“~~ "THE PONTIAC PREM OVER PAGES — (Detatis Page 1%) 47th YEAR kkkkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1953-30 PAGES ie Be ooo ~ A Master Your Tensions Try Tris Simole [J Of M. Space Shot Success Test of Emotions co merase ae Pontiac Takes. «= Reuther Talks Against... Indian Summer Thunders Aloft A practical examination of your tensions should cover | to Favor Area the different type of emotional upsets of which tension | . ‘ Sm, Ce PP Tn is an impertant part. To help you, we list nine of ne Third Place in , ie a : * " fora Few Days as Transmitters most common types of emotional upsets. After you finish | : -=2\ ite reading about each one, ask yourself: Does this apply to , - Se . me? Does it happen frequently? When it happens, is it 59 Car Sales severe? Does it last a long time? If only a few of these situations apply to you — or —teven if they all apply, but, Indian summer dropped in on the Pontiac area this morning with Re ort {0 Earth |hazy skies and temperatures in ithe 50s Tonight will be cloudy with a' Nose Cone Is Dropped low of 45 degrees. ere arr | Into Atlantic Waters ednesday's g empera- . ture is expected to rise to 52 800 Miles Off Shore | with skies continuing cloudy, the New Auto Figures Top. lonly in a mild way—then| Last Four Years; Ford| e @ he ki | U Sh iM ket | Quick Pay Hikes sis, sssermcarie tc) Ure Shore of Marke weatherman said. WALLO SLAND. Va. | i Nine mile an hour winds south- P rf | ) — A’ five-stag ocke should give you relief. | Pontiac has won its share) ee wip aaa - % t somewhat tonight and shift to/Murled a tiny radio trans- northwesterly late tomorrow. mitter 1,050 statute miles Thirty-four was the lowest ¥e- into a cold, cloudless sky to- cording in downtown Pontiac pre- ceding 8 am, at 1 p.m. the day. The nose cone dropped reading was 52. into the Atlantic about 28 ; ‘minutes tater some 800 | miles off shore. Cranberry Crop At Ann Arbor, University of Michigan scientists, who \designed today’s successr | in Cancer Scare. Pee , launched five-stage t rfl ; f Everybody has something to of 1959 laurels in the auto-| q e end Of werry about. Some people cause (mobile industry’s biggest! themselves additional woe by year since 1955, plac ing| Belding’s Stahlin Hears ticle oer ip cia use third in sales behind Chev-| of 4 Road Men Getting} tai health ctinie because she |rolet and Ford. | tomps Each 2 Weeks — she was worrying too . More new cars were sold ° in the United States in the LANSING (®—Four right-of-way] Tyr See eonant eae nena, {first nine months of this experts got sizable pay inoreases|rjeq: she was out of a job, out |Year than in any similar every two weeks when they quit'of savings, and faced eviction; period over the past- four the Washington State Highway De-, years, it was announced to- partment to take similar jobs in 1. Do You Worry A day. Michigan, a Senate committee has According to R. L. Polk & Co Great Deal figures reported by Automotive t expressed sat- Warning Claims West isfaction with the firing. AP Wirephote been told “Ev ‘j 'NION LE "RS GET TOGE "2 — Three Ose . es qendntene Ane cae ° | verything was good right from Pay ut ail oar hax ued abort News. a total of 4635.35 cars UNION LEADERS GET TOGETHER Three Jo eph Curran, vice president; Jame B. Carey, Coast Variety Made he at as . 8 a ie anaes : . of the were sold during the first nine} officials of the AFL-CIO Industrial Union depart-. secretary-treasurer, and Walter Reuther, presi- | H f = S jime & art through to the finish, = Per cent ince they wipes - months of this year. This figure} Ment get together today at the opening of a two- dent. Reuther has plenty to say about the T-H armtu y vproy William H. Hansen, university re- jobs last fall or spring, the com- Time? was topped only in.1953 and 1950.| day convention of the department. Left to right: law and its injunction clause. search engineer who headed the mittee learned yesterday as_ it opened an investigation into the| road agency's administration. Total domestic sales for this pe- WASHINGTON (AP) — The g0y. ee, rite by pinged hea riod last year was 3,635,546 Ik F: , d St ] 0 S L d ernment warns that part of the th neue ing ns e fee — The figures are based on new € ravore ee irm, Say Leaders West Coast cranberry crop is con-| [here were no rude surprises. car registrations, regarded as taminated by a _ weed-killer that | The 57-foot tall recket, weigh- Highway and civil service of- her doctor suspected her of tu- Ves ‘oduce cancer rats i than 7,000 ; . the only accurate accounting of oe can produce cancer in rats, ng more pounds ficials . —— — — a — | + ° : gag Ae — Toercutosts.—Aret — the poor girtt | car sales. ~ * * __| when loaded, was hurled into the nd the s P Ses, | wanted to know why she was! pontiac increased ils share of a= = The warning brought a chorus air te send back new data on commonplace. of protests and denials from cran-| the electron density of space ; ' If, under the circum. th é rket fr 958 to 1959 P __ ; . = Sen. John H. Stablin (R-Beld- worrying er the total market from 1958 to y berry growers and crop experts.| more than 800 miles up. . stances, she did not worry, then with a 1.5 per cent hike in car WASHINGTON (AP) — AFL-! Art J. Goldbe st tp ane ae ; , : ing), committee chairman and a she would really have ‘cause for Sales. CIO leaders, sharply critical of ers ees an phan é : é ” om ne Preside : z or ki J- Stahlin’s criticism followed tes-/OF medical examination’ | Second place Ford sold 1,104,774 ley law to end the 16-day steel en on 0 Ars c n ent so at nei er labor; He did not say how much might at the nearby Aberdeen, Md., prov . i, Saas 0 nen pA y . nor management involved in a big ’ in round. He said “Indications timony by Herbert E. Streukens,| This sounds like the way som strike as “a political payoff to strike would know what ern-|be affected, or where it may be a ‘sound that all worked the department's chief appraiser; People feel on Monday morning.) Fellowing Pontiac's third | steel companies.” mental ‘action te expect’ That! On sale. No reason has been found eel pretty oo mee Floyd F. Knutzen, assistant chief}a9d the way some people fecl! piace, in order, were Plymouth, | ~*~ *© * | would put both sides under pres-,'0 suspect current crops from wis-| “« appraiser; Ben E. Stenton, chief/¢very morning. | Oldsmobile, Rambler, Buick, | The White House declined to | e rac sure to reach a voluntary settle-|Consin, New Jersey and Massa- SEEN ALONG COAST right of way consultant, and Ro-| Clara is an example. Up tO} Mereury, Dedge and Cadillac. comment on Mazey’s speech, ann before an emergency de. Chusetts, he said. | The vapor trail and smoké left bert T. Harrison, Detroit district|9:30 each morning, she is int By corporation, Geuiral Mo. | Made to the AFL-CIO industrial Vote | 924 421 b t velops, he said , | And in Lansing, Michigan cran-|as the rocket roared upward could appraiser. possible. She can't stand the sight | ors’ ace: OF the Marie stipped | won department oO s - r U * * * [berry produces use “little, if any” |be seen along mest of this Dele- Little more than a year ago, |! her husband and children. 1.4.1) per cent to 43.69, its low-| Both George Meany, AFL-ClO | Opposition Group May Under the Taft-Hartley law now,|sprays on their crops, George S./ware - Maryland . Virginia penin- all four were employed in Wash. jEveryone had to tip-toe around). figure since 1952. Ford took| president, and Walter Reuther, | Le Fiah Goldberg said, management! McIntyre, state director of agri-|sula. There was virtually no wind, ington at salaries ranging trem |the kitchen lest they touch off an'o7 <9 per cent: Chrysler, a post-; Auto Union president, charged in Take Fig t to Court knows the government ultimately,culture said last night tand the long column hung motion- $6,440 to $1,668. Responding to explosion lwar low of only 10.85 per cent; | ether speeches that the njunction : will be compelled to seek an 80-! * * * less for several minutes. advertisements placed by the After her third or fourth cup of American Motors, a company rec- | procedure used to end the steel A possible court fight loomed day injunction | MelIntyre noted that cranberry | whe dhiesl wat atniaeted iv Michigan Highway Department, coffee, she starts to be human lord of 5.92 per cent; and Stude-| strike is = one-sided solution today after Fenton Township voters If it is government policy to pro-.growing is a relatively small in-| the Army's Ballistic Research they were hired at rates rang- (854!". Oddly enough she is @ very |paker-Packard, 2.14 per cent, also, against unions, approved construction of a $3,500,- fect public interest by maintain-| dustry in Michigan. Wisconsin Laboratories based at the Aber- ing from $9,792 to $9,380. jeasygoing person the rest of the|, company record 000 horse race track ing essential production in suchicranberries were also declared deen Proving Grounds, in cooper- ime. e st somethin ee rn ; They said it bore out labor's 7 : — Cy nd |Ume There must be something| Miscellancous makes. mostly charges that the Taft-Hartley Act. Approval of a proposal to re situations, he said, the sacrifice okay alien with the Netlenal Aeve- about facing reality each morning foreign cars, took 9.90 per cent is a slave labor statute that can Zone 200 acres of land for the should be borne equally by both) If the housewife can't determine nautics and Space Administra- which upsets her. of the market, up from 7.74 per ; - i track on U.S. 23 about 15 j sides, not by labor alone where the berries come from and be used to make men work against Sa 5. £3 about 15 mies : cent a year ago their will |south of Flint was given yester- SS SSS SSS the year of the crop, Flemming , said. ‘‘to be on the safe side she! The Army said all phases of the To comply with civil service reg- ulations, however, pay started as low as $7,140 and was increased| every two weeks until it reached; What about you? Are you | tion. the agreed-to level classification.| touchy, jittery? De petty annoy. | OO The union group itself. claiming day in a 924-42) vote ~ — ; . (Conti 4 é 5 2 A _ 7 : ° ntinued on Page 2, Cal. 4) Promotions and pay raises given| ances irritate you way out of \Tippling at Topping to represent seven million labor’ The controversial issue brought Several Offices doran r buy a palatine itil all civil service employes has since| proportion? Do you frumble a union members, adopted a resolu- to the polls about half the quali- : (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) NEW YORK (UPI)—Construc- |tion criticizing the government's |fied voters, said Township Clerk Will Be Closed tion workers who finished the |action as an attempt at strike-|Gus Lutz. See kine area waiee \adioeaiaiia es « « | wut the Citizens Committee for (O71 Veterans Day Steel Starts Trickling yesterday didn't get their usual “This injunction was imposed eaten Township, which bas Will Offer Free Service Here beer and pretzel] topping - out {deliberately after the strike began| fought the track. may new ge te - ‘ - | party. ‘The . building company |tp pinch te industry in its moat court in an effort to block it, |all Oakland County offices, and the b t Out ut tO Be slow orm edd OcIe y putting up the 30-story Imperial sensitive nerve center—its pocket-| x Spemcente) tat ths creey make. pose prose ene en eae U Pp Pontiac banks. their branches, House decided that the topping- | book.”’ the union resolution said.. The committee is made up large-| bureaus in the sheriff's department out party for 400 workers ought | The Supreme Court upheld|ly of property.owners and church will be closed all day tomorrow in| PITTSBURGH (P—A small quantity of newly made = ; to go along with the spirit of the | Saturday the Taft-Hartley law in-| groups. observance of Veterans Day. | ae Free legal assistance to county residents unable to af-| building, in which annuai rents | junction which the administration) Endorsing the track are the Fen- x * \steel trickled from the furnaces of some mills today as ford an attorney in civil cases is nearing reality for the| Wil! be $1,000 to $14,000 per room. | had obtained more than two weeks,ton Area Chamber of Commerce) The