Fs $120,000 $160,000 $249,008 $320,000 — a ey os The Weather U.8. Weather Bureau Forecast Cloudy With Occasional Rain (Details Page %) THE PONTIAC PRESS 115th YEAR * *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WE DNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 195744 PAGES D PRESS UNITED PRESs PHOTOS dlpcurer panes NEWS SERVICE 7¢ veteran has his rifle restored after- several years by Pontiac Patrolman Melbourne Griffin, assist- ‘ed by Sgt. Fred Goines, left, and Officer William Stony-Fisted Vet Armed and On Guard Load It for Pee S58 Me Boys, , q m _ Tired * City Asks U.S. to Back Urban Renewal Project ‘Bailey. The - rifle was stolen by vandals several years ago and found Friday night—-along side a road -by-two Waterford Township police officers. a * General Motors Offers to Return 9 Million Profit Corporation Reverses Earlier Stand in Dispute NEW ORLEANS — Nep. F. Edward Hebert (D-La) announced last night Gen- eral Motors Corporation ihas offered to return to the Air Force over half of an alleged $17 million “ex- cess profit” earned on an airplane construction con- tract. | Hebert, chairman of a ‘House ‘“watch-dog” committee on government fer was a “complete re- \versal” of its position that \it was not obliged to return any part of the $17 million ithe Air Force claimed the) ‘e) company received in excess 8060 Molena Ave., Detroit and Wil- youth, Michael ‘Flanary, of 37 P. Garcia widened his lead in Phil-| was found this ‘of the normal profit due un der government jtracts. GM's offer to return $9.700,000 as a compromise to settle the dis- pute was contained in letters writ- ten by GM Vice President John F Gordon to Maj. Gen. William T. Thurman, Air Force deputy direc- at Wright-Patterson AFB. _ Pentiac Press PFhote Rifle Issued to Civil War Hero o's sacs meso By HAROLD 8. COHEN Pontiac’s Civil War hero armed again aiter several years of facing south and awaiting the enemy with his bare fists thrust! ‘| forward as his only defense. The hero is a statue of a. Union Veteran erected in 1927 at the corner of Oakland and Saginaw streets by the Daughters of Union Veterans, This morning a contingent of police officers replaced the an- cient rifle stolen from the stat- we’s hands by vandals, and the soldier is once again on guard in the little triangular park in which the memorial stands, The rifle was found by patroling Waterford Township officers last Friday night lying on the shoulder of a road, apparently heaved out of a passing car. Still missing is the bayonet, with only an empty scabbard to show ‘Dems, GOP Differ Sharply on Reasons — ‘Why Is Industry Moving From State? it was ever there. t * * ; The monument, now the property of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, was the scene of a near renewal of the Civil War fwo years ago. Low of 45 Tonight, Rain or Drizzle Rain or drizzle is the forecast for the Pontiac area tonight. There will be little change in tempera- ture. A low of 45 is expected, Tomorrow will be cloudy with occasional rain and a mild high of 50. In its five-day forecast, the U. S. Weather Bureau says temperatures will average around six degrees above normal. The normal high will be 47 and the normal low 33. Rain amounting to one-half inch is expected Thursday, Friday and Sunday. Saturday will be mild apd’ the warmest day of the week. Forty was the lowest recorded temperature preceding 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. At 1 p.m/ the redding was 49, j A squad of Gls from the Nike from below the Mason-Dixon Line. base. at Auburn Heights came to One look at the Yankee proudly is Pontiac with the firm intention of cleaning up the park and monu- ment, Nuclear Power Used to Light California Town atomic age came te Moorpark last night, when, for five min- utes, the community of 1,500 was lighted entirely by means of nuclear power. The power, transmitted - over Southern California Edison Co., ‘lines, came from a nuclear plant Santa Susana Mountains, 30 miles northwest of Los Angeles. Engineers said it marked the first time an entire town was lighted in this manner, But four of the soldiers haile a MOORPARK, Calif, ) — The | for generating electricity in the | to refund $4,100,000 to the Air Force “as a matter of principle.” _In_a second letter dated Nev, 1, 1957, the company stated it was willing to return an additional | $3 million, standing above them and they balked. “If my people back home ever heard I was fixin’ up a Yankee ‘monument, they would sure enough run me clean out of the country,” one unreconstructed | The ‘latest offer came on the theels of a request by the govern- iment's general accounting office ithat the justice department consid- Reb told his frantic sergeant. jer whether the company had com- ‘mitted fraud. The company main- Another commented, ‘‘With his tained the charge was hands cupped like that, one over ed.” the other, he’ sure seems like a * * * true Yankee, just ready to shake) GM's alleged ‘excess profits’ on them dice come payday.” the contract came to light last r * * * year in an investigation by He- It took a threat of a court mar- to work a profit of 5.4 per cent, after taxes, | Today, the Yankee soldier stands hohier plank armed again gazing at the horizon “® ater planes. where in the morning mist *the TWICE NORMAL PROFIT shadowy, forms in the enemy's The committee maintained that camp can be seen forming ranks this was twice the normal profit for another day’ s battle. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ‘Second in @ series of articles on taxes and industry.) By ROGER LANE LANSING « — When people from Maine to California buy automobiles like hotcakes, things hum in Michigan. ‘To an extent unparalleled in economy is dominated by a sin- gle industry—automobiles. SHOPS SHIVER When car sales drop off even moderately, the impact on the State is sudden and hard. Shivers run through parts and accesso- ries plants, machine shops anda maze of specialized little enter- prises clustered around the auto- motive giant. - , Automotive wage rates, which. set the pattern for the entire complex, are high. Ac- cordingly, Michigan manufac: turing wages last year were y the ghost te in the nation, The weekly average of nearly was more than $8 ahead of Illinois and Indiana and over 50 per cent higher than in some Southern states, io most other states, the Michigan. | union disciplined, aggressive and The Unfted Auto Workers. a | forces—over one half a million powerful enough to talk back to the powerful auto makers, has | “oa ti forced wages up. and the UNION 18 POWERFUL Many of the 156.000 industrial ° | ich Michigan be- _ As anions go, the UAW is tre- | jobs which Michigan lost mendously powerful politically. | rece) oe ee eee Under the leadership of Walter | were USN Gis pee P, Reuther, it has marshaled its | About 61,000 of those lost jobs disappeared with the demise of the Kaiser-Frazer, Hudson and | Packard Auto companies, and ' 16,000 .more with the shutdown of hind Gov. G. Mennen Democrats — r= fio z| Q be n | on i] n ” Ike Will Outline Program Tonight on Air Force Contract | Some key scientific advisers to City sub- . expenditures, said GM’s of- con. — “unwarrant- | bert's committee during which it) tial to get the leaf-raking detail*¥4s charged that GM had realize d| on a contract to construct 599 FS4F) strong in Michigan—directly be- | Williams | WASHINGTON President lined Eisenhower outlines to the nation Eisenhower will recommend tonight his program for training For tonight's coast-to-coast tele more American youths as scien-: vision-radio address, the second in tists in the space era struggle a ‘chins up’ series, the President against Russia. travels by plane to — advance discussion of what the President reportedly have sug- The speech will be carried live gested to him that the federal at 10:30 p. m. EST by NBC-TV government grant scholarships to and ail four major radio net- promising students as an incen- works. ABC and CBS television tive. But the White House de- “ne carry the address from film 1s p. m " eee ‘nhower will speak at Mu nicipal Auditorium in connection a an Ifa ic ve Oklahoma's ‘Arrows to oms Sth anniversary of state - ae He plans to start back to : Washington by plane immediatels Takes ? Lives ee the speech. Cool and cloudy weather may cut . . down the crowds greeting Presi- in Southfield dent Eisenhower on his six-hour visit in Oklahoma City toda Oxford Arps Local officials planned tw meet him at Will Rogers Airport rr join the motorcade downtown, - by the President in his why House limousine with the plastic Collision Kills Woman; Pedestrian Dies. ’ Two traffic fatalities were re- corded in Oakland County yester- | bubble top day, one as the result of a collision in Southfield Township and the other @ pedestrian accident in Ox- Find Body of Boy tord Dead are Cathrine Tinik, 47, of The body of a 14-year-old Pontiac | liam Poss, 8, a resident of the S. —— St., Bliss Convalescertt Home, Oxford.! mornin Mrs, Tinik died in William (his home. Pontiac walle said the Beaumont Hospital from inju- boy died of a bullet wound in his ries received in a collision at 10- head. They said a .32 caliber! Mile and Southfield Kds., said Yevolver belonging to his father, Southfield Township Police. James Flanary, was found nearby. Beare: , Earl Burkeen, 55, of 271908 De- -quindre Rd., Warren Township, was the driver of the other car. Mojority | List Mother He is to appear before Oakland County Assistant Prosecutor Wil- @S Boss in the Home liam Lang today. Emil DuRoska, 44, of 18156 a shire Rd., Southfield Township, a passenger in the Tinik car, was treated for minor injuries and re- leased. Poss was reported by Oxford Po- lice to have walked in front of a ear driven by Laurance C. Mauzy, 66, of 58 Oakdale Rd, Pleasant Ridge. He was admitted to Pontiac General Hospital at 5:10 p.m. and pronounced dead of a fractured, skull and concussion at 6: 5, SALT LAKE CITY i? — The Salt Lake Tribune recently sent a questionnaire to all its school correspondents. One of the ques- tiens: ‘Who is the boss in your home?" ,Columnist Dan Valentine says an overwhelming majority _re- ported mother is the bess. Only a sprinkling voted for father.