The Weather U. & Weather Bureay Forecast Cloudy and Warmer (Details Page 2%) 117th YEAR . : at THE PONTIAC PR zkkKkeKK- PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1959—56 PAGES hin * Labor Unrest Major Concern —Broomtield County's Congressman| Ends 6-Week Talks. With, Voters During his six-week trail- er tour to meet the county’s voters, Congressman Wil- liam S. Broomfield (R-Oak- land County) said he found labor unrest the number one topic. =a Broomfield said he found that “almost everyone” be- lieved Congress right in passing the Landrum-Grif- fin labor reform bill, aimed Willm : * oey _ City Managers Honor af z Ke a & ig E at stopping corruption and| driving those union officials misusing power out of the labor movement. “IT even had some visitors .who said they believed they might be considered traitors for talking to a Republican,” Broomfield said. “But they said they wanted to come in to voice their support for the bill.” Union members told Broom. | field they disapproved of Team- sters Union President James R. | Hoffa’s threats to “get” the 56 lawmakers who voted for the bill. Broomfield was one. He said his best receptions;were % | (Poe ie. \ To * hs wn a for his election as president of the ICMA. With them at a luncheon for Willman at Kingsley Inn is Virgil C. Knowles, president of the Southeastern Oakland County City Managers Assn. Terrill is man- ager at Grand Haven and Knowles is manager of Oak Park - — —— FETED AT LUNCHEON — R. V. Terrill (left), president of the Michigan chapter of the International City Managers Assn., | came all the way from Grand Haven on Lake Michigan yesterday to help honor Pontiac City Manager .Walter K. Willman (center) °- Warming Trend Names Ex-Governor He § Come Long Way Defrosts Area to Replace Langer | Curtice Grieved by Hunting Traged Ford Abandons | ts Edsel Line Effective Now | Mere 100,000 Sold, in 2 Years; Casvalty of Compact Car Fight, DETROIT (#\—The Edsel; today became the first cas-| ualty of the new automo- bile battle of the compact) \car. Ford announced it will |abandon the medium price ‘car immediately. Introduced only two) lyears ago the Edsel never) | captured a market. Slightly | more than 100,000 were} sold. Less than 100 have. been built in the last two) weeks. aS Ford diverted | scarce steel to its other) lines. | Ford already has announced | | production plans for a “‘luxury-| itype’’ compact car, the Comet, to) lbe marketed by Mercury startins) inext spring. Original reports said | ‘the Comet would be sold as an | Edsel. In an official statement Ford said sales of the 1960 Edsel mod- el, which looks strikingly like the 1959 Pontiac, ‘‘have been par- ticularly disappointing” while response to all other company lines has been good. “In view of this high consumer) preference for the other company tera oe Accidental Shot Ends Life of Lonatime Friend Companion Anderson Is Killed as He Stands Up in Front of Gun WALPOLE ISLAND, Ont. (#) — Pale and shaken from grief and shock, Harlow H. Curtice, retired president of General Motors Corp., ac- companied the body of the friend he had accidentally shot and killed out of the St. Clair River marshes. “Harry Anderson was my very dear friend for many years,” the tall, dignified industrialist said. . Ashen-faced, the 66-year-old Cur- tice had difficulty mustering words in describing the hunting accident to Ontario provincial po- lice Wednesday, Harry W. Anderson, 67, a re- tired GM vice president, was killed by a blast from a 1% gauge shotgun fired by Curtice as they were hunting ducks on Ste. Anne’s Island in the St. Clair River, between the United States and Canada. HARLOW H. CURTICE For many years, Anderson was | GM’s top negotiator in contract talks with the United Auto Work- ers Union. Around the General Motors Build- HARRY W. ANDERSON BISMARCK, N. D. ® — Gov. John E. Davis today appointed for- . . , lines and the severe decline in i Missilemen Hit demand for Edsel cars, the con- ing and generally in Detroit today, tinued production of the Edsel is} |they called Harry W. Anderson not justified, especially in view of| “one of the best personnel men ; in Haze and other heavily- | rN ’ . . settee From Dirty Dozen Days ‘uno... The second-term U. S. represent- ative moved out into 35 Oakland | communities soon after the 86th| By PETE LOCHBILER turned to the Pontiac area follow- ing a record low of 11 on Tuesday. mer Gov. Norman Brunsdale to be U.S, senator from North Dakota, the shortage of steel,’’ Ford said Two for Four in its formal announcement. | who ever lived.” | Provincial Police Constable Bud ; 2 }suceeeding the late Sen. William Z ' Congress adjourned in September.| About 30 years ago a group of young fellows used to; ,, ae Hee ' he thermometer Langer (R-ND),*Both Davis and) Total 1980 modet “production “ _ (So rt lero = ane Curtice This was his third tour. Broom- | get together periodically at Norwood Inn in Berkley to) .o-hea 39 and is hovering around 2/¥™Sdéle are Republicans, | the Edsel has been approximate- Sodium Vapor Roeeat) re Ragcoeer a =~ poses ar 28 ts field said he profits from them by learning voters’ reaction to varied subjects, many of which will be voted on when Congress reconvenes next year. discuss the woes of the peculiar, play-it-by-ear kind Of} iat point today. Tonight the tem-| sccaeaiant 68 a a -_ y La - pl yt oay only ee ad had ew to ene . +o Detroit suburbs aeere is expected to drop to 26.| special election in conjunction saith been built. Another Fails Today ey were ci nagers from roit suburbs an ; is expect ims xt] on oe | , . ‘ within their eclia wen pn Walter K. Willman, 33-year- bap Song “on al sous: June. “veen a ovcmter apa! be Peic aged pow Fatt yas WASHINGTON (AP)— A second — « otice et wie be com- at amet erin nee ig. Old city manager of East+— oe (Meme tel out OnE VETO. ahve anes of he sae cars QU, juin, eee et ee taal ns x bor law ought to be changed.” he| Detroit, already g@iNiNg} . sect type of government by NerG-nertywqnny winds at -38 ~ * & palaprege ete teal your. Va, but it tailed to eject ite bei ~ ar : = : miles in downtown Pontiac will £ : : ee ae [seniority in his profession) yay means, but 1 don't believe jreach a possible 18 miles an hour|conrerence ended 10 days of hee.\q neo ee aatitie cere [rea -sliglhariney oath BONDING TOO STRICT iby virtue of five previous) any other can produce any more tonight, becoming light ‘and vari-| omerence ended 10 days of hec-|.¢ Ford's Louisville, Ky., plant. | flight. The rocket itself rose to 160 “They believed that the bonding | vears on the job in Mount) tor the taxpayers’ money.” provincial headquarters ‘a Success Last Night, ; The Lambton Coutity Coroner, Dr. C. A. Henrich, said a decision on have torney for Lambton County, said at Sarnia there appeared to be no doubt the shooting was an ac- cident and that he didn’t believe able \tic speculation, which had included pps plant will continue to build | miles. . | the possibility he would resign a8 porg trucks. The Mercury-Edse!- | Civilian space scientists were) requirements for union Officials * * * : inquest would be necessary er | Pleasant. —_ : ; |governor in order to accept a sen- C0 % rj ‘unable to say immediately why| * be - ae lien ales * * * Pies sais that his ICMA) At 1 p.m. the thermometer read-|ate appointment from Lt. Gov. armen Division yi a oe the |the sodium vapor failed ae Por Released by police, Curtice was hardship on small unions duties would be strictly secondary|ing was 32 in downtown Pontiac. |C. P. Dahl. Lincoln-Mercury division 0 ‘oat ar thn rocket driven by friends to Ann Arbor, |company. | hae . He . | Only last week Ford shifted all! Another sodium rocket fired poe he rion sorrow to z The group became known as the to his job as Pontiac administra- j ; “They have a point, and this ; ; , . “Dirty Dozen” — it can’t be re-! me : : | 7 matter should be considered by |) >. + ae,|tor — “I won't forget that I'm) ' . ae . | a re tiie ion unk Enbce calied omdepalens Per conti working for my living’ —|!t Isn’t Their Money! Curfew Bell Work? Se ee ua rad a — ——— at —— visible ‘bowed and refusing to talk with . ” s iWillm the F : — cnas : ‘4 seta hrchc | or ‘hundreds of m along ont ’ — next year cerning the new breed of public! oe pc Pag sede! pea DENVER (UPI)—The Denver OAKLAND (UPI)—A group of |a move which industry observers! eastern seabord. Tt tage outside the An- During chats with an estimated | administrators. younger’ members of his audience: School Board authorized final | angry housewives got this -re- suggested heralded a complete} . Tson home, urtice got into a 1,300 constituents, Broomfield found) 44 tose days were net | . _ ‘| payment yesterday for a’ $13,640 | sponse from Almeda . County |merger of.all Ford car-making op- The National Aeronautics andicar with friends arid drove to the the problems of the aged another} aces io. ss bear recalled . * * * ae kitchen remodeling job at the | Supervisor Emanuel Razeto to lerations. | Space _Adenicietreten plans a own home in Flint. 