City Hall will remain open, ithe nation’s giant steel industry continued shaking off ; Instead of beer and pretzels, jeartier on its contention the na-jand Township Supervisor A. C.ias will the Pontiac branch of the j j 116-day strike. first time here. ; they sent up champagne and |tion’s health and safety were Locke. \Secretary of State's Office. ithe effects of a crippling y lativel ll. but it Moving toward the working stage is a ncw Oakland) caviar. threatened. t oo All will reopen at the regular) The amount of new steel was relatively small, bu County Legal Aid Society. t —— — —— | The citizens committee petitioned time Thursday. was a start toward the bigger production which the gov- . . for yesterday's referendum afte: — - 4 tain- It is being set up by the County)| Al t F d C fete *ivefiahin : ' : ernment sought in obtain Bar Asm, made up of some 200 mos a e e€Tfa ase the Township Board approved re- ; g a yen ing a Taft-Hartley injunc- a t ‘soning -4to- 24ast August, breaking; — focal lawyers. a previous deadlock in front of the tion to end the strike anu open the mills. Township Zoning Board. Only a handful of men — mostly maintenance workers — started work Saturday for the tedious job of reopening mills. But by Mon- day, long-idied steelmen were be- ing recalled by the thousands as iron-making blast furnaces and steel-making open hearth furnaces were started. However, residents who have found themselves named in law- suits in the past, or wishing to initiate court action, haven't been completely ignored. Service has been rendered by a special com- mittee ef local attorneys of the bar association. Grand River Amusement En- terprises, Inc., of Novi has an- nounced elaborate plans for the | track, which it hopes te com- plete in time for next year's harness and thoroughbred rae- = —— ing seasons. ? Today, with the county growing by leaps and bounds, the commit- | tee has decided to go one step further and establish a legal’ aid branch here. Already office space has been acquired in room 221 of the National Building. * * * | But if you're in need of legal advice, don’t.-go- knocking on the door just yet. ‘“‘We probably won't be open for business much before the first of the year,”’ said Carl F. Ingraham, Birmingham attorney and president of the new society. What will the society do? Essentially, legal services simi- lar to the television show concept (Continued on Page 2, Col. &) Backers said they would apply | immediately to the State Racing Commission for a license | The track would have a 10-story |grandstand and stables for 1.200 |horses. There would. be parking} \for 10,000 cars | B. F. Gregoric, a spokesman for |the corporation, said a one-mile! ltrack is planned with a half-mile! oval inside. The inner track will| be enclosed by a transparent plas- | tic roof, he said | * * * Among the track's _ financial | | backers are William Capers | iGrosse Pointe Park, president of! |Pontiac Lumber Co., 831 Oakland | |Ave.; Mrs. Rose Marchesotti, No- | |vi, owner of Saratoga Farms; and| {George Kovacs, Walled Lake, pres- | en of General Machine & Tool Works. , | | 3 oye z , + As more men were recalled to- day, an estimated 35 per cent of the nation’s 500,000 basic steel- workers were back on the job. But industry spokesmen say it will be weeks before production amounts to much. With the reopening of mills, some of the 335,000 workers who had been furloughed in allied in- dustries began returning to their jobs, but in small numbers. In southwestern Pennsylvania, six coal mines owned by steel companies reopened Monday. More were slated to open today. The Pennsylvania Railroad re- called 200 furloughed trainmen. * * *® But for thousands of other idle workers there was little prospect x » rem RE Rg gE hai tid ka | ‘ aE ey i a od kad aad FE RE ETRE RETR, | In Today's Press aN POR EBEE SEO RER PES | . : ‘Found Peace at Last- cane pepe 4 soso! OOUMMOG «of ssccctrcscscces 23 : ‘ Cotaty NOW ..<12...-. 600% 17 LONDON (UPI) — John W. | = such as the auto industry. For Editorials .................. i Glenister, 45, was fined $54.16 ge Wiresinia these workers there will be no Markets ...........6.0..8.. 2-4 yesterday after a busy day in GETS READY TO WORK — Robert Clugsten, 42, of Trenton, — m steel supplies are built Obituaries ............... 1 . ; ; ss “ which he attended his father’s . — ; . up and become available : 20-22 NEAR ‘CAT’ASTROPHY — The feline being cat's meows and notified SPCA officials. They | feneral, visited his hoepitalized N. J., shaves off his 118-day beard. He vowed he wouldn't use the On the Great Lites Sects ef — ah ae B held by George May of the Buffalo, N. Y. SPCA _ said it was evident the cat had not posted itself, | wite attended his son's wedding rena until the steel strike un over. He went ~—S work nS honte—that-“25 Os wea TV & Radio Programs ... 29 was imprisoned in .a U. S. Mail. box in Buffalo but admitted ignorance as to the methods em- | reception, stopped off at a pub terday under the Taft-Hartley injunction and was told he woul essential to steel - making were Wilson, Earl ..:........... 29 Monday, but was freed after summoning help ployed in the kittenish federal case. and was arrested for drunken | have to shave off the whiskers since he works in the blast furnace preparing for a race against Win- Wonten’s Pages ......... 13-15 with metallic meows. School: children heard the | driving area. : ter, , ‘ ‘ , it... ‘ 7. | $e ae Tusedar at Sub pa lot the world. gets Wednesday st 3:20 a.m. Moon rises Tuesday at 3:06 p.m. | can Dervions, Tonoereeeree | Senator Is Startled _¢ Frees ee errr | ‘= freteaceees =| ee nonetoe 7 R d ’ p mieco8 at Road Men's Pay Monday in Pontiac ‘ (As recorded downtown) |, | (Continued From Page One) eee. SR raised their salaries as high as y. (TS. One Year Age in Pontiac Ordinarily, civil service employ- : Ted ceateeane. Si obo seen so . MENUROD ca siseccsccoseess.082 penny. *~ * * Highest and tures This!) C.J. Hess, deputy civil service 70 in 1997 Se 19 in 1926 director, told the committee ac- —— ” celerated increases were frequent- Menday's . ~er 21|!Y approved for hard-to-fill posi- & . 4 Se eens spocthl (reining end 8 Elonenpetie 3 ie “You'll be startled when you S 3 Bez Scenes SS Bitearn how often it's done,”’ said ‘s a Ouahe S tag I'm. asking for figures 38 Phoenix 80 56) ° i: Pali = Pitebersh 48 | wee $3 Bt outs Sh Bi Am average American family ; 33 4 ¥ RL. 3 34/spends about $11 each year for f 8 Washington 5 ssieubscriptions to its favorite news- ‘ Seattle 44 : an 8 Tampa 72 61/P8per. | TWO GGjAU iXVW THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1959 _——— Master Your Tensions (Continued From Page One) when things aren’t done exactly and crush you? . How many people are there to- a walk through the park; the beau- ty of the stars; the taste of a favorite dish or the look of a 5. Have You Difficulty FT favorite suit; the joy of watching children at play or chatting with friends without having to be bril- liant or funny; or doing nothing at all except sitting? Are you always hunting for the new, the unusual, the exciting — and getting no real, basic pleas- ure when you find it? Do most of the things you do every day have a gray, drab, unalive feeling ‘about them? Are you unable to tolerat simple and ordinary folk? We all tend to fear the new and unknown. But some people have these fears beyond reason. One businessman said he would rather miss out on a licrative business deal (and other did) than travel lout of town for a conference with strangers. He didn’t even like to go out for a meal or a drink with a prospect. Away from home, he felt threatened and insecure. Are you one of those who re- mains on the edge of things be- cause you fear the new and un- known? Do you have to have four | of tive drinks before you can warm up te people? Do new assignments on the job frighten you? Does the thought of jchanging furniture in your hom» cause you anxiety? Have you passed up promotions or salary increases that would mean mov- ing out of an Old rowitine? | Some people have a wonderful iknack for getting along with jothers. And then there are those who seem to have a Special knack for not getting along. LOOK AT THERESA any of the neighbors’ children have a birthday, she is sure to bake a batch of cookies. When the neighbors plan a commuatty outing, she volunteers for the irk- sgme chores. But, when Theresa isn't being very nice, she is being quite un- pleasant, And you never know whether she is going to give you a warm hello or freezing rebuff. Do you find yourself loving peo- ple one day and hating them the next? Do you find that just as | Pontiac Girl Tells Her Meaning of (Editor's Note: This ts National tien Week the “What Education Means Education ° We have in the United States an opportunity for education which would be almest impos- sible to get on our own or in many other countries. What Education Means to Me: Many times I have read state- As for me, it represents the very instrument with which I am going to realize my objective to become a better person, trying to under- Yet statistics show that the “cream of the crop" of American | adults read only a couple of books bi g ASRS CELESTE MENDES ‘a year, while the majority of adults almost never read a com- plete book! * * * Theresa is this kind. Whenever | vy | Try Simple Emotion Test you've gotten things running smoothly with friends or business acquaintances, sometining always seems to happen? Do you find it a problem getting across to others what you really think and feel?. Do you feel that by and large people are a miserable lot who can’t be trusted? Do you stay pretty much on guard in your dealings with others? Do you look for double meanings in things that people say to you? * * * A person may think he hds confidence and is quite fearless without realizing that he has been taken in by the impression he is' trying to create for others. One way to find out if you're deceiving yourself is to check and see how you behave towards people ~ycu consider your, ‘betters’. To start with, if there are many people you regard as ‘‘better than you,” this already is an indica- tion of the way you feel about yourself. Furthermore, if you are unsure and apologetic in the pres- jence of these people, you will have an additional clue. Self-doubt is very frequenfly right out in the open. Many peo- ple frankly feel that they are not as good, smart or valuable as others, even though this may not be true at all. De you have a calm sure feel- ing about yourself and your abii- ities? Or de you indulge in a great deal of self-criticiam? Do you just assume that others are going to like you? Or do you feel you must work hard to make a good impression? Do you often find yourself on the outskirts of groups, fearful that you won't be invited in? Ww pl, 4 EXPRESS OR LOCAL? — The new subway (R-Vt), right. seat of the 18-passenger car are George Stewart, connecting the old and new Senate office build- Capitol architect, and Sen. George D. Aiken ings is given a tryout in Washington. In the front (Continued From Page One) project — dubbed ‘‘Strongarm’"’ — performed just as expected. * * * The tiny transmitter was de- signed and packaged by Dr. Ly- man W. Orr of the University of Michigan to get a reading on the amount of electronic activity in the upper reaches. It had not been measured at that height before. The data, when fully compiled, A person carrying a chip on his shoulder is, in effect, saying know you don't like me but | dare you to say it so I can knock your block off." He has a poor opinion ‘of himself and _ thinks others do, too. It makes him es- pecially uneasy to think that lim and not saying it. * * * Do you find yourself getting into arguments and quarrels of- ten? Do you have the feeling that people are picking on you and you'd like to get even” Do you get angry about trival slights? Everybody gets “down in the dumps.’