oe u é3 P RUSSIAN. behind him are his U. N. ee Czech’ ambassador Jiri. Nosek, front, : assist assured pole, as ants. AP Wirephoto BIRTHDAY SMILE -- Sporting a grin almost as wide as her husband's famous smile, Mamie Eisenhower: marked her 62nd birthday today, with ‘a private party with her grandchildren. UNIONIST SLAIN — Malcolm White, (eft) president. of a small manufacturing plant in Chester, N. Y. yesterday shot and killed Alfred Dugan, right, who was leading a strike against the plant, White said Dugan rushed him with his hand in his pocket, and he thought he had a gun. Ike Ponders Suggestion t o Hike Tax on Gasoline WASHINGTON (UPI) — Pres- ; 1% cents per gallon will be nec- ident Eisenhower has been ad- vised that an increase in the | materially to: his federal gasoline tax of one or | culties, essary next year to avoid adding deficit diffi- ] * MOSCOW (?'—The Soviet government today prom-|: ised its people the highest living standards in the world | by 1970, The promise was made in mittee. ed by Khrushchev The plan for the years 1! Id a report on Premier Khrush- chev’s seven-year economic plan which was approved Wednesday by the Communist party Central Com- 959-1965 calls for an 80 per Meeting Called Moore Sets Parley Nov. 25 to Draw Up Emergency Plans Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore -}has called upon state mental health officials to meet and plan emerg- ency measures to be placed before a proposed special session of the Legislature. Judge Moore, chairman of the Probate Judges Committee on Mental Hospitalization, announced the meeting is sched- uled for Nov. 25 at the Michigan State University Union Bidg. in East Lansing, Invited are Goy. Williams and the state administrative board, the Mental Health Commission, Michi- gan Society for Mental Health rep- resentatives, plus key members of the Legislature. Vv *® * * . The latter inciude House Speaker Appropriations Committee, House George Van Peursem, the Senate Ways and Means Committee; and the chairmen of the House Mental Hospital Committee and the Sen- ate Health and Welfare Commit- tee. Such a meeting could lay plans to whittle down the long list of mental patients wafting to get into the state’s crowded mental institutions, Judge Moore said. Gov. Williams has not yet indi- cated whether he would call a spe- cial December session of the Leg- islature to consider the problem. “Prompt emergency action is vital,"’ Judge Moore believed, * * * j “Only combined legislative ac- | ‘tion and administrative planning can solve the problem. It should be faced immediately,” he told Gov. Williams in a letter. “In fairness to everyone, it must be recognized that the ma- jor difficulty is unquestionabi the shortage of state funds,” The judges’ committee has a two point plan to open up bed space in state hospitals. It recommends: 41) The release back fo local counties of approximately 500 men- tal patients whose primary need is custodial care rather than active psychiatric treatment. “In exchange, an equal number of beds would thereby be made| available for waiting list commit- ments,” Judge Moore said. | (2) The use of approximately 1,- 000 vacant tuberculosis sanitoria beds for mentally ill patients, be- ginning with the transfer to sani- toria of mental patients with tu- berberculosis. Occasional Rain, Cooler Tonight degrees. er with the high averaging around again Tuesday or Wednesday. 1 p.m. was 63. Be Comics ...°....... cvcdese.s County News ....... seey, 1415 Editorials ...,........ Lsiveen 6 High School ................ "ul Markets ,,........ PEA TENE ve 8 Obituaries ,.........6e00505. 17 Sports Tr LAA PERLE eee ee 35-36 Theaters .....006s00+-5., 90-31 TV & Radio Programs ,.... 43: : eee eeeeeeatewae 3 Women’s Pages ......... 18-21 Mental Health ‘vestments: in the 41 years of Com- | munist rule, Khrushchev said. jtween parked cars into the path Occasional showers and cooler ‘is, 3st snnnhinamaiinnennana the weatherman’s forecast for the © Pontiac area tonight and tomor-!# row. Tonight's low will be near 48\ 0 Saturday and Sunday will be cool. | 54, the low 42. Monday and Tues-|} day will be warmer. Showers are! ? Predicted for the weekend and|) The lowest temperature in down- Ft town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m.\% was 53 degrees. The reading at Hall for rent for special occasions. ; res location, Ample parking, ; 47101. Adv | :_— cent increase in Russian in- dustrial production. .* * * This will enable the Communist bloc to produce more than half the world's industrial goods in 1965, compared with about one- third now, the report claimed. outstripping per capita produc- ‘tion in the United States’ by. 1970, according to the. report. By 1970 or possibly earlier, the péport adds, “the US.S.R. will take first place in the world both for absolute volume of produc- tion and for per capita production, which will insure the highest liv- ing standafds in the world.” Such economic success would prove the absolute superiority of communism over capitajism, the report déclared. The report will be delivered at the 2ist party congress, scheduled for next January. At a date not yet announced it will be presented to the Supreme Soviet, Russia's parliament, for certain epproval. | The seven-year plan was pre- | nism.” j The report refraifi¢ from prom- ising a date forthe Soviet mil* jenium of pure communism in which each contributes according | to his ability and is rewarded only! according to need. : “-@..¢ The report touches on almost all| phases of Russian life, from Khrushchev's new work-plus-study) educational system to expansion of airlines. But primary emphasis is placed on heavy industry. The volume of state capital in- vestments during the next seven| years will almost equal capital in-| At the same time he promised « better itis to te tae tm | 200 million Russians. The real pene incomes of factory and office workers will increase an aver- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) ” City Girl Hit by Car in Critical Condition A nine-year-old Pontiac girl was|lice to hunters to register camp reported in critical condition today post was extended also. - at Pontiac General Hospital after | being hit by an- automobile yes-| terday afternoon. Delores Harris, 385 Branch St., was struck by a car driven by John L. Waldo, 2219 Crane St., Waterford Township: She suffered, chest and internal injuries. * * * The accident occurred on Branch street north of Clovese street. Waldo told Pontiac Police he was traveling south on Branch when the girl darted out from be- the. girl. seasons. Both are former Michigan football stars. Oosterbaan said in a statement: head coaching position. . . capacity. the head coaching position -* and so informed Frits or was not the ~ ioe) 98 ] ust risler, * tian LOSING pressure on Bennie,” director of athletieg’ at Michigan. | “It was up to hint entirely. This is. a reassignment within the athletic department. “I think it was four years ago! when Ben first suggested that he} AP Wirephote U. OF M. SHUFFLE — Chalmers (Bump) Elliott will replace University of Michigan coach Bennie Oosterbaan January 1, it was indicated today, of the coaching assignment. He} ing his 11th season State Tratfic Today i j : a brunt of the load of hunters were; The 121-bed hospital will be dedi- head football coach as of Jan. 1, |M66, U.S. 27 and U.S. 23. cent factory layoffs might cause} traffic to be heavier this evening | and tonight. He said many people | might work up to the quitting time | : ‘ instead of cutting off work a day Pletion of a $200,000 remodeling) jor so early. a day when a large Lansing fac- | tory resumed operations after a) strike. Pressure in the area, he said, was considerably below expectations, largely because|for an undisclosed sum in Jan- of the work resumption. Similar |0f his car. He said that he braked|thoughts might keep people right! but was unable to avoid hitting|on their jobs today instead of their been located in a converted clinic ‘quitting a day or so early. RES WEIN Time’s Awasting: Start Practicing NO said then he was looking forward to the day he could get out. Bump Elliott Will Step Into. Top Wolverine Grid Job From Assistant’s Position — ANN ARBOR (#) — Bennie Oosterbaan resigned today as football coach at the University of Michigan after11 . — * Chalmers (Bump) Elliott, Oosterbaan's top aide and backfield coach, will replace Oosterbaan on Jan. 1. “As ig generally known I have for the past three or four years been seriously considering retiring from the « 3 Pa * “Last spring at my request this intention was made: known to the Athletic Board, which subsequently offered: me a fine opportunity to serve the university in another. “At that time I decided thig would be my last year in ‘+ ’ 2nd Year | or Bennie Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, who’ some day would like to be relieved | resigned this morning, is complet- as head coach at the University of Michigan, © Hunters to Domimate ose sitcine cc. | Snee 1 etn roan rte is not a factor. There was ho organized alumni faction against Ben and there was no campaign- ing ter another coach.” , Oosterbaan told newsmen: ‘ From Our News Wires heer dew |. “LT considered making the an-| : 5 + nouncement at the opening of the | LANSING — Michigan traffic this weekend Will be J ocon but decided to withhold it oy dominated by an estimated 300,000-plus deer hunters) -——-——- me moving to their favorite spots, most of them getting) | See Other Stories wins against 3) ties, week. In his first year ce ae ae Tee director's duties for the Wolver- ines, Oosterbaan's record shows 63 losses and four He will finish the sehsee which has two more games In- Saturday and Ohio State the Wolverines won the Big Ten mpionshi ready for the 6 a.m. season opening tomorrow. Page 33 — a perfect pon. In ie The Conservation Department estimated the Satur- 27th. seasdn w si ovr. ta Viuelieaae aoe oe sae oe day opening would mean’ ™ [gf the recurring rumors, however, | took the title and also won the hunters would start their, Wen “4s exodus from cities this Dedication Set Elliott reportedly wilt receive | ia, 1446. | an annual salary of $16,000. Oos- bd * afternoon and evening. for Osteopathic terbaan’s hew job ig expected to * * * AF be as assistant athletic director (Ord at Michigan: Actual hunting pressure wasn't H OSpl tal Sunday under Crisler, his predecessor as. | YEAR . jexpected to be much heavier Sat- football coach. 1948 jurday than it was during Saturday,, Ceremonies dedicating the Pon-| QOosterbaan reportedly made $19,- = the second day of the season, last tiac Osteopathic Hospital have 9o9 q year as coach, but it was 1951 {been scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Sun-| understood he would take a slight} 4959 No extra troopers were as- | After the brief ceremony, al oar: a “ _ 2. wet signed by State Police, but a | which representatives from various} Last night in a closed session, 1955 | maximum patrol pattern used for (religious faiths will take part, there’, resolution was passd by the| 3956 all heavy traffic periods was to | Will be open house for the general Athletic Board stating: “The Board| 4957 Se fa decree public, announced Harry H. Whit-\o¢ Control of Intercollegiate Ath- 1958 . ; low, hospital director. |letics recommends that Chalmers The main routes bearing the) x * W. Elliott assume the duties of} Total jcated “to the people of Oakland'1959 at a salary of $16,000 a| “Two Games to Play I'm making the statement now.” | Rose Bowl game against ‘Califor- * This is Oosterbaan’s 11-yéar ree- * * Naw Ranaaw we vowauwnal imo @ecooHeHad 63 31 The annual invitation by state po- County ,” Whitlow said. -° year.”’ Open house will last until 5 The board presented this recom- p.m. and most ef the hospital |Mendation to the University Board will open for general inspection, of Regents which has its meeting Whitlow announced. There will scheduled for today. be a buffet dinner served in the The Regents usually follow the hospital dining room. course of action recommended by The open house marks the com: the Athletic Board, and the ap- pointment of Elliott was expect- ‘project at the hospital's new lo-| ¢d to come out of today’s meet- * *« * | One conservation expert said re-| cation, 50 N. Perry St. The seven-| ing. story building ther was met | Oosterbaan was appointed head the Pontiac Hotel. ‘coach.in 1948 and has been on the xt & lathletic staff since he was grad- The hospital purchased the hotel | uated from Michigan in 1928. Oosterbaan will finish out the in two 1958 season as head coach. Michi- had formerly|gan has two games remaining. with Indiana tomorrow and Ohio ' State the following Saturday. The pheasant season opened on} Lansing 1956 and moved |a race with death It uary, months later. lat 32 Auburn avenue. ~*~ * SLES, ROME OA BN SO et oe Pe PORES: PS Sg Ra ie aS | With his free arm, NEW YORK (AP) ployes. know what to do with SIMPLE ANSWER Don’t Wait ’Til You're 65 to Retire| By HAL BOYLE of articles on the evils of retirement. enough to frighten a man out of the desire to grow old. They make retirement sound more dangerous than Sunday driving. . Some people are always knocking a good thing, but we doubt that they’ll ever make retirement really unpopular with the working classes. Or, for that matter, government em- The big peril seems to be that a fellow sud- denly turns 65, is cut off the payroll, and doesn’t adjust to a new way of life. The answer, of course, is simple. Start get- ting ready for retirement early in life, so when it does come it will find you ready. Here are a few down-to-earth tips—the kind the magazines don’t dare give you: F At 25 start borrowing money from your relatives and friends. If they are like most relatives and friends, it will take you at least 40 years of steady borrowing to build you up a really decent retirement fund. Begin loafing on the job at 35, and loaf more each year. By the time you're 65 you'll be used to not working, and there'll be no sudden shock when you have to hang up the harness forever. If the boss objects, explain your program to him —Magazines today are full They’re Twin Babies Die: of Suffocation: Race With Death Fails: to Save 2-Month-Olds: at Mount Clemens .* MOUNT CLEMENS i — Police. /man Edward Morisette lost out-in- Thursday. On an errand of mercy he spéd™ to a hospital with twin baby as passengers in his car. * sence = Morisette drove with one he clasped fully and honestly. He’ll understand. He's prob- ably doing the same thing himself._ Since. most people spend most of their time making mountains oyt of molehills, be sure to lay — in a good supply of molehills while you are young. ’ You don’t want to be caught short in your old age. START NIPPING Doctors often advise retired people to take a nip before each meal to help their. circulation. s (Contiriued on Page 2, Col. 3) himself. He finds it hard to re lin vempio employe An é wikeageses vss 116.00 ute Loan Se. empls. 108 Meg School employes 107.98 mentary School sepedecsics sh esencwee 105.00 é Construction ....... 100,00 m Vv. seeeeny 100.00 Eyerett a, Mb ceascsee 100.00 MeNally's i ceueeicee 100,00 Mic’ & Ohio Preight aoe 100.00 BSeuer & Girard .. 100 John Mb isi. 100.90 Bia: nie te 100, Geandate Printing 1 med ne 4 : employes . : Pinance mii +cese pe : s . d Local No. 500 UAW employes -. 