part with the antique, but this gaa oy geen the generous. of ie: it the Civil War wk well shifting to atother garden or possibly first base, Morgan, 27, another former Yag- kee, probably will be used as reliet pitcher—a Detroit cuelanis this year when the team finished fourth. | Thompson, 34, hit only .205 last ee = ie Se a eee ee as ‘ 2 = eran’ here ever needs, reinforce- Sports ee eeqerasenys Ze ae ee i ae Ze S Press ‘ments, there's a boy in’ Imlay See terres e..%8 Pe. Para dee i tale’ Cad. laa Ota ue 4 i as City ready to come, to the rescue TV & Radio Programs .... 39 Ricky ‘of Imlay City, ‘offered Civil War liero, wandering rifle was ™ with a bayonet to fit his long-wan- *iein, Gat i035. 9 ancient bayonet shown here to Pontiac's ty SR SY = hecea chegs ene Sas. ON j Rt S i + * 4 1 Sn ‘ ; ‘ * ‘\, ; j \ ; , y ‘ ij it ; * : : . hs aes N : ee | \ #3 < iy zee i bi ' la ‘ Le oo: A! \ ee a A WA PE ps oS Rice Kr ve season but caught the eye jof De- troy Uyase when he hit tires homie oe . % * ? : | 40.38 Minneapolis 30 25 New Oriean ay 43 #\in 1944. His mother died in 1945|'0 Be or Not to Be tainer we didn’t find were milk ion oat. meal, ‘peanut butter.’ bd * * Prominently propped on a heap in the living room was a black funeral wreath. Since Gein’s par- ients and only brother died in the canned soup and only person to stalk the nine-room years. Gein tived alone on the family — and is without known rela- ves. His mother, Augusta W. Gein, beught the 160-acre farm for $3,600 in 1914. His father died of cancer in the early 1940s. His brother died is now an executive committee). served, with hair, ears, lips and| W There are the crime detective new industry locating in Pennsy!- vania, Labor. leaders refuse to agree that the tax climate in Pennsyl- MURDER FARM BEDROOM — This is the bedroom in the home of farmer Edward Gein, 51, who has admitted butchering Mrs. Bernice Worden, 58, in a summer-.kitchen on the farm. The rest of the Plainfield, Wis. 2 was about the same as this-‘room. from the many churches in ,the area, as well as residents. Legal advisors have begn asked| to prepare the ordinance as quick- “We want. to thank the health department staff for their splendid cooperation in this,” Robert Ken- ly as possible, State legislation has|™"8, assistant city manager, said. been asked ‘by real estate scek:| N° patien ben pan! taken on - tl request of , Gene ek ing local action as 9 faster Means). 11 collections in Birmingham AP Wirephote mingham Town Hall series is materials, and made ‘suggestions , vania played a major part in new industry locating in Pennsylvania. Harry Boyer, president of the state CIO, said he doubts if re- peal of the capital stock tax ever played any part in the relocation of industry in Pennsylvania, Instead, he and Joseph A. Mc- ——. president of the Pennsyl- Federation of Labor, credit much of the success to “the larg- est skilled labor surplus of any state and the job the state com- merce department has been doing in selling Pennsylvania.” * * * Though there might be some dis- agreement on how Pennsylvania did it, there is nothing but accord among all circles on the fact that recently. “Industrial development has increased in Pennsylvania in the lagt year by about 30 per cent over the previous year,” Daviin said, He added that “the tax struc- ture, particularly as regards this phase of government, was adopted by Democratic Gov. George M. Leader, . “This group representing a1 the state did expand its industrial! ‘muscles to such a great degree largely on the recommendation of) a tax study committee appointed DELEGATES CONFER — Two women among the delegates representing the United States at the U.N. are Irene Dunne (left) and Mrs. Oswald Lord, shown conferring during the dis- 25-nation body. armament discussion in the General Assembly yesterday. The Assembly voted to add 14 nations to the Disarmament Commission, making it a City officials pointed out that é contract survey with the as collector should be made before action is taken, Grass clippings and wet leaves are the main nui- jsances. Separate collection costs are deemed too high to enter ne- gotiations — more informa-. -}6w_of-theformer chaplain of the Senate, will be the featured speaker, Mrs, Marshall is author of “A Man Called Peter,” the book that has sold nearly two million copies and has been translated into many foreign languages. tion. In 1955 the book was made-into a highly successful motion picture. Her other books include ‘Mr. “ir ci tear ema ACmitfed Killer Le ur Stands Mute A native of Tennessee and the | daughter of a Presbyterian min- ister, Mrs, Marshall has devoted her time mainly to writing and speaking appearances since her husband's sudden death in 1949. Town Hall officials are predict- ing that her appearance here will prove one of the biggest attractions they have ever scheduled. The customary luncheons and in- Arraign Former Convict on Murder Charge in Grocer’s Death Edward Drew, 26-year-old. con- fessed slayer of an elderly Com- merce Township grocer, yesterday, rates mute to a charge of first- egree murder at arraignment in formal chats will be held after both Circuit Court. Drew, an ex-convict released from Jackson Prison in July, was ordered by Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty to stand-trial and returned» to Oakland County Jail wines UF Now in Last Lap With 75 Pct. of Goal“. ss chainee inane aks said Drew may be tried in Jan- AP Wirephote (Continued From Page One) walks of life and both political parties put aside politics and co- operated to advise on taxes that I feel helped the industria] sitta- tion in some way.” + The commonwealth operates to a great extent on revenues gained from a three per cer‘ retail sales and use tax — a b-wad based levy. ' The GOP contends this type tax, with considerable exemptions for industry, is the most pleasing for industry and the most equitable for all citizens, * * * Gov. Leader opposed the sales tax but let it become law with reluctance. Gwilym A. Price, president of estinghouse Electric Cor p., agrees that Pennsylvania “faces a brighter future than it has ex-- perienced in the Jast decade as a result of the improving fax picture.” R. Warren Grigg, industrial de- velopment manager for the Penn- sylvania Railroad, said: “The solid obstacle to dynamic growth in this state’s economy has been an industrial tax burden heavier than that of most neigh- boring states. Although further im- provement is needed, the outlook for increasing- success in bringing industries into Pennsylvania is ibrightened by initial changes which show a growing recognition of this iproblem and represent a start in the right direction.” (Tomorrew—Ilinois) Seeking $2 Million to Defend Hoffa (Continued From Page One) iTeamster officials, the St. Louis jvice president said. * * * Gibbons said Hoffa never was consulted in the preliminary dis- cussions about setting up the fund after the union’s convention in Miami last month. He declined to disclose the names of the trust officers who would approve dis- bursements from the fund to Hoffa and other Teamsters, He added officers contributing to the fund will be required to use their own money and will not be permitted to accept reim- bursement from thelr unions. A federal court order in Wash- ington has prevented Hoffa from assuming the. union presidency. faces perjury and wiretapping charges in New York federal court. WHITTIER, Calif, (INS) — A noted scientist predicted’ today that students now in college will live to see the day when men can — — trips to @ STILL SHOVELING — Nels Johnson of Du- luth, Minn. celebrated his 100th birthday in after the season's first storm passed. Johnson lists the secret of his long life as “hard work and going to bed'early.”