"Uneasy se : Ja ‘ She i = _ — a te eae es * * oil -“ =* j rs eae ere et as 7 © _* © * n_es i ? = 1g RARER nee ule oo - - oes 114th YEAR © — > i 2h SUNKEN SHIPS IN SUEZ — Harbor craft scuttle around sunken ships in the Suez Canal at Port Said after the Anglo-French invasion. Sal- * sunken craft. vage work: continues in attempt to raise Quiet Follows Mideast Violence \Assembly Due - ; ito Hear Hoover » Arrive in f al al Give U.S. Stand Expected to Spell Out America’s Position on vs | Hungary, Mideast UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (—Acting Secretary of] State Herbert Hoover Jr. is) scheduled to spell out to-| day for the U.N. General Assembly America’s posi-| tion on the Middle East and Hungarian crises. There was some ques- tion, however, whether the wrangle over completing its agenda that might de- lay the start of general de- purchasing supplies. lor and defense attorney Milton R. Henry, whe Taylor said re- quested them, Circuit Judge George B. Hart- rick mist rule on the motion if the attorneys agree to enter the Showers Tonight, : ‘an ration, and Wyatt, ‘burned, allegedly when Mrs. Wyatt Whether the tests will be ad-- a prediack aaa Sica nig ten OF it ‘over a gas burner. Doctors. ttorney aps B36 Hits, Burns Reaches 88 Per Cent UF Drive $30,000 Short Pontide’s area Unité Fund drive seemed destined to end up at least $30,000 short of its $612,202 goal to- morrow, UF officials said today. Latest figures show the cam- paign has reached $536,825, or 88 per cent of quota. The eighth annual campaign, ‘winds up with a victery luncheon Willman explained that. how closely at noon in the “Elks Temple. |shie year’s campaign comes to its ’ oal depends on last minute re- Speaker will be Earl W. Prosser, '® me cutive vice president of the ports coming in until luncheon Michigan United Fund. The lunch.| "™¢- eon will be sponsored by sConsum- ers Power Company. unteers to turn all. remaining re- ‘ +. * K.| 204 E. Lawrence St. UF leaders sffongiy urged vol- | ports into Fund Headquarters, ' _ Us, Weather Bureau Forecast Details page two : pags ak ; | * * * * . PONTIAC, MICHIGAN... THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1956 —80 P AGES ASSOCIATED PRESS a1 SoMa > PRESS PHOTOS Te lice Units Lone ae) Troops Rush In to Keep Reds From Acting Nasser Asks Russia to Send ‘Volunteers’ to Egypt Immediately Campaign chairman Walte started last Oct. 23, officially Iron Fist.in Iron Glove Revealed r "—| If the campaign ends short of its) ‘ ‘\goal, UF leaders may call for an) LONDON (#—First units extension of the drive. tales geven year history, the ur of the U.N. Middle East po- Boss Kadar Tells Workers No Free Hungary Elections =": =... VIENNA (#—Russia's pu aivanos Kadar, today rejected neutrality as a future policy for the nation and refused any negotiations with) former Premier Imre Nagy the asylum of the Yugoslav wenn Kadar set the policy of his regime in a statement to 4... Geographic Division seemed a workers’ delegation, broadcast by Budapest radio, sure to make their $19.00 quota.|carrying 47 Norwegians never has failed to reach goal, al-\lice force landed in the though time-extensions have been Suez Canal zone today. necessary. i = Willman explained that the UF) They were rushed in on goal js carefully calculated to sup-'urgent U.N. orders in a 34 community service agen- move to forestall the threat of Communist “vol@n- teers” being poured into ithe tense area. | goal,” he said, “then the agencies : | which help residents of Pontiac, ppet Premier of Hungary, Pontiac Township and Waterford |= The first Swiss airliner Township will be rating on r eed ea loaded with 45 Danish tl! The agencies supported provided troops touched down be- as long as he remains in heaith, recreation, youth, welfare hind the Egyptian lines at Embassy in Budapest. _—- and family services. ‘sun-baked Abu Suweir at Women solicitors of the door-to-, 9:30 a.m. A second plane have Said she may regain use of the hand, untreated for two months, after two years of surgi-' ‘ * goes urder Verdict Sherry also was suffering burns von Ker back and legs, which she told police were also inflicted by’ Airfield. The giant craft, assigned to the Strategic Air Commarid, was based at Elisworth Air Force Base at Rapid City, S.D. The plane took off at Lowry AFB at 6:29 a.m. and radioed that it would attempt an emergency landing at Stapleton, about three ‘were 98 per cent of the way to: success. Bat contributions in the all- (°f the canal near Ismailia. has no intention of walk- ing out of the Soviet-domi-| Abu Suweir is on the west side } tion on seating, Red China in the jnated Warsaw Pact or, important Industrial Division, as . A third plane carrying equip- [ U.N. rt giving up the close ties! well as the Commercial 1 Division. ment for the international police The $5 decision countered | \with Mescew whidh ast off, Oe | ae se en Bie India's proposal that the Assem- | [ the three-week. revolution So far, the Industrial Division Swissair planes were char- bly pat-the questien'ee its agen. : » FEVER HOR. | nas $257.487, or 86 per| tered by the U.N. to move the pa eg og Ae Unica has ged the man the revolt had cont of its $414,000 goal. | police units and supplies te were expected te their | Fate of 4 Unknown, 17, premier briefly. Kadar said) The Commercial Division stands| Exypt. Pa fight to the Assembly. , 7. {an agreement with lagy “could 68) args per cent. or $138,802 of it8) Word of the planes’ arrival . ; there was little Wkeltheed of the | Hurt as Big Bomber |$158,085 goal collected. radioed o he Ue anaben oan oe — committee's decision being up-| Crashes Near Denver | Ten Thousand in March | «Commercial Nag oo — rat Capodichino, Tialy, near Naples. P 4 : set, a protracted debate could | — fee octren! eeheer cant ‘Swissair officials said the air Trial of Wyatts Beginning Today: .”. : *.* Bie A sheen tae! YEREM Oo tanmman aee e oiy tn me of tae /erat Mere making a guick ture Li D f 4\ Tension ane cS Soy an bomber with 21 persons aboard| marched on the houses of Pariia- Victory luncheon. ) ‘(ead Naseer end Bec Ousted ; ; bed crashed and burned north of Den-| ™ent in revolt-torn Budapest to- Low standing of industria] con- | Page 19. _Lie Detector Results Questionable might then word came thal fet ets Mmaicipal apart olay, | duy im potest wf mane deporte: | trbwtions "was Mamed ven a | en” Page 1) ; : hed new U. dar A Lowry Air Force Base spokes-| tions of Hungarian youths to smaller labor force employed at laround, but it’ appeared unlikely Lie detector test results loomed) Sherry and ® other enildren of The children had been left tn |General eS Se uk aa [pate iae ae (teda ‘secen® eantingant’ (Geabd as’ @ question mark today as 9| the taily—inclading three Wil- \the care of Acron Wilkinson, 13,\proceed to Egypt. Hammarskjold|;.* sot chee poy | Industrial chairman Earl Max-|be ferried to the canal zone today. Keego Harbor couple with 12 chil Statens apd. Ok: Wonieg <— ware |cldest of Oe 22, lett New York by plane to take/Tt; "ut Bone is reported crit possible only if he changes his|weil was doubtful if his division fe ee ck dren began trial on charges of| found alone in thelr howe Aw- | Testimony at the couple's pre-jpersonal chargé of the operation.| attitude and comes out of the Yugo-/would reach its goal by tomorrow.| Later.a U. N. spokesman said: a ar “ gust 23. . triad oommanetig before West “a “We have no information yet |Slav Embassy to negotiate.” | Chairman of the women solici- ae te ome of about 100 men testy were taken a of : Bloomfield Township Justice El- sonagall as to the other four.” he sald.| Nagy took refuge with the ‘ors is Mrs. Ralph G. Bump. Her/|Will leave the staging area tomor- this week by the mother, Ada — - em ee ihé|mer C Disterle indicated Sherry) Pe*cBes trem Moscow sald Egypt CoE ~in.| Yugoslaves when the Russians [Workers have all but covered the Tow for Egypt. He said the second ; .q Urst marriage > | had called on Russia to permit | The plane met disaster 16 min- arn pea Wyatt, 33, bat results were mae snty had been tied to her bed in an up-) poured troops into Hungary and (thousands of homes in the Pontiac Contingent would be made up of “inconclusive,” to Chief were Dold &t Ge County} (Continued on Page 34, Col, 1) | utes after taking off from Lowry. ' —- - ve,” acrarding to Children’s Home. stairs room. | It crashed while trying for an| Budapest ta, suppress the revolu- “Tea. ibe Rrst Celsebinn troeps and Su Assistant Prosecutor George F. “yy. Wyatt was hospitalized for| Sherry's left hand was severely ? landing at Stapleton, t=. . tage pete tel a announced that the “technical problems with which we were ott tdepeate stenet w» ed Pontiac Balloon irevolt-shattered nation, Kadar’s (27 i faced to be solved.” regime announced a mass aarG ft SI p Lands A cochasmen shied that the shut- of former top Communists and then West Vir inia loti . : : itling of planes between the staging Premier expressed approval of g ‘area and the canal zone will be amg free elections One of the thousands of balloons speeded up in the next few days. . released at last Saturday’s “Pon-| i¢ “at al Budapest radio said Kadar told results. The husband,“ William, 29, did: not ask for a lie test, Taylor said, Mrs. Wyatt was tested by; Snow Due Friday The U. S. Weather Bureau pre- dicts occasional showers tonight, her mother, She was hospitalized for three weeks for treatment of the burns and malnutrition. Tree-Trimmer Killed LINDEN W—Merle R. Osborne, 1?, of Flint was killed Wednesday low of 36-40. | Tomorrow will be colder ‘with specifically 4s snow flurries, and a high near 40. yesterday and in Bay City Wednes-'a day, ° The couple State Police at the Redford post with the temperature dropping to | ee charged with cruelty to seven-year-| The lowest temperature preced-| downtown old Sherry Wilkinson, daughter of ing 8 a.m, in Pontiac Mrs, Wyatt by a previous mar-'was 56 degrees, At 1 p.m. the riage. merctry stood at. 60, when he fell 25 feet from a tree uwhich he was trimming at a Lake- side home here. a 4 Fat Eight-Pointer Ist Deer’in County Henry Plans Appeal, Hits Court Procedure in Moore Trial Pontiac attorney Milton R. Henry confirmed today he plans to appeal the first-degree murder conviction of Howard Wayne Moore, 24, of Lake Orion, sentenced to life im- prisonment Oct. 29 for the sex slay- ing of three-year-old Martha Little July 27. . Henry said he has “several new witnesses to establish the fact that Moore was nowhere near Lake ‘miles north of Lowry. It veered left and crashed about a mile north of the north-south Stapleton runway. Population of U.S. Near 169,000,000 Of the United States at 168,921,000 on Oct, 1, ; the workers’ delegation, however, that the only parties which would be allowed ‘to participate in elec- tions would be-those which ‘‘stand for. Socialist principles and serve the interests of the workers.” The rebel gung were silent in Budapest today after the end of resistance at tiac Salutes Industry” parade has| Nothing was said, however, about been discovered in Bridgeport, the solution of the major political W. Va.—some 300 miles from Problems of where the force would Pontiac. joperate in Egypt and for how long. Floyd P. Miles, owner of the! Orders for the U. N. peace army Christian Literature Salés, 39 Oak. t¢ get moving to Egypt were issued - lafid Ave., said yesterday he has last night after an Arab diplomatic received a $1 gift certificate do-Source had reported in Moscow “that President Nasser had request- (In Today's Press armed the big plants on Czepel Island, in the Danube just south of the capital. But the workers there after downing their guns, joined in the nationwide general strike. Nagy sent word to Western news- men yesterday that he would have (Continued on Page 34, Col. 2) “We'll send him-his $1 in mer- chandise,”” Miles said. haven't quite figured out what it tian Literature Sales,” indicated) Moscow dispatches today said Cottrill found the .certificate af-/D€yPtian diplomatic ‘sousses there tached to the balloon while rabbit 5* to discuss the report. hunting one mile east of Bridge- There was a complete blackout on information at the Egyptian Em- ibassy there. Requests for _ confir- mation or denial of the report were met by “no comment” or “no one The bureau said il be t" is available who can discuss this shows a population growth of 17,- “i eel Losi matter.” Trice or 11.8 per cent since April County News e Before the on rd's ae , 1950, the date of the last official) oe ee a the international force at i- census, ~ , 4 Editorials rere ee 6 Get Surplus Property - chino had swelled to 467 men of The census clock at the Com-| Food News........... 37 thru 48 | ~=WASHINGTON @ — State edu- four nations — Denmark, Norway, merce Department, which regis-| Sports ............55, 56, 57, 58 |cational and public health agen- Colombia and Canada. More are ters the estimated net increase in| Theaters ................ ....63 (cies received $57,981,018 worth of to come, with the force finally to- the seconds,| TV & Radio Programs......71 (surplus federal property during taling perhaps 10,000, showed a total of 169,265,254 at; Wilson, Earl................. 16 |July, August and September, it) There still was no word of a : (Continued on Page 34, Col. 5) Wemen's Pages.....49 thru 54 ‘was reported today. By JACK PATTERSON RAYLING—It is possible, on am deer! for Oakiand County hunters. From south of Grayling. Around Lewis-|lers. Deer Scurry as Hunters Open Fire "The Grayling-Lewiston-Mio trian-Henry McCandless, Jack Foster|“Bonnie” and It ma Wilkins are ‘an especially popular area/and Charlie Newsome. Up on the) spas Gilchrist, north of Comins, Walt Kergan and Ralph Morehouse for- Clarkston we find Bob Jones andisake the warm comiort of “Poca- json Bobby at the “Half Dozen club” }hontas Park” to go afield after ant-/li a x ak ae a ; 2 =< org i = z Siamese - stds ag OE aa 9 < a Me a eA ae ge — ¥ rs ~~ i X * Sens eee seg i ~- i - * “ * *. * =e + ? ~ “ai Wp qh ng tin ee ae ae geanasicapie ais 2 As ge = . ae se a b ‘ = : : i Ze. : é : : : ; : , 4 ( ' ts : : ae ur THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1956 i a Californians Drink Up _[liquer conssingtion totaled 20.953,-|Bookless Libfaries? S. Millis, president of Western ‘Stratosphere’ Cheaiber utes, ‘The chamber is sell for : : 000 gallons duripg the year for an te. Reserve University, Cleveland, " Ttesting. airplaie instruments. SACRAMENTO, Calif. (P—Cali- average of 1.61° gallons per resi-/ EAST LANSING «— Libraries|says microfilm, microcards, mag-) PATUXENT RIVER, Md.