* Such moods are apt to come on when you've been through a wearing illness, heard distress- They are also apt to occur when someone important has moved out of your life. And then it may take hardly anything to set you off, like having a free day ahead with nothing planned and nowhere to go. You begin to feel that no one loves you. Do y@u recognize these feelings? * * * If your answer is ‘‘yes’ to most of these questions, with the ad- ditiona) qualification’ that ‘‘this happens often and with intensity and lasts a long time,’ you may want to consider further action than that recommended in_ this series, possibly even consult a psychiatrist. (Condensed from “Master Your Ten- sions and Enjoy Living Again.” by 8 and Harry Georg M stand the world and its peopies.| 7). wealth of the United States|Mi*. “Copyight. 1958, by Prentice-Hali, Beautiful Fall Day Visiting is more than arvelous, and envied by almost every country in the world. The people of the } United States have the unique opportunity to become thoroughly educated, directly at school or in- Most of Nation By The Kesettdted Press Another fairly pleasant autiimn day was the outlook for most of the country today. — * * * There were only a few wet spots. A warming: trend developed in the mid-continent from the Cana- dian border southward into Okla-| homa and northern Texas, Tem- peratures were 10 to nearly 30 Ge They know, too, that books are grees higher than Monday morn- where below zero readings were reported Monday. The Weather Fell U.S. Weather Bereas tenight Teday in Pentiac at 8am.: Wind velocity 6-12 m.p bh. 7 PONTIAC AND VICINITY = Partly|what the generations before vs warming and becoming ¥-have learned ‘but just exists. -Lewest temperature preceding 8 am. US, descendants or whom we want the very best . . . the ‘‘fittest’’ minds } directly by means of books. * * * One notable contrast to the ;United States is Mexico. ‘There? ithe number of books printed and sold is very small. Books are | Scarce. fortunate enough to afford them. * * * Money is scarce too, but the peo- ple know what it means to learn. even our teachers’ teachers. Our schools offer a rigorous dis- cipline that not even the most dedi- cated and scrupulous individual could submit to regularly and effi- ciently by himself. There we can learn to think and to benefit from I know for certain that without a person 1 x* * * Education not only remains with but it also remains with our is/ The cultural books are} very dear to the people who are! does not live,| 3 Jets Crash: 4 Dead in Storm Caught by Snow sudden, blinding snow storm sent three Air Force jet planes crash- It\airmen to their ning. Biggest advances were in/would be very difficult, of course, Minnesota and western Wisconsini¢, be completely self-taught. Seconds before their plane crashed, two other airmen bailed out, parachuting safely onto a cen- tral Montana ranch. Rancher Olind Jenni saw one plane crash, its fiery flash illumi-) nating the darkness like daylight! at the base of a large hill. Minutes: late a second plane crashed against the same hill. oe a Pe. A number of other F86 Scorpion jet intercept craft. caught in the’ -jammed skies, barely got on- to off-base civilian runways 250 air miles away at Billings, Mont The exact number of planes and specific mission were withheld as classified military information at the home Malmstrom Air Force Base here. * * Early reports included what happened to eight aircraft. But this | list appeared incomplete. Others than those on the training mis- | sion were involved. * sea 53 sy Hear Trial Bid Circuit Judge Beer Oakland County Circuit Judge William J. Beer Monday will hear a motion for a new trial requested by Raymond L. Alyea, who is serv- ing a 7 to 15 year Jackson Prison term for manslaughter in the Aug. 1, 1958 death of a Southfield nurs- ery watchman. Alyea, 37, claims he was convict- jed May 22 on insufficient and cir-| cumstantial evidence. He was sen-| tenced June 8 by Judge Beer. His conviction followed a second to reach a verdict. | eee are thinking critically of Two ‘Chute to Safety| VW eter ans D ay Breakfast Slated in Montana as Group at Cook-Nelson GREAT FALLS, Mont. (AP)—A 4 bas be distributed to the 66 na- | I tional Geophysical Year program. * tions participating in the Interna- * * The Army plans to use the in- ting news, suffered a sertous-loss.+ + ; | | Ee | oa | FIRED TODAY — This is an artist's conception of the five- stage rocket fired by the Army reach a thousand miles or more into space to measure electronic | density above 800 miles. } The American Legion Cook-Nel- son Post 20 will hold its annual Veterans Day Breakfast tomorrow ing today, two craft carrying four'at the post home, 206 Auburn Ave. | deaths. Featured_speakepat the 8 a.m. event will be Oakland County. Pro- secutor Frederick C. Ziem, cir- cuit judge-elect,- Mayor—Philip—E. Rowston also will speak briefly at the breakfast. Toastmaster will be Floyd Cremer, deputy director of Oak- land County Veterans Aftairs. | Orrin Hunteon Jr,, senior vice | commander of the post, is chair- man: Among other guests will be Wil- liam Plummer of Royal Oak, 18th District commander. : An all-day open house will be held following the breakfast, ac-| cording to Mrs. Jean Conant, com- mander. About 45 to 50 vets are! expected to attend. Contest for State Junior Miss Will Return to Pontiac For the sceond-straight year, the Michigan Junior Miss contest will be held here under auspices of the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber Commerce. tional honors will be chosen Jan. 30, said Clyle R. Haskill, contest chairman. She'll compete March 27 at Mobile, Ala. in a national contest to select America’s Junior Miss. National finalists will share in $10,000 in scholarships, said Has- kill. Last year’s Michigan Junior Miss was a Pontiac Central High School senior, Shirley Hutchison. 16-18 years old. AP Wirephote | today at Wallops Island, Va., to | U. of M. Rocket Declared an Outstanding Success formation for military purposes. It now will know more accurately what type of space intercontinen- tal ballistic missiles and anti- ICBMs will be operating in. The rocket assembly consisted ef an Henest John rocket, twe Nike-Ajax boosters, a modified Recruit and a “‘scaled” Sergeant missile. It was designed to reach a speed of 17,000 [68 a second at burnout. The transmitter operated on ltwo frequencies—37 and 148 meg- lacycles It began operating 30 jminutes before the firing, and con- |tinued until it sank into the Ocean. | * * * | Tracking and radio reception were conducted at the launching Auto Smashup Kills Area Man Waterford Twp. Airman Gerald L. Pierson Victim in Wisconsin A 20-year-old serviceman from Waterford Township, Airman 3.C. Gerald L. Pierson, died last night in a Wisconsin auto accident. Prior to joining the Air Force, he llived with his parents, Mr. and \Mrs. Paul Pierson, 64 Exmoor St. Airman Pierson was stationed at Tyndall AFB, Panama City, Fila. Besides his parents, he is sur- vived by his wife, Laura, and two station here in a spééially Gon- structed van. * * * or: * * * Details of the accident, which oc- A spokesman said he could not speculate when the information would be processed and available for distribution. curred in Waukesha County, Wis., were not immediately available. His body is being brought to Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Circuit judges were expected to plead that their pay checks for next-year not be sliced $1,000 while prosecuting attorneys argued that ithey should receive pay increases. | On the receiving end of these two requests this afternoon were members of the salaries commit- |tee of the Oakland County Board fof Supervisors. Beginning mext year the five judges will be receiving $22,500 instead of the regular $23,500 based on a state law — although | declared unconstitutional by the attorney general — holding the pay at this figure throughout the state. “We won't be there asking a| |pay increase,’ assured presiding | Judge William J. Beer, “but we |will ask them not to reduce our ,pay."’ | * * * Pleading that his staff of assis- jtants is “grossly underpaid” will be prosecutor-elect George F. Tay- jlor. He said the 11 assistants have been putting in around 60 hours a week preparing for the present New Manager at Sears Store Howard Nelson ‘Here Fram Australia Where He Handled Sales Appointment of Howard M. Nel- |Detroit group manager for the |company. Nelson, 49, succeeds the |Frank S. Lyndall. late | The new manager comes te Previeus to that, Nelson aged a Sears store in the St. 'Mo., area. | A native of Indiana, Nelson -ol| He started with Sears_in 1940, The Michigan nominee for na-|i Nelson attended Indiana Univer- sity, is married and has three chil- dren. The two older children are mar- |ried, but the youngest, James, 14, jaccompanied his parents to Aus- |tralia. They lived near Sydney and trial after the first jury was unable | Competition is open to seniors|returned to this country last Judges Plead Salary Case. Attorneys Seek Raises law, despite the attorney general’ jopinion. . |Bob Crosby, Beating Wite in Squabble no|many parents have: with all our (jury term cases, but are still be- ing paid for only 3744-hour weeks. “The pay our assistants in classification No.1 are getting (between $5,500 and $5,900) is unreasonable,” Taylor said. Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem said he'll attend the meeting as a bystander. However, he'll have an interest in how the judges make out as he will become one him- self Jan. 1. * * * John Witherup, county person- nel director, said there is $6,000 set aside for the Prosecutor's of- fice, monies with which the sal- aries committee found not enough time to make adjustments with because they were rushed in get- ting their recommendations in by 1960 budget approval time. He said prosecutors did not re- ceive the general pay raise granted all other hourly rated county em- ployes next year. * * * The committee said it is knock- ing the $1,000 out of the judges’ pay checks after the Board of Supervisors voted 48-26 in - ber 1958 to comply with the state —- sons, Roderick P. and Gerald L.| The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — The City, Com- mission jJast nnight City r L. R. Gare to prepare deocriptione of the property that vacated for the construction North Woodward Parking vacated immediately. It gives per- mission for the streets to be vacat- ed when necessary. Last week the Commission vot- ed that the parking let be built behind the Reid building. At that time the Commission said| the project would invelve vacating portions of Island View drive and Park avenue. ‘* * * In another action the Commis- sion amended a sign ordinance that allows owners of multiple family residential unit to erect RB sign bearing its name. { The new ordinance states that the sign will not exceed 10 square feet in area or an overall height of more than four feet abeve the ground. The sign must be made of non- combustible material and may be lighted at night. * * * No advertising will be displayed on the sign other than the name of the residentia] unit. No more than one sign will be permitted for each residential unit. * * * A petition from residents of West Brown street, between Pierce and Bates, requesting a two-hour park- ing limit there, has been referred by the commission to the city manager. Police Chief Ralph W. Mox- ley had recommended allowing two-hour parking between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m., except Sundays and holidays, but the commission de- cided te study where the cars The council felt that without this study the parking limit would only add a problem for neardy streets. A letter to the commission from) the state seeking a committee to study the problems of the aged in the area, was turned over to the Council on Community Serv-! ices. This local organization is 900 More Pupils Since_]st Day of School Here Enrollment in Pontiac schools has climbed by more than 500 pupils since the first, day of the term, it was announced today. * * x’ Some 19,942 students are now at- tending school, compared with the 19,434 who reported the first day of classes almost two months ago. The fourth Friday of the school year, the date by which state ald is based, enrollment was 19,924, Enrollment the first day of class- es in 1958 was 19,115. By the |fourth Friday last year, the num- |ber of pupils in the Pontiac school system reached 19,415. * * * The approximately 17 per cent increase this year over 1958 was felt almost entirely at 7th, 8th and Sth grade levels, according to Dr. Philip J. Proud, assistant super- intendent of schools. * * * This situation indicates a 25 per cent increase — an additional 1,- 000 students — in the two senior high schools over the next three year period. SOW as Tanager Or the Sears Roe | denying ° E= jmonth. said, ‘‘We have had problems, 46, Denies children. I'm afraid this latest will give Cathy a setback.’’ Mrs. Crosby said she grabbed tion after he knocked her down Authorizes Court Action in Reid Parking Area familiar with the health, welfare and social problems of senior citizens The council was given the let- ter after the City Commission was told it was a participating member of the organization, The Commission also re-appoint- ed J. Clifford Currell of the De- troit Edison Co. to the Electrical Examining Board, and City Man- ager Gare and City Clerk trene Hanley to the Martha Baldwin Park Board. Mrs. Robert Schaffner Service for Mrs. Robert Schaf- fner, 30, of Wheaton, Ill., will -e 'Thursday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Funeral |Home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete. Mrs. Schaffner, a life-long resi- dent of Birmingham until two years ago when she moved to Wheaton, died suddenly in her home yester- day. x * * 1 She is survived by her husband, five children, Steven, Robert Jr., Kim, Peter and Michael, her moth- er, Mrs. Leo Flynn of Royal Oak; two sisters, Mrs. William Bronsing of Birmingham and Mrs. Thomas McIntosh of New York, and a brother, Donald Flynn of Birming- ham. Mrs. Hendrick (Edith) Hobbie Service for Mrs. Hendrick (Edith) Hobbie, 86, formerly of Birmingham, will be held at 1:30 p. m. Thursday from the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Greenwood Ceme- tery. Mrs. Hobbie died yesterday in Detroit after a long illness. Surviving are a sister, a niece and nephew. ¢ Legal Aid Society Being Formed Here (Continued From Page One) of the public defender will be offered, with one major excep- tion. The society will help in only civil matier, such as negti- genee, rental and garnishment cases. Such a society is born from the constitutional right that everybody should be protected to the fullest exten. of the law, and attorneys can help provide this guarantee. we me For those who get in criminal scrapes with the law and are unable to afford an attorney, this service is done for them by the Circuit Court judge they eventually |appear before. Such court-appoint- ed attorneys in these cases are paid from county funds. NO DIVORCE SUITS Ingraham said it is hoped the Oakland society can employ a full. time attorney or attorneys. In the meantime, he pointed out, volun- teers from the association and then part-time attorneys probably will fill the gap. Divorce suits — although civil cases — will not be initiated by the society, he emphasized. Fer the past 10 years or so Oakland attorneys have, been drafted on a volunteer basis to “The need has become so great now,”’ he said, ‘That we have outgrown this system and are in dire need of a full-fledged legal aid society.” = * * He said there are but six cities in the United States with 100,00C or more population without such societies. . ; When the local society gets go- ing, he. said there might be a nominal fee charged for registra- tion. There won't be, however, a penny charred for the litigation of the case. the bulk of any attor- ney’s bill. SEEK FUNDS Fee receipts will be used to de- fray court costs, the president community the necessity of the “tservices-we wilt offer, ~ application will be made to the Ponhtiac Area ~ . a THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY,-NOVEMBER 10, 1959 % j i Ike More Willing (Than Dulles) to Give and Take Same Policy... but It's Played Soffer By JAMES MARLOW Dulles-Eisenhower actions have coming events — Khrushchev’ against cancer is being aided by Associated Press News Analyst/been pretty much reactions to So-| visit here, Eisenhower's promised, what is probably the world’s most viet actions. constant thermometer at the new WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles died 170 days ago. In less than six + 2. trip to Moscow, the summit con- 4 ference next year — all had their|Walker Laboratory of the Sloan- A whole series of recent and up-'origin in Soviet, not American, Kettering Institute here. Thermostat Plan Helps to Battle Cancer Scourge - RYE, N.Y. (UPI) — The fight months American foreign policy has undergone a kind of convul- sion. Dulles so completely dominated foreign policy he made President Eisenhower look like a secondary figure in this branch of govern- ment. Now Eisenhower dominates; it and Dulles’ successor, Christian! A. Herter, looks secondary. . ~~ we *®. Dulles was rigid, Eisenhower) seems more receptive fav and! take. Dulles was almostMJovian in| his thunderous threats. Eisenhow-| er talks softer. * * * \ Stiff-arm communism by ring-! ing with bases. That was the basic policy laid down by Presi- dent Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson. It was fol- lowed out the window by Dulles. It still is basic American policy. SAME POLICY BUT... But there has been a change jn the way this policy is handled. Eisenhower appears more willing to consider the notion that per- haps containment is not the only course in dealing with the Soviet Union. * * * But this change itself is the product of two profound changes: | 1. The Truman-Acheson policy) was created to stop the mad-dog tactics of Stalip who pushed and for weakness. For example: the Korean War. as The Soviet Union under Pre- mier Nikita Khrushchev has be- service for U. S. WORTH EAST EXTENSION = ROAD SHOW — Barbara Stefanik displays a welcome new turnpike travelers. The weather-warning signs will be posted at all interchanges on the Pennsylvania Turnpike this winter. Barbara is from Harrisburg, Pa. The thermometer, which _ is guarded by a system of thermo- stats’ more than 100 times more sensitive than the human body, registers the temperature of -a , rgom which is not allowed to vary more than two degrees from 71 degrees Fahrénheit. ’ The thermostats, which are \veloped for the laboratory by the |Minneapolis - Honeywell Regula- itor Co., safeguard the institute's priceless colony of research ani- mats. Cable Repair Ship Will Be Biggest LONDON (UPI) — Plans to construct a cable repair ship llarger and faster than any now in service have been announced — | The vessel is to be built for | Cable and Wireless Limited by | Cammell Laird and Company of Birkenhead, It will cost one mil- lion pounds ($28 million). | The keel of the vessel is expect- ed to be laid in February 1960; with the ship ready for service ahout a year later. | It will be diesel-electric pro- pelled, with a maximum speed of 15 knots and a sea endurance of seven weeks. equipped with alarms and are| $44 for Family of Four year under one “nuisance” tax suggested to help carry Michigan through its cash crisis. Another suggested ear, If you prefer soda pop, a third} hit you for $3 a year. Department figures if all proposed ‘“‘nuisance taxes’’ were | enacted, the cost to the average | } be $44. z would include each year: 1. $5 through a proposal to put the sales tax on telephones and telegraphs. per cent tax on ‘amusements, jthe sales tax to services such as a haircut or permanent wave. the premiums of non-Michigan in- ,Surance companies. ; The $44 dollar cost of this pack- jage compares with the $60 esti- mate for the average farnily from a one-cent boost in the sales tax. On the other hand, an average family with a $5,000 income would pay only $42 under the flat 2 per cent personal income tax, the $10,000 family $132 and the §15,- 000 family 232. Thus, the ‘‘nuisance taxes’’ un- der discussion would cost the $5,000 LANSING (®—If you smoke onejaverage family slightly more than to two packs of cigarettes a day,|the 2 per cent income tax but you shell out an extra $4.50 mS Nesrindagran Se npc emanainn hig: . . . measure — a triple beer tax — . would cost beer drinkers $5.25 8 Opposed fo Testing proposal for a soft drink tax might 74. soviet Union's atomic energy jadministrator, The estimates come from the |Emelyanov, says he is opposed lcontrolled by a “data center” de- | State Revenue Department. me types. i bomb testing of all} e ; | Michigan family of four would Monday that it is impossible to = jsay at this stage of atomic de-| For the average family this|Velopment 2. $8.25 through a suggested 10/atomi¢c facilities under an ex-| 3. $15 through an extension of|would be expanded. | 4. $3 through a proposed tax on|tion in east Idaho Monday. higher income groups. IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP)— Prof. Vasily S&. including underground | tests. } He also told a news conference) whether the Soviet! Union or the United States is ahead. | Emelyanoy heads a group of nine Soviet scientists touring U.S.| change program he said he hoped} The scientists toured the Atomic Energy Commission’s testing sta-| ACID INDIGESTION? come infinitely more dangerous, potentially, than under Stalin but ‘now it is far less reckless and militarily aggressive. 2. Truman and Acheson and even Dulles for a brief period could rely on the containment program — bombers with atomic weapons — in the period while the U.S.S.R. was still trying to develop that means of destruction. * * * Containment became less a sure bet as the Soviet Union produced not only the same weapons as American but pushed ahead with missiles to a degree which startled the world. So at the time Dulles died the Communist world around which he sought to keep a fence of bomb- ers had changed in both its tac- tics and its étrength. While Dulles was the most active: of all, historians may wonder whether his amazing activity was not sometimes a substitute for thinking. * * * What was true, in Dulles’ time is still true now: there is a lack of initiative in foreign policy and dealing with the Soviets. The No Action Likely in Fatal Mishap SOUTH HAVEN ® — Legal ac- tion against a father whose teen- age son crashed through a window and died while they scuffled is doubtful, says Van Buren County Prosecutor Meyer Warshawsky. Warshawsky said he’ would meet today with police before making a final decision whether to prosecute Elmer Leroy Martin, 36, in the death of his son, Richard Eddie Martin, 15, a South Haven high school student, fell through a first floor bedroom window to a porch and died during the father-son scuffle yesterday. Police Chief Don Hardy said the wrestling bout started when Martin attempted to discipline his son for keeping late hours. Vermont Dems Choose to Back Kennedy in’60 MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP)—Ver- mont Democratic * leaders have voted to back U.S. Sen. John F Kennedy (D-Mass) for the 1960 presidential nomination. A resolution passed by the Dem- ocratic State Committee Sunday urges Vermont delegates to the national convention next year to give “‘loyal and unswerving sup- port” to Kennedy. x x x The resolution charges the Re- publican party has ‘‘failed miser- ably” to provide needed leader- ship. Factory Representative Here WEDNESDAY—2 to 3:30 P.M. REMINGTON Electric Shaver RECONDITIONED | —While You Wait Service— ace ry every Wednesday of every eek. « as pret / dy i © zu } EREOp = 4 Sneakers 4ONle ke 40 Watts Undistorted Power... . 80 Watts Peak in Combined Units. ” for the Price of High Fidelity Only... 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But unlike the flamboyant, fire- cracker type anti-U. S jt is preached by Cuba's Fidel Castro, Panamanian resentment against the United States has exist- ed for almost half a century. Panama as a nation bears a “Made in U.S.A.” label and dates back to a not too lustrepe bit of power diplomacy. Going back to 1819. it is in the tradition of the great liberator, Simon Bolivar, who led the war of independence against Spain and established ‘‘Great Colombia’ in- cluding the present territories of Panama. Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela It was in 1878 that Colombia| granted a French company headed by Ferdinand de Lesseps the right to build a canal across Panama. It failed. In 1903 came the action which was Panama Canal States but which has come back to haunt us ever since in Latin American retations. On Nov. 3, 1903. Panama _ pro- claimed its independence from Colombia and U.S, warships pre- vented Colombian troops reaching Panama to put down the revolt. Ten days later, the U.S recognized an independent Panama) and on Nov. 18 won from the new | state full jurisdiction in perpetuity | forceful to win the over a zone five miles wide on either side of the future canal. } In return, the U.S. paid Panama| $10 million and promised an annual “rent” of $250,000. * * * On Aug. 15, 1914, the Panama Canal was opened, serving the Al- lied world well in two world wars. The “rent” has been raised twice since then, and now amounts to $1.930,000 annually. The constitution of Panama orig- inally gave the United States the right to intervene in Panama to|# maintain order. In return the U.S guaranteed Panamanian independ. ence and sovereignty. By 1926, the old order was #4 14th-century English Gothic in de-| ing advertising of dentifrices made} by Dr. Paul H. Jeserich, president C10, which generally has backerl,? ITS NICE TO KNOW OUR GAS IS THERE, WHEN DAILY MEALS RED-E GAS Products Co. 1968 Airport Road (opposite Airport) OR 3-1715 Complete Bottle Gas Service i (Advertisement) HetASTHMA Fee, Teen and difficult a r recurring attacks of fs. an itis with . Quickly helps er MENDACO. © one. relax bronchial tubes, jucus. breathing, sans drainage and sounder sleep, Get MENDACO at drussists. (Advertisement) Husbands! Wives! Get Get Pep, Vim; Feel Y of couples are weak, worn-ow al iene | because body lacks iron and V wee | — B;. For « younger feeling after 40 od Osteen Tonic T *. Contais | = =e Nigh-poteany pen Vitamin By for | “Get-acquaint- | vim energ cee only 08¢. At all drusgiste everywhere. . doctrine as|Panamaniahs charge that they are for the United | from} 2,000 years. +sign-and-construction. Large 11907 at a ceremony attended by} changing and the Panama As. ;Panama, resulting in a dependence | sembly was claiming sovereignty jwhich has prevented development over the Canal Zone. Ten years |of other resources. Panama has later, a new treaty eliminated rich jJand but imports approxi- U. 8. right of intervention, mately half of its food because the | But land is untilled Minerals are untouched old sores have remained. Exports discriminated against in the Canal |@Pe comparatively meager. Zone in the matter of pay and jobs.| Meanwhile, Panamanian politi-| They say. Panama’s ecgnomy is/cians cal. for nationalization of the| hurt because, out of thé canal's|canal | revenue, they receive tess thanj Inwardly, they shudder at the; one-fifteenth. |thought of having to run and main-| Through various channels mil-' tain it. lions of U.S. dollars flow into must Italians Sweat Huge Cathedra to Drill Highway Rising in Capital “cer Mountain COURMAYER, Italy » — Ita ly | Outwardly, it is a political has drilled the first kilometer | Episcopal Edifice Now | tive-e ights of a mile) of a great| ‘60 Per Cent Complete, lsuperhighway beneath towering | | | Mont Blanc; and. engineers ac-| | May Last 3 Centuries iknowledge the job is tougheg than they expected WASHINGTON —A_ great gray) There are 10'z more kilometers mass of stone is taking shape as to go to complete the tunnel by a magnificent Gothic cathedral'1962 and give motorists a long- atop a hill in the nation’s capital. desired all-weather road _ from Washington Cathedral was start- Italy to France beneath the Alpine ed in 1907 and is rising at the peaks generation-by-generation pace of, Three hundred meters (984 ft.) the famous European cathedrals, have been drilled from the French| |which often took centuries to finish. \side since last June. Italian drill-| The Episcopal edifice is more jing started in January, and 200 | than 60 per cent complete, the workmen have had to battle an National Geographic Society junderground lake and massive says. Seven chapels, four bays |cave-ins to average a scant five | of the nave, the north transept, meters a day part of the south transept, and ali the foundations are now Launch Crackdown from its hoisting chain as it’s Seattle standing. ers. The tire was manufactured {i The current phase of construc-| ment. Including the rim it weighs nearly $14,000. tion will add about seven per cent | p Pj {| p h to the structure in the next four on ep | us ers | or five years. tp When completed, Washington) WASHINGTON (UPI) — Federal Cathedral will be a tenth of a|agents have launched a broad new Rautier Urges imile long and the sixth largest) crackdown on peddlers of amphet- (amore Labor to Warn ‘Dems on Dixie WASHINGTON (? cathedral in the world. The Nation-| amine or “‘stay awake’’ al Bureau of Standards estimates) |was announced today. that it will stand for 3,000 years | Arthur S. Flemming, secretary and need no major repairs for jof health, education and welfare, : —Walter BE the prosecuting campaign | said Beat oes « s iear 20 ot center at truck stops where the Reuther said Monday the Amer- salem Psd church is built on high tablets are being peddled illegally.jican labor movement should tell its tower will be higher| Flemming also told newsmen|the Democratic Party it cannot} ground, than the Washington Monument. that the Public Health Service is|have labor's support and retain Built in the traditional cruciform |‘in complete accord’’ with the ne: Doierrats in top congressional shape, the cathedral is basically|cent criticism of false and mislead-| positions. Reuther asserted that the AFL- of Indiana limestone form vaulted |of the American Dental Assn. But) Democrats, interior arches and_ fiying but-jhe added that such action against |’ ‘You can’t have our support if tresses on the outside. such deceptive ads by toothpaste|you fly the banner of Franklin Appropriately, many id World }manufacturers would be the re- | Roosevelt and Harry Truman on artisans have lent their skills to {SPonsibility of the Federal Trade election day and then, the day alter the building of the church, Italian | | Commission. election, turn the party over to stone ‘workers, in particular, |Howard Smith and Jim EaStland| have played an important role Number of Americans over age /on Capitol Hill.’’ in carving the many ornaments (65 has quadrupled since 1900 and} Smith, a Virginia congressman, and sculpture adorning the edi- lin the same period the total/is chairman of the powerful coe fice. A 72-year-old tron crafts- a has just about doubled.!Rules Committee. Eastland, Mis-| man was called from retirement Saas ine should tel] that party PR TOO MUCH RUBBER — The Causing a general scampering , Reuther ESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER. 16, 1959 _ a ee —— State to Open 3 Bridges | The Projects include a bridge yer several railroad tracks on to Traffic Next Friday aa 2 tm Landing: en 86 mile | LANSING (UPI) — The State|Stetch of U.S. 16 expressway Highway Departaiet announced the Ionia-Kent county line J 90 >> \Nation:s Burros Be Well Treated So trem meres projects to traffic Friday. Grand Ledge. Californian’s Can't Can, - WORLD REFUGEE YEAR 1959-1960 | Them; They're Pets as Well as Pests WASHINGTON—There is small need for the expression of woe in \the eyes of an American burro. |He never had it so good. True, the burro has an imper- sonal enemy—canners of pet food: |But California forbids the killing lof burros, and Congress recently ipasséd legislation prohibiting the use of aircraft and motor vehicles in hunting burros—and mustangs —on Federal land. An estimated 5,506 to t3,000 burros run wild in the West. “| WILL NOT BE AFRAID » repeats young refugee to himself. But knowing only want and waiting in his short life, unaware of his destination . . . how could he be anything else? _ Only loving help such as he gets from your own faith’s Overseas Aid can kindle the heart and confidence to replace young refugees’ paralyzing fear. Give Thanks by Giving this Thanksgiving. PROTESTANT: Share Our Surplus Appeal. CATHOLIC: Bishops’ Thankegiving Clething Cellection. JEWISH: United Jewish Appeal Special Fund. Published as a public service in. cooperation with The Advertising Couneil and the Newspaper Advertising Executives Association, have turned to the wild they often overgraze land and take over water THE PONTIAC PRESS holes. More timid animals are === _ nena a Moreover, the soft-eyed, mild- | matured creature now rivals the _| Shetland pony as a pet for chil- dren. Mexico exports mahy burres to the United States each year. It is possible to order a | pet burro from mail-order houses | in Chicago for less than. $100. The burro can be pest as well as pet. however. Where burros| driven frem their usual haunts. Unlike the mustang, also hunted Turn These Words Into for pet food, bufros are not threat- ened with extinction, the National Geographic Society says. Major concentrations of feral burros live . Sell Them with a Want Ad . J in The Pontiac Press the easy life along the .Colorado River from Utah to the Mexican border, and in the rugged desert country of southeastern California UPI Telephet s ; Serene ,They thrive even in Death Valley. world's largest tire breaks loose unloaded from a freight car in away on the part of onlook- The burro, or donkey, seems to take life as it comes, which doubtless accounts for its long and strikingly successful history. Man probably tamed donkeys in the New Stone Age, some 12,000 years ago; no one could estimate the myriad gallons of water and cords of wood they've catried since then. Donkeys were about when Egyptians were putting up the labor | pyramids. The progenitor of the domestic donkey is betieved to have been the African wild ass. A few of the species (Equus asinus) still -exist lin the Sudan, Abyssinia, and Som- aliland, They are big and husky 1 heavy-duty earth moving equip- three tons and costs - ——- ——— heads the im- committee. They 1ugh seniority. sippi senator, partant Judiciary won the posts thre asserted that Democrats should insist that the jobs to mem- refuse to support the party's platform. deny hgh commiultee bers of Congress who Number of irrigation acres in|with gray or ashy upper parts, a Tennessee has grown from 1,102\dark stripe down the back, and in 1949 to 25 times that numberjgenerally a shoulder stripe and now ivarigple striping on the legs. | Dr. Stanley W. Black Optometrist 3513 Elizabeth Loke Rd. Corner of Cass Lake Rd. Evenings by Appointment Phone FE 2-2362 Closed Wed. an ) \? AIRPLANES =| to wring out of metal « gracefal gate for an interior stairway. A group of devout laymen g@ y, planned Washington Cathedral in| Nn O 1891. They chose a tract of land | ion a hill called Mount Saint Alban. The site near Massachusetts Av-| enue formerly was owned by| Joseph Nourse, first Registrar of, ithe Treasury under George Wash-| ington. Nourse meditated- daily in an oak grove crowning the hill and often prayed that a national church 'be erected on the spot. j The foundation stone was laid in | President Theodore Roosevelt. In five years Bethlehem Chapel was’ ccmpleted in the crypt, All services Were held there until 1932. { U. of M. Chemist Wins Top Award in His Field ANN ARBOR (®#—The nation's ‘top award in analytical chemistry | J jbas been won this year by a Uni- versity of Michigan chemist. Pie university announced yester- y that- Philip J. Elving, profes-_ or of chemistry, will be awarded ‘the, American Chemical Society's iFisher Award in analytical chem- istry next spring. If You Call Right Now —— SPECIAL FINANCING — We'll gladly accept cash, of course, if yow want to handle it that way. But if you preter or want credit, you can take advantage of Big Bear's exclusive Personalized Budget Financing Plan. This wonderful plan permits you to lump all your payments — including mortgage and any other outstanding bills—inte ONE lower month- ly payment. Take to 15 years to pay. No charge for this valuable service. NO PAYMENTS ‘TIL ‘60 Today § No. 6 or More ®@ Siding @ Patios @ Comb. Doors SALES 3415 W. Buron &t. PE 3-7600 EXTRUDED ALUMINUM WINDOWS Less than6.... We Also Specialize in ALL ALUMINUM @ Awnings @ Carports @ Porch Enclosures ALL AWNING & STORM WINDOW SALES L. W. BOGERT—Owner Open Wed. Night Till 9 P.M. HOME IMPROVEMENT 10% OVER COST! NO PRICE Increase at BIG BEAR ford That AWNINGS AUTOMATIC WASHERS ALUMINUM SIDING ARM CHAIRS AUTOMOBILES APPLES ARTIST SUPPLIES ANTIQUES ANTENNAS ~ ACCORDIONS AIR COMPRESSORS AIR CONDITIONERS ~ AMPLIFIERS ‘ } Value! 