* chairman, assisted by 22 district captains; SERVES 65 AGENCIES According to Dr. Whitmer, the 55 agencies supported by this year’s “Give “Onée for All” drive are counting on a successful campaign n the current level of with a rifle Oct. store, 1010 Oakley Park miles north of Walled Lake. Ziem said Drew still denies that the shooting occurred during .an attempted holdup and that he ‘clubbed Kolm's wife; Amanda, 64, jon-the head with the rifle as he escaped from the store. Drew was arrested fleeing the area an hour later, but the rifle has never been found, Ziem said. Drew claimed he tossed it into a muddy canal about a half mile from Kolm's store. Adjoining Areas Defeat Annexation to Holland HOLLAND # — The proposed annexation of parts of four adjoin- ing townships to the city of Holland... was defeated in an election me day. The ‘city voted in favor of tha annexation which would have in¢ creased its area from three square miles to 42 square miles and doubled its population of 16,000. But the areas to be annexed “If we do not reach our quota, it will mean that 5 of our less fortunate citinens Cll be without aid they desperately need and other worthwhile youth and adult services wil] have to be curtailed,” he said. Whitmer paid tribute to the fine work being done by all volunteers, especially singling out George Wat- =. head of the Industrial Divi- . * * * Watson said today, “We have cut out quite @ job for ourselves. We handle our own promotion and have trained more than 1,700 solicitors, “Every supervisor in the Indus- trial Division is a United Fund solicitor," Watson added, * * * He cited ‘The civic-minded ef- forts of both management and la- bor united in the common cause of bettering their community” as the primary reason for the division's early success. voted overwhelmingly against the proposal. THAT'S ALL THERE IS} § There Isn't Any More! AP Wirepheto Pk ae pe Ses oe sprightly fashion yesterday, by shoveling snow € AP Wirephoto DIVORCE A HABIT — Mrs. Beverly Nind Avery, 48, got her 14th divorce and a bit of Jegal advice to go along with it from | Coca Los’ Angeles Judge Elmer Doyle, Tuesday, The judge rk 20h a $25 a week temporary alimony which her “-year-old husband, Gabriél L. Avery, a parking lot attendant, agreed. But the judge ” said: “You are making a mockery out of na eed ex advice to veal ete uaarns amenned NEW 1957 MODELS Pontiac School Union’ Gives $100 to UF OLDS— —CADILLACS Maintenance Employes Local 719, | 3 : as “@ real fine gesture of com- Fal munity support,” and added that; , : t Pontiac UF drive is taken for Tages i. ) eae ® | A om AW hh The following list of gifts of $50) E YOUR st a Cae | or more has ben released by tie] a is 5 ge 7 ie Pontiae Area United Fund head-| f [eS Coca Cola Co. Employes | 36 lk See 7 Jerome Os:¢ Ca ile | People's t 170.00 | - Oo | oiBten Feat i Supply Balployes 8.30 280 ‘. Saginaw Street - Pontioe E iracle lig eek thes 4 bo.00 ee H eae row = BE) OPEN “TIL 9 PM, : Frank Geris, M.D. i ' Be. i eating & Subply Co. ‘base ‘ “ O'Brien ae a a a eee ee eee ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1957 After Visit to Moscow a8 al Michigan State University has 7 , — 5 es It may take longer than that be-;- : 10 KEE ! ’ aps a ecTecy ifore We can talk, but the mutual|/many firsts; first agricultural col- : ? Oe seater se tgaite interest in avoiding war will move|lege, first land-grant college, had - FINLESS ie og ~ : E conomic, Technica DP Alden acon par iene gw ag ‘ FIRST STAGE ~ AT FIRST STAGE . a | short’ course in dairying, first ' ? { D STAGE |: * * * ' . ON STRAIGHT BURNOUT, ‘ SECON U U nl ussia ‘sg Pled e to E t { J hybridization of corn began at : ROCKET MUST q MUST “STEER” g gy p | Stassen said he still feels that|Michigan State College, first build- BE AIMED ROCKET ONTO a3 : idisarmament talks with the So-/ing in ‘American for teaching sci- = 45 DEGREES COURSE PARALLEL Prober Says Air Force MOSCOW w—Egypt's war min-|give the Egyptians low-cost loans iviet Union can sueceed. ‘entific agriculture. ‘A FROM THE TO EARTH Knew of Moon. Plans pai a age Ese Reng for development projects and will! e ¥, . carry ome | = VERTICAL Months Ahead of Time new ‘soviet agreement pledging SUPPLY technical advisers, This is) COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE * atcenie and tarealenl assistance|"? aid that has been announced: - is Prasihent Noheeil anuacmeal jfor Syria. Egyptsalready is trad-| Dwell NEW ORLEANS (®-The top & ling a large part of her cotton) iigssstN as Premier Bulganin announced) the aid pledge at a Kremlin ban-| ‘ercp—her major, export—for Com-) quet last night honoring Amer, | munist-bloc Ors. who has been conferring with So-| Communist party chief Nikita, congressional investigator of gov- ernment secrecy said today the Air Force got information of Rus- i | Motor im tall, activated by gy- . Push of earth’s eastward ro- rescope, can tilt in several di- i rections to correct course. sian satellite launching _— viet leaders and visiting military | Khrushchev stood by smiling as) —— naptontg a ' = | installations. ‘se announced the aid prom-) g meri peopie we . : * *: * ise i : ‘ " bd Optometrist 18,000 MPH soeet ~ «2 « Bulganin gave no details of | Uses | . # Prompt pr. ARNOLD MILES, at : a iwhat Russia will supply Egypt,, Bulganin declared that imper- irs ° a Rep. Moss (D-Calif) also said) land technical assistance in the de- ‘* ree 103 N- Sasi ACTION SIMILAR TO PRECISE O BE — . ins use sub-| velopment of her national econ-| al crest ae are | SPEED . ‘ WwOUL COMUTCe WHC see omy. | selfless on the mutual in- SPIRALING FOOTBALL : ail te) A PERFECTION federal information practices, re- It appeared likely that a Soviet) terests of our two countries and | ———— ferred at one point to what he/ mission would be sent to Cairo to OM preserving peace and stability|______.__- More auxiliary rockets could Speed must be calculated care- This would be difficult at pres- \“Alled = “public-be-damned — work out details with the Nasser in the Middle East,” Bulganin de-| fire automatically to set up a fully to balanée outward (cen- ent stage of knowledge. Even - [atin pes ris said they/regime. This was the procedure clared. desirable rotation speed of trifagal) force with pall of such things as shape of earth |™USt oe ” |followed after Syria’s defense min-; Seco , something -like 200 revolutions gravity. This varies with dis- and maghetic field influence can x * lister visited Moscow last August’ The Premier said the. Soviet Moss’ views were ‘sharply chal-|and obtained an aid pledge. tance away from earth. throw orbit into elliptical shape. ade government regards its friendship, jlenged by the Pentagon's informa- ~ * * with Egypt as inviolable and con- ition chief, Asst. Secretary of De-| Presumably the Russians will siders Nasser the outstanding po-| - ROCKET ORBITING PROBLEMS — Setting a rocket into an orbit such as those traveled by the Russian Sputniks is no easy task. U. S. scien- tists have encountered several problems on the - Vanguard rocket project in atternpting to plan its flight. Biggest problem in the project, thrust, revolves about the power of fuel used. Concern has been expressed by our scientists over the fact. that Russian fuels seem more powerful than ever. This may account for the fact that Sputniks are finned and Vanguards are not. No official indication of how Vanguard scientists overcame other obstacles has been given. But the above sketches and suggestions below each of them offer theoretical solutions. * |fense Murray Snyder, who said) the congressman “apparently sub-| iseribes to the myth that, for | reason, your defense offic spend all their spare time lone! paper curtains of secrecy around | the facts of our military activi-| ties.”” : j Both Moss and Snyder made | litical figure in the Arab East. : Physicists Visiting ceesine | American Colleges for Disarmament en es rs ee J rick uP THE PHONE Colo BOULDER, (®—Harold FE Tell the manager how Come in by appointment their comments in peat pre-;a group of top-flight physicists Stassen, the President's adviser. much cash you want and for the cash. Phone today — AWOL SE? ° pared for the annual convention of|plans to visit 100 American col-|on disarmament, said last night when you'd like to get it. We like to say “Yes!” British Telescope Tracks Sputniks . the Associated Press Managing/leges and universities by next the mutual interest needed to talk : Editors Assn., which continues June. \disarmament with Russia will re- Loans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture or Car E through Saturday. Each physicist, in a programiturn after U.S. satellites are CT Uses $15 Radar Transmitter 8... Ee LEST LAWRENEE STREET, CONTIG “For two days this ‘week, Sny-| |tute of Physics, will spend about) * a ns OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS Loans mode te residents of ell surrounding towns “Tt is probably true that a real atmosphere for negotiation won't | return until our ‘satellites are cir- cling the earth,” he told an audi- ence of 2,000 at the University of Colorado. i "that will be in a few months.! der was a witness belere the three days on a campys and will Moss subcommittee at Washing-| Visit one or more colleges, ton ‘hearings in its continuing * * * study of government, information| At the same time, 60 high practices, schools will) be visited by scien- Moss said the fight for the pub-|tists in the next several months lic’s right to know must be un-|in a parallel project. By TOM A, CULLEN . nal in order to satisfy public strument for supplying informa- JODRELL BANK, Engla NEA 500, 4i pees tion in which the scientists are ( ) — The 000 radio k : telescope at pooling Bank, which| Prof. Lovell is the world’s first |keenly interested: the behavior of i professor of fadio-astronomy, (the satellites as they enter the is the largest of its kind in the| aveee (cart a atneaphare: world, is using a $15 ex-Army| Yateoreity remitting, as new threats arise} The program has as one objec- radar transmitter in tracking the created a special chair for him | * hes * icontinually. He appealed to the tive an improvement in the teach- Russian satellites in outer space.