The Weather 
U.8. Weather Bureas Forecast 
  3 
    Se 
  PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1958 92 PAGES 
    “Tieth YEAR 
x * * é * & * Red Chinese Fire xk *k * x *k * Agai nonQ xk k * 
Pontiac Motor, UAW Agree on Contract   — 
Three-Year Pact 
Expected to End 
19-Day Strike Ratification by Workers 
Probably Will Come 
at Meeting Tomorrow 
  With~breaks coming in 
General Motors Corp 
strikes across the nation,; 
an end to the 19-day dead-| 
lock at Pontiac Motor Di- 
vision was in sight today, 
after negotiators reported 
tentative agreement on new, | 
three-year pacts. 
Officials of UAW Local) 
653 were scheduling a mass) 
meeting, probably tomor-| 
row, at which union mem-| 
bers would be asked to 
ratify the new agreements, | 
ending a walkout that be- 
gan at all three General 
Motors Corp. plants in Pon-| 
tiac Oct. 2. 
The new pact covered both local 
wage and seniority agreements.) 
Local 653 already has overwhelm-| 
ingly approved ratification of the 
fiational GM agreement. 
The Pontiac Motor settlement | 
meant that agreements have 
been completed or are within 
reach at 81 GM plants employ- 
ing 189,000 workers, Still idied 
are about’ 86,000 workers at & 
other plants, 
The latest settlement was at Cad- 
illac Motor Division in Detroit, 
where a marathon bargaining' At Opening of 1958 UF Drive   
Torch to Be Lit Tonight Tonight marks the official send- 
off for this year’s tenth anniver- 
sary Pontiac Area United Fund 
appeal. 
At 8 p.m. Philip J. Monaghan, 
campaign chairman, will push the 
button to ignite the flame that will 
burn throughout the 2l-day cam- 
paign. 
The traditional torch lighting 
ceremony will be held at the junc-   tion of N, Saginaw St. and Oakland 
Ave. on land owned by Cook-Nelson 
Post 20, American Legion. 
A special kickoff show featur- 
ing vocalist Fred Kendall and 
Miss Paddy Beach, magician 
and comedienne, will begin at 
8:30 p.m, felewing the torch 
lighting. : 
Close to 1,000 top UF volunteer 
  
Twister 
  Sus ae 
* 
be 
  session came to a successful cli- 
max at 3 a.m. today, affecting 
8,400 workers. 
Of the plants where there are 
now settlements, however, a GM 
spokesman said, “We don't know 
if they have enough material to 
operate more than a couple of 
days” because of continuing strikes 
at supplier plants. | 
Still clouding the production | 
picture here was the strike at 
Fisher Body Division, on which | 
the Pontiac Motor plant depends 
for auto bodies. No progress in | 
negotiatibns was reported at 
Fisher Body. 
Gerald W. Kehoe, president of 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) | 
| 
|   
Window Ledge Falls THIS WAS A HOME — Smashed against a huge pine tree is [much smoke. Hits Florida 
te oa 
       
= AP Wirephote 
the wreckage of a migrant farm worker’s honie near Pahokee, 
Airport were wrecked. Fla. The tornado ripped through the area (on southeast edge of 
Lake Okeechobee) killing one man agd injuring 16 persons, and 
causing $400,000 damage. Nine crop-dusting planes’ at Pahokee (Oldsmobile in Detroit in August. | 
  
Dr. Crane to 
0 f Teenagers | Everywhere you go nowadays the topic of conversa-| Barber said he planned to ap-| in Talk Her ‘ Bagwell Jalopy workers will see the show, which 
|is sponsored by Community Na- 
tional Bank as a public service to 
jthe UF and its workers. 
| * ke * 
| Tomorrow these men and women 
jand 3,500 more volunteers will) 
begin calling on the residents and) 
workers in the Pontiac-Waterford 
Township area for their fair-share| 
pledges to the fund. | 
GOAL OF $501,000 
The volunteers will be seeking, 
$501,000 for 55 community service} 
agencies, 
United Fund solicitors are or- | 
ganized into three general divi- 
sions; the Industrial Division,   | 
| 
by Judge Clark J. Adams and | Berkley Voss; and the re- | 
organized Women’s Division un- 
der the chairmanship of Mrs. | 
Donald E. White. 
A “Yardstick Giving” form of | Solicitation is being used again) 
ithis year as a suggested form of| 
| giving which will insure a fair dis-| 
jtribution of the financial responsi- 
|bility among many, rather than 
| unreasonable contributions by a 
| few. j 
| Those who pledge in accordance | 
with the suggested scale have the |   | Eisenhowers Worship in Denver 
  IKE CONTINUES WEST TODAY — President 
and Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower attended the 
Corona Presbyterian Church in 
At right above is the Rev. Robert Lutz, pastor, 
greeting the nation’s first couple as they left ace re 
  ‘a 
AP Wirephete 
the church. The President continues to Los An- 
geles today, for an address tonight. Mamie is 
staying in Denver with her mother for a few 
days. Denver Sunday. 
» 
v   
satisfaction of doing their share in! 
helping to make this year’s drive 
|@ success. 
  
Driver Appears in 
Court for ‘Smoke’ 
. Donald E. Barber, White Lake} 
Township Michigan State Univer- 
sity student who drives Paul D. 
|Bagwell around in a 1908 jalopy, |   ioe Traffic Court tod 
* *« | 
Barber, of 8675 Highland Rd.,| 
was ticketed driving the ancient Officer Slays 
FourinCafe to Battle for GOP - 
Violent Attack Poses 
Riddle in New York's 
Police Department 
j : NEW YORK (AP)—What dead- : : . 
jwas scheduled to appear in De-', use drove policeman James Quiet weekend, the President was pictured as 
. ay on @ McDermott 
charge that the car gives off too slaughter of four 
'way restaurant? the cold-blooded 
men in a Broad- to 
Did injuries he suffered last 
year in a car accident twist. his 
mind with destructive urges? 
Did he bear a grudge against 
He and his attorney, Jason L. the victims? One was a convicted 
| Honigman, Republican nominee joan shark and two of the others 
| troit, contend that the car was 
| giving off campaign steam and 
| not smoke, | for attorney general fromt De- also had police records. 
Air Problems Had he been drinking? 
* * * 
| Police investigated these angles state Western network. 
Bagwell has been chauffered today to try to uncover some ex- 
around the state in the old buggy Planation for the 34-year-old pa- 
as part of his campaign for gov- 
‘ernor, 
* * * | 
DETROIT (UPI) — A chunk |tion eventually swings to that of the problems of teen- Pear before Traffice Judge John) 
of concrete fell from another lagers. D 
building in Detroit yesterday but | 
no one was injured. Police said | Is our juvenile delinquency situation getting worse or 
a six by four foot piece of win- \is it just going with the times. dow ledge fell from the second | 
floor of an east side building 
just before noon. 
  One of the most qualified to express his answer on 
this perplexing situation is Dr. George W. Crane. e's Half Million Hunters | . Watts in the white cap, long 
| white duster coat, goggles and long! 
gloves of a 1908 motorist. | 
  trolman's ,violent outburst in the 
‘Pic-a-Rib Restaurant. 
McDermott himself could not 
supply the answers immediately.|in California, it will be the first 
He lay speechless in critical 
condition on a hospital bed. His | 
body was riddled with five bullet 
wounds inflicted by other police- 
men, who waged a Spectacular 
gun duel with him on midtown 
streets as he fled. 
Two of the capturing policemen Ike Off to California | 
. DENVER (?—President Eisenhower flies to Los An- 
'geles today for a campaign speech billed by aides as a| Quemo 
  Suddenly End 
Truce Order: 
lke, Dulles Talk Commies See Shelling 
‘Punishment’ for U.S. 
Aid to Nationalists 
TAIPEI, Formosa (} — 
‘Chinese Communist shore 
batteries laid a new barrage 
‘of fire against the off-shore 
island of Quemoy today, 
‘ending nearly 15 days of 
‘cease-fire proclaimed by 
| Peiping. 
| The Red artillery caught 
'four Nationalist supply 
|Ships in the Quemoy beach 
jarea — three LSTs and 45 
|minutes, then stopped, the 
|Nationalist Defense Minis-   
try said. There was no word 
‘as to the intensity of the 
| barrage. 
| The Nationalists said their rein- 
| forced artery on Quemoy had 
| returned the Red fire. 
A Nationalist spokesman said 
no American ships were in the 
beach area. The Communists in 
ending the cease-fire had charged 
U.S. warships had broken the 
truce by escorting Nationalist 
supplies to Quemoy Sunday night. 
The Americans flatly denied this 
isaying they had only ‘conducted 
|a small-boat operation . . . lifting 
'Chinese Nationalist supply craft 
| through international waters,’’ at 
\least 15 miles off Quemoy, 
| « * * 
| The Nationalist Defense Minis- 
try said. the Communists had re- 
sumed shelling at 4 p.m., 30 min- 
utes after Peiping Radio had broad- 
cast orders canceling the cease- 
fire. 
The Communists announced a   
‘hard-hitting effort to bolster Republican candidates) week ago that their self-imposed 
|/plagued by party split. 
| Resuming a 5,300-mile cross-country tour after a 
ready to 
  
shift gears and do some*+ a 
plugging during a two-day, 
visit in California. The state Umbrellas, Anchors 
is one of the nation’s major 
political battlegrounds tne Handy Tomorrow 
year. 
| Eisenhower's half - hour 
tonight at the Shrine Auditorium the Pontiac area this evening. The 
in Los Angeles will be carried on low will average 30 degrees. televisi d re Tomorrow's forecast partly nsion a d a ? re a = 
pes Ar ang radio Over an cloudy and warmer with scattered Mostly fair and warmer is the 
is 
+ two speeches in San Francisco 4t 15 to 25 miles per hour tonight 
| before traveling on to Chicago. will increase to 20 to 30 miles per 
hour tomorrow. 
Tomorrow evening will be partly 
1 : : : oudy a mild with continued itime since he left Washington last ely OS scattered showers and a low near |Friday six-day vote-hunti . ; EEE Ca) Gh) Wee witha 48. The outlook for Wednesday is 
mostly fair and cool. 
In downtown Pontiac the lowest 
temperature recorded preceding 8 
a.m. was 40. At 1 p.m. the mercury 
istered 67, If he does go to a scrapping role, 
tour. In Iowa his speech was only) 
indirectly political, and in Kansas 
and Colorado he made no talks) 
whatever. : 
The GOP candidates in those 
two states had to be satisfied with "eS 
not much more than photographs   ‘showers or thundershowers likely) 
Tuesday morning he will make and a high of 76. Rather high winds | | hold-fire had been extended to 
midnight next Sunday, 
| The Nationalists said they had 
jwaited one hour after the Com- 
—— munists began shooting, then op- 
ened fire. 
* * * 
A Nationalist spokesman said the 
Red bombardment was not so 
‘heavy as on Aug. 23, when the off- 
‘shore war began with an intense 
|two-hour bombardment. 
speech U.S. Weather Bureau's report for} During that initial attack 41,000 
killing 11 civilians and wounding 
18 on Quemoy and causing more 
than 200 military casualties, 
The abrupt development raised 
grave new problems for U-S. 
| Secretary of State Dulles, flying 
by jet tanker over the North 
Polar route to Formosa, 
His mission was to clear up mis- 
‘understandings with Nationalist 
‘President Chiang “Kai-shek and lay 
the base for a more substantial 
cease-fire in Formosa Strait, 
* * * 
From Denver, President 
hower today instructed Secretary 
jof State Dulles to continue on his 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Eiser . 
Quickie Kisses Only Governor Lends Ear —*a psychologist who has 
delved into the practical [FaMping Today with the President. In Colorado, iwere from McDermott's home 
° ithere was even a hassle over | 
precinct. j 
| 
| * = . ‘ “| | . wk Ok ithose, that left the state Repub- SEOUL, Korea (UPI) — Min- 
Begin Final : Preparations provlems & youl many! By The. Associated Press McDermott, married and the fa-|lican organization miffed. , | istry of Education movie censors to Call of Pheasants 
5 ; times. The small game hunting sea. ther of four, was off duty when a ee have advised film producers and | LANSING (UPI) — The call of 
Before Election of Pope Tomorrow at a 2 p.m. school saa Son opens today in Michigan’s he entered the restaurant on) On Eisenhower's arrival in Den- importers that screen kisses the pheasants was louder than the 
a sembly, Pontiac Central High sen-) Lower Peninsula with an esti. Broadway near 53rd Street about ver Saturday for a visit with his| Must be cut from the pre- call of politics today as opening viously-permitted 30 seconds to 
to mated half million hunters ex. (Continued ,on Page 2, Col. 3) jof the bird season swayed candi- = failing mother-in-law, Mrs. John S.} i 
VATICAN CITY (#— The cardinals of the Roman jinvited area schools wil] have the) pected in the fields. | Doud, the first to greet him at the) a Maximum of 10 seconds, dates and press agents from the 
_lrare opportunity to hear Dr. Crane| They’ll be after pheasant, rab- ‘Has His Feet Gr airport was Colorado’s Democratic) Make them “less lascivious.” —_—/ campaign trail. 
Catholic Church today began the final week of prepara speak. ~«~| bits, squirrels and grouse, The | . on ound Gov. Stephen McNichols, his wife * | Gov. G. Mennen Williams was jors and representatives” of other| 
  
  
tions for election of a new pope. 
The nine days of funeral service for Pope Pius XII 
ended Sunday in St. Peter’s Basilica with a two-hour 
solemn Requiem Mass attended by U. S. Secretary of 
  
State Dulles and other* 
diplomats and representa- 
tives of 50 non-Communist 
nations, - 
* * * 
The arrival Sunday night of 
Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski from 
Poland ‘brought fo 47 the number 
of princes of the church assem- 
bled in Rome ‘for the secret con- 
-glave which will convene next Sat- 
furday to elect a new ruler of the 
church, 
By the weekend all but two of 
the 54 living: cardinals “are ex- 
pected to be at the Vatican. « 
The absentees will be Josef) 
Mindszenty, a fugitive from Hun-)° 
gary’s Communist government 
who has taken asylum in the U.S. 
legation in Budapest, and Alojzije 
Stepinac, confined to his native 
Yugoslav village by President 
Tito’s government. ~ 
* * * 
A thousand cheering people 
massed at the Rome railway sta- 
tion to greet 60-year-old Cardinal 
Wyszynski, who was kept under 
house arrest by the Communists 
for three years. The crowd includ- 
ed both exiles from Poland’s Com- 
rs munist regime and representa- 
tives in Italy of that regime. 
The welcome amazed the pre- 
late, who exclaimed, “My God, 
I did not know I was so popular. 
Why? Why?” It took almost 10 
minutes for police to clear a 
path for him to a waiting Vati- 
can automobilp. - 
Robed in purple, the cardinals 
sat in two long rows on each side 
of the apse area of St. Peter’s 
for the final funeral Mass for the 
late Pope. Behind them were Ro- 
man and foreign nobility and rep- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) 
LAE RRS BIE & 
    In Today's Press , 
    His talk, ‘Be a Good Ape,” will] 
be presented in the school audi- 
torium.- 
* * * 
The Pontiac Yress will sponsor! 
this afternoon appearance and a) 
second one at 8 in the evening at) 
the same school auditorium. | 
The psychologist, lecturer, 
author and columnist will talk on 
“Sex Problems in Marriage” at 
the evening lecture, The doctor 
will answer questions following 
his lecture, as time permits. This 
will be done through cards dis- 
tributed to those who wish to ask 
questions, 
Introducing Dr, Crane at the 2) 
and 8 p.m. talks will be John A.! 
Riley, assistant advertising man-| 
ager for The Press. 
Riley said the play field at Cro- 
foot School, immediately to the 
west of Central High School, will 
be opened in the evening to facili- 
tate the many cars expected, | 
There will be no admission 
charge for either the afternoon or 
evening talk. ~~ 
Dr. Crane's column, “Case Rec- 
ords of a Psychologist,’’ appears 
daily on the editorial page of The 
Press.   
  