3 popular, | “They tell me that participation] Columbine School. The board al- | their petition for action against | , ; eted se ee Friday | srrTiNG SIDE-BY-SIDE an invasion of black flies: ‘‘We 7 oe oe ta aaa [morning. The sodium clouds help| inci j oa | on Sept. 4, 1957. Ford said it (scientists study wind currents at Provincial police said the acci- dent occurred at 1] a.m. Wednes- key issue. A Senate committee is . tard th - |; currently touring the state seeking hare Sal Dirt *onen jin training courses‘has fallen down; so approved a $750,000 budget e F ; » J j i i sors to y 11 per cent in the past year. Now) item to tear down the school | can't legislate against flies. They | hag been under development for.|nioh altitudes Curt Anderson were don’t respect our laws.”’ | three years at a cost of a quar: | Another rocket experiment at| day. ice and answers on this subject. ; gathered, still known by the old | (Continued on- Page 2, Col. 1) | and replace it. — ter of a billion dollars. 'Wallops Island Wednesday night) Sitting side-by-side in a duck blind * = = nickname, to honer Willman upon ee The 1958 and 1959 models fea-|also fizzled That was an electron-|in the marshes. Anderson stood peelle gle Saal He said many voiced concern! over the low fixed incomes they his reaching the pinnacle of their | profession, - ” h4 ri wee ae eoposed to ia | Called more formally the South- Arrive From England After 13 Years tured a prominent vertical oval counting device designed to trav-|up just as Curtice raised his gun a et ; lgrille. The Edsel started with|el up more than 1,000 miles. and fired at a flock of ducks pass- four series and 18 models. It} This rocket, known as Strong-|ing over. The charge struck And- dropped to a single series and six)arm ‘II, was designed by a Uni-|erson in the right side of the head. models in its 1960 presentation. iversity of Michigan. scientific) 4 Chippewa Indian guide was ‘team. Strongarm I was @ SUCCESS.| Hiding about 25 feet behind the federal spending programs, such eastern Oakland County City Man- e ° , as farm subsidies and new build-|agers Assn. and nowadays repre- ings for the House of Representa-| senting 15 communities, the Dirty! L e, 1C om e a t as tives and Senate. | Dozen feted Willman at a Kingsley, iInn luncheon attended by 32 other} “These people want to 9 | . At C ; / a some resuls trem the vast [Managers from other parts of the By MAX E, SIMON He met pis wife, who was serv-jdidn’t like what she'd heard of i he Did wednesd eae Army! blind. He saw the shooting and -| State j rith i-al i e Keally Vid, e |Wed ay night the ArMY! raced over to the blind of two amount of money they contribute’ "~~ An English war bride who turned|i"8 with an anti-aircraft unit of| Americans,” said Mrs. Parker. | ‘launched a Jupiter ballistic mis- * * * From as far away as Grand Ha- lven—eame RV. Terrill, head_of Many™“avored his bill to abolish|the Michigan Chapter of the Inter- the farm subsidy program and re-| national City Managers Assn., to turn to free market conditions in| praise Willman for his recent elec- agriculture. |tion as president of the ICMA and Others urged abandonment of the | to present him with a handsome huge miltibillion-dollar farm sur-|jeather briefcase in behalf of all plus stocks, of Michigan's 119 city managers. APPROPRIATED EARLIER There were only a couple hun- Concerning new buildings in| dred other city managers in the Washington, the Royal Oak Repub-| business when Willman, a grad- lican answered complaints of ex-| uate civil engineer from Michi- penditures, saying funds for them) gan State University, got started were appropriated before his time.| in it 35 years ago. «lomever, he aseured voter that| Xow ofthe 270 members n the been attempting, so far without | ICMA, he finds himself third high- much success, to stop further ex. |¢st in seniority. As Pontiac city manager, Willman of course is the to the operation of federal gov- ernment,” the Congressman said. nsion, S only charter member left in the “Congress ought to be setting | Dirty Dozen. an example for our nation in * * * wise use of the dollar,” he said, “not be attempting to outdo all “It took guts to enter the busi- ness in the old days and it still others in lavish expenditures.” (does. And courage to stay in it,” Making this junket around the | Said Willman, who entered the field county the best of the three, he himself as a road builder. explained, were many visits by| “Qur profession is still grow- young papi. Pine ing in esteem and size. It’s not “A great many school gTOUDS ViS- | sccmesemmmamminenmmmmesiGs| States. He sold-his brother on the ited my trailer, and I was constant- P ly amazed at their breadth and depth of knowledge on federal I n Today s F Tess problems and their keen interest | #neenmanenammmanmamentanets in the operation ‘of their govern- ” Comics 7 2e...... eee ment," he said. ~ | County News ......6..s0s5 . 18 He assisted some of his older | fditorials . eo Visitors who came with social se- | Food Section ....... Leg curity problems. Others be | Markets’ ....... 49 helped order federal bulletins-on | Master: Your Tensions....... 22 various subjects. Obituaries ,............ — Remembering that next year is| Sports ...... ee (pac ceeess. 41-46 election time, Broomfield said he} Theaters ......... ores 47 hoped ‘he would be back the fol-| “TV and Radio Programs... .5%5 lowing year ingress Gd-| “Wilson, Ratt. - 2-285 journs—trailer Women’s Pages. ......... 34-38 a irecruiting officer for the United States Air Force and her husband|". + |were sitting on clouds today. F | the British Army, during a black-| (they became established ™. |_ Mr. and Mrs, Norman Parker of| Mrs. Parker's mother disliked) So Michael and Richard stayed |79 Prall St. were reunited yester-jthe land of the |day with. two teen-age sons they| left in Great Britain when they came to Oakland ‘County in De- cember 1946. 5 The two youths, Michael, 17, and Richard, 16, arrived at De- - troit Metropolitan Airport yester- day morning. The boys ran from the plane into the arms of their overjoyed par- ents to end 13 years of separation. Also there to greet them were three brothers and a sister the boys had never met. * * * Michael was 3 and Richard 2 when they last saw their parents. The separation was to be tem- porary. But, as Mrs. Parker put it, “it turmed out to be a pretty long temporary.” It was a letter from Mrs. Clark to the younger boy (containing Air Force recruiting literature) that sold him on comihg to the United idea. Richard wants to fly, He had his eye set on a career with the Royal Air Force , . . until mother con- vinced him otherwise. Was Mrs. Parker really, that in- terested in the Air Force? ‘My boys are here. It’s wonder- ful,” the happy mother said. Mrs, Clark met her husband in _| Britain during the dark days of a TIME FOR REJOICING — The two teen-age sons of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Parker, 79 Prall i _parents yesterday after 13 years of separation. The boys were left World War IT. Parker, an Ameri- ean citizen, had joined the Cana- dian Essex Scottish Regiment be- Tore the United States-entered the war. : } Z i { «.. | y try. The boy: And she convinced the pair to| The“war's_end_ brought _a prob.| leave the two boys behind until | f his wife. Bunnie, on the with Mrs, Parker’s “parents England, when the. parents moved to this coun- | LAS VEGAS (UPI)—Albert Headley was granted a divorce assumption she left him. Head- ley said he hasn't seen her for Yankees, “Mom| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) | 29 years. = Pontiae Press Photo in Somersetshire, Ee ’ happily, are-Richard (left), 16, and Michael, 17. ; 2 4 : ! other members of the hunting sile on a 1,300-mile flight. . G e W. K ty, 32055 SIREAKS SOUTH The Army's Jupiter, an inter-| Chairman of Kelsey-Hayes Wheet lmediate range missile, rose from| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) its Florida launching pad trailing ° a mass of flame. It streaked down the Atlantic missile range) Plan Approved on a scheduled 1,500 mile test = flight and was to drop a dummy [Oo Free Berries warhead near the island of al, H lid tigua : The Wallops Island sodium va-| Or Oll ays por rocket rose above the earth's} wASHINGTON — The govern- _shadow into sunlight 150 miles UP ment today approved a plan for ‘and spewed out a cloud of yellow| making plentiful supplies of un, ‘sodium vapor for the study of (ontaminated cranberries available wind conditions at that altitude. | 6. Thanksgiving | The vapor trail was visible over) oo otary Arthur S. Flemming of a wide section of the Atlantic the Department - Health, Educa. a as far north as Worcester, tion and Welfare said lots of cram a berries already tested and found to be uncontaminated may be | marketed if they contain this state- Reports Steel Firms x" Make Liberal Offer <::minea ant passed by the | | ‘Food and Drug Administration of PITTSBURGH (UPI) — The the U. S. Department of Health, Pittsburgh Press reported Wednes- | Education and Welfare.” day that steel management had| Cranberries from lots totaling | made an offer to President David | ™ore than four million pounds |J. McDonald of the United Steel-\already have been tested and a Union which was “consid-|found to be free of contamination erably more liberal’ than former from the weed killer aminotriazole/ | offers | Flemming said the plan, worked The Press said the new offer “‘is}OUt with representatives of the jlooked upon as having a ‘good | cranberry industry would: lchance’ of ending the record-long|~1. Assure proper testing of fresh labor fight.” cranberries and processed cran- The offer is said to call for a\berry products in all stages of three-year contract with a 30-cents | marketing—wholesale and retail— per hour wage increase spread before they are offered to the con- - over the three year period and in-|suming public. re insur-| 2. Provide for approved labels > —_— »Dell_said if the law was fol-_ Beer Starts Writing Opinion on Storm Drain Court Battle Cireuit ‘Judge William: J. Beer Jhas started writing his opinion on the Madison Heights’ lawsuit which protests the County Drainage ‘Béard’s apportioned new costs for the 12-Town storm relief drain. * * * "le said it would be rendered before the end of the year. At the same time, the judge will rule on a motion renewed - y—Judge Beer once de- it—by attorney Claude H. ens, the board’s attorney, < that the suit should be quashed. sean his arguments Wednesday, stressed that the same . being raised by Madison ights previously were ruled legal ‘BP Circuit Judge’H. Russel Holland and the State Supreme Court. ; * * * However, Madison Heights’ spe- cial counsel, Harry N. Dell, the three-member board, after the high court ruled in its favor, still fgiled to take into account what benefits the city will receive from the $47,102,000 drain in arriving at its share of $2,848,803. lewed correctly the city should be given more credit fer exist- ing drains. . Stevens said benefits and con- tributions to the problem of exist- ing flood conditions in 14 south Oakland communities — which the @yain would alleviate—were taken into consideration. 2° x *« * ’ Fight over the long delayed project, initially conceived in 1952 and in the planning stages since 1956, erupted last month when the city was granted a writ of certiorari whereby Judge Beer yst examine apportionment pro- Thais: to determine if they are (Continued From Page One) you younger men had better get busy because in 15 to 20 years you'll be the backbone of our pro- ts x *« * Advanced courses for city man- are arranged at Mich- said| Want Hoffa Out Group's Attorney Acts on Grounds Leader ‘Abused’ Teamsters WASHINGTON (AP)—Godfrey Schmidt, attorney for a group of rank - and - file members of the Teamsters Union Wednesday areliasked the ouster of Teamsters President James R. Hoffa. * * * Schmidt, in a motion mailed from New York City to U. S. Dist. Judge F. Dickinson Letts in Wash- ington, asked for Hoffa's ouster on grounds that Hoffa deprived Teamster members of rights guar- anteed by the -new labor law. The motion further seeks Hoffa's trial on charges previously filed by Schmidt alleging misuse of union powers, Teamster members bringing the action are Andrew Boggia, Ed McFarland, Frank Kennedy, Ho- bart Gale, Joe Malloy, Harold Will, Thomas Manning, John Mc- Glynn, John Olsen, Steve Milone, John MeManus and George Beck- er. All are from the New York City area. x * * The motion accused Hoffa of consistent unwillingness to coop- the Chicago, IIL, ee Deep South FNipped Again tby Jack Frost — Mestl Teday in Pontiac temperature preceding § a.m | 6 a.m.: Wind velocity 5-10 m.p.b.| tion: Westerly. sets Thursday at 5:07 p.m. fises Friday at 7:29 am sets FPrday at 10:42 a.m. rises erate with a three-man board of monitors appointed by the court to regulate Hoffa's administration and a group/of union affairs. The formation of the board stemmed from legal action by Schmidt on behalf of rank-and- file Teamsters acini to Hoffa's control. Ford Foundation to Sell More Common Stock WASHINGTON (AP)—The Ford Foundation. announced today it will sell two million shares of Ford Motor Co. common stock to the public. The price at which the shares wil] be sold will be announced later. The closing price in trading in Ford stock on the New York THE PONTIAC PRESS, HURSDAY, NO OVEMBER 19, 1959 AT CLINIC DAY BECEPTION — The St. Joseph Mercy Hospi- tal medical staff yesterday was host to guest lecturers, specialists in their fields, who came to address the group on the hospital's fourth annual Clinic Day. One of the four speakers for the day was the —— s own clinica) laboratory —— Dr. Julius Ratsky (Continued From Page One) Corp. of Detroit, and Arthur Brown, 6200 Winkler Mill Rd., Avon Township, a, manufactur- er’s representative. Kennedy and Brown were concealed about 100 yards away and did not see the accident. The guide said Curtice aimed at he fired Anderson stood up and stumbled directly into the line of fire, The hunters had been waiting in vain for several hours for ducks to show up and were almost ready to quit. ~ *®* ** Ste. Anne’s island is separated by channels from the Canadian Walpole Island Indian Reserva- tion. It was Curtice’s favorite duck hunting area. Kennedy has a hunting lodge on a site leased from the Indians. His firm has used the lodge to en- tertain friends and customers. Curtice and Anderson had been hunting companions for many years and were skilled in use of) firearms, friends said. Kennedy said, “it was one of these unfortunate things that you GM Aug. 31, 1958. He is still a GM director. Anderson retired Dec, 31, 1956. He leaves his wife, Veda, 40, and a 4-year-old daugh- ter, Jane Kristan. Because of the remoteness of the hunting site, provincial police were not informed of the accident until midafternoon when Ander- son's body was brought to the mainland. REMOVAL HAMPERED Removal of the body was ham- pered by the marshy condition of the island and 15degree weather. The island is 30 miles northeast of Detroit. The body was taken to Muehlig Funeral Home in Ann Arbor. A Mormon funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the First Presbyterian Church of Ann Arbor. RRS ie ae By MRS Seg 2 ee They $ Sneer at Courtesy the lead duck of the flock and as Curtice retired as president of | The Mormon | (second from right). Kemp, Clinic Day committee chairman; Dr. Morton S. Bryer, assistant attending physician in New York City; and Dr. Norman Gehringer, St. Joseph Mercy ‘Hospital chief of staff. “Tragic Hunting Death Rank’ q Flers of Friend Grieves Curtice church at Ann Arbor was said to be too small to accommodate the expected large number of mourners. Japan. * * * pounds, firm in contract talks. * * * son: er you agree with them or not.’ negotiator. He said, ness.”’ ‘Potato King’ Dies in Hunting Accident sar: Oakland County's former “‘Po- tato King,” Jack Williams, 62, of Mullett Lake, was killed in a hunting accident near Cheboy- gan yesterday. x * * He was found dead by a mem. ber. of his own hunting party, Roy Bowers of Cheboygan. State Police said Williams ap- parently was hit in the back of the head by a bullet fired by | an unknown hunter. Williams hag a potato farm on Baldwin read in Oxford Town- ship before moving to Mullett Lake about eight years ago. The quantity of potatoes he produced | earned him the “Potato King’’ | title. He Needs Training WHITCHURCH, England (UPI) —What should a young mem- man? Fireman Herbert Dulson, 21, yesterday told the court he started a fire because he want- ed to practice by putting it out. GRE SPIED rT SE Rd * money to bring Our U.S. Women, Bah! | microscope for flaws. a 7 > comes up: : 1. When you first marry 3 Thursday 10:47 p.m | mtewn Tem tures ee re 1) a.m..:.. 31) im es ctherpe 30 2 m. +31) MMs cae ssces 30 1 p.m 32) 9 am.. 10 a.m... 31 Phoenix BERsIeeresses SIVBSSVV. SUS ak Seumssusscsss onary @ of a =~ per roof. 2. A woman talks endlessly but rarely says what she really knows — or really knows what she says, so how can a man ever understand her? A man can under- stand only things that make sense. A woman always keeps appointments by the calendar instead of the clock. A woman is supposed to have the 3. 4. right to change her mind, never does — and nobody can make her change it. A woman’s mind also never lets go the memory of a fancied are gone. - * * -Well, there is no doubt these moss-grown objections are still fair- ly valid, and probably always will be. But if you polled most American men -I-doubt these reasons would explain the By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) — What is the basic thing wrong with most American women? 