| I" 1951. No one knows what will happen editors to help lift what he termed|ing of science on both education levels..The National Science Foun- dation and the Ford Foundation’s |Fund for the Advarcement of akira ° ; ee x > throes. Ionisation will probably on for the firs 8- *\ occur when the satellites {all to “the smug smog of secrecy." * * * “I bought the transmitter as) Army surplus in 1945,” Prof, Ber-| nard Lovell, the radio-astronomer in charge of. the giant telescope, told me. “I picked it up for only five guineas, which would be about and was still being broken in when Sputnik | I burst upon the scene. Im nediately the British public a height of 60 to 199 miles. They may then circle the earth several Snyder, sharply critical of Moss, | said that he found it “difficult, | and so did newsmen covering the times, followed by an ion trail, or | hearings of his committee this| } 'Education are footing the bill. * * 3 - “We are attacking the -problem they may come down reasonably | week, to reconcile freedom of in-|at the school and college level in intact. | formation objectives of this com- lorder to develop an informed citi- Lovell thinks there is a good mittee with Mr. Moss’ refusal to|zenry who wi] appreciate the role chance they will come — rea- permit” the Pentagon general of science in a technological soci- sonably intact. counse] to “refute an unsubstan- ety,” said Dr. Elmer Hutchisson, tiated indication.”” . ldirector of the institute, $15 in your money.” clamored for the telescope to be BRITISH MAKE-DO . jused in tracking the _ satellite. Hitching a piece of scrap equip-| Lovell was, faced with a dramatic ment to a million dollar precision decision. instrument which would make a magnificent plaything for the gods is entirely in keeping with British “make-do” tradition in <" ence. - aes * In fact, the machinery which tilts the 800-ton retlecting dish of the telescope was salvaged from the scrapped British battieships HMS ‘Royal Soverign and Re- venge, I had no sooner recovered from the shock of the $15 radar trans- mitter, however, than Lovell sprang his second surprise. SET WORK BACK “Of course, the satellites have eompletely wrecked my priority researoh program.” he remarked quite casually. “They have set my work back months.” * * * ° I had expected to find a scientist hollow-eyed from lack of sleep, buf elated over the initial success of his telescope brainchild. Instead, I found a mild-man- nered man of 44 whe looked re- markably fit (Lovell captains his local village cricket team), but who. was anything but happy—a reluctant “boffin,” if ever there was one, “This telescope,” he informed, me, waving towards the window where the giant was on full view, “wasn’t designed primarily to track earth satellites. That was only a minor part of its job, which is to explore the limits of the * ” racking is ai rt ee ieabeats eatwal “m ol Rustlers Create mally it acts only’ as a receiver, Ho li day Hazar d at Turkey Farm KALAMAZOO w# — This is the itime of year that Derby sepnal| | jhas—trouble with people seeking ifree Thanksgiving dinners. * * * Russell owns a 1,000-bird turkey farm near here. He estimates “turkey rustlers” cost him = the important 2 centimeter last ques. waveband, which is the signature But this fall RussefM has hired | tune of interstellar gas. | a guard to patrol the highway ome att area near his turkey trot. Pe honed Sid es such. be- “Disease and rustling are *the comes the biggest steerable radar|™2in hazards in the turkey busi- set in the world. It is as a trans-/DeSs-” Said Russell. mitter using radio echo equip- -_ * * ment that the telescope tracks) He recommends antibiotics for . being able to pick up/disease and buckshot for rustlers. an object the size of an aircraft ee A good host shows his true colors when he serves rest =& COME IN AND HAVE A LITTLE CHAT, ANO WELL EXPLAIN THE “THIS ANO THAT! DO IT YOURSELF | aa casted, to pointed to waves emitted ee FIRST QUALITY: NYLON BLEND fp PLUSH TWIST 995 i FIRST QUALITY WOOL TUFTED | TWEED “A heavy carpet that An excellent carpet that is priced below will last for years at a price way below most dealers’ cost dealers’ cost Several colors still most available 549 N SAGINAW $ ST Pontiac Ib , Mich ich. Tee FE4-2521 A> Double Barreled Savings Opportunity .. . Two items a Day... Handpicked for Value and Style You save more than you have ever saved before during McCandless’ spectacular sertes of One-Day Sales. Every advertised item is first quality. Most items are priced below Wie cost that most dealers pay every -item advertised is th sufficient quantity to guarantee delivery if purchased on the advertised day. Some carpets ar priceti as much as $4.00 below most lealers cost today A fabulous eavings spree to give YOU ail of your carpeting requirements at record low prices. . Delivery Guaranteed If Purchased on the Advertised Day @ Pienty of salesmen on hand to serve you. @ Expert installation by the world's finest craftamen. @ Free delivery anywhere. @ Convenient credit... Up to 36 months to pay. @ Free home service. Ne obligation. ‘s Layaway avatiable on all sale carpets. @ Open every night ‘til 9 p.m. In consenting to switch over to satellite tracking, Lovell ran the risk of damaging the instrument, which had not been fully broken in. The radio-telescope picked up Sputnik I for the first time on Oct. 12 at 10:54 p.m., an event which was hailed with mild “Eu- rekas” from the thick-sweatered scientists who clustered around the radar recording machine mie 4 universe. drinking cocoa. : EXPLORE UNIVERSE Not until early December will er “But now,” he his|the Jodrell Bank come First Quality— . shoulders resignedly, “we've hadjfully, into its own, It will then Textured Leaf Wilton . to switch over to sateliite-track-'be the world’s most accurate in- FAMOUS QUALITY SPE LES 6 years old 90A. proof S ~ SPECIALS TioUSERS.” 49 | SWEATERS |. | house” E in t $590 “715 a Code No. 1416 $371 . First Quality— Wool Floral First Quality— Wool Blend Tweed . FOR YOu | Code Ne. 141! . AT At Cieteed—Catie Weenpet es occ 4 in o sf lands oy: — “ | 3 tgs if Luxury Wool—Nylon Embossed 11 N. Perry St. ,ut) ™ po gee INDIANS Rit is the 10th y 12 articles in ch conf Bovie apy y Jack Sobie rel the brane og Ae Beene leader tor as By JACK ein (Written with Jack Lette). A Soviet agent is like a wooden- headed puppet. His every move is controlled by his hidden masters. He is not life is never his own—and woe to WAS did intiane paint their faces? QUESTION: ANSWER: Face mae : wanthing that some Indians: still do on ceremonial occasions. And they’re not the only) ones. Primitive people all over the world paint their faces and| their bodies, for a variety of reasons. A chief reason doubtless is that, lacking:a lot of clothes, they use paint for fun, just _@s you like to wear a good looking suit, or fix up your hair.| Another is that paint for them often has religious or other| Significance. A single Indian would paint his face in! different ways an various occasions. Certain styles or manners of painting would be adopted by certain tribes or) groups of tribes, so that paints sometimes helped with identifi-| cations. themselves; Remember, the ancient Britons stained their bodies when the Romans first saw them. _ + .FOR YOU TO DO: This Indian chief, about to paint his | face while using a pool as a mirror, makes a fine coloring subject. You can color not only his face but his fancy bead-| work and headdress. After that paste the picture down, if you' munist principle. Vacation is a |dirty capitalistic word. | | For momentarily forgetting these 'ABC’s of Communist i day in August 1950 by my Soviet ‘isuperior..My mistake was in think-, ing I could take some time off, from the espionage duties to whieh | 'I had been assigned to supervise. |PAIR WORKED HARD Jane and George Zlatovski, two) permitted to think for himself. His'frightened Larry so that he left us./. him who forgets this basic Com-'turned to the subject that brought ah French Holiday Cu Short setge. Ho tires es Chik tae Wile TEE wee “ebeiilies to ta his eyes, declaring: When we were alone, Petrov him from Moscow. “Who has given you permission,” jusing the “to take a vaca-|facturer and I typed a letter intro- ducing George as a bristle sales- 'Il was brought sharply to task ak “What right do you have to take/man, he demanded, tion?’ a vacation when there is so much| to do? You mist work for the) umiotheriand,”’ He