-—In a can go through a ia }fornfans drank 188 million gallons| dent. The figures were based on @ without books are envisioned byjnetic tapes and similar devices)stratosphere chamber” at the|range of minus 55 to 90 degrees lof beer during 1955, That's: an average of 14.3 gallons per citizen. The State Board of Equalization, compiled of the statistics, said hard population count of 13,035,000. Wisconsin produces about 68 per cent of the nation’s cheese. may take the.place of books. = jNaval Air Test” Center at . |Patuxent River, pressure canbe) : ~ One-fifth of Utah is said to be|changed from that at sea irty-fiv underlain with coal, ito that at 70,000 feet in 6 min- an educator. He says books are being printed so fast these days they become outdated before li braries find room for them, John e tk JUST HAVING FUN — One may have called the other a dirty pig. Or the other may have called the other-a dirty dog. At any rate, a. moment after this picture was snapped they were going at it apparently for dear life. But neither got hurt. To them, the rough ‘stuff is just fun. The battle takes place daily on the farm — of Ted Ricklets near Atchison, Kans. Out of a herd of 100 hogs, | the boxer picks on* the same porker day in and day out. When | one gets the other down, he lets up — and they go’at each other again. — . , ‘New. Water Helos Ulcers agent,” is an extract developed in Denmark from cattle organs, liver and brain cells. A series of reports on the new wafer showed it to be effective in treating ulcer victims ‘on all levels of society whose illness ranged from a few months to 14 years. It was emphasized that science | dees not know for sure what! causes ulcers but that the new | compound's “healing effect’ would | ‘indicate ulcers arise from improp- | erly-balanced meals. The wafer apparently makes up for the miss-| ing. elements. A . Reports were made by Drs. NEW YORK (INS)—A radically rew anti-ulcer compound has been ieveloped which reportedly allows ulcer victims an unrestricted diet, ‘ordinary use of tobacco and noderate use of alcohol.” i : * * = “The cornpound, taken by mouth m the form of cracker-sized wafers, was described at the! clinical conference on peptic ulcers nm New York. Reports on the compound said it “eliminated symptoms and—- restored ability te work” and was based on the theory that ulcers are caused. by nutritional {Ejner Jariov, University of Copen- «deficiencies. Present ulcer drugs operate on |hagen; Carl W. Ebeling, Depart- ment of Medicine University of he theory that ulcers result from | typerstimulation of stomach nerves Maryland; Dr. Jacques Fischl, caused by emotional stresses. This, "x Hill Hospital, New York so the thinking goes, leads to City, and Dr. Louis Gilbert, St.’ | i i ~ CRAFTSMAN 68 PC. SOC ee ee : Luke's Hospital, New York City. o neve’ - — in the |” me drig will be ecld en 0 doc] To attack this, present ulcer |*°"’S prescription only. It present. ireatment prescribes rest, change |'Y #5 in use in Dgpmark, Italy and xf habits and bland foods. Canada. The new compound consists of vitamins, minerals, milk solids und sucrose, plus an extract named “nupra.” This last.was desc as the “specific ulcer healing actor.” Nupra, a term coined from the initial letters of ‘nutritional ulcer preventive and restorative Tail Wag Will Get Head NEW YORK @® — Sculptress Jeanne Owens has offered an un- usual reward for the return of her missing basset hound named Tuesday. She said she would sculpture a head of whoever finds and returns it. t j i ‘ 4-Pc. Cutlery Se Attractive Hardwood Helder Craftsmen = 6,95 Stainless steel . . . hollow ground blades. Includes 3-in paring knife, S-in. utility fork, 8-in. slicér, fork. Black — Brown } ‘Warm fleece-lined and watet4ight to keep ‘your feet dry ond prevent colds. Steak Knife Set Set of Six Craftsman Knives | Only 6.95 Res. 2435 9.88 ea at 24-pe ‘ Highest quality stainless stee!, es nite hollow Our finest! Knives have longer eogee attnt vin handles. Shorter blades care ® bledes. Handles are plastic gabe around Forks and “5 $1 HOLDS ANY impregnated wood. spoons gracefully tapered. BIKE "TIL DEC. 15th | 26-Inch Full Size = Easier to pedal, more fun | Shop Sears ToyTo ia Men’s Hi-Slides Fleece Lined 14.95 Child’s -<-Sizes 6 to 12 ’ ‘ 9 5 ‘ stered chairs. ’ Ss : . Phe <4 : t . e FS ‘ 4-Buckle Arctics Men's --- Boys’ *. 499 | Sizes 21% to 6 16-42 * strap, s Dinette ~ New Wrought Iron Look Perfect Gift for Tiny Tots A soft cotton-filled doll in sanitary pliofilm bag. Choose the standing doll 6r cuddle doll in assorted colors. Made of'printed percale.and vinyl-plastic with mask face, yarn W4nch neck 11” 3-Pe. Set Little folks like their own table for playing and big fam- ily dinners, too! This sturdily built set bas a plastic top table, 18x24-in., stain-resistant, cleans easily. 2 ‘uphol- 98°" Friction ' Motorcycle \@ - , 12- * * * . ii s : ~ “3 : Open Monday and Friday Nights ‘til 9 P. M. Hi | \ eg , Inch 2.98 ‘ ra > ‘ q Rat-a-tat-tat Strong friction way po — I i he'll lead the motor propels, . : \ wwe parade! Gay - makes clack- re S tl! farm color. 2 sticks, ing sound, “Redlistic 88 Only $5 Down ; “a Mahogany a Cillnat We dare you to compare thig buy anywhere. It's American-made throughout with full rotary action, +} automatic bobbin winder, upper and lower ten- ‘aoe mahogany . " finishied cobinet. ‘= a CALL FE 5-4171 _ FOR FREE HOME ‘CAMERA SHOP HURON ST. FE 5-6615, — Budapest Youths ( 3 newsman Seymour Freidin was one the reporters trap in ‘the Russian attack that smashed the ee and killed and wounded an estimated 100,000 persons in Hungary's revolt for coche: the following article, ugh the words Preidin. telis of two of the boys who fou aE a they oan Pe es they think = future balds ravaged country.) BY SEYMOUR FREIDIN VIENNA (INS)—It was . hot, crewded and noisy in the little cafe restaurant. Over the radio a Gypsy fiddler was beating madly — frenzy of a. “‘Czar- ‘{ asked the two hollow-cheeked kids sitting at the table with me if they wanted the music tuned out. “We are accustomed to noise now,” one remarked shyly. “We don’t ming that.”’ “We were all having © reunion in Vienna. But neither the young- sters nor I back a few days ago in Budapest ever thought it would this way. I didn’t ever think I would see’ these Everyone in . family shad. to work just to live in a room er maybe two rooms. , Adults were always exhausted. Getting a suit of second-hand clothes was almost a cause for celebration.” “There also was fear and terror,” chimed in Zoltan. “Every family had someone who had been arrested or was at some time in jail. We came to hate authority, th: kind of author- ity we swallowed even when we Went to buy a loaf of bread. We ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, NOVEMDER 15, 1956 is Ask: learned how to hate the p2ople who watched you suspiciously when you talked to a friend in Whispers.” “In my factory I listened with amazement to the discontent of workers,” said Janos. ‘‘At first I was afraid. You don't talk that way, I thought.” “One thing they taught youth that helped us,” said Zoltan. “Many of us had to go in semi- military units to help fight. for peace. So we learned after a fash- By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst boys again. Janos—that’s his first name and| no doubt now where the Supreme state lines. The ICC ruling does he’s nineteen -and a machinest—| Court is going, whether or not the not invalidate these laws in so far and Zoltan, 18, and a university | ‘South likes it, protests it or defies as travel within a state is con- student, had just made their way | through Soviet armored divisions) trying stifle Hungary into sub-' mission. * 8 «# They are each or both typical) of Hungarian kids who beat their) i lathes and school laboratories into weapons that still baffle and lash back at the power of Russia's Red Army. Janos and Zoltan fought in the, streets of Budapest. They tested every inch where they took| on concentrated Soviet firepower.| 4, far as to outlaw segregation in| ing their..achools. “We were seventy or eighty in our group,” recalled Zoltan, his eyes flashing with remembrance. “When we left there were 11 of us." Janos and Zoltan learned how to fight in the hardest possible way They fought to detond the streets in which they had lived all their lives. “We learned quickly how to knock out a tank if you get up clese enough,” Zoltan said. “It was always a preblem getting near so you could throw a botth: of gasoline.’ You look at them and you think they are pretty scrawny. Eighteen days of fighting and staring at death rammed down your throat a few yards away don't tend to flesh out growing boys s * =~ But these are the neous supposedly of a Communist genera-| tion, a skilled young worker and a wmiversity student. Of the new generation they were the most fussed over regime, the most | ic ms, WASHINGTON (®—There can be, vit. It is going straight down the line in banning racial segregation in) | j all fields of American life, which’ involve public utilities, like buses, | |have_ to go before the Supreme jor the use, Of tax money, like pub-, lic schools. The court had banned segrega-| tion in public schools, in public swimming pools, parks and golf jlinks; and on buses which cross \state lines. And yesterday it ex- {tended its ban to buses which op- erate entirely within a state Whether the nine justices will go privately owned enterprises which cater to the public — like a res-| taurant—is something for the ture to show. They face no such decision sox = s * Nor are they likely ‘to For Ne. groes, fighting segregation, will have their hands full for some jtime trying to get racial discrim-_ ‘imation ended in the various areas where tax money is used. The -court no doubt — judging from the consistency of its opin- although a test case hasn't reached it yet — will in time ban segregation in public housing. By the same reasoning the court may eventually extend the ban to any housing developmert built with government loans or financ- ing since that money comes from tax Treverue. And. since the court has banned nq S¢gregation on buses which oper- ate within a state or cross state lines, it can hardly avoid — when confronted with a test — banning indoctrinated. So the Communists, segregation on all] railroad trains, believed. Besides, like other young-' | whether or not they cross state sters in their echelon of society,) they are both sons of workers. What made them turn and turn 80} violently against the regime? EVERYONE WORKED “You have to go back almost to the time we first went to school or even earlier,” said Janos “We hardly ever saw our parents. 'r i bines. . * * The Interstate Commerce Com- mission, undoubtedly taking its cue from recent court decisions, lordered railroads and bus com- \panies last Nov. 25 to end segre- | gation in interstate travel and banned segregation in waiting noceis. Expect Ban on Segregation to Affect All Public Utilities But 13 states have laws‘ requir- jing segregation of whites and Ne- |groes who intend to travel across ‘cerned, This mixes up the pic- ture. * * = A test of the ICC ruling will ‘Court for a final ruling aft clar- ion how to use some weapons,” hehe said. ‘There was no central observed, “Some of us did. Others|leadership, It just spread. Take|pression as Janos added, learned during our revolution. There were girls who had about ten minutes experience learning how to use a tommygun before they went into action.” “Nobody theught of revolu- tion,” said Zeltan, “I don’t know anyone personally who did be- fore the Russians came in the first time. After they came in and killed, everyene thought about revolution.” Whe were the leaders? Janos smiled bitterly before re- plying. “That was our biggest) strength and greatest weakness,’’;from our people.” Our friends just came out and fought there, That was it.” | “You saw us,” Janos resumed. “We had about one weapon or one grenade for every five of us at the beginning. But soldiers who were our own countrymen wouldn't fire on us, They gave us their own weapons or joined us.” EVERYONE PITCHED IN were no differences.” How about organization? How did they communicate with other resistance units? ters away were doing,” said Zol-| had a good supply—theirs, Zolfan. “Everyone in our block that starts in dry grass in a park. pitched in. There was no treachery|When it catches it is a forest fire. TLat is what happened.” Then there was pride in his ex-, ‘Ang Revolutionaries the district where Zoltan and I live.|workers, my comrades, they fed Can We Get Help for Any of Our People?” “The Pemelane and said Janos, “‘How do they accoun munism is finished in Hungary for- lever. by = they a a * | Where are their parents, their “Most of the time we didn't know families? what the resistance units 800 me-| “We don’t know,” replied Zoltan. 2 * * ipast the steel lhad clamped on tH® country? call us Counter- Fascists,”” for the fact that almdst everyone) us, gave us the last crusts fj, Communist youth organizations) bread and fought with us. There)jike | fought against them? Com- “We saw most of our families do-| tan, “All we knew was that they|ing something to resist. We don’t’ “When the Russians came in we were fighting and dying.’ You must know what happened to them.” ** added remember it caught on like a fire) | How had they managed to slip the Russians with our people—or we will die “You forget that people are with us,” said Janos, “They help pass you along. Te stop that the Russians would have to put sol- | diers into every house in Hun- | gary.” | Zoltan stared up from his half- . ‘filled coffee cup. “We would like to . ask: Can we get any help for our | people?’ . 1 didn't answer, What did they plan to‘do after |scouting around? | “We will course,’ t) go back home, of * said Zoltan, ‘‘We will live iwith them." at the Hub |ific ation. Yesterday's decision — which knocked out segregation on buses in Montgomery, Ala. p nt for al] buses where, within every state. The other Southern states will not com- \ply immediately, of course, any more than they did in desegregat- . They will fight individually but in the ‘end, in view of the court's| position, they cannot wip. The most they can do, unless the |American government break s| down, is to delay y_comptiance You Can Put It OVER THE TOP Give to the PONTIAC AREA UNITED 4 rs i | \2 For 1s — ow | sale@ 63 Po SERVICE For8 VE $10.00 Choice of 3 ae, Att ie tLlele O-ceseae TA / -_ “( 3 C44 § Domi-F woes your City. and will Ist a O Yellow a tree SPECIAL THANKSGIVING SALE AT GEORGES NEWPORTS se a id é _ OO DOWN Eo iaa att wits Por er Ber Eton Soren er Cotte Pot | Cover OR Mall THIS COUPON GEORGES NEWPORTS, 7“ N. Saginaw } Please send-me “CANNON Sheet and Towel ensembd sale “of $20.95, E enclove bo ny andy A Green () Dawn Gold Da the 0 e? LE ORG. 6. cease os soeee Scho’. e ee ‘Open *til 9 P. M. FRIDAY . _ “SATURDA — set the| every-| Suits and Coats Your new fall coat is here at the Hub. Whatever your preference, you'll find row upon row of handsome coats. Topcoats, overcoats of just about every style model and size. You can select from fine imported tweeds, cashmeres, gabardines and velours — Choose from nationally advertised brands — Eagle, Clippercraft, Rock Knit, Glenwood a Come in now and see them all. All wool imported tweeds and shetlands. Many with zip-out linings Specially Priced 8 © © © © © © © © eee ee he ll Donegal tweeds, Irish tweeds, Scotch tweeds of im- ported wool ..................... Specially Priced Imported velours ... shetlands, tweeds .. . Some with zip-out linings ................... Specially Priced Imported wool and cashmere blend, richly tailored . . . Fully lined Specially Priced ee ee i 2 Very Special Groups 2-PANTS SUITS PRICED WAY BELOW THEIR REGULAR PRICES... sh Qo The Price Includes the Extra Pair $69" The Price Includes the Extra Pair 2 PANTS SUITS in fine hard-finished wrinkle-resistant all wool worsted suits in sharkskin and long-wearing twills. All sizes up to 50. Regularly sold for $79.50. 2 PANTS SUITS in beautiful imported worsteds, sharkskins and gabardines. Finest fabrics from the best mills and handsomely tailored. Come early! Regularly-sold for $89.50 ® NO DOWN PAYMENT NECESSARY WHEN OPENING A CHARGE ACCOUNT AT THE HUB! TAKE 3 MONTHS TO PAY! ‘It's “Not vas Early to Select ‘HIS’ Gift! Use Our Convenient Christmas Lay-away Plan soe aaa 18 - 20 North Saginaw Street > 6 oOo °®@ and domestic 45° $ 5 9>0 *69°° Sensational Values & ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 1956 4 ry your Bave, “Gi Biuck ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL Mothers, Save $8 — Girls’ Coats, Coat Sets Warm all woel, regu jlar $24.99 and Sets eapecss Anniversar — Size 3 1 > Ge oe Stu “14.99 " ae _—— Ze é ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL 16sjnch Vinyl BABY. DOLL Ps /4a0* . Toys for Boys and Girls ~~. ST a Doll Strollers ...... 1.99 \ Betsy Wetsy ....... 5.99 \ Doll Crib... 5.99 \ Service Station 5.99 N aa Gene Autry Holsters _ 3.99 ..% : * ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL just Like Dad Wears BOYS’ JAGKETS Values to 12.99 in all Wool Sub- urban and Sur Coat styles. Tweeds and Plaids to 16 Quilted fined. Sizes 6 Cone Joten 19.99 e F ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL Men's Plaid Washable if FLANNEL SHIRTS | sleeve cotton ‘flannel, new ~rchecks and plaids in beau- tiful colors. 299 * 3.99 Men's Corduroy Shirts ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL Men's 100% Weel is & SUBURBAN COATS cand. brown. | Sizes (34,t0 46. MEN'S - SuEDE < JACKETS jal 16, ea! Seihinaneeal JUST SAY, “Poy No Manat Down! Take 6 Mos. to Pay! 10 A M. te 2 P.M. FRIDAY $1.69 69c Bath Size 60x76 22x44 CANNON BLANKETS TOWELS 99« | 49s 51.99 Size $5.99 24x36 Full Size LOOP CHENILLE RUGS SPREADS $] 288 EN TS: ik ANNIVERSARY 4-HOUR SALE... FRIDAY 10 TO 2 39c PRINTED PERCALE Full bolts of beautiful 19°|° Stock up' First quality. prints and patterns Goes Back to 39¢ After 2 P. M. ANNIVERSARY 4-HOUR SALE... FRIDAY 10 TO 2 8.99 CANNON BLANKET Regular 8.99. First quality. Full bed size. Beau- $5 tiful colors. Core! Save! Goes Back te $8.99 After 2 P. M. OPEN ‘Til /9 PLM. FRIDAY & “SATURDAY BUY FOR NOW... BUY pce CHRISTMAS : QE RE REE os FEAST YOUR EYES ON THIS ANNIVERSARY. te be BSS MD ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL | “"Zip-Wel” Glassglo Lined . 1IP-OUT GOATS — ; ‘ ‘ § 3” A M. to 2 PM. FRIDAY 2 $1.99 $1.29 ‘ cathe Size 42x81 £ CUPS CURTAIN Regular 39.99 and 49.99... » SAUCERS | PANELS Yes, choose from Tweed: Zibelines and Fiberines All $] Set 69° Wool Glassglo lining. Sizes 8 to 20 = 4 LARGE SIZE WOOL COATS $29 ‘$6.99 $2.99 Ist Quality TABLE t “Sue 2g RT EERE PILLOWS CLOTHS | ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL | SPECIAL Save on These $10.99 SMART SHEATHS | eee ANNIVERSARY 4 - HOUR SUPER-WITE BED SHEETS While 200 last... > Limit 2 to @ customer Goes Back to $1.99 After 2 P. M. 10 A. M. to 2 P.M. FRIDAY Reg. 23¢ Reg. $4.00 LADIES’ LADIES’ PANTIES BRAS ] 7 4 ] 29 Reg. $3.99 Reg. $2.99 LADIES’ LADIES’ “SWEATERS | GOWNS 2" 1” First quality. Fu SALE... FRIDAY 10 TO 2 Full 84 inches | bed size. De ANNIVERSARY 4-HOUR SALE. 3.99 PRINTED DRAPES “Make your home beautiful for Thanksgiving. Solid ard patterns. ANNIVERSARY 4-HOUR SALE... FRIDAY 10 TO 2 1.89 LADIES’ BLOUSES GS Values to $1.99. Short sleeve. Cuaranteed wash- able. Styles. White and colors. Sizes 32 to 38 Goes Back te $1.99 After 2 P. M. ANNIVERSARY 4-HOUR SALE... FRIDAY 10 TO 2 10.99 LADIES’ GAR COATS Don't miss this outstanding value. Water repel- lent poplin, Beige, red and black. Goes Back te $10.99 After 2 P. M. 6" Gees Back to $3/99 After 2 P. M. 10 A. M. to 2 P.M. FRIDAY -. FRIDAY 10 TO 2 5°? Yes. you save $5.00 , . Just the: thing for the Holiday. Metallic trim. Sizes Reg. $1.39 Reg. $1.00 sabes 20: Also beautiful linen in- LADIES’ NYLON WOOL JERSEY 8.99 GLOVES HOSE DRESSES 73 ¢ |] € —— ; 88 5 9 ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL e $3.99 Reg. $3.99 Save 2 on These $129 LADIES’ LADIES’ MOUTON LAMBS. ROBES -PUBSES | Pee Deli . > Coatpssioorentanig! 4~- HOUR “BETTER LADIES’ DRESSES Yes, ‘pick from sport and casual | styles. misses ‘and large sizes. Goes’ 10 A. M. to 2 P.M. FRIDA Higher Priced | $299 Group of LADIES’ MUSKRAT RAINCOATS | COATS ‘> $79 Group of $29.99 Group FUR TRIM | LADIES" COATS SUITS *15 k to Original Price After 2 P. M. 18 ay SALE... FRIDAY 10 TO 2 Sizes for sD ANNIVERSARY 4-HOUR SALE.. ANNIVERSARY 4-HOUR SALE... FRIDAY 10 TO 2 $14.99 Men’s Jackets Choose ge le gabardine and wod! style Sizes 34 to 4 susie neihe ane 49, i ass ff ANNIVERSARY 4-WOUR SALE.;. FRIDAY 10 TO 2 . =. ts = Sars SPORT ST, se ern cottons. Goes Back to $2.99 After 2 F. M. LADIES’ WINTER COATS Group gf $29.99 all wool short and long coats. Misses’ / sizes. Midseasor: coats included. Goes Back to $29.99 After 2 P. M. . FRIDAY 10 TO 2 19 Be smart, be here early for | yours. Choose from 28 to 36- = inch length. Beautiful linings. | LLL NIE MRED ENT ENG BB A M. to 2 P "a FRIDAY 3 ea 5997 Reg. $8.99 Pare DuPont oe WOOL NYLON re, | ca | CS $5 | .1* SWEATERS, SKIRTS Maternity | aS, i RESSES p y has *2 . Perfect for Gifts and for your- ANNIVERSARY 4 - HOUR Choose from briefs, All sizes. ‘$269 Limit 3 ; DIAPERS PANTS - | i Be $1.79 dialed $1.00 Peme Mu Jeans | "sure ae To 69c MEN’S UNDERWEAR \ undershirts and tee ane | Goes Back te 69c: After 2 P.M. SALE . - FRIDAY 10 TO 2 | ANNIVERSARY 4-HOUR SALE... 5.99 MEN’S PANTS | Come early, these won't last long. one | materials. Goes Back to $5.99 After 2K M. $ R’ SALE . . FRIDAY 10 JO 2 TSET . coat sets. - Pastel i: Size 2 to 4. ANNIVERSARY 4 - TODDLER: Regular $12.99 and and demium Ah gle Goes ‘Back to $12.99 ” ANNIVERGARY 4° HOUR SA . FRIDAY 10 TO 2 - GIRLS’ GAR é Reg. $8.99 warm flannel lined coat. Lined hood. Sizes 7 to 14. E “Gow Bock to $8.99 Aver 22 P.\ ANNIVERSARY 4 -~ HOUR gg "oo font sete Have: 1.79 GHAMBRAY SHIRTS — Goes Back te $1.79 Alter 2 P. Me FRIDAY 10 TO 2 self. Long and short sleeve — slipover sweaters. Sport and dress blouses, holiday skirts, wt -10.99 “Plaid jackets | head : ‘ : : Ser eee ‘ a SRA . tom — j ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL Mem $10.99 Ladies’ $2.99 36x50 Chathom sae sy: FRIDAY 10 TO 2 Si oun ; — You I ia " fa ts a oh aie a ose 100% Weel | ‘Slacks. rn ANS k Hh } 2 _\ as | THE ‘PONTIAC PRESS, : THDEID AT; XOVEMRER 15, 1950 Ne s ; wa ‘ no May Hold. Missile Tests ((urDinep Trve Life Adventures C&O May Cut pa nittee on Un-Anierican Activ-| Hie: ‘plans to move westward in) “about a’ week to continue hearings >» what it has called the Commu-| ist counterattack on anti-Commu- at Old Penal Colony Site What for many years was Bra-|become- an portant element in jail’: most unpopular island eo itesting W osers Stone. DIXIE DAN'S BIG DISCOUNTS ON TOYS & GIFTS Layaway Now! Brazil to build a tracking station for long-range guided missile tests on Fernando de Noronha, a former ) penal colony. Strategically located about 225 miles northeast of the Brazilian bulge, the six-mile-long island lies near the southern-most ‘end. of the. United States testing ! | miles southeast from Florida into ithe South Atlantic. Convicts on Fernando de i] i Noronha have now been replac: ad by personnel of the Brazilian Air Force which maintains an Airfield there. But political pris- onérs were banished to the out- post as recently as the 1940's. | Earlier, an ornithologist, George | Finlay Simmons, reported that he had seen about 350 felons, | 150 ee and 50 guards on the OPEN MON. and FRI. NITES P.M. FAMOUS MAKE $16.95 SHOE 5 . til | As _ of an expedition for ‘the Cleveland Museum of Natural ‘History, Dr. Simmons went to \“Murderers’ Island"’ in search of Officials are ‘mectinaae a lrange that reaches thousands of; island jailbirds ‘‘worthy of all of Pandora's curiosity.” iwho had killed a policeman 24 years before, helped the expedition hunt for some rare red-billed jtropical specimens. Also helpful “was the colony's barber. A mur- 'derer too, he described his crime jin hair-raising detail as he wielded ia razor across Dr. Simmons’ | face. PEAK SEEN 40 MILES | The convicts lived in a group of ‘old stone-and-mortar houses that \sprawled picturesquely across the foot of Pyramid Peak, the island's summit. Pointing like a long fin- ger more than 1,000 feet into the _ ROLLER SKATES ONLY ~ BOYS’ & GIRLS’ FIGURE ‘fare birds. However, -he found the) One inmate, | ICE SKATES air, the peak can be seen 40 miles away. Northeast of Fernando de. Nor It is now inhabited only by birds and wild cats. * Deluxe Doll STROLLERS and BUGGIES Fernando de Noronha is 581. In The latest official population for) th OLD TIMERS’ Bhan aageHe Aeanchn BISON 16 NATURALLY A’ HER ANIMAL. OFTEN A FEW oF a - WIM6BELF GETTING ON IN -o, TEARS, HE VOLUNTARILY “= RETIRES FROM ACTIVE SOCIETY. © 1956 “* Walt Disney Producton; World Rights Reserved THE OLD GAFFERS AGGEMBLE INTHEIR OWN BEanion. OF PASTURE AND CHEW THE CUD OF ZONTENTMENT. Distributed by King Features Syodicate. ave been stationed there off and mill, and guano deposits. Discovered in 1503 by the Portuguese Count of Noronha, the island was coveted by several | addition to military personnel who! naval powers in the 17th and 18th centuries. Portugal defended it inhabited for a whole century, Famous onha is a string of islets. The on since 1942, there are farmers ee a a ee eaal Santo. The British, having noted makes $ 99 largest, one-mile-long Rat Island, raising cattle and growing corn, ‘ile aA erie: that the isle had remained un- genuine is rich in recently surveyed phos manioc, cotton, fruits, and me- p, : ° kes laid claim to it in 1895. Brazi leather phate deposits. Kidnapers, it is Aicinel plate. ‘The island also he Pernambuco. Since 1912, the Is- |) ected, and its ownership was claimed, used to hide out on Rat. dicinal plants. The island also has land has been governed a8 8 J heid by the King of Portugal. uppers. a saltworks, limeklin, manioc flour, federal territory. the mediator in the dispute. Another Brazilian island in the, 44e is still uninhabited Trind- ‘Train Service in Grand Rapids Region Force Decision PETOSKEY i® — The last two passenger trains serving northwestern lower Michigan area passengers. - The Chesapeake and Ohio a way said yesterday that it w ask the Michigan Public Fresh |Commission for permission to dis- continue trains 25 and 26 between Grand Rapids and Petoskey, * * «& The Pennsylvania Railroad end- ed its passenger service north! jfrom Grand Rapids in 1950. Now | | the C.