- One reply: “I don’t know who's boss in our heme. They're both still arguing about it.’ Oklahoma » far behind a popular former con- ‘and member of one of the Philip-| government,” Leading Applies for Fund to Rebuild Area Now Below Par Grant of $1.7 Million Would Pay Two-Thirds of. Clearance Plan ————+ The City of Pontiac will ask the federal government — ito earmark $98,000 in order ‘that a detailed survey and |plans may be made of the city's first urban renewal project. The City Commission au- PRESIDENT GARCIA thorized the filing of an [ d Wid application for a capital qd | ens grant of $1,705,346, with ‘he $98,000 to be an ad- ‘vance so the city’s planning consultant David S. Seer of Birmingham, may pro- ‘ Favoring Garcia President Holds 40 Pet. The area pinpointed for this first of Votes i in 5- Man Race: project is bountled roughly by ‘ Osmun on the south, the Grand Running Mate Losing Trunk railroad tracks (paralleling Saginaw) on the west, Pike on the MANILA — President Carios| north, and Paddock on the east, It is a 155-acre parcel to the ‘south of the City Hall. Mayor William W. Donaldson fold those in the commission chambers last evening that the ; Program would not mean that all structures in this area would: be razed. City Manager Walter K. | Willman agreed. [ippine pre midential ele ection returns | sels trailed! gressmanh and diploniat. - Gureia, 6i-vear-old Nacional- ista party candidate and_politi- eal heir of the late Ramon Mag- Saysay, moved Well ahead of Lib- eral party candidate Jose Yulo, | | 63-year-old sugar king. Garcia Was winning almost 40 per cent “Many of the homes in the area won't be touched,"’ Willman said. He added that actual work on the of the yotes in the five-man race. (project will not begin for at least In the vice presidential race, {wo years Diesdado Macapagal, a Liberal, JUST A STARTER piled up an overwhelming lead over House Speaker Jose B. Lau- “This . action tonight just gets rel Jr.. the Nacionaliste nominee program before the federal declared District 4 pines’ leading political families, [Commissioner Floyd P. Miles. an A - =| The City Planning Commission With Garcia and Macapagal. vic had. aperoved ie Pec ena its torious, the Philippines for the Nov. © meeting. first time would have a president * = * and vice president of opposing par-| The plans, as formulated by the ties. Both favored continued strong|/Birmingham firm, will go before _Cooperation with the United States. | (Continued on eee Col. 1) Trowel Work. estes New Post Office | other plants in the Detroit area. — Kaiser-Frazer went out of the a er ee eer $6 =o auto. business, The other two County News ...... vecceeee 24 | Merged with auto makers in Wis- Editorials ............... ..« 6 | consin and Indiana, Markets ........ccc.cceus De What of the other jobs that Mystery g | Wete lost, or the new jobs that Obituaries Ng e q | Went-to states. other than Michi- PotO-Gold Pure ......., 2% | 24"? Pe Sports . 30 thru 34 |’ Theaters... 38 The governor explains it- this TV & Radio Programs .... 43 | “#9 es Wilson, Earl ............. 8 1, FEDERAL DEFENSE pol- Women’s Paces __ 13 thru 18 icles. A Michigan Employment —— - 4 | Securify Commission analysis side shows that, in the last four years, Free Lectore on Christ Science, i 123,000 jobs, or about 80 per cent BUILDING STARTED ~ Congressman William $. Broém- field (R-Royal Oak) and Acting Ppstmastet "Leslie H. Dean Sr. (left to right) add several’ bricks onto the now under construction was - (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) $850,000 post office expected to be ready this spring. Retired. ' ne Pontiac Press’ Photo Congressntan George A. Dondero (R-Royal Oak) standing next to Dean and Walter K. Willman, city manager, were also present at the official Post office groundbreaking. ceremony yesterday afternoon, y me \ ; + % _THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, N OVEMBER 18, 1957 The Day in Birmingham ome: Police Seeking Eton Park Rink Opening |Mo 2 Jailbreakers \Set for Thanksgiving Day One Youth Formerly From Southfield Area; Hunted at Cheboygan Sa for Yule Savings | Christmas Glub Checks to’ Be Mailed to 13,000 in Pontiac Area BIRMINGHAM — With the open- ing of the artificial rink at Eton Park scheduled for Thanksgiving Day, the Recreation Board is plac- ing the emphasis on skating. This Hickey Co., Royal Oak, for a net price after trade-in of $9,423, Grover R. Serenbetz, city engi- neer, and T. C, Brian, DPW super- intendent, recommended the Leach Paying A former. Southfield Township|and swimming are the only board! purchase on the basis of excellent mas i ware ek youth and his companion today/controlled winter sports operating| performance here and in other Bo problem for more than 13,000 per- were the object of a police drag- gaia of weather condi-) communities. nicipg! affairs will headline the sons who participated during. the net spread across the northern por-/ Uons. sixth annual jast year in local bank and credit tion of the Lower Peninsula ~ * * Mrs, Roger Ingalls per Conference union Christmas Club saving plans. following a jailbreak in Cheboygan) Hockey players desiring to €N-| service will be at 10 a.m. tomor-| day at Michigan State Universi x *« Officials of Community National last night. Identified ag one of three -in- ter this year’s competition must register with the Recreation Board not later than 5 p.m, Friday. row from Bell Chapel of the Wil- liam R,. Hamilton Co. for Mrs. : ; P mates who sawed their way to Rone Ghesoer Md etn. . of a agg Wren vey peng yo freedom was Hubert McCurdy, Ages of this group are 13 |724 Brookside. She died Tuesday wih eaionene and General Motors Truck & Coach 17, formerly of 20199 W. Hamp- | through 14 and 15 throrgh 17. . St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, after Gen off tha Employes Federal Credit Union an- ton Rd,, Oakland County officials | 4 “Hockey Clinic” will begin (a long illness. partic newspaper said MeCurdy had a long record Burial will be in White Chapel pounced today payments totaling $1.126,842 to 13,694 persons who took part in the year’s program. There were 8,561 persons in the Community National Bank plan. Checks totaling $704,757 will be mailed Noy. 16. On the same day Pontiac State Checks went out today from Pon- tiac Federal Savings Assn, offices to 652 persons. The checks totaled $59,175. * * * Tn its first’ year of operating a} Christmas Club plan, the GMC) Truck & Coach credit union will make payments beginning Friday of $5,800 to 125 employes. City Asks U.S. Fund for Urban Renewal (Continued From Page One) the Housing and Home Finance Administration in Washington, D.C. lt is expected to be at least three months before the city learns of the government's an- * Overall cost of this initial project is estimated at $4,030,372. This in- cludes property acquisition, site improvements, relocation and mis- cellaneous costs. x «* * Taking into account selling the cleared property back to com- mercial and residential redevelop- ; ers, the net project cost would amount to $2,558,019. * * * The grant of $1,705,346 repre- sents the federal government's two- thirds participation in the program. a & Loan! report luncheon for campaign workers held yes- terday by the Pontiac Area United Fund. With left, are Kay Amaugher and Scharing, Cathy Berbeck, Sue Shirla Scharing. Adlai States He May Go With Ike to Paris Meeting WASHINGTON @—Adilai Steven- son held out the possibility today he may accompany. President Ei- senhower to a Paris meeting next month designed to increase Allied cooperation. » An érror by James C, Hagerty, White House press secretary, brought en the uncertainty which both Hagerty and Stevenson la- ter sought te clarify. Even in the limited advisory role, officials let it be known that Stevenson could go with Elisen- hower and. Dulles to Paris if he chose to. * _* * whether he would go would depend Grant Postponement in City Hospital Suit Another postponement was granted today in the show cause hearing in the suit of six Pontiac General Hospital doctors against hospital surgical regulations. the hospital. and miedical staff their cases. In New York last night, he said on the shape of the U. S. proposals. | From Buenos Aires to Washington By VERN, HAUGLAND ABOARD KC135 W—Gen. Curtis E. LeMay lifted his record-setting KC135 Jet Stratotanker off Buen- os Aires’ Ezeica Field early today in quest of a possible inter-Amer- ican jet speed record. * * * The Air Force vice chief of staff and 22 other persons left Buenos Aires about 4:28 a.m., EST. A Buenos Aires-Washington speed record appeared to be in the making. Maintenance crews worked nearly through the night prepar- ing the four-jet tanker for