Hall fer rent for special occasions. 
Convenient location. Ample parking. 
FE 4-7101 
    Wake up Oakland County! 
    (0. ) dingn gen ecnsnonosodccddc bo | 
County News ...+...-++-.05- 17 
Editorials .........++-se000 6 
Markets. .........0-0000 ooo BS 
Obituaries .........e.eeeeees 9 
Sports ......0.cceeesaeeeee 20-22 
Theaters: 2.666. 622002 eecuent 9 
TV and Radio Programs ....31 
Wilson, Fart ................ 31 
Women’s Pages .......... 12-15 Lawson for Pros. Att. — Dem. coon hunting season starts at 
midnight today. 
A kill of about one million 
pheasants is expected before the 
season closes Nov. 10. 
Bag limits are 5 rabbits; 5 
Squirrels; 2 cock pheasants; 5 
ruffed grouse and 4 woodcock. 
There is no limit on raccoons.   WASHINGTON (UPI) — The 
Washington Post and Times Her- 
ald said today the government's 
small business administration 
had received a letter which read, 
in part: ‘I’m just five feet tall 
in my stocking feet, and I'd like 
to know if that qualified me to 
be a small businessman?” land their five photogenic children. 
iThe GOP candidate for governor, 
|Palmer Burch, was almost lost in 
ithe shuffle some distance back of 
the receiving line. Es, 
Then the Republican state 
| chairman, Richard H. Shaw, got 
| into an argument with White . 
! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Officers Bag Deer 
| DETROIT (® — A ceer swam 
the Detroit River from Belle 
| Isle today and led policemen 
| on a two-hour chase before they 
| managed to shoot it. The officers 
| killed the 300 pound animal with 
six shots when it charged them 
| as they tried to lasso it. ischeduled to spend most of the 
day hunting with State Treasurer 
‘Sanford A. Brown on the Walter 
|Lange farm near Sebewaing. 
i Press Agent Paul Weber, who 
usually keeps news flowing from 
the governor’s office when he’s 
away, also went hunting in the 
/Thumb area,   
Fear Seventy-Five Killed   
Red Jet Liner Crashes With No Survivors LONDON (AP) — The crash oft son of the Cambodian ambas- 
a TU104 jet airliner, showpiece of 
Soviet aviation, took the lives of} sador to Peiping. 
The number of crew members 
the 65 passengers and all crew! was not giv. ; ; | was given, but the TU104 usu- 
members, Red China announced jally carries up to 10. Sunday night. 
Peiping radio said there were’ The Peiping broadcast gave the 
lfirst details of the disaster, Mos- 
cow radio, in ore of its rare an- 
nouncements of air mishaps, said 
‘Saturday night that the plane went   
ee cea ey Tet Makes Return Flight of Moscow, and that among the | 
dead were 16 Chinese government 
officials. 
It was the first crash to be 
announced for the jet airliner, 
the pride of the Soviet commer- 
cial air fleet. 
The other 49 passengers were| 
described as ‘‘foreign friends’’ and 
experts on their way home from 
Red China, They included one 
Briton, four West Germans’: and   
  NEW YORK (UPI)—A Pan American World Airways” 
Boeing 707 jet clipper landed at Hdlewild Airport at 6:13 p.m. 
EST yesterday after a pre-inaugural flight from’ Baltimore 
to Brussels and back. 
The plane made the westbound trip in flying time of 
§ hours and 18 minutes, making a 1-hour 10-minute stop 
at Keflavik, Iceland. 
The jet plane, soon to be ge % 
in regular trans-Atlantic serv- 
ice, made the flight from Baltimore to Brussels late Friday 
in 7 hours and 19 minutes. down on a regular Peiping-to-Mos- 
cow flight but did not disclose how 
jmany had been killed. 
wk * 
Aeroflot, the Soviet state air- 
line, said in Moscow no further 
details would be disclosed until 
an investigation has cleared up 
_Ané case. 
* * ~ 
An indication of the importanee 
attached by the Soviet government 
to the crash was the fact that 
Aviation Minister M, V. Khruni- 
chev is heading an investigation 
by six experts. 
‘SETS STILL FLYING 
The Soviet Union made a point 
jof reporting the jet liner is still 
flying the world’s air routes and   carrying important passengers. 
The crash evidently has not re- 
sulted in the plane beirig ground- 
ed. 
Russia itself still maintained 
silence on the identity of the 
victims. But the Soviet cabinet 
in an unprecedented move, de- 
creed that a _ top-level panel 
investigate the accident. 
Peiping Radio said that the Chi- 
inese communist officials killed in- 
jcluded Cheng Chen-tuo, vice-chief 
jot the Cultural Bureau, and Tfai 
|Chu-fung, a member of the Com- 
|munist Chinese Sports Federation. 
| Others ineluded officials of the 
|Chinese communist trade and for- 
eign affairs ministries, the Peiping 
broadcast said.   
   __ Michigan Roads 
             
  
  
  6Ch dren Killed Quacruplets rie Methodist Ageins Intoxicants 
“Sapoys 2Girs ‘Favor Marital Counseling | RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Quad-| 
‘ruplets were born early today to| L 
| Family Life has approved resolutions favoring martial coun- in State Traffic ~? Bovs. 2 Girls 
Among 10 Victims OF the wife of a Richmond city em- 
Weekend Mishaps on ploye. The hospital reported the jchildren—two boys and two girls— 
are al] alive and apparently well. 
* * * 
  By The Associated Press | They were born to Mrs. Edward | 
Six children were among 10 per- G. Englehart of nearby Sandston, | 
sons killed in Michigan traffic over in Johnston-Willis Hospital, The! 
the weekend. Engleharts have six other chil-, 
* * * |dren, all girls. 
A pair of double fatality acci-) me Seagal sae the first child: 
dents took the lives of two small/@ sil, was born at 5:05 a.m. A! boys in each. In the Upper Pe.' boy was born, at 3:15 a.m., the! 
ninsula, two boys riding double, other girl at 5:25, and the other | 
on a bicycle were killed when boy at ee. * 
struck: by 9 car near Hancock: Englehart works for the Rich- 
At Flat Rock, two boys com- mond Department of Public | ing out of church after Sunday Works 
Mass were struck and killed by |= The jast quads born in Rica-| 
J ‘mond were those of Mr. and Mrs.| 
A 15-year-old boy died in a two-/Richard Shaia, born in March 
car crash and a 3-year-old boy 1956. All are living. F 
walked in tront of a car near his 
heme. 
* * * . * ¢ ; 
Red China F | The Associated Press weekend C Ind Iring 
traffic death count begins at 6 : j 
pial Friday ‘and ends at ‘mda AQQIN on Quemoy 
Sunday. 
Leo Byrne Jr., 7, and Robert | Continued From Page One) 
Bolicki, 8, both of Flat Rock, way to Formosa despite the ending were killed as they were leav- of the Chinese Communist cease- 
ing church Sunday, ifire. 
David Rich, 13, Essexville, was pe isenhower held : ee tele. 
killed Saturday in a two-car col-|/Phone conference w S, 
lision in Saginaw County. jcealled _ from Fairbanks, Alaska. 
Mrs. Mareta Nelson, 40, Owosso, Dulles had arrived there en route) 
was killed Saturday night in a ' Taipei for areal with 
two-car collision west of Flint, |President Chiang Kai-shek. 
Mrs. Winthrop C. Akins, 35, Eisenhower was awakened to 
Vandercook Lake, was killed gun- | take Dulles’ call. They consulted 
day when her husband’s car hit | fer about 10 ssleates and thea 
a utility pole near Jackson and | decided that Dulles should con 
overturned, | tinue his trip. 
- © Newherrsy wac High officials on Formosa ex- James Oberle, 3, Newberry, was . 
ed Sunday when struck by a Pected the secretary of state's 
killed’ Sunday “woen ‘struck by * talks with the Nationalist Chinese 
lleader, beginning Tuesday, would 
| disillusion the Chinese Reds of any 
Douglas Hendnckson, 7, and idea of a split between Taipei and 
Charles Valearski, 10, both of Han.| Washington * kt 
cock, were killed Sunday riding car on a county road near his 
home. 
* * * CHICAGO (UPI) — The National Methodist Council on 
| seling and total abstinence from all intoxicants and nar- 
| Cotics. 
| * * * 
The convention's windup session also backed support 
of world law and strengthening of the United Nations in its 
windup session. 
“We are aware of the great need among our people 
for competent professional counseling in marital and 
other problems,” the Methodists said. “We feel the church 
has an obligation to provide such help because of the 
spiritual implications involved in these problems and 
their solutions.” 
In addition, the 3,000 delegates: 
—Recommended the organization of family life commit- 
tees on a local basis. 
—Called for a fourth national family life conference to 
be held on either a national or regional basis. 
* * * 
—Urged Methodists to participate in the rehabilitation 
of a group of Polish women who were used by the Nazis for 
medical experimentation during World War II. 
  
Officer Goes Berserk, 
Slays Four in Restaurant 
(Continued From Page One) 
1:45 am. A few minutes later, 
without warning, he drew two 
guns and blazed away at helpless 
patrons. Four men fell mortally 
wounded. 
McDermott crashed through 
the glass paneling of a door and tan, a stevedore who recently 
served a prison sentence for loan 
sharking. His record also shows 
fines for gambling and bookmak- 
ing convictions, 
Thomas Joseph O'Hare, 55, of 
Manhattan, an usher ‘at Madison 
Square Garden, once arrested for 
fled alleged burglary but released with 
Plrsuing policemen opened fire,|the charge dismissed. 
hitting him five times. He re- x © & ; 
turned the fire, wounding one of} Lawrence Davion, Mount Ver- 
the pursuers, before he collapsed,jnon, N. Y., known as ‘‘Larry the 
uncohscious, about three blocks!/Barber,” who carried papers list- 
from the restaurant. ing two other names—Latry Jenk- x * * ins and Frank ‘Anderson. Davion’s 
McDermott had a clean record,|police record, dating from _1933, 
including one commendation, dur-|includes a jail term for altering 
ing his 10 years on the force.|identification marks on an auto- 
Neighbors described him as a con-|mobile, a bookmeking fine and 
scientious father. and churchgoer./two other arrests. ~   jouble on a bicycle. They pulled! One result of a demonstration of 
pig! fe ee “5s ay : ia united front against Communist into the path of a -car. . ‘ 
; laggression might be to make more 
Sigmund S. Majcher, 38, De- /jasting the present cease- 
troit, was killed Sunday when (fire over the offshore islands in| his car struck a viaduct beam (the Formosa Strait. 
in Detroit. j * + * 
Philemon D'Hondt, 32, Utica, was 
Clemens. 
  
Furs, Silver Stolen 
_no longer consider them an offen-! |been under 
lsince December 1957, when he was 
In his talks with Chiang, the injured in the collision of a radio killed Sunday when his car struck’ American secretary is expected to car with a truck. Two weeks 
a bridge abutment north of Mount search for a formula to bring about! he underwent X-ray examinations 
| what he calls a dependable cease-! after complaining of _ persistent 
jfire. One of his problems is to get! headaches. 
|Chiang to reduce his forces on His four victims all died in hos- Quemoy in the hope Red China will) pitals. They were: Fellow policemen recalled he was} Eugene Cronin, 60, Jersey City, 
a “nice, pleasant guy.” N. J. 
x *« * 
said McDermott had 
medical treatment Deputy Police Commissioner 
Walter Arm was asked if there 
was evidence that McDermott 
had been involved with a loan 
shark, and he replied: ‘‘We have 
nothing to go on, but we are in- 
vestigating that angle as well as 
all other angles.” Officials 
  ago, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 20,1958 
|Wives Take It . 
Edmund Leahy, 53, of Manhat-}'ald_troopers. The Day in Birmin gham ae :   
onthe Chin—. - 
and Elsewhere 
The so-called weaker sex took 
it on the chin (and elsewhere) this 
weekend as two area husbands 
ran out of patience, according to 
State Police reports. 
What began as a friendly card 
game Saturday night ended quite 
differently for a young Waterford 
Township couple. 
The 18-year-old wife told 
troopers that her husband had hit 
her in the face and chased her 
out the front door shortly after BIRMINGHAM — Charles Mor- 
tensen, manager of the Birming-| 
ham Chamber of Commerce, is 
asking the city commissioners to- 
night to consider adoption of an 
ordinance to prevent transient 
merchants from opening tempo- 
rary stores in the city for the 
Christmas season, 
In some communities, Morten- 
Sen said, this is a common prac- 
they had been playing cards with! tice and can do considerable another couple, She suffered a| harm to stores which operate bloody nose, throughout the year, 
The reason? Police said the 
women had won five or six 
games, The dismayed wife said 
her husband was a “poor loser.”’ 
Saturday night also proved a He offered to work with the city 
attorney in drawing up such an 
ordinance, 
The Oakland County Road Com- Asks Commission to Ban Special Christmas Shops. 
     
       
   
     
          damage by destroying the top 
coating, permitting “water to seep E 
through. 
The Birmingham Democratic 
Club will sponsor a public meet- EB 
ing at 8 p.m, tomorrow at the | 
Birmingham Community House, | 
Several county-level Democratic — 
candidates will be introduced. 
Among those who will speak are. 
Leslie Hudson, 18th Congressional /— 
District candidate for the U.S. E 
House of Representatives; James 
Lawson, candidate for prosecuting 
attorney; John Kronenberg, candi-| Fit Models ‘W’ - ‘WL’ - °G' 
SUNBEAM - 
Fits Schick Models Only 
  mission has alerted the city of Bir- 
mingham to enforce the law which 
prohibits the burning of leaves and 
other rubbish on surfaced streets. 
Detroit Newspaper 
Supports Bagwell 
DETROIT  — The Detroit Free 
Press came out editorially today 
in support of Republican Paul Bag- 
well for governor, It was the first 
local metropolitan daily newspaper 
to express a recotnmendation in 
the campaign. 
The Free Press said the issue | 
has come down ‘‘almost solely to 
whether the political climate cre-| 
ated by 10 years of (Derhocratic) | 
Gov. Williams is hurting the pros- 
perity of Michigan’s people.’ 
It added: 
“We strongly believe that it is 
time for a change before further 
harm is inflicted.’ 
The Free Press also has support- 
ed previous Republican candidates 
A freak drowning took the life = 
of a 19-monthcold Farmington for governor against Williams. | 
Township boy Saturday afternoon 
in a swimming pool near his home 
at 33901 Braebury Ridge Rd., ac- 
cording to township police. 
* * * rough one for a Pontiac woman 
who had consented to go fishing 
with her spouse at the Hatchery 
road Pond. 
A bit bedraggled, she told of-. 
ficers she had objected to fish-| 
ing for catfish, which she didn't 
consider suitable for the dinner 
table. 
Her hubby, tiring of her objec- 
tions, hit her several times with 
his fists, paddled her with a stick, 
and tossed her into the pond, she   
  
    Boy Drowns 
in Swim Pool Farmington Township 
Tot Perishes as Mother 
Hunts Him in Woods 
  
Sets House Afire Here 
Children playing with matches 
set fire to window screens and 
storm windows in a vacant two-) 
story frame house at 125 E. Pike, 
St. Saturday afternoon, | 
Firemen extinguished the blaze 
which caused an estimated $300 
damage to the building and con- 
tents. It was the second swimming pool 
tragedy for the township in five 
days. 
Sebastian Mancuso, son of Mr. 
and Mrs, Sebastian Mancuso, 
was dead on arrival at William 
Beaumont Hospital, 
His mother Mary, 20, told police   Playing With Matches 29 
SCHICK : date for the office of county clerk! , 
Razor Head and register of deeds, and Floyd 
L. Cobb Jr., candidate for state 
representative from the 3rd dis- 
trict. 
      
         
       
   | 
Continuing its series of ‘‘WhatiE 
High School Education Means To- 
day,’”’ the Birmingham PTA Coun- 
cil has invited junior high school | 
parents to meet in the high school | 
Little Theater at 8 p.m. tomorrow. 
They will hear discussions on|,< 
evaluation of the requirement by 
colleges and vocational schools. 
Merit scholarships and general 
junior high school activities also | 
will be discussed. | 
a 
: Why Pay Regular Prices MILFS 
1st TTY   
  
    
—You Can Get It at Simms 
At a Big Discount Price 
   Sindy 59° Regular 98c—Roll On Type 
oe ey (   
Celebration   she was raking leaves when the     Neighbors said McDermott had 
given up drinking about five years   
DETROIT W — Theft of $15.- 
  