100% STORM ADDING MACHINES AQUARIUMS ALARM CLOCKS ANDIRONS APPLIANCES SIDING 3%, 10" .$21.95 ea. @ Basem’t Comb. CONSTRUCTION CO. WAREHOUSE 233 8. Telegraph Rd. FE 8-1123 aeeeenmnen *16® Finish Shell Homes ‘39 422 ADDITIONS °22" ~~ + NO MONEY DOWN PMA COMPLETE SERVICE BY PONTIAC’S LEADING | - HOME REMODELING COMPANY 92 W. HURON ST. ANCHORS ANVILS ARGYLES ACREAGE Sell Them With a Want Ad FE 2-8181 DOWN bg - oath Per Month CALL ANYTIME! _ Operators on Duty 4 Hours a Day = A. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1959_ Deaths in Pon ERWIN H. BEARDSLEE Erwin.H. Beardslee of Benson, Ariz., a former resident of Pontiac and White Lake Township, died this morning at Veterans’ Hospital in Tucson, Ariz. He was 62. He had been ‘employed at the General Motors Truck & Coach Di- vision before moving to Arizona for health reasons 13 years ago. Mr. Beardslee leaves his wife, Lily; a daughter, Mrs. Josephine Weston of Tucson; two sons, Charles of Lum and Jack of Ben- son; five grandsons; and two sis-| ters, Mrs. Josephine Redmond of Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Town- ship, and Mrs. Kenneth Mitchell of East Jordan. MRS. WILLIAM C. CHRISTY Service for Mrs. William C. (Alma E.) Christy, 83, of 4443 Windiate Dr., Waterford Town ship, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednes- day at the Wiltse Funeral Home in Sebewaing. Mrs. Christy died at the home of her son, Dr. Harold Mossner at Marine City Sunday after a long illness. Survivors include another son, John E. of Los Angeles, Calif.; three daughters, Mrs. Ruth Weber of Detroit, Mrs. Christine Shel- don of Utica, and Mrs. Gertrude Kenifeck of Waterford; a broth- er, Fred Spaeth of Detroit; 13 grandchildren; 21 great-grandchil- dren; and two great-great-grand- children. J. CLAIRE HOLLENS J. Claire Hollens, 54, of 351 S. Roslyn Rd., Waterford Township, died of pneumonia today at Pon- tiac General Hospital, He had been ill several weeks. Mr. Hollens had been a _ pur- chasing agent at American Forging & Socket Co. and a member of the Masonic Lodge at Grand Ledge. Surviving is his wife, Ethel, and a sister, Mrs. Harold Dresser of Lansing. Service will be held at 11 a.m./Burial will follow in Woodlawn pyperal Home at Walled Lake. Thursday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. PRESCRIPTIONS Y PERRY DRUGS) if Burial service will be conducted by the Grand Ledge Lodge at 1:30 p.m. at. the cemetery in‘ Lansing. MRS. WESLEY PARISH Mrs. Wesley ¢Addie M.) Parish, i77, of 49 E, Chicago St., died of a heart ailment yesterday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Gladys Hall of 741 Gertrude St., Water- ford Township. She had been ill two years. Service will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at the Huntoon Funeral |Home with burial in the Lakeville iCemetery. MRS. HARRY L. RAVELL Mrs. Harry L. (Matilda B,) Ra- vell, 64, of 35 Bliss St. died unex- pectedly yesterday at her home. She was a member of St. Trinity Lutheran Church and an atten- dant at Pontiac State Hospital. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Leo Boyd of Lake Orion ;two sons, Harry C. of Pontiac and Donald L. of Plainview. Long Island, N.Y.; eight grandchildren; one great- grandchild; a brother and three | sisters. ‘ | Service will be held at 2 p.m. iThursday at St. Trinity Lutheran Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Ravell’s body 1s at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. MRS. MABEL M. LIVINGSTON Service for Mrs. Mabel M. Livingston, 41, of 113 W. Strath- more St. will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in White Chapet Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Livingston, who lived with her mother, Mrs. Della Downing, was dead on arrival Sunday at Pontiac General Hospital. FRED B. ADLER LAKE ORION Service for Fred B. Adler, 80, of 750 E. Flint St., will be held at 11 a-m. Thurs- jday at Flumerfelt Funeral Home. |Cemetery, Jackson. Mr. Adler died Sunday in Pon- \tiac General Hospital after an ill- iness of six weeks. He was a former village treas- urer and auditor for the Orion F&AM, Scottish Rite Bodies and |Moslem Shrine, Detroit. His sole survivor is a brother in | Jackson. MRS. LOUIS HANKE |quindre Rd., Avon Township, for- imerly of Troy, will be held at 1 689 E. Blvd. 1251 Baldwin at Perry at Ypsilanti FE 2-0259 FE 2-8359 | DRUMS Complete grans - STAND . CYM ACKET - BRUSHES BAL DRUM STICKS $29.95 Christmas Layaway E-Z Payment 18 EDWARD'S So Saginaw |Corners Cemetery. jseveral months’ illness. lis a daughter, Lois Jahe, at home; ‘of Temperance. fiac and Nearby Areas | State Bank. He also was a mem-/8Te, ‘ber of the Ashlar Lodge No. 91,| p.m. —Thursday—at—Priee—Funeral} 'Home. Burial will follow in Union| Mrs. Hanke died Sunday at Uni- versity Hospital, Ann Arbor, after j GLENN B. DALRYMPLE | LAKE ORION—Service for Glenr B. Dalrymple, 64, of 1364 Sharp Dr. will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Allen’s Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Lakeville Cemetery. Mr. Dalrymple died Sunday at ‘his home. Military graveside serv- Polan Post No. 233. He was a life member of the Disabled American Veterans. | Surviving besides his wife, Gero- ilene, are two sons,’ James E. of |Jackson and Dale D. of Ortonville; itwo sisters and six grandchildren. i¢e will be conducted by Chariton- | MRS. FRANK SPENCER | IMLAY CITY — Service for Mrs. | |Frank (Marcella) Spencer, 87, of |2441 Bristol Rd., will be held at, 10 a.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart! Catholic Church. Burial will follow | in Mount Calvary Cemetery. Mrs. Spencer died at home yes-! terday after an extended illness. Rosary service will be at 8 p.m. | tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funer- jal Home. | Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. | | Carol Sohn of Birmingham; and! isix sons, Clare and Norman J., |both of Imlay City, Hugh, .Lewis ‘and Francis, all of Almont, and | William of Goodland. Also surviving are 21 grandchil- |dren and seven _ great-grand- | children. | DANIEL H. STEINBACH | HOLLY TOWNSHIP — Service for Daniel H. Steinbach, 89, for-| |merly of Holly Township, will be} |held at 2 p.m. Thursday from the |Dryer Funeral Home. Burial will ibe in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Steinbach died yesterday. Surviving are two brothers and la sister. | HARRY W. WIMBROW SR. | MILFORD — Service for Harry |W. Wimbrow Sr., 66, of 530 Com- |merce Rd. will be held at 1 p.m. ‘Thursday from Richardson - Bird Burial will be in Commerce Ceme- tery. Mr. Wimbrow died yesterday at ‘his home after a two-week illness. | Surviving besides his wife, Faye, tare, five daughters, Mrs. William Rowe of Indiana, Mrs. Henry Sal- vadora of Pontiac, Mrs. Lester Parsons of-Commerce, Mrs. James ‘Walls of Waterford and Mrs. |\Thomas-Foster of Commerce; four |sons, Harry Jr. of Commerce, SHRINE LEADER DIES— Frank S. Land, past imperial potentate of the Shrine of North America and founder of the Order of DeMolay died in a hospital in Kansas City Sunday night. He was 69. Land is shown in a Shrine fez in 1954. Former Rep. Diggs Dies in Detroit Hotel DETROIT # — Charles M. Diggs, 60, former state represen- tative from Detroit, died in a hotel room last night of acute pancreatitis. * * * Attendants. at the eastside Ca- pri-Plaza Hotel said they found lying across a bed, His- identity was not established until two hours under a_ different said. The hotel said Diggs checked name,«#police istering himself and an accom- panying woman as Mr. and Mrs. George L. Cooper. The woman, q | been identified and was not at * * * A Democrat, Diggs served two terms in the Michigan House of A onetime real estate dealer and ried and had two daughters. *«* _* * \Gerald of Texas, Ronald of High- TROY — Service for Mrs Louis | land and Eugene at home; two) |\(Wanda) Hanke, 34, of 45319 De-|brothers; a sister and 12 grand-|Charles C. Diggs Jr. or Ch *hildren. children ‘ HAROLD E, WORDEN LAPEER — City Commissioner Harold E. Worden, 41, of 746 Vosburgh's Inc., yesterady and Hospital. i\Phoebe; and three children. He was not related to U-S. iC. Diggs Sr., former state senator | ‘Dr. Campbell, 81, Dies | NEWBERRY (UPI) — Dr. E. H Washington St., suffered a heart) campbell, 81, died Monday after a! attack in his department. store, long illness. He was medical. su-' : at Newberry State | §$urviving besides her husband | died in Lapeer County General) Hospital from 1906 until 1951, ex- perintendent |cept for a two-year period as med and her father, Henry A. Harlos! Worden is survived by his wife,|ical superintendent at Traverse | City State Hospital. the former Negro legislator’s body | later because he had registered| in early yesterday morning, reg: | escribed as about 50, has not | the hotel when Diggs was found. | Representatives fror: 1954 to 1958. grocery store owner, he was mar- | arke? To Outline Plan for Police Dept. Pontiac C. of C. Will Go Before Commission With Proposals Officials of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Comme are to ap- pear tonight before the City Com- |mission to outline a plan to strengthen administration in the police department. Drawn up by the chamber's gov- ernmental affairs committee, the |plan- calls for the Commission to schedule a _ spring election to amend several city charter pro- |visions, especially in the Police [Trial Board section. William Kalwitz, committee eliminating ‘‘weaknesses’’ in the trial board setup and strength- ening the chain of command be- tween the city manager and the police chief. | | | chairman, said the plan aims at | Specifically, the chamber wants to eliminate the position of public safety director, remove the police | chief from the trial board’s pro- tection and make him responsible solely to the manager, and make the chief responsible for drawing up rules and regulations for the | department. | * * * | The trial board now is respon- | } Sible for rules and yegulations, but o g ——x-—- jthe chamber believes the activities | Coy of the citizens board shoufi be re-| |stricted to hearing appeals in disci- ingly, should be renamed to Police Board said Commissioners received copies of the plan last week. Alsq,s¢heduled tonight is a public hearing on the assessment roll cov- | ering curbs, gutters, grading and igraveling on East Beverly avenue, | Fuller to Arlene It is expected that formal con- gratulations will be extended to City Manager Walter K. Willman for his fecent election as presi- | dent of the International City Man- agers Assn. Commissioners or- dered a_ congratulatory message | prepared last week. Deaths Elsewhere | MILWAUKEE | + ] (AP)—Gerald L.! , Seaman, 17, producer of the Na- jtional Broadcasting Company’s National Farm and Home Hour! radio program, died Sunday of a! |heart attack. Seaman, radio and |television director of Bert S. Git- jtins Advertising Inc_, was born at Redfield, lowa | * * * | ALBANY N.Y. (AP) — John Carroll. 67, an artist who for many years taught at the Art Students League in New York City, died Saturday of a liver ailment. Car-! roll, whose paintings hang in the Metropolitan Museum at New| | York and in many other museums| in America, was born at Kansas | City, Kan | WASHINGTO plinary cases. The board’ accord-| y Goldberg, chief counsel of the , United, Steelworkers Union, ate | VICe of Review, the chamber | at a Chinese restaurant Saturday | ee te NINETEEN a k ul his fortune cookie was “Govern yourself accord- | ingly.” 