the takeoff. * * * LeMay charted a nearly direct course for the approximately 5,000 might have more time to | miles to Washington on his way home from a quick visit to Ar- gentina’s National Aviation Week and a call on Provisional Presi- dent Pedro, Aramburu. that the trip back would take yesterday from Westover Air vice chief of staff skirted Brazil, flying over the Atlantic to add about 600 miles to the trip. It set + v* = By E. H. SIMS How far out from the earth does the “air ocean” extend? The air ocean, as we call it, extends from the surface of the! earth no further than two hundred) and fifty miles. Many people think that the air ocean extends into outer space only a few miles. Experts say 150 to 250 miles. © This belief has been built up} because all life exists from 15,000! feet (approximately) and about 10) feet below the surface of the earth. Much has been written about this'| and because no form of life sur- Kaen rsh WASHINGTON (INS) — The stench of a big garbage collection scandal arising from New York's plush Nassau County captured the attention today of Senate rackets probers. * * * The rackets committee, which yesterday unfolded a lurid tale of junion violence and murder in a struggle by hoodlums to control irefuse hauling in wealthy suburban | Westchester County, turned today ito an equally odoriferous situation iat Mitchel Air Force Base and | Manhasset’ s swank ‘‘Miracle vives beyond about 15,000 feet,/ Mile.” some assume no air exists much| beyond that point, or beyond the | limits of weather, On the contrary, air does exist, | and extends outward for many miles, That is why an earth-cir- cling satellite must be pushed so far out into space. It must orbit beyond the thinnest outer reaches| of the air ocean to escape friction | ‘Kennedy said testimony today wipes eet Ve SD es *~—* * to show that the bad publicity DIAL FE 2-8181 fh > 2 r. : : < = rr 7 b | and the pull of gravity, ‘would spotlight Pitempts by under- eke Dp a rican tii et anidd which the union has received as a Just ask for the “Ts EQ RG S x E laiiag $ The Weather | Fall U.S. Weather Burean Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with occasional rain or drizzle tenight and temerrow. Little change in tempera. tures, low tonight near 45. High te- morrow pear 50, Winds mostly somtherty at 10-18 miles an hour tonight. Today in Pontiac is Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m, At § a.m.: Wind velocity 10 m p.h. Direction: South Sun sets Wednesday at 5:12 p.m. Sun rises Thursday at 7:21 am Moon sets Thursday at 12:58 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 11:07 p.m, — Temperatures Stephen Spiak, who identified | himself as a garbage man In | _ Yonkers, N. Y., was one witness yesterday who refused to answer questions before the investigat- ing committee, on the grounds his answers might incriminate him. | Committee counsel Robert F. | world figures to “‘rig’’ bids on con- tracts to cart garbage away from Mitchel Field. * * * He said witnesses also would re- veal intimidation of “Miracle Probers Turn Attention to New Garbage Scandal Mile” shop keepers by corrupt un- ion officials. Slated to testify were John Mon- tesano, former vice president of the inter-county cartmen’s associa- tion; his brother, Anthony Monte- sano, and eight or nine other wit- nesses. Kennedy said the committee also expected for the first. time to get inte the actual activities of Vincent J. Squillante, de- scribed as the czar of a business empire that wrenched a “stran- giehold” on the multi-million dol- lar New York garbage collection industry. Squillante, a close associate of murdered gangster Albert Anas- tasia, was listed by committee chairman John McClellan (D-Ark) yesterday as an individual who— aided by both labor and manage- ment—squeezed all competition out of the refuse pickup field. * * * stores, and threats were made on lives when they refused to go along with demands of Local 813 and the Westchester Carting Company to rule trash hauling in the Yonkers area. Air Force officers estimated) about 11 hours. LeMay flew south) LeMay Seeks Jet Record a distance record of 6,325 miles for an officially recorded nonstop, nonrefueled jet flight. The trip south at an average speed of 485 miles an hour did not set an official speed record, how- ever, because the International Aeronautical Federation recog- inizes only speed tests from one national capital to another. Why Is Industry Leaving State? (Continued From Page One) of the net total, were lost be- cause defense contracts were cut. Where Uncle Sam used to pour billions into trucks, autos and tanks, he now has diverted the money to missiles, aircraft and eléctronic production in other states — especially California, Ohio and New Jersey, 2. DECENTRALIZATON of the auto industry. For national de- fense, markets, transportation NO ACCURATE FIGURES 3. AUTOMATION. Big techno- advances always Save ; accurate ferns 4, OBSOLETE PLANTS in De- troit, industrial hub of the state. Combined with other factors in- cluding high local real property and inventory taxes in the city, this has brought pressure for some industry movement. * * * The Republicans, of course, have a vastly different version. Early in the controversy they toned down their blasts on state tax policies, perhaps mindful that the Republican Party, with un- broken legislative control for 20 years, would have to share any blame for tax laws. Instead, GOP orators in- creasingly flayed Williams for the “tax climate” or “political climate,” broader terms tak- ing in the governor's unfulfilled demands and his persona] atti- tudes, With businessmen, they bitter- ly denounced his 1957 demand for a corporation profits tax piled on top of the business ac- tivities tax and other existing levies, Reuther alliance. Don E, Ahrens, GOP fund rais- ing chief and a former General Motors vice president, recently referred to Reuther this way: “If they think business is mov- ing out of Michigan now, and it sure as H-- is, just wait until we get a graduated income tax which is what the guy wants who is running Michigan from De- troit.” , (Next — Reuther and the Daisy troubles) Missile Talk Slated of delinquency and was being helg in Cheboygan as a fugitive from the Boys Vocational School in Lansing, Identified as accompanying Mc- Curdy in the jailbreak were Randy Tracy, 17, of Manistique and Wil- lam Hitchcock, 19, of Lansing. captured this morning by state police who spotted the three flee- ing southeast of Cheboygan in a stolen car. . * * * The search for McCurdy - and Tracy centered in the Black Lake Forest area along Hammond Bay on Lake Huron, Werner said the trio were not locked in cells in the jail and had freedom of the celibiock, They escaped by gaining access to the jail attic through a trap door in the ceiling and cutting through window bars with a hacksaw. McCurdy was a “repeater” with a long record mostly for breaking and entering and larceny, said James W. Hunt, director of chil- dren's services for the Probate Court Juvenile division. * * * in Home, McCurdy was committed in June 1955, to the vocational school, _|Hunt said. * * * The home at the Hampton road address has since been replaced by a business establishment, Carrier, 41 Planes Hunt Lost Airliner last Friday with 44 persons... x * * . The big carrier, with 29 radar- tracking planes and. 12 _helicop- ters, completed the first full day japproved the purchase of a Leach After serving a number of times|¥! Oakland County Children’s) of 9 Million Profits due the corporation under terms, HONOLULU &®—The Philippine! Nev. 25, with a special feature awaiting potential players be- tween 9 and 12 years. Skating instruction will begin at 10 a.m. Monday, at Eton Rink, continuing through Nov. 27, Special sections listed are: in- struction for pre - schoolers and mothers; teenagers; beginners; Cemetery, Complete inforniation on rink| = A native of Massachusetts, Bank will mail out 4,356 checks \ _ Pontiac Press Photo * *©* skate dancing: junior and senior|®0@et; two daughters, Mrs. Rob-| A panel of university and gov v amounting to $357,110. COURT OF HONOR — Eight-year-old Sayuri her are members of the Land-O-Lakes majorette— meee County Sheriff Harold|figure skaters and speed skating. = Plew of eye sae pee. ernment vn garg Rge discuss - x* *« * Peck, Miss Torch and Feather reigned over the group which performed between reports. From Werner said. Hitcheock was re- x * * ae " Alma : | Telationship newspaper hours and prices is available at the Recreation Board office in the Municipal Building. : National Education Week at-Der- by School will include an open house at 8 p.m. tomorrow. A planned program will permit parents to meet teachers, review the objectives of courses their children are taking, and make a. complete tour of the school. They are asking that prolonged teacher - parent interviews be | avoided in order that all may have a chance to talk with the | teachers. | Rejecting the lower bid, Bir- mingham City Commissioners have rubbish loadpacker. The machine GM Offers Return (Continued From Page One) of contracts made with other air plane manufacturers, . The company stated it had! agreed to build the planes under a fixed contract and “hence there was no contractual obligation to, ' The city’s one-third share of _ Force Base, Mass., in 13 hours,| 24 other reasons, the auto |Sea and its covey of planes to-| yesert says an offer by Gen- $852,673 is expected to be credited) Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams|2 minutes, 51 seconds. riallate pike, other, big indus- |day enter the critical area In their| eral Motors. te repay the | — against public improvements/moved the hearing up to 9:30 on x * * pried Gat Sth ay — ‘° pestn "i irl a whack vanished| Force. more reer SLAYBAUGH'S SPORT SHOP planned for the selected area. Nov. 21 in order that attorneys for! On the trip down the Air Force as they expe srortaisel beohsee 459,209 constitutes a plea of guil- : ave Hebert said a large part of the | THURS., NOV. 14 HUNTERS! | We Will Be OPEN Extra Late (as long as we're busy) to accommodate the DEER HUNTERS We have a full stock of hunters’ equipment for you to choose from... come in and see us. OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAYS 9701 | A 1500-Ib. Moose shot by Gerry Weoliver will be henging in front of Slaybaugh’s Store Thursday and Friday fer viewing! 