&0. says that its trains'| along the 250-mile line are aver- aging less than 19 passengers a| trip over the most heavily traveled part. \of this service in light of steady loss of patronage appears to be economically impossible." * * «® At the same time in Cleveland, the railway announced its quarter- ly dividend on common stock ould | be raised to $1, payable to share- holders of record, Dec. 3. The \87'2 cents, paid quarterly since ‘Dec. 1955. Previous to that the dividend was 75 cents. ‘Missing Since Monday, y Tuesday’ s Taken Home found the pooch isn't interested in Light Passenger Loads . gt A spokesman said, “Continuance > previous quarterly dividend was’ LOUISVILLE, Ky, @—A no-wig- gle has been placed on Elvis ‘y's appearenige here Nov, Police chief Carl Heistis said ‘he won't permit “any lewd, las- of ‘the entertainer. “As you can surmise,” the chief said, “I just. don’t happen to be one of his —— e this | may be pulled out for lack = Expect Liquor Sales fo Rise jone of the leading distilleries says |the liquor industry expects to’ in- | create its United States sales by |5 per cent this year over last. Howard R. Walton, President of |Hiram Walker-Gooderham & Worts |Ltd., put the industry’s expected ‘civious. contortions’’ on the part © |U.S. sales at 210,000,000 (M) fal- - \lons. He said overall: consumption of distilled spirits for the eight months from January through Au- ust amounted to 127,352,000 (M) gallons. In the same peridd of 1955 |consumption |gallons, Waiton said. | Walton spoke yesterday at |meeting of the Financial Analysts Society of Detroit. a Glasses for Safety PROVIDENCE, RI. ie — Qut- door employes of the New Efg- land Telephone and Telegraph €o, in Rhode Island all will be ?ear- ing glasses seon“The “company announced its outdoor employes will be fitted with safety glasses to prevent | eve eee NEW YORK | — Seul Iptress Je anne Owens has her basset \hound back, but the man who} -'collecting his reward. The hound, named Tuesday. dis-| ppeared Monday. Miss Owens) rae she would sculpture a head of whoever found him. 1 Tuesday lIolling on a street cor- ner He returned the droopy-eared dog to its owner but politely de- clined the acquisition.of another head a Patrolman George Bryant found, was 119,446,000 (M)- general area is tiny Trindade. lies still farther south, east of Brazil's State It 730 miles of Espirito —~4 Well built, styled just like real strofiers and buggies; a big selection PRICED AS LOW AS Freient Train REG. $11.95 VALUE oa i All Metal Wind- Up Train. . 1” Train. . 1” to our omplete or former and plenty of track trange- new member $3.98 Ball Band $422 Thermolite Space Helmet ] Teen ty ea? SEWING KITS I” ‘FAMOUS MAKE ELECTRIC PHONOGRAPH Reg. $9.95 $4°97 Metal cabinet, beautiful tone BOADWAY-SHELL Quick Service Hardware & Supply 97], Our Best Wishes to $3.98 HUGE ASSORTMENT OF & TOYS stuffed 5, uku- fea sets, hol- udi ng ‘4 , trucks feles, ‘640 - 700 Auburn Ave. for continued success EASTOWN SHOPPING CENTER Broadway- NEW TOOL CENTER Shell NOW OPEN What.a Layout! Every Tool Where You Can Try It In This Exciting New Tool Center Our new Tool Center is the result of careful planning and long ex- perience in the hardware business. Now we have a tool department that puts every tool you'll ever need—and the right one for every job—out where you can see it, try it of test it for good feel and balance. Come in and see our Tool Center soon. It’s all yourself, set up for you to enjoy Stantiey 2H 1204 Stanley #H 1°47 wie $ 50 box Plane—Handy, $ 98: Bench Plane — The $ 25 “ee nit — oa easy to use and finest . » & baste’ carpenteras full adjustable. tool for every work — afte Feed cong oe eench. % You will finds “every; Stanley 2H 121 tool that you = may need by © anley ; Millers. Falls A Few Very Desirable Store. Hand Drill — Makes P the tough jobs easy. bench needs one. Porter Cable a \ of ! : od 3° $ py eamnaane #700 Vise ~ Every, woodworking ESF, Locations Still Available . Boadway-Shell i} \DISCOUNT STORE CALL FE 0-0000 HARDWARE and SUPPLY .- A | Some Ness s Open Daily 8 - 5:30 — Friday “til 9 ) _ 109 N, Saginoy St., Opposite WwKC " | 650 fit Avenue. se < a a , ve | } : a 4 # 4 é : |! . : fi. ; ' ve . og ONO ee TNS eee sd geri e er ah PL a ee Geary ee ey PRELIM AMO a LS a eae OTe Pe UNI one 1 el MME, sl at stent cl i By GAYNOR MADDOX: “THE. ‘PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1956 ‘f= * = “ba te lio aaiets market is one‘of the worst. It was _ NEW YORK (NEA)—Millions of /puiit 50 years ago, on the site of the ily dinner table. in operating dilapidated wholesale | sient markets in industrial slums, blight-| 94, ed by filth, congestion and unsan- itary handling of produce, The result is that spoilage, dete- rioration and excessive cartage ‘costs add about 20 per cent to the nation’s annual seven billion dollar bill for fresh produce. Who picks up the tab? You and the farmer— you pay more, he gets less. * * * In New York City, where some 150,000 carloads of fresh fruits and vegetables roll in every year, $100 is added to the cost of each carload id an antiquated whol ing set- weThe Washington Wholesale Pro- duce Market is a group of ancient buildings covering 17 city blocks in the shadow of lower Manhat- tan's financial-disfrict skyscrapers. Here most of the city's 300 whole; salers have ground-floor stores. The top floors are abandoned, their broken windows inviting bats. Patsy D'Agostino, who owns’ a) chain of supermarkets in Manhat- tan, must send his trailer trucks from his Bronx warehouse at 11 o'clock at night to pick up pro- duce in time for next morning's shopper. At Washington Market his trucks, along with hundreds-of others, get ‘snarled into the narrow, produce- piled streets. His drivers must park blocks away and the produce must be hefted out by porters, at extra cost. Meanwhile his own men, paid at union rates, sit idly by. Because of confusion and con- gestion it often takes four or five hours to load. Every effort-to move Washington Market to cheaper land on direct railroad lines, accessible to river old market destroyed by the earth- ji quake and fire in 1906. a I wormed my way through streets where trucks were jammed like straws ih a haystack. Side- walks and lanes were cluttered with decaying produce. anges Gomer slept undisturbed on boxes of: This market serves over 1,- ates yenuas Ui Gan Wrensbecs and the Bay area. Becatse of its lack of space and direct rail con- nections, as well as inflated cart- age costs and spoilage, $3,500,000 a year is going down the drain. rts Boost Nation's Food Bill ters Boston distributes produce to) doll: suburban areas, and to much of New England. Hence its muddled marketing system rifles budgets in countless. New England burgh and Detroit similar condi- tions are running up retail prices. Smaller cities are no better. is being taken to end this hidden cost. phia's merchants have been agitat- ing to abolish the old Dock Street Market, some. of whose buildings date back to the time of William/the most consulted men in food Penn. Civic groups have joined the fight and plans have been made for a modern food-distributing cen- ter four miles from the center Of!ations from farm to marketing, so town. It is estimated that the new market center will save Philadel- ; Gen. Gruenther Commences Stay Like most other metropolitan cen-iphi’s see weary four milion 222 Europe ars a year. Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, Evea in New York City, despite Atlantic alliance’s supreme com- the powerful opposition, the New York Market Study Committee of the United Fresh Fruit and Veg- etable Association is spearhead- ing a drive to move the present market. It would cut everhead by up from time to time.” at least 50 per cent. * * * bd * 7 homes. ‘In Philadelphia, Baltimore, Pitts- NATO must be maintained ‘‘re- Here and there, however; action The most active factor in the battle to bring produce distribution up to modern business standards jo¢ is is the Transportation and Facilities)" Branch of the U, S. Department of Agriculture. Its chief, William C. Crow, marketing expert, is one of “* * «© . For years, many of Philadel- happen.” His remark distribution. “Our hope,” Crow says, “is to improve all the hundreds of oper-/°Y°* Middle East policy. that produce gets to the table as fresh as when it left the farm.|as boss of SHAPE, the traffic and trucks, has run into strong opposition. Real estate in-| terests who get sky-high rents for) have dug in to retain the present site in all its inefficiency. ~ * * confined to any one section of the YURE SKOOL SHURE 08 SOT — Protesting high school ‘stu- firetrap buildings and some unions.’ gents in Lynwood, Cal., need more than just a new school. Witness the spelling on sign at right. Demonstration came after voters tailed te put through a bond issue for new school construction. | Such appalling conditions are not Present overcrowded building has been condemned as unable to | withstand earthquakes. And at a lower cost.” jheadquarters. U.S, Army, 100% WOOL With Nylon Pile Lining A strikingly handsome coat that's equally at home in the office or at the dressy occasion. Enhancing beige, blue or red solids or grey. blue or brown tweeds. SIZES 8 - 20 39" - ~ NATIONAL CLOTHING CO. 9 S. Saginaw Buy Yours on Our Easy Budget Terms! |part in his final review here. FRANKFURT, Germany ® — the mander in Europe, bade farewell/th ¢ se to 250,000 U.S. servicemen in this gardiess of the strains that come “We must keep it working,” he said, because its “‘No. 1 mission is to deter war, to make an act aggression so destructive and so expensive that it can never about strains on NATO was an evident reference to the split between the United States and Britain and~ France Gruenther returns to the United States next week after 342 years NATO Air Force and Navy contingents took During the ceremoni special message. to P rsar oy bay ee dent Eisenhower was read, “To me personally,” the mes- sage said, “it Has been a source of great comfort to know that 5 were in your hands.” The Kurile Islands, Alaska and Siberia, get their name because “kurile’ is the Russian word for smoking. There are ac- tive volcanoes on the islands. exacting responsibilities between | “College Heads Favor Adult Education Plan YPSILANTI W—Michignsi needs an expanded program for adult education, according to a study made by the Michigan Council of State College Presidents. * * * The report on adult education, ‘entitled ‘field and extension serv- ices in the state supported insti- tutions of higher learning in Mich-| igan,”’ was released this week by) the council’s president, Dr. Ss . Elliott of Eastern Michigan Col- lege in Ypsilanti. Adult education develops a well- informed citizenry and puts to use advances in arts and: sciences, the report says, The college presidents wis that every one receive educational ben- efits to the limit of his ability and especially stress the need of adult programs for those who were un- able to attend colleges or univer- sities. & 3 | | There are more than 70 known ‘non-food industrial uses for sugar. OPEN “TONIGHT Monday, Friday and Saturday UNTIL 9 BDO Zour “WALL TILE SALE Take Your Pick — All Wall Tile Reg. Price s+ 8 8 Do It Yourself & Savel o 4 8 eo we we ee fansPatter —=a ASPHAL mm TILE Vinyl C TILE 9u9u's FLOOR 10° 9x9 Deluxe Gauge A.Full Ve Thick Reg. | CHROME TOILET FIXTURE SET s7” §-Pc. 4.95 at te a 7 ew A A Big 10 Pound WITH ANY PURCHASE OF (Except Appliances) I 00 OR MORE! MODERN LIMED OAK Dining Room Suites —, WARD'S GIVE - 48 South Saginaw Street . . Here is an offer! In addition to finer quality furniture and Word's lower prices, we will give you a big 10 pound turkey at no additional cost with any purchase (except appliances) of $100.00 or more... Dress up your home for the holi- days now and get one of these fine birds . . . offer expires Wednesday, November 21st. WARD'S GIVE HOLDENS RED. TRADING STAMPS DOUBLE STAMPS GIVEN MONDAY EVENINGS 6 P. M. to 9 P. M, wl * Here .is just about: the finest selection of dining room furniture you could buy - for your home. There is no furniture so rich_ in appearance, so beautiful in de- ° sign, so luxurious in finish, so econom- ical in price as this beautiful Limed Oak Modern. Dining Room furniture. OPEN STOCK Buy just the pieces you, need DROPLEAF TABLES $795 119” as o* eee eee eee CHINA CABINETS as low as eee eeeeoeee CHAIRS a | ore ee “ARE ET Reee tesron gem erm (rs a paw mame ee ly e ‘OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 P. M. Z x Pe = : ri = 4 ‘ ¢ * 28 yo aes : : ‘ ee =< : see ‘ ee ae : Ps : : vor Cae ee “ : as ¥ ‘ ¥ _ + ok ae mie PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1050 Aris Boost Nation's Food Bill (ez,Szeuter ts er Heads Favor scenes aE lege in Ypsilanti. *. Commmenees SIC? Sen wets * Adult Education Pan's ss in In Eu pe .* : . : ad ci and. to use By GAYNOR MADDOX _|country. San Francisco's wholesale Like most other metropolitan cen-iphia's citizens nearly four million [dent Eisenhower was read.. ts eae me advances in arts and sciences, ny ahaa dyad ge Pept pas jas br ances gre 4 aur garda “To me ,” the mes-| YPSILANTI (—Michigan needs| report says. 50 years ago, on the site of the|suburban areas, and to much of Even in New York City, despite dollars market destroyed by the earth-New England, Hence its muddled gare bard er er i Pocketbooks each year by gaslight-|ouake and fire in 1906. marketing system rifles budgets in eee a 5 - nithese exacting responsibilities|made by the Michigan Council of| efits to the limit of his ability and era methods of bringing fresh fruit ag henry Fase hal seagoing pi eal viet State College ts. [especially stress the need of adult I wormed my way through Countless New England homes. | 6 United Fresh Fruit and Veg- |to 250,000 U.S. servicemen in this|Were in your hands.” etable Association is spearhead- [NATO must be maintained “re- ° Ts * *+ * ing a drive to move the present on adult education, market. It would cut overhead by ata tan and extension sities. with decaying produce, Alley cats|Smaller cities are no better. at least 50 per cent. ok fe a thiah: caaealal vot — x in in ind Gums, Wel Sere ee eee Here and there, however, action * * «& : 2 4 ustrial cots s market serves over is being taken <4 end this hidden “ * 3 “ed by filth, congestion and unsan-|599 999 persons in San Francisco! cost. ont oe active factor in the!said, because its No, 1 mission! We Yalonnons: om tie ands. dary handling of produce. and the Bay area. Because of its *-¢ © = ly dee distribution |i, The > that spoilage, dete-/lack of space and direct rail con-| yo. years, many of Philadel-|is ae — pre ee on wae of excessive cartage/ nections, as well as inflated cart- phie’s merchants have been agitat- nsporta' * so add about 20'per cent to the/age costs and spoilage, $3,500,000 a/i1- 14 abolish the old Dock Street! Agriculture. Its chiet, William C annual seven billion dollariyear is going down the drain. | Miarket, some of whose buildings|Crow, marketing expert, ix, one of for fresh produce. Picks) Boston's historic Faneuil Hall |date back to the time of Williamithe most consulted men in food|NATO was an evident reference ay Gener table “\ streets where trucks were jammed! In Philadelphia, Baltimore, Pitts- ay. “ cae