80.80 Parmer-Snover Funeral Home . 85.00 Club eeece 84.40 et oan employes. eence 64.00 Glenn C. Gillespie ....-...++.-+ 82.00 Spring Is Here ‘Although Rain Falls in West By The Associated Press ‘ Rain clouds hovered over broad areas in the Northwest and Mid- , continent today as spring-like ‘weather spread across the east- ern half «Me _— _+° Temperatures dropped an aver- ‘age of about 10 degrees in the song! air in the Northwest. Read- ngs ranged from the 40s near the ; coast to the 20s in the Rockies and the 30s in ‘areas: — ha ~ Dakotas. . Showers oe rains ecmapaniel ‘the cooler air, with snow in the Higher elevations. Two inches. of ‘snow fell during the night at West "Yellowstone, Mont., bringing. the covering up to a half foot. Rain- fallin most ares was light. * * Biggest, ‘chins . advances “were in the Great- Lakes région ‘as southerly winds fanned warm air across the eastern haif of the country. Temperatures were near ‘60- compared to 40 degrees 24 hours eatlier, The 60 marks ex- ‘tended southward from the Great Lakes region to the Gulf Coast ‘and southwestward into Texas, with. 70s in extreme Southern re- gions. Readings in‘the 40s and 50s were the rule in-the Atlantic Coast, * * * The southerly winds also) ‘brought increased humidity and showers, with rain from the south. ‘ern plains northeastward into the Great Lakes and eastward through New England. | Says Doctor on 98th Birthday WAYNESBURG, Pa. (AP)—Dr. Lindsey S, McNeely, a doctor for 68 years ih the nearby village of Kirby, celebrates his. 98th. birth- day today without “fuss and feathers.” é ‘Just another day,’ he called it, then shrugged off-all thoughts of retiring. “Who would take over my practice?” be asked. Dr. McNeely, w some recy n Pennsylvania and possibly in the ‘United States, practices mod- eration and YTegularity. He calls them the keys to contentment and a long life. * * * Dr. MeNeely doesn’t smoke or drink, but admits he has pre- scribed a bit of whisky at times. “I can’t say whisky will cure anyone,”’ he chuckles, “but neither can I say it won’t do a patient * * - ize as the oldest active doctor! @ THE HARD WAY — William G. Gates, right, who says he's trying to get background for a novel, talks with Seattle police de- any good," Rise in Simca Sales Reported by Chrysler DETROIT — Chrysler Corp. says sales of the French built Simca passenger car in this country for the first nine months of 1958 totaled 12,031 units. In the same period last year sales were 3,374 units. Chrysler purchased a substan- tial interest in the French auto firm earlier this year. It said that by the end of 1958 it expects to have 700 dealers selling Simcas throughout the United States. to prison. tective T. C, Jorgensen, after his arrest in connection with writing a worthless check. Gates told newsmen he wanted to find out how convicts¢eel, to help him write his book, and was trying to get sent os 0 Finance Officials Agree: LANSING #® — Although Michi- gan is in the red financially, the state will be able to struggle along until the next meeting of the Leg- islature, top state officials have agreed. Reetentiel Life i Co. @ 92.00 A & P Tea Co., N. Perry 4 es ‘ orwalk Truck Lines employes . * 00 ovay #1 restone Stores ; 35.00 a Glass o. ee eee a Mig Tyleshone 3 Garlock PUSS ..... des sinss 75.00 ‘ape net ' $3,008.08 Vv. ¢ Hampton... 75.00 Management employes) ee | ceed Smith Oi Co 75.00 ee Interstate Motor Freight 75.00 5,663.25 | . R. Blakeney, MD oave 78.00 . _ Management employes) . . 1,194.20 LH Cole Ol] Co. employes 73.00 | onniins Central n Scho! A & P Tea Co. (W. Huron store) eet ee See See eres 12d Cee nn ee 12.50 pontine Sate Beak eneere 5 1,120.52 #63 UAW em 71.00 Truckaway Corporation ...... a Mr. John C 76.00) Det roit 927.00 Mrierna ne bervies ‘empls, 68,50 A. Predman Inc. empl $55.50) Pursiey Funeral Home employes $5.00 Trackewsy peepee co 605.40 | Household Finance Co. employes 0 Wrigley’s ... 600.00 Hawkins pment Co. ..... 06 Lincela moot Siniet | * igh’ School an YMCA «& ee ... 63.90 See Age bt rke- nh Puneral Home Eastern | Fn BOE “Fig Spee ee oe eee pene ie ge Ben tie Loe j babe i. 1 ¢ Sales employes .. d Wash roi te ign Schoo re Ot] Co. employes . 62.00 #41.06 an Social arrices smmpie, $1.00 , County CIO ancl vs Shain) Pere ee 416.0 aes 61.00 L. &, GO. eevee ene © 400.00 Baultabee t Life Ins. employes |... 51.06) A&P Tea -, | 375.00! Goodyear Service Stores ... 60.00 | ea Senior h School W. EB. C. Huthwaite . 50.00 es iis P 37488 Dante! J, Hackett, MD 60.00 n CO. employes 336.40 Ciinton J. Mumby, MD 50.00 N s it Se 300.95 gecophs Nosanchuk, MD . 60.00 Mary Bethune Schoo) em: 208.85 MecDonaeld, Inc. 50.00 | ‘Tel-Huron Center, Inc. 250.00 Mr. and Mrs. David E. Bastrom 50.00 | Crefoeot School shou tess 248.50 Charles Patrick. MD . 50.00 Jetierson Jr. High School empis. 242.00 ¢ ten, MD . 60.00 MeConnell School ¢: FOS a o. 3 Roll ; 4 : pay : trolt. Creamery — a i wove ¢ Wilson School employes ....:.. 233.00 Fred N. Pauli Co. heeeee 60.00 Life _ Co. 392.20 Me ers sect md Ce. pepe 20) amm Drug Store ......... 3 Tavern Hotel « empioyes 217.00 | Prank L. Doty" Spe ctios oes ac 50.60 ter Bchool employes . 214.50'0, Bryan Kinney .... 80.00 7 Beh « FOS ...+.5.. 202.30 Old Mill Tavern . 50.00 200.00 Hoyt Realty ss 60.00 cone Guidance Clinic H. R, Nicholie Agency : 50.00 em: ‘ ; 193.60/R. J. Cooper seWes $0.00 fellow School employes: 193.00/R. A. Landry, MD... Snes 50.00 Hubert Distributors — +» 191.80\Rey, Richard W. Thomas... . “$0.00 c joyes . 168.00 Rev. ames L. Mareeto 50.00 ration — Drayton Central B — ‘Michigan Highway Commissioner} ®€85- ¢c But, he added, construction in Santa Claus Shortage KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) — There may be @ shortage of Santa Clauses here this Christ- mas segson. Local merchants gave up plans to hold a school for Sanfas after only five appli- cants showed Up, Regular $14.95 Value With "Without Trade-In Trade-In 6 3% different shaving edges, one for tender underarms, one for legs. “Standard Brand Men’s Electric Rators Accepted as en, Elec. Shavers —Main Floor waerrrree> they represent are vitally depend- ent on the vastly improved stand- ards of mobility which can only be provided by the rapid develop-|E ment of new expressways.”’ x * * criticism at past squabbling over mon Council voting against Mack- superhighway. tion under contract in the second quarter of this year—almost twice oysters to fight Chinese Com- month period. munist competition. TOY DEPT. SPECIALS FRIDAY & SATURAY melt ee oy It Walks—Talks—Lights Up @ Complete With Accessories 9 & ROBERT ROBOT =: Construction Camp 4 2 B88! «x 3.49]] wwaiue e $ = Value e i ; forward cad weckward, ‘Unbreak: 4 By MARX set fosiedes: few : j able plastic hy mag ge it talk. @ ce, tables, wheelbarrow, fools, r | Tough piastic etalli @, 2x. fences, pipes, crates, . PEF t $1 HOLDS IN LAYAWAY. Big and roomy for toys, sheets, clothing, etc. Housewares —nd Floor Buy Now for Christmas Gifts! Y, oe Many Uses! tor. storace , Steel Frame — Padded Top — Two. Sizes TOY and C S S $10.98 Value STORAGE H E , T 15x27x15-Inch SPECIAL PURCHASE—Save halt on this rugged, many purpose chest! Padded, hinged top, washable vinyl fabric covered. - HI For TOYS blankets, He was apparently aiming his/E the James Couzens expressway,/E which resulted in the Detroit Com-/k ie’s plans to make it an elevated : The commissioner also an-iE nounced that his department put/E some $64 million of new construc-|— as much as for any previos three-|E | STOP! YOU Shonld STOP PAYING High Prices — START Findin ra ‘Shelving x! 3, as = 7 i Fi il pu $4.95 Value With Cover Safety style rubbish burner with perforated sides, covers, bot- = toms, 3” PIPE—2 Foot .. .65¢ :-4" PIPE—2 Foot ...75¢_ Save installation costs by doing vents from any make dryer ee Ep re pope $10. 95 Value 6-FOOT rt Save at Simms low price. . abla ind by Anarene nte pot dh thc Automatic DRYER VENTS. AS gett =. pipe, rain shie cover. andard yo & 4-inch sizes. it yourself. to install exhaust ; rough wall pps Hoag a SIMMS ” 4-Shelf Unit All Steel Exactly as Pictured Regular $9.95 Value 6° | @ Four 12x36” Shelves @ Full 5-Feet Tall c @ Ready to Assemble Everything in easy - to - carry : carton—ready to assemble with 3 J just a screwdriver, Each shelf 3 holds up to 300 pounds. $7, daa NO-RUST ALUMINUM RURAL MAIL BOXES $3.29 97 Value Post Office Approved Ever - lasting aluminum rural § mail box with signal atm Save § now, : SCOHOSHSHSHSHHSHSHSHSSSHHSHSHHSHHSHSHSCOOHOESEC = Do-it-Yourself and Save Costly Installation Charges CLOTHES DRYER Vent Needs | 3 he a Size 1.88 3” ELBOWS .......79¢: 4” ELBOWS cones 89 3 TONITE & 3 TURDAY 3 . 1 } ; i OoCs Nat Be eee ee ee i a sciieeal claaiiisediese eee emai Gi 4 _ oF ES a8 rcs ie : : vias 5 soma t yselm inane eee igtigmalacarigisen st et went ee on ee a ee ep aes 2 * oe Bee Sg on. Serene ai i Tas tar SHOP NIGHT While We Give Our Store-Bront FACE- LI FTING © ng tok ad r. Clipper Ge Guides "Before You Buy Any PHOTO NEEDS —for Tapering 2'E PLEASE READ THIS... 25 CARDS for only... .$2.00 Temporary Contruction ON THE OUTSIDE fe ‘er oo oo ME Rare aT ee jlow prices, tp... . but you've never @ 50 CARDS for only. . $3.94 . BARGAINS AS USUAL on The Inside! ” 3 ombs = | ee at ty Biles You bah ae y game 5 elas | ve ftp tou So eeeee Pee Sey. . -97-08 The MAUL McCOTTA Company is giving our storefront- a ‘beauty ¢ E LAYAWAY at no extra cost — tie ita “prec ay, ay, No Rater ® Finest Quality Productions treatment’ and when the scaffolding went up our prices went DOWN. EH: low pric : ardon any inconvenience you may have getting into our store . . . on 67 | ices NOW at LOWEST PRICES! Pord ou may have getting into our store .. . ond ee iO cs sul wiclly Seem peur e are saying——'excuse us’ by giving even gr an-usual bargain Sete RIDAY ond SATURDAY SALE VALUES! : favorite photo ca’ qiheieg ce od to make shopping now doubly worthwhile. : : - «» « « With envelopes. ae close Take Color or Black & White Photographs B Super-Special PRICE REDUCTIONS Effective TONIGHT AND SATURDAY * KODAK . e BROWNIE Snap Cameras F SIMMS. Regular $1.00 Value—2 Styles—Sizes 812 to 11 c BROWNIE STAR iazi? ) > Requiar $5.95 Velie... 487)$ Camera Dept, —Main Floor Ladies’ Nylons -- P r. 5 BROWNIE HAWKEYE 587 SOHSSSSHSSSOSOHHOSESSEESEEESEEOEESOOSOEEECESE 400 needle seamless or micro-mesh 60/15 fashioned Regular $7.95 Value ....... ‘ BROWNIE STARFLASH Regular $1.00 Value—for M M Regus $895 vane... 687) SIMMS HOUSEWARE SALE jours |B Voi 8° Vp Men C owe 887) SETETTETMMe ip Mennen’s Skin Bracer Met0inch ive la ‘95 Walue 2.60. 0 A ODULLAN oO WORT BUNS E After-shave lotion. completely masculine. Save now, COTTON SHEET {f° “KODAK PONY 11 Regular $26.75 Value .... ., 1987 “Take black and w + Soler 0 Seay at | £4 slides with new ie oe 8 your nes layawa soduweds debedboneecceccnccerctceehiececectne Famous Kodak — Revere — Wollensak — Others 2mm Movie Cameras KODAK BROWNIE F2,3 ELadies’ Flannel Gowns 23" Full length style. Long sleeve. Colors in sizes 34 to 40, = ose Plaids and solids. As<* sorted colors. Stitched Regular 69c Value—Fast Relief C edges. =Coldene Chest Rub 46 For fast, effective relief of chest colds and aches Regular $2.49°Value—Warm Flannelette 1% Blankets All New RECHARGEABLE ' Pocket Flashlight 4 Reg. 9 $7.50 Value : im —_ mien su all plastic flash- Regular $32.50 Value ..., ., 1987 — KODAK BROWNIE F1.9 2987 “Hampden” 5-PIECE Regular $39.95 Value .. Neale tiene Hiio-ties a= eee eee ee a ee a eo oe oe 2 ’ § Genuine ‘HANES’ Cotton Knits ‘pocket with = KODAK TURRET F2. 98 Fam. cet ronax vunerm2 3987] Bridge Sets | Ghair Cushions Child's 2-Pc. Sleepers ule Regular $74.50 Value ....., $28.95 88 F 69 & Long sleeve, feet on pants. Gripper snaps, 6 mo. to 4 years. . : or 70x90-Inch Size k Electric i Ferret . - 7787 Torre. < maine 10787 Value 16 2 T Regular 67¢ Values—You Save 21!c c STRIPE SHEET Revere Elec.-Eye Revere lee Eye , j : | | Turret-Roil. 87 r r | Folding table and folding chairs. | | 14-inch embossed plest F D Bi k Reg. $169.50 titer eee 127 Res. $19 199-56 14987 — Pace rge: — ' chete cuchian, as 2 hous Fasteeth | for , Ventures ‘ an ets . . $ j | n ates fT r ing. Sar om nt rr me arya crn, ere aa hae Eramled rams. ci | seats, ett. ‘Choice of 4 colors. | - ne 79 For All Electric Razors Co ccccccccccccccccccccccccccecoccccocccccoce Labuuucanauuaceuwnn wee eee wee ec nne. IE Regular $3 49 Value—’BLUE BELL’ Value Layaway for Christmas at These L ES! ALL NYLON M W k 9 Blue or green stripes, — he Speedak y f OW PRICES! Cake | Flexible PLASTIC—J-PIECE | en ‘s or Pants he. or gn sees Converts AC te DC 3” 7 émm MOVIE PROJECTORS Pastry - Mixing Bowl Set | Ya-ounce twill. Sanforized. Khaki or grey. Sizes 29 to 42. to — setoua Limé | : , _ - ee eta 3987 g fA Decorator ! $2.98 Value | Regular $1.00— omen G alana c $19.50 Koist Smenis BS OBT, J 5180 velue 5 49 1EBaby Oil or Lotion Watt projector ....., i Ud ; 4 c ‘ I Your choice of either of these famous products $123.50 Kodak Showtime 8787 ' @1% Quart aoc come an Watt projector... .. . : e213 Quer [IE Regular $1.98 Value—POLYETHYLENE C ees 5 7.50 Revere No. 777 @ 4 Quart a a ’ 5 : 87 ! | Pl D h Pp 72xt4-Inch Size | “Fomeus Brend” pierre Soo cra Sart vaiaun [EF lastic Dish Fan WARM BLENDS & 89. rgus “m’ wit! e dec- * wis, Molde ae 4 ‘ : Famous Bran Movie Projector ......... 7287 oraler tips 2 ‘ hand, pouring ip and graduated | 15-inch diameter. Cushion soft, rolled edges Blankets ea f suring. Better than shown ’ q COSMETICS oop Wan Cee 715 1 2987 E Regular 59c Value—Johnson G Johnson c 59 Se *erveee 98 ¥ {| gt LOWEST PRICES $174.50 Kodek Showtime 13987 Baby Talcum Powder av: 2 2 att projector ,..... a . a Soothing, y -irritating for baby’s soft skin Choice of pastel colord: * pay eee on of porte, projectors to fit your needs and pocketbook. Sethe bas nde Fall size. PPT TTT rir iii y Regulgr $24.95—-SPEEDWAY 2.5 Amps : Prices’ Slashed! Layaway a Gift Today! SER EE ESR Y4-In Electric Drill WAND CREM FAMOUS ° satan - pRorect a bal Geared chuck, universal motor, 2400 RPM’s. srano SLIDE P ROJECTORS 7 SPECIAL PURCHASE! Save On = : $2250 Resin Pieter 4.487 s mE Regular 89c Value—COLGATES for 35mm or 127 slides ... . ALL LEATHER ~4 R " »EKOom Deodorant $29.95 Realist Automatic i - : H. H. AYERS for 35mm or 127 slides ... 2287 : MEN'S 8 and 10 Inch | ‘Florient’ spray bomb to kill odors in house... - 72x84-Inch Size “ 39.95 Ansco Dual a 4 # eae ny, 2eer " L aced Pacs BE Regular $1.95 Value—100% Pure 18 RAYON NYLON | = 2 $62.50 Argus 300 Auto. a a M Oi 2 G I. C Bi k ‘35mm slide projector ..... 4987 = Styles for Hunters and Outdoor Workers eH otor il-- “30 an an ets ‘ 4 $69.95 A 500 Auto, 10-20-30-40 grades in sealed 2-gallom can i | coeget e te San, ea Sse sie sencor.., SOOT le Values 99 : soso 88 : = me "Mate 4987 $74.50 ori. “State 5987 a to $18 . $3.95 Value—Sheffield Steel c = os ‘ mim or 12 ; ; ’ changer... changer. te a CHOICE . Solids, jacquards, ranch- $90.30 Argus | wo 7487 $149. 20 Kodak C Caval- 10987 = YOUR = Steak Knife Sets ee Your chet. — Se aeemeRe =... a Ps ALL SIZES—6 to 12—— MIE Serrated blades, ‘Lustrex’ handles. Set of 6 for Just a few of the famous nag projectors you'll tind ‘hace at SIMMS. @ L to a — Small deposit holds in Free Layaw a és but not in every style. gy Oo eceercccccceccccccceccccccccccccesooocees M Plain, moccasin or cap g fe Regular $1.00 ake Fle . c Only $1 Holds Your Choice ’til Christmas a toes + cggore leather and Ml . 