630 Oakland Ave., Corner Cass FE 8-0453 $9,701,458 offer was conditional. It of participation in the widespread search yesterday without a clue. | * * * Its planes are covering a line 200 miles wide along the airliner’s route. Four escort destroyers and two submarines range ahead and to the sides. A * * * The airliner, Romance of the Skies, vanished Friday after send- ing a routine position report 1,028 miles east of Honolulu, Beck Reports Increase in Teamster Members depended on-a-refusal by the-Jus-; tice Department to press charges ‘of fraud against the huge automo-| bile firm. ; The contract’ involved the con- struction of 599 FS4F jet fighter planes ‘by the company’s Buick- | Oldsmobile-Pontiac divisions. Genera] Motors made a profit of | 11.6 per cent before taxes, Hebert) said. He termed two million dollars | of the profit overpricing by the’ corporation. At Detroit, General Motors de- clined comment on Heébert's state- ment, but also made public the two letters sent by Gordon to Thur- man, make a refund." | Alr $17.- i WASHINGTON (INS)—President Dave Beck of the Teamsters’ Union announced today that the union in October had 12,000 more members than it had a year before. Beck declared that in August, September and October the union’s! average membership was. 1,473,566: compared with $1,422,441 for the! .|/same months of 1956. -* * He said shown since 1952 an increase in membership over the correspond- ing month of the previous year.) The announcement was intended result of the Senate Rackets Com- migfee investigation has not ad- iversely affected it so far as mem-|L_. bership is concerned. Laika Never to Return MOSCOW (INS) — Sputnik II and the lifeless body of the little dog Laika — first creature to travel in space — are “not to return to earth.’’ This was an- nounced by Prof. Viadimir Cher- nigovsky, a member of the Aca- demy of Medical Sciences in the U.S.S.R., in today’s Moscow News. the Teamsters have! Always in Demand There is always a big de- mand for good used furni- GEORGE *S-NEWPORT’S — STORE CLOSED THURS., 4 P.M. To Get Ready, Mark Goods for Our Annual, Gigantic 25th ANNIVERSARY SALE WATCH THURSDAY'S AD ture and household articles so why let them stay around in your way when it’s so easy to turn them into cash | with a quick action Want [| Ad? This little ad brought over a dozen calls the first | day. c WALNUT DROP LEAF DUNCAN Phyfe dining table with 2 extra _ leaves, seats 12. OR 3-09243, To Place Your Want Ad WANT AD DEPT. | i We Need Help for This Sale °15 Salesladies ° 6 Salesjen * 5 Cashiers -°10 Wrappers Apply Employment Office 74 NORTH SAGINAW ST. eS eee 47 4 Ft. Comins 48 if. 8 DETROIT (® — Maj. Gen. John ) B, Medaris, commander of the/State Democrat Dies GOES NON-= $s ro P | © Tuesday tn Pontiac Army's ballistic missile agency at _ ° . Highest temperature ....-.....,-.+. 82 Huntsville, Ala., will address the} EAST LANSING ® — Charles hiean temperature’: etnotctercsses =e = Economie Club of Detroit Monday| E. Hayes, 74, a member of the One Year Rn _ — Highest temperatu cos Lowest tomparatare war on ‘“‘Where Do We Stand Now With Guided Missiles."’ Democratic State Central Com- home here yesterday, NEW TORK Se ee ~~ — 3 Bombers Fly Non-Stop 8,000 Miles os at Oe Tee ONLY 2 HRS. 15 MIN. | s Tuedday's Temperature Chart $6 42 Los Angeles 72 56 Jets to Manila in 17 Hours Lv. Flint Convenient return service 9:00 A.M Ar. New York 1 15 A. M,. Ralsimore 4 “ ee - 43 40 : Eevee a won ‘ge MANILA (INS)—Three jet bombers swept 8,000 miles Lv. New York 7:45 P. re { . Ruffalo 82 34 Milwaukee 83 43) non-stop from California to the Philippines in little more ae Ar. Flint 10:25 P.M. 2 Chieage 83 44 New Orleans 69 64|° than 17 hours teday te show how swiftly the Air Force neat wecane ES AP Witephote | could reach’the scene of any remote “small war.” _pemms > Mage. Bitte Bs NO COMMENT — Identifying hima tak Youkers, ¥Y-. ‘The ‘supersonic B66 Jets, eapable of carrying nuclear. : ieee Werth $ PH in OO . be garbageman, Stephen Spiak took the stand yesterday in a Senate bombs for the Tactical Air Command, landed at Clark Air Grand Rapides 043 88 Mere = 38 " Rackets Committee hearing in Washington. Spiak refused to Base at 3:41 P.M. (11:41 P.M. PST; Tuesday), 17 hours and Zeekeoneiie i? i Paes gton ” 3 answer the committee's questions on grounds his answers ‘might 11 minutes after they left George Air Force Base, Calif. y MG Tame Tra, ténd to incriminate him. Their average speed was 530 conven an hour, — “7 | \ ‘ / Fa f “THE PONTIAC PRESS, W EDNESDAY,.’NOVEMBER 13, 1957° PANCAKE SUPPER — Linda Haskinsen watches as Mrs. George Jones and. Mrs, Norman - VanWormer practice making pancakes for the anntal paneake supper to be held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Drayton Plains School. An open house The affair is sponsored by the school’s P.T. A. for parents of the children from the kindergarten through the 6th | grades. Rayma and Cecilia Werden, all of Lapeer, and Walter LaRoy, at jhome, and one brother, Earnest. + © LEONARD F. CARTER Leonard F. Carter, 79, of 185 W. Howard St. died suddenly yester- day at his residence. A stone mason, he was a member of Central Christian Church and a life member of the Masonic Lodge. Surviving are four children, Mrs. Grace Granger, Mrs, Ethel. McFee William and Joe L. Carter, all of Pontiac; and three stepchildren, Mrs.’ Helen F. Keene and Robert Taylor, both of Fresno, Calif., and Mrs. Rosalie Fitzwater of Indiana. Service will be at 2 p.m. Friday from Central Christian Church with his pastor, the Rev. G. W. Gibson, officiating. Burial will be in Pe Mt. Park Cemetery. His body Will be at the Sparks-Griffin ‘Funeral Home until noon Friday, when it will be taken to the church. |-- ? The rabbit, hare, beaver, copyu | and sheep are used mostly for fur | in making men’s hats. The copyu) is a member at the otter farally. | Moved Homes [AK KK KAKA A AIA IIIA II IIA place to another,” said City At- torney William A. Ewart, ‘Read by title only Tuesday night, -commissioners are ex: pected to take final action on the law next week. It was drafted by the. city’s committee on substandard housing. Persons wishing to move a istructure must provide a $1,000 es deposit, in addition to a per- mit fee of $25, which will be ‘forfeited if the owner fails to t Homes moved from one site e ivitia tht tithing wp te ste ds ‘another in Pontiac must be brought within six months. up to proper building standards within six months after the relo- cation, under a proposed ordinance | introduced before the City Com- mission last night. Eyed by City. Proposed Ordinance Requires Houses Meet ‘Proper Standards Guilty of Embezzling SANDUSKY & — Raymond L. Loeding, Yreasurer of Buel Town- ship, pleaded guilty Tuesday to * OM lembezzling $3,000 in township “This will prevent moving a/funds, Circuit Judge Arthur M. dilapidated ‘building — from “one'Bach 8 set et sentencing § for I Dec. 16. | * * SELLING OUT at Below Makers’ Cost! You couldn't buy the material and make it yourself at SIMMS low price on this smart sport jacket. Better buy now, we expect a sell-out and there'll be no more. Be TOMORROW (Thursday) ONE DAY ONLY — CAMERA DEPT. Special — FREE 5x7 Inch Enlargement Given with any roll de- Pentise Press Phete will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas MRS, CHARLES CORNWELL Mrs. Charles (Ella) Cornwell, 74, of 161 State St., died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital Annex after an illness of four months. She was a member of First Bap- tist Church, Surviving are her husband; Fl sister, Mrs. Ethel McCaughton of! Port Huron; and two brothers. Henry and Herbert, both of Pon- tiac. Mrs. Cornwell's body is at the! Huntoon Funeral Home. MRS. FRANCIS COUSINOW Mrs. Francis (Clara) Cousinow, Deaths Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CLEVELAND (®#—James (Jim) Brown, 91, founder of the Brown Fence & Wire Co, and the. Jim Brown Stores, died yesterday. He was born in Scotland. * * * INDIANAPOLIS (@—Mrs. Nellie G. Cole, 85, widow of J. J. Cole, pioneer Indianapolis builder who founded the Cole Motor Car Co., died cssdag! * * na, 84, premiere equestrienne of the circus and a star in the center ring for many years, died yester- day. She and her late husband, Fred, the circus ringmaster, were with Barnum & Bailey from 1902 to 1918 when it ‘combined with Ringling Bros. in. 1918. She re- tired in 1940. : * * * _ PALO ALTO, Calif. —Maxwell M. Hamilton, 60, former U.S. min- ister to Finland and a career dip- lomat, died