  400 in cash, silver and furs was |Sive threat. | the Pic-a-Rib as they sought to ing for) help! and reported to police over the week- x &® * | u determine where McDermott had end by Sebastian Moceri, 56, of | Dulles was prepared to argue Doesn t Approve \spent the 12 hours between the Toll POO IOC into a 2.49 ‘AEROWAX St. Clair Shores. Moceri told po- |that increased _ firepower cult of Piano's Tone iti left his home in the Flush-) . woods at the rear’ 
lice thieves apparently broke into compensate for the reduced | 4» |ing section of Queens and the| in ’58 nea hie ah was Non-Rubbing his home while he was away | Power, and that there is no change} 2 itime of the shootings. Saturday night. in the American policy of support. Artist Walks Out * vs + 19 there, Floor Wax 
jing the defense of Nationalist ; Patrolman Larry Roden, wound- She eventually GALLON 
China. | pipe! sap ea ED eal nile chasing McDermott, was _ Spotted him at the ] 6 8 N. orthwest U. Sy Red Chinese Defense Minister ie it pee fo ag ve Oe ae |listed in not serious condition in|bottom of a neighbor's swimming) e : . |Peng Teh-huai gave as his reason| orthern city yesterday — Amer. Roosevelt hospital. pool: : No rubbing — for Florida Feel |for resuming the bombardment a/ northern city yesterday — Amer- |" \inermott was charged with oo all floors.—Gives } | | st Julius Katch see OG jcharge that U. S. warships had) ican conce*t Pianist sublus Rate’. lhomicide and suspended from the| Last Tuesday a 4-year-old boy|f satiny, fintsh. 1éeal Storms’ F uly {encroached on Chinese ferritonial) elu choue yu les) trom Condon rae drowned in a swimming pool at his|f phait, ete ee |waters Sunday night in escorting 
By The Associated Preas |Nationalist ships to Quemoy. ago. But police checked bars near 
    to give a Beethoven recital. 
An audience of nearly 200 set- 
tled back as the maestro strode Nationally Advertised 
WAXES & CLEANERS 
at Simms LOW PRICES tot wandered away. Several mo- 
: ments later she} 
[Drowning 
Oakland heard him shout- 
      
         grandparents home at 28825 Mill- 
    
Formats Ne. 9 Linegld de   
  BAYER’S ASPIRIN Pkg. of 50 Tablets 
79¢ Groves Brome | Strong northerly winds fanned 
cold Pacific air across Northwest 
sections of the country today, ment,” 
breaking a spell of mild weather. 
Violent storms which struck 
Southeastern areas appeared end- 
  “Shelling must therefore be re- 
sulted as a measure of punish. | 
the Communist order | 
| said. | 
|! The U.S. Taiwan Formosa De- Pontiac Motor, UAW on to the stage and sat down 
at the big concert grand in the 
new Shakespeare Theater. 
Katchen flicked his hands up 
and down the scales, frowned, 
ed. Fairly normal weather pre-|fense Command declared the, and played some more scales. 
vailed in most other parts of the charge was completely untrue. Still frowning he said I don't 
country, with a warming trend in| The Nationalists viewed the on-| like the sound of it. I don’t think 
the (central Gection| | again artillery war as a fulfillment) I had better play it. 
Severe windstorms hit North-/0f their predictions that the Reds; _ And he marched off, climbed 
west-areas Sunday. Four persons|W0uld renew action when it Buited|| into) hiaicar) and idrove: back to were killed by falling trees in Ore-| them: MDELED: 
gon. In Idaho, the gale-like winds They have claimed the Commu-| 
whipped up clouds of dust and con-| MS's were only following accepted "wo , 
tributed to several traffic ac- Red tachies of “fight and talk, talk) aml y S hi ren 
cidents, with one person killed and 24 fight. | 
at least 27 others injured. Twenty-! bg * * ‘ ee 
n contict wit putes All Die Within Week five persons were injured in the:, 2S Was in conflict with Dulles ie | In ee 
pileup of eight cars dust | Noes. He has been working on stom near Nisital the line that the Communists might} 
In the Southeast. a tornado insltule a permanent Cease life if| struck the farming community of the Nationalists would thin eo 
Pahokee in southern Florida Sun-| Hes eel on Quemoy down to} day morning. Heavy rains hit a point where it could not be con-| 
other Florida areas and severe|Sid¢red an invasion threat to the| 
southern Alabama and western mainland. : | 
Florida. . : ‘ | Red China’s order ending the 
two week-old Quemoy cease- |: 
The Weather fire took official Washington by 
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report |complete surprise, 
r LJ . LJ 
PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly. e in alifornia fair and warmer tonight. Partly cloudy | 
and warmer with scattered showers or! 
thundershowers likely temerrew. Low te- id night 50. High tomerrow 76. Windy te-. night and tomorrow. Winds southerly 15) ign Our to 23 miles tenight, increasing te 20 to 
34 miles tomerrew. Temerrew night! 
partly cloudy and mild with seattered | 
thandershewers likely. Low near 48   
in a 
WILMINGTON, N.C, — Mr. 
and Mrs. DeWitt Carroll have 
lost all their four children in less 
than q week. 
Mrs. Carroll gave birth te a 
stillborn baby last Wednesday. 
Her three other children were en 
route from their home in nearby 
Acme Sunday to take her home 
from a hospital here when their 
automobile collided with a pas- 
senger train at a grade crossing. 
The two boys, aged 5 and 16, 
and the girl, 12, were killed.   
  
  
‘Burnt Leaves Spark 
(Continued From Page One) ‘$1,000 Garage Fire 
| 
_ House press secretary James C. | Pontiac firemen yesterday morn- 
Hagerty over Shaw's insistence {ing extinguished a fire which 
the President pose for pictures |caused an estimated $1,000 damage 
| Teday tn Pontiac 
pais temperature preceding 8 am 
{ ¢ . 
At 8 am- Wind calm 
Sun sets Mondar at § 43 pm 
Sun rises Tuesday at 651 am 
Moon sets Tuesday at 12°04 am 
Moon rose Monday at 214 pm. . at the airport with several GOP |to a garage in the rear of the | candidates. The pictures weren't 'home of James Brafford, 51 Mo- | taken untfl late in the day—in | hawk Rd. Downtown Temperatures” 
6 seas 11 am 6am 57, Private at Eisenhower's hotel. A 1955 auto in the garage was 7 am.. o 40 12 ™ 62 . j < : ~ - 
os Meee eGo 4) lpm .... .67 In California. the President's) destroyed in the fire. 45 A . vie nee ae work is cut out for him in the face| Firemen reported that the blaze jof a party split over U. S. Sen,|Started when children took a bas- 
‘William F. Knewland, who is run-|Ket containing ashes of burnt 
‘; ning a steep uphill race for the|leaves into the garage. 
sl governorship against Democrat! 
Edmund G. (Pat! Brown, the 
ses attomey General Farm, Garden Branch Saturday in Pentiac 
fas recorded downtown)! 
Highest temperature ... 
lowest temperature 
Mean temperature . 
Weather—Sunny 
Sunday in Pontiac 
fas recorded downtoen:   
oe idlat re * oe to Meet at Walled Lake Mean temperature... .... .. 43 The split developed when Know-) Weather—Sunny 
land announced his candidacy after. _ WALLED LAKE — The Interlake 
_ Gov. Goodwin S. Knight already Branch of the Woman's National 
oa had said he would bid for re-elec- Farm and Garden Assn., will meet 
5°53 tion. Knight wound up a reluctant/at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home 
lcandidate for Knowland’s Senate|of Mrs, Joseph Todds, 482 S. Wil- 
seat, and he haid recently he may|liams Lake Rd, 
24 in 1875 not vote fot Knowland. | Speaker will be Mrs. William 
| In Denver over the weekend, the Lowerie of Birmingham, the 
S President passed up golf and fish-;/group’s state conservation chair- 
68 ing in favor of two long automo-;Man. One Year Ago in Pontiac 
Highest temperature . 
Lowest temperature 
Mean’ temperature - ore 
Weather—Clear, warm 
Highest and Lowest Temperatures 
This Date In 86 Years 
85 in 1953 
Sunday's Temperature Chart 
nh 55 46 Marquette 6. 
Memphis 75 
Miam! Beach 85 Baltimore 61 43 
Bismarck 81 48 
  Bors cole maimnukee’ $) ss bile rides and inspection of a| Mrs. Violet Pascoe and Mrs. Ma- Chicago.” 68 bo hee Senans 8° 58 ballistic missile plant. It was his ble Rose will be assistant hostesses. 
Cincinnatt 67 37 Omaha ie 61 first visit to the Colorado capital | ; 
amt BO ERGvien $$ there in September 1955, | | Revolver, Suit Taken Dultith 66 40 St Louts 73 $0 : a 8 Francisco 67 52 * * * 1 — . * * * ~ rl | 
Houghton. 63 48 Trav Cits. 1 4¢_ Mrs. Eisenhower is remaining in Rockwell St., was bufglarized and| Jacksonville 68 §7 Washington oe Denver for a few days with her a revolver and suit stolen, it was! KansasCity 84 65 Seattle 42 . : Loe Angeles 82 62 Tampa 73 69 mother reported to Pontiac police today. Fort Worth 87 63 
Gr. Rapids 64 
ibeyond the apse.     
  
    
  ., in the Vil Wood | ala St., in the Village of Wood, 3.25 BEACON 
~——s k ok | 
The boy, Gene Luicier, was be-, 
    Quinine — 30 for . 53° Non-Rubbing      
        
  
    
            
  
          
  
  
          
    
    “to $2.25 Evening in Paris e is . 
Agree on Contract lieved to have been attempting to WAX E Hd. Lot.- Toilet Water 89 
retrieve a toy sail boat floating on Reg. $3.25 — 
(Continued From Page One) the water. oe <- 
UAW local 596 said negotiations | Gallon were stalled on the question of aye f . 68 
|the local seniority agreement. Nixon § B h d 
Fisher Body workers gave ore Ss ays € In 
whelming approval to the national] Fy | ? H ‘Sinan 
agreement Saturday, Kehoe said, | aN tra our S 5) _ Cut Price 
by better than a 9-to-1 vote. = = Famous Beacon floor * * * COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. | wax gives @ gleam that lasts ’n’ lasts. 
Continuing strikes at other stra-|(AP)—Vice President Nixon, who — 
tegic plants in Michigan and the|has spent the weekend here recov-| 3.98 GLAMORENE i: TEMP is 
nation also played a part in the! ering foe au oi and sre} RUG CLEANER /E HAIR SPRAY ae | 
local strike picture. Unless these|throat, will a plane at Den-| _ 
other strikes are settled, there will|ver for Washington today at 12:30 GALLON Wee gieasic a Sea $1.50 Valeo : ; be no delivery here of essential/p. m. ; Medi pecan Sao tee Sec 89° . 
parts on which production depends. x & * 88 a ER 
Altogether, approximately 9,100) Originally, Nixon planned to $2 Schratz Sun oot OP HELP US 
UAW workers have been idled at/leave Denver at 12:30 a. m. No! Valley Bath Oils i 
Pontiac Motor and Fisher Body|reason was given for the change . 4 
since the strikes were continued|in plans. Cut Price CELEBRATE 
here, over local issues, after the} Secret Service Agent Jack Sher- 
national GM contract was approved|wood said the vice president’s|] Give your . 
Oct. 2. cold has “dissipated considerably, |] rues = new OUR Another 5,000 were idled at GMCjarid his throat - irritation has wesitee ieealty naa, L 
iTruck & Coach Division, but this|;cleared up a a : : , ec 
strike was settled a week ago. 
Nixon is in the midst of a barn- EMM D scores . ; i 
- _ storming tour on behalf of Repub-|f 99 "7 Segisaw) (ed Pioes aie P 
In Final Preparation  |czx_sextses 7 NOXIEMA 97% 
for Election of Pope Toawe Offa - |p Skin Cream © st ] er Ss er ore Regular $1.23 Value 
(Continued From Page One) | B 
|resentatives of the foreign govern-| Than 29 Nationally Known ARBASOL BIRTHDAY 
/ments. | a ALo MENTHOL | SGHESTUIN, RANK | Brands of Home Furnishings SHAVE 4 . 
| President Sean O'Kelly of Ire-, . . 
land was the highest ranking’ We Invite You to Visit wee BOMB | B e h 
|mourner, the only chief of state; : é ring t e 
present. Foreign Ministers Hein- $9c Value 
‘rich von Brentano of West Ger-, OUR NEW SLEEP SHOP M * 
|many, Maurice de Murville of 3 . 39° Children 
Prance ang ew! of Bel-| |. . where wé are offering better values in (Ff  @ Be The Bark ob Peth score | NATIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS of Hollywood cool. refreshing ¥ ments. The Earl! of?Perth repre- Beds Mattresses Boxcurinen Bed d Imentholated’ shave: al. 
sented Queen Elizabeth II of Brit- ~~ ses — xX springs — Ss an VW Al lain: Steel Bed Frames. 
Dulles was accompanied by his | : sae ; 
wife and President Eisenhower's | All Quality F urnishings 
other two representatives, Mrs. | Offering You the 
|; Clare Boothe Luce, former U.S. | é Ss ; A Oo Hi ; 
ambassador to Italy, and chair- reatest Savings in ur History Stores to 
| an soba .A. MeCene sf the U4. “You always get the most for your money: at Miller’ | | , ) 3 ya er’s” ¢ ‘ | Rtoetc Energy Comanesien: Our Lower Overhead Makes the Difference Serve You 
| Francis Cardinal Spellman of! E T T ‘ ’ 
|New York was one of the four 
jcardinals assisting Eugene Cardi- asy _ferms, oo. ENDEN , 1" 
/nal Tisserant, the French-born = 
(aeanlotthesCotiegs ot Caritas FURNITURE SHAMPOO | OPEN EVERY in celebration of the Mass. COMPANY Reg. $1.50—Cream or Liquid @' 
x *® *& n Tonite & Tuesday Only NI T | | The general public was not ad- Our 23rd Year at This Same Location” ey 
| The home of Tom Smith, 297 mitted, and the chanting of the 
Vatican choir rang through the| 
vast emptiness of the cathedral 144 Oakland Ave. 
Open Friday Evenings Cc SIMM).A". 98 N. Sagnaw —Main Floor 9 PM. losed Wednesday Afternoons 
        
    ese   
    
 Se ee ee “re PE Bo ++ papal . 4 ee peumceeris ha = a 
Ee Ec eR Ee ao ye gp gen waaim age We eee eds « = 
     
  a # « 
         
  ae      
  
  
       
        FOR om _[. ra THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY; OCTOBER 20, 1958 _ | ue 
on Dantiar Moatinn|..™ Birmingham League of! For 'T nage Safety Work re om ic on | , Plan Pontiac Meeting| wm ‘sats v's |For Teenage Safety Work == | nye COME JOIN THE CROWDS on State Constitution"... s auf ete High School Pupils MISS. TONIGHT ond TUESDAY ‘Why Pontiac e voters should apt, wl head. te meeting ort High school students on the steer- ceived from area fire departments iT! Te 9 ROM. | prove a state constitutional con-|wWed to begin at 7:30-p. m. in the ing conimittee of the proposed Oak- for next year’s program. e 4 vention Noy. 4 will be outlined at! school auditorium. land County Teenage Safety Con- + « ¢«€ a public meeting Thursday night ference were the guests of the   
at Lincoln Junior High School. Safety Committee of the Pontiac) The safety committee also re- ; Ps ‘ ived notice that Nov. 16 will Citizens were urged to attend Chamber of Commerce at its lunch-|C¢* pope the ‘session by its three sponsors, Pontiac H ospital eon meeting yesterday in the|De Observed as “Michigan Traffic 
  Safety Sunday.” Area clergymen 
he ine Am Aeneey Com Cronin Arranges ("et tate. will be asked to stress safety to 
ia a Pontiac “eaeton P ; | The t cain 8 saci ting their; Pe” congregations. : eenagers, re ing 
Assn TV for atients high schools, drew praise from the 
. Main —— =a i Dr, Wil-| Patients at Pontiae General eg OA A rr fmt aire Ship-|6 Pontiac Men Seized R. . ersi f > E 2 ely * Z a - 
Michigan coy specialist, at oar the. wornen's: hospitad mission, who called the conference|in Vice Squad Raid “ jects that tached to the Institute of Public’ auxiliary. ae ~ lel bv ai paca Were weeds a 
  
  
  
              
  
   
           
  
      
                    ——- In a A ee a [Right im a vice aqua ald at 6 d Wessen Sf. ‘~ ‘ (Savestionments - -\a Detroit firm for special hospital Among the subjects proposed sf were Ushra Gay, 25, of 
Does BLADDER [Bets that are ‘availathe to patients) for discussion at the conference |174 jake St.; Dunbar Gay, 28, of on a renta B. are school traffic hazard sur- . lei . : 1) 
The sets have such features a8, yveys, year-round traffic safety towed agin a Thea 
IRRITATION under-the-pillow = speakers and) pregrans, auto safety checks, |oon 41 of 14 Grant St.; Willie highly mobile stands. essay and speech contests on the 7. 53 of 512 Branch St: and - Y NERVOUS? | Proceeds from the rental service) importance of safety, school as- E ugene ‘Douglas 18. of 494 Bloom- 
Rr] erator? formulation, thes. (will go towards purchase of hos-| sembiles on safety, and columns Execee 3, | table and depeeaes |pital equipment, said Mrs. Ray-| in school papers on the impor- > ; 5 go ge esa Rapaport, auxiliary presi-| tance of safety. The six men pleaded guilty to, pestder Weannces” — tee ire mest, | dont ce + gambling in a public place in Muni- 
ting, Getting Up Nights—or Strong — | a ; ‘cipal Court this morning and were Cloudy Urine, due to common Kidney or | Sherwin Birnkrant, chairman of fined $10 or two days. fn secondary Backache Hestene set | The first known white man tothe committee's Fire Prevention : Doors Nervousness. ih such casts Now leaprosed | vigi Week ported that ma OVSTEX ususil? gives auch waned |visit South Bend, Ind., (where the|Week program, re: ny oe 4 bi 0 10 AM. to 9 PM. 
lef by combating irritating germsinacid |University of Notre Dame is lo-|congragulatory letters have been| Joseph Smith, founder o e pen Ml. . fale ato tor roune or dd. Get CYeTEE jeated) was Father James Mar-| received on - ad angio and — = mer by a mob at Come Early! You'll Ot drugsist, Peel better fast 7 that entries already are re- hage, Iil., in . , ee ee ee ee —_—SS—_ Tuesday, 10 A. M. to 9 P. M. Not Be Disappointed! 
SAVE Below Is an Exact Picture of the Crowds Waiting for 
MONEY! | the Doors to Open at 10 A. M. Come Don’t Miss It! We 
1c a" — Must 
Tht ; | Lm \aghZ E: Vacate WHAT ’ tre 1-6 Ley O ; ur 
ee _ Present 
ane Buildit DOING uilding 
AT in the 
Shortest THIS Possibl 
GREAT ossible 
   
       
Rules of Absolute 
Close-Out Sale 
@ All Sales Final, No 
Exchanges, No 
Refunds 
@-Deposit Necessary 
on All €.0.D. 
Purchases 
@ All Sales Cash or 
30-60-90 Day Short 
Term Accounts   Open Tonight and Friday ‘til 9:00 P. M. 
BIG SAVINGS ON ROOM SUITES! 
  Other Financing Can 
Be Arranged 
       