4 =||| i =| =i! 54 nr Donald Hk. Johns o r4 Carl OV. Donelson yea Service That You Will Like... <', We design our services with you, U the family, of the departed in A mind. We are ever considerate of ‘your thoughts and wishes. J, We supply exactly the casket and Y) materials that you like and re- il quest. We take prompt care of * W every service. We try hard to \ earn your respect and your loy- alty — and provide a better ‘ service. W Ph dl F EDERAL Pa tking = 4 - 4511 On Cir a j= Vil — == a D ore [; On- Johns ‘ BRSUNTa-7 an * Telus u 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC } } | 5 |GET Stage i LOA DOUBLE TOP VALUE STA MPS at the Following in PONTIAC @ 265 NORTH TELEGRAPH ROAD at Elizabeth Lake Road @ 2341 SOUTH TELEGRAPH ROAD at Square Lake Road—Miracle Mile Shopping Center "©4370 DIXIE HIGHWAY - at Sashabaw Road—Drayton Plains WEDNESDAY KROGER STORES WHITE BR LARGE Ag as, Bee ee TOMORROW - WEDNESDAY IS x DOUBLE « STAMP DAY At PEOPLE’S and FOOD TOWN FRESH VES phe. ARMOUR STAR (stst—( THICK SLICED BACON SPECIAL LOW PRICE ow 4 Pee ae y se POUND PACKAGE PHILLIP’S TOMATOES ‘ 2 brett 4 oe OEP halons. eae SOE LE BORE KA Ve a pe Sd *. PR BA 24 Top Frost Frozen OCEAN PERCH FILLETS OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK OPEN 9 AM. (ill 9 PL eam me om onaua wae OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK CLOSED SUNDAYS OPEN SUNDAY 9 te 6 9 AM. till 10 PLM, 700 AUBURN ST, 2135 Dixie HIGHWAY ALL 1200 BALDWIN AVE. et COLUMBIA 7580 HIGHLAND RD. ot TELEGRAPH RO. M-59 et WILLIAMS LAKE RD, FOOD TOWN MARKETS—OPEN SUNDAY 9 £ i i | a ee a ee i 1 ge ee ere ee ee ee in the world. and they pre ete vod and they ore \Pigeon Problem graduated goctors of medicine ion the Skids your: | LONDON u—Science at long | last may have outwitted the pi- ‘ geon, whose carelessness long , has been the despair of those who SHARE OF | tists: ana they concocted some. thing that might be called a istry spokesman. some | months we've kept it on the | An interesting 20-page secret list, but now it can be booklet, “What Every In- told. vestor Should Know”, is wad on oe It's a liquid yours for the asking. Cover- on with a spray gun, ing fundamentals of inves!- | and it dries to an unbelievable | ment, it's particularly heip- oe buyer of stocks. Stop in, “ write, or phone for your ]| finds himself falling on his chin, an way. Finally he gees to dance somewhere else,- ; and our cornice stays clean.” The substance has been tried on the National Gallery, beside | Trafalgar Square, which pigeons — | “It seems to work,” said the | prospect of being able to per- | suade our birds to go somewhere _ Member New York Stock Exchonge manager in 1950 ~_ — a | make a headquarters. tive stock, jand Martin Co. rataey | “ile ener... Uneven Market YOUR | 255° Spotlights Few PROSPERITY (ipo aang nienneneal ig — raat navel unevenly aay to-/ day with a few special situations’ ‘attracting interest. * * * Changes of most key stocks were from fractions to a point. A spurt of transactions at the slickness. The pigeon alights, aha‘opening was accompanied by at om : is surprised to find himself skid. {briefly late ticker tape. Then turn-! ful if you aren't a frequenf ding three feet. lover slowed. Ford dropped 3 points betord | | reducing the loss by a fraction. copy. sed ing on his bottom in | The word was that the Ford Foundation is planning to sell another 2,000,000 shares of Ford @!nce. | common. American Motors, which sank Beets . topped. bu 5'2 points as yesterday's most ac- rebounded a couple of Cabbage Curly, bu. ag points in brisk dealings. Stude-|& Red. ; | spokesman, ‘and we like the D&ker-Packard gained a fraction. | Carrots. topped Boeing rose more than a point was about a point yal pascal, at ond other leading exchonges elxe without hurting them. ” f iecue wi news ln the Air (Fennel, dos. bel behs pattern nnn re to build and pow the Dyna-Soar| ‘ Watling, Le-ehen & Ce. E I er the yna-Soar| Kohirab to reeuas we, | Chevrolet Ad Manager Ispace glider Leeks. j Pentine, Michigan 1 | Will Retire Jan. 1 decd tala chon ehikn i 1 . sland railroads showed little or no: mew ciseiisie prey Seu oe 1 weet vote on . ain ee response to published news that a | Parsnios Cello Pak dos. .. \ al ¢ y manage cial eateries ! SL ciewralet, sill getive- Jan. 1, was merger is being studied. , Mowe sno: -- | | announced today. He will be suc-, Steels and rails were mixed | ' ! | ceeded by Jack Izard, presently; 90W that the back-to-work in- j Address - 1 zone manager for the company at| Junction in the steel strike is in 1 ' 7 Peoria, ll effect. Wall Street remained un- an a 7 ; A 31-year-veteran with Chevrolet,| Certain as tothe outlook in the bemmm em em we mem mam= | Power was named advertising still unsettled labor situation. Bethlehem gained a_fraction.| |U. S. Steel eased. Jones & Laugh- jlin and Youngstown Sheet moderate losses. Illinois Central was up about a Southern Pacific «was Serre i and find out what’s good! Made with home-grown grain harvested an ar ae Tobacco and Interna-| ’ . wes Jon aper. The latter down) hour’s drive from our distillery. And pure, more than 4 following declaration sweet limestone water from our own under- iof the regular cash dividend and 2 2 ground springs. Slowly distilled, then trick- led through fresh charcoal for extra clarity timg CATTICTS changes. ! Goodyear (ex dividend) was Cel Cabbage, |down more than a_ point. ndive, bu losers were American Cyanamid, | ‘Let Sample Little Brown Jug [own ed a point. Other lead- is per cent in stock. -New York Stocks MARKETS |Futures Weak == but Oats Fim The following are covering sales of sd grown produce brought to the Farmer's Market by growers and sold by| |them in wholesale package lots ‘Quotations are furnisked by the slight firming in oats, | Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of futures market was steady to weak | |today with iosses running to about ja cent in rye and soybeans during | the first several minutes of trad- Detroit Produce The selling appeared to be | mostly liquidatién for profits al- though some of the pressure in ’ linked with a weaker market for soybean meal. Trade was slower than in other recent sessions as dealers awaited the government's November crop report to be issued after the close #200 of the Beard of Trade today. = Neseesses cider | Oral. case ws. bu, . : we @ Nass & y- were virtually at fy standstill | near the end of the first 2.23 hour with wheat unchanged to 4 a bushel higher, December = : corn \% to % lower, De- ' 18 cember SL 12%; oats % higher to Gabbans Sprouts os bu. 150 14 lower, December $1 - it beans ls to % lower, November. president and national legislative director of the National Federation of Independent Business, at ‘luncheon tomorrow at the Elks | Temple. | Onions, green, doz. behs. The Milwaukee and _ the Rock, Calons. dry 50-Ib. bas.. Grain Prices Radishes, sarhouae doz. behs sees Radishes, red. doz b —— white. doz. . | Squash, Buttercup, bu Squash, Butternut. —- Delicious, bu. . July 1.30 Laré ea ‘ Nov 795 took . 02 10 ee _$sessees i3,Ro val You: Fi irm Cd GEORGE J. BURGER Will Address Luncheon Here County Business Heads to Hear Report From Federation Executive Business and professional lead- cember 77%; rye 4 to, ers throughout Oakland County wiil ~J. Burger, vice * * * Burger will be principal speaker the luncheon, according 74*s Francis Miller, district chairman 66', for the federation. Monroe Osmun, chairman for the noon luncheon, said tickets may be obtained at Osmun'; Men’s Clothing Store, amnetl Realty or at the door. Burger will speak on what in-| jdependent business may expect! from the next session of Congre:s. —_——__?_r—_*—_ _ Sets Open Hou 3 to Mark 5th Year Michigan Life Insurance Co. in \Act pe the Miller-Tydings and Royal Oak will hold open house McGuire national fair trade acts. from 3 te—-9 p.m. mark the fifth year at its present) per | begpasig on Woodward avenue near Other ere, bu. Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY ound FOB. Detroit for No STOCKHOLDERS INFORMATIONAL MEETING =| ‘PtSi? sige! ) reports on the affairs of the company. All stockholders are cordially invited to be present at this 8th annual meeting. INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS r CALL ~ C.J. NEPHLER CO. * FE 2-9117 t 818 Community National Bank Bidg. \19Un FACIL Tike EXTEND PROM p Const Gen Tire o. 42.6 Tran W Air. mast night, Ff if ’ . : and mellowness. Then we age six years, and Aeneaue -:- GOF Kennecott .. 95 lie 5 ; j tse Kresge, 88 : ‘ [Allied Strs .... ; wind up with the smoothest, softest bour- (Allis Chal 1... 38.3 KSOB*E s+ 31 |Alum Ltd ..... 31.4 , Al " Ligg & My .. 94.2) bon that ever touched your glass. Sample Amvairtin''<: $8" Lackn aire |. 3e \ . A 8 c Little Brown Jug and find out what’s good ! lAm Gyan "| £24 Lone 8 Ges .. 0 jAm M & Poy .. 47.4 Lorillard ac. Gt 1| $ 70 $ 98 jAm Met Cl... 25. Mack Trk .. 444 era 2 Am Motors ... 846 Martin Co 45 | fu AmNGas ... (82 Merck 77.3) Am Smelt 505 Merr Ch & 8 1s @. Pint _— — Tel Ae 3 Mpls Hon 125 Code No. 915 Ne. 9 ' ° 4, Minn M & M 1484 ° eee a ak ' - Anaconda 632 MinnP&L 33.3 . Anac W&C 55 Monsan Ch 50.5 Armeo Bt) - 136 weent Ward | 31.7) Armaur & Co + oe Mot Prod a , Atchison BOD He ere neede Avco Corp 432 torola -» 129 Balt & Ob. a Nat Oash R 652 Beth Steel 545 Nat Dairy $1.3 Boeing Air ,.. 32 Net Gyps ‘ ‘Bond Strs .... 21.3 Nat Lead 110.5 {Borden oon Oe NY Central 50.3 Borg Warn ... 42.5 No Am Av 43 |Briggs Mfg ... 116 Nor Pac . 4 Brist My .... 462 Nor Sta PW... 23.6 | salable j : she Balke .. 382 | Bu Co coce 38.4 LITTLE |Burroughs ... 322 Qwens Ill Gi 100 BROWN JUG jCal Pack 284 Pan A W Air 223)/Ply; Calum & H .. 241 pann Epi 44.1/0f run: \Can Pac pe creel, =H M WALEER \Case. JI ) 222 Param Pict .. 46.7/ ers; LIy TLE ‘souRBON |Qater Trae eS . s Oh. 686 ‘ BROWN JUG Chrysler... ont ; KER Cities 8vc 46.1 Pepsi Cola .. 3 IRAM WAI Clark wip .. 85 Pfizer ...... 34 BOURBOF.- Coca Co . 163 Phelps D .... 58 = |Colg Palm . 363 Philco cooe 24.8 Colum Gas 206 Phill Pet .... 41.6/steers 38 a Con Edis + 60 Pure Of] ..,. 35.2/26.50 - 2 Con .N Gas... 482 RCA . 5 | steers “M Geneuater Pw. ae 13 14 -16 16 - - 42 R blic St 7” Cmcpss . oe ota e Cont Mot ..... 115 : Rex Drug .. 48 1 e rown ug Cont Ol) ..... 494 Reyn Met 63 : Copper Rng .. 25.1 , Corn Pd |... $3.3 nel oe s rtis Pub... 6 Year Old » Straight Bourbon Whiskey See ee is 31 aSfeway St .. 38. Det Edis ..... 43 St Reg Pap . 52 Dis C Seag ... 33.5 Secovill Mf .. 25. STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY » 6 YEARS OLD » 8 PROOF Dow’ Chem ‘282% shell Of S13. |Dow em , e : HIRAM WALKER & SONS INC., PEORIA, ILLINOIS Du Pont 259.4 Sinclair 52 East Air L . 345 BSocony . ast Kod $5.7 gou Pac 69.3) Eaton Mfe¢ . 46 gon Ry eae 1 Fl Auto | 494 Sperry Ra .. 227 oe = El & Mu ® 3ta Brand 34 6'mtxed No Frer Pod 144 wet 77 —— = E ie PI 127 Std OW Cal Mae F--Cell< on 4 Std ON Ind 415 13.40-13.50 Freets rag Sid ON NI 1. 476 Pord Mo ‘W714 «Std Of1 Oh .. 4 Freep 6! 245 Stever ip, 30 P-ueh Tra 282 Stud Pack .. 25.5) | Gen Bak *3 Sun Of 57 4 Suther Pap Gen Pas .... 1021 Tenn Gas 32 Gen Mills oe af Texaco ++ 186 Gen Motors $24 ex G Sul. 17.4 Timk R Bear 593 Transamer .. Goodyear ....1383 Underwood + 3| yesterday. Three desks were ran- 376 Un Pac . 30.2 sacked, a door broken down, and; | , DETROIT EDISON | 2280 2 Soh 0° i | | Gillette | 2:00 p.m. Mondey ier Paige... 23 Un Carbide Gt A&P “<< Gt No Ry .... 49.1 Unit Air Lin .. November 16, 1959 (Grevnonnd +." 218 Unit Atre a1 la steel cabinet_prigd open, but! . u 1 1144 nit Homestk 412 Bele os ao oa at the Hooker Ch y2 US Lines .. 286 ; wae ia US Rub . 63 Weipa ;: 2 Hey anig) Ca Steel cen 28 Ford Auditoriym, Detroit fj paee AE 5-402 Us Ti | Interiak Ir «gy [mtohn 42.2 | Tt Rus Mch | 6°7R Walereen 48.2 tnt Harv ang ‘est Un Tel ah | Thi id tunity for Detroit tat Pern 96 vets Rl. oe ( = Int Pane 1254 ests S meeting provides an opportunity for : rot iret Paper ae ei sr e i i i \Int Tel & Tel 38 Yale & Tow low. Edison stockholders to pecome acquainte “a Jp [tas Tel & Tel. 38) Vane & Toe * see mana: peopl o receive -to- Johns Man 49.7 Zenith Rad gement ee ‘ - to-date Jones & L 735 Lear . 20.2 DOW-JONES 11 A. M. AVERAGES 30 inds. 649 21 off 1.71. 20 rails 15405 off 009. - 18 uttls. 