yesterday, Hamilton, who was born at Tahlequah, Okla. had been in the diplomatic serv- ice 32 years before he retired in 1952. * * * . LAREDO, Tex. w#—B. R. (Bar- ney) Gilmore, about 80, of Berke-/ ley, Calif., and West ‘Coast stockbroker, died Monday. He was one of the found- ers of National Park Airlines, now a part of Western Air Lines. * * * CHICAGO ® — Grace Watkins E Frank, 52, wife of Curtiss E. Frank, president of the Reuben H. Donnelley Corp., big Chicago printing firm, died yesterday. Frank also was a former mayor/E of Yonkers, N.Y, Mrs. Frank was born in Aberdeen, Miss. * * * VIENNA W®—Antonin Zapotocky, one of the leaders in the Com- munist seizure of Czechoslovakia and its president since 1953, died early today in Prague after more than two years of heart trouble. Radio Prague announced the death. The veteran Communist would have been 73-next month. a former New York) N (84, died yesterday at the home of lher daughter, Mrs. Harry Riggins of 1915 Winding Dr. She was ill) two years. - Surviving besides her daughter is a son, Edward of Pontiac; two sisters and three brothers. | The Rosary will be recited at 8) |p.m. today in Donelson-J neral Home. Service will be at 10 a.m. Thursday in St. -Benedict's |Church where she was a member. | ‘Burial will follow in Mt, Hope! |\Cemetery. ! i DONALD MacAULEY Donald MacAuley, 64, of 117 Elm St. died yesterday morning in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after an illness of seven weeks, : He had been-employed by the Blair Transit Co. . Mr. MacAuley leaves a brother, His bedy will be taken from the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home tonight to the James Patten Funer- al Home in Glace Bay for service and burial in the Greenwood Ceme- tery there. ‘FRANKLIN A. STOREY Fu-|With her pastor, |held at SS. 'Mary’s Cemetery, Burnside town- Zack of Glace Bay, Nova Scotia:), veloped & printed or 12 negatives re - printed. (We choose best picture) She leaves a daughter, Mrs. | Mary Jean Hockey of Torrance, | \Calif.; two sons, Theodore W. and Frederick France, ‘both of Pon-, itiac: ten grandchildren; and a sis-| ter. Service will be. at 11 am. Fri-. day in the Pursley Funeral Home | Dr. Milton H. Bank, offi¢iating. A graveside serv- ice will follow at 3:30 p.m. at the | cemetery near Portland. ANTHONY HOHMAN NORTH BRANCH — A Funeral Mass for Anthony Hohman, 86, was Peter and Paul's Church here at 9:30 a.m. today. | The Rev. Edward Sobczak offi-| ciated and interment was in St. You SAVE Every Day at - SIMMS LOW PRICES XPERT PHOTO FINISHING f | SUPER-SIZE Black and White Snapshots ® Sharp. Contrast Best-possible prints GUARANTEED by Electric-Eye’ process only genuine EASTMAN-KODAK papers ‘and chemicals used in our studio. Only at Simms— ® DATED Prints ship. Mr. Hohman died early Sun- | ° Deckled EDGES day in a Lapeer hospital. : cnone o Quality He leaves one son, LeRoy Hoh- man, North Branch postmaster; two grandchildren and three great-! grandchildren, WALTER E, WERDEN LAPEER — Service for Walter’ E, Werden, 55, of T75 East St., who} saesirwerrierrsteriters: PHOTO NEEDS —Main Floor LADIES’ and MISSES’ Hooded JACKETS Originally Made to Sell at $9.95 or More ONLY¥-—72_SALE PRICED Ls PP me ® White Poplin—Water Repellent * Treated DE I I ® Full Zipper Front—Attached Hood ® Wool Inner-Lined Quilted on x SIMMS... * LADIES’ WEAR —Main Floor Embroidered Swiss tape-trim, knitted wristlets inside sleeves, guaranteed first quality, beau- tifully made. All sizes—10 to 16. Thursday — Friday and Saturday Sale Superior Blend RAYON Ladies’ Gowns 39° 2 Fully washable a with ruffle and ns § $1.29 Value. _ Sizes 34 to 40 died Tuesday in Flint of a heart ' Word has been received of the} death yesterday of Franklin A. Storey, 75, of 938 N. Maple Rd., are Fla, Ella Brad-| R0yal—Oak,—afte a prolonged’ iliness. Mr. Storey leaves his wife, ailment, will be at 2 p.m. Friday}. at the Baird Funeral: Home, = A resident for 20 years, Mr..Wer- den is survived by his wife, Edith: | ‘six daughters, Mrs, Illa Herman of ~ Metamora, and Mrs. Donald Brick-| — jer, Mrs. Norbert Maresh, Irene, | Banmineatane Here's , warmth - without - weight vest, that keeps you warm in = coldest Weather Claire, and three children, Mrs. Ralph Connor of Seattle, Wash., Frank A. of Berkley and Robert! B. Storey of Pontiac. The Rosary will be recited at! 8:30 p.m, Thursday in the William Sallivan & Son Funeral Home, 705 West 11 Mile Rd, * Service will be at 9 a.m. Friday from St. Mary’s Church of Royal Oak with burial following in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. MRS. CARRIE MARSHALL Marshall, 68, ier of 58 N. Cass Ave., died Monday after an iNmess of three years. Moose and the Ladies’ Auxiliary of Metropolitan Club No, 6. White & Colors — Training Pants Genuine FIBERGLAS Insulated. | Hunting Vests ‘2 Bright Red Quilted Satin oa Usual 99 t®> $5.00 Quality : _ Zipper front, elastic shell © loops, 3 pockets. ail sizes. * Sensationally underpriced, : Sa ee Fi m ROTHERS THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY a MEN'S WEAR —Basement fe eS SN Girls’ $2.98 Va Sizes 7 to l Washable beige, pocket. Fully Lined POPLIN or TWILL red, Fully lined, elastic back waist, one back Full cut for fit. “Capri” Pants | 1.935) e poplin or cavalry twill in black, grey or turquoise colors. lue 98 North Saginaw Main Floor 18-in. STEEL BLADE Snow Pusher Shovel t Before You Pay $18 to 20 for This—Check Simms Low Price i = ar | Big 20 Ft. Ice Skating Rink. E Big 20-fdot diameter skating rink for your backyard » —~ the entire family will have fun. Easily assembled E +o bolts or screws, 4-inch corrugated aluminum sidewalls, strong plastic liner. As pictured, $2 holds E in layaway. 98 N. Saginaw de waar Floor SIMMS. isc eleeceandcet eiemeamiee $2.29 T 77 Value 24-Inch Pusher ........ $2.77 No lifting—just push snow off to one side. Hardwood handle, ‘D’ HANDLE STYLE Snow Shovel $2.70 99 Value . 18-Aluminum Shovel . $2.88 Ribbed biade for extra strength—'D’ type hardwood handle. $17. 95 Value 412 PVIIMM, and Outdoor Workers —.— 3 WN. Saginaw en i lace trims — full length style with elast ylon waist. Choice of assoried pastel “colors Slight-irregulars -of regular $].29 quality. ROTHERS —Main Floor FOOOOOOOLOOOCOT OEE EEO OCC OEE $5 Holds in Layaway ‘til Christmas Day! “ , i“ Neal | a) ie co a Naas haet tas nO) iy PA © A Family Gift! BELL & HOWELL ~ Home Movie Set : * 8mm BGH CAMERA * RADIANT SCREEN *® 500-watt PROJECTOR * BARLITE SET * 1 Rolf KODAK COLOR FILM Regular $133.20 Value You get everything as listed — movie camera, projector, screen, 2 lamp bar lite. film etc. For indoor or outdoor movies. Life- time guarantee. 98 North — '{ "Cameras North wD |) —Main | Saginaw eMetd.e$ Floor 4 DDI DD RMRB IY REPEAT SALE — Now Lower Priced __ Another 600 Prs. of the Same High Quality Ladies’ SEAMLESS Nylon Hosiery GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY f Regular $1.10. to $1.35 Values / | & 400 Needle—15 Denier } ®& Regular or Nude Heels L£ 4 Popular Shades 54 5 & All Sizes 842 to 11 | Made by one of America’s : ; leading hosiery mills. Beau- tifully styled and famous for long wearing quality. NO WIMIT — Buy all you LIIMM) wi —Main Floor 2 Pair $1.00 fion viewing——races, hunting, etc. BGL type, Imported, $59.80 7x50, Center Zeiss _ $28.99 1 $63.80 7x35 Center B&L $27.99 $74.00 7x50 Center B&L $35.99 First saféty patrol or. program lated by Michigan’ » state police " in. the United States was inaugut-| 1931. Quality Priced SO LOW! : cetaaaiewann lucky purchase brings famous brand, first “DAN RIVER” Scalloped Border in Colors = $4.49 DOUBLE BED SIZE @ 19 e * Fine 180 Thread Count :- a . trim, scalloped borders in pink, @ SURES SRR SEREERER EERE ER Calista # = We've Never Seen Such Fine Don't confuse these with ‘ordinary’ bed sheets rt) 136 SAVERS just because of the low prices. . .:Only & 3 = quality, embroidery + scalloped sheets at* o ~¢? ‘below-wholesale’ cost, Macimnsed Actual $3.89 cut § a 2 tor $4.55 $1x108 Inches (2-for $4.95) . * Egy to Launder ‘white percale with embroidery~ maize, green or blue. No limit — buy all you want, Full in maize we ~ only. Matehing PILLOWSC A 8 E 8. «iss value, 42-inch, Maize 2 er green trim, Se eeels ae se a SIMMS ccctitest * —Basement Mc This Week ‘Only! el ee Made —Men’s Fine CORDUROY Shirts Regular $3.49 Quality 39 2 for $5 ALL SIZES — Choice of 3 Colors Two way collars ... satin yoke . . In-or-outer shirt tail... one button cuff ... washable, fast color ,.. fine corduroy, SANFORIZED Easy-to-Launder | FLANNELETTE MEN’S 2-Piece Pajamas 59 2 for $5 Button Front or Slip-Over Styles Famous ‘McKenzie’ first quality . big selection . .. color-fast .. gripper fastened, elastic waist... All sizes A to D. © JIMM), UU LLULLLL . MM MON TTT Our $2.99 Quality MEN'S WEAR ROTHERS HT DAUUUUUSNNONUEOUUUASNRNOOUUOGOAAUOUUUAAANUEUUUUAGAAUU AA at Ye DEER HUNTERS’ SPECIAL LENSES Recommended for 90% of General Use LAYAWAY SALE of 7-POWER * Sports Events %& Horse Racing * Travel *% Nature Study %& Hunting * Others VALVE LENS FocUs TYPE SIMMS PRICE $45.90 7x35___Indiv. Zeiss" _ $17.99 $55.80 7x50 _Indiv.—--eiss $23.99 Great Feature Value Full 10 Degree FIELD Wide-Angle Binoculars $35” Wider viewing — see 525 feet at 1,000 yards, Ideal for ac- $85.00 VALUE ALL PRICES INCLUDE FED. TAX & CASES Are you confesed as to the k Jens size, center or individual focus, remape | * ay a bingeulary? v experts mee its ans ‘Big sel get rou * es re «@ owe poss ee ne of 7 power ples 54 different powers te choose from, : 98 North ' ; Saginaw set OT Ve B ROTHERS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NovEMBER. 