   —— 
    
gi mere tS ee eee Sea rata PE as 
WE GUARANTEE LOWEST PRICES OR YOUR MONEY CHEERFULLY 
REFUNDED IF YOU CAN BUY SAME QUALITY FOR LESS ELSEWHERE! Hundreds of folks bought the opening days of this great sale. Proving beyond a shadow of a doubt that the general       
  IN A SWEEPING CURVE! a vA PP" RET 
NE 4 | i LL Ip ty NEW SECTIONAE GROUP 
i 
  
  
  
  
    
  
      an Siew SAPS - 5 — Nylon Covers public knows a genuine bargain when they see one. Come in tonight, all day Tuesday and Tuesday night pre- ee Se lll aii . pared to buy! THE PRICES TELL THE STORY—You be the judge! Nothing reserved—nothing held back! = ier Sty tees All 3 Sections Luxury 
2 ae ane CIA Reem ae LIVING ROOM SUITES Platform Rockers DINING ROOM SUITES \ Platé Rockers , eth WHILE $ 88 WHILE THEY LAST! Come and eet $AQBT OUT THEY GO! ~ 4 . ‘ ' $185.50 2-Pc. Living Room Suites go at, $139.87 them. A great #8 $119.50 Dining Room Suites go at..... $ 89.87 
wee: THEY $229.50 2-Pc. Living Room Suites go at, $154.87 | 2ue20 10 £0 2 $249.50 Dining Room Suites go at..... $188.87 = @e> — LAST : $25950 2 Pe. Living Recon Suites gs at, $179.87 Reg. 49.50 Lane $259.50 Dining Room Suites go at... $218.87 ; $339.50 2-Pc. Living Room Suites go at’ $289.87 $429.50 Dining Room Suites go at..... $319.87 - $429.50 2-Pc. Living Room Suites go at. $329.87 | Cedar Chests $599.50 Dining Room Suites go at... . $429.87 
— Regularly $339.95 2 and 3-Pe. SECTIONALS | 2250.2 $38°"| BEDROOM SUITES OUT THEY Go! Cedar Chests at. . 
Made by Master Crolismaa   
  
    
     
           
  . 
: : All Sectionals Reduced for Clearance ff | 2250 2-7. sections g0........ siass7] Reg. 5443 $149.50 3.0, dteom Sete arith. $1198F : dhe | | $289.50 2-Be. Sectionals go at....... $169.87 | Baby Cribs Complete | $187.50 3-Pc. Bedroom Suite go at... $149.87 : | | $239.50 3-Pc. Sectionals, Curved...... $179.87 | occ, (caus com: S 87 $239.50 3-Pc. Bedroom Suite go at... .$189.87 P AY 90: DAYS S AM E C ASH ] | $259.50 3-Pe. Sectionals, Curved... $269.87 J plete with Matt- 29 9299 207 To Resreem tube geet. 3219.87 24 to = as | | $449.50 3-Pe. Sectionals, Curved. ..... $389.87 J ress... Tonight. $399.50 3-Pc. Bedroom Suite go at... .$269.87 : . | $319.50 Custom Made Sofa at ....... $179.87 - $419.50 3-Pc. Bedroom Suite go. at... .$299.87 
2S se 7 Sie a ite OCCASIONAL bs oe : et i i Over 300 Platform Rockers, Lounge Chairs, Swivel Ne Glitecmanmlamercme $ 59.50 I. S. Mattress go at........... $35.87 ame f i Rockers, Occasional Chairs, Recliner Chairs at c cll, pe 119.50 Foam Rubber Mattress and | | Sensational Reductions. Lane step - cocktail, end Box Spring... «ss... .. $85.87 
$79.50 Occasional Chairs go at ....... $24.87 | and lamp tables go at $149.50 I. S. Sets, Twin Only, 837 Coil $ 98.87 ' $69.50 Swivel Rockers go at ....... $49.87 | close-out prices $39.50 1. S. Mattress .............. $ 16.87 $59.50 Swivel Rockers go at ......... $99.87 $59.50 30” Divans ................ $ 49.87 | | $119.50 Lounge Chairs go at ......... $79.87 UP TO $39.50 $89.50 Sofa Beds at ............... $64.87 $119.50 Kroehler Relaxer Chair ...... $89.87 TABLE LAMPS $129.50 Sofa Beds at ............... $84.87 $129.50 Barfel-Back Swivel Rockers .. $89.87 One Group Rem- 
$369.50 Barca Lounger Recliner ...... $119.87 Fo ondt Ga nidiell bad 
Table Lamps go at     
  
       
   
    
   . ; Reg. $219.50 5-Pc. Maple BREAKFAST SETS 
$359.5 Simmons Hide-a-Bed LIVING ROOM $74.50 Breakfast Set go at........... $59.87 
Becuer see oe Cen uline GROUP $119.50 Breakfast Set go at...........$79.87 
beds ES aa ATi $129.50 Breakfast Set go at........... $89.87 
iain ara $139.50 Breakfast Set go at........... $99.87 While They Last - @- eee eee Git Roun Group Bet ] 43°" $159.50 Breakfast Set go at ........ $109.87 cocktail table, 2 
step tables 
   *Fiat Rater 
Ze it | = 5-PIECE DINETTE ey Right)” (Left ang . : 
“8 Extra Strong 
Tig] Socket: . . 
} “es ese tor ar Formica Extension Table $ 8 8 
lt Position, "6 4 Matched Chairs J ° 3%" Extension gar 
“Sturdy Carrying Reg. $79.95         
  
    
Artist’s Drawing of Our MODERN FURNITURE HOME Nearing Completion   
FREE PARKING | - FREE DELIVERY| CLEARANCE   
    
  
     
          
      : ON ALL 
7 Furniture Pictured Typifies Similar Selections BEDROOM SUITES | 
MUL e tiles | LIVING ROOM SUITES B) | Srrasac ip fr 
FURNITURE CHAIRS | coh) (eae COMPANY RECLINERS | 
| CARPETING | 
atk @ : DE-A- | | After 41 Years on South Saginaw St. Opposite Auburn Ave., Stewart-Glenn Co. will move 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE : PONTIAC HIDE-A-WAY BEDS ! to the New Store pictured above. An extreme effort will be made to close out our present , SOFA BEDS | | stocks in order to vacate our present building in the shortest possible time to save the 
3 BLOCKS WEST OF SOUTH SAGINAW Reduced to Make Room Bi} [inconvenience and expense of moving. 
ny fad 4 
 THE PONTIAC PRESS,   MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1958   
      Kuwait Richest | Deathstlsewhere [)eaths in Ponti d Nearby A } | * Weains in FONTAC and Neal reas By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS y : 
. . KARLSRUHE, Germany (AP) ‘ . i 
in Cal ast | —Dr. Joseph Wintrich, 67, presi- INFANT MILLER B, Saunders of Fort Bliss, Tex.,jat his home following a heart at- ; 
dent of West Germany's Supreme} A daughter, born to Mr. and Mrs. ase ri E. Array of bs chesed tack. 
, {Constitutional Court, died Sunday) Richard Miller of 1 Quick Ct., died|field, Tenn.; and three daughters,’ He was director of t : Ruler Invests Royalties of a heart attack. two hours after birth at St. Joseph|Mrs. Clifford Irwin of Port Huron, field Optimist Club a "ie Ok 
for Schools Hos itals x * * Mercy Hospital Saturday. Mrs. Milton Longstaff of Clarkston jjanq Village Subdivision Assn., @ 
. ‘ P ‘| SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — Sam-| Graveside service was held this and Mrs. Keith Dudley of Pontiac.)member of the Goodfellows and : 
Social Services uel A. Lillo, 88, one of Chile’s best/morning at Perry Mt. Park Ceme- Also surviving are 13 ogi Southfield Lodge 572, F & AM. 
known poets, died Sunday, He wasitery with the Rev. Tom Malone “> Cot sare orane a jon He also was a former member of : 
WASHINGTON—In the midst of |2 winner of the National Litera- officiating. Arrangements were by w ae oy MA ts aEeG iftin a the Southfield Board of Review. é 
the troubled Near East, the tiny | ture Prize, Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. cere’, at Sp ri "| Surviving are his wife, Mildred : 
. x * tk BENJAMIN H. SAUNDERS : L., a brother and two sisters, . 
sheikdom of Kuwait is gripped by 
a peaceful revolution. Based on an 
ever-rising tide of oi] and money, 
it is changing the face and life of 
the nation. 
* * * 
Kuwait is the richest of the new} 
oil-rich, says the National Geo- 
graphic Society. Wedged between 
giant Saudi Arabia and Iraq at the 
head of the Persian Gulf, it is MOSCOW (AP) — Prof. Nicko- 
lai N, Slavyanov, 81, noted geol- 
ogist and hydrogeologist, died Oct. 
15, the Soviet Academy of Sciences 
announced Sunday. 
* * * 
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) -- 
Dr, Ernest D, Wilson, 65, head of 
the chemcal engineering depart- 
ment at Worcester Polytechnic In- 
      Benjamin H. Saunders, 70, of 1705 
Auburn Rd. died at his home early 
Sunday morning. 
A member of the Baptist Church, 
Mr. Saunders was formerly a con- 
tractor. 
Surviving are his wife, Alma; his 
mother, Mrs. Enoch Saunders of 
St. Clair; two sons, Sgt. Benjamin T. NED MC GREGGOR 
SOUTHFIELD — Service for T. 
Neil Mcreggor, 61, of 25082 Lark- 
ins Rd., will be held at 2:30 p.m. 
tomorrow at the Ross B. Northrop 
‘and Son Funeral Home, Detroit. 
Burial will be in Grandlawn Cem- 
etery, Detroit. 
Mr. McGreggor, a Southfield City 
councilman, died early Saturday         FRANK HARSEN 
LUM — Service for Frank Har- 
sen, 79, of 2163 Mitchell Lake Rd., 
will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday 
at the Lum Methodist Church. 
Burial will be in Lum Cemetery. 
Mr. Harsen died early this morn- 
ing at his home after a long ill- 
ness. Funeral errangements were 
made by Muir Brothers Funeral 
smaller than New Jersey. Yet be-|stitute since 1940, died Sunday, Home. 
low its desert sand and camel x « * ° » || Surviving are his wife, Sarah 
grass lies the world’s largest! sp LOUIS (AP) — Paul Beis- Losers in Beauty Contest Jane; a son, Keith, of Lum,; a 
cnown oil pool. man, 60, who started his theater . daughter, Miss Zada of Flint; a 
te |career at age 13 as an usher and F a re Bette Ti Th a n Wi n n er brother, Fred of Otisville, and one 
Skyrocketing output has _ shot, 
Kuwait to first place among Near 
East oil producers. In global line- 
up, it ranks after the United| x & Sn ny ee eS Tan look at the case histories of beauty for Robert J. Menraey, 50,24 NON-SLIP, TWIN-GRIP 
States, Venezuela and Russia. It! CHICAGO (AP) — Joseph A. 1 intending to become a star. contest contestants—and what hap-iGarden Grove, Calif, a former ... famous for “9 lives” of safe, comfort- 
provides half of Britain's crude oil 
imports. 
RULER INVESTS ROYALTIES 
Croesus of Kuwait's sticky treas- 
ure is His Highness Abdullah as 
Salim as Subah. His state is Brit- ‘became manager of the American 
[Toester and Municipal Opera in 
. Louis, died Sunday of cancer. 
Rawlings, 66, retired Associated 
Press newsman whose career cov- 
ered 40 years of service in Mid- 
west cities, died Sunday of a heart- 
ailment. He served as AP corre- 
spondent in Lincoln and Omaha, HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — You 
And the line by the gruff but kindly 
cameraman er prop Man or some- 
body or other who says, ‘Look, 
kid—why don’t you go home—back 
to your family?” 
* * * The pretty actress said that any 
pened to them—would show that 
the lowers, whether runner-ups or 
lower, seem to fare better in 
movies than the winners, 
* * * 
“I know about the winners, too, grandchild. 
ROBERT J. MUMMERY 
MILFORD — Graveside service 
Milford resident, will be held at 
3 p. m. Wednesday at Oak Grove 
Cemetery. 
Mr. Mummery died Oct. 13 at 
Garden Grove. His body is at 
»|Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, 
ish protected, but his rule over his | |Neb.. tre ies ay ae any It's supposed to happen evgry|she said. ‘“They’re secretaries, Milford. ; 
people is absolute, and the oil roy-| . —. day. Maybe it does. But there|schoolteachers or mothers with Surviving are his wife, Mar- 
alties go to him by dynastic law. * have also been times when it|large batches of kids. And every-/84ret; a son, Robert, and a 
Had he so wished, His High- 
ness could doubtless have be- 
come the world’s most lavish 
spender — or its most affluent 
miser. Instead, he chose to in- 
vest the oll revenues in develop- 
ing his country. 
In the port city of Kuwait, the 
sheikdom’s capital, old mud-walled 
houses have given way to concrete 
homes, public buildings, hospitals! 
and schools. Broad, paved ave- 
nues, along which white-robed 
Arabs drive gleaming American 
cars, replace narrow, winding al- 
leys. Radio towers share the sky- 
line with mosques and minarets PITTSTOWN, N.J. (AP)—Wade 
Everitt Griswold, 62, a retired 
printing executive, was found shot 
to death Sunday. Police termed 
the death a suicide, He retired 
last July as executive director of 
jthe Lithographic Technical Foun- 
dation in New York. 
* * * 
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — 
Douglas G. Timsley, 68, veteran 
newspaperman who retired in 1955 
after 22 years with the Florida 
Times-Union, died Saturday of a 
heart attack, He also had worked 
for newspapers in Birmingham, 
Ala., St. Louis and St. Paul, Minn. 
* * * 
    worked out in reverse. “Consider 
Colleen Miller, the girl who lost a 
beauty contest and became a 
movie star. 
Miss Miller, who stars in “Step 
Down to Terror’ for Universal- 
International, doesn’t think her 
case is particularly unusual. 
“T was ‘Miss Portland’ in a 
beauty contest, and nothing hap- 
pened,’’ she said. ‘‘When | entered 
the Miss America contest and lost, 
U-I signed me to a long term 
movie contract. Since losing that 
contest, I've had nine major film 
assignments. If that’s what hap- 
pens to losers, make me a loser time they read, they seem to pick 
up a magazine with an article 
about them—how they won the ig 
contests and so forth. 
“The also-rans may not have 
pleased enough judges, but 
they’ve been pleasing a lot of 
uadiences. Rhonda Fleming is an 
also-ran. Linda Darnell was a 
loser in the same contest, Susan 
Hayward lost the |let’s-find-a- 
Scarlett-O’Hara-contest, but she 
later won an Oscar, 
“There are lots of such names 
~Yvonne DeCarlo, Myrna Loy, 
Dorothy Lamour and Joan Blon- 
dell. They all lost-in beauty con- 
    daughter, Shelley, both at home; 
a brother and three sisters.   able wear... . best buy for all the family’s 
shoes! Always look for, ask for Cat's Paw 
heels. . . Cat's Paw thin heel lifts... and 
Cat's Paw twin-gripper Soles 
       
   SHOE 
REPAIRING 
  
cH 
  
           
           
                 
     
       
    
  DURING SALE! 
October 20th to 
October 22nd, 
Mon., Tues., Wed. 
    