wotld listen to no explana- tion, told me that they expected to iget much more information from 'the activities of Jane and George, of my best agents, had been worke| ing hard, drinking hard, fraterniz- ing with Americans in sensitive posts while siphoning off secrets. | in Paris,from the United States with our son, Larry, 10, to join | me, I thought it would be a good | idea for all of us te relax and take a month's vacation. Accordingly, together with- the Zlatovskis, we rented a small house, jin a village near Deauville, France. |\We were there about a week chen There were 18 cases of mumps Your own remote ancestors may well have painted |! received a telephone call from) reported in the county and three ‘Hollywood producer Boris Morros, jwho at the time was my courier, lfor the FBI. jand unknown to me, 8 omer=F? forealcdown of other comrounicable | like, on cardboard, cut along the outer border, and stand ae tonne in Bad Gadstein, Austria. up by folding as indiciated. (Your suggestion may be worth $10 if you.mall it on a postcard to Mrs. Higgins in care of this paper. Today's idea was submitted by Sandy Lee, Orinda, Calif.) * * * TOMORROW: Was there a real Johnny Appleseed? Pravda Boasts of Red Potential Asks Boost in Production MOSCOW (AP)—Pravda called today for large increases | in basic industrial production within the next 15 years, the | period in which Nikita Khrushchev claims Russia will over- take present U.S. output. ~ * * The Communist party newspaper asked for a three-fold fof the Soviet Secret Police, came}. increase in Soviet iron ore production to an output of 250 to 330 toms annually. Russian production in 1955 was about 79 million tons and. U.S. production about 116 million tons. x * * Pravda claimed that current Soviet reserves of unmined _ tron ore are 35 billion tons, which it sald was 40 per cent of world reserves. nn MORROS REAPPEARS jeounty health departments last) Morros, with whom I had — my address, told me he was vaca Pontiac Tiiee Wa le described it in glowing terms, | enicuen Ren pox satve . : 3 laid it was mach, cheaper” and| f= Bearlet fever” <00ocis.c000s5 1 8 jbetter than our resort town and Mampe vr eeasccnecseccan S 10 | [persuaded us to come there. fiegaiitiy oo oos2020207" ; Y | When we arrived in Bad Gad- Oakland County jstein, we discovered Morros had) B sacd oe Year left for Vienna. Our bags were still! cnicken pox..." “sn “ES p|unpacked when Morros excitedly | Messies |. = s ° : itelephoned: |geariet fever ........ 0 3 | | Tuberculosis 6 0 4] “They know you are here, and | wee oping cough” . . 3 ; you are instructed te go to pores oll ; es ° e | Vienna at once.” | German meailes c 3 0 6 Influenza asioueune ; . Morros told me that I was to [eer fever “2. 1.4. 4 meet “a friend” in a restaurant/Impetiso .... -- 0 I bd lin a8 amusement park. Myra, Larry and I left the Zla-' |tovskis in Bad Gadstein and sat at a table at the rendezvous point. | Leonid Dmitrievich Petrov, deputy chief of the foreign section ‘fo our table and joined us. He was lin an angry mood and made .it |plain he wanted to talk to me and! |Myra alone. When I tried to get my boy to/ jtake a walk, he bridled, like all | youngsters do occasionally, and jmade some petulant remark. ‘Petrov was beside higpself with —, Westinghouse STEAM-N- DRY IRON presses woolens with a single stroke @ 15 sted vents scien- tifieally ploced for more steomn over.c greoter crea. @ You iron more with every stroke. " @ Open Handle design ends wrist strain—keeps fingers and hands relaxed. @ Does all your ironing too. Switches from steam to dry ata turn of the dial. @ Easy to fill—uses ordinary Same top water. STEAM-N-DRY IRON 16.95 Quam WESTINGHOUSE... 15 steam vents make . the gift with something extra When my wife, Myra, arrived Currently i in County Mumps Run Higher Mumps continued last week to some girls he had met in Belgrade and had lined up as possible agents. He reported on living and ece- like—that the Yugoslav people were strongly behind Marshal Tito—who had breken with Moscow. George also listed the names of (Next: Soble’s fateful mistake.) (Copyright, 1957) jbe the communicable disease with ithe highest number of cases in the | ° city and county, according to Dr. ohn D. Monroe, county health \director. . | in the city. The following is a complete diseases reported to city and) THE VODKA OF VODKAS > 80 and 100 Proof. Dist. from grain | Smirnott Fis. (Div. of Neublein)Martford, Conn, YOU'LL GO FORA , Ste. Plerre a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 90, 1937 Salsas Editors Quiz on— ‘Agent's Life Is Never His Own’ ao Generals + Choral .» . dIudge. Those named were Maj. Gen.|hésitant to grant Mrs, Beverly chief of Nina Avery temporary -alimony, pending her iéth divorce, Mps.iee | at Ft. Avery, B. beaan BITE-SIZE shape just right for easy eating —neater serving! . Freeh when you buy ‘em... fresh every time you serve ‘em. No more soggy left-over crackers. Open a new pak at every meal and enjoy the freshest crackers in town! 122000 pounds of thrust behind every piston stroke that thrust can do. Cooks food better! Sure to be welcome! eS ES IOUSE AUTOMATIC FRY PAN Measures heat with Vas fpamang Control. Cool open ha $22” Coffee deluxe! Gift deluxe! WESTINGHOUSE AUTOMATIC . COFFEE MAKER Male 2 to 10 cups Sdbere . keeps it hot for hours. $29.95 about driving. For there's where the B-12000 engine seaine up with a Flight Pitch Dynaflow* that switches its pitch @ million ways. Which . means perfect performance ratio for the need at hand—perfect It's eager for the miles and mountains. And in traffic, too, the ’58 Buick gives you a wholly fresh idea | Dip TIME a spark hits a charge, 12,000 pounds of force hit the piston. And every time you call for action, you feel what That's the beauty of this B-12000 engine—it gives you a response like nothing else short of wings. _nimbleness and instant obedience like never before. So why wait when there’s all this to discover, plus an Air-Poise WESTINGHOUSE POP-UP TOASTER IN COLOR erm WESTINGHOUSE 2-Towe Frosting Pik, Mint Aqua, Sugar White, PORTABLE Cleaiie Chsouna. hve $2195 $1995 Chrome aviation principles ” SEE ‘Your FAVORITE DEALER NOW! | T: mation on the subj _ even better what he demonstrates for you. ¢ REE TRE: | ao » i ae Sn ee et Ss ee ee ee ee 3 Se eS a than any other car? Nothing like it this side of the wild biue yonder THE AIR BORN. Suspension* that makes you feel like you're floating? Why — when you can be piloting a B-58 Buick born of more See your quality Buick dealer. He’s a regular bureau of infor- - You'll like what he tells you — —and like j TRY THE B-12000— most modern engine possible to build for today’s fuels NEVER SO MUCH SO NEW * Fresh:bold styling with the Dynaster Grille * The Miracie Ride pius Buick Air-Poise Suspension* * Flight Pitch Dynafiow* with the instant flexibility of a million switches of pitch * Air-Cooled Aluminum Brakes’ with smoother, surer control and longer life * “Veivet Wall” Sound Silencing * All bulit. to oxeetie quality standards When berter outomobiles ore built Buick wil build we < — 7 Pt is. ' *Air-Poise Suspension optional at : THE . extracost onall Series. Flight Pitch : “the is OPEL $ Dynaflow standard on. Sbyg Ne: and ROADMASTER 75, é ®nerq] Mo. ade. at extra cost on other Series. + S@rman,__"lOrs in © A Front Brokes.stand- | Orderey i POW be : on all Series except Sruciar. + Station. ws, ong } ae : Decith SEE Your AUTHORIZED Buick DEALER f x be eT b : Neg as SUog A : ne ae +, ee ak ke tok ke (ak ne ae a ce eo ok oe A B. also means will come along with two clue words. object ts to select + Se which you think best fits the clue place the number of that word in the has the same letter aq the clue sentence. sentence. You then square om ie FSS SEAS OS OL PSS RR OS SSSR SN HHO nwee wa Cc. ouzzle. and only t Ey brie | ‘in Pot-0- Gold Bach week without a hanes means angther $100, but it the chances are getting gréater that a winner someone snatches which ‘list of sentences of the words is numbered, The other words, you will read the clue labeled -A and In’ decide which of the two words makes the most sense ‘in the puzzle square marked A. Do the’same with all other squares carefully and be sure the right numbers_are in the right squares. ~ . Read all the clues eee rere D 98 2 Aoaeeouoanoe oes SSS PS SSRRSRRRERERSEEE EBB ee eee ° .. PHONE NO. SOLUTION CLUES To a child. a beautiful one could be quite ewer (1) BUBBLE; (2) BAUBLE. After «a while. such clothes become decidedly annoying to the wearer. A. basebal] team's to avoid. (3) SPOTTY: (4) SHODDY. is what the manager hopes (5) DEFEAT: (6) DEFECT. With something fairly heavy, you ‘t really gu much this will cost. (7) POSTAGE: (8) PORTAGE. A kid will respond to this with at least a smile. ess how (3) CHICLE; (10) CHUCKLE. ace a PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. an NOV. EMBER 20, 1957 eT oe ee a oo eee ar re oT Sn are + yn Mint Crosby, ii leturning to Film Work By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS | HOLLYWOOD (INS)—In town for [{tekephoned before she rejoined Bing Palm Desert. Good to hear her i q lonly a few hours, Kathryn Grant | . She said that Bing is go-|** ie t My ber to Tucson tomorrow Py her Columbia picture ‘Gun- man's Walk,” see ber settled, and Jthen return to their desert home, “Pll spend every weekend with | him,” said Kathy. “Fred Kohl- mar has been wendertul about ) ture as long as possible.” Place.” He said he is casting Diane as a eee g actress- the Studio had great plans for her. Although she is only 19, she Nas riage was annulled and she. re- cently separated from James Dick. son, a young engineer. * * * Rhonda Fleming's mother, whom Rhonda says never got the grease paint out of her system, gets her She said she is learning to cook, first acting role in Rhonda's pic- Hand that Bing's mother gave her|‘ure. ‘'Bullwhipped.” t } | letting me wait fo start my pie- ;Many recipes. “But so far I’m not} Hh *" she confessed, “but I'l! " Being a college girl and then anactress-hasn't given my) attractive’ friend, Kathy, time to learn the culinary arts. * x I met Buddy Adler and asked him about his plans for -Diane Varsi, the young actress who hed hadkuk de ded &: WHERE GOOD FRIENDS N MEET . K aa = | | | | N NJ N J @ BEER N @ WINE N A @ CHOICE Vi A LIQUORS \ oe DeLicious \ COCKTAILS N N ‘ \ \ N: Ns LIBERTY N COCKTAIL \ LOUNGE \ 85 North Saginaw. Nesosseres wrwvvweveweVeVe Vee VV YS Wonderlul Food Grouse a normal SYMPATHY. F. The more Ibat’s performance, the easier it seems to be. ali) § SUBTLE; (a2) SUPPLE. ‘ - G. Toleratien of leads to office miamancgemen. (13) BOUNDER: (14) BLUNDER, : H.° To get a — project going. many people may find it n y their strength. (15) CONSERVE: |__| __ ey concent. Soe L_ A team that on the football field can have a hard time winning. (17) SHAMBLES; (18) SCRAMBLES. I. Someone who has this may use it to take advantage of _ others. (19) CREST: (20) CRUST. K. In the vernacular, the average showgirl likes a finish to her personal. appearance. (21) FLOSSY; (22) GLOSSY. .L. it really doesn’t pay the more peculicr traits of a friend._ (23) ACCEPT, (24) ACCENT. M. The work of the courts can be inereesed whes a nig is (25) COMPOUNDED;. (26) CONFOUNDED. - N. A person's would be measured by the company he keeps. (27) SOBRIETY: (28) PROPRIETY. ©. The of an expensive government am can't be too careful. (29) PROJECTOR; (30) PROTECTOR. P. A.——————, of course, is an animal in ene stage of its me. tsp SHOAT; (32) STOAT. 2 Q. As far as a concert pianist is co d. @ good « is satisiactory. (33) GRAND; (34) BRAND. ' R. When is on the hunt. he expects to get the prey. (38) CORSAIR: an COURSER. S. The t of itman usu- ally keeps him in Asad “try NER (38) VERVE. T. The unhappiness of a fellow creature could certainly (39) EMPATHY; (40) OFFICIAL CONTEST RULES 1. Anyone ts eligible to enter the POT-O-GOLD contest with the exception of Pontiac Press employes or their immedi- ate families 2; Entries must be on officiel entry blanks printed in this newspaper 3. So submit an entry the contestant must print his num- bers in the proper spaces, cut out the area enclosed by dotted . lines and attach it securely to a 2-cent post card. No entries will be accepted if they are in envelopes. No. 77 must bear a Tuesday, Nov. 26 postmark (or before). No entries received alter that time whether mailed or delivered bv hand, will be declared eligible ble for entries lost or delayed in the mail Entries for Puzzle The Press is not me 4 Sorry, telephone colls or maif concerning details of the 5. The Pontiac Press” will award @ week to the winner of edch weekly POT-O-GOLD contest: If more than one winning answer is received the prize will be divided equally among the winners. should pass without any winners, the prize will be added weekly until a winning solution is submitted. contest canot be a or acknowledged. cash prize of $100 a lf any week or weeks ‘6. Winners will be awarded an: extra cash bonus & $25 winners ore anounced each if they are Pontiac Press subscribers of record on the day Only one such bonus can be award- ed_to-each prige-winner rio matter how many weekly prizes mav accumulote - 7 Eath week's puzzle will be published Monday, Wednesday and Frida will be considered as 0! ficial entry blanks. ers ond correct s solatione will be 8. Winn Fede ot ors week foll until the contest’s end. Either or all announced each individual contests. agg k of answers will be rick C, Ziem, itor for Sod County. the General Features . originators of | the puzzles, wi io te solutions until after each som . is over. Answers will be delivered to fag 2 Press judges by Mr. Ziem after the final deadline 9 There is only one forrect solution to the POT-O-GOLD cotrect answer can win. The decision of the fudges is finel and all contestants agree to abide by the rudaes’ decision Al) entries becoming. the eroneey of The Pentioc Préss and none can be returned soul” Sem Se ge pamela m notified ae by telephone or in the ust be addressed to ne Pontiac, Fang gi -* JUST WONDERFUL FOOD Live Lobsters, Ocean Fresh Sea Food, Superb Prime Beef, Steaks and Chops, Duck, Turkey, Game Dinners. - Four Private Dining Rooms For Your Banquets FAMOUS WINE CELLAR Wines, Beers and Ales From All Overs the World . LUNCHES Open Every Day PHONE: OR 3-1907 Scoee much} Rhonda wires from Angel's | Camp, California, where she is on location to say that her moth- er, Olivia Louis, who lives in | San Mateq, came to visit her and Harmon Jones, the director, asked her mother to play the | wife of a judge. “It’s a small part, but you) |would think mother was opening in| ia Broadway show,” said Rhonda. “You'll recall she was a star at, foothold on the African Conti-: rE ithe Winter Garden in New York,! ‘but this is her first picture.’ | * * * \Y ! I was very happy to be present) jat the impressive marriage cere:| scores $0 brilliantly in’ “Peyton|. Gary Cooper's daughter in “l0r North Frederick.” She is one ofj , the 20th lot, and nd Buddy said| . . been married twice. Her first mar-/ i. [WHAT'S | MY" LINE? ‘Saocnne. Sa scramble os few os Gapble as ply Bagge pM ; ‘ . ord, : LAMA ‘ ae tT Eide 2 a : : i | LJ 4 | i i i . 5 riicm = 6 Textic 6 4 . 2 ECKA 7 Cuses 2 | ' 2 DERVi = &-~REPMET 8 a} 4 YOR 9 WONGA 9 : 5 CP 10 GONTS « | Yesterday's Answer: Turret Lathe as Ethiopia has lost some of} » [its satuesar for es Pr as Communist paEty yl pihiogee Fae net. has developed a brick aggregate. Moscow. Thellight enough to. float ‘bn water: -Sudan has aiLower brick construction costs, the school says, would result from breduced freight costs. Red ‘Island’ in Ethiopia Hospital Wedge to Atrica i ; ADDIS ABABA @® —. Long be-| \fore Egypt began flirting with the| Red World; Moscow wanted to get} nent, |%An unfinished Italian hospital building in Addis Ababa provided [the initial opportunity. A contract was signed wit the Ethiopian sorely in need of.all peasible med- ical help, went algng with this l readily. Opening the hospital in 1947, mperor Haile Selassie named it ithe Dejasmatch Balcha Hospital. Balcha was a guerrilla leader killed by the Italians. That was the last time the name; vhas been heard. All letterheads,| jmony of Linda Schreiber, daugh- ‘government to take over the UN prescription blanks, bottle labels, | iter of Mr. and Mrs. Lew Schrejber, |finished building. Unfinished .con-' ot. and William Eugene Drury. at the! Church of St, Paul the Apostle, Linda, whom I've known since she | nurses moved in straight from 1 iwas a baby, was a beautiful bride lin her wedding gown of white. Her sister, pretty Susan \Schreiber, in a light beige gown,| The Russians agreed to ge td mitted with the foreign personnel) /was maid of honor, while Gail Ken-| aston, daughter of Billie Dove and) struction was soon compieted and’ la staff of Russian doctors and now ‘ * * * That was 10 years ago all the hospital equipment. tors and nurses must all ‘be Rus | 'Bob Kenaston, also in beige, was) sian. Ethiopia, _disease-ridden and) _ j an attract é bridesmaid. g * SN a OF HULLYWOOD (COLLECTED AT RANDOM: Sher- man Billingsley, who collapsed at) the Stork Clib and was rushed to a hospital, returned to the club that very night. Doctors said his! illness was one cf exhaustion. George Montgomery, turry- ing from La Rue where he was | ify with Mr. and Mrs. Sid- Korshak; to‘ hear Dinah | re on the’ great General — show. Mrs. Korshak | looks exactly like Norma Shearer. Ernie Kovacs and Edie Adams, open at the Tropicana in Las Vegas} tomorrow night and Eddie Fisher | a young | ‘* ~| flies to see them, and also to see | iden jcharges of wildlife against Carlos Woodrow ‘Friend of Uniontown, Pa., |Magistrate Earl C (Dean Martin at the Sands. Dean) ‘tells me he will positively be welll enough to keep his date with aie Entratter. * * * The 32 Oriental artists imported jfrom Tokyo, .including authentic igeisha girls, plus some Kabuki dancers, at Wilbur Clark’s Desert | Inn are also a Las Vegas attrac. Iname is used. Pentiac Lewis M. Wrenn Jr. 1880 Racker William J. Winters, 29) Ottawa ; t dT, Sead, 64 Bloomfield Terrace | Edwar 4 | have ever since read “Soviet ‘HOWARD JOHNSON'S NOW OPEN Brunch time, lhch time, dinner or munch time—it's always the right time to come to Héward Johnson's! Whatever the hour, whatever your wish, Howard Johnson's serves up the tastiest full-course meals, salads, sandwiches and delicious desserts. And, you'll be doubly pleased with our wide range of food at a wide range of po es to fit all pocketbooks. * Juicy charcoal broiled steaks * Grilled-in-butier Frankforts * Tendersweet fried clams * 28 flavors of pure, rich ice cream HOWARD JOHNSON On Woodward (U.S.