ee \ ai Was climbing to 17, alter a trig * * SHAKING — WITH THE COLD — Tahitian Ramine Allen, in Kansas City, Mo. to promote a motion picture, found the tempera- . tures-too chilly for skimpy grass skirts, and decided to hide her ee in a borrowed overcoat. ON THE RISE — Aatscngl Halt Lake” Gp, Utdh taemmen A. N. Lindorff looks cold, the temperature on the thermometer PO IR Ao) SMI AP Wirephote gid low of 6.there yesterday. AP Wirephote Gale's Backlash Hits Eastern Half of U.S. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS _ Strong northwest winds from the violent storm which raked the Rockies and northern Midwest fanned*cold air across the eastern half of the nation today. Gale warnings remained Wind gusts of 50 and 60 m.p.h. lashed Northern Mich- igan ‘Tuesday. Gale-like winds hammered the north shore of Lake Superior as the tailend of the storm struck the Da- kotas. and northern and northwestern Minnesota. Towering waves smashed stim- mer cabins and fesorts as the storm swept into northwestern On- * tatio. ‘ At least 19 deaths were attrib- uted to the snowstorm which pounded . sections from Idaho, Utah and Arizona northeastward to Minnesota. However, skies cleared and wag the outlook in all of the Mississippi Riv- &- 2 2 The lesiting edge of the cold air ‘extended from Pennsylvania south-' ward across éustern Tennessee and Alabama into the Gulf of Mexico. | Rain fell in sections along the cold front, with rain and falling temperatures along the | eastern Gulf Coast and the Atlan- ‘tie seaboard by tonight. Snow flur: ‘ties Wéreforecast: near the lower ~ sy posted on the Great. Lakes. + + Great Lakes region and in ‘parts of New England. The biggest temperature drops were in Tennessee and the lower Ohie Valley, \ Readings were 25 to 35 degrees/ lower than 24 hours earlier. They, ‘also were 20 to 30 degrees lower than Tuesday morning in the upper Great Lakes, with some readings under 20 in northern Michigan. Pennsyl ope frony light in most places to about a half inch in parts of Tennessee,’ Alabama and ‘Ken- tucky, Drizzle sprayed areas from New York City to sotithern New England. How About Swapping? WARSAW (UPI) — The Polish National Airlines, recently. en: gaged jn negotiation to purchase ‘British - made turbo-prop air- planes, advertised for sale today: “One ‘horse, one wagon—10,000 Strong winds added to the cold, They also okayed the sta Rainfall along the. cold. front| of , : from Alabama and . $7,350 worth of ghound work around vania the terminal. He ham, chosen by the Michigan Aeronautics Commission. ry ment in the personals column of Hint Blockade : of West Berlin Charge That Allies Use Air Corridors to Further Cold War Aims BERLIN #—Communist East Germany dropped a to get control over the Al- jlied air corridors leading to isolated West Berlin. ‘These would be the Allied surface routes were closed. |. The hint came in the East Berlin newspaper Neue Zeit. It declared. the United States, Britain and France are violating Berlin and Frankfurt, Hamburg and Hannover — would be used British European Airways use them for regular passenger flight. These airlines also carry out the thousands of refugees that stream into West Berlin every month from East Germ- any. Neue Zeit contended the West- war’ and the time has come for new negotiations on their use. FITS INTO PATTERN This article fits another piece’ Nikita Krushchey last week—to turn over control of supply lines| to the East German Communists and force the Allies out of Berlin. Soviet withdrawal from the. four-power occupation of the old German capital is now considered a certainty, although authorities here had no idea how soon it would come. The Western Big Three were al- ready getting set to cope with the impending transfer of control over surface supply across 110 miles of East German territory. These| were cut in the 1948-49 blockade that =i broken by airlift. ussian action was expected | to touch off the most serious Ber- 4lin crisis since the 1948-49 block- ade. The United States, Britain and (Continued on Page 2, “ol. 8) City Advances Airport Funds $25,000 of Full Share of Terminal, Tower City commissioners last night ad- vanced $25,000 out of capital im- provement funds for construction of a terminal and tower at Pontiac Municipal Airport and promised an- other $45,000 next year. The total $70,000 is the city’s matching share in a federal aid formula that has the state con- | tributing $70,000 and the federal government $140,000. The state and federal funds have: already — aeatel Thus