PIONEER PURE 
adorned with flashing electric CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) — Dr. every time, please.”’ tests." — 5 1PON 
lights. Forrest E. Craver, 82, a member SAS 5 BONUS cou GRANULATED 
tk of the Dickinson College faculty IONEER PURE 
Under a long-term program of 
social services and public works, 
Kuwaitis receive free medical care, 
and free education. Half a dozen) for 37 years, died Saturday. He 
| retired in 1946 as professor emer- 
itus of physical education. He also 
‘taught Latin, Greek and mathe- | INSURANCE 
Fire — Auto — Burglary     
    
         
    SUGAR i a 
‘ee oF ee he eo * “ma _*e ew eo 
     
      
                      
  
     
        
   
    
   
       
     
       
       
      the county and state election, said 
vee ° | sion to take disciplinary action 
allan ‘against ni 
* * * * * 
Jaycees hope to keep the booth | Galeazzi- i insisted he had re- 
open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday ceived no payment for his pub- 
through Saturday until election, lished diary. He said he released 
providing non-partisan information| the account because he felt there 
concerning the mechanics of voting|would be ‘‘perhaps some profes- 
machines, precincts, voter eligibil-| sional advantage s in its publica- 
ity and registration. \tion.”’ 
GLASSES ore |Rome Medical Assn. for its deci- well - staffed .and spectacularly matics. He was born in Wapwal- Cc Limit 1 
equipped hospithis, including tuber- open, Pa, Busi ness BAG with 
culosis and mental institutions, x * * ; LB. - coupon 
have been established. The scores 4s, who wor On Gerald L, Woks roles MARKETS © wn 
of new schools offer not only state who wo! or newspapers in + BOTH PEOP a : 
transportation and lunches, but—|Detroit and Sioux City, Iowa, died Good a eon EXPIRES OCT. 22 ~ Coupon 
even more remarkable in a Mos- passaged of a heart atrack. a fis 
] land—t for girls as well | Was a former reporter and rewrite T 
traning for gs as we othe Dewat Free Prem | “rv” — MAYNARD JOHNSON | . * ~ ry the Detroit news, and the Detroit, - : 
4 Times, and most recently was copy vee General Insurance . ‘ 
Perhaps most welcome to-a des- editor for the Sioux City Journal. | Heme Owners’ 807 Community National Bank 
eert-harried people is the capital’ s| All-In-One Ph FE 4-4523 
huge distilling plant that turns sea Pelicy one - / 
water into fresh in a modern ver- Pj XII {Ph ; 
sion of Aladdin gand the lamp | 1US ysician FACIAL TISSUE 
magic. Eventually, a _ piped-in 12 ° i 
stream from the Shatt al ‘Arab in {0 Be Investigated Season Tickets Are Going Fast! : 
southern Iraq may create farm ; 
land in the arid interior. ROM E(UPI) — Premier Amin-| - Get Yours Now! 
| | Limit WHITE |tore Fanfani has ordered an inves-| . Cc TH e 
' |tigation to determine whether Prof. KIW ANIS white 3 wi or 
Taking ver oot |Riceardo Galeazzi-lisi could be -or seers COUPON COLOR SIZE COUPON 
|punished under Italian law for his T ] d d color : A ARKETS ) e WITH 
widely-condemned articles on the) T ae aoe “ : 
fo Inform Voters last hours of Pope Pius XII, rave an venture coop OrcourON ExPi . 
| t & & 4 
The Pontiac League of Women| Fanfani acted amid a growing Series 
Voters has taken over Friday and|storm over the publication yester- 
Saturday operation of the down- day of Galeazzi-lisi's diary des- 
iown Fomine voter, information enbing nuinate and detaied ac) PONTIAC CENTRAL HIGH AUDITORIUM a a see: 8 PM. | PILLSBURY or BALLARD The Pontiac Area Junior Cham- Newspapers of every political ; . TOP F ROS T 
b f Cc . a in for |eaning criticized Galleazzi - Lisi, | D li htf l d Th Lli i 
er Of Ome ree AS xing et | who was physician to the late Pope e ig ut an ru ing | FROZEN 
more volunteers to help man the for almost a quarter of a century. ° 
booth through Nov. 4. the date of! an the newspapers lauded the Entertainment | . an 
      GRAPE JUICE    
   
      
    
     J aycee The Kiwanis Club of Pontiae presents seven of the 
top travelogues in the Country. These are all per- 
sonally conducted, the kind that appear to capacity 
houses in the largest cities. Read this list then get 
your season ticket now. Only limited number 
available, TUBE 
    PHILADELPHIA 
CREAM CHEESE 3 0z. Pkg.         7 TOP TRAVELOGUES 
SEASON 5 00 
ov TICKET 
Tuesday, Nov. 4, 1958 
* CURTIS NAGEL. “Song of Switzerland” 
Tuesday, Dec. 9. 1958 
NICOL SMITH. “Island of the Caribbean” 
Tuesday, Jan. 13, 1959 
° IRVING M JOHNSON, “Trade Wind Islands” 
4 Tuesday, Jan. 27, 1959 
¢ JULIAN GROMER. “The Mighty Amazon” 
ix Tuesday, Feb. 24, 1959 
* CARL H. THOMSEN. “Wonders of Alaska” 
6 Tuesday, March 10, 1959 
7   
  
               
   OUR FAVORITE CUT 
GREEN BEANS 303 
Can COMPLETE 
Lens—Frames 
11" 
Bifocals $3.00 Extra 
High in Quality! -Low in Price! 
Your Choice of Frames... 
Latest in Styles 
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 
@ Prescriptions Filled @ Safety Glasses 
‘@ RX Sun Glasses @ Repair Service 
@ Frames Replaced 
Come in and Have Your Present 
Glasses Adjusted — No Charge! 
Glasses Adjusted ¢roperly Means _ Bétter 
Vision         
   
   
   BRYLCREEM 
FINE ate COMB free 
inside package 
PLUS 
bi - * SAJORDIS KITTEL PARKER, “Denmark and 
Greenland” 
Tuesday, March 31, 1959 
“Utah”     SILVER STAR 
1# CELLO. PKG. 
SLICED 
BACON 
1 OOD-0-MAT 
     
   
     * STAN MIDGLEY, 
     Get Your Season Ticket Now! 
No Single Admission Tickets Will Be Sold. Tickets available 
from Any Kiwanian or Mai} Coupon Below. 
Kiwanis Club of Pontiac 1 
70 West Lawrence Street 
Pontiac, Michigan 
Please send me a Kiwanis Trave) and Adventure Series 
Folder and advise where season tickets may be purchased. ee 2 
ee 
Oe 
Oe 
ee 
ee 
ee 
Se 
ee 
ee 
cee 
Ge 
oe 
ee 
          NAME. ...ccscccscesssesscecececseccarecsscersceetecesecsee . HM GES OR ROT RINT EOD Corner Sanford Street _ FE2-1298 
Baker Optical Co. ADORIIGSG | oo ccccccccccccccetcesccccccscectccessearcoctcecce 
861, N.Saginaw = sera Ws Preece Re ‘1 BD | iD = Mm BB K a f FE 8-4331 The whole of the net proceeds from the Travelogue series will be devoted — 
HOURS 9:30 - 5:30 — FRI. ‘til 8: :30 te the work of the Pontiac Kiwanis Club {7 serving the youth of this f VAUTO) A uburn aN ve, Ph. FE5 -8311 (NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY) CLOSED WEDNESDAY and neighboring communities 
      
     a Ea oe ee SS 
  
  In Methodist ‘Harvest Banquet’ 
Gold Rush ‘Days Return nad omen, reat greies ed 
cherch organizations work 
       
nual affair. 
bjt 
hee : 
sk FEE E 
drive are bringing gifts in 
  Nancy Barton of North Anderson 
street and Danny Arnold of Riviera 
bags to the covered wagon at the 68th 
annual Harvest Home Banquet, held Mrs, Austin as com- 
fy 
Butler, publigity; Mrs. Chester         
    Pentiae Press Phetes 
Friday in First Methodist Church. 
Nancy and Danny represent the pri- 
mary and intermediate departments of 
Sunday School. gold nugget 
  
a = ate 
    DIVIDEND 
COLLECTOR'S    
  ITEM    
  Trivet and Wall Piece 
LARGE 7 in. DIAMETEK      
      © NORTHERN RAROROCK MAPLE @ RUSSED SALEM FINISH 
Ԥ 95 to 
      ! 
M@ Mirror on The Wall, 
By RUTH MILLETT 
How NOT to be a bore: 
Never—uniess you are trying to 
|put a painfully shy person at ease 
|—do more than your share of the 
‘talking The biggest bores are al- 
|most always the biggest talkers. 
If you want to discuss your aches 
and pains and illness, visit your 
|doctor, not your friends. No matter persen who did say exactly what 
| you understood him to say. 
When you tell a story, don’t ruin 
it before you start with some such 
comment as, ““You would have had 
to be there to really appreciate 
|this,” or, ‘‘You’d have to know so- 
and-so to really get a kick out of 
    
just by your telling it, why bother 
how sorry your friends are that to tell it? If you can make it in- 
you have those aches and pains, 'teresting or entertaining, 
they don’t want to hear a blow- needn't begin with an apology. 
by-blow account of your suffering.| When it's your turn to listen, 
Don’t have one pet topic that jreally listen. Don’t interrupt or 
you always manage to steer the ‘let your mind wander while -you 
| conversation toward. Den’t you, fix a smile on your face and nod 
yourself, dread being caught in |vaguely to everything being said. a corner by a person who always | T° be an apreciative listener, you 
    at the Harvest Home Ban 
black bonnet, a creation of 
The lace on her white apr 
grandmother in the early 1800s. 
said she “rigged up” the Mrs. George Hamilton of Judson street arrived    
     
    
ag ee a 
Sale! 
   82 N. Saginew St. Nylons... with or 
without seams... 
77¢ | Spates $150 
Neumode Hosti ery Shops . 
Neumode Hedert Shop | FE 2-7730 
  
  
  quet wearing her mother’s 
1875, and a paisley shawl. 
on thas made by her great- 
Mrs. Hamilton, 86, 
outfit just for fun.   
of Marilyn Mae Davidson and 
Roger Lee Frentheway. The Rev. 
Philip. Samers officiated at the 
candlelight ceremony before 200 
guests. 
Parents of the couple are Mr. 
and Mrs. Douglas H. Davidson of) 
|West Beverly street and Mr. and 
Mrs. Abe Frentheway of Oxford. Marilyn Davidson Weds 
Roger Lee Frentheway | 
| Vases of fall flowers banked the} 
jaltar of Marimont Baptist Church 
\for the Saturday evening wedding 
The bride wore a white floor- |   
FLUFF-DRY SERVICE 
  Make Mondays Sunny-days 
What a a to send all your family wash to Pontiac 
A 0s Laundry! Oceans 
ft oh-so-bright! 
folded. Then when Careful Dan returns them nile suds and oer rinsings make 
and towels are fluity dried and 
there's almost 
nothing leit to do Wouldn't you like this service? 
  
  rrr ~~ ning | 
anna RA A Ree rd Free “Plastic Bag with Dry Clean   
DRY CLEANERS 
7-Hour Service at Our 
3 Locations 
$40 S. Telegraph Rd. 
2682 West 12 Mile—Berkley 
$33 S. Hunter—Birmingham   
  
  
  
illusion fell from a crown of | 
pearis and rhinestones, and she | 
carried a bouquet of stephanotis | 
centered by a white orchid. 
| Barbara Ann Davidson was her 
sister’s maid of honor. Bridesmaids 
were Janice Gain, the  bride- 
\groom's sister-in-law, Mrs, Ardith 
Frentheway of Kalamazoo; Phyllis 
‘Davidson, another of the bride's! 
sisters; and Charlotte Zubal of 
[Rochester, the bride’s cousin. 
All wore ballerina-length dresses | 
Am | a Bore to All? length gown with a fitted bediee, of toast chiffon over taffeta. The} 
Queene Anne collar and long ta- maid of honor carried bronze} 
pered sleeves. Her veil of silk (chrysanthemums, and the brides-, 
|\maids’ bouquets were of yellow) 
jchrysanthemums. 
Judith Ann Frentheway of Kala-| 
mazoo was flower girl. | 
The bridegroom's brother, Rob- 
ert Maxwell Frentheway of Kal- 
amazoo, was- best man. Seating 
Crawterd, Raymond Blanken- 
  this.’’ If the story won't stand up| 
you | burg and Harry E. Hil dr., all 
| of Lake Orion, and Eugene Me- 
Vay. 
| When the couple left for a 
|honeymoon to Canada following a: 
‘reception held in the church par-| 
jlors, the new Mrs. Frentheway was. 
\wearing a beige suite with brown 
‘accessories and the orchid from | 
her bridal bouquet. 
* * * 
Mrs. Davidson selected an aqua 
lace dress with black accessorics | ; 
| the guests were ushers Arthur 
| 
} 
| 
|   take your 
‘BEST GIRL’ 
out to 
dinner 
at 
She'll enjoy the delicious food, 
efficient service, and friendly 
atmosphere! 
penal 
Month         
talks about the same thing? jhave to be alert. 
| Don’t expect your children to be | 
jas fascinating a topic of conversa-| 
|tion to someone else as they are| 
to you. And that goes for your 
dog, too. 
Listen to your own voice, not | 
just to your words. If your voice | 
tends to grate, or whine or has a, 
|discouraged ring—do | 
| 
\ 
} 
  TO MEMBERS ONLY 
JOIN NOW... Only members are entitled to 
purchase this item at special dividend price. Watch for 
future outstanding decorative and useful dividends for 
Colonial Club members.   
     for her daughter’s wedding. Mrs. 
'Frentheway wore a dusty rose! 
sheath with black accessories. 
\Both had corsages of pink eure 
MRS. ROGER L,. FRENTHEWAY) |tions. Inch marks made on your 
garden trowel will help you to 
— the proper planting depth 
or flower bulbs.   WOODWARD at SQUARE LAKE RD. 
    
      
      
     
    
  
ister ig 
    
      
    
     
about it. 
Don’t overwork a few plati- 
tudes or meaningless comments 
to sum up any statement any- | 
bedy else makes. For instance, | “Early Shopper” 
“You don’t say!”’ is not a | SALE 
l = of 
  Saginaw at Orchard Lake Ave. 
PARK FREE At Rear of Store       
          
   
   
      
      
Regular Much Higher 
ALLIGATOR grain calf 
Pointed toe 
OPERAS 
i   Famous 
Swedish 
ANGEL 
CHIMES 
$100 ,       
  
    
  
    a famed 
brand | 
you know only HEAR 
Dr. George W. Crane 
TOMORROW 
Pontiac Central High School Auditorium, 8 P. M. 
LECTURE and 
Question and Answer Period . 
The Subject: ‘Sex Problems in Marriage’ 
FREE ADMISSION PUBLIC INVITED) 24 W. Huron Street 
Sponsored by THE PONTIAC PRESS Open Tonight and Friday ‘til 9 P.M. bs for Alligator Calf 
The Crofoot Athletic Field Parking Area Will Be Open ! | in the Shoe Dept. 
; , .     
    _—o Special, direct shipment from Sweden makes 
this price possible. Of gleaming solid brass, 
chimes play a merry tune when the candles 
are lit! Makes a delightful gift for youngsters 
on your Christmas list! 
REFILL BOX of 12 CANDLES........25c 
WIGGS 
    @ BLACK and BROWN 
ALLIGATOR CALF 
@ BLACK SUEDE 
@ BLACK and BROWN 
GALE 
  Matching Bags 
Your F qehion Store           
      i ‘i 
  
  
      
     tHe wew... 
THE EXQUISITE j , VK fies, Danish !cderne 
FOR BABY’S PRICELESS FIRST SHOES 
For the first time, you can add the elegance of contem LL) 
r, 
rary 
bookends or ashtrays to the never-ending thrill of baby’s tiny 
shoes gorgeously plated forever in rich SATIN SILVER or 
Sparkling Bronze. Reduced THESE FEW DAYS ONLY as . 
an Introductory Special. NI Also portrait stands, pen sets, wall brackets in the popular 
Traditional Patterns . . . from $3.95 Unmounted. 
SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICE 
DANISH MODERNE BOOKENDS (Proce after Now 3 — $1595 Bronze, $21.95 sr!ver) 
DANISH MODERNE ASHTRAY {Proce atter Nov. 3 — $13.95 bronze, $19.95 siiver) . 
stores. 
  Pontiac’s Oldest Jeweler 
Fred N. Pauli Co. 28 W. Huron 
“The Store Where Genuine Engraving ONLY 10¢ per letter 
_ SPECIAL ENDS NOV. 3—Bring shoes in tomorrow. 
Quality Counts” $4199 BRONZE 
SATIN SILVER $1699 
BRONZE $4 oOo os 
SATIN SILVER $1599 
  DO WOT COMFUSE with inferior imitations 
sold thry 
sold metal process 1s sold only im retail the mail. Bron-Shoe DUCTYL 
FE 2-7257 Ko. ee 
"INeed Periodic Relaxing os.   
Personal 
By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN 
While visiting in Vienna, Austria, 
attended the eleventh annual 
eeting of the World Federation 
ior Mental Health, In listening to 
peakers and talking with leaders 
in this field I was impressed with 
the necessity of taking time’ for 
appiness and with the danger of 
losing a sense of personal identity. 
In columns to come you will 
ear more of this theme of per- 
nal identity. It was discussed 
over-and over again and is an 
important adjunct to mental and 
emotional . well-being, 
How can a person keep a sense 
of personal identity when he or 
she is harried and hurried day 
after day, when no time is al- 
lowed for the varying parts of 
life te fall inte place, when we 
let worries cloud eur lives be- 
cause we never get far enough 
away from them te achieve an 
objective viewpoint or set the 
stage for a happier mood? 
This brings to my thoughts the 
happy temperament of the folks 
who live in Vienna, to the way they 
love music and burst into song at 
the slightest opportunity, Therefore 
I want to tell you about a. Vien- 
nese institution, The Heurige. 
These happy times first started 
when wine growers drew off new 
wine and hung an evergreen 
ipranch over their door as. an in- 
vitation for their friends and neigh- 
bors to come in and help them   
    
          
           
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(Over Tasty Bakery) all year long but the informal, con-| sage and luscious pastry, Often 
vivial atmosphere still remains. 
The most typical onés do not 
serve food. You bring your own | the music is intimate and spon- 
cold cuts — cheese, bread, sau- 
How can a person 
identity when he or she 
after day.   ____THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1958 
‘| the whole family comes, from 
grandparents to grandchildren. 
There are no floor shows and 
taneous.. 
keep a sense of personal 
is harried and hurried day Identity Is All Imp ortant This usually consists of four mu- 
sicians —a_ violinist, and a flute, 
accordion, and zither player, They 
play nostalgic and familiar tunes, 
separately and together and often 
wander from table to table, It Bride-to-Be 
Announces. 
‘Attendants 
Josephine Osmun, bride-elect 
of Richard Swanson, an- 
nounced her attendants at a 
luncheon given Saturday by 
Mrs, E, C. Swanson at Dev: 
Gables. 
does not take long for practically * 2 ¢ 
all of the customers to burst into 
song, All Austrians know the words 
and sing them with great gusto 
and poigwancy. If you are “a for- 
eigner you find yourself humming 
without the words, i? 
I have heard some of the most 
appealing zither and violin music 
I have ever heard any place and 
I am sure that many a person 
has forgotten his troubles for a 
while and again been drawn to- 
ward happiness by the contagious 
friendliness of these places. 
In Vienna you feel the pulse 
beat of life and you would have 
to be absolutely dead not to re- 
spond, Everyone sings together 
and everyone is everyone's 
friend, The feeling is somewhat 
like New Years Eve in America, 
except that the emphasis is more 
on song and less on drink, but 
it is the same sort of “good- 
will-toward-everyone” feeling. 
These experiences made me 
think how important it is for men- 
tal health that everyone get away 
from problems and troubles pe- 
riodically. 
Tomorrow: “‘Viennese are Huge 
  Eaters but Perhaps Walk It Off." Charlotte Osmun, the bride- 
elect's sister, will be maid_of 
honor. Bridesmaids will be 
Marjorie Swanson and Nancy 
Walser, both of Birmingham, 
and Mrs, George Catlin of Oak- 
mont, Pa, Flower girls will be 
Laura and Leslie Zimmer of 
West Palm Beach, Fla. 
x * * 
The couple will be married 
Nov, 29 at First Presbyterian 
Church, Their parents are Mr. 
and Mrs, Caroll Osmun of 
Woodland avenue and Dr. and 
_ Mrs, E, C. Swanson of Vassar. 
  