-10) at Square Lake Road — Just South of Pontiac Hospital. e . The Russian staff lives an iso- ated existence. The members aré never seen out of the hospital! compound except in twos and threes, No association is per-/ - of other hospitals. Since the Sudan became inde- (ae ~ County Births | | Following is a list of births of ‘children born to Oakland County; couples as recorded in the County Clerk’s office. Only the father’s Wilson, 667 Joycell 2325 Jones John P Carson F. Pall Walter A_ Ferrell, Emil J. Finn, 231, Evadna Charlies W. Findley, 18 Porter Prancis C. Fieck, 1326 Florence James C. Foote. & Auburn t William L. Forsyth, 006 Kettering ti Alvin Fortier 548 Colorado James R. Fouts, 122 Oakland ~ | George R. Freer. 3530 Overton William J. Preyermuth, 19 Mohawk doseph E. Galardi, 4810 Ross Nicolo F. Cagne, 436 Kuhn 90 Waterly | | i | Richard A. Garrison, 199‘ a Agape =Garcia he Raymond J. Gates, Arnold B Gee, $54 BE. Madison -James K. Gee, 520 Nichols < Lewis R. Giddings. 1016 Véorhels Irwin H. Glos, 2720 Dixie Hwy John H. Lawson, 2300 Shimmons Robert L. Hausman, 79 Lincoln McKenly Setser, 325 Horneworth * Kenneth H. G. Stinson, 04 W. Ru Grant Smith, 819% Oekiand (twins) Richard L. Smith. 16 Sanderson Robert E Spansier, 391 Pourth | Teddy Sarson Jr.. 1560 Rotsel James E Simmons, 502 Wyoming Dale L_ Bitler, 7145 _Fiizabeth Lake Rd. oines. ~ Ir ‘tion, = That's all today. See you “tomor- row. Friends Meet in Court OAKLAND, Md, ®—Game War-| Leo G. .Friend brought) illegal possession of| ithe case. None of the three men is related. Carlos Friend was free jin 1,50 bail on 23 separate) charges | North Carolina's annual peanut) crop is valued at 30 million dollars.) Donald K. Davis, 20741 Tuck Merlin A. Engiis, 30000 Orchard Lake Join H. Stamper, 21637 Jefferson (Advertisement) Vern D. Standley, 26155 Spring Land 4. Gari J. Btewersdorf, 21121 Whitlock: \ Robert J. Burger, 22550 Lilac Charies F. Abner, 20832 Tuck Sam 5S. Begian. 38171 Shadylane William L ph Rader on a3 omaring Kenneth £ ompron, 2 re P y vend Jack Tremont, 22660 Middlebelt senna car Walter D. Woodson, 262666 E. Green- ‘Sout stomach #0 haretul érugs, spirm | tmendow Circle ot trameuitizens. jeborstory tests prowe ARS Sylvester R. Westberg, 34871 @ Mile minate as many iE a — ions | Everett L, Goodroe, 22820 Elmgrove today for the festest rellel. 3¢ ant Ans gene J. Curcio, 32365 Northwestern : obert J. Fralick, 23016 Hayden Farmington Robert E. Sechier, 37840 Wendy Lee Baril 8. Broks, 2208 Albion Vernon L. Vickland, 3.838 ~~ Vista fi). Thomas W. Decker, 36425 @ Mile'i § hnad an . THIS PROGRAM is for ADULTS and NOT RECOMMENDED for CHILDREN | James J. Pitegerald, 86 Putham and) Friend heard! | |} Donald M, Kobman, | (twins) Erwing L. Hoskins, 21526 Hancock Lyndie R. Martin, 1212 Decker . Cacial G. | James T. Goff, ro Ceanre dale Kennneth L. Groth, 8500 ‘Bonnie Briat Thomas E. Glinn, 5675 Hanley Max 4. Evans, 55 Seminole Allen D. Pisher, 1337 Orehid Carl W. Pisher, 1138 Bielby Ford B. Pitzpatrick, 133 LeGrande Lake Orien James L. Shepherd, ,045 Devon Charles A. Stilwell, 315 Lake Billy D. Bramiett, 1023 Heights Edwin A Calkins, $23 N. Lapeer Norman F. Carvef. 885 Detroit Jean M. Walter, 3256 Indianwood Delbert W. Graham, 783 Vernite Albert O. Frisch, 10093 Devon Bloomfircid Joseph G. Gauthier, 3793 Alcott Bert E,. Uebele ITI, 5861 Biandfort David C. Asher, 3720 Northwood Farmingten fdward R. Douillard, 29434 W. Frederick C_ Cook, 28069 Quail Hollow 12 Mile Thomas C. Leach, 26227 ponies | Hayes, 21432 Jefferson George H | 22864 Warner Walled Lake | James W, King, 2880 N. Pontine Trait} — Larry R_ LaMontagne, 1878 Weir William M. Case, 1442 Ladd J. T. Puller, 42500 if Mile, WNovt; jThemas 8. Furness, 36:7 Areoview and Orchard Lak Davisburg: IME AREMLIN} owe LEX BARKER ‘SA ZSA GABOR + JEFFREY STONE — PLUS —— | 10990 | siomkowski, 1490 Flamingo, Wixom. $ SHOCKING JUVENILE i ‘PUNISHMENT’ FARM! KIDS TURNED ROCK-N.p tl OLL “NOW! THIRD BIG WEEK! THE TEN COMMANDMENTS | ASTON -BRYANE: -BAKTER- ROBINSON: DECARLO- PAGEI vom DEREK « + HARDWICKE: FOCH SCOTT ANDERSON - PRICE PROOUCTION SAT. MATINEE “fs 90¢ _ MON. - TUES. - WED. - THURS. - FRI. Doors Open at 7 p.m. — SHOW at 8 p.m. SAT. & SUN. SHOWS at 1 p.m. «5 p.m. -9 p.m. Music Every Night Featuring Joe Polzin at the Hammond DELIGHTFUL DINNER — GOOD MUSIC DINE and DANCE Daily Noon . Luncheon 11 A.M.-2 P.M. MUSIC EVERY NIGHT CLUB TAHOE 3412 Dixie Hwy.’ Phone OR 3-9754 We Invite Bengocts and Private Parties eg | THE GIRL IW | a VAGE GIANT ON A BLOOD-MAD RAMPAGE ! Get More Out of Life — Go ‘Out to the Theotre! _ TODAY at | Your BUTTERFIELD ‘Theatres! — INATRA GAYNOR CRAIN Shocked and Fascinated An Audience! Added CINEMASCOPE } “CALYPSO CRUISE” ; — PLUS — ioaoee OF THE BIBLE” at - Pt Pe Aten Jack Lemmon a Wem) Rovecs hago Grant (Mrs. Bing Crosby) mn “OPERATION MADBALL” Soke «6 6 6 6 0 6s. NOW! KGiiyitely 32" =| TERRIFIC CHILL - THRILL TWIN BILL = SeowNG.... GROWDNG.. COMING ‘SUNDAY. GEORGE MONTGOMERY is/"*LaeK PATCH” ANN BLYTH in “THE HELEN MORGAN svoay” é e ibis a . @fe up roughly an average of 3.4 ma | beg THE PONTIAC. PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1000 3.4 Per Cent ico! Over Last Yeor ¢ ‘By DAVID J, WILKIE AP Automotive Editor DETROIT (#—Factory-suggested ‘The dollowing are top prices cov- ering sales of locally. grown pro duce brought to the Farmer's Mar- kets by growers and sold by them i Bt oat Seetntoah, ba, ae list prices for 1958 automobiles ple Cider, tense) 4 gal. ars, Bosc. bu. Owed ee eee eee per cent over 1957 listings. This is about one-half the increase an- nounced a year ago. In dollars and cents mostic factory-announced increases range from $35 to as much as $225. It could be argued that some ad-| Fo vances were smaller and some /On higher. EXCLUDE U. 8. EXCISE The prices announced by the caf |souash, De makers are the “suggested” list prices. They are not binding on * eee ee * eee e-. * Sasesaszesstssayees peers it-loosening steps may be taken 444s eevee ictous by. Tomatoes, nothreee, “Abakt.) @ tbs... wer aweee #Oee : cee . eee e et ee gris sities ariagons Cees Turnips (bchs.) 4-42; small DETROIT POULTRY hgh a, 19 (AP)— Prices paid ner, and a jury of six persons i pointed by him. Brings Overall State Toll to 11 Guntire Kills By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gunfire has claimed a fourth hunter’s life in Michigan’é six-day- old deer season. In adidtion, six hunters have died of heart attacks and one of a cer- '__bral hemorrhage. At least 22 have .-b4, of Ab jwounded over the last 24 hours: . ‘Eugene 0. Heilein, 25, of Richville, them peming, @vila LaPalm of cd gel Donald Woods of Ve rg. 4th Hunter Cadarette was shot by Theodore Wikaryasz, 42, also of Alpena, who told State Police the two had sep- arated earlier in the day and he did not know Cadarette was near- not held. * * * hunters were Four reported Edward W. Sanberg, 28, of Ish- Stocks Irregular, Rails Steady for the most part. There were a “\few 1 or 2 point gains, assortment of fair-sized were traded. A number of leading issues — : Hayes of the New York Federal Reserve Bank that additional cred- started a rallying tendency near the close yesterday and still effective investment attitude due to other official statements. , '|Prosecutor to Seek Manslaughter Warrant ' |said he will seek a warrant for manslaughter today against Clisby Watkins, 23, of 415 Bloomfield Ave. in’ the Rhimes Perens: died yesterday at Pontiac General by ‘when he fired. Wikaryasz was Hospital from a knife wound. Rhimes came at him with an ax after an argument in the house where Watkins rooms. stabbing occurred after Rhimes ~j|had put down the ‘ax, but was after Watkins with a chair. i (Cadillac to Show Automstic Convertible The opening was active as an blocks x * The statement by President was But there was some confusion of * x * ’ Pennsylvania Railroad rose aj fraction after sinking yesterday to pea / jits lowest price since 1932, Balti- M. Swindle, 26, of 3730 Cabbage, bu. . vsaseveesseeeeqs £95/More & Ohio, sold heavily yester--Webb St., Detroit, pleaded guilty Kale bu. .c.statsceasascssacies E75 |48¥) also rallied a bit. New York|to drunk driving charges, Tues- Mustard, bu. ....... :) g00/Central was firm. day, before Sylvan Lake Justice Swise Chard. bul”... ": 733| Douglas Aircraft rose more than’ Joseph J. Leavy, and paid a fine Turnips, bu. ssosscrssseeeeeees £001 point, North American Aviation|o¢ $89 plus $20 costs - fp Scied Greene Uli higher and’ Boeing reduced a ; Endive, bleached, bu. .............. 