8 rapber sdles. a ar rd e ul od eines : Genuine LEATHER Double Thickness ~ Heavy duty fluid meets all SAE specifications. 12 ozs. ‘ oe BRAND a — a than half. $5.95 Walk Mete 98 INSU LATED BIE Regular $2.95 Value—Tin Container c | i & % limit of 2. ig alz Meter . Nee ane sn yi pe i, 795 = 2-Lb. Fruit Cakes Rayon—Nylon—Cotton’ £0.36. Nive ‘ nee achcvt: S39 : (Using Thermos-Bottle Principle) a Chock-full of fruit—erum and brandy flavored. BOUND PLAID . : ; $10.95 GE Macet 11 = 7/8 Thermo Boots mE Regular $6.95 Volue—Gift Boxed 88 Blankets | bod : zat ecm &. oe 1387 . ALL WATERPROOF Treated i: 4. Pc. Dresser Sets $6.95 4° 5 $16.50 Argus 13 1187 J $15.95 . Set has brush, comb, mirror and powder jar. seed a Save nearly $5 ..........05 J f = 72x90 inches. Variety: $17.50 Argus 44 87/5 — @ EE Regular $2.49 Value—PLAID FLANNEL 49 of colors. Satin binding. . es ‘. ' Attach to-camera ......-5.. 13 H 6 to 11 = M f S t Shirt $34.50 GE Meter 2487\" . ens opor S With Case foc. .scekeu ct ee ~ - "King Kole’ Sanforized, 3 colors. Sizes S-M-L-XL = Shee et tel eit tn ers ree are depen for nunttns Eo icc of up 1 95 957 LADIES : SCOSHHOOSEHSHOSESSHSSOEOHHOEHOEHEHEESHOOEESEOS = bel ad onan: a ‘ 2 f ° 66 he Save Now on Genuine RADIANT Made a °r r Play ex Girdles . MOVIE and SLIDE SCREENS - Warmest footwear ever ma ~ Fabricon lined. Figure control, All sizes S to XL > Keeps in heat, keeps out co a oat H Paracord soles and heels: Sizes gy Regular 59c Value—’HERSHEYS’ 72x108-Inch Size : : GOOD Meteor Model - 6 to Il. : | Cc Mi Cc CANNON e eset Gan a — aeenstant Cocoa Mix Muslin Sheets | 30x40 Inch ..........00, . 8 . Styled As Pictures - For hot oF cold drinks. Mixes instantly. POUND box ca 14 : ' . a 987\5 Boys Combat Boots BIE Regular $2.50 Value—6 of 12 Volt 97 Values ‘ ; a a High count muslin in ‘$2095 Value A ri d L. tig ees | 1487 : All Leather With Buckle Tops a uto Fiea amps a fl Ini J , WIE Sealed beam. Easy to install yourself. Limit 2 lamps, : Pas BETTER [20s erotune "BEST Uniglow - i, a fe 4s. A a am, Easy to install y : — Saco 107 Sco eT H Value { a : ine 1487 wines ;- 2087 \n soles and rubber heels. All first 7 os NSS 19.87 8c 29.87/8 quality. and 2 Ke Sag oo A ll iti : - iif a rot eee ge : cons uae aw din if ee in a Righis : So DUM on: RESO . / - eards and letters to her dying 4 year-old nephew. * * * Mrs. Silva wrote the Independ- the boy is suffering from can- not expected to live. likes to look at cards * * * “Wi tg don't expect little Mel to a Christmas this year so and letters from friends would be greatly appreciated as sort of an early Christmas,” she wrote. Little Mel is Melvin Leroy Drig- gers Jr. 411 Locust St., Manteca, Calif. Deep Mystery in Well: DENTON, Tex. — Roy M. Smith has an old-fashioned well at his home, but it pumps nothing but hot water. Neither Smith or city water officials can explain. the phenomenon: Wells in the gration of schools. -|interview. “We must find a way jemotionalism that has caused con- ys Should Come Gradually WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen. Hen- ry M. Jackson (D-Wash) suggest- ed today that Congress provide a gradual approach to racial inte- “So far court decisions and ex- isting legislation have not solved the problems,” Jackson said in an so that set social patterns can be changed gradually to conform with the law.” * * * Commenting that “small chil- dren have few prejudices,” he said the best approach might be tolrious split in Democratic party start integration schools. in elementary * * * “I am confident that men of honest intelligence and good will believe that integration is right and legal,” Jackson said. He ex- pressed hope that Congress can consider this and other civil rights problems “without the spirit of troversy in some areas in the past year.” Same area give cool water. Election of 16 new senators, 64 senators to choke off debate issues. and Clifford P. Case (R-NJ) have said they will force atest on re- vision of Senate rules early in the new session which begins Jan. 7. Rishon. Jackson said, increases the chance for a revision of Senate rules that now make it difficult to choke off extended debate or filibusters. He said the new Congress also must find some method of pro- tecting the voting rights of minor- ity groups. x * * Jackson, re-elected to a new six- year term in the election landslide that boosted Democrats to 64 Sen- ate seats against 32 for Republi- cans, said he believes all of this can be accomplished without a se- ranks. e* & oO Jackson has supported efforts to loosen the Senate rule which now requires the affirmative vote of and force a vote on controversial * * Sens. Paul H. Douglas (D-Ill); evidestly (it sénan ions Was BBC Fades as she wast te narnia out to lunch to try to see how a court case is coming along, yet SALE on ALL ODDS and ENDS LEFT AFTER | OUR GREAT SALE to CLOSE-OUT STOCKS BEFORE MOVING Cutoff Proposed" sss /commissions should be on the same many persons contact agency and| commission members to pry into |} important cases before them.” ~* * Influence Path the House Legislative Oversight subcommittee prepared to ° con- tinue questioning an attorney about vague rumors of a $50,000 payoff solicitation in a television case before the Federal Communi- cations Commission. The New Jersey congressman is senior Republican on the sub- committee, Recalled to the witness s’and was George O. Sutton, Washir.cton attorney, who had represente ‘ a corporation seeking FCC approv- al to operate TV channel 4 in Pittsburgh. Ban on Contacts With Federal Regulators Is Congressman’s Aim WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Charles A, Wolverton (R-NJ) said today Congress should ban con- tacts between members of feder- al regulatory commissions . and persons interested in pending cases. “Contact with members of such basis “as with the courts,’ Wol- verton said in an interview. “No one would ever take a judge Earth’s total land area is’ about 36,840,million acres, TONIGHT and SATURDAY 2-Pc. Living Room Suite pati pit 3 99” rise aw TONIGHT and SATURDAY TONIGHT a SATURDAY ee — Suite a CHAIR NL ease te sofa =°174" aed eke s.° 569" Weary modern with foam render HUNDREDS OF PIECES NOT ADVERTISED GO ON SALE—COME SEE! TONIGHT and SATURDAY TONIGHT ond SATURDAY Shop Tonight, Saturday end Monday Nights 17 Tit 9 Waiter On aD ODDS and ENDS BARGAINS Out They Go! 149.50 Lounge chair ............. 74.00 129.50 Lounge chair .............. 64.50 139.50 Lounge chair ............., 69.50 129.50 Lounge chair .............. 64.50 54.50 Occasional chair ........ ove 27.00 194.50 Blond ext. table and 4 chairs. 59.00 144.50 Silver fox ext. table & 4 cahirs 68.00 419.50 6-pe. blond mhg. din. rm. s‘te. 204.50 69.50 Blond mhg. corner desk...., 29.50 289.50 Double dresser & panel bed. . 129.00 99.95 Unfinished twin beds ....... 9.95 _ 36.50 Seatoam nite stand ........ 18.00 | 22.50 Maple nite stands .......... 11.00 59.50 Blond mhg. coffee table...... 29.00 CASH or TERMS ODDS and ENDS BARGAINS Out They Go! 29.50 Blond plastic top coffee table... 12.00 29.95 Mhg, end table ............ 19.50 49.50 Mhg. step table ......... ... 24.50 99.50 Fruitwood room dividers..... 49.00 13.95 Nest of stools ...... ‘c.so0 5.50 44.50 Maple corner tables......... 22.00 24.50 Mhg. tea carts........... «+s 12.00 10.95 Wrought iron mag. racks... 4.50 269.50 Sofa ....... Act echoagoones lintel! 19.95 Boudoir chair ........ nance 11.00 79.50 setyweed 6 ft. 6 headboard, limed oak ...........0.... 39.50 289.50 Double dresser and bed......129.00 259.00 Sofa, foam cushions ........179.00 26.95 Sandel bridge lamp .....%... 14.95 32.95 Sandel floor lamp ........... 16.95 FREE DELIVERY Charge Yours at Waite’s— Notions ... Street Floor Protect valuable papers with heat-resistant .. . fire-retardant LOCK SAFETY VAULTS TONIGHT and SATURDAY TONIGHT and SATURDAY *219” Maple Grouping 69” 3-Pc. Bridge Set ONE ONLY ONE ONLY mec. Caan ‘148 Wonderful Cocktail Table Sandee 2 Step pists = ter 41 years on South Saginaw St. opposite Auburn Ave., Stewart-Glenn will move to the New Store pittured above. nade to close-out all odds and ends of present stock in order to vacate our ven Tir 2c et the shortest pen time to save a inconvenience An extieme effort is being Double steel walls lined with J-M asbestos 1414” long, 92” deep, 62" aa Cyl- inder lock, 2 keys, 2 safety chains, 5 securities envelopes. 9.98 luggage-type De ee 7, 49 Waite’s Stationery . . . Street —_ ok So lovely for afternoon or evening . Magic Crepe” Slim Prints B. Two-piece print magic crepe suit with slimming straight skirt, blouson jacket. 3 right now through the holidays ahead. Choose blue or red, sizes 12 to 20 or 1412 to 221. Handsomely crafted... Butter Soft Leather French Import Bags 12.98 The wonderful detailing, the butter-soft luxury, the new horizontal shapes you love. Choose from several styles with single or double pockets, zip gee smart linings. red. Select yours now! Waite’s Handbags... Street Floor‘ Black, navy, brown or b a a A. One-piece paisley print magic crepe sheath in a step-in coat style. flattering for afternoon or evening wear. Select red or blue, sizes 12 to 20. Tab collar, 34 sleeve. Waite's Inexpensive Dresses ... Third Floor * Beautifully matched... Deep Fire Aurora Imported Jewelry 2.00 12.50: Dazzling! That’s the word melting jewel-tones of re, matched necklaces, pho | bracelets _ pins. Hand set Austrian cut stor see! y Wes lower et Floor these beautiful, - —— f ' j \ i Very 10.98 4 sleeve. So fashion- 10.98 emera crystal, smoky topaz or | black Salons jis ee f we ® oy ee rere Pg é owen # ee ae +. Ce o*@eeeeaae and add new sparkle -to ‘ied sg Outmoded diamond rings that spend their days in a vault have no value what- ever. Enjoy the beauty of your diamonds now! Let us tell you how little it will cost to remount theni in a modern, safe setting... a new ring you will wear with pleasure and pride. @ TERMS OF COURSE Connolly’s esis y work now and JEWELERS 4 place your new 3. he 16 W. Huron St. | “kequinep™ FE 2-0294 into a new setting Sa é PRP DPOF He = ee ee ae che iaeiacniial a ee ae om é 9 a eee TE PONTIAC PRESS, PRIDAY, NOvEMDER Meio ee Re el ee Ee re Fraud Repo red 90 days in fine, oof ogy sy eps jail, a $100 oes gna ey 1 Se ee “1 "gine OF Over Tage SAGINAW on tind ee the 3,000 families receiving wel- fare assistance are participating “ororge Ht Burt, drctor of the F. Taylor disclosed yes-|ing the county and are liable for GRAND OPENING is o Host | mi | H Gksalivte Is Visited ORION TOWNSHIP—Held away criminal prosecution, which could Back From Europe - by Education’ Heads for Regular Meeting meeting at Proper School ‘was at-| tended by about 50 area residents. | | The Gingeliville’ school was the ifirst of several district schools - host the board’s monthly meeting, following a decision ‘last mionth to make it more convenient for residents to learn how thet Board ; joperates. in this illegal practice — : cg neuen ig wag od __Besldes the tals, aylo LOCATION going on — wel o _ ais ie te nen Puatias Y, Mile : ALE welfare load plaguing Oakland] that @ number of milkmen and NORTH Soe yp Php larg ge apogee! & eg mn epee sony Bon of stoplight tie arlene lesson Pw version of orders in Clarkston 10% ‘ What happens, Taylor explained, Pern’ ; ; Up ‘16 Exchange Youths [s,s muy win cataren il | tesuse Su'| CASH DISCOUNT department, and given an order, for this amount. Instead of taking | @ Gifts On any item in the store, Nov, this-full quota, Taylor said, they 14th to 30th. Open Fri. & Sot. ‘| WASHINGTON @® — Six. Mich-|wit) often take only 25 quarts andi = @ Toys 9109. Men. Thurs. 9 906 igdn young people are back in thejask the milkman to either give : ; — . U. S. after a visit to Europe to|them cash or credit for the other © Tools Open Sunday During Grand see how foreign families live. |” Then they aor he Appliances Opening Only, 12 to 6. The Group were smong neatlvimongy for a number of things] © Mardware CHRISTMAS TOYS ond three score youngsters who wentlother than what the order def 9 pai, tana to Europe as International Farm/|Hitely states it is for,” Taylor said. aint GIFTS—Low Down Payment EO ear Betis pp ean Boyer Ae, jstates. y li our to reim! e Sasa acu Ga a al ray firme which “have @ Planking 12 MONTHS TO PAY countries. ; employes enga these il. The Michigan delegates and the| legal acts. - INDEPENDENCE Modernization countries they visited included) «The oviiees spell out, withoyt) Evelyn —_ po bene ee question, what they must be used | BUILDING Work Sweden; es Gleason, for,” Burt said, more Lake, Austria; Shirley Max-| Taylor said so far his investi- SU PPLY co NO MONEY on, of Kingsley, Switzerland; Suz-|gation shows this milk-food order ° DOWN anne Thompson, of Dansville, Ger-jfraud is centered only in this sec- 7183 N. Main Clarkston 36 MONTHS many; Wilfred Warbowski, of Les-|tion of the county,-He said they MAple 5-2400 TO PAY lie, Ireland, and Larry Adams of|were ‘continuing to investigate re- pre o- Included in business weniced | In Wednesday night’s session was the announcement that the dis- trict has secured a driver train- ing auomobile from Lake Orion Motor Sales. The school system this week re- iceived $2,087.50 in state aid for its driver training program, This amounts to $12 per pupil, instead of the usual $25, the board said. The cutback was due to an in- crease of 37 per cent in student jenroliment and a decrease of /32 .per cent in reimbursement , funds. * * * zines checked out of the high Action on purchase of liability insurance was tabled by the board, pending further study. Announcement Was made that the old Howarth and Eaton schools no longer being used, will be sold if voters approve the proposed sale in the school election next July. It was reported books and maga- school library increased by 400 ,during October. One-Day Bazaar Held by White Lake Church THE BUSINESS INSTITUTE Is Approved for | VETERANS TRAINING { .Take advaritage of P.L. 550 to improye your education and prepare for a better position. Veterans eligible for G. I. Training have three years from the date of their discharge or sepa- ration to enter training. Do not allow your eligibility to elapsé. Courses are offered in Business Administration, Professional Accounting, Higher Accoynting, and Junior Accounting. Other Subjects are available. ENROLL NOW! Day, Half-Day, and Evening Classes ‘Call or Phone Today for Information _ The Business Institute “TW. Lawrence Street Phone FE 2-3551 4 noon today at St. Patrick's Church, Hutchings and Union Lake roads. Area Youth. Elected by State Farm Group ROCHESTER. — Stuart J, Hutch- ins of 2071 John R Rd., has been | elected second vice president of | the Michigan Farm Bureau Young | People’s group. . | During the Farm Bureau's 23rd | anniial convention at Michigan’ State University, he also received the Michigan. Farmer County by Michigan’ New Books Received by Library at Keego West Bloomfield Township Li- 3201 Orchard Lake Rd., Closing hour has been set af 8 |tonight with bazaar hours sched- | Ste from noon until. 