Zonta to Honor 
Dr. Sarah Jones 
Zonta Club of Pontiac will , 
honor one of its members, Dr. 
Sarah Van Hoosen Jones, at a 
dinner Nov. 13 at Kingsley Inn. 
Dr. John A. Hannah, president 
of Michigan State University 
will be speaker. 
Cochairmen Mrs. L. Harvey 
Lodge and Mrs. Fotis, Takis , 
have announced that reserva- 
tions must be made by Nov. 6.     
celebrate, Today they are open|Eqshion Hint 
The pendant: earring is back 
in favor this fall and winter, 
done in glittering rhinestones 
or sparkling waterfalls of color. ' 
  
Burlap is still a beautiful 
fabric for country lamp shades. 
    
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900 Sylvan Shores 
Club Has Party 
Mrs. Arthur Novotney of Wood- 
bine drive entertained members of 
the Sylvan Shores Women’s Club 
at a Halloween party. 
Mrs. Leon Sirlin, Mrs. W. O. 
Moll and Mrs. Harry Bower pre- 
sided at the refreshment table. 
The evening program was super- 
vised by Mrs. Lyndon Salathiel and 
Mrs. Ronel White. Prizes were 
awarded Mrs. Hugh Hales, Mrs. 
William Herrmann, Mrs. Russell 
Grover, Mrs. Robert Newill, Mrs. 
George Newton, Mrs. Duane 
Lemaux, Mrs. Larry Sherwood and 
Mrs. C. I. Humphries. 
' Mrs. J. T. Brown was introduced | 
as a new member at the Wednes- 
day gathering. 
87 Pay Tribute 
to Fred H. Miller 
Assisted by a number of his 
great-grandchildren, Fred H. Mil-         First Presbyterian Church, Bir- 
mingham, was the scene of the 
Saturday afternoon wedding of 
Barbara Kindy Borglin and 
Thomas Lee Stinson. Dr. W. Glen 
Harris officiated at the 4 o'clock 
ceremony. 
x & 
Parents of the couple are Mr. 
and Mrs. Ernest Borglin of Detroit 
    ler of Rochester blew out 85 birth- 
|day candles Sunday at a party hon-| 
{oring him in Avon Park Pavilion.) 
| Mr. Miller's son-in-law and 
‘daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Otto! 
Schuler of Helen street, were hosts) 
at the gathering which included, 
some 87 relatives and friends. | 
| Among those present were Mr., 
'Miller’s three daughters, Mrs. Cle-| 
‘tus Drouillard of River Rouge, | ;Mrs. Harold Weyand of Dearborn, | 
,and Mrs. Schuler. Another guest) 
|was Levi Fogelsonger of Roch-, 
ester. 
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GABERT FE 5-6189 Barbara Kindy Borglin, 
Thomas Lee Stinson Wed 
and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Stinson 
of Birmingham. 
neckline, 
sion fell from a crown of seed 
| pearls and iridescent sequins. 
She carried a bouquet of white 
camelias, stephanotis and ivy. 
Mrs. Hugh Barber was her sis- 
‘ter’s matron of honor. Bridesmaids 
‘were Mrs. Robert Briggs, Mrs. 
Charles Park III, Donna MacKen-   zie, Mrs. Burris, and Mrs. 
Daniel Cornila Jr., the bride- 
(groom's sister. 
* * * 
  The bridesmaids were dressed in 
peacock blue chiffon over taffeta 
'with matching crushed taffeta Em- 
|pire waists, and wcre flat crowns 
of matching flowers. They carried 
inosexays of peacock and white| 
‘baby chrysapthemums. The ma- 
tron of honor was dressed in white. 
Best man was Michael Plom- 
brother, William Borglin; Den- 
ald DuPuis, Alan Davis, William 
Leckie, Bud Cummings and Dan. 
lel Cornila Jr. Thomas Howting 
was junior usher. 
  The bride were a waltz-length | 
gown of white silk marquisetic | 
over taffeta, with long sleeves. | 
Appliqued Alencon lace accented — 
the bodice, forming a portrait | 
and the hem of the — 
gown. Her fingertip veil of illu. | 
stead. Ushers were the bride's |   
  
  
      
“The Roaring 20's” 
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Charm Chats 
) Autumn Spark   
  
    
by Rowena Wilson 
| Leading salons today are 
| achieving as great fame in 
hairstyling as the chic coutur- 
iers. €or years 
their custom dé 
signs have been 
patterned te the 
individaul’s fig- 7 
ure, coloring and — 
personality. A 
great amount of 
brains, artistry) 
and deft finger 
work goes into dressing. 
women's heads. However, it 
justifies the new coiffures 
which have been created to 
spark your autumn wardrobe. 
Let us help to spark your new 
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hairdo to complement it. There 
is a special coif for you alone. 
Make an appointment fer your 
styling at Rowena's Beauty 
Salons. 4831 Dixie Highway, 
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17_N_Sagincw _—_—FE. ‘44-7071         
  
Following a reception held in the 
church social hall, the couple Jeft 
(for a northern 
moon. 
x * * 
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs 
Borglin wore a peacock peau de 
soie dress with matching corsage.) 
Mrs. Stinson was dressed in a, 
melon peau de soie gown with 
matching accessories. Both had 
white camelia corsages pinned to} Michigan honey- | Magic Beauty tNu-Pace.” No discomfort! Face 
tifting and Cosmetic and 
beauty adv to Hollywood 
stars for 40 years. 
Stockholm Grad. Specialist 
CAROLYN NILSON 
Salen 772 E. Maple, B’ham 
MI 6-7373. Majl Orders.         
their purses.     
  
Fashion Hint 
Paris fashions are buttoned 
up with great big buttons this 
fall. Some are nearly two WILLIAMK. COWIE Custom Upholstery 
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  4 OBER 20, 1958 
    
  
       
   
      memory, was one of Gen. Chen- 
g Tigers, a 
F World 
War HI, Medal of Honor winner, 
Japanese prisoner of war. 
He also cannot tick to S faohicosase 
of the idiots that built their 
plaques, you reminded him that it 
was not nice to speak ill of the 
dead or the senile, or the fashion- 
, |able. 
* * * 
minded risking my neck if I 
take/thought it could do some good. 
But when it dawns on me that 
own personal ends . 
* * 
He’s got it all in mango, which 
is a sleeper called “Baa Baa Black 
Sheep,”’ and which begins with a 
heart-felt and completely mislead- 
ing chapter that explains how he’s 
put writing about the adventures of 
his lile and doesn’t really mean 
to criticize any heroes. 
  “But,” he said in self-amaze- 
  
when you'd like to get it. 
Leans $25 te $508 on Signature, Furniture or Car 
7 WEST LAWRENCE 2nd Floor Floor, Lawrence Bog. » Phone: FEderal 
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS 
Leen: made te residents of ofl 
  for the cash. Phone today — 
We like to say “Yes!” 
= PONTIAC 2-9249 
ving towns “Listen,” he snapped, ‘I never) 
some Ween eae me ee ee 
; only gave me the Medal of Honor 
  rj 
ment, “‘it kept chine out that you 
carpe tell the truth if you paint- 
ed yourself as a hero, Andif you 
told the truth about China and 
Burma and those~people Wwe all 
kept |know, you couldn't keep painting 
thenr as heroes all the time.” 
x * * 
For example? 4 
‘Well now, take our pilots. Most 
of the enemy planes were: shot 
  MAJ. GREGORY BOYING- 
TON, in the cockpit of his fighter 
plane “somewhere in the South 
Pacific,” just before he was 
downed and captured by the 
Japanese. He spent the rest of 
  2 a 
( gton Outspoken 
Print and in Person 
down by the same few pilots. I'm 
not saying it was right or wrong. 
That's just the statistics. 
xk * «* 
“Or take some of those heroes 
again. And how they learned you 
could make a lot of money flying 
missions and swapping . currency. 
And, of course, there are those 
phony battles that get reported so 
our allies can account for our sup- 
plies they sell to the enemy.” 
“Baa Baa, Black Sheep,” like 
its author,-had a fight to get into 
‘print. The. first publisher who 
—. it suggested several changes 
taking names out and soft- 
“ded oo the rough parts. 
Boyington saw the rewritten text 
as somebody else’s idea of what 
'|Boyington would have said if he 
were not so naive about what peo- 
fap Macha 
So Boyington took it to a second 
publisher:.on the condition that it 
run untouched. “Just point out the 
Ming..and grammatical er- deste 
rors,’” he .fold-them, ‘‘and I'll fix 
* {them:"” 
Today, with several movie offers 
© | before him, Boyington will have to 
‘isee his: bodk changed around, soft- 
ipedaled arid-fictionalized for the 
script. « 
x « * 
“I don’t care,” he said. “It’s a 
good adventure story anyway. And 
even if they don’t tell the. whole 
in the book. And 29,000 sales in the, 
first two months.” 
* * * THE: PONTIAC I PRESS, MO 
story, I don't care. I've got it all| 
      the war jin a prison camp. 
a ae 
Ite lling the truth. I’m not running 
ivotes. But if they want to answer 
‘idence in 20 minutes. Maybe this 
| know, too.” 
    be. 
BOYINGTON TODAY: ‘They 
when they thought I was dead.”’ |self. I keep it out in the garage 
lalong with the other stuff we don’t 
'want in the house.” 
lof middle 19th Century artists who| 
‘took their subjects straight from 
‘nature. Was he worried about reaction | 
| from high places? | 
“Don’t make me laugh,”’ he said. | 
|The boys I talk about know I'm 
for office, so I don't need their 
me, I'll produce documented evi- 
book will encourage some more 
unfashionable truth-telling.”’ 
The old Flying Tigers? “No. 
They know it’s the truth.” 
The Marine Corps? “They 
The Medal of Honor winners? 
“Listen,” he rasped, ‘“‘they only 
gave me the Medal of Honor when 
they thought I was dead. That) 
Medal is a whole story all by it- 
  
Barbizon was the French school 
      
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CONFUSION — There was confusion at this 
‘stage of the game at Evanston where North- 
western trampled Michigan, 55-24. A loose ball 
bounces around as players sprawl out all over blocked out of 
ter Jim Andreo AP Wirephote 
the ground. Fred Julian, Michigan back (16), is 
the play by Northwestern's cen- 
tti (56) and end Irv Cross (32). 
  
Michigan College Roundup:   
Chippewas Season Record Still Clean Rogers and center Ed Tallman 
on a 65-yard pass interception By The Associated Press 
Hope and Central Michigan, the} 
state’s only unbeaten college foot-| 
ball teams, kept their records| 
clean over the weekend. | 55-yard pass from Bill Klenk and 
Hope smothered Adrian 41-7 for; Len Faee on a 92-yard kickoff 
its fifth straight of the season and| return. 
its third in a row in the Michigan) Eastern Michigan shut out East- Intercollegiate Athletic Assn. nal ern Illinois 31-0 with John Malone 
peck Roa Bekits scar fous toue land John Kubiak each scoring two downs for the winners. 
‘touchdowns. The victory lifted 
Central Michigan walloped return. Alma’s touchdowns were | 
scored by Jim Northrup on 4 | In a pair of intersectional 
| games, Western Michigan rolled 
over Washington of St. Louis 
34-2 and Kalamazoe dropped a 
| 25-0 decision to Beloit of Wis- 
consin, 
Lovell Coleman, the nation’s 
leading scorer among small col- 
leges, got three touchdowns in the 
Broncos’ easy triumph over Wash- 
ington, 
Kalamazoo's only threat against   Uo Saturday's Rout 
at Northwestern 
Futile Display Despondent Oosterbaa 
Despondent ‘M’ Coach 
Worst Defeat 
igan’s gloomiest hour since its col- 
around in 1679. 
look so grim. 
The erstwhile champions of the 
\etie La ete mee oto 
e, They reached the 
a Northwestern toyed with 
them 55-24 Saturday, 
er room of Dyche Stadium after 
thoughts of retiring with a win- 
ning to take shape. 
never seen so much.” 
  ANN ARBOR ® — This is Mich- 
lege boys started kicking a football 
Not even in the dark days of the 
mid-1930s have the Wolverines 
been so futile. Nor was their out- 
A despondent coach Bennie Oost- 
erbaan sat in a corner of the lock- 
the game. Words were hard for 
him. He looked like a man who 
had taken a fearful beating and he 
had. Only two weeks before he 
was on top of the world, His team 
had tied Michigan State and the 
ning season perhaps were begin- 
“That’s the way it goes some- 
times,” Oosterbaan said. “But I’ve THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1958 
x ke ® Fs o 5 
Spartan Offense Listless at Purdue   
EAST LANSING ® — There are 
sure to. be a lot of shake ups in 
the Michigan State lineup this 
week, 
When a football team loses and 
looks bad losing as the Spartans 
did in thé 146 beating by Purdue, 
that’s the only remedy — try to 
shake them out of it by shaking 
up the lineup. 
Coach Duffy Daugherty ex: 
pressed his unhappiness at the 
almost total lack of offense after 
the game, 
“We just didn't have any of- 
fense,” he said on examining the 
  
Iceberg’s ‘Cool’ 69 
Tops MPGA’s Event 
the weather, Sunday, with his 69 
actual over the Glenhurst CC lay- 
out, to set the pace for the last 
handicap tourney of the season 
under Michigan Public Links Golf 
Assn. auspices. There were 86 play- 
ers in the field. 
Handicap winners were Sal Po- 
mante of Center Line and Jim 
Bacon of Detroit who tied at 66 
Northern Lllinois 33-23 for its 5 
sixth triumph and its third in ~ 
a row in the InterState Inter- 
collegiate Athletic Conference. | 
Walt Beach scored two touch. | 
downs in leading the Chippewas 
from behind twice. ‘of Cleveland ‘Eastern Michigan's IIAC record to) Beloit came in the closing minutes 
2-1. Eastern Illinois is winless in)when quarterback Jim Fletcher 
‘conference play /and halfback Bob Begley combined 
* * ion a 4]-yard pass to the Beloit 
21. Then, at the final buzzer, 
Fletcher completed a pass just 
over the end zone. Wayne State defeated Case Tech 
21-6 with a second- 
jhalf outburst in a presidents’ ath- (net). Bill Woods of Detroit and MSU to Get Lineup statiatich dneet that showed a total 
of only 103 yards made rushing 
and passing. 
“But we're not going to forget 
that game,’ he added. “We're go- 
ing to try to profit from it.” 
The most Michigan State can 
hope to salvage from the 1958 sea- 
son js the role of spoiler. But the 
only team MSU can hurt is Wis- 
consin. 
Last season the com- 
plained: of fumbles that cost them 
a victory over Purdue, The boiler- 
makers gave State five fumbles 
Saturday and they couldn't do any- 
thing with them. 
MSU’s stable of fleet backs 
were turned inte plow horses by 
a brilliant Bollermaker line that 
allowed them just 38 yards. And 
Duffy Daugherty, using every 
quarterback available, saw the 
Spartans gain only 65 yards in 
Pontiac’s Roy Iceberg matched) the air 
It was a case of Purdue giving 
State every break possible — in 
addition to the five lost fumbles, 
State intercepted one pass, blocked 
an extra point attempt and had 
the benefit of two bad Boilermaker 
snap-backs on attempted punts 
with the kickers smothered. 
* * * 
In the second half, with the score 
tied at 66, the Spartans twice 
      