hike straws in a haystack, Side-/burgh and Detroit similar condi- ~ Powerful and long-entrenched in-\waics and lanes were cluttered'tions are running up retail prices. osts add — Din ‘up the tab? You and the farmer— you pay more, he gets less. ae me * In New York City, where some ‘350,000 carloads of fresh’ fruits and -vegetables roll in every year, $100" 4s added to the cost of each carload| vod an antiquated wholesaling set-| | a Washington Wholesale Pro-| duce Market is a group of ancient) ‘buildings covering 17 city blocks) in the shadow of lgwer Manhat-| Aan's financial-district skyscrapers. | Here most of the city’s. 300 whole-| salers have ground-floor stores. | ‘The top floors are abandoned, their, broken windows inviting bats. | Patsy D'Agostino, who owns’ al chain of supermarkets in Manhat- tan, must send his trailer trucks from his Bronx warehouse at 11 o'clock at night to pick up pro- duce in time for next morning's At Washington Market his trucks, along with hundreds of others, get snarled into the narrow, produce- ; : the dressy occasion. Enhancing piled streets. His drivers must park beige, biue or red solids or grey. TILE 9x9 blocks away and the produce must blue or brown tweeds. Suda % : Deluxe Gauge be hefted out by porters, at extra cost. Meanwhile his own men, paid Market, first built in 1742, and Quincy Market nearby, opened for business in 1826, are ‘just as rty, antiquated and wasteful as those in New York and San Fran- cisco, Penn. Civic groups have joined the fight and plans have been made for a modern food-distributing cen- ter four miles from the center of town. It is estimated that the neW | market center will save Philadel- distribution. \ ations from farm to marketing, so i AAHTER And at a lower cost.” * “a States and tee hella Cony deme is to!" improve all the hundreds of oper-(°Ve® Middle East policy. Gruenther returns to the United that produce gets to the table as|States next week after 3% years fresh” as when it un Se. mm. OPEN “TONIGHT Monday, Friday and Saturday UNTIL 9 ‘WALL TILE SALE Take Your Pick — All Wall Tile 100% ‘WOOL With Nylon Pile Lining A strikingly handsome coat that’s equally at home in the office or at “see * © ® @ # #e * oo @ “eee eee ee ewe et “eee eevee “eee ee we ee eee Do It Yourself & Savel Spatter jASPHALT FLOOR 7 Vinyl 10° $] 6” G8 WOME sivvcccesce at union rates, sit idly by. Buy Y 5-Pc. 5 Sse ot eesti Sy ul on Our Easy *9Q° RUBBER C CHROME TOILET —_— takes four or five Budget Terms! FIXTURE SET $ Every effort to move Washington S A Full a Thick Reg. 14.95 Market to cheaper land on direct 51 railroad lines, ble to river . traffic and trucks, has run into : Senet Ste get cho-sigh souks ior] WORE ype , ry or SKOOL SHURE IS SHOT — Protesting high school st etn, dey ogg Mondygr, | | dents in Lynwood, Cal., need more than just a new school. wie NATIONAL | J 1 * 8 ‘ Z 7] 7 ho no te beckery. | hel psagadler liner adc piiermpenighoar teeta CLOTHING CO. Such appalling conditions are 10 Present ecateboked building iis ‘bee condemned as aad ke | 9 S. Saginaw JOS55 tt] we HURON yf PONTIAC confined to any one section of the’ withstand earthquakes. | : . | ge ——— ] ee at Hibs. ..48 South Saginaw Street Pontiac . . Here is an offer! In addition to finer quality furniture and Word's lower prices, we will give you a big 10 pound turkey at no additional cost with any purchase (except appliances) of $100.00 or more . Dress up your home for the holi- . days now and get one of these fine birds ... offer expires Wednesday, November 21st. @ WARD'S GIVE = : HOLDENS RED ee ene TRADING STAMPS WITH ANY PURCHASE OF , DOUBLE STAMPS GIVEN ud | 00 MONDAY EVENINGS 6 P. M. to 9 P.M. (Except Appliances) OR MORE! Ps ® e : @ ining Room Suites : Here is Just about: the finest selection. of dining room furniture you could buy for your home. There is no furniture so rich in appearance, so beautiful in de- sign, so luxurious in finish, so econom- ' ical in price as this beautiful Limed Oak Modern Dining Room furniture. OPEN STOCK e Buy just the pieces -you, need OPEN DROPLEAF ‘pened $ 95 MONDAY ee eee See 79 and FRIDAY | ; ee Cee Ss $] T 9” EVENINGS i eoeeeeeeveene ‘UNTIL | BUFFETS $] 1 9” 9:00 P. M. * as low a8 0.6406. 008 @ q CHAIRS WARD'S GIVE HOLDEN RED RADI Gs STAMP: ed HIN RP SRE RR TR INE NAN AC i NR OILED LLOE DELLE. EL MELEE IIE DLL EEE LEG EY SENG: BELLIED ENED CLOSE LE LELED EE NS.ILELNDELE! PE te LLIN SEN EL IELE LS RAL ELE EE LEE IG! ELE LIANE BOREAS. PALIN LE EE Set cee THIRT British-Force Refuses Help Italian Relief Offered Citizens of Ror Sold by Consul © PORT SAID (INS) — Off Port Said stands the Italian ship As- cania loaded with medicjne, food, clothing and blankets “= the des- titute, It is also loaded with a potential explosion between Britain and Italy, The British said they do not need or want the Italian relief ship but were still ar er the ‘situ- ation, — An official spokesman an. nounced that British forces were well able to take care of all the military and civilian population of Port Said and outside help was unwelcome, Italian Consul General Frances-| co Vincenti-Mareri, who has been working since a week ago Tues-| day to spare the city as much hard- ship as possible, violently. First he was shocked by the news the British don't want his ship. And it is his ship. He asked Rome to send it. That was last Thursday evening when he had the Italian school classrooms filled with wounded Egyptians and for- eigners. That day he asked the British for penicillin, sulfa, bandages, cot- ton and other rudimentary hospital supplies, The British said that Some items were unavailable and the rest could be purchased locally.' By the time Mareri knew all hospitals in the city bad long been out of everything including bandages. Drug stores had been looted and were shuttered tight. The Itahanms organized doo! knocking teams to “beg foreign ers for food, clothing and med cipe for the hospital] that started with 6) beds and increased to 70 Mareri was shocked, too, by the implied British claim that every- body is getting enough to eat af Port Said. His Consulate has been handing out 3,000 rations daily for four days. The rations, he said, are going not only to Italians but als to Egyptians and even to seme French abd | British Hoover Scheduled to Address U.N. , (Continued From Page One) thousands of “volunteers” to go fo the Arab state. President Eisenhower com: disagrees, , CLAIMS AGREEMENT CARBINE CAPTURED IN EGYPT — British ~- trooper works bolt on carbine taken from. sur- i rendeueg Egyptian troops at Port Said in alk hing Suez Canal area. ed bayonet which folds inte stock. identification, Including the label | from his clothes, were missing 'with-the exception of a belt buckle| — “©. D.* Fist UN, Police - Reach Canal Zone (Continued From Page One) clear-cut agreement on the exact task of the police force in Egypt. This apparently remained to be ~ Chicago Man Found in U.P. Alleged Murder Victim at Camp Kilmer | Takeoff of the first units had) IRON MOUNTAIN (®—The skele- been stalled two days by technical ton of a suspected murder victim, and political difficulties. The de- found last Monday in a spruce, iparture came on urgent orders thicket, was identified today. as ‘from Hammarskjold, who actedithat of Odess Demopoulous, 31, a \shortly after a report from Moscow Chicago grocery store operator, ithat Egyptian President Nasser | A newspaperman in this Upper jihad asked the Soviet Union to send Peninsula community called the) ita Egypt immediately the thou- Chicago Tribune yesterday with in ‘sands of Russians who reportedly formation which quickly solved ihave ‘volunteered’ to join the part of the mystery surroupding Egyptians against the British, the skeleton found” by a hunter .|French and Israelis in Egypt. chasing a wounded rabbit. Before leaving New York, Ham-| Positive identification was estab- imarskjold said his mission was ‘‘to lishéd this morning by the victim's staging area for five million Gls during World War Hi, is coming to life again to receive 5,000 Hun- ror. The first contingent of service troops arrived yesterday and began restoring heating and lighting tc the camp's 1,139 baild- ings, most ef them weoden bar- | racks, White House press emergency force in Egypt.” AP Wirephoteit is the first experience of its i kind,’ he told reporters. “It is the first truly international force. Let us hope. it will succeed. Let us hope we will succeed in establish- ling peace and order.” er and George Costas, all of Chi- cago, will arrive at the camp by the end of next week™ The Army here said that befor this week out, the troops on hand to take care of the Hungar- ian men, women and children will Late model weapon includes His family had not seen or heard from Demopoulous since last Dec. 7, when he was driven to a Chicago train station by a is SEE Hammarskjold ‘is expected to! than 4,000 crossed into Austria | t ~ ae , », sister, He told her he plaaned a number 600. They will include doe- . lot-41 Squarely confronting the U. N. ; _ . asks return to New York ii five Gr six| yesterday, dringing’ the _ total | as Foresigh Bccccomiaed aan he conflicting) Short trip to Gary, ind. tors, nurses, mess personnel os . Sov ; 1° — lies and administrative staffs days. He said that after his Mid- since the anti-Soviet revolt began | ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (INS)—istands of Egypt. and Britain, Dickinson County Sheriff Peter aces oat sen nue st 4 a iene East a -— magia Oct. 23 to mearty 30,608. jOne Albuquerque tot wrote to France and Israel] on the role of Carlevato said Demopoujous prob- Aery "commends xaid A my temavent Pind evilen ex ach, Budapest radio said approximate- santa Claus at the North Pole (re-|the police force. ably died shortly after he left Chi-' etary Wilbur M. Brucker “has the General Assembly has passed ly 8.000 of the city’s apartments cejyeg through the local post of- Egypt demands that the Br itish, cago since he had carried only charged him with the a resolution.” I have not yet-got a reply from' the Soviet blitz which followed. Budapest.” he said, "and for that The Red radio claimed that some . . : ulsory insurance law such as Mas- reason, I cannot say exactly what 169 restaurants and bars had re- lines, and that Egypt resume full| Iron Mountain officers said thes Animal ale mara ae rer pulsory ins " ince " such as Ma nai ‘vs ' = = amp Kilmer went into standby sachusetts ha Tre surance my pam tent a ~~~ |opened in the capital Dry Report on Wets control of the Suez Canal do not think. De mope oul lous com- | : ‘ jul ‘ ; G8 win ° al : scnasetts mie ie fe ae “ue afus sty 1, a), ‘i! oniy z ate "Ose sta é are But the genera; strike continued, Britain and France say their mitted suicide although his broth- °'* : ; > ; . Sick > rat : rose substantially, are } ‘aretaker orce t¢ < c over its sai apparently unabated. The only! DETROIT (INS) — Howard R. troops now holding the north third er’s German Luger pistol! was eo ee o waren “ oe y I: i 0 ree rachone siores open were _ selling food=W alton, president of Hjram-Walker- of the Suez Canal will give up that found in a glove near the body. ot2 acl 2 — Y. W ee an — eS ir | mostly. Gooderham and: Worts, liquor area only to the U. N. force. They) They said he was shot through ms om pre and. be vespeciall al . sure drive > s t Even Budapest radio admitted company, concluded a dry financ ial pico have indicated that they ex-.the head from left to mght at an Rudolph Halley ‘Critical’ ured ° ce aes, bya » in ungary U ure that some workers who had re- report yesterday in Detroit saying: pect the U. N. to put the canal angle thaf would have been diffi- HOD Ui) ee) as “sane (ee Americans have downed 8M back into operation and to control cul&.if not impoSsible for a right) NEW YOR“ @®—Rudoiph }! ile — (Continued From Page One) inces now weré quitting again at additional 1,011,968.000 standard it until] a settlement with Egypt. handed person. counsel to the Kefauver Sen cA ike’s Appeal ~ h far th ” nswer Ike $ App ; : word of deportation of rebels to ‘shots’ so far this year Israel has given every indication Crime Computtee five year no dealings with the Kadar re- R : =~ f : oe lavestigators also said clothes “ ee eatin Ke . , USSIa, it will not pull out of the Gaza remained in critical con “WASHINGTON (ENSi—President gime a . < . : i : ; on the skeleton were bunched in .. i ‘ . ; : * « lutha Development, | subsidi- Strip, .. which had been under ; day at Mt. Sinai Hospital Fisenhower’s appeal for homes and a = { Pl r Development. will Exyptian control since the i of 2 manner that indicated the bedy |. I th i H ian cel j t > mr < @ Y ace Vel es : pe r end o tu, entered the nospital [ou t Ds ungarian efugees who Former Communist . arty First ‘U. S. Company Makes Did P : onee 7 ; had «been dragged under the oe “ ; nae bee | Secretary Enroe Geroe and forme prospect in the area around. Gold the 1948 Palestine War. The strip thick. lew-hamaing spruce bows ago suffering acute pancreatitis, an escaped from Soviet terror has al- Premier Andras Hegedues heade 4 Tires in Philippines | Ridge in ithe British Selomon Is-'was seized after Israeli forces nme oe * jinflammation of a gland in the ab- ready brought answers from nearly the long hst of those purged by ilands, Noumea learns. __ plunged int into o Egypt Oct 29 The vietim’s wallet and other domen behind the stomach a thousand Americans. the new regime Hukipost radio MANILA — An American-owned —_ en a — . — _ . ay said they had been barred “‘for- tire-and-rubber company’s factory ever” from any public and party in the Philippines has begun to OPEN activity and advised their forn ; to resuMe€ manufacture a complete line of jobs in private life. ‘tres and tubes, recapping mate- rials. and rubber shoe-soling slabs 4heq and heeis. When in full operation the plant is expected to supply 50 to 60 per cent of the Philippines’ tire-product requirements. wr i he had reac h Soviet mult WKadar claime in agreement wi uuthorities tn Hungary that ame may be deported,” and de- clared the government would “hoid na no one responsible