8 p.m. o | Pe awed by St, Patrick’s Altar | Society, the bazaar offers a host of | gift articles, including plants, toys, jewelry, aprons, pillowcases, rec- ords, candy and books. Proceeds will be turned over to| the St. 0 eh ed races ex- pansion fund War,’ ‘gteinbeck. Non-Fiction “art of Drying. Plants and Aes “Enamel TB yy ~ Chicago Pire. ouse and Its Thirty- Two Pamilies,” its a Pailette te; “Last Train ert jay Hoehling; e sie * Sheen; “Pranklin's Yesteryear,” ood, ee, Romeo Official Reports: School Finances Failing ROMEO — The. Romeo Commu- nity School District is in “‘bad fi- nancial shape as many other dis- tricts are,” Supt, T. C, Filppula told Romeo Board of Education imembers at their regular euscae: 4 last night. He blamed the current ethool crisis on Michigan legislators for failing to set up adequate financing of schools and for the inability to (pay state aid to school districts on time, After the Nov, 21 payroll of $26,000 is met only $3,000 in cash will rémain in the bank, Filppula said. With anticipated income between ‘now and the first of the year to. amount to some $55,000, an addi-' tional $55,000 is still needed to meet the three payrolls through Jan, 2,/ plus current bills, the superintend-| ent said. * * * The Board voted to make applica-. tion to the Michigan Municipal Fi-. nance Commission for approval to borrow $50,000 to tide the district | over this lean period. This is the third time in the past | six months Romeo’s school officials | have had to borrow against future state aid to keep the schools open. a MWe = Just in Time for aoe = oN ha ea . - , = = \a = \\ae =s = i = !, f i , aS //e REMINGTON “HAS IT’? — — — a = = — ene a ‘a — Semel —_ = — ne —— — —_ tems — —— — — ——— a — — — —— —— — —— — —— — ——— — — —— = — —— — — am — = — — — — — cmd — — — — = = 9 —- al —s — asin — eect —_ — ——— —— — = — — — — a ecto ——s — — — 4 ll = mt —a€ er << = — a ——— — — — — — —— — — — — al os — — —— C iB THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1958 MRS. JOHN F. CREW | Mrs.’ John F. (Margaret M.) Crew of 42 Washington St. died yesterday at her home, She was TB. She was a member of the Oak- land Avenue United Presbyterian White Shrine No. 22, Or- Fagg Mev Star No, 228, Ama- ranth Esther Court No, 13, and the Rebekah Lodge. Mrs. Crew was also an active | member of the Keego Harbor Busi-/Mjable are five children, Donald ness & Professional Woman's Club./of Little Rock, Ark., James of, Surviving are a son, John F./petroit, Mrs. of Howell; two grandchildren; Berkley, Mrs. Patricia Scholl of three sisters, Mrs. Clara Cronk); sporte, Ind. of Pontiac, Mrs. Molly Moren of) prandchildren; Flint and Mrs. Elizabeth Allen of; Columbus Grove, Ohio, and @ day from the Virgo E. Kinsey [Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with) burial in the Elmlawn Cemetery. |Holly res 10 a. mi. tomorrow at Dryer Fu- first resident representative to the nera] Home with burial in Oakhill|/ League of Nations in Geneva. He brother. Service will be at 2 p.m. Satur- day from the Sparks-Griffin Chapel | with burial following in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. OTiIs C. FIELDS death of Clarence G. Smith of 21630 W.McNichols Rd., Detroit, father of Pontiac patrolman Clar- ence G. Smith dy. He died yes- terday in Henry Ford Hospital from injuries received when hit by a bus. Motor Corp. | Daniel W. (Anne G. Dildine) Hous-' , -- ter, Tl, of 8900 E. Jefferson Ave., C. Fields, 55, of 1759 Gid- Hetroit, a former Milford resident, | in Pontiac and Nearby Areas CLARENCE G. SMITH Word has ben received of the He was an inspector at Ford, Surviving besides his wife Marjorie Smith of; and Clarence; 13 and two sisters. Service will be at 10 a.m. Mon- E. Fourth St., will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Pixley Fu- neral Home. Burial wil] be in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Pearce died Thursday at the home of her grandson, Ear! L. Bell of 130 E. Fourth St., Roches- ter, following a heart attack. She was a resident of Royal Oak until two months ago. | Surviving:.are four sons, Albert Furze of California, Raymond Furze of Florida, James and Wil- liam Furze, both of Detroit; a daughter, Mrs. Margaret Bell of Anchorage, Alaska; a sister and 12 grandchildren. JAMES P. SHUTT MRS. DANIEL W. HOUSER MILFORD — Service for Mrs. | Otis dings Rd., an employe of Oakland) i) be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at] County, died suddenly yesterday i. Gordan C. Crabb Funeral) on the grounds at the Oakland | County Service Center. Surviving besides his wife, Car-| man, are 13 children, Mrs. Veron-', ica Green of Auburn Heights, Mrs. |, Shirley Clark of Germany, Mrs. .a, a charter member of St. Janice Ewer, Mrs. Mary Lou Sut-/niark’s Methodist Church, ton, Basil, Harold, Larry, Gary. |, Jimmy, Valley, Gregory, Gail and en's Society of Christian Service. Charlotte Fields, all of Pontiac: | two brothers, Everett of Pontiac} sons, William J. Dildine and Rob-; ert R. Dildine, both of Milford; a daughter, Schroeder of Detroit; a sister, four brothers, and four grandchildren, and Verner of Chicago; and a sis- ter. Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Mon- day from the Vorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. MRS. JOSEPH M. HANGGEE Mrs. Joseph M. (Mary) Hanggee, 74, of 3314 Meinrad Rd., Drayton Plains, died this morning in her home, Surviving are her husband; two sons, John of Pontiac and George t Drayton Plains; four grandchil- sisters and a brother, 2 Mrs. Henry Setter and An Negus of Wednesday at his home following a heart attack: Mariette. Service will be at 1 p.m. Monday from the Coats Funeral Home in Drayton Plains with burial in the Drayton Plains Cemetery. Her body will be at the funeral home at 2 p.m. Saturday. WILSON K. PEACOCK Wilson K. Peacock, 61, of 1005 Myrtle St., Waterford Township, died at his home yesterday after an illness of two years. A former gas station owner, he was a member of the Congrega- tion Church. . Surviving are his wife, Anna; grandchildren, .--Service will be at 2 p.m. Mon- day from the DeWitt C. Davis Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. for Auto F. Montross, 55, of 2555 Pontiac Rd., will be held at 2 p. m. Saturday at Church, Rochester. in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. The body is at the Pixley Funeral Home, Rochester. Wednesday night in Wyandotte fol- lowing a heart attack. He was supervisor at the Detroit Edison Co. plant in Trenton. rietta; Rochester; two brothers, William two sons, Max of Waterford and/of Rochester, and Jack of Pontiac, | Lyna of North Branch; a daughter,}and two sisters, Mrs. William} Mrs. June Walls of Holly; and two/Peterson and Mrs. Spencer Rowe, both of Pontiac. Aaron (Louise) Pearce, 75, of 130 it.. Buria] will be in) : Pores: ee cacaey. iof Holly; three sisters, Mrs. Kath- Mrs. Houser died Thursday at| he home of her daughter in De-; roit following a long illness. She) De- roit, and a member of the Wom- |Wednesday in Receiving Hospital, L. Phillips, 28, of 2549 Peppermill Rd., will be held at 10:30 a.m, Saturday in .the | rt Church, Burial will be in London Ce ely is ot tia enn Fu at ‘y. “3d neral Home. ant view lissa Jo, all at home; his parents, Mr, and Mrs, Monroe Phillips of Lapeer; three sisters. . Elba Baptist Wednesday. He was born in Valley|) Deaths Elsewhere sara atm santes DUBLIN, Ireland @ — Mi-| Thursday chael MacWhite, 76, formerly Ire- HOLLY — Service for James P./land’s minister to the United ‘Shutt, 43, of Detroit, a former States and to Italy, died Thurs- ident, will be held atiday, In 1921 he became Ireland's Cemetery. was minister to the United States Sears for ahoating — of Mr, Shutt died unexpectedly /from 1929 to 1938 and to Italy from season. They were of Detroit, Surviving are his wife, Victoria; a son, David; a daughter, Wendy Jo; his mother, Mrs. Grace Shutt erine Nortman of Santa Barbara, Calif., Mrs. Gaye Elliot of Holly and Mrs. Josephine Harger of De- troit; and three brothers. DAVID L. PHILLIPS LAPEER — Service for David 1938 to 1950. He was born in Cork. * * * Harold Mowry, 64, former consult- ing director to the minister of)7, agriculture and chief of the Uni- versity of Florida's cooperative PARIS (AP) — Mrs. Henri Ma- tisse, 86, widow -of the tamed neth McLeod; Harlow Clairmont, painter, ,husband died in 1954. died Wednesday. Her * * GAINESVILLE, Fig. (AP)—Dr. was struck by a car while crossing a street near her suburban Detroit home. mission to Costa Rica, died Surviving are her husband; two) Mrs. Florence D. AUTO F, MONTROSS PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Service} the First Baptist| Burial will be Mr, Montross died unexpectedly LAIRD J. MOW FERNDALE—Service for Laird J. Mow, 53, of 155 E, Oakridge St., will be held at 3:30 p.m. Satur- day at Wessells Funeral Home, Pleasant Ridge. Burial will be in| Mt. Avon Cemetery. Mr, Laird: died unexpectedly! Surviving are his wife, his father, William of MRS. AARON PEARCE” ROCHESTER—Service for Mrs. ALT: 2258 DIXIE HIGHWAY NEAR INTERSECTION OF TELEGRAPH LOTS OF FREE PARKING Daily 9 to 6 FOR SPORTSMEN | < starlight crystal emphasizes the eight diamonds. . Ten karat gold-filled with Diamond 14k gold with wraparound crystal $100 starlight crystal $250 Specially > 5 Priced 40 PIECE SERVICE FOR 8 Also Available in Open Stock Bright and bold in traditional good taste ,.. . the pattern is underglazed- for everlasting. beauty. Completely dish washer and detergent proof. - Prices include Federal tax Charge or budget ‘ Choice of Over | 60 Other Patterns 20% Pontiac’s Oldest Jewelry Store 28 W. Huron —°.. FE2-7257 “The Store W sea Qualjty Counts” All Sales Final Dixie Sorry Fot Your Convenience ' | " Open Daily 10 A. M.- 9 P. M. Sunday.to 9 P. M. | 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near Waterford) PR 3-1894 Sos gueneansccanmnsmansenceeeenrtesseacineeeomeer Seseraeeseesestrers “OPEN DAILY — 9 A. oe ee. S. ees ore ee eee eee : ae He ag { ’ j by GoanaWhedls A pair of towels is always a welcome gift. Get out odds and ends of embroidery floss. The motifs in this pattern are done in a jiffy. Fewest of stitches so colorful, effective. Pattern 685: Transfer six motifs about 6%x 8% inches. Send 35 cents (coins) for this pattern — add five cents for each pattern for ist-class mailing, Send to The Pontiac Press, 124 Needle- craft Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, name, address and zone. A new 1959 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book — just out — has lovely designs to order: Embroi- dery, crochet, knitting,’ weaving, quilting, toys. In the book, a spe- cial surprise to make a little girl happy — a cut-out doll, clothes to color. Send 25 cents for this book. Honor 14 Volunteers From Area Thirteen Birmingham wom- en and one Rochester woman are among 34 volunteers who have been honored for service by William Beaumont Hospital. * * * Mrs. George W. Akers of Rochester has: received a sil- ver pin for 500 hours of serv- ice, Additional recipients of silver pins for volunteer work are Mrs. Donald Boyd, Eliza- beth Carter, Margaret Car- ter, Mrs. Lyman Craig Jr., Mrs. William G. Meese, Mrs. William T. Menewisch and Mrs, S. E. Milne, all of Bir- mingham., Other Birmingham volun- teers honored are Mrs. Harry J, Pitcher, Mrs. H, D. Seel- inger, Mrs, James H. Tracy, Mrs. June Vinton, * * * Mrs, Howard S. Christie of Birmingham has been present- ed a gold pin for 1,000 hours of service to the hospital. SS SY = e : = cut seae8 eatured gram of Meeting, rael, was up in the test, the Flight Force and Israel, Also on publisher ish News, $] 99” Miss Israel Star Guest at Meeting of Hadassah guest on the pro- Pontiac Chapter of Hadassah’s annual Honor Roll held Thursday eve- ning at Congregation B'nai Is- Miriam Hadar, Gites Miss eed MIRIAM HADAR Irael of 1958 and a runner- Miss Universe con- An Israeli law student, born in 1937, she was a sergeant in Control and Radio Division of the Israeli Air is a veteran of the Sinai campaign. She was a scholarship student at York University and is now studying at Hebrew University, New EDITOR SPEAKS the program was Phillip Slomovitz, editor and of the Detroit Jew- He spoke on “The Jew in the World Today.” He paid tribute to the work of Ha- dassah and stated that Hadas- sah has been a dynamic in- fluence in stimulating creative and intelligent Jewish living and that it has done much to preserve democracy and bol- ster the United Nations. * * * ; For the musical portion of the program, Mrs, Herman Stenbuck introduced Mrs, Mor- ris Serwin of Detroit, past pres- ident of the Pontiac chapter, and Mrs. Sol Slomovitz of De- troit, They sang several Israeli and American. song classics, eaccompanied by Mrs. James Rosenthal at the piano. * * * Mrs, Thomas Horwitz, Honor Roll chairman, reported the functions and goals of her com- mittee and its progress to date. She pointed out how volun- tary contributions from Hadas- sah members together with the work of each of the com- mittees, makes the Honor Roll Drive a success and provides funds for rehabilitation and re- lief in Israel. Refreshment committee heads were Mrs. John Roths- child and Mrs. Sam Chafets, 75 Attend Meeting of OES Chapter Seventy five visitors and guests attended the meeting of Pontiac Chapter No. 228 of OES held Mon- day at Masonic Temple. Mrs. Rudy Wren, of Kindness chapter, Detroit, brought greetings THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 14. 1938 Go With Ideal Weight A. That seems pushing it a lit- tle. However, if you mean the low but shaped heel it seems to me that this would be appropriate for special occasions. Q. “1 have seme dark hairs on ble, What can I do about in? Please hurry.” A. Tweeze them or have them removed by electrolysis. Q. “Please tell me what to do for the dark spots on my face which occurred during my last preg- nancy.” A. L do not know of anything one can do for these except give them time, They usually fade out, at least to a great extent. You can use a make-up base to hide them if you wish. x * * Tomorrow: ‘‘We All Have Hair— What We Do With It Is What Counts."* Every woman has her ideal weight when her figure is good, her health unimpaired and her face most youthful looking. Hairdressers. Give Methods A permanent wave demonstra- tion was presented at the Tues- day meeting of Pontiac Hairdress- ers held on Wayne street. Mrs. John Reither will replace Mrs. Russell Wright as rtcording secretary. The next meeting will be a Christmas party to be held Dec. 9 at Hotel Waldron. Dorcas Class Holds Fellowship Dinner Doreas Class of Oakland Avenue ‘United Presbyterian Church held a fellowship dinner at the church. Guests included the Berea Class and others. Group singing and showing of slide pictures highlighted the Mon- day meeting. Permanents AT A LOW, LOW PRICE! All work done by senior students under super vision of instructor. Phone FE 4-1854 Closed All Day W ednesday Call Miss Wilson Today for Information 1 PONTIAC | BEAUTY COLLEGE 161, East Huren Behittd Kresge's, 2rd Floor DIAMONDS From HOLLAND Dalla FE 2-5812 - 88 N. Saginaw from the grand chapter. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Harry Lumsden. Flag bearers were Mrs. Fred Cleland and Mrs. Earl Bronson with Mrs. Richard! Roberts, marshall. Medium-sized muffins are usual- ly made in muffin pans whose wells are 244 inches wide by 1% For Building inches deep, Ly prin 97 97/7, get STEREOPHONIC. H FIDELITY! 