4 There has been a rash of criticism about the henpecked U.S. male, but nobody has been putting the U.S. woman under the These are certain traditional objec- tions that are always voiced when the subject of what is wrong with women glows like the morning sun, but in time » she gets to look like a rain-stained old cop- 5. A woman never knows the value of | # sound dollar or a good man until both fact there is What tend the ancient alry. As an elderly gentleman observed a bit bitterly: “A woman g a woman she him to take o nary courtesy? but actually wrong. that -most of Maybe the country’ needs a National kick-a-woman-in-the-Knee Day to put the question of modern chivalry on a sounder ®. footing. — sannnintiaitdinpiiamamnivetomtnospicimniioal * -_ among many males against U.S. women. day is that he is being made a sucker: of in a new way by a new kind of wom- an. She demands the status of a man while still insisting peremptorily on all en by the etiquette of romantic chiv- a man’s job away from him; then if they ride down in the same elevator, she expects goes out to look for another job.” Are U.S. women becoming racketeers in _ girdles when it comes to the field of ordi- Many men think so. Many men think women have lost their manners and charm of gentility, and are more arrogant than appreciative for the little gestures -of knighthood men still like to extend them. How rare. indeed is becoming the woman who can accept such tributes to her sex gratefully, or bothers to repay them with a smile or a “Thank you.” a vast and growing grudge i s to annoy a man most to- privileges accorded wom- oes into an office and takes ff his hat to her before he * * x * Shown with him are (from left) Dr. Felix Since Anderson's retirement, the family had traveled in Hawaii and A rugged six-footer weighing 185 Anderson was hale and hearty after mandatory retirement at 65. Associates liked him for his genial manner. But he could be UAW President Walter P. Reuth- er once told the War Labor Board|reached between Sullenberger and | in an obvious tribute to Ander-|his former patient, Cecil J. Har- “GM is tough, but you always |Trison, 38, now living in California. know where they are going wheth-| Attorneys declined to disclose the Anderson liked his role as labor | ber of the fire department do | to make himself a better fire- | NE we were behind the eight-ball. i “T’'ll never forget the date,”’ Mrs. Pentiae Press Phote medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital, pp -_-fonee again, the Sullenberger — Suit Withdrawn Out-of-Court Financial Settlement Is Reached in Surgery Case An order has been signed by Circuit Judge Theodore H. Hughes dropping Dr. Neil H. Sullenberger as a defendant in a $100,000 law- The Day in Birmingham - BIRMINGHAM — The normal stopping distances of automobiles will have to be increased from three to 10 times in the next few months when snow and ice cover the. roads, Police Chief Ralph A. Moxley wafned drivers today. Serious accidents increase dur- ing November and December each year because many drivers have to learn again that slower speeds are necessary when roads are under icy conditions, Moxley noted. * * * “Fundamentally the solution to this problem lies with each dri- er,” he added. “Slippery roads, inadequate brakes, reduced visibility caused by rain, sleet and snow fogging windshields, do not cause acci- dents. The driver in control of his vehicle can and must allow for such conditions.” Moxley said the assured clear distance ahead is a matter of judg- | ment. “The problem, depends on how fast you are going and how far|™ it will take to stop. Your percep- tion and reaction time .are as im- portant as your braking distance.”’ * * * Moxley ‘said that during October “right of way’’ violations were predominate in most accidents in Birmingham. “Following too closely’’ was sec- ‘ond in causes of accidents. He reported that in October there were 59 accidents resulting in jn- jury to 19 persons. He reported no deaths due to accidents. Construction of a two-story of- fice building at 800 South Adams Rd. was announced today by Ham- ilton H. Paterson, president of the W. E. Reid Development Co. The building, constructed of steel, concrete and brick, will have private parking spaces for suit charging the Pontiac surgeon an operation. Attorneys said an out-of-court fi-| nancial settlement has coal ‘|amount. Because 1958, Harrison has started a sec- ond suit in Detroit Federal | Court, It names as defendants, | as did the first one, Sullenberger, | Bo Pontiac General Hospital | Board of Trustees, the medical | eS and the city. was expected that Harrison's rakes here also would move to drop Sullenberger frem the fed- eral suit. | | Judge Hughes said he has been) |informed that attorneys will not pursue the Circuit Court case against the remaining three de-| |fendants, but wil} continue the higher court lawsuit. Harrison, a former factory’ \worker, charged the surgeon per- lformed three operations on him |for stomach ulcers at the hospital) lin 1957 although the condition |could have been cured without jsurgery. He said the second operation lwas necessary to remove the jsponge left from the first opera- \tion. Family Reunited ‘After 13 Years (Continued From Page One) | with their grandparents in Som- | ersetshire while the Parkers | | came to the states. ! “From the moment we arrived, | “There was sickness in the fam-) ily and we just didn't have the the boys over giere. said Mrs. Parker. Only 14 months after they én- jtered America, the family home in Metamora went up in flames. Parker said. ‘It happened on George Washington's birthday. The beys entered English schools and despite Mrs, Park- er’s coaxing, decided to stay in Great Britain. When Richard wrote his mother of his interest in a cadet training program of the Royal Air Force, Mrs. Parker went to work. The Air Force wasn’t the only thing which sold the boys on Amer- ica. “They realized they'd have more of a future here,” said Mrs. Park- er. “Class distinctions still exist in England and there is no oppor- tunity for advancement there.” The boys were working as press operators in a brass plant when they decided to make the move. Not only were the parents ex- cited, Parker, a Fisher Body em- dren weré all ‘steamed up” about: their brothers’ coming from across the ocedn... * | The other Parker Children are | Gregory; 14 and a St. Frederick's High School student; Raoul, 9, and iRhys, 6, Crofoot S“wol + : wients: and Jeame “tat .2 Moin left a sponge in a patient following |» he has moved to Calli- “In GM, la-| fornia from his Pontiac residence | bor relations is everybody's busi-| since the suit was filed in May of ploye,—said—the-gest of the chil-/E 68 cars in the rear. To be built at Freshest Tobaccos Because We Sell More - and we sell more because you = ¢t your favorite smoke for Shop for these specials) Priday and Saturday Nationally Fans Brands CIGARETTES § REGULARS Per Carton Pay Only— 921; Choose your a Say — Chesterfields, bo Gold, Phi ip Mor-| Regular size at this low ris, etc price plus 7c tax KING G FILTER 91: Per Carton Choice of Winstons, Salems, Kent, L&M, Marlboro, Duke, Pall Mall, Life, Spring, Raleigh, etc. (7c tax) King Edward 6c Cigars—Box of 50 for longer freshness. Pull box of 50. SS 4 % Set Has 4 Changeoble ‘S Brair Bowls Koolsmoke Pipe Set Regular $4.00 Velze Metal stem briar bowls a toewenangestt 2” Drivers Warned Again About Icy Road Speeds a cost of $225,000, it was designed by Linn Smith Associates, Inc., of Birmingham. Construction is being ‘started at once and the building is expected spring. Wallace E. Reid, vice president, said ‘Birmingham makes an ideal location for new offices because of the ease in reaching manufac- turing plants in all of the metro- politan area.” The police department will not have the power to impound ve- hicles and hold them until. owners have posted $100 as had been stated in the proposed amendment to the city’s nuisance ordinance. The mtisance ordinance has been amended prohibit vehi- to be ready for occupancy in early L sticky substances or foreign mat- ter on streets. The amendment is designed to keep contractor's trucks and equip- “iment from carelessly spilling their loads. * . * Commissioner Carl F. Ingraham, however, objected to the police having the authority to impound vehicles if the ordinance was vio- lated. The amendment was con- sequently modified by the City Coramission. The Birmingham Board of Ed- ucation has approved preliminary plans for the: proposed Westchester Elementary School and the new building éite. The school is to be built on a 400-square-foot site at the south- west corner of Cranbrook and West Maple roads. The first phase of - construction calls for a 16-classroom structure. In addition, there will be a multi- purpose room, kitchen and ad- »Ministration area, In the future, six classrooms and two kindergarten rooms could be added. TTITTITIIII ii iii iii | —TONITE—FRIDAY & SATURDAY— y SIMMS SHOE SAVINGS? “EF. aS i c @ The latest @ sports and casual dress wear. a Sizes 42 to 9 rage 2 2 Hid $5 and $6 97 Values Sizes to 9 Black rubber (Colors at $4.88 _Tining. Children’s. One-Strap - with each other. Ideal for gift giving. Genuine. Kaywoodie $10 Briar Pipes gift giving. a Lites for Months Without Refill | “SCHICK ‘Butane’ ‘Cigarette Lighter be pa to $9.95 3 298 4 “— filing ‘ae fuel © SPies for fer ladies —_. “aginaw —Main. “sees ’ Sizes 4 to 10 3“ aa ENDICOTT-JOHNSON FOOTWEAR for BOYS +—for GIRLS Several Styles—Odds and Ends ‘ ENDICOTT-JOHNSON LADIES’ —MISSES’—GIRLS’ Popular Style “Che- Cha” Boots 2" in footwear ‘for school, LADIES’—MISSES —GIRLS’ ‘Stadium” Boots Styles Exactly As Pictured PPITTITITITITI Titi = PPTTTTIITIT TTT it = BOYS’ DRESS ARCTICS | (Sizes 2¥2 to 6—$4,79) (Men's 6 to 12—-$4 Jay” and “Playwelt” Children’s Values to $4.98 Mest Sises St: te 13% 1te3 ® Moccasin Toes Close-out styles of higher priced footwear. Some in narrow G& wide widths, built-in arch G Perma-Counters. Infants’ *4 White Sandals . Small Sizes—3 to 8—NOW ONLY & Swivel and T-straps plain or fancy toes. All leather uppers. Ist quality 1° Men’s Oxfords Choice of 4 Styles . Values to 54.98: All leather uppers, comp. soles, rubber heels. Moc- toe oxfords, amilitary straps, dress oxfords, etc. Sizés 6 to 12 in broken ranges Usual $3.95 Sellers All colors Easy On and Off Girls’ Boots —— 3" git to a7 nee. 98) MEN'S ZIPPER AR 10‘ inch, dress weight. Si CTICS zes 6 to-12. SHOE DEPT. BB = MEN’S WORK ARCT ICS. B® Four buckle, Deep tread soles. jersey lined. 