for participat- Rob Great-Grandmom ing in the uprising of the past three weeks ; This contradicted a Budapest ary “no NEW YORK (®—A 70-year-old great - grandmother was knocked |-radie breadcast yesterday which |2*" 3 Bronx street and | admitted the Soviet army ta de. |TOdded last night by a bay and - . ‘a girl—each about 12. The victim, porting Hungarians te the East said thev in sealed railway cars in a des- | = y made Mrs. Rose Shaw nemt- perate effert to stamp eut revo- | _ - e@ in Washington that the United lutionary elements ~ fe< would Oppose olden States would oppose — probably’ rhe radio told of the deporta., Township to Vanish * thors * ita ta 4 by 4 ety isuch (volunteers intc cad pt mn in ¢ phi ai ung why the general ANN ARBOR (INS)—East Ann e s * strike had not ended . . : oe . oat ,.. Arbor will disappear next Tues- Hammarskjold will confer in It. Sadar declared ee ee day. The community. in operation aly with Maj. Gen. FE. L. M. Burns ct nly persons arrested Gur- . yaa i iA LS emir > qe AES es ne commission of “acts of terror’ for 10 years. will bow out of busi- a nander of the UN. force, be ** ; : nes “*n Ann / we City Council f@re pushing on fm C Before and crimes would be prose ted ness when Ann Arbor City Council io pu “ &. oF = —— * @¢ ee holds ceremonies to annex the @aving. Hammarskjold made pul , é little rchiD lie a letter from U. S ‘Del wt Another broadcast said the Hun- Little townst st % My ‘ le * if | * * See Henry Cabot Lodee Ir. giving g an army would ge . new uni details of the American offer of forms and recruits wouldn't have Safet ‘Frist’ Bud! #4 ibe L a re 4 Ld tetp for the emergency force _to shave their heads. It promised Y Pp ; rey lighter penalties for infractions of - Try ls . ledge said the United States “| OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. w — military law, bigger pensions for Would provide air and surface tfansport for an estimated 3,500 te 5.000 men and their equipment t@ staging areas as requested by the U.N. command. The sign painters that put the safe- ty sign on a highway on the north- east edge of Oklahoma City weren't The flood ofgrefugees from the very alert battered country continued, More They painted * ‘BE AL RET." ~. and noncoms, and furloughs and more aff CeTs Passes ie ie, ie i * i, Oe a a ee ee * — oe oe ie A al 7 a dy tf g SS ei kt a haa aa aa ea SCURIEY DSM 9. .€. UNE YSN RODE 4 ON LTA SETS “SKYLINE” DECANTERS —* 4 America’s most wonted gift whiskey... clearly finer Schenley Reserve in the towéring “Skyline” decanter. Yours in. a pre-wrapped gift .box. + es ee ‘had been destroyed by gunfire and fice): ‘explosives during the rebellion and motor truck, a car . laf with her purse containing $30. 7 a fire truck, a French and Israeli invasion forces $34 on the trip. He had access to = ithe li s » disappeared. 5 the 1949 Egyptian-Israeli, armistice he disappeared Svillan wellare apencies TRUCKLOAD We Sell What We Advertise No switching . . . no gimmicks! Just honest-to-goodness values! Our business hes continded to expond over the years because we have adhered to the policy of honest values and honest advertising. ; 3 WAYS TO BUY: 2—Layaway. 3—No money down. as low as $1.25 weekly! 1—Cash. } erie = wy U. N. Secretary Missing Since Dec. 7. to Aid Retugees’ seneral Dag Hammarskjold,. w left New York last night for Rome| Positively Identified =| osup kamen, NJ. This and Cairo. sprawling Army installation, a garian refugees from Soviet bere 250 three secretary #nswer James C. Hagerty said in Wash- the state -}do what “I can to assist setting up brother, Gust Demopoulous, and ington there is “a very good © and getting going a United Nations two brothers-in-law, Andrew Beck- chance” ‘that the first refugees Official Hare Troops on on Hand Proposes Fund Uninsured Motorists to Contribute $30 to State Accident Plan LANSING W — State officials started drafting legislation today” for a state-supported Accident fund to reimburse the victims of unin+ sured drivers Secretary of State James M Hare offered the plan yesterday at a meeting of the State Safety Commission. He said he would sub mit it to Gov, Willams in two or weeks “In my opinion: this law would many of the problems in caused by the seven or ight per cent of the drivers who are uninsured,’ Hare said. The plan would be patterned aft- er a New port) law which takes effect Jan. 1, It requires uninsured .totorists is contribute $30 to a moter vehicle indemnification fund When a motorist is involved in an aecident with an uninsured driv- er, he is reimbursed from the state fund. But. Hare explained, the unin- sured driver must then in turn re- imburse the state fund or lose his driver's license. The state also has refugees the right to impound the uninsured “The the York angles New bad plan does not of a, com- “T want : ws a ni fara ; ® : reception, processing and welfare griver’s car . and a park- withdraw immediately, that the a $15,000 checking account but no Panel oe Ng a si ‘ can | driver's cat ti suc me as yey an a > N. force take 0sitions along money had been drawn on tt since or : . ing meter U f e up fF . y had ~“ given over to the . appropriate have FRIDAY NIGHTS 30-GALLON GAS HOT WATER HEATER Special Purchase 21x32-Inch ‘ar Cine, naa S 95 DOUBLE BOWL Raley seis i value ! Stainless Steel Kitchen WHILE THEY LAST! 30-Gal. Water Heater SINK | $™7 G50 GI : 3-PC. WHITE "| Lined 19 /p—=ame\\| BATH SETS = \ . 52-Gallon Electric REG. $134.50 VALUE =| HOT WATER Beautiful MIRROR Includes 6-ft. tub, wash basin and closet. We urge you to compare this outstanding — bargain. BRITE Finish HEATER Kitchen Cabinets Formica Sink Tops We offer an outstanding selection of cabinets SPECIALISTS in COMPLETE KITCHEN LAYOUTS Choice Selection of GENUINE BIRCH end Your Choice of BASINS. With triple plated chrome faucets. A wonderful value! sy TRAYS Complete with sturdy Stand and faucets. Crate marred ... cash and rry sTs> 2 SINKS *6* Every Gre a real buy! Hurry, select yours to- day. Slight impertec- tions, 415-Ft. and’ 5-Fe. BATH TUBS Steel and Cast Iron $2995 and ap Crate Marred Shallow Well LOWEST PRICES ON STEEL PIPE: 9] ) 3 pane Y2-in. Galvanized $2.65 1 %-in. Galvanized $6.52 + Modern Styling ptr Galvonized $3.44 12-in. Galvanized $7.70 1-inch Galvanized $4.90 2-in. Galvanized $10.32 CASH AND CARRY ONLY SINKS. $2895 °74”° With Tank “The Store That Values Builf” = = | ~ PLUMBING - , ERY co. eo. § 95 COMPLETE WITH $ 95 for k tehen or bath along with formica tops in Th tank tr - ie " l AS =e lea : a | | | ec | | ec wits é rov no | Less Fittings _ riya prs aa aa a 21x32Inch Includes tub, wash basin, $ 95 WwW ASH sd Compartment 2 Compartment wecw S-GRADE fittings = 99 a aagael LAUNDRY *% Storage Compartment *& Chrome Plated Faucet SPECIAL LAUNDRY TRAYS with WHITE ENAMEL CABINETS 44s { rests PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1956 Be Be eae e See a Sf eee ee aS te : : ee op ae S : - : ee 2 oe =. * ae, a * Po j P * * 7 : ¥ * ae | - fe * ; een . ey ; : 4 = 5 : + f 2 * : : ‘ 4 : : : ; 5 ; ) * f * 7 ‘ : ‘ : tng : é z e | | \" : ‘ . ES u : 4 es i” ‘ You'll is iG Purchase® *: be mares, prem =" ra ‘Rich Extender ,suarore, sorting, Add low to Soften Yeast : value. th can nich mh Bog Sango ‘ arey to Make Steak Stretch ~ Pia Somerset ae Woreg Hoag Bal Holiday Foods This Week iivast"misy svtcm in| 1Sriettee, Bet weak can be saved cv] conn ine srt 1 hu tne ar it 8 2S per cutee, than “We large dize| “Ome mend to unexpected guests by the j-ior until steak is tender, Just be-|t. “date on the envelope expires. ace turing the hy per pn han ones, Tt |trigerated cases. jf moisten the bread crumbs, Addlers.” Cut 1% pounds of ¥iinchl gutted olives, Makes 6 servings.| oo. tuat oro 4 come week and lee flavor when/rrankagiving If refrigerator or| or has ensngh storage pace, the Apple Dressing ae, aN ge te ee exposed to air. freezer space is available, the large birds are often ‘the most | {, Sip’, gt RE Peed teaspoon salt and a dash sii merrtnn heats are Stig ary te eecoeuersiaes guenanl dy. When stored in pry-off cappedimeat for Thanksgiving might be) economical buy. A 25 pound tom | 2 ied oes land black pepper. Brown the pieces injbrisk weather. aroma, and the glass lets you see|Consumer Marketing ‘Information roasted: meat, while a 15 pound — just how much of each spice you!'Agent, Mrs. Josephine Lawyer. At) turkey yields about 50 per cent. | 9 “e 7 , have on hand. least, most families will reserve) When it is time to cligpse a tur- nm wh & To reseal the jars airtight each their Preferences of turkey, ham, |key, the size to buy is often a time oles artnet the bet Pak rn fer mt poem. A Saf ound 8 roma Ss! cap on evenly press down grocery ¢ ready-to-cook turkey gives : firmly with the heels of the palms Store. . one average size serving. Be sure, , of both hands. You will be able’ MEAT IN THE MARKET—Dur-|to add “seconds” for those with 78 NORTH SAGINAW OPEN FRIDAY _OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 9 . pag => — “click’ < the lid ing this year’s Thanksgiving|gdod appetites. . 0 place. P a lid|month, per cent more turkeys * ee e : ETT flipper in your spice cupboard to/will be marketed than last Novem-| pent purchasing of pork for ii BAZLEY S B TER TRIM ROUND flip the lids quickly and easily|ber. About 29 per cent more heavy 4. school lunch room ocegranen oery tae breed turkeys were raised this\ used pork prices to raise some. SIRLOIN : R year. Light breeds total about 18 /However, plentiful supplies will Want a really shiny glaze for a|Per cent of the total turkey crop, /665 pork one of the best meat ‘SWISS hot bread? Then spoon on the con-\compared with 26 per cent 1ASt/vaiues when prices are compared “NONE HIGHER” — * GRADE A , FRESH, LEAN GRADE 1 LBS. $ | —— vo. AQ gg SKINLESS | For HOT Docs WU Fok yas ate gel iu 93° THRIFTY VEAL POT BEEF RUMP | eoakT. 33: ROAST BAZLEY'S— HEADQUARTERS FOR GOVERNMENT INSPECTED TURKEYS! BLADE CUT "CHOPS oi. | ORDER YOUR THANKSGIVING POULTRY NOW FOR YOUR BEST SELECTION! | 18-24 Lb. Toms....% 39°] Young Ducklings...+ 49° | 12-16 Lb. Hens..... 49°| HAM COOKING ONIONS...3 “ 13¢ | _ FCABBAGE........... » 5°] 4 pork & peans 7°," =. = 41 ¢ oe roe 2 2565 INSTANT POTATOES =. 21¢ APPLES Meciatoh, Spin Jonthon rm. 79¢ 5 I rr i i if So Good! So Pure! WELCH’S GRAPE JUICE Tall 24 Oz. Bottle 23° Bottle Morton’s Frozen PUMPKIN PIES La S 49 - Size ' Farmer Peet’s Ranch Style BACON 2 Ibs. QS - BOOK Downy. Flake Crosse & Blackwell MATCHES WAFFLES ; Chili Con Carne Dro Bho | Hrs. 400 4} i; H - GRADE 1 SKINLESS Hot Dogs 3 Ibs. 89° | : J At | z ut * * * | Team cranberries with al gan’s pleritiful apples or with] "We been preparing these. | appetizers for 6 onriry Hi Ho crackers or company? Wonderful !” ’TOMATO ‘JUICE GIANT 46 OZ. CAN A C Cens y HAMILTON GRADE A EGGS LARGE DEFIANCE OLEO YELLOW QUARTERS PS. Hi Hos finer, buttery flavor | works wonders with any shack | -of course itdoes.HiHo loves compahy...and company loves Hi Ho! | | | | | | i~> AS | Giounn BEEF 29;|POT ROAST 35; Blade Cut OCEAN SPRAY > CRANBERRY “ne 17-oz. Can EMERALD BABY WALNUTS 39° BO! Bach's Holiday x CHOCOLATES °°?” Maraschino 11-Ox. CHERRIES <<: 29° Fi Whitman DINNER 9Q° <2" | MINTS ts" Real Good, Fanc y SWEET PICKLES WHOLE DILL STICKS or SWEET WAVES Your 39°" 16-01, Choice LIBBY’S _) PUMPRIN | Strained Whole Fresh Maine Y ovsTERs 12 Oz. Container 89: Butterfield Whole-irish POTATOES te genalee| |All Flavors - [ROY | |ROYAL ] ——fteaaee Norn Cartinn socom ght ear wih a7 fr Bae pe oY 2 Gas, Se a a ge tes ale Sigg ry ety Aer Se es % . S ; ; . eas \ ¢ A, : “THE PONTIAC mises’ « tab xs Ne Soy oo Wy Vine we one eas es ans > “ “8 3 gee Se, Pie a eee ze r ees i Bee apd lege ie Nena we = . eae amateur, won the Oregon Gelfapolis Lakers figures Assn. medal play title for the! Lovellette will be a better basket- a 35:16 edge in games. M4 holes oss of excess weight. Bob Prall, 20-year-old Salem: Coach John Kundla of the } Minne Clyde ball scorer this season glue to his is today’s éreatest whiskey value! wal “ay polit ance z 2 Pr. Code Ne. S81 NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION, NEW YORK » 86 PROOF ¢ 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS THEY MEET AGAIN — The Rev, Bob Rich- ards, U. S. Olympic track and field member from | LaVerne, Calif., has a reunion at Olympic Village | near Melbourne with Bagnar Lundberg of Swe- den. The Rev. Richards was gold medalist in the pole vault at 1952 Olympics and Lundberg was | third in the same event. They will meet again in the 16th Ciympiad ‘Starting November 22nd. tented ‘City, College:.ot New ‘pe but Wilisenses' ts represent, New. York state in. the Dean Heating TES: 1 NCAA, eastern playotts; Week-End Hunters RIFLED | wsutarer IPL INSULATED SLUGS | THERMO 16--20--410 Gauge. -2-n0e~e| BOOTS v of Reg. $15.95 x sqe 4 i iieenbot ar i Landy’ Showing Is Poor in Practice MELBOURNE (?