Big 3rd Period Turns Trick   
Eaglets Trip 
rolling to its 4th straight Suburban 
Catholic League win, Over St. 
Michael, Sunday, Orchard Lake St. 
Mary’s club annexed its 2nd loop 
victory at Ferndale St. James. 
Eaglets wiped out a one point half- 
time deficit to down the "Dales 
24-7. 
Sunday’s win squared Eaglets’ 
SCL season's mark at 2-2. While Pontiac St. Frederick was, St. James 
Steckel peas on the 14 went in for 
the tally after St. James had driv- 
en more than 50 yards on the kick- 
off. Yezak ran the PAT, leaving 
Ravens with a 7-6 lead at the half. 
St. Mary’s broke the game wide 
open in the 3rd, with three count- 
ers. In 9 plays after getting the 
ball on the James’ 27 after a puat, 
Tony Kosetcki went over from the 
one. A few minutes later Bill Krull 
eager vein rt 
run, and the final TD wasn't long 
in coming. Wotjtowicz anoth- 
er aerial on the same play that 
* touchdowns by Walt Poe on a Hetic conference game. It was the 
Albion| second meeting of the season for, 
46-0 and the two teams. They battled to a 
Hillsdale beat Alma 21-13. {7-7 tie in their last outing. Wayne 
* * * | Muller, Jim Ross and Jim Mac- 
Albion, unscored-on in four of, Millan scored for Wayne. 
‘its five games, divided its scoring In other MIAA games, 
blanked hapless Olivet Northern Michigan rambled to a 
34-0) victory over Michigan Tech, 
Mike Streble led scorers with two 
touchdowns. 
Ferris Institute turned back Il- 
linois College 26-7,   * * * 
The Wolverines were in the ball- 
game only for the first 34 min- 
utes. When quarterback Bob Pta- 
cek was hurt after the Wildcats Jack Aldred of Ferndale had 67's. jumped on fumbles only to lose 
Iceberg fired 34-3569, including the ball on interceptions on the started Eaglets’ scoring, ran 23 
yards for the score. 
Clement, 20-14 im the other league |" rq Eberhardt with three, Dan six birdies, four on the front nine. Donar two, and one Art 
Joe Spehar of Detroit led the|“eTY ext Play. Eaglets’ Milton Wojtowicz took a|Storen, Ed Miers 2 Art 
2nd flight with a net 63 (72 ac- Seer aces emanate pass from Frank Bartos for a 46-/Massucci scored Raven TDs. Stor- 
tual). er ashington for TD, the kicked six PTAs and WS sicanca eet _. yard midway in 2nd peri-jen six Donar ran 
.|Sunday, at Gowanie, marks the 
the season's fourney trail 
  end of 
in the area. It is a 27-hole medal 
capped us,” st.   
“But it was mostly Northwest- 
ern, We just couldn’t bieck   
among seven players. The loss was : 
Olivet's 27th straight over a three- 
year span. 
Hillsdale went to 3-6 in the 
conference (4-1 overall) with 
Howard Larry Rutledge 
Sunnybrook Golfers 
Defeat Sylvan Glen 
Sunnybrook won the men’s 1958) 
Metropolitan Golf Association 
championship Saturday with a 21- 12) 
victory over the Sylvan Glen team | 
in their 18-hole playoff at Pine Lake | 
Country Club. | 
The two teams were champs of: pass, 
  
  
their respective divisions. Dick! 
Preston led the winners and took, 
medal honors with 72. 
Summary 
SUNNYBROOK SYLVAN GLEN 
Dick Preston 72-4 Pete Baker 79-0 | 
John Kurach 17-4 George Catto 89 P | 
Best Ball 3 Best Ball 
Jay Law TT-1% M Andonian aS 3% 
Wally Smith 60- ', Ed Wasik 9-3" 
Best Ball 1, Best Ball 242 
Bam Lima 71-2 m Bie ythbarth 77-2 
Tom Stevens 74-4 ) Hanes 79-0 
Best Ball 1% eh Ball i'g 
  
Kansas City Winner 
KANSAS CITY «P — Redwood, a 
chestnut gelding from the Mahog- 
any Farm, Ann Arbor, Mich., won 
.the -$1,000 five-gaited stake for 
three-year-olds last night at the 
, American Royal Horse Show. Rube Wideman. NEW CHAMPS — Pontiac 
Industrial championship - trophy 
    Pontiac Press ‘Phote 
Motor’s golf team took the city 
away from GMC Saturday at 
Pontiac Country Club with a total of 307. In the picture are Red 
Fender, Nick Cantor and Wayne Beals. Missing from photo was |times. The flurry was aided by against their nine-man line.” 
Oosterbaan wasn't able to use 
Stan Noskin, Ptacek’s alternate, 
because of a hip injury, Noskin 
warmed up before the game and 
then watched from the bench. 
Ptacek was X-rayed Saturday 
night and the results showed his 
ankle wasn’t broken. 
“It’s not as bad as we thought 
at first,” Oosterbaan said yester- 
day. “But we've got to figure 
he'll miss is week’s game with 
The Wildcats’ accumulation of 
points was a 20th century high 
against the once- mighty Wol- 
verines. Not since Cornell scored 
58 points in 1891 has Michigan’s 
goal line been so damaged. 
* * * A 
The carnage reached its peak i 
a 10-minute span of the second 
quarter, The Wildcats scored five 
three Michigan fumbles and an 
intercepted pass. It was 43-0 at 
halftime. 
By the time Michigan was able 
to muster some scoring power, 
coach Ara Parseghian was clear- 
ing the Northwestern bench, 7 
Fullmer Meets Micelli 
WEST JORDAN, Utah (AP) — 
Gene Fullmer, former middle- 
weight champion, has signed to:   ‘STONE WALL — 
ments Saturday in sto 
final result was in fa 
    AP Wirepheote 
higan State’s line had some bright mo- 
ng Purdue back Bob Jarus (36) but the 
of the Boilermakers, 14-6. Ellison Kelly 
(57), John Middleton (61) and Francis O’Brien (62) pile up on 
Jarus.   for one. Halftime count was 340 
for Ravens, over ROSM. 
MEN WANTED To Train ter High Selery Position in Electronics, 
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BAETOES on cccccccscccescevcvcceecsesscesetocsenssss SOMF. veccceceenceesers   
    
COSTCO TON EH OTOH EO EREHER OEE O HH OOS eeeeeers PReme.. .ccvcsioreeces 
    
  
    
fight Joe Micelli of New York in a 
bout here Nov. 10.         
MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER 
TIRE and SERVICE SPECIALS B. F. Goodrich 
TRAILMAKER 
RETREADS 
95 
6.70-15 
Big, massive, rugged treads 
to give you more grip — 
fess slip on all types of 
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  *Pins tax and retreadable tire By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
Things returned to normal in the 
'National Hockey League today. 
Montreal is back in first place, De- 
troit has become a contender and 
Chicago is up to-its losing habits. 
Montreal defeated the New York 
| Rangers 5-3 Sunday night after 
playing a 2-2 with the winless New 
Yorkers the previous evening. 
The Boston Bruins split thetr 
weekend games, whipping the 
Black Hawks 4-1 Sunday night and 
bowing to the Maple Leafs 3-2 the 
night before. 
The Canadiens took over undis- 
puted possession of first place Sun- 
jday night with a third-period rally 
‘against the Rangers, Rocket     
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1958 electronic equip- 
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Correct camber;,! Richarg’s second goal broke a 3-3 NHL Is Back to Normal    
        
   tie after brother Henri’s tally got} 
the game even, Then Boom Boom 
Geoffrion caged the crusher by 
scoring on an open net in the last 
minyte, 
New York had built up a 3-1] 
tied four times and lost twice. 
Vic Stasiuk’s three-goal per- 
formance carried Boston to its 
victory over Sunday, The 
Black Hawks, who finished last a 
year ago, started the weekend in 
first place with three straight vic- 
tories, 
Toronto chalked up its first vic- 
tory Saturday as Ron Stewart 
scored twice against Boston. 
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  Stewart-Glenn Store 
Readied for January 
Construction is under way at a 
S. Telegraph road site on which 
Stewart-Glenn Co. will open its 
new furniture store sometime in 
January. 
Addison K. Oakley, .secretary- 
manager of the old store at 86-96 
§. Saginaw St. and manager for 
the new store, announced a clear- 
ance sale is riow going on at the 
old building, Stewart-Glenn Co. has 
been located there for the past 41 
years, he noted. 
* * * 
The new store, near Molls In- 
terior Furnishings store at 1666 
S. Telegraph Rd., will be 100 by 
125 feet and will feature mostly 
Early American and contemporary 
furniture. 
Oakley said the company expects 
to close out business at the present 
site, opposite 
sometime in December, Auburn avenue, man Rd., and Susan Forsyth, 16, 
of 1859 Warwick Ave. 
Flaming Auto Starts 
Forest Fire, Man Saved 
SHERIDAN, Wyo. (AP)—Verne 
McKim, 27, was thrown from his 
ear when it overturned on High- 
way 14 Sunday. The car plunged 
325 feet down a hillside, burst into 
flames and started a forest fire. 
McKim, seriously injured, lay 
helpless as the fire swept toward 
him,   
* * * 
But the fire brought 50 volun- 
teer fire fighters rushing to the 
scene, They saved McKim and 
controlled the blaze after it had 
burned 350 acres. i 
  Safe Resists Thieves 
Thieves broke into the Eagle 
Theater, 13 S. Saginaw St., and 
tried unsuccessfully to open a safe, 
it was reported to Pontiac police 
today.     THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, CcrORER 20, 1958 
1 (Chinese Reds 
Take Up Boxing ‘Protective Measures’   
  
  188 Nations Join     
xe 
\ 
© 19538 
" Walt Disney Productions 
World Rights Reserved 
          
      
    
  
    
  
  
Benton Harbor Still Has 
Bus Lines, Only Reduced 
BENTON HARBOR wp — Oper- 
ations of Twin Cities‘ Motor Coach 
Lines continued on reduced sched- 
ules today instead of grinding to 
a complete stop as predicted ear- 
lier. 
The firm dropped some of its 
non-paying runs in a compromise 
reached in negotiations Friday be- 
tween P. H. Lovell, transportation 
firm president, and Benton Harbor 
Mayor Wilbert Smith. Lovell had 
predicted. a halt to service by 
Oct. 17 unless help was forth- 
coming. 
  
Gas Station Entered 
The Mobil Bulk Station, 521 S. 
Telegraph Rd., was broken into, it 
was reported to Pontiac police. The: 
burglars knocked the combination 
dial off a safe, but nothing was re- 
        | er, the new Mrs, ~ mounts in recession         
   
           SAccmet Ale) “A 
Some WATCHFUL SWAIN 
WILL. HURRY DOWN TO 
ESCORT HER TO His 
HOUSEHOLD. THERE 
ARE NO ‘OLD MAIDS 
ON SEAL. ISLAND.     5 A FEMALE SEAL BELATEDLY ee MAKES THE SHORE OF THE ISLAND AFTEK 
ALL OF HER SISTERS HAVE JOINED HAREMS. 
BUT SHE NEED NOT WORRY. Battle for Health” No Iron Curtain Divides 
People Fighting Hunger, 
Malaria, Blindness 
NEW YORK (UPI) — Nations of the world that are so sharply divid- 
ed over contro] of nuclear weapons 
ang other such questions of life 
  manitarian. 
| For the past 10 years, they have 
ibeen doing this — free world and 
| Health Organization. 
As a result, sick children have —~ | pe i OS _ been restored to health, the hun- 
f,? FS as | gry have been fed, the blind have 
pte : been cured, 
whom WHO has extended its aid 
live in obscure parts of the world, 
places that, to us, are no More 
aa curious names in a geography 
. There, the health organiza- 
vee is sparking all-out war on 
mankind's five biggest scourges— 
malaria, tuberculosis, yaws, trach- 
oma and leprosy. And it is engaged 
in guerrilla-warfare with 40 other 
diseases as well, 
« * * - 
| For 15 cents a person, WHO de- 
tectives have found a way to cor- 
ner malaria and give millions a 
new lease on life. When the agency 
was first formed in 1948, malaria 
struck 300 million persons a year, 
of whom three million died. Today, 
the toll has been cut in half. 
Five more years and 32 millign 
more dollars may wipe out the dis- 
ease altogether, WHO hopes. 
Eighty million members of the 
| human race suffer from yaws. 
    
Competition Growing   
    By SAM DAWSON 
AP Business News Analyst 
NEW YORK w — Paper work 
or recovery. 
And machines and methods for, 
handling or thwarting it fascinate 
businessmen almost as much as 
coming jaunts into outer space. 
As the making of business gadg- 
ets prospers, foreign makers of 
‘equipment are invading this mar-| 
and more American compa- | 
‘nies are branching out into dic- ket, 
tating machines or computers. 
* * * 
The competition has of clerical staffs, 
efficient machines, and if possibl 
cheaper ones. Business Machines Take Fore 
and seeking more 
| Of the 370 exhibits at the Na- 
tional Business Show opening 
here Monday, 10 per cent are by 
foreign manufacturers, and their 
exhibits cover 14 per cent of the 
five acres of display space, or 
just about 
Foreign equipment 
dictating machines, inks, double the 
runs foreign 
sector of last-year’s show. 
from 
adders 
and calculators, to duplicating and 
grown Copying machines, typewriters, tel- 
markedly for orders from business-|€Phones and telephonic equipment. 
.m. School of instructions at 8 men bowed under the weight of 
= work and the growing cost their foreign rivals have learned} American competitors. note that 
  
Becomes Airman’s Bride. wwsrs.ces 
in Presbyterian Ceremony 
MILFORD — 
Class Fredrick N. Robinson in a 
double-ring ceremony at 
Presbyterian Church. 
* * * 
The bride is the daughter of Mr. 
Kensington Rd., Milford, Parents 
of the bridegroom are Mr. and 
Mrs. Glen Robinson of 9100 Davis- 
burg Rd., Clarkston. 
Given in marriage by her fath- 
Robinson wore 
a waltz-length gown of Chantilly 
lace over satin, featuring a back 
panel of ruffles, 
of irridescent sequins and pearls 
and-she carried a bouquet of white © 
iroses and carnations. 
* * Milford | Loleta Mae Warner of Drayton 
became the bride of Airman Third. RLAIN 
bridesmaid. 
* * 
Best man was Ss. 4 
* 
the 
| groom's brother-in-law, 
Roberts of Southfield Township. 
Ushers were aS junior 
bride- 
Norman 
Buddy Furman of 
and Mrs. Earl J. Warner of 4591 (tarkston and Kendall and Roger | 
Warner, the bride’s brothers. 
The. reception was held 
White Lake Town 
the ceremony. Hall in the 
following | 
  