40 WATTS of PEAK POWER Hear recorded sound come to life as never before on the new Zenith in- strument. ophonic PLAYS ALL YOUR PRESENT RECORDS PLUS NEW STEREOPHONIC RECORDS! Companion Stere- deliy Remote Speaker System High Fi PRICED FROM Has 40-Watt Matching Amplifier “TWIN ENSEMBLE” 3 SPEAKERS! 4 SPEEDS! Ss '?P “ZENITH PORTABLE HIGH FIDELITY PLAYER PECIALLY RICED AT ONLY 594% BUY NOW or LAY AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS COME IN FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION avers WAYNE GABERT : to Pay 121 ” erty : Friday wn ‘19 P.M. (90 DAYS _. SAME AS FE 5-6189 oe S 1 Home? . —— bid 44 BURKE LUMBER CO. Planning a Contemporary Supplies See Use... = = : SSS S =— — ==C = ALIFORNI A= = ~—S = SS se ememememeneonmmamecene samipmecanntie | i FOR BEAUTIFUL INTERIOR PANELING, SPECIFY... =o / VR Interior and Complete Stock of Structural, Including Beams, Pillars and Paneling Saturday 8 -3 BURKE LUMBER CO. i ~~. “Where the Home Beyins” | 4495 Disie { ’ hway, Drayton Plains OR 3-1211 || \ | ‘ Finish Pieces o” Anniversa ~ Nale! OPEN FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS °TIL 9 Our Famous Blouses We had to remove the labels because we cannot mention the name. Long sleeves and roll up styles in whites, solids, prints and stripes. Full Fashioned Sweaters Fur blend novelties, pullovers and cardigans in shags, mohairs, bulkies, and fine gauge wools, 5 te and Gq Imported Skirts | Also domestic tweeds and solids in darks and pastels. Dresses and Separates A wonderful selection of one and two piece styles that are perfect for the winter season. were to 49.95 Winter Coats — Imported and domestic tweeds and solids in the seasons most wanted styles. tee me ot “ee le were 6.50 - and 7.95 ~~ were to 14.95 were 8.95 to 14.95 ‘53°58'68 Cashmere Sweaters Our famous brand in discontinued novelty styles. Per- fect for Christmas giving. were 25.95 to 32,95 Nylon Hosiery Pearce: ft Seamed and seamless: styles in all the wanted shades. ne SR Alvi. | HURON. at TELEGRAPH \ : ‘ Mon, Thurs, and Fri. 10-8—Tues, Wed, and Sat, 10-6-Sunday # tw'S e were 1.15 pair f ‘ ge a r Fro oo , ‘ies = . ee ae : ; . ful, United, it might run for| a pe | ” -Knowland : ; Red Barber is} There were several deals in : : was vasa Rigegsa Blog senate ific | + ‘ : nitude toward its benefactors is a Cuter deveined ta im t to military orders under the pro-| defeated — eer think (2. tl pra op Pager rony of ee wines oor wee ik notable development, it seems to som enthusiasm with which old against him “will be really hilar-jvisions of the state of siege. — }Brown, 7 * cinorpaat ot at business on V-5 | World Series, in business, several still at the|™* oreo 4 paper yar fin oy derma dg ke aoe ns co . : Bivcck ese y os pg _ people probably z P : me * Dey. Be siewet as bory ss | Bed Hope and Rests Bovrer [tame address. On Dec. 2, the 16th anniversary|*, COrtul and "2. Fx-President Hoover oe tician | spot at Christmas time. | The “Yellow Pages” spell out) nuclear reactor the Alenic Easray mind to such a degree that are , ‘ gan lorn he There now 245 clubs and ithe meandering course of man’s speaking and even writ ’ ission prese A flare lke S Speeches centers in the U. 8. and Korea, interests, oe P. Pe cam with re with a Skeffingtonian . said. Council of the ruling Intransigent s Faicat part, to tien bounce OTS Service Award Bon odpaaay shed pee ony atl ee Sean aan” the Philippines, | . Alf condition and plastics list- |and a check for $50,000, “load pleas bien ** "> laizi belong, decided to expel Go:| NEW YORK (AP) — Former|vent’ the ‘plane's : J the plane’s Greece, Turkey, Italy, France, | IMS* Nave Gotbled since | 1948; qt Manes ceatsteations to - it clan hon" tet ree ee ins llocking or skidding on wet or icy Take Effort ee from two to 16 pages. “Segars,” | development of the A-bonh ang |Jarretts Claim Record: Leaders of the government|twice by the National Institute of senata in There is a crying need for facili-| “passe partouts” and “buggy | the H.bomb, and the perfection charged Gomez attempted to en-/Social Sciences for Advertisement ‘distinguished ties on Okinawa and in Puerto) whips” seem to be on the wane. am PORTSMOUTH, Va. ® — Five/gineer the ouster of Frondizi by|service to humanity.” — ! Moos Says Eisenhower Rice. ion of this titanle power for pesce- | arrett brothers. hete think they|Claiming he hed military support], He received. his second award) Helps Yeu Overcome Outlines Draft, Revises weet" dramas tM eth ati| ml he ty «meal we le ee Cts Lomas st ai fo an oaet Sen'n as "| FALSE TEETH . . ‘ nF } since the invention e column: J gi . f Firat Version ‘(ar a gn. Yor ht ry eed wa He ay lo oe, ont ees ne, 08, won| Laguaness and Werry . do to help with a j ich ' Airplane Company for United Air vt ” Jo longer be enpers’ wobnly false Pp th a job which ‘Uncle | ment has taken note of. what this/ of those years working for the Sea-|tary and members of his Cabinet.jsistant to President Eisenhower) eas? de- Eisenhower does“a lot of work on)sam for some inscrutible reason, Budapest born physicist has|board Air Line Railroad, Party members and government|for science and technology; sing- Ptag: fete oe runcied oo his speeches, says the man Wh®/has shirked. It is a compact 205 horse- [achieved in behalf of his adopted leaders appeared to be cooling offjer Marian Anderson, and Robert; your plates Shows Srmer so Shey turns out the finished product power “turbo-starter,” a small |land, Most fruits and vegetables de-|toward impeaching Gomez. B. Anderson, secretary of the, ‘emer by loose plates, Get a Maleolm C. Moos only laughed| The 80th anniversary edition of| jet engine to be used to blew ' The British do it a bit better.!pend on bees for pollination, Impeachment proceedings initreasury. PASTEETH et any drug counter. when asked whether it was he who had suggested the new campaign ° ad He Gat IG wee S Seat wees af a commeranin | he Lark by Studebaker>your new dimension in motoring>the one _ “sia eee! = Car perfectly sized for today’s driving needs—big six-passenger room- a) Joao _ Iness inside, nearly three feet shorter than conventional cars outside ee il BEE aaa gr runs miles and miles on a hatful of gas—regular, low-cost gas» peak He throws off a lot of . on ideas, how he wants fo ap- 5 reece ~ performance from either the spirited six or super-responsive V-8 oo engine » behaves like a lady, parks on a postage stamp, turns on a anette dime beautifully built and engineered by the knowing craftsmen of Studebaker>simple, clean, and classic in styling—no non-functional ornamentation > distinctively rich, fashion-right interiors, uphol- stered in fine pleated fabrics and vinyl > costs less to buy, far less to operate—prices begin under $2000 > you knew a car like this had to happen—and when you drive the Lark—you'll be glad it did. It’s your car—the one you’ve been wanting—and you'll love it! Trl F : Pag ul ligtite al =i 3 | Ss p Bulbs i A superior Darwin Tulip; beau- ff tiful salmon ark ‘e color, grows 22 inches high on strong stem. Blooms in March. These bulbs are very large. i. i | | Be a, 100 for $4.50 BY STUDEBAKER dog food. It outsells all other Bf brands. Why pay $2.99 for 25 ff pounds? 4 HARD TOPS 2 DOOR SEDANS 4 DOOR SEDANS STATION WAGONS i All dogs like this new kibbled | 25 Lb. Bag. $2.59 | 10 Lb. Bag. $1.30 5 Lb. Bag. $ .70] e — SALT* | Per 100 Lbs. *] Granulated Salt . $1.70 C. C. Rock Salt ... 1.70 } fe iF | WE peuiver | » § Ne charge on orders over $5.00 ff 2S¢ added to orders under $5 ff ‘@ MEET AND DRIVE THF TA Rik: BY STUDEBAKER 4x THESE DEALERS TODAY: | MAZUREK MOTOR SALES 245 SOUTH BLVD., EAST 4 PONTIAC, MICH. 4 j ‘ 3 { Z ; ta : ‘ : fi * ae y 4 ‘ Joe ; ’ f y . i : 1 eee ’ ; } ] Congratulations to the administration and staff of the Pontiac Ostenpethic Hospital. , _ | one of its incorporators. He lives the Des Moines Still College thy We. are-proud.to be the supplier of and was president of the Oakland paper products used in this complete panty 4 es — A yomet hospital facility. ter has served on the board since served on the board since 1953 and advises it in legal matters. A Vice president of the Michigan Shoe Retailers Assn., Todd lives at 190 Cherokee Rd. : * ® Kruger, 47, a Waterford Town- -iship insurance agent, has been on the board since it was formed. A native of Ohio, Kruger was once hesemny Rte: Ayers Meclbaes insurance business 17 years. A past member’of the Commu- },|St., Drayton Plains, auto thiet who apparently business, Married with three daughters, he lives at 4180 Midiand|) GALESBURG, Dl. (UPD, — fly, didn A beep tars Ear! To Build Swim Pool *\eartong yesterday... i(asti‘é‘st With Maple ‘Syrup “Pale found the car, severalisavy thle Sipe coe _ BIEPARD cup) and Not a Meal Was Lost! On Sept. 17, 1958, with the ration of the tal, the kitchen a on all three shifts reported at one thoes for a demonstration by factory resentatives. Each representative ores in oe or the piece pment f Flag manufactured. This Gunbied we h to utilize each piece to the full efficiency me the manufacturer had built into it. _ __Mr. Schaliman, the consultant in conjunction with Ted Stone, owner of the Auto-City Soap and Chemical Co. is to be commended for their special compound formula which overcame the hard water and ini the dish-washing d and other conditions which existed epartment. BEFORE Not a Meal Was Lost! i with all the planning the goal of un- witches wenaneral-enpermahor oo tie Marre e@ won rry Whitlow, Hospital Administrator, his staff and Mr, William Sternfels of Medical Supply Corp. Harry Altman and Sons offers its consul services acim” @ STERLING METAL WEAR CORP.—A Masterful Job of rg rma Steel @ KINGSTON PRODUCTS CORP.—The Finest in Garba @ VULCAN-HART — The Best in Electric Cooking and pert Or gee g- @ VULCAN AUTO SAND—The Most Pic cb oe and Sanitary Dishwashers. to hotels, . clubs and Electric Contractor—ZARATE ELECTRIC Soap Compounds—AUTO CITY SOAP co. Congratulations to The Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital on its Grand Opening. Here is a truly “up-to-date” Hospital that will serve its area with conscience. BEFORE TA 5-0947 NOT A MEAL WAS LOST The Impossible was Accomplished when Harry Altman & Sons of Detroit, Michigan, com- pleted the renovation of the entire kitchen without causing an interruption to agent ¢ services or the delay or loss of a le meal. This was done a constant atten and perserverance of taff of Harry Altman & Sons directed Mr. Ted Schalimai, food con- — in conjunction with Mr. Allan Rosen- ‘MR. TED SCHALLMAN The main kitchen 30'x35’ total size overall services an average of 110 wegen with centralized service plus a cafeteria for the full hospital staff. e kitchen reminiscent of a resort hotel in the roaring 20's was trans- formed into the modern and efficient centralized hospital kitchen of today, with unlimited years of useability. A sem Cm ene cent rome wm ge ge Vulcan hea an ae was selected to fill the needs. of the hospital because of ir excellent reputation for producing quality merchandise as well as having a factory trained service organization available at all times. It was thr the use of Vulcan electric cooking be po that it was possible to reduce the average kitchen temperature better than 30°. t 4 Congratulations Staff of Pontiac r HARRY H. WHITLOW bc tor of The Pontiac Osteope” Administrator A Oe Boat Hosp Staff of Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital AUDREY LINTZ, RN. Surgical Supervisor \ 0 | DOROTHY 5 al RN. Medical Records Librarian JOSEPHINE POSTLE, RN. Ass’t Nursing Director CORRINE SMITH, RN. Anaesthesis MATILDA KAREN Supervisor, Housekeeping ital and Secretary 0 VERNA SILLER, RN. Nursing Director ELEANOR TWEEDALE, RN., Ass’t Nursing Director MARGARET ZAHARA, RN., Anaesthesis DR. JACK C. LEVE, MPH., SCD., FACMT. Ass't Laboratory Director FRANK WHITLOW, Supervisor Purchasing » IRENE McCORMICK, RN, Ass’t Nursing Director LOUISE SIMPSON, RN. Ass’t Nursing Director % @) ae ae Peay DOLORES DULZO, RN. Central Supply DANNY EVERTT, BS., R.Ph., Pharmacist > JOSEPH TERRY, Maintenance Supt. to 0s Board of Directors It is indeed a pleasure to have been the supplier of most of the specialized medical and surgical equipment which has gone into this new, modern hospital. Most certainly. those who planned and developed the modernization and equipping of this-hospital ean be well pleased with their accomplishments. = Ct To every member of the. board and. staff of. this friendly modern hospital, we, at the Medical Su Corporation of Detroit, extend heartiest omaaatione and best wishes for continued success. THE MEDICAL SUPPLY CORPORATION OF DETROIT 3502 WOODWARD AVE. MR. HARVEY PARK MR. HAROLD KRUGER - DR. BEN’J. President Vice President DICKENSON, DO. » DR. M. C. WOOSTER, MR. R. V. TODD DR. DONALD FRASER, MR. DAVID C. PENCE .0. We * * * er “T have no comment,” said Oos- terbaan last night, when informed ‘of the athletic board’s move at a =secret meeting. Som statement was expected ‘trom the likeable coach later today. ““Athletc Director Fritz Crisler, Oos- M's predecessor as coach, “and ‘several othcr board members “declined comment, xf T “* * -- It is known Oosterbaan has been vonsidering his retirement for some’ time. He was appointed head coach | an 1948 and has been on the ath- tie staff since he was graduated “from Michigan in 1928. + QOosterbaan is 52, second oldest “Big Ten coach, He was ranked tas one of Michigan's greatest all- around athletes in his own foot- , ball, basketball and baseball play- “Ing days. Twice he made the All- ;, America Seothalt team as an end. , 33, has been Oosterbaan’s Phe eld coach for two’ seasons. left a similar post at Iowa to _feturn to Michigan, where he im- mediately was dubbed Ooster- Baan’ s heir-apparent. * * * -He was a star back on Michi- n's unbeaten Big Ten and Rose ‘Bowl champions. of 1947, Crisler’s final season as coach. £ Oosterbaan duplicated Crisler’s \unbeaten record in 1948 winning “the Big Ten title. He coached the , Wolverines te a conference co- championship in 1949 and won it outright along with another Rose Bow! title in 1950. Over one stretch, Crisler and Oosterbaan combined to coach Michigan to 24 straight victories. The streak was ended by Army in * * * Sinee 1950 Michigan has been un- “Rble to win another Big Ten cham- pionship. : “ This season is Michigan's worst since 1936 when Harry. Kipke was ‘coach. : The Wolverines, who have games left tomorrow with In- -diana and Nov, 22 with Ohio “State, have won oly twice. Each + victory was by a single point as the Wolverines slumped to eighth ‘place in the Big Ten. They’ve Jost four times and tied Michigan State. = eh * After Northwestern trounced Michigan 55-24, its worst 20th cen- ry beating, Oosterbaan was} -hanged in effigy on campus. This was the first outward sign.of- ag- ‘gression against the coach who is a@ legendary campus figure. There “were some alumni ‘ * * * 'y Oosterbaan’s players vowed. to win the next game for him: and they did, edging Minnesota 20-19. The Wolverines haven’t won since, ‘Josing to Iowa and Mlinois. The Mlinoig defeat ignited an- “nual speculation that Oosterbaan -would retire at the ont of this “season. + He is expected to announce his esignation after the Ohio State game next week. He'll probably “Yemain in Michigan's athletic ad- “ministration as Crisler’s assistant, taking a slight cut from his‘ esti- imated $19,000-a-year salary, 2 * * * ~ Elliott, it was learned, was the only man ever Considered as Oos- terbaan’s successor: There _ had _been repeated reports that the hext #@oach, was to be Iowa coach Forest Monee or Wisconsin athletic rector Ivy Williamson. Bot-h ee — so —— } The sient ‘suet cases back: field at Oregon State before mov- ee a ee under * © Elliott is an excellent recruiter. ‘Inefficient recruiting has been Blamed, for Michigan's decline in “fecent ‘Seasons. = > Pa SDAY'S FIGHTS hin ound vackiosion ka seat =to the ‘university’s regents, who, outstanding rs in University of Michigan football are in the headlines again today in re- gard to the Wolverine coaching picture. Coach Benny Oosterbaan (right) was last night removed FAMOUS WOLVERINES — Two of the most (Bump) Elliott recent rumors AP Wirenhote from the head coaching job, and Chalniers was recommended as his suc- cessor. This was a picture of the two during the circulating about the change. -\Indiana Home Finale for Oosterbaan ANN ARBOR ® — Bennie Oosterbaan enters Michigan Sta- dium for the last time in an active following next week's finale against _|Ohio State at Columbus after 11 seasons as head man. | The gentle veteran has coached there ever since, first as an assistant, and since 1948 as head ‘coach, x* * * Only 47,000 fans are expected, which would be the 101,001-seat bowl’s smallest crowd since 1953. Michigan has lost its last -two games and(has won only two one-point victories in seven starts in its werst campaign since 1936. Oosterbaan’s squad is entrenched Third ajrleaveb 5 ¥ ing Sought | New York Starts Wheels Turning Saturday, ending Nov. 30. Press Phote HEADING NORTH — Two Pontiac devotees of the hunt, Ralph Norvell (left), and Jim Jenkins, neighbors on Wenonah Drive, were caught by The Press cameraman stowing deer hunting gear at the Norvell home, 46 Wenonah, They left Thursday afternoon for Camp 24, at Curran. The scene was typical of hundreds of area homes where hunters prepared for the annual deer season, starting Pontiac i SPORES 15 PCH Seniors in Grid Farewell | Fifteen Pontiac Central grid- ders will be playing their final high school football game tonight when the Chiefs close out their 1958 season against Flint Central in a Saginaw Valley Conference tussle at Wisner Stadium. The PCH seniors making their farewell grid appearance here this evening are dim. Pritchett, Howard Batten, Gerry Andrews, John Wibley, Jerry Sigler, Bill Green, Harrison Munson, Bill Da- vis, Duke Relyea, Herman Spi- cer, Tom Nichols, Jim Gardner, Willie Duncan, Harold Ledsinger and Gary Rose. Tops for NCAA Race WHEATON, Ill. ® — A field of 21 teams and 152 runners from 11 states will compete in the first NCAA college division cross coun- try meet. tomorrow. * * A four-mile course is mapped! out on the Chicago Golf Club. * * * Eastern Michigan College has been installed the favorite with top contenders being Roanoke Col- lege of Salem, Va., Northern Il- linois University, Wabash College of Crawfordsville, Ind:, South Da- kota State, Wheaton, and Kansas State of Emporia. Conference Championships Also on Line By United Press International Conference championships and bow]; berths dominate Satufday’s college football program with top- ranked Louisiana State and Okla- homa heavy favorites to land the lucrative New Year's day assign- ments in the Sugar and Orange Bowls, LSU, one of only two major per- lfect record teams in the country, is a solid 15-point favorite to whip Mississippi State in a night game at Jackson, Miss., while Oklahoma, ranked sixth, is a 16-point favorite to whip Missouri at Normian, Okla. ’ Victory over Mississippi State would all but clinch a Sugar Bow! _ berth for, the Bayou Bengals ‘since their chief rivals for the Southeastern Conference title— Auburn and Mississippi — are jfornia, which has the inside track either out of the running or about to be, Auburn is ineligible for bowl competition and Mississippi already has lost to LSU, Oklahoma and Missouri are tied (40) for first place in the Big Eight and Saturday's ‘meeting will resolve that race, The Sooners, 6-1 overall, will be shooting for their 70th straight conference victory in| this one. Missouri is 5-3 overall. * x * Clemson, another team with an eye on a bow! berth, is in a strong Position to land the assignment alongside of Oklahoma if it beats North Carolina State, while Cali- to the Rose Bowl berth - against lowa, can begin getting ready for the New Year's day festivities if it defeats Washington. EAST LANSING (UPI) = Michi- gan State's freshman football team holds the second of a three-game series of intra-squad contests ‘to- day. Out of the series is expectéd to come the prospects to get the Spar- tan varsity back on winning ways next year. Already there are indications the freshman squad holds the solution to MSU's primary weak- Deleon, 1104 Pexico, ted Abe Villa, 0, is 50, M is, ate es eo ein, 1%, # MSU Eyes Its Freshman > “We have so much power in the freshman backfield we may make linemen out of some of them,” said varsity coach, Duffy Daugherty, * * * Among the top prospects: Gary Ballman, 197-pound all- stater from East Detroit; all-state Larry Hudas, 195 pounds, Detroit: Tony Kumiega, 205 pounds, Chico- pee, Mass., and Ed Ryan, 200 May Complete Bowl List Saturday grumblings;_ ‘about a need for a younger man.| Coach Frank Howard’s Clem- son Tigers are only seven-point favorites over N.C, State, a team which lost to Mississippi South- ern, the nation’s top-ranked small college team, in a tradition-laden game at Raleigh, N, C, Clemson is 5-2 overall, while State is 2-5. —- loses then the race resolved until next week pend- ing how North Carolina fares against Duke and the Tigers against Forman, : California (4-1) is favored over Washington in their Pacific Coast game at Seattle, but Washington State (5-2) and Oregon State (4-2)) are in contending positions if the Golden Bears falter. State plays outside opponent College of Pacific, while Oregon State meets Stanford. * * * The situation in the Southwest Conference and Ivy League is somewhat muddled, but only the y race involves a bowl berth. Texas Christian and Rice are tied for first place with 3-0 records and more than likely will still be tied when they meet next Saturday. Tomorrow TCU plays Texas and Rice meets Texas A&M, In the Ivy, where they play for kicks rather than post-season berths, Dartmouth (4-1) and Cor- nell (4-1) meet in the day's top game, However, Princeton (also 41) meets a soft touch in Yale, , Pounds, Chicago. — 80 it may be another week before! this championship is resolved, _, fo Add Loop To Diamond Officials Skeptical Due to Present Problems NEW YORK ® — For the first time since the Federal League era nearly half a century ago organ- ized: baseball was confronted today | with the threat of an independent third major league, New York City, virtually aban- | —— doning hopes of obtaining a Na- tional League franchise, set in mo- tion the drive for the new league. * * * Baseball officials, already faced | with such problems. a8 controlling EMC Runners Rated | television, antitrust inquiries and collapsing minor leagues, met the surprise move with generally skep- tical comments. Even baseball minded people in major-hungry minor league cities viewed the proposal warily, Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick said, “Baseball is not go- ing to be sledge-hammered,"’ Frank Lane, general manager of the Cleveland Indians, quipped, “First I think they have to catch one team before they can catch eight.” . But- it was this inability of the nation’s largest city to catch a team to replace the Giants and Dodgers that touched off the latest bomb in baseball's already sim- mering hot stove. oy Yesterday, William shen: chairman of Mayor Robert Wag- ner’s committee én baseball, an- nounced at a press conference that the .committee, convinced that it is getting nowhere in its bid to land a National League franchise, would.start negotia- tions for a third major with an whnamed National League executive. Shea insisted that the committee would like to see the league formed with the cooperation of the cur- rent majors, but added that he felt New York had run into a blind alley in efforts to acquire an exist- ing National League franchise or gain one through NL expansion. He accused NL President Warren Giles of evasive action in New York’s bid. * * * league is not new, Frick is for it. Most of the club owners favor it. But the general feéling is that’ the time is not ripe and there are ‘not sufficient players or adequate playing sites available, : Giles said last night, “I fully appreciate the desire of New York for a National League fran- chise and have felt that would come about in the foreseeable future, But it will not be accomplished by threats , . , forming a third major league in or out of the pis- ent baseball structure is easier to accomplish through a press re- lease than actually getting the cit- ies, parks and. players.” * Vs * Yet Shea said the impetus for the third league movemént came from within the National League. Shea said these groups of in- terested: persons were in Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, Atlanta, To- ronto, Denver, Miami, Minneapo- Jis-St. Paul, Detroit and sever other cities on the West Coas 11 Years for Bennie! in eighth place, lowest since he became coach. * * * Tomorrow Oosterbaan will be minus his best runner, left half- back Darrell Harper, who has a leg injury. The Wolverine captain, John Herrnstein, has been shelved for the season. eee TO START — Tommy Wilson sophomore from Lapeer, was named by coach Duffy Daugherty to start at quarterback for Mich- igan State Saturday when the Spartans play Minnesota in the final Big Ten game. ' *>4a SS Herrastein’s knee injury ‘in the third game began a series of setbacks that lave hounded Oosterbaan all season. Mich- igan has 2-4-1 record, Michigan's hopes are built around quarterback Bob Ptacek, the last outstanding player de- veloped in the Oosterbaan regime. Ptacek has been playing about 50 minutes a game in an almost one- man effort to offset Michigan's rapid decline. x * * Indiana, a perennial tailender, has climbed to seventh place in Phil Dickens’ first year as coach. The Hoosiers are riding their greatest victory surge since their Big Ten championship sea- son of 1945. Winners only once last year, they have a three- game victory streak. Indiana has yielded but a single touchdown in those three games. The last two were duplicate 60 conference victories over Minne- sota and Michigan State. Reds vs. ‘M’ in Hockey NEW YORK (® — A Russian hockey team is going to play in seven U.S. cities in January on a tour of this country. The Rus- sians will play against an Ameri- can team composed of college players and amateurs in the armed forces. One of the games will be at Detroit Jan. 6. The Russians at that time will meet the University of Michigan team. ihave the tournament committee The concept of a third major = Scoring in BOSTON ®—One of the major problems the Boston Bruins face is how to halt Detroit's Norm Ull- man-Gordie Howe-Alex Delvecchio line. * * * The big forwards continued to haunt the Bruins and prevented PGA Changes Rules on Pros Reduced, Add Training Course * CLEARWATER, Fla. » — The Professional Golfefs' Assn. of America Thursday changed the ap- prenticeship period of a pro golfer from five playing years to four playigg years plus a’ year et a training school, x *« * The new ruling, adopted at the PGA's annual meeting, applies to both tournament and teaching pros. The one-year training will be taken at one of two PGA as- sistant training schools. One school already is operating in Clearwater, The other will open in January at Alameda, Calif. The PGA members also voted to composed of the PGA president, secretary and treasurer and four tournament players, This new set- up, effective next August, elimi- nates a member-at-large. * * * The meeting also approved a res- olution, effective immediately, to seek to arrange a sponsor and a site for a match play tournament for all PGA members. This resolu- tion in no way affects the annual PGA championship tourney, Sports on TV BOXING Wednesday, Nov. 19—Splider Webb vs, Joe Giardello, -round middiew bout. ‘a Laying cisco Cow Palace, ABC-TV, Frida Nov. 1th Pnor ‘alhoun a on ws. 16 wel a middleweight bea ayer — New York, Nec rad BOWLING Sunday, Nov. 16—Billy ge - Norman Nichols, ABC-TV, 4:30 p COLLEGE FOOTBALL Saturday. Nov. 22—Notre Dame at Iowa. NBC-T Mutual radio and ABC radio, 2:15 p.m GOLP Vicenzo goteree, Nov, 5 p.m. . Frank Giranatan, A n. ABCAY, at Boston, HOCK Nov. ta Detroit 2 pm. e 0 BASKETBALL 16 — Minneapolis at New 2:30 «'g Saturday, CBS-TV PR Sunday, Nov. York, NBC-TV, (All Sun See ames sanet out seatte radius of aying site) 16—New fe es p.m. Cleveland ai at bem eps CBS-TV —— e ar ohte ago Bears: * cekity go and Green » CBs. and een M'Prancisco, at Detroit, CBS-TV_ De- vl ae 5 io Las neue at Green Bay Wings Big Line Does 3-1 Victory = Apprenticeship Period | lof the. goal ifrom Johnny Buyck. The puck Division, meet the Syracuse Nats them from moving into the Na- tional Hockey League’s top berth last night in a 3-1 Red Wing verdict at the Garden. Each of the three scored a goal. Ullman had two assists while his mates contributed one each. Detroit leads the series between the clubs two games to one. In those contests the Ullman-Howe- Delvecchio combine has accounted for five of the seven Red Wing goals and 12 of the 17 points. * * * Oddly enough the score of each game was 3-1. The outcome telt the Bruins with 17 points behind. idle Mon- treal’s 18. Detroit ted Chicago for third place at 14 points each. Boston's only score was so-hotly contested by goalie Terry Sawchuk that he drew a 10 minute miscon- duct and narrowly missed a game misconduct. * * * Don McKenney crossed in front and fired in a pass came out as fast as it had gone in and Sawchuk made no effort on it. He apparently thought the shot had hit the inside of the post and bounded out. Sawchuk twice charged referee Dalton’ McArthur—the first time he drew & = Misconduct. The second time, when the penalty was an- tT ; ' | 3 3 iG | slammed his stick on the ice and|° Two Waterford hockey Tom Reynolds and John San son who played with a team in Birmingham Hockey League Is year, found out what a world this is. Reynolds, now play> ing with the Phoenix Apaches the California hockey bumped ties ewe ta Gee SS ens It was Sanderson. * o% of The Oakland B Conference: will hold its annual league meet~ ing Monday night at the Lae’ Hunda on M59 toward Utica near Mound road. The Alle Lcagve team will bp sclecied thal * * * ‘ Avondale’s Oakland-B football champions were feted to dinner by Auburn Heights businessman Cart Pike this week. ‘ * * * Next . Tuesday night at the, at Southfield a basketball exhi-. will coach a team Northern students in city recreation league. * a Redleg farm, and infielder Jack Hoffman with a Giants’ farm. * * * and Doug Hales of Waterford were players Three Table Téahis Teams Post Shutouts; Newberry, A & W Root and Pankey’s scored 6-0 and league-leading Nutrilite 5-1 to feature play in the Table Tennis Association loop i night. L. H. Cole Oil took other match. Bill Wettlaufer edged John’ wing 21-19, 17-21, and 21-19 in Nutrilite Newberry Mkt. 30 & W Root Br, 29 pore Barber 23 nounced, he bumped into the ref-| 5 eree hard but no added penalty was called. LL. H, Cole O11 18 Detroit Won Last Night, 119-110 Pistons Host DETROIT (UPI) — The Detroit Pistons, riding a two-game win streak and only a game out of first place in the NBA'S Western tonight inthe. University of De- troit Memorial Building. The Pistons moved up to the 500 mark — exactly where they were this time last season — with a 119-110 victory over the Minne- apolis Lakers in a York last night. The game was a battle for second place in the Western Di- vision and the victory gave De- troit a 5-5 season record. The leading St. Louis Hawks are 4-3. 