280/tle higher and Boeing reduced an} Webster School, 40 W. Huron precy ames ny < sessahedsece Hey early loss. was broken into, it was reported een = seeeesccessss & * ow yesterday, and some change taken Poult Chrysler and U. S. Steel Sones zor a milk machine. Ou about a point each. Smaller losses rrr Ogos ‘atte taken by Lake, General amemage Sale AN Glas, Hee , Sesueee eee Motors, Goodyear and inscunde. change Bt. . ad Deol, eiten included,” federal-iat es aes a eae case ew ook of, Merchandise, Re. “whites: Grade A extra large 69-00, /shares: Bethlehem unchanged at pe her Foy Ara gpd ave. S1:, medium ‘48;'smalt 36-40, wed. (37% on 2,500; and Union Pacific eve, 304. Grade ‘Bi frge t00 wid. up % at 245% on 1,400. Roast Beef Dinner. Central avg. 83%. ui ose|Methodist Church. 38 E. Huron. wns: Grade A ar 53-87, wta.| New York Shipbuilding r Nov, 22—5 to 7:30 p.m. Call reser- be = — 45. ecks 3444-39, more than a point following news vations to FE 2-3401 by 1 p= Commereialiy graded: cei aden of a ategerecna tira sone Thurs. . = od building the hull o wor Browns: Grade A large 53; medium /first nuclear-powered ship. ~ a 2 ee a New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) Rain Sends Windows Up bazaar. Baldwin E.U.B. Church. 212 Baldwin. Nov. 21, 5 to 8, $1.50 and 5c. —Ady. y, winds today that are cutting down ady,|sell stock, It's hard to borrow. ‘lease before the board now and Airline Profits, Stocks Decline CAB Cold to Fare Hike Asked to Raise Funds for Shifting to Jets - NEW YORK & — The airlines says they are bucking heavy head their profit speed. Wail Street agrees and hag marked their stocks down. sharply. This. comes at an embarrassing time for the carriers, who must find money for costly jet planes. Without profits in sight you can't ~*~ *« * So the airlines want to hike their fares. The staff of the Civil Aero- nautics Board, on the other hand, denies that this is needed. A staff report holds the outlook much bet- ter than the lines paint it and calls their present troubles mostly temporary. The airlines are putting their stressing many other things in their plea for higher fares — de- fense needs, general rise in costs in industry, need to improve serv- ice, growing competition. x *&* * The 12 trunk lines have .ordered or plan to order 357 jet and turbo- prop aircraft at a cost of two bil- Prosecutor Frederick C, Ziem slaying of Freddie R. * + Rhimes, 28, of See Hughes St., Watkins told the prosecutor that Witnesses said they believed the eaptured early|the First National City Bank of at|the form of loans or the sale of lion dollars. T. Carl Wedel, vice president of New York, for equipment must be — ice from outside financing either in equity.’ *~ os a James. P.. Mi vice © presi- at dent of the ag claiaes Bank of New York, says it's probable that “a definite downward trend in earnings, increasing costs, poor dividend expectations and the tre- mendous capital programs have joined to discourage the investor from seeking opportunities in this industry." Nehru one India Must Forge Ahead ter Nehru told Parliament today India must forge ahead with its ‘Looms Over Squillante U.S. Moves to Revoke the first time im his career. department. man set Monday for a hearing on probation, Bail was set at $10,000, which the former fruit — posted. . * * * Squillante, 40, has been on pro- bation ‘since 1953, when he pleaded a $1,000 fine and a suspended sen- tence. ously in a chair at the counsel attorney Irving Bush—U.S. Atty. Paul Ww. Williams heatedly told the court yesterday: x «* * “This man is not a small-man. He is reputedly the head of one of the biggest rackets operating in New York City, and he is being investigated by the district attor- neys of Queens and New York (Manhattan) counties. “Let us not pretend Nat we are dealing with a poor little man here in relation to a mere violation of| Dryden probation. He is the head of two of the biggest carting associations in the city, which have been en- gaged in shaking down - business people.” ro n of — : Garbage Rochitesr, hg iggy le mmoen cost of between six and seven bil- NEW YORK UP —The federation dollars, ag bert Anastasia and reputed gar-|proposal for a defense against the bage racket kingpin, in prison for|Soviet transpolar intercontinental come from. the federal probation|Vinced that this weapon can be Federal Judge Irving R. Kauf- monueclear warheads to a petition to revoke Squillante’s|Stroy the Soviet, ICBM. jamin Franklin Pawley, 63, who died at Pontiac General Hospital, the Methodist Church here, with the Rev. Melvin Straight officiat-} While Squillante squirmed nerv-|ing. Prayer at the family home table—frequently whispering to his) Thursday and burial will be Lakeville Cemetery uncer ag sonic auspices, the Oakland Avenu Unitd Prs- Taylor of Ionia; wife, Myrtle; four daughters, Mrs. Phyllig Morse of Davisburg, Mrs. Evelyn Wood of * .%. ® The Times sald the proposal has The 5-foot-l silent witness, at/been made to the Joint Chiefs of last week's Senate hearings onjStaff and Secretary Defense rf the garbage by the Army chief here was hauled)staff, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor. . charged with violating On the basis of experiments by consorting with known crim-| vith of the Army mis- inals and hoodlums. He also was|"ih Components ‘s accused of concealing his 1956 in-|Sie. Zeus, Taylor is con- Death Notices — BENJAMIN F. PAWLEY LEONARD — Service for Ben. nigel ator pag oN ea Mr. Pawley was a member of He leaves his mother, Mrs. Edith Dryden, and Mrs. Joyce Wax and Mrs. Edith Rowley, both of Leon- ard; four sons, Gerald and Keith Vital to Missiles Presram of Its Helium WASHINGTON U—The’ govern- sion’ of in the missiles and other defense programs, it was learned today. * * * ported under way to develop a comprehensive, long-range pro- gram aimed at future extraction, of all possible helium from nat- ural gas before it is used for fuel, the helium content. a 2 * *. These developments were. re- ly printed designs of the Russian Sputnik ay carrying it contained a helium carrier. tity. 15-billion-dollar,- second five-year ise ito get out of the “cow dung more atomic research centers ‘so as not to be left behind in this Sputnik age,” he said. The launching of the second So- viet earth satellite “has affected our thinking on planning.” Nehru said. “We have to loo kahead be- yond the second plan period and think in terms of the third and fourth five-year plans atomic power for peaceful pur- poses.’ a * x * This would mean more money, Nehru said, but that could not helped “‘if India is not to lag hind in this revolutionary age.” The federal government has more employes than the nation’s Promotion to Detective State Trooper Robert E. Neige- bauer, of the Pontiac Post, has been to detective and transferred to the rackets ley second district headquarters, De- troit, : : a a Neigebauer joined the State Po- lice on March 4, 1948, and was|¥@Sted in gas sold from fields assigned to the Grand Haven Post. He was transferred to Flat Rock on Jan. 5, 1951. In October, 1956, he came to the Pontiac Post, He holds one ‘department citation for) meritorious service, U.S. Planning Expansion ment is planning a major expan-|this government's its helium — productive plants at Exell and Amarillo, capacity to meet expanding needs/Tex., Shiprock, N. M., and ‘Otis, the helium available to the free world. High-level planriing also was -re- jor user of helium. The inert, non- ported by Interior Department of-jedly plans to ask ficials, who also said that recent-|year for about 14 million dollars showed that/plant. State Trooper Receives {capacity Production The Bureay of Mines operates four helium) *x * * The missiles program is a ma- in atom- explosive gas is also used ie energy work, in titanium and age production, in electron- wi nsequent waste forever of|ics and in testing of refrigeration ae and air — systems, * * The hearer Department report- They said this may be an indi-| woud possible