the way. was a for fi- nancing construction of the build ing next year. Preliminary plans jare being sent to Lansing this week for approval and. may get a final month * Homer Hoskins, airport man- | ager, said he hopes to get con- struction bids early next year. proved hiring William €. Zim- merman Associates as architects. The firm drew up the prelimi- nary plans, Robert G. Peck- Lonesome, Too! TOKYO: (UPD - ~— An advertise- the newspaper Mainichi today | read: “Smoking, drinking, ca- rousing, Japanese-speaking Cau- casian gentleman: wishes to meet smoking, drinking, carousing, Japanése-speaking lady. Object: strong hint today it expects) - garrison’s only lifelines if| a four-power agreement that the! jair corridors—stretching between: only for allied military purposes. | Pan American, Air France and | ern Big Three were using the cor-| ridors “for purposes of the cold! OK'd for Construction Commissioners last night ap- | ‘It Pays to Advertise? _ glycerin ‘to break into the vault It | City waits with her six children WAITING FOR WORD — Mrs. Cecilia Karewzcek, of Rogers for word of her husband Joseph, a crew member of the ship lost on Lake Michigan. The children Union Faces Big Decision AFL-CIO Must Expel Giant Carpenters Group. or Ease Corruption Fight, drive or possibly losing another anes the Carpenters. ce Hutcheson, the Car. | pe Union boss, has dared AFL-ClO _ President afdeorge Meany to stop investigating the carpenters or risk withdrawal of the 840,000-member union trom the merged labor organization. Having already tossed .out the 1% million member Teamsters) Union on coiruption charges, AF'L- CIO leaders may think twice about ifurther depleting federation ranks, pote down to about 1314 million members. At an AFL-CIO Executive Coun- cil meeting two weeks ago Walter) Reuther, head of the Auto Work- ers, and James B. Carey, presi- dent of the International Union of Electrical Workers, moved to oust and AFL-CIO vice president right! then and there. However, the council decided | to give Hutcheson more time to | explain his refusal to answer questions by the Senate Rack- | ets Comimittee and to discuss his scandals, attend that council meeting, Hutcheson sent a written denial of wrongdoing or misuse of union ifunds. Then last week the Carpen- ters Union cofivention authorized Hutcheson and fellow union offi- cials to pull the union out of the AFL-CIO if and when they see fit. * * * The way things stand now, the AFL-CIO council has asked Hutcheson to appear and make his explanation of corruption charges at its next meeting in ‘February at San Juan, Puerto ‘Rico, or at a special session when-| ever Hutcheson is emeseer FS remey. Clouds, Wind, Wind, Cold Not Ready fo Leave O.K. in Washington, D. C., next Partly cloudy, windy and colder is tonight’s forecast by the U.S. | Weather Bureau. The temperature , 060, will be the taxpeyers in* will drop to near 36 degrees. | Thursday will be mostly cloudy ‘and colder, the high reaching 42, ithe low 28. Winds will ‘continue lat 15-20 miles an hour tonight and ‘Thursday. Friday's outlook partly cloudy with little tempera- ture change. \ Precipitation will average less than one-fourth inch in showers about Thursday night and again about Sunday or Parsee s * In downtown Posting the lowest recorded temperature preceding 8 a.m. was 35 degrees. The read- ing at 2 p.m. was 46. & WASHINGTON (AP)—The AFL- into the pattern of*the Soviet bloc’s|}CIO faces a protMem of campaign—touched off by Premier) ‘backing up on its anticorruption ‘of the labor federation's major, Hutcheson as a council member) indictment in Indiana highway | While shunning an invitation to’ ap a a 25 Rogers City Families Can Only Hope and Pray ROGERS CITY (UPI) — Rogers; on Lake Huron, hoped and prayed |today for 25 of its seamen missing in gale-swept Lake Michigan.. as residents stayed up all night. “It's like one of those mine disasters,’ one of them said. ‘‘All| we can do is sweat it out—and ipray.” * * * The local radio station broadcast | op an emergency basis all night, ' bulletins on the djsaster. sailors on the nine ships operated by the Bradley Transportation Line. The Carl D. Bradley, which sank; yesterday in Lake Michigan, was | | About 350 Rogers City men are | | _ The choppy watters of northern forced a 40-foot rescue vessel to) went down. | Lake Michigan are studded with | ‘abandon its | small rocky islands and reefs, . "}9, 105844 PAGES are Jo Linn, 2's months; Andrea, 3; Kathy, ta, 10; and Ronald, 11. “es AP Wirephoto 4; Rose Ann, 7; Jacin- ; ®Built—1927 at Lorain, Ohio. Con-|hitting the jutting rocks. The Ger- City, a shipping community of 4,000' verted to turbo-electric power in man motor boat Satori, first rescue 1950, | * * * | stone Division of U.S. Steel Corp.) lester line and 640 feet overall. | Capacity—14, tons. At Charlevoix, lindicated today search operations vm for wr uw iCarl D. Bradley c likely causes for Sinking, x * * | some of which are just solitary rocks sticking above the water. | | Owner — Bradley Transportation|Particularly hampered because it | | | ‘ship to arrive at the scene, was Lights burned in many. homes/Lines, a part of the Michigan Lime.