—John Landy’sals in the Games opening a week ‘miserable showing at Geelong de-| | veloped into a major subject for! | rainy weather discussion among | Oly mpic athletes of other nations | eectary at the rapidly filling Olym- pic Village. * * * The world's premier miler, hold- jer of the 3:58 world record, ran a} stiff-kneed second_trom ast in the | | big field of the two-mile race last | night at a hometown track meet ito evoke sad remarks from: his fellow. Australians They had put great hopes on his slim shoulders for gotd med- FULL ROAD HAZARD - fore Co November BLACK SIDEWALLS GUARANTEE REGARDLESS OF TIME USED OR MILES DRIVEN SPECIAL AL _ SIZE REGULAR] SALE 6.00x16 $14.00 | $11.95 DEA k E A K 6.50x16 $16.00 | $14.95 PERMANENT TYPE pti | cme | aie ANTI-FREEZE 7.60x15 $18.80 | $14.95 ‘Reg. 9 8 8.00x15 $20.05 | $15.95 $3; 25 8.20x15 $20.05 | $15.95 GAL, All Prices Plus Exchange WHITE SIDEWALLS AVAILABLE ‘cials kept the press away, from today. “ But Landy still insisted he'd run in the 5.000 as well as the 1,500- meters in the Games. He had a dedicated look in his’ room today as he telephoned his jmother after limping about the duplex apartment. * * * A barricade of Australian offi- but Landy let the outside world know “I intend to ease down slightly in my training for the next few days, but at present I intend to go on with my races at the Olym- pics.” Bert Guyot, Australian track: and field team manager, conceded Landy's effort last night ‘“‘was no help = * e * He said Landy suffered a ‘‘deep seated shin soreness, but he's made no arrangements for treat- -ment.”” He added: “He'll be in the race. If I were a competitor (I couldn't disregard him.” | Landy was only one of several j}track stars who created an arm- ada of groans which always echo |these pre-games days 1 « * * A batch of Americans moaned | whitefacedly in the mess hall.) ae they successfully m anaged ‘of steaks, that they were suffering) | possible to get down an excellent eicheoil stomach aches which they per. | sonally charatterized as “food! poisoning.” . Ohe of the most. notable was) Thane Baker, 100 and 200-meter | man who many are tipping as al upset winner in ‘the! sprints. Baker claimed he ran last! nfght in great discomfort ag did, Rafer Johnson. However, they didn't look like invalids yesterday or today and American officials said the team was in magnificent shape. Despite an irritating rainfall and strong winds some athletes of all nations beat their way around the Olympic Village workout track. 7° HUNTING $ 95 co AT. 42 Ag Pov 95 Scorlet Insuleted Hood va S168] "Saw rat 916°] > $499 HAWN’S SPORTS SHOP FE 2-7621 Greeks Traditionally Lead Olympic Parade MELBOURNE W — George) Routhbais, a 6-3 Greek pole vauler| will have the honor of leading the| Olympic athletes into Melbourne's: Cricket Grounds next week in opening ceremonies for the 1956 Games | The Greek team traditionally] leads the parade of nations and! Roumbais, 27, was selected to lead his contingent by the Greek chet de mission. | Factory Adjustment fs PECIAL EASY r BUDGET TERMS NO MONEY DOWN! TIRE Co. TUBELESS TIRE. HEADQUARTERS ° : FREE PARKING, Open 9 9 ni Pontiac’ Motorist Headquarters}... TW. Huron FE s-0424 -* - —when you can get the same protection with _J&R's “PERMA-TEST”’ and for so much less — no finer quality made! . Save the difference! 3.25 VALUE! of finda 0 OX gel he se J&R AU WHY PAY MORE! } & R "PERMA-TEST” is a permanent type anti- freeze ——@ non-evaporating ethylene glycol formula . ../ it won't boil off, one filling lasts all winter! You omn't buy better protection so why pay high Prices. JaR “SUPER-TEST”” Methanol Base Anti-Freez WHY PAY MORE? =yen v ey less be hgh bing pa for lng proton m5 N. SAGINAW | FREE PARKING = 88: || quality! Antirust methanol formula’ TO STORES ~ eee t —_ Le : 16 S. Cass ARMY JOE'S 32 S. Saginaw § ' SURPLUS 2.0022 TARPAULINS FE 9x12 tA iF ” © * iw & — Manila Rope. CLOSEOUT SALE on HUNTING COATS © Heavy Wool and Nylen Cloth © Flannel Lining REG. $15.95 SALE PRICE .. . $2.99 Drawers $1.79 Shirts . $1.39 Fleece Lined Drawers $2.39 25% Weel f Drawers $2.89 Genuine Gov't — Brond New Korean Boots Warm feet at 40 degree below zero.with _ ees ees Seat $12.95 rm. ta Sole Socks, 79 SEE "JOE_SAVE | DOE " & ¥ ‘ WE. GIVE MOUDEN'S RED TRADING STAMES ~ THE, PONTIAC PRESS. _ruunspay, NOVEMBER 2 15, 1956 - i) Our Air Force ‘of the Pie " a wv lided Missiles With Atomic Weapons lo Be Major Striking Power in 10 Years tal ballistic missiles will take the SAC assignments. So will new air- breathi: missiles, powered by’ conven jet engines. 2 Cd at aL Se planning missle bases “we are utilizing the principles of dis- persion and hardening.” Gen; Lind-| say reveals, “Hardening,” he ex- plains, ‘is construction of a base) so that a direct attack by an atomic weapon will not destroy) _|mere than one-third of the facili- a as chip usaiiacs ek ike tinental missiles will some day be based at the plant site where they are finally assembled,’ In this case the only AF officer is the one who pushes the button. ‘ Choose Low. Man for Bridge Project | LANSING ® — Fresh Construc- tion Co. of Iron River was low bidder on a bridge construction ‘project in Mackinac County, the State Highway Department said) today. of $196,726 on ‘construction of a From Two Wives, ‘him a-divorce from his first wife.’ | No children are involved by either: The company entered a low bid ; ties or capabilities.” bridge to carry the relocation of Only isolated bits of information M134 o¥ér the Pine River 14 miles’ have leaked out about new chem- northwest of Hessel. ical power for aircraft to be used: . in radically new engines. But it’s * believed that. chemical planes will Iron Company Fights be flying about the same ‘time .as et in Court atomic-powered planes are ready. i Both of these developments will LANSING # — Thé Cleveland | today asked .the; be having severe competition from Cliffs Iron Co. the guided missiles. State Supreme Court for leave to, i nO) Pine Fe ' em esteatins. § és euntt ot a 1952 “franchise fee air-to-air recket to the ICBM, are | , : The company, which has exten- = vo) crt fan haar sive holdings in the Upper Penin- |sula, is disputing a 1952 assess-| The increasing civilian charac-'ment of $114,236 i an extra as-| ter of the Air Force, even intrud-|sessment of $62,667 | ‘ing into combat units, is already) The Michigan Corporation tax ‘apparent. Food services are being appeal board set the assessment taken over by civilian contractors, but the company has been fighting | for example. So is pilot training. it through the courts for the = ictal eat “BIGGEST MISSILE — The Red- stone is.shown, soaring into the stratosphere. WASHINGTON (NEA) — A peek at the U. S from now, given by its top brass reveals a radically altered fighting force in the making Pilots will he obsolescent, with guided missiles performing close te three-quarters of theif mis- sions. The first family of atomic and chemically powered planes will be growing obsoicte. Only atomic ammunition will he in Use, AF units will be widely dis. | persed in very small groups, A big percentage eof civilians will have combat-type AF assign ments, This future look at the Air Force comes from reports made at the 10th Annivérsary celebration of the Air Force Association Since becoming an_ independent service the Air Force has grown from 306,000. men to 910,000 men. The 3,000 aircrafy it had have been replaced by jets and newer planes For: example, the B29—the best bormtber then—has been: successive- ly s@eceeded by the BS, the B36, the B47 and now by the 600-mph B32. There are 131 wings—with 157 the goal—as compared to 6 wings The AF badget has zoomed from $1.2 billion to $17.7 billion. s * = Within the next decade guided missiles will be performing at least 530 per cert of the missions of the Strategic Air Command and 30 per cent of the missions of the Tac- tical Air Command, according te Maj. Gen. Richard C. Lindsay, a top AF ope rations Officer. a2eaeaea SLIP. COVER Cotton Knit — Colors: Chairs, Reg. Price $3.98... Sofas, Reg. Price $7.98. .... Cotton Barkcloths — Colors Red, Green, Brown, Gray Chairs, $12.98 Value ... Sofas, $21.98 Value .... | \OSENBERGER’S 34 South Saginaw St Store Hours 9:30 - 5:30, Open Bronings Mon. O Fri wi 9 Pw. tt _ Vuvvvvedvvew Air Force 10 years! Fri. and Sat. This Week ona ‘Mon.,

. i i as i Ad ee oa Sand DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, Nov. 14 (AP) — Prices pa sick z5 4 a ‘3 : ri rheit ii 32 s~ i hig 50 2.25 bu. sate. ‘, basket. Let bu. Lettuce, Romaine, Ne. 1. 1.50- , Cabhege, Wo. 1. ss 2 it 8 No. 1.00-1,.24 bu. Musterd. No. 1. .75-1.95 bu. nw! 5 bu, a ods ye 4, faroiee. Faces: ag 30-40" case; Medium. it 0-12.00: Small 7.50-8.50, DETROIT EGGS . Nov, 14 (AP)—Eiges, f.0.b. cases included, federal state Ohites: Grege A jumbo 51-59 weighted average 34%; medium 27-32 7 . ""Sreene: Grade 2 40-44% wid ‘avg 42: medium 26-32% wid avg 3: — 21-04 wid ev ; bg c large evra A “extra large 45-46; divas, m edium ‘Grade A extra large 43-45; > medium 24-29; small 20-23. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, Novy. 14 (APi — Butter ond; receipts 946,000, ~aopie oey 38%: mi 3844; 32%: dirties 25%; checks receipts 29. - CHICAGO POTATOES 1,' Communi 1 better feeling in Wall Street, brok- ‘lers said, 13 and Youngstown Sheet and Tube fornia was To-| But Beat l Nickel dropped -| about 3, i better atmosphere in the Middle “isey) was up a fraction. 4! on 1,500 and U. S. Steel up % at : — Petroleum and Molybden- cur rent) Bethichem Steel was up evskal over a point. 6 oe ® Lukens Steel which rested yes- terday after its sensational rise of 15% on Monday and Tuesday added around 6 points today. American Sugar refining was up around 3. High-priced Superior Oil of Cali- up another 7 points. Gulf, Oil rose more than 2 and Royal ‘Dutch about a point on the East where these companies have high stakes. Standard Oil (New Jer- oS * * Leading rails were mostly steady. U. S. Steel was up a frac- "\tion, Motors were firm, Du Pont dropped around a point. Allied Chemical rose around a point. Opening blocks included Virginia Carolina Chemical up % at 21% on. 17,500 shares, Curyser up '% at 72 on 1,000, Gulf Oil up % at 11142 71% on 1,500. * * s. On the American stock exchange prices were higher. Gains were’ made by Creole Petroleum, Inter- gy ee bonds were higher. Yesterday the Associated Press, : average of 60. stocks declined $1.20) to $178.80. | NEW YORK (Prices otvaical sf, See ey ee ~" MILKMAID IN MANHATTAN ability. — Manhattan, Kan., that is. Con- nie Morgan, freshman at Kansas State College, has been chosen |! queen of the college’s Agricultural Barnwarmer festivities. Connie es le he RE AE A Re ee Saris Fe A SANTA FE, N,. M. GNS) — Santa Fe, N. M., the oldest cap.) ital in the United- States, faced a fight today involving “progress versus charm.” Santa Fe, the ancient city of dusty old adobe walls and nar. | row dirt streets, has long attracted| | } Lodge Calendar Special communication Pontiac Lodge No, 21, F. & A, M., Fri. Nov. | 16th, 7:30 p. m., to confer F. C. degree. Samuel E. Smith. W. M. —Adv. | News in Brief New York Stocks iLate Morning Quiet) A $10 girl's bicycle was_report-| ed stolen yesterday from the | igrounds of Madison Junior High |School, Pontiac police said. - Ae Stirs Fight in Old City potnt out that with just a. little | comes dewm, or a Materis heute vehiteciivs ‘tourists. interested in history, ro- mance and an atmosphere which lean best be described as “charm. ing.” But there are many who think it ridiculous to keep bumpy streets |and ‘antiquated systems, There are Many who object to the adobe- type house, ‘where-brick would be ‘more weitariee. * shane! Wahisinds in “progress” bit of work in Santa Fe it could be made into just as nice a town as, say, Albuquerque, The believers in “charm” fight | the “progressives” on every ; front. Every time an old tree |* a ee this particular seg- of Sante Fe comes te life es indignant vigor, ’'The most recent “Save Santa Fe” alarm was sounded as leaders of the movement helped draft an ordinance patterned after laws now national stunt. “But I want to stress thing,” the impudent, energetic Kennedy said in ene of his rare serious and moments, “The Russian people I met were helpful, friendly, cooperative heeplitab} A. for = 1 the first day that Kennedy on Soviet soil as a special emissary for video performer Art Linkletter, he began angling — at which he is obviously adept—to get Mr. average Russian through the Iron curtain—if he found FOUND MAN _He found his man all right. him. The Kremlin saw to that. But the hand- picked ‘‘average’’. Muscovite turned out to be Viktor Sergeievich Gu- riev, a gray-haired 60-year-old en- gineer at the Molotov Poliographic Combine, which prints Russian en- cyclopedias, Kennedy spent 10 days rush- ing futilely from ministry to min- istry to agency to bureau to what have-you trying te ofl the tracks for his average man's departure from Russia, “T ran over to the American em- Council Picks. Wideman to Fill Kreps’ Position; Two Men Sworn In Howard E. Wideman was elected by his fellow councilmen ‘last night as Sylvan Lake’s new inayor.. wikia: 45, a former member of the village and City Council, succeeds Anthony Kreps, the pre- vious mayor, who lost out Nov. 6; in his bid for a fourth three-year term on the council * * oe RD Robert Menees was nominated. as mayor pro-tem for a one-year term. — Sworn in as the newly-elected councilmen at the organizational meeting were William B, Taylor and John N. Doherty. The new mayor: was-a member of the village council of Sylvan Lake in 1942 before f incorporated as a city in 197. He continued his tenure through November 1955 when he announced he would not seek re-election. * = * Alter the death of former Coun- cilman Frank Baldwin, Wideman returned to fill Baldwin's unex- pired term in April of this year. He lives at 2249 Avondale Ave. bassy and asked for a special visa! { that ‘wouldn't require my boy to/Constable Frank L. Stott. William) The man there Bigford was appointed alternate if I got a Rus- Constable. Tom Reese was re be “hy to the three types of “Santa Fe Sian to go, they'd arrange ine pointed = attorney. isa.’ Finally Kennedy wound up bei ing | | Sent to Intourist, ‘which handles ail. ‘tourist matters in Russia, to see a Mr. Moulin. “That took two days,” he said, “and right away Moulin gave me | and is sales manager at the Clark Oil Co. * * » Also sworn in last evening was. Sears fo Finance ; Time Payments ; th when ning four were when Po Fhe eR es mete supports give wy i a windstorm. A more thidertand ‘precaution, iphases of home-lifé, but leave ‘your TV set to an experienced re- /pairman. Even when a set is dis- jconnected “and has been turned joe for hours, there is often a rong enough charge left“in. the the business about fingerprinting | CHICAGO ® — Sears, Roebuck aonaene to cause serious and-. and said Russia couldn't submit one of her — te such miliation. be | “T let him talk himself out andi then told him about my deal for the’ special visa. He went into a ‘of shock. I went out to get a \while he conferred with his Ea e * state) hair-| i “When I came back he told me it. ing requirement. He said I'd to make arrangements to change! man go to America.” for home. County Deaths Herman A, Faller would be unfair to the average So- viet citizen to select one individual “me and free him from the fingerprint-| Charge customers amounted to have the law for all Soviet citizens be-) being financed by more than 200 ‘fore they'd consider letting my ‘banks around the country. mise measure and recommended. -That tore it as far as Kennedy source of funds, said it also will to city council some sort of law Was concerned. He settled for mak-| continue its practice of _ selling that would set up the ordinance as ing some films of the inside of Gu- instalment metas to banks. \a compromise measure. It retom-|Tiev’s home and boarded a plane | sult in the incongruity of old adobe} WATERFORD TOWNSHIP in one block and glittering chrome Service for Herman A, Fuller, 57, | 4180 Elizabeth Lake Rd., who died land Park Cemetery. had tived in. 14 years, Surviving are his Ida; ten daughters and five at home: brothers in Ohio. Aussie Farm Output CANBERRA — Australia’s Mass meetings were called,’ after a ten week illness ‘yesterday, ‘will be at 2 p.m. Friday at Pursley_ Funeral Home, with burial in Rose-' A watchman on construction at the GMC Fisher Body Division, he the county . for wife, sons, of Clarkston, Mrs, Erma Dezurs of Rochester, Mrs. Maxine White lot Pontiac, and Linda Lee Fuller three sisters and two * ‘Shows 20 Per Cent Gain total farm prdduction increased by 20 per cent in the last three years. Wool output climbed from 998,000,- 000 pounds to: 1,280,000,000 during f 687,000 tons to 1,327,000, and Fossil Find Extends History of Plants 4) onte USDA) — et a 2 ie ie am wn poultry [peiatoge arrivals 0: | teaee, "304: retail ir ea: ie at x. Bool . = Pleading guilty to reckless driv- lin effect in Carmel, Monterey and wrolieig er Mant type. i |Gemen nd sow: market dull: niaaho-Orenea| Allied, St Sire. | Fi fon st. 8 aot 5 Seine aang preg a of toy (Santa Barbara, Calif. ‘The law’ Rn: eties 4-b05 Red Rivér Valley Pontiacs 265-2.75 {Arum tad: “ages ie “tee peer by Ponting Municipal a ‘aot ceed aoa id ; % 7 te fone $837: is oo Auta ERE its Kresge. 68 —. pat \Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. bulidings, make them stick rough-/ 7S Se oy; : : © ons 900 : Marat wong Te tenen| Grain Prices | Am Gast Bi ES Lo ae = R sale — Holy Name ‘Style’ — Pueblo, Hacienda and/¥ | ‘active holida ne! m= lige @ My.....633\Church School auditorium, Bir- | Territorial. f seoeralty smale com CHICAGO GRAIN [Am Motora ... $6 Lge | afponeust onge Sig, ase EES, Oe ~ Cocems 88 Bee a eS. Grmusehem. Pri. Nov. 16, 9 a. m. (0 ARCHITECTS IN ARMS ae, eae : | am Seating | 3 Lorillard 16.719 p. m. adv . > being Dee ne aon Mareh wees Rye Am Sme! A Martin. or ae But even before the proposed - me zy! sbalt ict Meret : hee : Hey Am Quenya coy ous Ba It your friend’s in jail and needs jaw got to the city planning com- Sad otierines * falty|July | 230 Deon”... 156%) A Rirewee aa Me oe Po. FE 8-966 or MA a ‘81. | mission, a wellorganized local j Sort, + 2a March . 13742) Anscond 3 Mpls Hon ... 85.2/ AAV. ' group of architects polished. up) cuICAGO POULTRY | Moret tye Fale ss TAM) Armee Gl 8 ation MAM eal Swiss Steak Dinner, St. John's @rguments against what they CHICAGO, Nov. 14 (AP) — Live poultry | May -"-. 148% Nor. 13.90) Atchicen 36.3 Monsan Ch’; 38.4 Lutheran Church, Hill St. Thurs., jtermed the principal of restrictive a Peceipts 1.131 coope ‘Hot step 2 SEGRE Bee 2 B88) Ae Refin” 3S Mont Ward .. 417! Nov. 18 from § to 7. Adults, $1.75. "|styte. 7. | eR a te a Maren : 14.30) Balt & . Tee a fat bine 36.3 Children under 12—-$1. —Adv.| A spokesman for the group said: |, pa | SSAA 2s EE SSS a! mammage sale, League ot Cath-|-Tt implies that the best that ean 13's 13%; old | : | Beth Steel. MRA Nat Grove... 401! one women, Parke St. Fri, 16th,\°€ accomplished in Santa Fe has gt A Livestock JBsstvots «Rat HO tg aM ~adv. already been done, Such an ordin aE ree: | hen turkeys ; | Rove Sy. ge ORY Central... 26.8) ‘ance would be against the tradition’ ve DETROIT LIVESTOCK | Budd Co ..... 9 «Nt 304 Rummage sale, First Congrega- of Santa Fe.;-a traditi f growth, CU DETROIT, Nov, 15 (AP)—Hogs—Sal-| Burr 30.9 Rec! & West @4) nel Church, E B Mill ie pathy th, able 100. Not enough hogs offered early Camp * 386 edi oe av slp then = i usons a Bil development, change and progress. ito make s market. undertone weak. | Can Dy - 33 Ohio ol 39.6) 5¢S.. Friday, Nov. 16, 4:30 to 9 p.™M. If there had. been a restrictive style Sal Pac G & El 495 Saturday, Nov. 17, 8:30 a. m. to 12) ‘supplies include armound ughter| Capital Air] .. 25.7 520 CG air. 17 ‘noon. aa ordinance in the 1700's, this prog- ff ae = nd 300, cows “carried bang - 2, Param Pict... 28.5) iressive development would not | Seimei yet emere OF G4 Free ac: Sal, Mtmmmnge cole, 188, Fim jhave occured.” . ed. inst -Thuteday: trading | Cities Sve... 668 PS a": Ziiby the Jimmy Dey: Post & Vets. Fren hS [ ty, active carly in week: inter] Clark Epuiw is Pree. CoM: Sh 3iand Aux., Sat. morning, 7 to 12. The stegan of the progrestives very dull due to a ng ys: Climax eis Phelps D aa ~ae became: “Let us be free to bulld . slaughter steers heifers slow, weak t Pea .... 402 Snico ...... 4 "- history, ed ; ater qoeuine higher on apiantey;_ cows rt | Seis Fas ws 1S Re we 2 ee not archeology. wea een r after ween OO “* 53 : u "se" ggg: Phill Pet... 52.1 The : Paris Crowds _Cheer carly, SGyanceulig stocksre,& nd feed Sel Our “2 An} Pasty ‘Mus. 43.4 will have fresh dressed poultry for|,. —_ at Maurice Chevalier on sites 26:6: “most choice’ to tow prime|Conram hy S88 Prata'g.... as [Our holiday. 484 Auburn Ave./ oeeN Oe poteerens tt a bela 1080-1200 Hoe, | 26.00-26-00; bulk mined Gent TS as Fuliman os ,|PE 32-0119, EE 2-0110. —Adv. Retu ~ 50: th 2 ont COPA&S .. \< oe S 2 : 24.80; load thigh ‘ehalee O61. i sinuchter Cont, Mat :.-- 04 Rovub wii’, seal, MUmmage Sale, Gat. Nev. 17, peljuye % 50: os . ontios Copper Rng... 46 ‘Rex rue Pais $.¢)from 8 to.12 noon. Central Meth- cont H Corn Pa ..... 28.1 .. 64.3 Od —- iatitk tae wade a per pre s mort wiaity "ald Slanaele. caste od Gurtist Wr sibke i Re op 8 42 dist Chron: 38 5, Biron: —AS¥-/mended to the council that the! sé the or. (neliers, 12.00-16-00; late bulk utility cows « Paiean ce Royal But. 100.2 F.. 4 and Bake Sale, os gortneace apply only to the older return very Paris neigh ¢ - 322 .Bafeway St. .. 666/Nov. 17, 244 Baldwin, near Vir-/section of. town. hood ‘where he got his start as an i080: 8 ime wisiey and commerciat bulls| Doug Aire ee Jos Lead |. 41.2 t a . entertainer half a century ago, 115.7: some. “gnaer 1100 ie cutter ‘bulls Hi gh polls me a mathe: St ae Adv. INCONGRUOUS Ce ee a tainae tee nee Sek Gee TESS Wencne| cet “= Set Heap BI.” lace vemat and baie sn, t60 Slam wate oko tet Wr would te ad. a jc u vos 38. sees 0 felt it would re- iF | Sinclair , .... 62.3 re oh tA an Ee BSc Pal bere rench variety an : mt ey aa | Pane Mar’... Bou Ryo. sss: 464 7 screen star, after sea last ont BF at Rel si 4H perry, Ra... 4 in the next, ‘The’ : se ts gpeeriah factor: efenlets otic Mach .. & Ba ou Ing ‘ : $4) Sa s Russians house, now known as the . my Be 4 ‘| Ol N 83 “Alhambra . Maurice Chevalier,” |Souch, shove Sa00 afeer 106-38 0 eck Tre 222. 98.2 Bievens is + Y ™ we aches made, new groups orgun- im sitented on the edge of the (*2¢ lo choice mostly 19.00-26.00 {ote: Gen | om vyeee O86 Dita “8 lan to Ste U ized, and some public-spirited citi- jutility and standard 13,00-19.00; cull and | Gem Pos. ..... 45 i | zens started a fund for th - Meniimontant workingman's dis- low utility mostly 1.00-13. Gen Mills .... 66.4 aun OF Ba + em: triet im tha Beart of Paris. | Sheep—Salable 25. Market nominaily| Ge" Motors ... 45.1 tyyq, co” Bt F ar O t t servation of old Santa Fe. Res cme algae aes Rae's... #2 Fee oow .: mals QT /ULPU The net result’ was. that the It was in this neighborhood that active. uneven, but higher Monday; int-|Quiett? g--+++- “4 Thomo: Bd *.. ] ROME (INS) {planning commission is now ‘recon-|), Maurice first began singing in fee or oe hy advance est Goodrich dus 4 Tren me 3) United Nati and Food tat Aan end sidering the ordinance that would cafes to round out his meager pay, setite. mostiy steady: bu andiGrah Paice |. 1.5 Underwd . ... 211 - Place all new building plans befoge as an apprentice in a thumbtack, s2ict ,.rovlet slaughter jambs 19:00-/Gt west s .°: 21° 02 Carbide 113 ,iture Organization report that the|, committee for ft He was then 12 years)? an Witty and low ood. 16.00. Quit ‘ita Gait Air, Lin 40.6 Soviet Union is planning huge in- joa while the snsleaiadee re-| a 18.00. choice slaughtet ewes Hooker 11 Bait Pratt 2 a3 ye. in agricultural production considers, ‘an uneasy f lies ; _ Indust hey "2°. 38 iS Rud ..... 484 un over historic city, Predictions sr sen | © CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Talent Bu... ie Us sien "":. 32. | In the “Monthly Bulletin of Agri. gre thes the Sropaetess “charm” Chevalier, who turned 68 a few _cmcaco, N “ll Gene Bee z mi! | Nov, 14 (AP) (USpa) —| Inspir o eels A + tural Economics and Statistics” |witi wi the ulti weeks. ago, sought to show. how faa hows, 2.000: fairly setive: steady | imterak Te °c. at Woe APE -- 294 /AO specialists report that thelsante Fe actual nee named and \itgher eh ‘welaghts over Seb end cn) iet Nick SUG” Wien & oo": 148] 0.8.8, ; ma. 28 soe neni ‘has changed _ Spry nimble he still is by|his 2. etnies ox 8 (204 on it Pape aainertal 4 7| U-5S.S.R. plans to increase its meat little in 600 years. a rock-and-roll number to ste te strong: mont 23 nse lots | int Teatel: 13 ae @h & T 103.6 | production by 100 per cent, its milk Mis grmlice repertory. lote 1-3 "mostly 2100-220 10 14.06-105; uakl ie eae ed sa eg ae — co | rade 18.00-15.10; most “4-3. 940-310 Ih,| NEED ape Cue. Of tes by 15t per mt. LON You. Tie I P But, by oe own eae this § t 2-3 240-270 ib.) NEW YORK. aa he = Genelee by ‘ . 4.00-14.25: few lots mos | 280-315 th) the Associated Pres takes him lot of a lot of effort. |13.79-1400; weights under 190 1b se 10 5 Roe tar enna i Cannes Men Wore C Said he: Tai 8 fee het 2.300 I > soe Indust Rails Util Stocks| SHOws that methods to ore ravat “4 can still get ‘hot’, but I need’ seers veaiine | nee tee liso active cok aco Gave Pe 34 ie Bi or aaeeae wr cane Soke mane to Bed in 80s i tive, “* ; inspt what Soviet farm : a telegram the night before to a *m te 6 Year nro. Base Bes i384 Ba ite leaders saw in the United States ” ; » weak to mostiy 60 fi-. 7" *«** * . y a ent ae Hah Sie be etna i dae REE HEL BY | OME int tet Tones en appatenty wore neck etc nate eee et faites ® Raman tnt aoe " d prime steers _ DETROIT STOCKS sae a a thowande of BSE oe ic ae ante steers “down. to (C: J. Nephier Co.) | Steater use of mechanization and) The Caivartity ot Michigan's ; reels nad | 2 tem onde choice ta "hugh Plewres after decal potnia wre sighths| 188 rigid and centralized we det ie Ae ole ae eee nationally famous heice heifers 21.00:23.50; ty andj Low Noon : o ng the Cra- entertainment — re ; 3 BOs i “The ' de gat _elters 11.08 diane dard n a Mlece. & “ 2 fa: its attempt to achieve greater|Vat,”” which was. published in New | 13.014 00: ‘canners, ind eutters| oes Gear Gon... 4 of agriculture, the York in 1793.“ Author H. oe They included Matlene Dietrich, /"00-10.00; rhe dca Tt Tees Gary Cooper, Autrey Tee i eeeretin SOR Saeecsa LG kt ATiecee creme gees seals | anal spy Sew insaloniel bs wees r : 5 : who are. Marisa Pavan, Michele Morgan, (7 ,<"?: Tentey 1. ght el bc me Frets Gers: RS 184| (955 to. 322,000 in 1960, and of com. shiek ie: the cone ~ Charles Boyer, Jean-Pierre Au- steer caives 3025: T° tonds Toledo Ba ee P' eravat should be mant and Roberto Rossélini wre Re, jeot temas Tb tending foe ager OP TT Eg nee ects 90.008 to 10 ome, most catetul in examining wheth- e< steers 1625-1800, Ee ate aa ce ce. The Russians also expect to in-| er loose, In his dressing room, Maurice |. Sslsbie ; she it be In all cates of found congratulatory cables from mort ‘shel pood to ee EE: sir abt, te SAG seear tak, organic diseases of the heart, or : 17.60-19 mostly — Danny Kaye, Martine Carol, Oliv jt por ie Average Tax Figures ~ |cates. | 1 a can be: S vey any gieretDe, Roland W. Brown, paleo fa oh imorinis of the leaves. we oes 1,111,100 gallons to 1,322,000 * is-retroactive to-Nov. 7. : s ,and Co. is setting up a subsidiary eyen fatal shock, Meyer explained. corporation to finance time pay-. _ment accounts. 3 ° * | America “Electric eavhv ind helped make the most Chairman Theodore Houser, in ‘nation in the world,” Meyer pointed explaining the move, said the new! out. . “Properly used, electricity unit will provide an additional iprovides us with the comfort and | payment sales.” | As of Sept. 30, 1956, the out- standing balances of the 8,065,000) payment and revolving) use i | $962 million. Of that total, $511,450,000 was Sears, in announcing the new e ie | The ecbiidleicy, wholly owned by Sears, will be called the Sears | Roebuck Acceptance Corp. It is | expected to be in operation by the _end qf this month, At the start, lit will confine its activities to |buying consumer instalment re- — ceivables from Sears. Michigan Bell OKs New Wage Contract DETROIT « — The. 19,600 em- ployes ‘of the Michigan’ Bell. Tele- phone Co. have’ ratified a new contract. The announcement came ‘last night from the Communica- tions Workers of America. For a full week after the old contract expired, Michigan waited under threat of a statewide strike t, which was_a doozy, by the way, source of funds to meet the growth, luxuries our -forefathers never bosses. in volume of the company’s “easy dreamed would one day be a reality, but electricity, like the | genii in Aladdin's lamp, must be in order for it to be a useful harmless servant.” Protect yout children Protect your home—with CYCLONE @ Make your own yard a safe play- ground—improve your you how to put it up yourself and save money booklet. Just and say “Please send me the booklet that tells me how I can fence my home.” * = | Some locals were reported to | have turned down the contract’ because of the failure to upgrade | job classifications. milk