6 to 12. Qut Ress-Is Pine ion the payroll. Else we couldn't is Mrs. Truman?” h otten along. Certainly no- ._° ave gotte: ° We inquired this from one of the body ever worked harder.” most.remarkable and certainly one| <“ «£ 2 ea who| Truman's pride in his family is ted rose to the top of American | . mething every fath@r would do olitics. : ; “Just fine and dandy,” H.S.T. |well to emulate, He is looking Tor- said. on her. Operations are tough 0n'to the Christmas visit of daughter anybody. But she’s feeling great)Margaret and son-in-law Clifton — ead ore She were cowry (Daniel and their two little boys. ere to rary nearly every - ‘ , : é had “They're just wonderful chil- Gay eee 8 Dee bom» | dren,” he said with that extra here died two weeks ago.” | feeling grandparents have sum- “She's working for me again,” | moned without effort since Adam | Truman said with a sudden, | and Eve became same. proud smile. “dust like she did | when I was in the Upited States jer jain? grandpaw this particularly busy day at the Truman library. What} He leaned back in his des*;had reminded him that special chair in his momento-filled office.| moment of Margaret was that two ‘She opens mail (the former Presi-|Finns who escorted her as guides dent receives more than any other|around Helsinki during her trip individual in the state),-sorts things) there early in 1959 had dropped in out and helps the office staff." to see him before this reporter “Trouble is,’’ he added with alarrived. twinkle, ~*“‘Mrs. Truman doesn’t} They upped to 75 the number know if she’s on the payroll or|of nationalities which have called no.. You know how much Hell/on the former President since the they raised in Washington yéars|Truman library opened Sept. 16, Hob. Considine, Finds Qut | Truman Talks and Talk something he had read today. “I! sec where they're trying to’ cut the defense budget in Washington 'agdin,”’ said the man under whose aegis~the Strategic Air Command jand separate Air Force was ‘achieved, and who snarteaded! |Korea, “That's all the Russians want,’ jhe said. “They'd like to see us| | wipe out all armament, as we pra | tically did after World War I. The iodd thing is that a lot of people | lin this country would like to see| ithe same crazy thing happen. Al ‘lot of people still think we're pro-| oceans, and, of course, we're not. role, | mean our role as a world | power—the greatest world power | in history, We've got to stay strong. “We've got to stay No. 1 and accept all the duties this involves. a simple reason: The Russians wouldn't dare hit us. Just wouldn't dare.” “We just, keep forgetting our | We're not under attack today for| jammed something out of his visit) to the U.S, Told that: since the} \Khrushchev trip the Russians had| | stopped jamming the Voice of} America, Truman exclaimed| \That’s fine. But will they keep) lit up? That's always the problem | INDEPENDENCE, Mo. —“‘How,that Bess had to work, had to be; All of which reminded him of|With the Russians.” | What's in a Name? We re Wondering RICHMOND, R. I. & — Although | “The operation was tough| wart with the liveliest enthusiasm|y N.’s first defensive war — in: ithere are five post offices in the! ,|township of Richmond,. you can | find the dot for Richmond on the| 'town by that name. The post offices are in the vil- lages of Alton, Wood River Junc- tion, Shannock, Kenyon and Wy- | oming, But perhaps this town of Truman was not playing foxy- tected by the Atlantic and Pacific! 1779 inhabitants is niore famous | for streets, ponds and locations. jare Smallpox Lane, Quarrelsome Corners, Skunk Hill Road, Moon- shine Swamp, Coward's Hole, and Drying Pan Pond. * Of course it’s always the woman who pays — but look whose money she’s using! . . . Women who hear ino evil, speak no evil, see no evil \—well, they probably don’t go to Among the more colorful names ago. What they didn’t know was 1957. He said he hoped Khrushe hev had beauty parlors. —Earl Wilson. ./MaP bécause there is no village or| AT THE HUB ... . JACKETS Are G SPECIALTY NOT a Sideline _ CHARGE IT-- AND THEN TAKE 6 LONG MONTHS TO PAY Imported wool Tweed Suburban Coats ......$24.95 to $39.95 1. 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Buy now: BOYS’ SMART SNOW SUITS 11 Orlon®.lined | ood with Knit collar, cu Open every night to 9 Mon. through Sat. Downtown AND Drayton Plains shart White knit briefs T airy A- shirts. B’cloth shorts. a to 44. jacket, edged draw string, fis. Zippe r. dept. stores Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back “DAY! Uy Ng FRIDAY 6 SATURDAY SPORTS and HOBBY SALE 6-foot maple toboggan low- priced now of... 11.98 8-foot toboggan perfect for winter outings... 15.98 Big 10-foot family-size tobog- gon, now only 19.98 Sturdy, strong bowling boll beg, roomy 9.98 Heavy weight hooded sweat shirts, S-M-L-XL 2.69 Regulotion-size basketball and gool set ...........ccceeeeeee 4.29 Belt - type g ~exerciser tones muscles ........... 49.88 Leather covered -football is white, black stripes 3.39 2-section 5x9’ tennis table now for only .............. 24.88 7x35 1.F. Tasco binoculers, . ; ; . dium 19.99 Great savings! Men’s Boys’ sport shirts of Full 7-foot long pool teble oad - complete set ............... +9. gift-smart sport shirts cotton knit and flannel =| sturdy tennis toble, has mony other uses on, 29.88 Regulation size bumper pool ey A sh 2 ter ‘3 table, now. 59.88 Kedek Hawkeye camera and kit, now priced ct ss 12.88 Compco film editor edits your home movies Charge I! Charge It! Sport shirts, full cut with wide yoke. Sanforized, colorful plaids, checks, two-tones. Horizontal stripe knit for school and gifts. In sizes 6 to 16. Sanforized cotton flannel, gabardines and cottons, some imports. Solids, novelties, plaids, checks, all guaran- teed washable. Sizes S-M-L-XL in grp. Jewelry, cosmetics, nursery furniture, luggage not et Drayton Plains EXTRA SIZE Men’s white dress shirts collars sleeves 18-20 32-36 253 Save almost on te » « = ~ + _ 6.99 coat sweaters Men’s Saas’: robes Orlon® .and blends in 6-but- hives. reat a Heavyweight, braid trim, all Quilt-lined, warm interlining ton, 5-button lo-holer, crew ol = SIXTEE! THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1959 Dos + : “ Si * 2 ——— ‘ maf , Famous Question: ‘Jake, Are You Home?’ Business Investin St. Louis Adopts i for ny — Sea water will freeze at a tem There are more than 6,000 |heads, the mayor, and other elected perature of about 28 degrees recognized and listed species of Com act Cars \city officers, Any other exceptions F, it. | the : M lli Recalls Past .] hirty Years Firms licensed - eee be vere We St ee ole Kec Y for Civic Uses _ -. | WASHINGTON (UPI) — The ee » Opera's Gloria Davy ip na OF T all Business Administration an —Future purchases| SPECIAL HE : : Wi din Virs. rg rote the whole Smal WwW By DOC QUIK = ies hg wirg wrete ‘ nounced yesterday it has issued a Of passenger cars by the city will| eds German Broker NEW YORI! UPIi—Yoo (for|—®ise thing and acted Molly through aaa N RK 1 oa, Nebedy (leed wll the license as a small business invest-'be limited to the “small or cem-| BRIDGEPORT, Conn.’ (AP) — perhaps the milhonth time! [100,,. WHAT RADIO? writes wid nobody fed her plots, ment company to the Regional pact’ car, says Mayor Raymond| ‘Opera singer Gloria Davy was | TWIN i Mrs. Blaom’ Your friend Molly is; ’T saudi ha did't except. the neighbors in their Building Investment Corp. of De- 'R. Tucker married Tuesday to Herman Pen-| CAR MATS \f expecting ever bays a You" @aily lives: “But the character trott A a ¥ snungstield Je, 0 broker from Dus-| $2 19 ’ Expecting to celebrate. that is know, Amov or Andy. and al was so real to me that I never It is the first granted to a Michi-- The mayor said Jower initial pur-! seldort, Germany. j ° f Heaveortan ta sts 30th. anniversir’ So | wrote tie seimp | Radia grope."’ gan company officials said. chase costs and lower maintenance * * * ty fore easy . ce ‘Paine on the airwaves 20a read it mw al . . , The firm plans to supply equity;Costs were factors in the decision; Miss Davy, 28, a Negro, is a. ci the appearance ol : : , : ‘ \bout nine years ago the Gote a a . ’ , ’ ~ mar ro - ors of the steadfast American charac. 20MC radio olket capital and long-term loan funds|to switch to the smaller cars. ‘native of Brooklyn. She gave her ter Molly Goldberg, the custodian RORY at SCE ER wy a stoped radio and sent ig’ small businesses in Michigan ~ & address as Milan, Italy. Penmings- oe of such solid Molly-isms a: nnn gia Pa rite weekly on TV. During the last four It will begin operations with $303,- The entry of the three largest |field, 28, is white. 162 N. Saginaw. * * * anothe: eript i They wars of the TV show. which end- 000 in operating funds. jauto manufacturers into the small; They were married by Justice| eee Pel o:a0-8 = | won Hos.