13,1957 ° Oldest Civil War Vet “Marks Birthday | HOUStOs, Williams, the oldest “pow, A Western band will play) , Years older than oe = Music. By JAMES MARLOW living Civil War veteran, cele- brates his 115th birthday tomor- venson sounds as cautious eran seme of his favorite Yune: - inelpin the Eisenhower adminis- * * * The white-haired, ing Confederate veteran is three vot broken — John Salling of: * * other living, Stevenson, a little hke Hamlet sometimes in trying to make up: ihis mind to do or not to Uo, issued). ia very carefully phrased state-| ‘ment on the help he'd give. j He stated his position only aft-| er the White House erroneously said he. had turned down a_sug- gestion that he help. : Slant, Va., the only Civil War veteren, * * * daughter Mrs. Willie, Mae Bowles said a small party with the band, cake and some punch Was planned, Friends were) expected to drop by all day but no big celebration was planned, Williams’ .* £ * * *& Wil siwavs lo = rs | ; ws ct te ‘er th . a miu-) But since Stevenson is a handy sic idder ! » past sis > eri lc. Bed-ridden e past SIX man with the English language, oe Zs dent. Translated into very simple| meee, “0 bisk English, it sounds like; ‘I don't) _ *« * want _ to stick my neck out too! in an ambulance dur-ifar | ing the Veterans Day parade) At the same time President Ei- Monday ,and said he enjoved Tis-'senhower, who wanted Stevenson’s| tening to the bands and hearing !help; played just as cautious about! the crowds asking him. In fact, he didn’t’ ask’ him. He had Secretary of State) Dulles do it. i x * * . This is an old story with the Eisenhower administration. The same kind of thing happened with dformer President Truman, whose relations with Eisenhower have been frigid since 1952 i Early this year Greece and Tur-| key, planning to celebrate the 10th anniversary. of ‘the help Truman started giving them in 1947, want- ed him to visit, both countries in March.. They told the Eisenhower administration. * Eisenhower nee it over with Dulles. But it was Dulles, not Ei- He rode FUEL OL FUEL OIL FOR PLEASANT i ll WINTER LIVING Burns Cleaner Burns Hotter Burns Longer =, RS, AN, Deadline Oakland Fuel & Paint Economic Dip 430° Orchard Lake A young jury to hear the grand larceny FE 5 ~6159 ;man strode into a west Philadel- trig) of Dave Beck Jr. st cman a iphia taprgom the other night, retiring president of the Interna- Slowly Widens Reflected in Steels, Oil, Cuts in Textile Output, UNITED SHIRT Distributors Downtown and at Tel-Huron White Collar Jobs a) 4 NEW YORK @® — Yous AND ‘NOT KNOW IT! , hose-picking and a tor mg rectal itch are often be in. textile! ‘esc! and oil industries, menti tale signs of Pin-Worms... ec : gaauniies dak a. byw joutput cutbacks and weak prices, |e of every examined, Entire families be victims and not know it. lar worker's outlook | To get rid of Pin-Worms, these ts must not onlf be killed, but * * ied in the intestine wi they live and multiply. That's ex- eure continue to spefd as ° honk poses or more for goods and serv- ices. But many manufacturers Pin-Worms and easily. and“ more use of services color the consumer spending totals. The economy is still riding high and no great drop. is feared, ir : } every month new segments of th Piret—a scientific coatin: ris the tablets into the bowels be- ‘finding they must produce fewer, Major ern, i rg units if they are to keep their gredient goes right to work—kile @ Stocks from rising. Higher prices dangerous, highly contagious con- } economy enter breather. Worm remedi: * ® ® Steel production this week is, lower than at any time since early Wionms ~ August 1956, when it was affected, iby the summer strike. ar The oil industry is being warned Uae Pin. that a rough year may be ahead. Demand still tops last year but Gh at te not by the margin expected. eisner’s |} * *.* | natinabommmeheiie Troubles of the overcrowded , — ‘tektile industry have brought} 42 N. Saginaw St. _f some new price weakness in some lines. i © as advertised in "HARPER'S BAZAAR elegant feet tuck into 7 eo There's o trim, new ALASKAN for every occasion where warmth ond comfort os well_os smort, good looks are important. Drop in soon for o look ot our complete selection of these fomous cold weather favorites. Come-in early while sizes and colors “12” are plentiful. Brown, ‘Grey, Black. Narrow and medium widths. Sizes 5 to 10. PAULI’S Shoe Store Serving Pontiae Qver 75 Years! 35 N. Saginaw Open Friday Nite ‘til79 \ senhower, who sent the invitation qn Bar Phone, Kills Himself ot their romance. ‘surely the slight dip in industrial patch things up, jactivity ‘which began last spring; You've got to take me back. lis widening out today—even as the | Tl kill my: self if you don't |He signaled for another drink, but jstomt market foretold. It shows in figures from the’ ‘did not stop talking, threatening. ‘Credit Unions Formed thimself are|Man was 27-year-old Benjamin F. Dangerous Gas Leak Closes High School into the caren closed S tevenson Shows Extreme Caution on Taking Foreign Policy Advice Post Thinking Cited still ts Associated Press News Analyst (saying he had other engagements. |titular- head of the ence ite Truman. Truman rejected it,'presidential campaigns, “Then the State Department said party. WASHINGTON @® — Adiai Ste-|both Eisenhower ahd Dulles re-| But he can’t speak for all Dem-| ‘ocrats, least of all for the , most! between) by Air Force Scientist itration on foreign policy as a man ‘next month to try to glue Ameri- \elections: The Democrats in Con-| tobacco-chew- | walking barefoot through a field/can alliances tighter, he'll be in/gress. If they don’t like the policy) ia ticklish spot. He'll need as much produced at Paris, they'll be free gretted Truman's decision. When Eisenhower goes to Paris'important . Democrats solid Americah backing as he canto criticize. get, from Democrats as well as’ * * a paragon i * * * policy, Dulles asked. Stevenson for help like. it, itn working out a policy for Paris.) blasted Stevenson, although he lost two from inside woman canes eenenenanette and the Democrats don’ he's in danger of being his own party. WHAT’S MY LINE?. INSTRUCTIONS: fach word is related to my work. Un- scramble as few os possible to guess my- jine. Answer eppsers under arrow, reading dewnward. tAM A oS i i. } 2 i : i ‘ tit) Jee a ; | 1DO8N. 7 NEYMO 4 2JIA 8 EDGuUs 8 3 FEHIT 9 RETSAR of ; 4 LOCPIE 10 CIMER oO S$ OBBRRE 11 ABit 4“ 7 T 6 CUTOR 12 LONEF nf TT Yesterday's Answer: Army Colonel ‘Pleads With Girl | Begin Picking Jury for Trial of Beck Jr. SEATTLE U?—Selection of PHILADELPHIA (®— ealled for a stiff drink, gulped it.'tional Teamsters U then made for a public telephone |s-heduled to start in at the far end of the bar. Court tSday + *« * | é He was on the phone two hours,|larceny on charges he misap bartender William Alexander said,|priated proceeds from the sale o pleading with a girl not to break two automobiles belonging to the Teamsters Union. His of scheduled to go on trial Dec nhion, Customers caught snatches Slowly but desperate entreaty—"Let's try to| similar charges. ' Young Beck's lawyers failed as _ .the trial opened yesterday to de- please. . , "| lay hearing of the case. Shortly before midnight the call-| receiver | KINGSTON, Jamaica — The Bri r slammed down the , — «= ish West Indies has 385 A few marina spi ohh = members,, under Government sup-| Leogey (A = |ervision. and was killed. eee ee een ee If Stevenson heips make that ‘ship — although such a_ project along with. © isenhower' : a the criminal,” Bennett son of the Plorable that the Eisenhower ad- was from scratch to beg Superior |W ith the Beck faces two eounts of grand Gas Street Lamps to Burn pro-; father is hi 9 on Phia. credit, $100,000 a year by dispensing with in factory employment, and even/and went out a side door into the’ unions, with 58.000 members. Each!a $29 yearly cost per lamp for an is starting to tinge the white col-|street. lis owned and operated solely by automatic system to turn the gas Man in Space But Projects Reality Called Long Way Off WASHINGTON (®—An Air Force jgeneral says the United States al- ‘ready is doing some preliminary ithinking about a manned space ' still is a long way off. * * * | Brig. Gen, H. F. Gregory, com- ‘mander of the Air Force Office of iSeientific Research, said in. ‘a Ispeech yesterday: “Although it) |may be somewhat early to be | building matined space ships, it is inet too early to be thinking about jexparnary research in this afea, “In fact we have been doing it ‘ing about it becaus®@ of military * lor some time.” | Gregory described the Air Force ty iproject Farside, a recent series) iof rocket tests, as jefforts that will be required . . for the suceessfu] conquest of ispace.’ The ously that six roc kets were fired : ‘in the Farside tests in the Pacific land there have been unofficial re- iports that the sixth shot went irnore than 4,000 miles into the sky .* * * f | | Former President Harry Tro-|@¢ttha Ekman opened the can 1a-/ iman, in Washington to attend a ihuricheon in. his honor, told news- men: “We had a missile program ‘before I left the White House — it jwas broken up after ] left.” | But about the same time, ‘Bennett (R-Utah) itration must be blamed jlag behind the Russians ‘bal listic missile field * * * “The record of the Truman ad- ministration on missiles reveals a monstrous neglect bordering on said “The Truman legacy was so de- ministration had to start virtually in to catch up Russians."’ Round Clock in Philly PHILADELPHIA i” — Philadel- which still has 7,500 gas street lamps scattered on many of its narrower lanes and alleys, has decided it can save money by letting the lamps burn day and night. J Streets ‘Commissioner David N.| Smallwood told city councilmen | yesterday the city could , save ‘off each morning and on again at: Inight. ete -— . | Detective John Keenan said the SAN ANTONIO, Tex, (#—The Harlandale High School was today while repairmen tried to find a severe gas leak. Supt: Dillar McCollum ordered the move late yesterday to protect the. school’s 1,250 studer McCollum said the leak allowed seven cubic feet of gas to escape each hour. He said the gas meter was sealed for the night and all t heating cut = yesterday. SHAG WASHED FREE "ick Automatic Laundry and Cleaners DELIVERY 1056 W. Huron, 2 Blks. W. of Telegraph FE 2-8697 rile x RUGS and DRIED UP and FREE ‘Youre a good host beyond a shadow ofa doubt when you serve... m the DIA sero? ‘Se re Mastery Germ fieerte erent -or “Canoes Con eee SS ORLY & fom UTED 6 years old) ~ 904. proof _ Lnported in bottle from Canadas csi in the Code 21410 3 Seas * Oode s14ll “ PUPONTED 1m BOTTLE FROM CAMADA BY Hina WAUREA cwpparees, | one.> ottagrt, ice sostneee. casagiag onised ' “one of many Air Force has said previ- Paper Snakes Worth $25,000 Sen. | issued a state- —___—| Ment saying the Truman adminis-' “for our Phony can of péanut brittle, in the Per snakes sprung out at her cafe ym Believes leiko Brought Back to Earth Alive Aeacath Sputnik Il probably has alive but the Russians aren't talk- Bic = Mace contended. his’ custom- turned out the. small aluminum ne neste expect such practical] suitcase wasn't lost but only mis- Jewelry Worth $7,000 SPOKANE, Wash. (® — ‘The dog Recovered for Actress ANGELES CAMP, Calif. been brought: back to the earth ; Rhonda Fle placed. She said the case held about $7,000 worth of cameos she was to wear in a picture being made in : FY yo gold country area, ‘Someone had sent the aluminum with camera equipment in- Rac ming got t jewelry back last night after it stead: of with the baggage. implications, the president of the International Astronautica] Feder- f ation said lasi night. & * Andrew G, Haley of Washing.’ ton, D. C., said he based his belief partly in the difference in the ra.) dio code pattern of the two Rus- sian satellites, ot * * Sputnik I gave out signals until! jits battery wore down, he said. i ij The beeping from the larger Sput- | nik I] ended sooner and suddenly, as if connections were broken or instruments destroyed by the elec: tion of the ne. * “ who spoke at Gonzaga niversity on a lecture tour, did not spell out’ the military impli- | )cations. | * Haley, Bazley’s Thursday Super Specials! 78 N, Saginaw — Lean, Meaty SPARE © RIBS .... ee eee ee ee eee This Valuable Coupon Entities the lb. Bearer to a 1-Lb. Limit Fresh er MEAT PURCHASE REMUs —— BUTTER . hr in Can of Candy LOS ANGELES ®—When Mrs.| ‘beled “peanut brittle” she found) it wasn't, and the judgment she got from a jury wasn't peanuts, either. * * * The jury awarded her $25,000 yesterday. Mrs. Ekman had testi- fied that when she opened the pa-| She sued. Wilmington, Calif,, owner James Munson for $117,250, claiming that the shock caused ber to fll backward and! that she required hospitalization’ four times as a result. * ~~ * *% apt, x" te Fi irst Quality Extra Heavy Luxury Type Plain Carpet. Available in 9 F2 and 15-ft. widths in an array of 7 pastel colors > % : + ed PAS 3 i “1 A Double Savaied Sevtngs dopertentey aac = Two items a Day... Handpicked for —= and Style. You save more than you have ever saved before during McCandless spectacular series of One Day Sales. ' géivertizved ftem is first quality .. . priced below the cost that most dealers pa em advertised is in sufficient quantsty to guarantee elivery if purchased on the advertised day . carpets are priced as much as $4.00 below neat dealers . .. A fabulous savings spree to give all of your carpeting requirements at record low prices. cost. today First Quality— Wool Blend Texture ef et First Quality— Nylon Blend Twist First Quality— Heavy Plush Cotton . CARPETS—LINOLEUM—TILE 5 6 I & oe = ss Bey ~ (Oil (New Jersey) big new stock AP Wirephete jteau and in the Rockies. Snow-/district next summer. Racks, be DU, sersres vevseeene 198) issue. AMERICA’S NEWEST — Rolling from the airliner. Bidit to carry as many as 91 passengers jfalls in some areas measured)’ -~ *®& * e Not much appeared in the over- | final assembly line at Burbank, Calif. is the first on short-to-medium range flights at 400 miles [about an — + A group of interested parents * 2.00| night news to prod investor senti- | of the nation’s newest airliners, Lockheed’s prop- per hour, 141 Electras are presently on order _|and officials met at the high : 240] ment, Wall Street sources sald. | jet Electra. The company says the new plane is from 10 airlines. No first-fight date for this ini- | Southerly Cans carried moist} school, elected officers and made 144] Financial analysts believed the | the first U.S-built commercial jet-and-propellor tial model has been announced. ee i aes are ee 2 re Se eee ee ee i aaa oe mee © ley and adajacent areas. Rain fell requesting the project. — : 1.00 n sections as far north as sou : Lal Deaen Steal wee, cone. os Ligtens cally to zioed of Testimony at ae Trial erm Minnesota and Wisconsin. | 9, oS ucntion treatments ae) " F ; - 15¢by a major fraction, General Dy- were given fo more than 600 Tomtces. hot sbothouse “(wskt.)' 8 Ibs..: 17 namics cut a one-point loss to a ) esi Attorney to Head pupils in three schools inet cum rurnips - Y OMB. ccc svcepecess — fraction, Boeing and et Regional Junior Bar mer 2 —_ and Cabbage, bu, .. : Slcraft dropped fractionall Collard? te CIS 2 tat al Pontiac attorney Wallace D. Ri-| tem of the 17 elementary ree Mistara Gea eae 180 Chrysler moved slightly to the| 105 ANGELES w—For te pti his pases, be silees & sharpiber mney reach $05 beter be tol of 2472 Empire Envoice 2. bas teen pikes: ord Kepernd ee Se ee Oe oe ssoors }48 tupside after opening unchanged.|six weeks a suave, contrast to prosecutor J. Miller|up and gives Scott a chance tol the Junior Bar Section of the State] Heke sald. . me vetince & Saind Greens Lukens Steel erased a small 1088./man has been sitting calmly in a|Leavy. Bristling with energy,|tell his story. ~ modi ana n Celery Cabbage, bu. .......-+-++6. * i U.S. Steel was down around a point./Los Angeles courtroom, listening|Leavy is always on the move * * * Michigan. Others elected to the executive dive, bleached, DU. «..+..+-0---. 2.80 : = let : A graduate of the University of}, 014 co-chairmen, Mrs.Mar- Eeituce Romaine, bu. s.!.0s 2.0: 200| Lesses of around = polit or |t ving he murdered i “weal cg tions without ‘letup) Among the prosecution wit-/Michigan Law School, Riley will Ge Decoy cae Gad Baar so. » were taken by Du Pont, (Proving he m s thy,/as he paces * [messes have been: have charge of Junior Bar activi- cordin ead Mrs. Robert International Nickel, Allied |S°cialite wife. x & * A dozen or more friends of Mrs.|ties in this area. ling Poultry Chemical and Guilt Oi. x * * Leavy’s task is a doubly difficult Scott. In pearls, mink stoles and = <6 ae aeeey: bevnorr roas Standard Of (New Jersey) eased As he took his rape the coun-jone. Before the jury can sential cultured accents, they have de-| ays pel : on ont and A, J. rT. 12 (AP) — Eggs, “lsel table today, L. Ewing Scott,|Scott of murder, it must first scribed the missing 63-year-old Sake ° F.0,B. Detroit, Mowssee included, federat.|The stock — = at 8/64, 61, was just as much of an enig-|convinced his wife is dead. All|woman as a gay and charming | 0 on [ 0 ee oe - ag aoe Se jumbo $8: extra unchanged taal os — Bethle-|# #8 he has been since that day/that can be proved by direct evi-|companion, full of life and health A consent letter will be sént me Ae ig Gd ty Ge Ringed a % Gt & on 5,000 more than a year and a half ago|dence is that at 4:30 p. m. on May|and not one to abandon her friends ‘ | home to parents in the near future, avg 31a. Grade B large §1-52, wid avg rere "Gaal Oyaamlos off % ‘when ane di = of ‘hs 16, es, a = alive sons! aeoar: —— notice. F H | with es the = $1 : : ; wife first became wri. ently ‘we apparently has} Lawyers, financial advisers and Osp a X if as portance treatments say coe glee nere Ban oie: at 56% on coal and Du Pont off Dapper in ‘a $185 suit, relaxed|never been seen since, and any) bank employes. They have testi- children in the elementary school a cas ee el and urbane, he looks more like alevidence pointing to her murder|fied that Scott, after marrying the TT eee age’ bracket. avg. 35. N k Stock businessman attending a board/is circumstantial. twice - divorced, twice - widowed) Commissioners to OK! Waterford Township dentist, Dr. eee a a waake (0, eukra ew York Stocks meeting. than a defendant on trial! Trying to eover every possible|heiress, gradually took over man- Changes Which Exceed Wiliam Baer of the District Den- large agin large 52-54; medium 41- (late Morning Quotations) for his life. angle, Leavy has put more than 75| agement of her $600,000 estate and tal Society, will act as consultant. "owns: Orede A Trae 8: trite] Air Reg... f-2 Jonas a Man .. 