production NEW DELHI (-Primeé Minis-|cation the Soviet Union is now about propel me more cubic ote: producing helium in — quan-'of helium ——_. a PARIS, (INS) — NATO virtually and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. * * * Paul-Henri Spaak was absent from the permanent council meet- ing while making his first official visit to Holland as secretary- general of NATO, NOBODY WILLING His absence and the Washington talks created a situation in which nobody present at the council meeting was willing to take the lead in getting.NATO to solve the problem growing out of the ship- ment of arms to. Tunisia by the U. S. and Britain despite French protests, . The French fear the weapons will end up in the hands of Al- gerian nationalists. ee A member of the U. S. delega- tion said no delegate had received new instructions from his govern- {ment so nobody said anything new. The American added that ev- eryone was awaiting the results ef the Dulles-Pineau talks, He said the Tunisian discussion “took up little time’ at the council session which was mostly devoted to consideration of housekeeping problems for the Dec: 16 meeting of the 15 heads of NATO govern- Two City Dry Cleaners Merge With Allied Firm ~Two Oakland County dry clean- ing firms—Flash Cleaners, 339 W. Huron §t., and Ridley Cleaners, 361 E. Maple Rit., m— have merged with Allied Dry Cleaners of America. acquired the facilities aa re- sources of the local firms in keep- ing with its plans for national ex- pansion, it was announced, Allied Dry Cleaners will operate ther Southern Michigan outlets under the name of Ridley-Flash Cleaners. Kaiser Rencaned Head of Regional JA Week Fred A. Kaiser, vice president and sales Junior Achievement Week by the directors of J Achievement of Southeastern : During JA Week, Jan. 26 to Feb, 1, Kaiser, of Grosse Pointe Farms, will direct a promotional JA cam- paign in the Pontiac area to ac- quaint the public with the or- ganization's “learn ‘by doing” pro- Large plantulians of bulrushes are planned in Southwest Africa Neigebauer will continue to live on radio in England. Since its last appearance, Barbara Lyon has married TV producer eight largest corporations com- bined. Russell Turner. 7 Williams Proposes New Cabinet Post price, Financing charges are an- per 2 top quality live Detroit i ir Red _..49.3 Int Tel & Tel 7 . ie Keith on foot and Brown JU oo escces ae Rye" Comw Ed. ....383 Philip Mor, °°: ‘je in a car he admitted stealing et ER verses 1aa| Ceci Edison ..41.4 PME Pet -... 28 Matt ti ‘ ote Bey ce Hi Sr RE RRS BE oo cents ween ea May seerenee Lae pa 127% Boat Reported Aground Cont cea se puliroam ©... “gle. rug- seeseece -264 ae 2.3 : . . : oun fos “aga | Near Uninhabited Isle cont Met 8 Roa 000 aa) tok * ; A 4 US ry in Lake Superior Corn Pa... 30.1 era eet ‘ aha] | Three oe en eare Deere, ..-. 285 Royal Dut... 8) ured ay, others Det Edi + 366 iremain at | police ex- Liem Orders PORT ARTHUR, Ont. u-—Sea-| Dour aire... ges St gos Lead -- 244) iat oan a - Dow Chem .. 544 geeh Al RR ... 20.2; |pressed bt that the remaining men from the. freighter Bricoldoc Du it 172 | Sears Roeb |.. 247/two came to the Mattoon area, battled high waves in a lifeboat) Fest {oq" -° go) Shell on... 684) ee 1 last night to reach tiny Hawk Is- El Auto L ... 34 Jair ,...... 478 ve Inquest Nov. 19 land but failed to find a tug re- Emer wad ©. 4) SoBe" --"": Mtg), The manhunt converged on this nd there or Erie RR -....- 8.7 Sou Ry ; 29¢/8rea last night after a car bear- aj pe ~— e gece -- Be Boerry Rd .-+- J¢4/ing Indiana license plates. was Coroner, Jury to Probe "= fr ereme: [FP EF Ea Sri nd atmo thie * Freevt sui... 70 's near Tolono, some 40 miles} Fatal Shooting of Man’ The four Canadians aboard the|Pruch tre !.: 18, td Oi On :::: @-|north of Mattoon, In it was a by James Witherspoon foot tug D&C radioed that the/Gen Drnam <: $8 Swift & Co".. 273 |shotgun. vessel gone on the rocks in a/Gen fiec ... 69, gyiv El Pd .. 33.8 e * &t ; snowstorm early yesterday and’ Gen Motors :. $53 Texas Co... 902 Pontiac's first coronér’s inquest|that they were seeking safety on 9e2 Shoe .... 194 Teton SM -: 193 a 2 you ae in four years will be called Nov.'the uninhabited island in Lake Su-|/Gen Tire .... 37.7 Themp, Fa. $9 A ave gone on trial t — ; ette 33.1 it * ig5| Monday for one of two sex mur- 29 to’probe the fatal shooting Mon- perior. Goedel BF ; ae oe Sv : Hf lders police say he he admitted. : © F i ic + ? 87 a * day - 7 ee eae a The Bricoldoe moved through a Cran Paie 1 74 Un wee in’) + 4|Keith was accused of theft. Bagley St . - |45-mile-an-bour gale to the island. Trothoma < iea Unit Prat <. Sellgeant a urge were Hovston Y. 60 miles east of Port Arthur and cuit on ./..1096 Us Lines... 284) >Mith, and Wallace Moham- * & * 1 »|Holland PF ... 9 Us Rub 33 |med, 18, bo : ; a mile offshore. The lifeboat crew ,;° os 8 Rub ...... th Chicagoans ac- The inquest was ordered yester- found no tracks in the fresh snow Mocent 289 oe Te one cused of theft. day by Prosecutor Frederick C.|. liff, Indust Ray .. 152 Weste A Bk ..20 x * : : : F "| but could not get up a steep cliffii,e Rand” 613 Westg El 50.2 * Ziem to determine whether crim- to search the whole island. Ispir_ Cop... 30 Wilson & Co ..14.2) The seven escaped from a 75- inal charges will be made against tt kt t int Ware et Saar s’ 37 vearcld section of the’ Indiana ‘James Witherspoon, 56, of 130 Wes- [Wie Gn aa one 35. sen St., who has admitted the! A tug circled the island earlier Int Peper 1. Ma cater i rr Jail at Crown Point by using a shooting but claimed it was injlast night and reported it could Int Shoe .... 364 Mann M&M ,.23 age pins to sional self-defense, not see the missing ship. STOCK AVERA a corridor, where wim pn tw SR te ee a cs PS i, mn Pe vt Win that he and Wright were arguing (chins and the Cariadian air force Indu. Ralls vit Stocks cto eg note _— . were searching the lake. The Bri- Week nae ides 9-688 1833 Contest to Star t grabbed a shotgun a rand- |ooldoc reported it was continuing Mo"th aco ./''2349 93.6 67.7 1567 and a ae Wikengen |O e a ae Re ms 23 eeifor Dance Club claims he then pulled out a .38 cw. ; ‘ : OW ce. 2260 805 66.2 150.9 : e have no idea where the tug 1986 High |") 276.3 156.1 : ieee revetree and shot in self | ht be but we expect, or hepe, !? fips 720 240 1902 oe na to Select Name ie; . . that its calculations were off when DETROIT stocks Be : : ; . ginning this wee Ziem said that in addition to|it sent out the SOS,” he said. He! pigures és deumelipeanie’ are eighths | Will be ever way by Waterford Witherspoon and police officers,,added that the crewmen might ites xi .Hish Low Noon |rownship Hi bh School there are six witnesses to thejhave mistaken another island for!Balgwin Rusber Go* ed Pg ‘ool students to shooting who may be called to Hawk. [Rose Gear Co.* oe pie different title for the week- testify. | Aboard the tug were John Me-/Howel Elec. Motor Go*”. 53 ere dance club, which has The hearing will be at 9:30 a.m.) Kenzie of Fort William, Ont.. and| ee Pee ce Co. ...11.6 16 116 n known as recreation youth in Probate Court before Dr. John Ernie Bishop, Fred Raymond and Rudy Mfg. Co.* . eee! 84 ca night. : D. Monroe, Oakland County Coro- Brian Trevor, all of Collingwood, —— Edison Co. ee OM WL wt x *« * Ont. Nile! were bound for Sarnia,| ‘No sale. bid and asked,” "| Winner of the contest, will be given two free passes for the te- mainder of the year, for the weekly Thursday night dances held at the Community Activities center on Williams Lake road, ® #8 The contest ends ‘Siciten: Dec. 5 and suggested names will LANSING ® — Gov. Williams made a plea last night for support of a program of federal aid to education, with a secretary of edu- cation heading it up. x we o* only be accepted the evening of the. dances until thén. A sock hop will be held from 7:30 to 9:15 p.m, tomorrow Flint Dise Jockey, Johnson, is scheduled to youth. tt * * This weekly dance }¢lub is for boys and girls from grades 9 through 12 and is by the Waterford Township Recreation department, \ night. Head/eral assistance to education, rec.|Sistance given without damage to grds for the Waterford Township/State and local supervision,” , Asks us. Education Aid é ies dae tarts aueiborr ef axe INSURE TODAY New $toad protection, can be yours — for me ive policy! enpholn it to you. See Us About Our ~~ HOMEOWNERS’ fone] PACKAGE PROGRAM , your legal liability — under one com- Come in today and let us CRAWFORD-DAWE-GROVE 710 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Telephone FE 2-8357 SS f fit individual needs , your personal ai il H i ‘ 4 *% —~ QP ;s ii z i a8 iu EE g z = i 7 $88 = ie _CONSTIPATED? fr I fg et SEE | iH ef i hi g } i ii Hits JA is backd by 2,000 business organizations throughout south- eastern Michigan.