87.13 up 0.02 65 stocks 213.13 off 037 Volume to 11 a.m., 600.000 DETRO'T STOCKS ‘C. J. Nephier Co.) *No sale; bid and asked. Dividend Is Declared ~ ‘by Pontiac State ate Bank m At a meeting of the Eis Board of D Dr ~—_ _ rectors of the Pontiac State Bank a 53O cents per share High, Fe | dividend payable Dec. 1 to stock-;Osmun’s Gown town Wed.. or box “> |holders of record Nov. 14 was de- clared. This. brings to $1 per share total dividends the bank has declared! CA caponettes under x Y Ree tomorrow “Michigan Life | . | Insurance Co. Day” ithe firm’s contributions de A jumbo 41-44; aa leconomic and social well-being of zs : community.” The company reported that it > has 550,000 policyholders for a Jumbo 40' 3-41; | total of $400 million and more DETROIT. Nov. 9 (AP) — Eggs F 26.1 Detroit in case ng federal sta small 2: grade B large’ 4-36; browns Commercially graded Se} Burger, a Washington ee | itive for independent business since si —— on the Robinson-Pat- mendment to the Clayton Portland's Newspapers Struck by Stereotypers stereotypers struck Portland’ s two daily newspapers today in a dis- pute over working conditions. * x * William W. Knight, publisher of the’ Oregon Journal, and M. J. Frey, publisher of the Oregonian, said the union rejected an offer to arbitrate al] unresolved issues. 9: small 19 browns =e than 100 employes. om \ 44%-3 arge medium to be Of particular, PUBLI DETROIT LIVESTOCK . informal dinner for Michi-| gan Life employes and their fam- hio Oil . 35.7 Steers and heifers stanensde and aoe limited showing ilies will climax the open house|tiac 8D # wens Cng 80.2 |grades ebacaggmarae ee. |choice steers and heifers in early sup- cows comprise about 30 ‘per cent Program. around 200 stockers and feed- ‘opening trade On Parke Da 43 ¢/and heifers slow few early sales high steers be by former Gov. Alex Groesbeck. City Underwriters to dear Speaker The Pontiac Life Underwriters 1;| Association will hold its monthly it breakfast meeting at 8:30 Wednes 000 slaughter classes |#Y in the re Temple. Guest veinihoe will be Robert Smith, agncy director of the Mich- — 1200 butchers ana igan Life Insurance Co., a Woodward, Royal Oak. Penney, sigill 11$.4|choice to prime yearlt Pa RR 16 2 |steady: other grades 25- | small lots “high choice to prime 065- 1020 Ib. yearling steers 28.00: one load choice and prime 1040 Ib most _— steers 1150 Ibs choice heifers 24 00 26.25; ; canners and cutters 13.90-; Vealers — salable 250 good to in most choice and prime “ standard and, \g00d 22-34; cull and util- liambe 18. ce utiltty to good wooled cull to choice slaugh- sows opening 25c ¢ 2 and 3 196-240. tbe. A veteran - more than 35 vears n life underwriting, Smith will deliver a talk entitled “This Is Your Day."’ Earning. Reports As) —-Cutbonrd Marine lGoodrich ..... ng Twent Cen ., 308 was reported to Pontiac melee hey 974, equal to #178 per share, for Plans and estimates pared and are on file with the Township Glerk for public examination. The esti- mate of cost as sg 2 and 3 p 25-10.00 News in Brief Someone broke into the Witeea| - 213! School by breaking a window, treme ileus year ea: NOTICE or PUBLIC “SALE — Notice! hereby given, that on the 10th day of Novena, 1960 at 12:30 | signed will sell at pud . ‘sale to the |highest bidder for cash, one 1962 Pon- POWM18295, at 4780 Oak Viste. Drayton Plains, Michigan vehicle is stored at 4780 Oak Vista, Dray- ;ton Plaine. Michigan. ant meg be in- | spected a reyton The firm was founded in 1927 |Ppiains, sieohignn. me Undersigned re- serves the es aE bid at the sale LOAN COMPANY 30 East Lawrence, Pontiac, Michigan, John Lee, Manager November 3 & 10, 1968 NOTICE OF HEARING ON SPECIAL Assessment Improvements by Bloomfield Township Board. To the suners of the following de- scribed propert Lots 2 thru te inclusive; Lots 21 thru 66 Looe ori ts 73 thru 96 inclusive of —— wns Subdivision, Section Bloomfield Township, Oakland County, eee Take Notice the Townshi "|Board ot the oo of Bloomfield has Gonsiruction Of F18.nee Tee Sanitary Sewer, including 19 manholes and 1120 lineal feet of 6” house leads in vonshire Downs Subdivision, Section 9, | Bloomfield Township. and has tentatively designa }cial assessment district against which the cost of said improvements is to be as- sessed as consisting of all the lots and parcels of lands set forth above assessment husband cher, Curtis and vie r greiper of Martha Wright, Pearl Tobin, Mrs. Lorretta Renno, rl, Harry, Albert and held Wednesday, Nov Babe! ™m. trom the Plumertelt Punere ome, ¢ Orion, with Reader Mr Hum officiat- ing. Intermen: = » Yale, Mich. Mr. Piletcher Home. ® . 10,1 J 351 8. Roslyn Rd.; age 54; be- loved husband of Ethel I~ Dresser. Funeral service will held Thursday, Nov. 12, at 11 a.m. from Donelson-Johns Funeral NOV. 113 W. Strathmore: e 41; pelevea daughter of Della Guiger Downing; dear m of 3 Livingston and Joseph Liv ton; dear sister of Mrs. service held Wednesday Nov. 11, at 11 a.m. from Voor’ ple Puneral Hom with Rev. L. W. Schafer officiat- ing. t in White Cemetery. PAR: we —_ 9. a. ADDIE M.. ; dear mot “WE icago: h- er es vi Earl bn Hall. Funeral service will be held Thursday, Noy. 12, at 11 a.m. from Hunteon Funeral Home with C. Warren Wilson officiating. In- terment in Lekeville Cemetery. Mrs. Parish will lie in state at- the Hi Pune ¢ SALE—AT 9:30 AM. ON NO-| ember "3, 1950, a 1950 Rambler 4 dr.) interest to open hula visitors ar: Bed. serial number D747142 will be sold sd publie sale at 22031 Woodward Ave rndale, Mich, that address -being count and posting and anciin where the vehicle ts stored ane may wel ing € 8° nspected. No - 10, il, the under- Said motor RAVELL, NOV. 9, 1969. MATILDA e 64; dear Matlock and Mrs. ward Moo also survived by — grandents. dren and one great “oO” Puneral eervice will held Thursday, Nov 32, at p.m trom St. Trinity Lutheran Church with Rev. Claus officiating. In- Puneral arrangements by Done son-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Donelson-Johns Puneral Ho until 11 a.m. Thursda ‘a which time she will be taken to the rvice. NOV officiating. Imterment Mt. Park Cemetery. Mr. air wit Me tn state at the Huntoon Fu- rs ie of William Wimbrow. Charies Wimbrow and Mrs. Barbara Hard- ci also oer by 12 grand- iaren. Puneral service will be id Thur: Nov. 12, at 1 ery ood oo ate son-Bird —<. A cf Walled Lake, with erry \ Thomas officiating eateriedas fa Commerce , nga aie Mr. Wim- brow will e dn state at the Richardson - Bird Puneral Home, Walled Lake Funeral Directors 4 COATS Drayton "Aone ne Tm Donelson-Johns FUNERAL ROME Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Plane or Motor FE 23-4378 SPA GR Service rE 2-5841 Cemetery Lots = 5 PAPAL SEARING 2 LOTS IN WHITE CHAPEL CEME- tery, located in the Garden of Religious Liberty. FB ee caY 7201. the spe- have been pre- shows the cost of said Fe be $29,700.00. ~~ her ‘Notice that the Town- ship ‘wilt meet On Monday, Novem- ber 16, 1959, at 8:00 bw p.m., at the Bloomfield Township Hall, n the Town of for the purpose of hearing any objections to the petition. to ‘bee improvements and to the special} therefor. ROBERT H. DUDLEY, Township Clerk. Nov. ow 4 10, 1059 45, equal to $1.16 Sa) totaled $171.569.244 | with Sine, 712,982 a year earlier. www y nothing was reported missing. Pesce ‘ For _ nine months ended HOUSE EHOLD FINANCE conP’ N ome— 1959, $14823, 3981958, $17,302,213. are 1959, $1.68—1958. $1.98 Sanrnat DYNAMICS CORP. es $16, m46 682—1958, $28,740,152. 1980, ati 1 70—1958, $2.92. sales— 1999, $1,186,045,043—1958, $1188, 006,54.| reported to Pontiac police yester- that someone broke into his removing a piece of cardboard from a basement win- Someone stole a coin meter box | containing about $5 in change from a washing machine in the base- ment of an apartment building at , it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. Burglars broke into the Webb) | Figures after decimal a a Fuel Co.. 1 S. Paddock St., we” 25 stole eight books of trade stamps it was reported Business Notes Charles H. Howson has been jelected a vice president of Mac-| |Manus, John & Adams,,Inc.. na- onal advertising 2} 33? valued at $100, if 3 to Pontiac police yesterday. A shotgun was stolen from her 10.7\car yesterday, Florence E. Smith, 189 S. Sanford St., reported to Pon- Vandals broke two windaws at Washington Junior High School, it was reported to Pontiac police) agency A graduate of Follies, Northern Wayne State Uni- 11 and 12. Tiekets at x versity, Howson joined the firm ( ¥ as manager of ‘the Balti- more offices of the agency for two years, returning to Detroit in Pontiac Shrine No. 22, stated meeting, womner” Nov. 11. 8 p. m., _ Mary A. McCurdy, scribe. EXPECTING 9 GUESTS + WEDDING GUESTS CHRISTENINGS BAR MITZVAHS Use the AVOY MOTEL or YOUR EXTRA __ BEDROOM Single $7.00 Doubles $9.00 Twins $11.00 itchenettes-$12.00 ° For Reservations ME se, ,PARE CEMEV EAT 1ER inns. Neuad ot ae Gon. Ge 3-3965. __Help Wanted Male 6 ree 00 TO si0.d00 FOTE X hg FA, ith $108 base pa Mar- bee age 23 Aag “phone, _ Pontiac aréa route. OH 3-8565. A MAN Wanted with car. Some mechan- ical ability helpful. Apply 2397 Elizabeth Lake Road. Wednesday. November llth, 10 a.m AUTO COLLISION SGDY _MAN. experienced only. 50 tr cent, — of work. group insurance, Rag Auto Body Service, 745 ith Bivd. East. FE 4-0687. EMPTY POCKETBOOK ‘ CROWDED ATTIC Pontiac Press Want Ads Specialize in Just Such Problems! Just Try "Em! “THRIFT WEEK” BEGAN IN TIE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS YEARS AGO AND HAS BEEN GOING ON DAILY EVER SINCEf FOR ACTION Dial FE 28181 * The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m, insertion of the advertise ment which has been rem dered valueless the error. Lines Idiay 3-Days ¢Dsa 2” $1.80 $208 43. 3 2 2.97 4.50 4 00 3.04 6.76 5 250 450 6.70 6 3.00 6.40 8.20 7 3.60 630 9.66 8 4.00 1.20 11 04 ® 4.50 8.10 §©612.42 0 6.00 9.00 13.80 Ap additiona! charge of 60c will be made for use of Pontiac Press box oumbers. BUMP AND PAINT MAN FOR CUS- tomer and used cars. 62 Oakland Avenue. FE 8-8300. CAREER OPPORTUNITY. OUE to expansion, a 65- r-old Life has an in this area for a full or part time man. The man we want to interview should be between 25-50. ambitious, food character. must own @ car. ve the desire to earn a better-than-average to- come with all plus ‘advantages meet call gee MI 6-6600 or M e DRiv Lm, SALESMAN. GOOD . Trepticlivetion. many other denefits. Age 23-35. mer- ried, must be ."; i, 9 to 2 am. 3 to & is WY Howard DO YOU QUALIFY + $85 PER WEEK. WE HAVE A Mgr com rou. TION WITH A AL WHICH OFFERS 7 TED. oF. oo cals sar POR ING — WHO CAN £8SE BASIC QUALIFICATIONS:, 1—AGE 18-28 2—EDUCATION- HIGH SCHOOL —e SOME COL- A If you pai geen these basic qualt- at a minjmum of $340 month, then call FE 8.8103. a.m. to 1 p&® EXPjchd{NCED FIREMAN TO OP- Crary tomatic ofl fired boiler Roct Bon Company, Roch- 149 W. Huron EXPERIENCED DRUG CLERK 22-35 years old preferred. Refer- ences. Excellent Sam's Drugs. po O° ~~ FE 8-1422 FIRST CLASS BUMP AND PAINT- er. Plenty of work. M. G. Colli- _ ston. 1 103 FE. Montcalm ~ MECHANIC Exp. on Chrysler products. on transmissions & power ing. Rammier-Dallas Motor Sales 101 N. Main St.. Rochester. OL 2-9111. MAN FOR DUCT WORK & PIPE fitting. 3101 Orchard Lake Rd Keego Harbor. MAN WITH HEAVY DUTY TRUCK or t ~~ and trailer to hau) aw ol 1-81 63. Forest Pro- ducts ty MAN WITH CRAWLER FOR SKID- ding and loading saw logs. nage f all winter. Phone Rochester 1-8163. Forest. Products, te. NEW CAR SALESMAN TO — Lark. Liberal commission. - rience not necessary. Mazurek yo Sales. 245 8. Bivd. East. 4- OPPORTUNITY TO EARN 86.000 per year. Permanent ae Gall "EM, Sait petwe between delly. PERMANENT SALARY National ¢ompany will train 3 men locally for full tad investi- gative work Makifie character investigations. Age 22 to 28, high school diploma. knowledge of typing and car required. Expenses. paid vacstion. other benefits. Call E 5-9748. PART-TIME If you are eee and are peat and have a car. ie Ex NCED FA hand wT month, Carl Dobat, 2460 Dutton Rochester. SINGLE. "ELDERLY MAN FOR — odd . More hom Jobs. _ Oe e than vented far © ‘spedecntention sales. FE. Help Wanted Female 7 3 LADIES WIE cama, F pers oe =< © up per a a 7 sine ine mand If have ever t cet nie tel ere $3" .% | aad Drayton DONT WiSIT FOR MONEY! Make it easily .% * and ask for — a friendly Want Ad . ' Sales Clerk ake ote Ads. to Seen ena L = sell, rent, buy, swap, hire, dial FE 2-8181.