-ic austieds aid, You ink sear. ter son Chere The Small Business Administra-;car field gives the city a broad of the Peace Lester Winkel. Miss} MIRACLE MILE | ame oeeiE is ‘eons \yy AS easy ‘ined with the writing Mrs. Berg UO". “Hl provide $150,000 of the enough base for seeking bids, the|Davy was divorced last Oct. 30| Opes Seahnee eg is in the oven lake I wanta However, once on, “The Gold a _.. funds in exghdnge for subordinat-' mayor said from Ernest N. Jeantz in Chihua- her don't, but T don't know: bergs.” of Tremont Ave the SOLD doe Molly in’ frequent’ TV ed debentures of the company Excluded from the mayor's order'hua, Mexico. it she shouldn't And that ‘Bronx, weighted Gertrude Berg ippearances but doesn't ee , times Q -and-A Jak ire vou); With one of the most prodigious write them home?” “If Im het I'm home stints of writing plus acting ever She has written a play, a com Mrs. Gertrude Berg, the cre kround out under daily pressure. eqy with her son and is happily 4 ator, acter, writer, and sole pro She got her first cation 20 anticipating the staging of it “T aaa ote POE ESSE A, LOPLI: «CLAN RS STEN le A a AM SG eG ETE ER ca i ARO BLES SRR ARE LE , prictor of Molly Goldberg, took years later There w no sum. never had time to do other things : a breather backstage at her mer hiatus in those day ce wor? before, She's occupied my whole . Broadway hit play, (A Majerity on all year around life, this Molly ‘ * of One,” with Sir Cedrie Hard At first the Goldber hie vas AS for Mrs, Bloom, the character 3 ‘ wicke) to cast a fond eve back ‘on once a week followu \mos Whom Molly yoo-hooed at so often . af over her 30 years with the Gold- ‘nn’ And) Nite 1\ ‘ it that people began to think she was (a(s S| ? bergs. Next Tuesday night, went to six mghts a week with a real alee app — ” hie ; , - a she'll appear othe Garry Moore live re-broadca lea fyy radio program but once—and then lik) ; show, on CBS-TV, to celebrate the \West Coas! she said only one word, “Oy! : ' the anniversary’ "ot . * a i * . % Looking back on it, that first. "Then later” Mrs bers ve: Family Bands Together : vear, 1929. was m\ best vear she | called “kor veat ‘ sere on to said. ‘“‘] didn’t have enough money|jboth NBC and CBS five tunes a LAWTON, Okla. ? Phere is a +c arorry-eboutthe-errsh—A_friendaweek—we sometimes —rin trom father-son combination in Ft Sill’s 2 * a 8 A : of mine who used to hear my mon-ithe studio of one network to the 97th Army Band, C. W. O. Ray O - 2. | = i ologues about this woman (I had/other—and also were on local sta-/-McCune is. director and his son renc rovincl ining 1eces! ‘ really been deing Molly since [ was|tion WOR recorded in the morn. Pvt. Ray O, McCune Jr. plavs the SQQUnreaee mani : § a little girl) had said to me ing clarinet - ; § Seen testo _— : Thanksgiving feature! New Provincial ; = fruitwood finish on sturdy cherry .. . fine 50 % : 3 furniture that’s warm and hospitable, a i : most attractive addition to your dining Each : = room ; x on gerucint ingporeTed Black Yori . connne,* Ps — a a eee 4 2 i} ! 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Every one e Lustrous glazes, high-fired for incomparable depth of FULLY ae ean ee gO so fast at this color and lasting beauty . topped with a luxurious ‘ GUARANTEED ae SENS: ENTE: ae RAE shade of richly textured fabric. Truly an incomparable : ‘ value that you will find hard to equal anywhere, now or ' USE OUR CONVENIENT in the future. Choice of popular decorator colors: White 3 B uy Now LAY-AWAY PLAN! Jade, Sand-Tex or Aqua. . . : WHERE GRANDPA GRANOMA BO , for ; s PONTIAC sa o eye ene hum ae ative cate ah Se ea eee =~ a. LITTLE ‘Christmas 30° PAY AS at JEWELRY CO. 25 North Saginaw Street Open Mon. . and Fri. Eves ‘til 9 P.M. OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS ‘TIL 9 “+ “$. Saginaw St. at Orchard Lake Ave. ' a meant PARK BEHIND STORE — 1T’S_FREE a_i By. The Associated , Press 1. Total offense Anyway you figure it, Syracuse; 2. Jotal defense is the No, 1 team in major college’ - 3. Rushing offense } “yt 4 football. . : The unbeaten, untied Orange, | 5. —— defense ranked first in The Associated - Scoring Press weekly poll and headed for Syracuse also is among the top the Cotton Bowl, lead the nation in: }10 in three of the other four team California Vet Named Top Pro Duino Will High Golf Dec. 8 ° Receive Award DUNEDIN, Fla. —Eddie Duino, a caddie, caddiemaster, assistant! pro and head professional in a 38-year career at the San Jose,} Calif, Country Club. Wednesday | was named golf professional-of-the-| year. Announcement of Duino’s selec-) tion came from Harold Sargent,} president of the Professional Golf- ers Assn. An anonymous committee select-, ed the 50-year-old Duino from a} group of 16 club pros for his all-| around ability and contributions to! the PGA President's Dinner Dec. 8 at Clearwater, Fla. Art Wall Jr.) of Pocono Manor, Pa., will receive the PGA golfer-of-the-year award at the same time Duino's entire career the San Jose club & has been at He started; bers of the Syracuse there as a caddie at the age of! who lead the nation as the number one team and are Bruce Hoag, team manager, fullback. Jack 12 and worked up te be a pro in also in most statistics. They will play in the Cot Nochols, tackle Bob Yates and back Ger 2 Ki > 5 } June 1932. ton Bowl. Rear row from left are guard Roger Schwedes He served four terms as a na-, . tional vice president of the PGA and served as chairman of the = . ° organization's educational commit- Philly AFL Verdict Today Lt. Gov. Race Victor tee three years. . SALEM, N.H, (AP) Lt. Gov ¥ ‘ — | ( Duino was a member of the oe ; oo five-man faculty of the PGA busi-- PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Bob it will be announced at a noon David Buckson of Delaware, len x — * of art < Mear.| . : a 1\ harnes horses : i f See Eee a a at ( : et Carpenter, owner of baseball's (EST) press. conference dr % | ca ae ; es oe ms é "ing the, past two winters. won his first race of the fall meet ‘Hatry Pezzul} - Northbr Philadelphia Phillies, announces. Harry Wismer, president of the oe ce : ; cullo Nor rook, at Rockingham Park Wednesday Ill.. was selected golf professiona]-| today whether he'll join the Amer- Last week at this time it was To S Small § h still rumored he would like to D Cnools t ok of-the-year for 1958 ican Football Léague as the own- thought he would bring the fran- Now. however, the expectation a as ‘er of the eighth and final team Bowling Green 11 chise to Philadelphia, and it is NEW YORK (UPI) — Bowling has been tempered by reports the Green (Ohio) today replaced Dela- AFL has decided it would be un-' ware as the nation’s No. 1 team wise to compete with the well-es in United Press International's tablished Philadelphia Eagles of small college footbal) ratings and the National Football League Middle Tennessee State took over _* * * ; third place behind Mississippi Whatever Carpenter's decision Southern. —— GOING COTTON PICKIN’ — These are mem- University categories listed in NCAA service age of 98.8 yards a game to top the bureau ‘statistics released today. total defense list, and is No, 1 in ‘The only one in which the Orange rushing defense with a 36.8 yield. ifornia No. 2 fail to appear is punting—having That works out to 1.2 yards for kicked fewer times than any other/each rushing play and a little bet- team (24 in eight games for a 36.2-|ter than 2-yards a crack* rushing yard average). land passing. Syracuse has given up an aver-! Louisiana State is the total of- AP Wirepheote Davis, center A] Bemiller, center Dave Applehof, and tackle Maury Youmans. Front row from left football team New York franchise, said on Nov ° Suck cor th . 10 the final franchise would go to Night. Buckson scored with Mas Philadelphia or Boston within 10 ter Scott in 209.2 in the sixth days racé. He paid $10.60 Schentey Distillers Co. W.Y.C. BLENBED WHISKY OF ELEGANCE, 86 Proof, 65% Grain Neutral Spirits * Cry ©legance i$-0 mark. i statistic groupings. Alabama is No. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1959 Syracuse Also No. 1 College Team in Every Statistic Z fense runner-up, giving up 143.7/one of the Big Ten's key games. yards a game, with Southern Cal-'In the other one, Illinois will pla- in rushing. defense, toon all except guard Bill Burrell allowing 17.6. Seuthern Cal is the'and tackle Rutgens against only uther major team with a per- Northwestern fect record, matching Syracuse's * * * Tackle Bob Lilly and guard Ray Pinion came out of Texas Chris- tian’s scrimmage yesterday with slight brufSes in prepping for Sat- urday's key game with Rice. The Owls first'string cénter Boyd King was listed as a doubtful partici- pant Joe Alabama, Mississippi and Stan- ford claim the leads in the other 1 in pass defense (47.5) yards a game), Mississippi tops in scoring defense (2.3 points a game) and Stanford is first in passing offense (208.6 yards) Notre Dame will have halfback The Orange, leading to- Angelo Dabiero, injured against tal offense and rushing offense fig- P!t. ready to relieve starter Bob {13.6 and 296.1, respective Scarpitto, who is filling in for the ly, are eighth in scoring defense. injured Red Mack in Saturday's They've allowed 6.4 point a game— game at Iowa while leading in scoring With a 38.9 averag whose ures are Hawks Add Farmhands iS € Mat Spray UND “Guaranteed for the life of atm a Authorized Pontiac-Rambler Dealer OVERHEAD LOCATIONS BIG savincs For You~ ‘IN LAKE ORION—2 LOCATIONS Russ Johnson Motors Broadway Corner of Shadbolt — M-24 Corner of Shadbolt your car from ‘rust-out MY 2-2871 ERCOATING ‘ Protects your car Quiets your 1 FORTY-FIVE 95 The University of Michigan ranks noreride Plus ninth inf punting among major SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (AP) = _ Tax teams, averaging 40 yards fur 43 —The Chicago Black Hawks of . e punts in eight games the National Hockey League have Pp t U d t * * * taken over player - operation of on iac n ercoa ing Seventh-ranked Penn State is: the paul Ste Thunderbirds 136 S. Saginaw FE 4-5453 keeping grimly silent about football Of the Eastern League, It was - _ Prag a talk at least antil Wiee cat annouced Wednesday <5 “ee as PRBS ~S - urday’s game with Pitt “To tell the truth,”” said Put Bo- fea SOLOOOD SARA RODIN A RAR A neve tula, captain and fullback of the Penn State club, ‘the bovs have- not talked to me about anything but the Pitt me, If there is a bowl fever in the air, it hasn't reached the football team Coach Rip Engie, overhearing the remark, added “Tve already called this team AUTO STORES “pante-proof—Sestew hod prep ably add bowl-proof to the list.” Everyon tabbed end Carroll Dale “Mr. Danger on Virginia ; FULL 1-YEAR PRO-RATA GUARANTEE rachiamtoatbalimtennibctonesithe —against oll road hazords, against defects in moteriol or work- ? ip under normal drivirg season began. But they menship ~ nditions—pro-rated on tread wear. ove eyes halfback Alger Pugh, who Has teamed with his captain to bring Tech to the brink of a Southern GOOD *VEAR Conference crown Tech, with a 6-3 overall record and 3-0 in the conference, meets Virginia Military 4-0-1 Saturday with the winner succeeding West Virginia for the title It was Pugh and Dale who last Saturday knocked the Mountain eers out of contention, handing them their first « loss in 31 games with a Wisconsin Coa nierence . 12-0 defeat h Milt Bruhn de- scribed his team as 2 tired bunch” while the Badge drilled against an expected aerial on 7.10-15 slaught by Minnesota Saturd in No Fed. Tax! No Trade-in! 7.60-15 138 | 1428 One of the finest winter traction 'Nu-Tread” tires you can buy —anywhere! Grade a oe Selected casings —fully capped with grade "A" cold rubber Massive, deep, silent run- ning cleats that'll pull you thru the toughest going in snow or mud! 27 In. Wide 6-Foot PLASTIC MAT ' ~See This Big J&R Super-Volve!— "Suburbanite” Nu-Tread yy Coan? » x LI ( « a cy i" Delaware, which suffered its _— DESK WRITER with ; first 1959 defeat. last Saturday, Fiahts Nov. ge a | oe when it dropped a 30-8 decision to Jordan ig 28 3 pts : ~ in the home! PEG BOARD . 98 Bowling Green, slipped to fourth. SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) /, r ‘\ > Each Hours and hours of happy 99 Oy Coach Doyt Perry's Bowling World welterweight champion / \ e “ ¢ play time! Blackboard desk Green Falcons, third in last week’s Don Jordan of Los Angeles will : “Sy Protects rugs from beord’ Con . a oig peg F ratings, handed Delaware its worst meet Brazilian champ Fernando , 17) LL f WWihe tracked in dirt, eer pegs ond ig eraser, $4 ~ licking score-wise since Bucknell Barreto in a_non-title 10sround of é cot. 4 War tort flot. Sturdy Chuninom a “at ae ran up a 33-6 edge in 1951. bout here Nov, 28 : Te, Hie ide id! 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Get up to BI sil edited Srl x a . ‘ : 7% ud! ‘ Ve : more action ry roads, ton! Ser : 5 par | Spaced es oe *Guaranteed Monthly Cost) | now and save on safer winter driving! # » 58 gar Pl he oa 88 your J&R Battery cun't cost you meret ; 14 e ; co - usually outlasts the guarantee for even BUY EARLY... ve L yy. ‘ $ GMC Cruise wk SM teed a lower GMC than shown above—. STORE THEM FREE... +. 1 Schenley %s = Dl ciel SS STALL THEM FREE cc? ips -_ | A ‘i ae am a op Oc 7. oe | MUFFLERS _."TROPIC-AIRE” ELECTRIC HEATER | yr Cee XN | eee | Preiss With FAN BLOWER! gno gel et 45. P It's lightweight and 9 i uo" é sis ee, gs portable —supplies 3 $ R a ee r Instant" fast heat! : j a Two-tone finish with $9.95 ‘ 4 f safety front grille. Value! ; a 2 : * Heats Any Room in Your ' All- 2 ete Home—For Basement too! ; 7 Ff WEATHER SPECIAL CAULKING GUN | New “IeeRem” | [bs ypeay +47 "Flaked" yn BATTERY fal és l re ( e) Melts snow-ice ote. # . a fa Trigger type— ‘ fost— provides 2 ses repl “ ¢ tracti : : by = < : For PONTIAC For CHEV able rarwidee, dy . hapll wheeln & ¥ Be es 1935-54 9 $1.69 19 A by fs ; | Goop/Year 6 & VB 1941-53 Value PU? \qi | 10 bb. 69 = a! | . h 65.95 CARTRIDGE ® = aed || 4 ee 1954387, 6 cy! 6.95 New ' Flow 37¢ WN Rt claaeic a Melts it FE e More Power ‘6 VOLT 12 VOLT . ch en le i For BUICK | eee Ee pFR X./ | 'ast—no shoveling, ete.! < lew Sates $1095 $395 yoy : 1949-53 For FORD 595 BS) WEATHER | STORM WINDOW © Longer Life — — é RESERVE 6.95 \1949-53....... STRIPPING || ss 36°x72"—win e Budget Priced thay a bli pire , eens ‘ - Mufflers for all Cars at J&R—Call mons CXR ee Pte ' Y Pay vd little — $1.25 _enlond . pe P } at Store for Listing and Low Prices! / PSS, suese ai, ome Heavy “a yj 4 y : ——S uv ir . Yllildidlldidliich YY UW6béébs6ésés!”/UD ay : | ae Ya a i ent =) ems GOODYEAR | , bos [10% DISCOUNT on 776 || ey reef y . ° ; When Purchased with a fj 17” Felt Stripping 19 ies : 4 | EE SERVICE STORE p finer in the hottle..cleaily finer to your taste [TAIL PIPES vopiacoment Mutter ||.0201 Botiom Swipping_29¢ | ond ‘ne sock ODE} 30S. Cass FE 5-612 et J&R AUTO STORES 115 NORTH SAGINAW ST... | 7 $965 $420 . me * "MI Ms MM EEE LLEIIEXZZ a ara ei . - PARK FREE REAR OF STORE —£ , se A 4 4 t i % = eee ee ~ . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1959. Income Tax Loomis for. State Squabbling GOP Goes | to Showdown Caucus —Decision Demanded Mart Continues | MARKETS. | pees | CHICAGO, Cet, 19 (AP) — Opening - quotations: LANSING (UPI) — Squabbling . > | The following are top prices Wheat: _ May . 74% ° Republicans scheduled a cavcsil fg Brisk Rall ‘covering sales of locally grown | Mar. ie ee showdown today that could set the \produce brought to the Farmer's|M®Y -- 2-2hi3 Dec. He rth 7 j course for settlement of Michigan's Market by growers~and sold by peor: i Mey spancet 1.38 L. R.-Schreinet, general manager fiscal es . NEW YORK w—The’ stock mar- ‘them in wholesale package lots.|Mar. 1.16% Sept ass 1.36% of GM’s Tern Division, ymaker oat * , ket resumed its rally in brisk trad- |Quotations are furnished by the May ... 1.18% past (drums): of automobile are. It shaped up as a showdown be- ing early toda |Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of|Dec. .. . 18% May 9.02 tween a package of ‘‘nuisance y. | Wednesday. | Mar TIM Ground will broken for the Gains of fractions to a point or| project -early 1960, Schreiner taxes and some form of income ltax, including possibly a payroll more were shown by a number | said. It is expected that the build- of key stocks. ~~ | ing will be for use by ap-| itdx. y Detroit Produce unt ata S - ‘proximately 1,70@ employes in the) | “Let’s get this settled,” de- Pred cee ae eee vuvirs spring of 1962. | manded GOP Floor Leader Lynn ‘an faire. aa =o he \Appies, Delicious, bu, $3.78 “Approximately 600 additional | 0. Francis (R-Midland), who : Greenings. bu .. 235 Bevan Farol mia bowed hae to “tad my |S, Semen, sera, ed ae eee" NOw Stand at 20 | we move inte our new — nose’’ te vote for either plan. Olis were down fractionally. rye ond rng y. ve Jeleisewiere - $08 ters,” Schreiner announced, y : Francis failed to get support for) po.4 which back Pears Goss bu. -- +s . The Ternstedt building will be . / his suggestion that both parties |") eeicth ie hat VEGETARLES Four More Die, One by ond ghe Michinas Reotral Railroad| PROBLEM SOLVED — Transportation prob-_ caer round the-clock until @/tion may offer another 2,000,000| Cabbage eu 0 *, Gunshot; Two Suffer — ‘sails ead. aut: Gk the general lem is solved high above Bridgeport, Conn., as” — = . shares of common to the public, | Seppags: Curly, bu. 331° Heart Attacks offices of Fisher Botly Division and) section of the Overhaul Dept. for the Army's pair were airlifted by the S-60 lying crane over REVISE PACKAGE was up fractionally after the actual S*frots topped, ou. 33 the Chevrolet Engineering Center. | H-34 helicopter was moved from the Bridgeport the mile air route. Compltted in one day, | Revisions were made by the|/Mews Came. — a Celery, test, G06. osise er sces cece 1.78 3 The property, which has been | Airport t to » the Sikorsky plant in Stratford. Seven- it would have taken six days overland. [Senate Tax Committee yesterday} North American Aviation was Locke dee bene wl By The Associated Press owned by GM for some time, néw | — a $$$ . - on the 70-million-dollar-plus pack- about a point higher. A report was ywqeres Gry 50-Ib. a — eee ee 3 Four more hunters have died. is being used by the Beverly Hills age, which had been riddled by|pUblished that it had developed-a Barsiey. curly, doa. bchs. . “g0\One of them by gunshot, to boost — | Golf Course. , * ee Thi t’s T S t ‘criticism from both parties. new compact atomic device for | Sirantpe — 2.35| Michigan’s 1959 deer hunting sea- _ Try, ats lop secre space vehicles, (Potatoes. 