32 points in the fourth quarter to ilead the Pistons. *. .§. & Minneapolis, trailing all the way, came within four points at the troit network and Pran- fonally on radio, , cisco; also nat 1:30 p.m. Gene Shue scored half of his oh New York ..cscesess Bt. va coed can ev ewan start of the last quarter but quick, , CBSTV New York network: gave the Pistons a 93-86 edge and|2 bad ele ee te ' Nats long ‘ : The New York Knicks deteated the Hawks, 119-102 in the half of the doubleheader at Mi son Square Garden. 2 The Nats are one up on the Pistons this season with a victory in the NBA season opener, eT at Syracuse. The Nats currently are along in second place behind Knicks in the Eastern NEW YORK ST, a GFT G a ee atlis an armer 3-9 Lovlette gat parrow . Martin A Pelix: 1 5 7 MeMahon 2 0. € 113. Ferrari 1 84 Guerin 4 613 Share 1 h3 Sraun 2 0 4 Wilfong © jobie § 5816 Park 20. ielvy 738 eed 22 = 3 ; ; uley 1 4 Totals ® ao 119 af Duane Greathouse, UAW vice ,Co. plants in 12 cities. Bg No Longer Needed in Europe? May Withdraw Missiles From Our News Wires WASHINGTON (UPD — The United States appeared ready to-|. day to cut back its program of on intercontinental missiles based at home, That prospect was unfolded late yesterday at a news erence by Defense Secretary Neil H. Mc- Elroy. It apparently means a rather drastic revamping of some pas North Atlantic Treaty Organization | (NATO) military plans. The move could be at least | partly a result of Russia’s bar- | rage ef warnings te U.S. over- seas allies against allowing American 1,500-mile range Thor | and Jupiter ballistic missiles on their soil. more The defense secre’ said that there was “currently under way . a reappraisal of our military requirements for IRBMs.” * * * He made it plain the intercon- tinental ballistic missie (ICBM), based in the United States com- pletely under American control and with 5,500 mile range, is now @ desirable military weapon ito this country than the IRBM overseas and subject to joint S.-allied control. ‘We might not have the re- quirement for the numbers of either; one of these or both of | them combined (Thor and Jupi- ter) that we have been ~ ing about up to this peint,” he | said, “The further you go down the McElroy, however, did not allude road toward an operational capa- to @#he Soviet warnings or to the bility of the ICBM, the less in- political issue that intermediate | range ballistic missiles (IRBMs) have become in many NATO coun-| tries, i ‘teresting it is for us to deploy additional IRBMs and we are com- ing closer to the time of opera- tional capability’’ of the Atlas in- tercontinental missile, McElroy added. : He said Jupiter and Thor mis- siles now on order will be pro- duced and the full planned com- plement will be sent to England, The United States also has ar- ranged to supply Jupiter missiles | pe. for Italy. Otherwise there has been far|s less than an overwhelming wel- |*pt come to the American offer of | De IRBMs for Europe. France, con- “ sidered by NATO military author- ities a vital spot for IRBMs, has y resisted up to now, * * * While the apparently imminent change in the plan may have been influenced by Russian warnings, it was not believed significant changes in American and allied deterrent powers will result. The United States has 200-mile range Redstone missiles in West Ger- many. It will have nuclear-powered sub- | marines with Polaris ballistic mis- siles starting in 1960. Talks Resume at Harvester U.S. Mediators Seek End to UAW ‘Strike That Began Thursday CHICAGO i —Federal mediators will try again Monday to settle a strike of 36,500 United Auto Work- ers at 15 International Harvester Yyith both Harvester and UAW of- ijeials yesterday, hours after the Mpike began at 7 a.m. Brown said the union and Harv- esteg still were far apart in an agreement on a new contract. The old pact expired Aug. 1 Picket lines were set up at the of the struck Harvest- er bet no disorders were Harvester announced strikers would receive checks today for their work last week. president and director of its im- plement division, and William Reil- ly, Harvester's labor relation man- ager, said the union and the com- pany have agreed on only three wage items. They are the cost-of- living allowance, an 8-cent-an-hour pay boost for skilled workers and an annual improvement factor of 64 cents hourly or 24% per cent, whichever is greater. STATE OF MICHIGAN—in the Pro- bate Court for the County of Oakland, duyenile Vision, In the matter of the petition concern- Se Morta, minor. Cause No. 148675 William F. Mortz, father of said enya Petnsce having been filed in this Court alieging that the present where- abouts of the father of said minor child; are unknown and said child has violated a jaw of the State, and that said child) should be piaced under the jurisdiction ot this Court, In the name of the people of the State of Michigan, you are nereby notified that the Dearing on said petition wili be hela at the Vaklana County Service 1 the City of Pontiac in said om the doth day of November, $58, wt one o'clock in the after- pam and you are hereby commanded to appear personaily at said hearing. It oeing impractical to make personal service hereoi, tuis summons and notice be served by publication of a copy — ohe The Pontiac Press, a newspaper ee and circulated in said County. Witness, the Honorable arthur F. Moore, Judge of said Court, in the City of Pontiac in Pat cm: this 10th day of oe * (Seal ARTHUR E. MOORE, week previous to said hearing iD} Battery of the 4th Battalion is part of an eventual na- tionwide change whereby National Guard units will man many Nike sites. However, Lt. Swartz gmphasized that this does not mean that the reguar army will relinquish its control over all Nike units. Presently some 16 men of ‘“C”’ of the Michigan National Guard, which some time around August next yedr will take over opera- Guard to Take Over Local Nike Battery The Auburn Heights Nike anti-aircraft missile battery| has been designated as one of the first units in the metropolitan Detroit area preparing to be taken over by the Michigan National Guard. lst Lt. Isabelle J. Swartz, public information officer for the 28th AAA Group, said the conversion of “D” + | ship. Battery, 979th Missile Battalion | tional control of the Auburn Heights site, are in Fort Bliss, Texas, training for the conver- sion. Slated to become commander of the Auburn Heights site is the present commander of the National Guard battery, Capt. Frederick E. Tucker, 35, of Farmington Town- Capt. Tucker is working with Regular Army Nike commander, Capt. Raymond J. Geoffrion, in readiness for the chenge. Stronger Market for Cars Seen Romney of AMC Also Dividend in 4 Years CLEVELAND President George Romney of American Mo- four years, yesterday before the National In- dustrial Conference Board and at a press conference. The AMC president said one rea- son for an expected better year for the automobile market is im- provement in the nation’s econom- ic climate. He also told the industrial board that expansion of consum- er credit is likely and there is a growing national acceptance of | compact and smaller cars such as those made by his com- pany. iA ‘see copy} Judge of Probate ELSIE J. VASUCASSENNO, Romney said reduced field stocks lof 1959 cars would be a factor. Probate Register, | * * * Juvenile Division Nov. 14, '58 NOTICE OF SALE $150,000.00 Walled Lake Consolidated Schoo! Dis- trict, Township of Commerce, County of Vakiand, Michigan NOTES Sealed bids for the purchase of notes of said school district of the par value of $150,000.00 will be received by the undersigned at the Walled Lake Junior} High School, 615 N. Pontiac Trail. Walied| Lake, Michigan, until 8.00 o'clock p.m | Eastern Standard Time, on the 24th day) of November, 1958, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read. The notes will be dated November 15 1958, will mature June 15, 1959, and wiil bear imterest at a rate or rates not exceeding 4% per annum. Both interest! and principal will be payable at such| bank or trust company in the State of Michigan as shall be designated by the| original purchaser of the notes. Denomi- | nations and form of the notes shal! be! at the option of the purchaser. Accrued imterest to date of delivery of such! notes must be paid by the purchaser at time of delivery. Said notes will be subject to redemp- tion prior to maturity in inverse numer- ical order at par and accrued interest, on the ist day of any month prior to. maturity thereof, upon 15 days’ notice! served upon the holder or holders there- of or published in a newspaper, or publi- cation circulated in ‘the State of Mich-| iga: Ties as a part of it regular gph potices of the sale of municipal bon For the purpose of awarding the notes jl interest cost of each bid will be puted by determining, at the rate ng. = spor specified therein, the total dol-| on the notes) lar value of all interest from December 1, 1958 to their maturity and ded refrom any premium. The -notes will be awarded to the bidder whose bid om the above computation produces the lowest interest cost to the school district. No proposal for the pur- chase jess than afl of the notes or at @ price less than their par value will be considered. joan is ‘in anticipation of un- distributed state appropriations for the school year 1958-°59, and the full faith credit of the district is pledged A certified or cashier's check in the amount of 7% of the par value of the drawn upon an incorporated bank or trust neared and payable to the ee easurer of order «ig! Mh. the schoolg ny each bid as a somites ot Gaon aith on the of ces on en ecks eka ot a ‘ul bid- vilopes “con containing the vids jhould ¥ tea i" "Proposals for conditioned wy the vacmnied antisn at the Pehaser ors Discussing AMC's possible first dividend since 1954, Romney said this would not be determined be- fore late November when all the ‘figures are in for AMC’s 1958 year. The company’s fiscal year ends at the end of September, * * * AMC paid its last dividend in the| spring of 1954, right after its for- | _mation in the merger of Nash-Kel- vinator and Hudson Motors. Romney's report of a possible | dividend sent the company's | stock up 174 on the New York Ex- change. Earlier it had fallen A Tierer, Three officials from he Detroit | capital spending next year. Predicts Possible First. | tors Corp, predicts a stronger car|by burglars from a garage behind market for 1959 and also a possible |the home of Julius Stargiala, 792 first dividend from his company in| Young St., it was reported to Pon- Romney made the statements’ | | | iChurch. Huron and Mill Lodge Calendar ‘Blue Shield Grain Prices CHICAGO WHEAT CHICAGO, Nov. 14 (AP) -—- Opening grains: Wheat— Oats. aamenaes 1.96% Dec, ........5 6% March ......- 1.09% March .,..... 67% ee deomconnne 197% May . _ $3 July .... LO7% July ...sesere 3 es L Rye— ‘ern (old)— ec... 139% Cece aes 112% March . 1.33% arch . 116% OY Voc. ceses 1.38% Corn (new)— July 1.33% Dec. Peoee et Lard (loose) — March ,..... M16 = Dec. cacsvense 10.65 May : 1.19 BAIL seonemsicons 10.40 uly seers 430% March ,,.,...10.20 ‘ B89 Ciccesss «10,30 July voce 0 Lapeer Father Dies of Polio First Victim Reported 4 Children, Widow LAPEER — A Lapeer father of four became Lapeer’s first polio by County in ‘58 Leaves | onions, ary Detroit Produce, FRUITS sanveseeesees sBO-10 eerernee aveeeseenne “SPOR RESO e Pee eeeee rs VEGETABLES Beets, accccceaseseoces 2.50 Broceoll se eceenecsssore Carrot tcoped, DU. s.ccncecccroses $M ‘Caulitiower, seecccverecsegre + 2.38 Oreereseeene soe eeeeeaee 2 50 -taceeeceecooes L2D eee eee eereee site's ‘a gna bs lekes a resdgece. 4 fatality of the year, it was reported today by Lapeer County Health Dept, authorities. The victim, David L, Phillips, of 2549 Peppermill Rd., died Wednesday night on his 28th birthday at Hurley Hospital, Flint, An autopsy was performed yesterday, Phillips’ 24-year-old daughter, polio, Her condition is not critical, however, according to doctors at the Flint hospital. * * x The father had no polio shots and the girl had two, widely spaced, according to health au- thorities. Phillips leaves his wife, two other small daughters and a son. Hospital Insurance Rates to Increase DETROIT — Blue Cross and insurance rate in- creases ranging up to $2.67 a month will become effective Jan. 1. This was announced jointly by the two organizations today on ap- cial communication. Pontiac e No. 21, F&AM Friday, sae 14th, 7:30 p.m. Work in EA Degr el Gerald L. Moors, W.M News in Brief Thieves broke into the King’s Mufflers Shop at 256 S. Saginaw St. and took some change from a soft drink machine, it was reported to Pontiac police today. An old cash register was stolen tiac police today. Rummage Saie sponsored by the. Parents Booster Club of the Rae-| Vens Drill Team. Time: 9 a.m., | Date. Saturday November 15, 1958. | Place, V.F.W. Hall Post 1370, 398 |@ S. Saginaw St. Pontiac, Michigan. | Fried Chicken Dinner. St. _ | cent De Paul H iran bad! s. Sunday, Nov. 16, oie Adults $1.50. Kids re ise. ‘Sn. der 5 years Free! Rummage Sale. Newman Church, 14 Auburn Ave. _ Bat Nov. eh | 8 a.m. to 121 Rummage sale, corner of storie St. and Auburn. Fri. 9 to 5. Sat. 9} ad, Rummage Sale. Cont Ae ea St. Sat. Nov. 15. 