Phone Booth Cuts Din 
CAMBRIDG 
| Her fingertip veil fell from a cap '™ odel acoustical | E, Mass. — A table- ‘supplies more than 7 per cent of 
shone booth for the food Israel consumes, 
use in noisy plants and offices is 
turer. 
adv. | Another cousin, Lynn Tottingham | rounding din. fered by a Cambridge manufac- Household Polishes Up 
It can cut nois 
iper cent, the firm says, and ¢ 
Maid of honor was the bride’ S| anyone to speak with privacy—in. cleansers 
S| ;cousin, Ann Benjamin of Bay City. a normal tone—regardless of sur-!$315,00.000 in 1957, a 5 per se levels 60 
enable, But WHO points cut that nine 
out of 10 cases can be cured with 
a single shot of penicillin — at 
25 cents each. 
| Fifteen per cent of the world’s 
population suffers from blinding 
|trachoma. Through WHO, Formosa 
|alone has cured more than one 
‘million cases among school chil- 
  three sales gimmicks. This year dren — at 40 cents each. 
e the joreign products look more like x * 
|American ones in style and color + : es Ce ae Free informati : |Their promotion through booklets , ee ae a ion about auiates : and sanitation is being poured into and .catalogs is very much along backward parts of the ; wee ld to . € 5 
American lines. And they have give aed ~ ee aes a 
taken & i at from the ventas car civilization at least an even chance 
a act Gi ant are OV SIress - ers an i Hi stressing for survival] during the first year 
service to overcome the former of life 
doubts of customers as to prob-|— 
lems of getting parts and repairs. 
* * * 8 
Into the field are coming more Inhospitable Isle 
American competitors, too. A | 
LJ 
intreduce its new computer. An- Aids Sea lanes 
other company best known for | 
its musical and dental equipment | J 
ohnston Atoll Guards company long known for radio 
and TV sets is using the show to 
is imtroducing a magazine-load- 
ed dictating machine. Pacific Supply ’ Lines 
of U.S. Air Force 
known as makers of paper prod-| - 
ucts, photographic equipment, or WASHINGTON—A lonely, closely 
idhesive tape. guarded fragment of Pacific soil * * A jhas been important for years as a 
The chief style revolution this United States air station. It has . . , belong Ini : 
year among basic office machines onged to the United States since 
—the typewriters, adders, dicta-; ; * Fi 
tion gadgets—is to make them as' 
-small as efficiency. permits, as 
easy to operate as can be, and as 
portable as possible, * 
Though Johnston has long fig- 
-ured in international affairs, a less 
|hospitable island could scarcely be 
found, the National Geographic . . Society says. The atoll is made up israeli Farm Output Up of two low, sandy islets surround- - . 'ed by a coral reef about eight JERUSALEM — Israel's agriculy miles long. The larger is only. a 
tural production nearly quadrupied thousand yards long and 200 yards 
in the past eight years, rising from wide. There are few trees, no rain 
/$10,000.000 in 1950 to $36,000,000 in to speak of, and no fresh water. 
[1957. Domestic farm cutput now|   
The offshore waters abound 
with hungry shark and barra- 
| cuda. Many fish in the lagoon, 
| including puffers, triggerfish and 
| skipjack, are poisonous to eat,   
BOSTON — Sales of household Johnston's only long-term inhab- 
and polishes _ totaled itants have been American serv- 
cent icemen, Hawaiian civilian work- 
increase ovér 1956. ers, lizards, hermit crabs and and death have taken a single- 
minded approach to matters hu-- 
      a Keep Amateurs From . * * * 
ar cast lension MARKETS | ains Ny . Injury While Learning 
® The following are TOKYO (UPI) — Communist 
evates Grains jer nis. sae Run Over Point jot 2s =" produce brought to the ae fiers man’s sport—but gently. 
' cae et ee aye New Cotes News Agee te 
them wholesale package ¥ ported that a week-long Na’ CHICAGO # — Resumption of tions furnished by NEW YORK @ — The stock i . Quota are Boxing Championship tourney was hostilities in the Formosa Strait of Markets, of| market was mostly higher in early|peig in P. “* China’s 
resulted in jmend ia as of trading toda eid in Peiping “to review : increased Thursday. sit eee amateur boxing talent for future grain futures on the board of trade : Gains in key issues ran from /international matches.” 
today. Detroit Produce fractions to a little more than a *~ & &* 
Prices moved higher for ly i aa ; : ra : — oa point. There was a good sprinkling) But, the agency said, “as boxing 
all grains in a fairly active early Appice seintesh. taney ou .... $275|0f losses in the same range. Motorsjis a comparatively new sporting 
trade. Demand for soy beans/Appie cider (case -sseoeee 2.50 were the strongest group. levent in China, championship of- 
pushed the March and May con-/Qrapes Cove (oa oe. oseene $5 * * * ficials prescribed . . . protective 
tracts up more than a cent a bush-|Quince, bu... ..-+..cs.scscceee. €28| ek ; measures.” 1 at the ; with other de-|Watermeion bu ...-.2...e+e..000, 200) Turnover was heavy, but not : 
roe oh pare ae veasvaz quite as hectic as the past few| ‘The agency said that some box- 
+ « ‘ te een ins. The ticker tape was late) ing matches were held in the big 
* ip. |Broeselt (Bebe » dow. eosssceeessss - 128|for about six minutes shortly after) cities “before China’s liberation 
ee ee ee rae Wseats deeper Tae Ge 235) the opening. in 1949." It added quickly that a ae z ‘ Celery — stalks ceneneasanansee: is Ame: Motors rose around | ‘owing to the influence of com- 
East situation, with the Reds mak-|Corn. "tong é eannrencese ~ i rican | Se and lect pix 
ing new charges against this coun- Eeepant eer eos te) oe — ae eet ey | bentng had Sean saparacd ed ey reer No. 1 Poeeeseseses vily traded 
try my oat Kehirebi tebe do se eepeeesenens 50! vision. General Motors was brutal and dirty sport.’’ 
Corn advanced at the outset on |; (bag) $0 p eprerereree 2.50| ahead a fraction ang unusuall The “ ” 
the first good demand in more Baraley foci ‘toch o § GOB. ..coccees 100) active, y Bes ee Colcnan catia 
eek. traders |; Eee . and cash heaves were the best (Fttigy ‘oyg!"B0 es) ccc: He] Business news was generally tains Using l2-%mee Bloves instead j b neo <onepecsecee be ' v $j Ts, 
buyers and a jarge export house aeeen Red (behs.) Gog. ....0.. 1.00 vorable. ahere were mene het two-minute rounds instead of three | 
was the biggest seller . seeeee 1,00) auto industry operations, harassed si : 9) by labor troubles the past several three-minute rounds and empower-| 
Activity in wheat was limited.|Ti™iig topped, bu. . 238! weeks, may be back to normal ing the referee “‘to call time out in| 
Theré was not much selling and shortly. case of bleeding.” 
this tended to move the bread grain args ou vene cosncesceeees 14 kt & * \FIVE-YEAR PLAN 
se ee thn) eucillof the fret) kote yee We ee ee 13s! Aircrafts and tobaccos were up, The officials emphasized, how- 
wet was unchanged t h higher presse op oa. Nr cists cotter peal er fractions. Otherwise demand cen- ever, that the “protective meas- 
i | Spine ree eee lisse 180/ fered in individual issues. ures’ were temporary and that in- 
Dec. $1.95%; com % higher to % os ou. corseccess 10) ternational lations will be en lower, old style Dec. $1.10%; oats| — Pfizer, Du Pont, Jones & coed ance the boxers are “ma. unchanged to % lower, Dec. 644%; SALAD GREENS vee Laughlin and U.S. Rutber rose tured.” In fact, the agency report- 
rye % to % higher, Dec. $130; |Celtery, soeege OS oo occic2cc7" s28| Sbeut a peta. ‘ed, some of the bolder trainers 
ern daa Ya to %2 higher, Nov. ponies werpyeses tes ar 323, Boeing, General Dynamics, West- have started sparring sessions ac-| 
2.13%. Romaine, bu. .......s0cs..--+--eee+ 150/jnghouse, Lorillard, American cording to international rules. 
Smelting and International Tele : . || The Chinese, as in almost 
Grain Prices estes phone & Telegraph advanced +2 everything, will mov. box. 
Guncago, On ee Openin. Lnves? pend CF oe | ing came Cocerdiag te a ave-yeat & ¢ 4 i—_ pening | e } 
grain prices DETROIT LIVESTOCK ; , plan. The China Youth News, the Wheat— Oats— —Cattle—Sai- | 
¢ * »-. 196%. Dec ne 64° | apie 250 pee noes Ce wo steers New York Stocks | agency said, “urged Chinese pu- 
Mar. sse. Jel aes a heiffers fully steady; cows | seedy: {Late Morning Quotations) | gilists to aim for world levels in 
ra - S9002 Be iy Joes as elec! Good toiow choice, wieers 36.00: Pigures after decimal point sre eighths ri gidlieroal a might, | 
p \g pe— 77.00; lot average choice s . 146 Int Paper .. 115 gh, enter boxers some in- Ce 1d y— De - 130%) z7. tandard ed of- : Des < . 110% Mas ee eee 130% ortngs "20-00-94 50" wulity cows, 18.00 A o wae ee const - a ternational matches ‘‘possibly in 
Mar .. 119% May ...... 4 Tie 32- eanpers and cutiers 14.50-16.00. -. 494 Int Tel & Tel 53.6 1959,"" 
Core ines) — July se en pared last week. e steers aims Chal .,.. 28 Isl Crk Coal .. 41.3 
Dec ........ 121% Card (loose)— heifers steady to 25 cents lower +. 35.6 Jacobs - a * * * Maer con fae Gee a om Story cows and bulls — pees oe ...e.see 006 Johns Man ... 
By ...-00 - f Mu teer oc ood E ri im- Mey «= 32-2 RS Nas pe: ahr rs — pomp GN or a mal arr [am Atria ..-. oe eel OF 36 1 A total of 142 winners of prelim-| 
Mas o.00p-134 pleers 31.18; few bead igh ghoice, 1131 am Cyan $13 Kimb Clk .,, 624 Mary bouts in 21 cities were en-| 
: te mos’ 7 Bbc, A—Asked oA tp, stoors 28 23 ost 60, standard to low | An Matore” ee Kresge. ss ... 2 tered in the tournament in Pei 
—_ caws 2 == 00; — eee |Am ¥ C as re - gis LOF oes 16 ping. They contended for 10 titles! 
: eae. Late sl pean ee: Leone ned and | Am Tob 913 cNty ° 272 ranging from the flyweight to the 
—— = ————_ SoR!|Anaconds Sem oi = eo Alre 525 heavyweight classes, There were 
anne § an § poet poea tt wollen oocyte tb. ier ulls| Armour & Co 3 19.6 pee & Cem ‘Sas penalty points against “any boxer 
dian steer calves 475 | Aveo a a ae Lertilard 704 who punched his opponent below 
5 Lou & Nash .. 78 : 
Veaiers—Galable 25. Nominally steady Balt & Obio. 43 Mack Trk 927 the belt or behind the head,” the 
._* Compared last week steady; most choice Beth Steel ... 526 wtanning ..... 26 agency reported. 
and prime yealers 33.00-40.00; standard Boeing Air . Si Martin Co ... 324 
~—e 26.00-33.00. cull -and utility pear] —_— sae cis May Deus as 464 
ws ea Pp “ 
Don lose aren ee re ei aily steacy Om par as wee 7: 7 e no). 49.1 
i i e \mught Briggs ME ..-- 8! wgerr Ch a& 8. 171 
Written Permit Needed iii nirvaty aati aie Hobie 2! Reis’ gi) Ledge Colendor , | S$ a ¢ ce Woo 8iaug : ? am add Co ...... 1@.1 oon 33 | Pontiac Whi 
OH California Coos! [ieientterss aeeim mee, a: erat! fb per Wear cerioe Ont airornia Coas ote ee —_ Caium & H .. 174 coin. «9 (22nd. Drill team meeting at 6:30 
= Llowrs ayy res Bape oa onal or Soup 3 Murray Cp .. 283) : 
. choice 60-75 Ib. feeder lambs 21.00-22.60 Ca" DIY. 362 Nat Bise |... $82 \p.m. 22 State Street. Bernice Cover, 
WASHINGTON—Off the coast of, —_— Capital aur i: 163 Nat Dairy j Ser ribe. 
| 1 y 5 
California lie the Santa Barbara Poul dE Gase JL 1. 302 Nat Lead. 2114) ; - 
Islands, a little-known group where ' ou an ggs Cater Trac ... 86.2 No ag av : oh News in Brief 
few visitors are allowed. DETROIT POULTRY a Bart 831 Nor sts Pw : 203 
| DETROIT Oct. 17. (AP) — Prices Chrysler ..... §14 Qhio i 
= geet gry eipamaren caitt Lap Oca Detroit for To “t/Com a ae : 74 Sau mon ; tae The apartment of Arlene Vas- umess 19 y live it Cities Bye .... . i 7: 552 Pac & E] 4.6 and he must have good reason to. nr nerre nena pie pp A eae he eked rrryr Pan A pl 31 | ques. 140 Chandler St., was bur- 
get it. Laws against trespassing | Ps whites 18, barred rocks 18-19; capon-|Colg Sere voce 78 Batam Piet 31 glarized this weekend, it was 
are rigidly | enforced. ames (eee 6 > Sreeee oe \Golum ‘oss... 303 Parte De . 102) reported to Pontiac police. Thieves * + | DETROIT EGGS i= — Dy : Pepsi Cola 2 took a record player, cigarette 
The ae Barbaras lie west of [ocretie Gon GER SIND ts Consum Pw. $83 Eheivs D sia lighter and a poplin jacket, 
Los Angeles and form the north- Whites — Grade A extra large 49-52 Pw Pf (4%) - Philco 24 valued’ at $67 
ern tier of California's Channel Is-'35- small 2 Grade B larce 4648, wid Eon! Se 1 ee a jz r 35. small 2 rade arge w 402 ; ; 
lands, which include famed Santa xf <1, Brasm —orade A extra iaige corr Ou" ta REA, “2 $249 gm. tos pm. IOOF Hail 463 Catalina. Though the islands have Cheeks 28 Coe ea as Rer Drug 34 E. 11 Mile Rd. adel Oak across | Total x} | nt : Rey t = ja 1 
heen on maps for 0 ¥ GATS gated echt "eer fw emer gece PBS Reap Big” iomugnam Unitarian a aaa 7] Geert wrote sarre w: turret! BAL BS Selewer es HE Church exist, (x48 medium 3393. Brower — Grade Otc Gene 8 Be Ree ae . . aad Two of the four islands, Santa 4 extra large 47: large 43-46. medium 32 ees Chem 6a] Sears Reeb 338 The Sanford Inn, 568 S. Saginaw 
Grade B ‘arge 36% Du Pont 2024 Shell Ov 82 | St., was burglarized and $21 stolen 
ta are East Air Lin 36.6 Sines 03 from a jukebox, it was reported vately owned and used te grase East Kod ....1296 gocon 492 ‘ I kat 
: : Pontiac police this weekend. | 
ives, Tie rene comme Five Teenagers Hurt fiat 3: eh a.” | | se ; “A Rd 313 
lessl ‘ee stro y etter | ner Rad BAe 4 Sta” rand Pe 
carelessly set te [Ene BR a 1d Std OF Cal tq, Card party at LA.C. Hall, 60 Til. 
much of the grassland. Cattle | airy Mot 18 gta on NJ S84-den St. $1.00 aoe ae 
Some visitors eve: j -* §Std Oil Oh 336 welcome. Door prizes an refresh- 
Foal qotsbets at the cowboys. | [Firestone . ...102-6 Stevens JP  3§§ ments. 7:30 Monday. Oct. 20. se 
1, Five, Waterond Towusiie ieee (rere: oa. a Pip bey Rummage Sale Redeemer Lu The third island, San Miguel. agers were injured Saturday night/Prueh Tra ... 162 Suther Pap © 30 | a. af ae : : rch of 1800 W. 
has been closed to the public ce when their car left W. Walton bow-\Gen Bak De 12a pA aso Maple Get 23 424 Thurs. 8 to 33] 
the Navy converted it into a rocket Jevard and rolled over two and 3en Dymam ... 86 tex G@ sul... 227 Fri. 9 to 2. 
and bombing range. ‘one-half times before crashing tolGen Pds |... 68) egies io a Rammage Gale. Oct. 21st & peal 
The National Park Service has!a stop near Silverhill road. Gen Milis ... 82 .timk R Bear. 4329 2m til] 4-p. m. both days. Cloth 
turned the fourth island, Anacapa,| Driver of the car, Roger Ulrich,jGen Shoe .|: 253 Transamier 263 ing, Furniture. Antiques, eg. 421 
into a haven for seals, sea birds, 18, of 4430 Dowridge Rd., was un- pe a ae -Twenty Cen . 7 Opdyke 
and possibly sea otters which are able to make a statement to Wa-|Giiette . ... 46? Gnderrd 104 
making a comeback on the Cali-; iterford Township police who said fesesaa)o 2208 ne bee ae . a Pt 
fornia Coast. The Park Service dis- the car traveled 350 feet fromjGrah Paige | 2% Onit Airc... 624) 
courages visitors, in a rare de- where it left the pavement to S ooo 2“ Sos vate eat aan 
parture from its usual policy. ‘where it was finally stopped by a Greyhound... 157 UB Lines 30 | * * large signpost. Gulf Ol ..... 117.€ Us Rub 43.5) 
Santa Cruz Island has a grotto : kt *« *«, @ nomex r 381 US Tob. : 352 : =e : cee 38.2 
where large numbers of sea lions Those in the car taken to St. eae aes yee F a 
congregate. Nobody seems to know joseph Mercy Hospital were Jo- Soe = = Wests ah gee: eis 
a OO ee 7 ae -in-the Ann Wilhelm, 16, and her sister, Inspir Coo .. 41.4 Wilson & Co.. 77-4 pitc: arkness 0 e cave. Mary, 14, of 2195 Pontiac Dr. Jo- nterlak Ir .. 24.5 Woolworth .. \ 
Ahi ate a ee _’O Int Bus Mch .437-. Yale & Tow.. 30.4/ 
On the white sands of San Mi:/ann suffered mukiple abrasions Int Harv .. | 384 Yngst Sh eR T1U6 | 
guel, are found once-rare sea ele-jand is in fair condition this morn-|!** Nick ..... 92.4 Zenith Rad ..1232 
phants, some stretching 20 feet ing Mary was treated for shock) STOCK AVERAGES 
and weighing two-and-a-half tons.|,44 released ‘Compiled by peel enee et ee 
The seq elephant, called Mirounga./ Ujrich, the driver, suffered mUl-|prey gay .... Hrs’ Hse Geo tse! is the largest of seals. The male tinie jacerations and abrasions.|Week ago |.:::.205.1 1248 859 1991 that inflat . Month ago 2829 1206 838 1919 has a monstrous snout that inflates ii. condition is reported fair. Oth- year ago .......226.7 876 673 1516 when he is angry. ers treated and released were/19s8 hish .......3961 1258 93.9 [901 : OW ... sees. : i 7 
Elizabeth Ann Day, 16, of 1163 Eck- jes" high ....... 280.0 134.7, 775 1888 1957 low ........226.0 78 66.2 150.9 
    
  ported missing. HEAVY GOING — Playing a “weighting” game, 
struggle vainly to lift a giant 60-pound squash grown in Knox, Ind. youngsters countless sea birds that have al- 
iways resented the intrusion. 
* * * 
The kids in need of more muscle are Gary Lucas, 5, 
Wothke, 6   | Scientists from Hawaii descend- 
ed upon Johnston in 1923. As a 
result of their study, Johnston was 
made a federal sanctuary for the 
‘sea fow] which had bred there 
isince time immemorial. 
Birds of a different species 
were soon to take over. As 
planes began to fly the broad 
Pacific, the island's value as a 
landing station was promptly 
recognized; it was placed under 
the United States Navy's author- 
ity As recently as 1953, a 
crippled airliner with 42 persons’ 
aboard had to make an emer- 
gency landing there. 
War clouds over the Pacific em- 
phasized Johnston's strategic | 
  ition. In July 1941, Marine Colonel ~ 
iJames P. S_ .Devereux, was 
later to win fame on Waka Island, 
set up gun emplacement§. The 
Marines maintained a vig# on the 
‘island until 1948, when it was 
tr: ansferred to the Air Force Pas 
| cific Command 
* * * 
During the Korean War, the 
|United States had to maintain the 
‘Tongest aerial supply lines in his- 
‘tory. Johnston Island served as a 
imain stop on the 8,000-mile mid- 
Pacific route to Tokyo. 
  
Germans Export Cars 
BONN — West Germany's auto- - 
mobile exports in the first quarter 
of this year totaled 184,900, a 32 
per cent gain over the sane period 
lin 1957. Motor-vehicle teat in | 
‘general was up 25.5 per cent for « 
ithe quarter compared with a year © 
‘ago, reaching a record 373,006 un-   ee 
& 
& 
O 
UPI Photo 
and Linda ‘Communist world, east and west | 
|— through the 88-nation World = 
yo Most of the human beings to 
   
   
  
a iii ig