50 1b. bag 1.75 | \ Sen. Haskell L, Nichols (K- A huge block of 87,830 shares of | |Radishes. black, ‘2 bu. . oie eh toll to 26. All died Norway, Barry Coe S F Ah d, | Jackson) said he would move to (studebaker - Packard when-issued roo ay~eeenennl i" nescny. Be Wed Saturda _| A case of wine, some gum and | cience orges Ca | day to discharge the committee | y,- traded at 18% up 's. Stude- | gauss? Mme ge o . / * ball . * — dion | : y jcandy were stolen by | burglars | | trom consideration of a flat rate (baker-Packard regular was ahead gouesh: Buttercup. bu. wos, ae The shooting victim was Jack , Me . Norway — Miss Nor- who broke into Walter's Grocery, but W here Is It Going ? income tax. This would force a |, fraction. mbaapey + cnet ig vores ial Williams, 62, of Mullet Lake, for-- |46944 Clarkston Rd., Independence floor fight on the income tax. Turnipe: WGA seco cee es es 2.00 merly of Oxford. Williams was American Motors rose a point or wa y iof ‘1959 and American movie | struck by a stray bullet while hunt- Township, it was reported to Oak- , Presid EENS Barry Cee will wed here i s | Nichols move, denounced 258) |more. resident George Romney | oer a ; . Sa land County - sheriff's a cae By WARD CANNEL ered submarine, the Nautilus, to premature by Senate Majority|issued another encouraging re-/Giiiars’ No to bu. cll) .. )L88 Se man fae tare beet —, ag Yesterday. | ; ew nter to die o J Krisianse m, 19, was) | NEW YORK (NEA)—In answer Sea. [Leader Frank D. Beadle, reflected port. SALAD GREENS gunshot. | -up in this year’s Miss! fats Cleaned And Blocked, $1,\to hundreds of. questions from all Today, as manager of the Sur- a growing sentiment among some’ Rethieher, Republic Steel and Celery Cabbage. doz. $1.75) Univ contest in Long Beach, |e S. Saginaw Street. jparts of the U. S. about our new face Ship Project at the Westing-/Republicans that an income tax Jones & Laughlin were slightly | | Two of the dead suffered fatal | Calif. Opti-Mrs, Rummage Sale, Sat.|"UClear-powered surface navy, it house Bettis Atomic Power Divi-would be the only adequate solu-' ghead. Youngstown Sheet rose . ’ | heart attacks. John S, Maciarz, | tall, honéy-haired girl andl \Now, 2ist. 9 am. at 128 W. Pike|can be reported that science is Sion. he is in charge of powering|tion to the lingering financial about a point. U.s, Steel dropped Livestock | 43, of Hamtramck, collapsed | Coe be married at the Moss St. Clothing & household articles. forging right ahead — while the'the new cruiser Long Beach and crisis. | a traction. - . | while walking in a Chebo Dean V. Hanssen-Bau st of back newer aircraft carrier Enterprise. | DETROIT LIVESTOCK | 5 . — by -Dauer. Combination Rummage & Bake rest of us are forging backward. Q. Im the buildi t sted | | Union Carbide gained about 2. | ~ DETROIT, Nov. 18 (AP) — Cattle! County woods. Alexander S. Bas- } The will be closed to the) |\Sale United Pentecostal Church In fact, national ignorance of liding of these mo-) U bn salsole 400. Fresh receipts sharply cur- key, 45, of Auburn collapsed 178 Green St., Nov. 2lst. 8 a.m. to ibile nuclear power units, ai p about a point were American tailed. however this supply increased i “¢ i . was weal! Pan, atomic energy is stil so appalling | feinaerita Thus have Soa a red omes ‘Tobacco, Goodyear, Woolworth and >¥,*,,moderate carry over of utility while hunting in Gogebic County. couple receive er 14 years since the first atom-. red oes en ee eee erings: pena | Their deaths brought to 17 the with a ovation when intro- Rummage sale, Fri., Nov. 2@ ic bomb was dropped that if an-! lot about making reactors sma all! bog aaa Sanne *atfete as etter | number of heart victims. duced jo the Moss citizenry at the 1213 East Maple, B'ham. Adv. other were to fall on — let's say and yet powerful? pages es Se Lrwey decline local F of Coe’s latest pic-) Ry sale at First Presby- Covington, La., hardly anybody A. We have. New York Stocks |and hetlers virtually absent; in early| Frank Macyda, %, of Dearborn, ture “§ Private’s Affair.” ~ ‘terian Chureh Nov. 20, 5 p. m. Adv. would know what hit him. | Q. Could you give an example? | bY one a . ony ia load lots “about. sieeay. |e the a on atl pio victim. a A U dmira 225 Lib McN&L 104 e was with two earlier suffocation Cuan Operrt Dah ese TIon vem fe ns a pie erie the |pltegy Cems ter desared tiie’ kat ate SS gree ter Sk Wiad pete 2235 |vietims who were trapped Sunday ; eux we Gane ee feces a. ase | interests of a better-informed | Union Business Agent's ities 8 strs Mi tow ee tie oO er : lin a trail Lew q pp for tne Year 1368 $142,300.00 | America, here are the official | that information classified. jal ‘lum chal 343 Lone 8 Cem 316 ee ede ee car ae 16.00- | overc ome Le ‘tim Lewiston and ursement tor’ Butiding | Maint ates | answers to some of the most fre- Q. Well, you must have figured! Wife Told Her Husband 3%! jAlcoa ae eee tone zea] ree, valk still unsels. chore and (heater. by fumes from a gas | __ 4646.00 | quently asked questions. ‘lout how to standardize the units a ‘Will Be Next’ Am te = 13 Lou & Nash 724 jsowe opening 25 cents higher: most] 1 ad dition, ex bs | $194,702.44 | ‘efe you can use one or more — rea ry ¢ May DS 13| 12 50°13.00; No. 1 and 230. Ibs. ee | fer to Bidg. Addition No. 3 37,445.43 |_The expert fa: John Stiefel, who ending on the size of ship you! Am Ma Fay $0¢ May D Str 47-3) 1250-13-00; No. 1,and 2 198-230 IRs. suffered a fatal collapse and died | = put the world’s first nuclear- ‘pow- ‘have to drive? CINCINNATI (“—"Your husband Am Motors 90.5 Merck 78.2) butchers 11.75-12.25; mixed grades 160: | from undetermined causes $112,257 #1 4 m N Gas 561 Merr Ch & S 167/190 mh butchers 1.75- : 75; mixed x00. | | lis next.’ Am Smel 7 . $ 6,206.94 | A. Yes. We have. . After issuin the tele neilttt Tel & Tel 38 Minn yl M ae cee ey 50. ~— re 33,193.44 } About how big is a standard 8 pho -104.4 Monsan Ch 50.2; Vealers — Salable 75. Fully steady: C i a wa 0] feared ae .! i andard threat, the caller hung up on Mrs. ‘Anaconae _* Mont Ward 51.5! choice and prime 34 to 40 standard and ave Trip Too Heady ° Propose igger _ un John Warnock, whose husband is} Armour & Co . 36 pepe me Yano oe Man per ae | MUS $151,656 39 | A. Unfortunately, the Navy business agent for the strife-torn Atchison ; : Mueller Br 26.2 Slaughter classes steady: most good and| KOGEE, Okla. & — Mem- : wt that information kept secret.|Teamsters Local 100. \Balt & Ee “0 dT) Murray cp. 218|choice ‘wooled slaughter "lambs 17-18; * | ber s of a Boy Scout troop here are | Beth ‘or ; §4.3 Nat Bisc 52.7’ small lot high choice 19.78; utility to) lin the $121,908.48 Q. Wan bos" moe owe ~ *« * Boeing Air... 33) ©Nat Cash R .. 63.4|good lambs 14-1650. cull’ to choice|/ market for some helmets arity i | power) 26.4 Nat Dairy 49.6 slaughter ewes 4.00-6.50: good and chaaed before they take thei ] wend Ground Maintenance $942.08 “7 one oe Iiges = feliver? | The local's frustee, John Curt Borg Warn . 45.2 Nat Gyps 56.6 feeder lambs 16 50-18.50 on their next per Diem and Mileage 1,295.12 singer of nearby Florence, Ky., is BW) Blxe’ | fei NY Central. ‘39.2 ‘fave exploration. All casualties | * 28.15 . still missing after receiving a|Burroughs 332 Nort & West 89 from their first underground trip parece er 13.08 | Operating Cost Picture| : ae you 1 ie explain| similar warning 12 days ago. He|pemee Soup .. $1 No Am Av .. 37 | Poultry and Eggs ‘were from ‘bumped and cut heads. 64.83 | \inJsifnple terms how one of these! aisanpeared de tliewe day wlOee ae eee SC —_ 48.64 Appears Far Brighter lunits work? ppea e Cay €P Capital air 132 Ohio On 35.4 DETROIT POULTRY 280 00 route to a union meeting here. (Carrier Cp 34.7 Owens Cng 844 DETROIT, Nov. 18 (AP)—Prices per] _ is hereby given, that state land seeeaneees eves set _ for Coming Year =A. Sorry. The Commission... | ie warncck geld that when (Chitr’brac 22} Owens Tilt Gi 99.2 pound Tob. Detroit for No. 1 quailty tion has been filed MPthe Tonsres eu ee . ~ 5 rnoc er Peeseeees — .| 4 How aboyt the fuel it uses? the call came in Tuesday night —. be tepid rar ane heey ty hens 16-19, mostly 18-19: hy weaaned' es pal na ot patie, egetton Dues and Publications ; 318.67 | A 1960 operating budget bigger - The Commission . “I thought it had something to ore a i parks Ts %. (ena trytrs 3-4 Ibs, whites 17-18: ‘Barred ete at ‘te 1959, at 10°00" an BOT ho 2,203.44 than this year’s and probably far| @. Then, how long does ‘the fuel) do with Curtsinger. But all the |Coce Cola ...1634 Penney. jo 3 Seren, tee copemetion under five yt Med Supervisors Room, Pourth Ploor. = aries |brighter was scheduled for presen- last man sald was, ‘Your husband ts Coiim Gas 10.6 Pepsi Cole 3417 cose 28-30; turkeys heavy type young Street, Pontiac, Michi me: 1 Latayene . 1,787.80 |tation to the Pontiac General Hos- A. The Navy .. next.’ ” \ Good Sales, Dividend Department officials said they by Nerieee gh a dent: ‘ n - $ 226.743 52| Chemical test for alcoholic content} WASHINGTON (NEA) — This is the way direct conversion are considering the introduction) $i" ,4™¢. ore "Freet-erandeniia + 188499 of his blood. Copies of the pro-|! of heat into electricity works: a Michigan — brit Co. 'of legislation to create a 15-day urday Nov. i, ‘2 pm. trem 1434 Kent County. to leeteittors frome sig Aran ———— on 2 or § approximately r per cent in eg will be val bi te vanthony Nelson 258. y. metals are attached to each other at both ends, and if one junc- # | sales new plates id. Present; — Mausoleum