30 | As Scott lolls back idly, twist-|witnesses on the stand. The num- ae her funds from the time she $2,500 Mark ; large 99-09; jarye 3 medium <- ora t 2G bog sappeared until police entered . ; small 33-35, Grade B large 41-42. oe: Ba Kelsey May " = : the case 10 months later. A control was placed on archi St. Joseph Hospital DETROIT POULTRY - Priees| Am stig’ “°. EY Kime cw 3.1 7 " * Police experts. They've told of}... Cre! was P rcni- paid per pound] OB. ‘Detroit up to| Am Gan... it Glass 1. 1 News in Brief finding Mrs. Scott's false teeth, |‘ectual changes in the construction ; pase for No. 1 top quality Live | Am Cyan sia Lib MeN&L *. 7.7 em eS which ‘she kk of the Pontiac General Hospital m 0 es onor poultry: sn Par 313 © 72383 ch was ‘known to havelwing by Pontiac city commissien- Heavy type hens 18-20, light type) AT Motors... €2 Loew's ......° 132 William Moore, of 54% Wayne) "een wearing the day before she|.-. ‘last night after they learned hens 12-13; heavy | type Am N Ges .. 47 Lone 8 Com 29 Sareagtels vanished, in a trash heap on a lot|“"* Sane Forty-four empl St. Joseph fryers 3-4 ibs ty, Barred Rocks Am Rad ..... lL Lorillard .... 25.6 , St., reported to Pontiac Police this Pp “extras” had reached $32,026. orty SeEGNC ISS OFX. 2-23; gangnattte 3 344 ioe 19-23, ss Am Smelt 11, 40.3 Lou ep teah.. 382 enses | a morning that Tuesday night some adjoining the Scotts’. And they've ‘rae: Mercy Hospital were honored last 1o-30; turkeys heavy type bens 26039, Am Tel S cases 3 van ae one broke into his apartment and/‘estified that her signature ap- man ae ees night at the hospital's annual heavy type toms 21-23. +« = |Am Tob ......- Ha May D'8trs.’: 374) . , .|Pears to have been forged on) ‘Under the new plan, City Mana-| sward night program. an Viscose. #8 Mca: stole various household items val : amtcandss Meret.” 384| NATO May Find Outlued at about $25 ee ae Tan Soe Oe ees aenoee, ean Oe obras feven ef Bees hess Sed * rm % Merr Ch & §' 15 | * _™ appeared to m access to her O approve, upon ice en n Livestock Amaccr “Ht Minn MAM’. %4) if U.S. Plans to Share| Geerge A. Colwell, @, issalecte deposit oe oa open a jointiof architects and oe no a cae IT LIVESTOCK All Cst Line. 26.4 Monsan 31s Cass Lake Rd., pleaded guilty to bank account. Board of Trustees com-| Eliza Borrae dietary DETROIT, Nov. ia cApL—tivewock:| Au Rage. 2¢¢ Mont ware’: 3n4| A-Sub Secrets reckless driving "Tuesday, belore mittee, any changes not exceeding |statt was the “veteran” with 22 attle — bm... e ceipts fed steers and heifers; cows com-| Balt & On ... Py =} = - 4 ; Keego Harbor Justice James p h N : rN, years of a_i Rockers’ abd’ feegers; early trade steers| Bet, Steel <-- M$ Nat Dalry.‘ $e3| PARIS NATO's Advisory As-|Southart, and paid a fine of $85 eat ofices "Changes beyond this limit must . = and heifers steady with Monday's 8d- airs, 1 Nat teh" °°: 381] sembly turned today to a study of|Plus $5 costs, immediately to the Com- Fi sore awarded to all by vance, cows fully steady with Monday's Boe‘ warn ... 31.1 faed es 4 , = ow Harold Brady, assistant adminis- saya iec acer sieseie, tea: heed | Brie My;+--. SEE Mia Bw: 3g2/t00 Atlantic Alliance's defenses at} sale — Holy Name DORAN EVANS en el a ee ee es ea ee oe ° Av... %.7 : ov. am. ‘ Reh heie ey In en Me Saelesd, anne ARE or Rach”. --- Tl ate logue hether the United eee em Pet Mov. Ith, 8 MARLETTE — Service tor Nor "™* Carl T. Plath, director of Pon. Jones cae Ler gta manferd (oie Sew? «BY Neat’ Aunin "; i14|States is willing to share some of sale. Central Methe.|here, a for Fred Gin ell asad ae esata Re Mb bay epee Mec: 8 at So [elon lanes and the Mediterriehs epeation, |p, tay. Buri wil be in the g erence along with sx fellow Pon sows fully steady, ay. e Bx-Cell-0 «0°. 3s ae at) Wr Wright would welcome addition-| He said he will oppose announced mie Paneer lg Rev. Service for Fred W. Gingell, for-} itiac city — Pir @ ee B14 Boe *:eeee» 4832/0) naval contributions from. the/efforts ot Northern Democrats and| J, mer Pontiac Township treasurer, NOTICE PUBLIC SALE | _ |Rord Mot’”:.. 43.5 Bou =e ceogee Oe : , ens, a senior at North Branch Notice is given by ‘endéer- ' | Preept Sul .. 70 -;-+sse 303|European powers. A sharing of blicans to expand this year’s Oxford Township supervisor and Romeo Woman Injured Freuh Tre : z- “rap es | aan $3 American atomic secrets primarily a voting rights — oe ee ean oon of Mr. board of education member, will aft bat Milfors. ie in Two-Car Collision wpe be mod ss 4 oa £1 ::- 445/ might spur the Allies to great ac-/measure, into other areas next ses- : be at 2 p.m. Friday from the Bos-|pichs_n. public sale of «1868 Stude- : : Gen Fas ... Ou NJ... 473 | tivity, sion. HUGH C. DODIAN sardet-Mabey Funeral Home; Ox-|neld, for cash to the hi dder. In- A Romeo woman is in St. Joseph |Gem ,Mills. -. 98-1 Std Off Oh °°:: 42.4 a k -| on ford. spection thereof may be made at above Mercy Hospital today after suffer-igen Tel ..... 3817 gent Boke SS ‘I am very much disturbed | MARLETTE—Service for Hugh * * Sigped sosmtter We t to bid ° , Time... 8 "ct g”| The Assembly's spotlight shift-| shout the talk about a r iC. Dodian, 66, . nee TMOSSOCIATES DIS eae nei te Gen Tire <0: 34 Suther Pap... 98 [ed to naval power after a day of| civ signte ail Soe: neat gear,” (here, wes hand fosias at Marsh| Burial will be in Oak Hill Ceme- CORPORATION ye Mote non at Opdyke Ra. ioueste -...- 32 Svift @.Co °:: 37 lreports trom leaders of the air| Sebaneee sald in an interview. [Funeral Home, with buri tery under the auspices of Oak-|_ rt an — Mount Clemens St. in Pontiac al in , lay, said 0 os He fy *s =. Jes @ Sut .... & ~ — forces. ——-*_ “I think the time has come for a {Marlette Cemetery. Mr. Dodian|“°°d Masonic Lodge. (Advertisement) ere — deputies. © ie on. ase Fron be tess”? at orce . Thomas Power, "| meratoriam on toughness.” died Nov. 7, in Chicago. Mr, Gingell, of 558 South La- rf} toa "wes Helen G. Rath, 42, ef Boland pct! Rumney -~: Hal mands aiffened NATO spots with], “Tt seems to me we are trying mergers these bad [ae igrs Seneges Mey Meapaal. Why Good- Time was en ad Jn Carbide... 90. to go too far, too fast,” he said, wo sisters Mrs,| day . Tl Cent ..... 28.3 +: 901/the report that many of his planes ” dust Ray .. 15 Un Pac 4.2 armed/|#dding that civil rights action by|Ethel Kerney and Mrs. Addie| at the age of 76, C tided with a car drive by Ronald|infing ae os Ofer Ae te. Beware on Ibeninste alert, Congress and the Supreme Court|Cross. He was born in Orion Townshi McNeal, 22, of 170 Opdyke Ra.,|inepir Cop <<: 33. Unit, Fruit :-: 3a3/With Nuclear weapons. = =» | na. have impeded “‘slow but sub- bg eed area aga elgg | said deputies. McNeal wes unin-[I2t ButyMO" 20 Us Lines... 3481. thing ur ite lanes om ahis statue (stantial progress” in the South, GAREY GROSS Hie asia teruser, cad Ned cieed Uneas Bladder jured. Int Nek 0.00 78.1 08 Steel 27725: as although the aim had not yet been| Rep. Diggs (D-Mich), a Detroit) WIJOM — Service for Garry|as supervisor of Oxford Township.| Such-s common as unwise eating tt geben. RS waa Re fully achieved. Negro, said last summer that op-|Gross, infant son of Mr. and Mrs.|He was a member of Thomas Met ee eS ee Prd ® tat — Tei ne Wests El ...°:-87.6 een {position by Johansen and Rep. Robert Gross of 48380 Pontiac odist Church, Oakwood Masonic pa pciow lg sekee, and wanenievenhie a4 Civic Leader Buried Inl Cre Goal 32 Yale Stee’! ine |Hoffman (R-Mich) to civil rights|Trail, will be at 11:30 a.m, Thurs- Lodge, Thomas Community Club! if restless nights, with neguing backethe, : . 4. ’ _ aches and pains due a Jacobs ...... § YngstSheT | me Red Cross to Prepare legislation would hurt Republicans day from Richardson-Bird Funeral/ and the Methodist Mens Club to over-enertion, strain or emotional upset, ; eal ogra x pe eel serv-| * STOCK AVERAGES for Holi day Accidents throughout Michigan. Neither Jo-|Home, Walled Lake, with the Rev. tok : are are edding ~~ misery — don't wait — ces for Lym B. Mason, former; New Prey oun o the As- hansen’s nor Hoffman's district Edmund Case Jr. officiati Bur- : : aha . municipal judge and city attorney, |*°!*‘*4 Press.) Pre ner taciliti contain a substantial Hears popu-jial will be in Walled ‘Lake Ceme. at — ah siahi ra ier woann Pil thrstrage for pour sper here. W. M parations added ies re peer, Neweil o' &MOT@| return to comfort. 1—They have an easing cee DONS Bare Weteey: Mimea aay... Rea ennai needed. during the|'*t"- : tery. and Lawrence of Oxford; two| seething effect on bindder tevitations, 2 died Sunday of an extended illness.| weer ‘sgo"....3351 $79 @6.0 iset holiday season will] , The baby, who died yesterday,|daughters, Mrs, Pearl Hoard Sel ae eee eon ° He was 79, [Year age"®... 7.2066. 1381 Ta siete lbe mapped out Thursday when the|_ We heard about a neighbor of|two days alter birth, is survived|Mre Gertrude Curtin, both ct Oe {sr snastay monsalar aches and pains 2 = ze 1 highy ee Ter ms int County Red Cross Blood|°WS Wbo surprised -his wife on|by his parents; seven sisters and|ford: two brothers, Walter Gingell pe pay pm tinge Podge cond mapary ros Resume Dealings Bish lice 188d ses iat Advisory Committee convenes, oe — He remembered mile, Leon, Willie,/of Lake Orion and William of Pon- cae hapoy rellet talllions have entaed for Ine low si ccae ined os 111.6 ‘The meeting, which begins at/it » » + A fellow down at the pool|Mitchell, Michae, Mary Lou and tiac, and 12 grandchildren, >of ems elo