8 a.m. Rummage Sale. First Presby- terian Church. Sat. 9 a.m. adv. FHA Officials Study City’ s Renewal Area Federal Housing Administration) officials were in Pontiac today, | istudying homes in the proposed urban renewal area. | Romney told the industrial board | his company showed a profit of ‘$14,600,000 the first nine months of its 1958 fiscal vear as against a 5| vious fiscal year. | | Pontiac's The first of its kind in the world, ‘and may, iNest Ethier, of the city’s planning loss of $11,800,000 for the full pre-' department. | They were determining the ex-} tent to which the FHA would back; private purchase of used homes in| the renewal area in connection with! the proposed project, said Robert} assistant city manager. | FHA office, Eugene Nosar, Joseph Van Dyke and Theodore La d.a, toured the renewal area with Er- renewal program is|w ‘nearing the final planning stage with federal approval, a wallpaper trade school has been. get under way in 1960, said Stier- opened in Kassel, Germany. er. + Firm to Build 2 Lapeer Structures Awards School Contracts proval of Staie Insurance Com- missioner Joseph A. Navarre. Blue ‘!Cross is operated by hospitals; Blue Shield by doctors. Blue Shield recently announced lit. was liberalizing payments to hospital members to cover an an- nual increase of 8 per cent in casts of hospital care. Increased charges for single per- sons will range from 98 cents to $1.30 a month; those for full fam- ilies from $1.92 to $2.67. The or- ganizations said they were neces- sary to give them an 18.5 per cent increase in overall income. Simultaneously with the new lrate increases, Blue Cross said it ‘would offer two. new insurance contracts, a $50 deductible one and a so-called economy package, both at rates below comprehensive cov- erage. Under the economy plan $14 a day is paid for 30 days. = Hillsdale Man Faces Check Trial in Ohio TOLEDO, Ohio i — A Hillsdale, \Mich., man arrested on charges of} ru ‘linterstate transportation of phony checks, was put under $5,000 bond yesterday by U.S. Commissioner ve John J. Barone. * * * Clifford Cunningham, Jr., 25, was unable to post the bond and was held in Lucas County jail. Commissioner Barone probably will have Cunningham transferred to Cleveland for prosecution in the U.S. District Court, eastern dis- trict. * * * Cunningham was arrested by! Fostoria police who said he was posing as a member of a nationally | ‘known rock ‘n’ roll quartet. The, iFBI took him into custody saying iit had evidence he had passed bad jchecks in Cleveland, Chicago, and in phony checks in several states. Picket Struck by Car of Chrysler Executive DETROIT (UPI) A_ picket was struck today by a car driven! by a Chrysler sales executive as) she walked the picket line at Chry-| iler’s MoPar Plant at Center Line. * * * Constance Tallent, who works in! the data processing section of the; parts plant, was taken to Memor- ial Hospital at Center Line for examination and released. She was uninjured, She was struck by a car driven by Ray Ayers as the Chrysler executive was turning into! LAPEER — The Lapeer Board! Eight bids on electrical work! of Education last night awarded|were received, but because there| contracts for construction @f the was only $12 difference between| Hadiey Community Schoo] and the the two low bids, awarding®of the| 'Turrill School in the south end of|contract was upheld for further | Lapeer. study. * *& t+ * * Of the 12 bids submitted, the lowest was by the Vesely Construc- s|tion Co. of Lapeer, $166,681 for gen- - éfal construction of both schools. Ten bids were received for mechanical work on the two hao ingle nari d por Base ad Capac, $63,000. This includes furnishing and in- = 8 Construction will start immedi- ately. Completion of both buildings is due within 200 days. _ The Hadley school will replace the present 100-year-old struc- ture, The new building will have six rooms, a multi-purpose room and a ‘kitchen. The Turrill school will consist of four rooms, ithe plant. * * Ayers was ticketed for failing to yield the right .of way to a pe-| destrian, Fruehauf Reports Loss DETROIT — Fruehauf Trailer Co. reported a loss of $2,705,897 the first nine months of 1958, equal to a loss of 45 cents per share. This compared with profits of $2,727,143, or 39 cénts a share, in the corre- sponding 1957 period. The company attributed $2,950,000 of the loss to special charges for inventory ad- justments and pther caus®. Melissa Jo, also was stricken with) Rom, quash, pu. Hothse., No. 1 4b. ‘bekt, 2. Turnips, topped, bu 0 h sHicious sevessesee 1.26 50 00 eeeerveverasrs eee eeere od SALAD GREENS Celery ee, a wasceeses --- £3 Endive, Mh. cocdesceness S.a0 Movaseie, at oa DU. reeves 2,25 Lettuce, ao ! 1.50 aine, * 2.00 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, Nov, 13 a itn r und, f.0.0. Detroit, for No. q 7 ve poultry Heavy type hens aad light Gee _— \Los Angeles. Cunningham told Fos- ltoria police he had passed $69,000) 11-12; heavy type bro! os and fry lbs. Whites 17-18%; Bar oa Necks 1. : o*| Royal Dutch and Standard | Caponettes er Ibs., isl; “Tight ducks 2. (New Jersey) scored small ad- DETROIT EGGS vances. DETROIT, Nov. 13 (AP)—-Eggs, f. 0. b. Detroit, in case lots, federal state a de A jumbo $1-54, wtd New York Stocks ade um! -64, wtd. . avg, 524; extra large 48-53, wtd. avg. (Late Morning Quotations) 51; large 46-49, wtd. avg. 47; melium! Pigures after decimal point are eighths | pode avg. 36; small 27-28, wtd. Amirali 16 Intelrak Ir 23.2 avg. 28; 45, L ae « 38: ok erade B large 43-45, wtd. avg. air age : ait int Bus M Mch’ “3 Allied Ch nt Harv .... Browns—Grade A extra large 52; large 47; medium 36; small 28 Grade B large — Sirs... 37 ocd onl hf 45; = C large 33 Checks—31-33, wtd.| aium Ltd .... 32 Shoe 44 oes. Icon ......-- 85.5 Int Tel&Tel . 55.4 Commercially graded: Am Airlin .. 24.6 Le Crk Coal.. 42.6 Whites Grade A jumbo 51-52; extra) Am Can .. 50.5 pobs . ..... 8.6 large 48; large 43-45; medium 32-34;)}Am Cyan .. $3.1 Sohne Man . small 26. Browps—Grade A jumbo 50;|Am M&Fdy .. 59.2 Jones & L .. 57 — 43-45; medium 32%-34%; smalij|Am Motors .. 32.2 Kelsey Hay .. 40.2 an N oes - 66.2 Kennecott , .. 99.4 New: - 30.4 Kimb Clk . 64 . am Tel & Tel ‘199.6 Soe oo ae sine : ass .. 98. Livestock Anaconda BOS Lib MeN&ls «. 11-7 rmco ; ry y ... 78. DETROIT LIVESTOCK Armour & co 20 Lockh Aire... 58.2 DETROIT, Nov. 13 (AP)—Cattle Sal-| Atchison . %.5 Loew's ........ 0.2 able 250. Bulk early supply cows; cnly| Aveo Mf . 8.7 Lone 8 Cem... 36.4 scattering utility and standard steers! Balt & Ohio .. 43 —— veeee B4 and heifers in less than load lots; cows| Beth Steel .. 50.5 Mack rk . 33.4 fully steady; other classes unchanged;|Boeing Air .. 516 Manning +. 26.6 utility cows 18.00-19.50; canners and| Bond Strs ... 21 artin Co .... 33.6 cutters 14.50-18.00. Compared last week| Borden ...... ™ May © Strs .. 44.1 slaughter steers under 1,100 Ibs. slong| Bork Warn .. 36.6 Mead Cp ..... baa with heifers fully steady; steers over Btiggs Mf .... “ed onan | a 1,100 lbs. steady; cows steady to 5 S ies ay te “103.8 higher; bulls and feeders steady; few a ee . Ho inn MaM "90.2 loads high choice to prime 1,080-1.117 Ib. vache - ska Ch 1.. 38.7 steers 26.25. 50; most average to high a = ee Mont Ward... 21 choice 950- 7 100 Ib. steers 27.50-28.60; = ry * 63. Can Dry .... 18.6 Mot Prod ..... 63.2 small lot high choice to prime 1,216 - Cdn Pac 99.3 Mueller Br ... 30.7 steers 28.00; several loads average to) ¢, "363 M Cc 29.2 ‘apital Airl |. 163 at ph Dias high choice 1,100-1,200 Ib. steers 27.00-| Carrier Cp 40.5 5 Dan 50.2 27.50; most good to average choice|Case JI ..... 22 Nat Cash R .. 72.5 steers 1,100 Ibs. down 25.50-27.50; stand-|Cater Trac .. 92.4 Nat Dairy .... 48.3 ard to low pest steers 23.25- = 25; to nak Chrysler . .... $2.3 Gyps = 87.7 steers 21.00-23.25; most Cin Mil . 39.6 Nat Lead . 107.4 choice 750-900 Ib. heifers Sco: 27.00; we Cities Svc . 89.3 No Am Av . 36.5 loads high choice to prime around 900\Clark Equip .. 59.2 Nor Pac ..... 57.6 Ib. heifers 27.25-27.50; utility and stand-/Cluett Pea ... 43.6 Nor Sta Pw .. 22.1 ard heifers 20.50-24.75; utility cows 18.00-|Coca Cola ...120.6 Ohio Ol! 40.1)- 19.50; load 1,340 1b. utility cows 19.25|Colg Palm ~., 85.3 Owens Il] GI.. 82.6 canners and cutters 14.50-18.00; utility|Col Brd A . 39.2 Gé& - 60 bulls 22.50-24.50; few commercial ale Colum Gas .. 20.2 Pan A W Air.. =. up to 25.00; cutter bulls 20.00-22.5 n Edis .:.. 59 a head good 414 Ib. stock steer “calves Con N Gas ... 47.4 ad aoa Fa “358 33.00; few small lots mostly good to|Consum Pw .. 56 ° ba"tp * ""'"'Ig9 choice 700-800 Ib. yearling ten sers 25.50-|Cont Can .. 59.4 984 28.00. ‘ont COP&S 13.5 Ip : . Vealers—Salable 25. Nominally steady/Cont Mot .... 10.4 22.5 today. Compared last week vealers|Cont Oil ..... 56.7 Phill Pet... 46 steady; choice and prime vealers 33.00-|Copper Rng .. 29-1 proct . 73.6 41.00; ‘standard and good 26.00-33.00;|Corn Pd .... 88.6 pure Oll .,.. 40.6 cull and utility 16.00-26.00. Fe es BES BCR... 40.7 Hogs—Salable 200. Butchers and sows|Det Edis ..... 41.6 Repub Stl .... 68.3 steady; mixed lots U.S. No. 2 and 3|Dis C Seag . 34.4 Rex Drugy.... 29.1 190-240 Ib. butchers 19. 00-19-25: load on “ a. Reyn Met .... 67.4 mixed grades No. 5 to 3 225 Ib. weights Dow Chem .. 741 Rey Tob B ,.. 88.7 19.40: few mixed Oo. 1 and 2 19.50 Du Pont eo 4 Royal Dut « $1.5 19.60: no straight lots No. 1 in early|@ast Air L... Safeway St 36.3) run: No. 2 and 3 240-300 Ib. butchers |East, ae OU ee | 18.00-18.75: load 267 Ib. weights 18,50:/E1 Auto “ye Gowen Mt. these mostly No. 2 and 3 mixed grades|e.° Raa * $14 Shell on. | sows 300-600 Ibs. 15.50-17.50. Compared | put" pe 125 sinclair...) 62.1 week ago butchers fully 25 cents higher:|e' Sig °°! 40.6 Socon vvee Sh — ee Fairb Mor... 33 Pac 1... 61.1: Sheep and lambs—Compared last weekiFirestone . ..119.4 Sperry os 22) slaughter lambs and ewes steady: — Food Ma .. 7172 Std Ot) Cal .. 57.3) lambs also steady; most choice to egg = i¢| Ford Mot .... 49.7 Std Oil Ind 48.7. wooled slaughter lambs 22.50-23 fe¥iFreept Sul ...104.7 Std Oll NJ 59.2 | loads choice and prime wooled aca Frueh Tra .. 17.5 Stud Pack ... ‘14.2: lambs 23.75-24.00: most good to choiceigardner Den.. 48.6 Ou . 65.6 wooled lambs 21.50-22.50: utility to goodiGen Bak ... 13.2 Swift & Co .. 37.4) lambs 19.00-21.50; enlis down to .00;lGen poga . 63.5 Sylv E) Pd’ .. $6.2 cull to choice slaucrhter ewes 5.00-9.50: igen v.:, 60.4 Texas Co ~ 84.2 most -good and choice feeder lambsigen Fds .... 73 ex G Sul... 23 21.00-22.50. Salable now 300. All cl siGen Mills . 79.4 Textron .. 3: steady today: few lots choice woolediGen Motors .. 49.3 Timk R Bear 46 | slaughter lambs 23.00-23.95: load cholee/Gen es $8.3 Twenty Cen .. 36.6 and prime wooled lambs 22.75; few InadsiGen Time ... 24.4 Underwd + 18.2) zood lambs 22.°4-97 50 load choice 77 Ib. igen soaa 325 = Carbide ..119.4 feeder lambs 22.00. Gaber Prod .. 60.7 Pac ..... 34.6, Gillette . .... 42.5 Unit Air Lin .. 30.2) Goebel Br ... 2.7 Unit Airc ... 64.3; Goodrich sy... 732.6 Unit Pruit 46.5 Japanese Prince setige .°3$ bs Bue Ba a ae Paige ie us Steet a5 | ‘0 . 27.4) Reported to Wed Somes * PETS Walgreen. 448) ult Oil 9.1235 West Un Tel 29.3! Hersh "69 Westg A Bk .. 28.4! ommoner 42, White Mot |. 613) e Mo b Hooker 3] co 318 Ison & Co. 31 Mm Cent ..-- $84 Woolworth |. 50.2) TOKYO (AP) — Crown Prince Indust Ray as 2 Yale & Tow || 324 |Akihito was reported today tong. 5 St 1.134 —— stall to have won his fight to marry a beautiful commoner and make ‘her ithe next Empress of Japan. A friend of both the prince and ithe girl, Michiko Shoda, daughter lof a millionaire businessman, said ionly a “last minute reversal — ;something no one can forsee—) Co! can keep the two from becoming engaged." * * * | | “The prince is an athlete and has taken part in many hard con- tests," the source said, “But the contest he is now in has been his emest yet. However, the goal inow seems to be in sight.’” | There has been no official com- ment on the reports linking the crown prince, who will be 25 next lmonth, and Miss Shoda, 24, whose father is president of the Nisshin Flour Co. * * But according to reports the match has been opposed by Prin- cess Chichibu and Prince Taka- matsu, Akihito’s aunt and uncle, and from some of Japan’s old pre- war. peerage, Fatally Injured by Truck 55, of Ecorse, was killed Thursday night when struck by a truck near his home. evr Mixed psig MARKETS |Stock Prices sis on intercontinental and less on intermediate range missiles. General Dynamics made the best early gain, running. up more than a point, Chance Vought was ahead nearly a point and Douglas a small fraction. Boeing was up ea fraction. * * *x U.S. Steel, Bethlehem and Re- public registered fractional gains. Goodyear and Goodrich were ahead in the rubber section. Among ~ Inspir Cop .. 40 Chrysler Tieup Drops Car Output to 121,305 DETROIT ® — Chrysler's white collar workers’ strike is causing a Warmth of Wood Paneling Live with~the Luxury of Beautiful Wood Walls <, Budget Prices! Budget T. . $6 Months to Pay oT. SPECIAL! , African Samarra—" 36x96 Panels. Warm, Rich Tones SHEET, Plain .............$3.99 SHEET, V-Grooved .........$4.99 Knotty. Pine = Kiln Dried — “Satin Smooth Finish” 6" — 8” — 10” Widths ‘14s Cut to Length Free of Piha $4.88 $99.00 M 15°F Grades 2 thru 16 Utility Grade School Desks Oak Flooring Acoustical Ceiling Tile—Celotex... Aubu 70 S. Squirrel Rd. Open Sat. ‘til 5:00 P.M. FREE DELIVERY umber{ _o. Auburn Heig FE 5-9293 For your convenience .. . WE'RE OPEN SATURDAY MORNINGS from 9 to 12 We hope you'll find it convenient to take advantage of these Saturday morning hours, to discuss your investment plans and problems. Drop in soon. We'll look forward to seeing you. We'll be glad to arrange an evening appointment, if you wish. Just call F. Ederal 2-9276 Watling, Lerchen & Co. Member New York Stock Exchange 402-403 Pontiac State Bank Building Pontiac, Michigan ——— BIDS WANTED for EXCAVATION, GRADING & FOUNDATIONS for First Unit of NORTH CENTRAL CHRISTIAN COLLEGE Rochester, Michigan The North Central Christian College Foundation, Inc., will receive sealed bids on labor and material at 7:30 P. M., a day, November 26th, 1958, at 820 West Avon Road, South o Rochester, Michigan, at which time same will be eenoty opened and read aloud, on the following work: 1. Excavation, Grading and Foundations Bids may be delivered to the office of the patentee 1602 Military Reet 8 Huron, Michigan before 5:00 P. M., a 4 contract documents, saaheding plans and specifications are on file oeg examination at the offices of: x F. W. Dodge Corp., Detroit, Michigan Builders’ & ers’ Exchange, Detroit, Michigan and may be secured at the of ice of the Architects: Wyeth and Harman, Inc. 1602 Military Street, Port Huron, Michigan Successful bidders will be required to furnish appeemnngn LL — and performance bonds written by recognized surety companies, also to nd satisfactory Workingmen's Compensation and Public Linbittty suran: Copies of the a ts may be obtained by d iting $15.00 with the Architects for each set of t t the dapostt will be returned within ton days after the opening of bids, provided all documents are then returned. The North Central Christian College Foundation. Inc, reserves the Tight to reject sy or all bids or to Waive any technicalities. A certified check in an amount << to five per cent (5%) of the ‘entral Christian College 8 pene oad drop in general car production this week. | Automotive News says car as-| semblies this week will be 121,305 as against 125,279 last week be- cause of the strike. A year ago! this week the industry built 141,904 cars. value of ec Igkchgan” or to the “North C Roches: a bi ieee suret the fem shal compen ‘ be submitted with each id botid executed by the bidder with a satis- m an amount mae he Oe to five per cent (5%) of io bid may be pt of bids. within three weeks after the scheduled it eens time for receipt of bi ' NORTH CENTRAL CHRISTIAN COLLEGE FOUNDATION November 16, 1958 Wheeler. Utiey, Chairman School Aid Requested MOUNT CLEMENS (® — The Mount Clemens community school district has applied for a federal grant of $470,000 to finance a new elementary school and an addition to an existing school. SES Michigan BUSINESS GuiDE Business of All Kinds Throughout Michigan. Investments, Too! INTRODUCING A NEW FUTURE FOR YOU WITH THE TURN OF EVERY PACE. OWNERS ATTENTION! lonia Fair Loses Money IONIA ®— Directors of the Tonia Free Fair said Thursday the 1958. fair “finished with a deficit of $4,445 compared to a profit of DETROIT — William Morgan, }$6,889 in 1957. Secretary-Manager Allan M. Williams blamed this { year’s deticit on the business re-if cession, Be sure your business, farm of in- vestment is listed in the next issue ¢, Pt. ly Michigan Business NO CHARGE TO You Realtor Partridge |. and iates 1050 W. Huron St. a FE 4-358!