|@S not familiar with the area. Quick-paced winds which blew) Size—615 feet in length at the Waves up to 20 feet high also itossed flares, dropped by a Coast |Guard seaplane, out of their in-| ‘oust Guardsmen tended path. The seaplane tried ito drop the flares just in front of the Satori so the ship ceed on an illuminated iL. re igiving’relatives of the missing men hampered by one of the ‘most bina 50-65-mile-an-hour winds blew several flares in undesired direc- tions. The turbulent lake waters also) attempt to.reach the! scene, * * * The other possible reason for the a limestone carrier. The 25 Rogers | The’ Coast Guard said rescue sinking, the Coast Guard. said, was City men aboard sailed her during Vessels combing the area had to’an explosion in the cargo. —_. ‘the summer and fall and do main- Proceed at @ slow pace to avoid engines, ‘tenance work for the company in the winter, The city was stunned by the | accident. “It’s never happened to us be- ifore,”’ one resident said. Rogers City pinned its hopes on ithe Coast Guard reports that the location of the downed vessel had/ ‘not been pin-pointed. ers and sweethearts reasoned, “the rafts are floating someplace where the Coast Guard hasn't | searched.” And through the night and morn- ing, Rogers City. tried to forget the slashing words of Capt. Roland Bryan, whose distress call was the ‘last message réceived from the ship, “We've broken in half. going down.” Bradley are: “Maybe,” the wives and moth- We're! Statistics of the sunken Carl D.| SHIP LOCATION merce, Lyon, Holly, Farmington SPURGEON, Ind. (UPI)—Safe- crackers set off a charge of nitro- of the First National Bank, worked. But the explosion drew Smoking, drinking, rr dlotys.” (about $400) 5% Fe ‘i ry |. Send photo.” ae i such a crowd they ‘had to.run away without the “* <4 _ cities of Northville, Oak Park | / and Troy, 4 Big Companies in Area Given Michigan Tax Cuts The State Tax Commission has ordered tax assessment, cuts for three big utility companies and the Ford Motor| 'Co. with centers or property in Oakland County. To bear the brunt of these reductions, totaling $845,- 10 townships and cities. where the companies, which: won the cuts, are situated. William B, Grabendike, director of the Oakland County Equaliza- tion Dept., said these areas will be forced to raise taxes to. make up} for the lesser amount of revenue that will come in now as the result of these slices, ‘ Areas affected by the reductions granted to the Michigan Consoli- dated Gas Co., Consumers .Power, Co., the Panhandle Eastern Pipe- Man Atftlicted With Bad Case of Relativity MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) — Chief Petty Officer John Ebaugh has in-law problems — but not the ordinary kind. .'T can't tell kinfolks without a said yesterday.” line. Co., and the Ford Motor Co. will be: West Bloomfield, Milferd, Com- and Rose Townships, and the Grabendike said “ because the -eounty has already set the equal- \ized valuations for ite many town-. . |in-law. ‘he confusion arose, he said, when his father married his sister- This made the sister-in- law Ebaugh's stepmother, and his wife his stepsister. Not only that, his stepmother is both the stepmother arid the grand- ee by marriage, of Ebaugh’s The problem is relative,’’ Ehaugh quipped, “once you get the |- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) hang of being your own. brother-’ [ in-aw.”” | score card,” the retiring navy man | *s#etraty Ship Breaks Up in Gale-Lashed Lake Michigan Last Night; Three Bodies Recovered So Far | CHARLEVOIX — Two .|men were found alive today in angry waters of Lake Michigan, which it was feared had claimed the lives of 33 others from the freighter Carl D. Bradley, when she went down in the cold, storm-tossed lake late Tuesday. | The Coast Guard cutter \Sundew reported recovery ,of three unidentified bodies. ‘An unofficial tabulation ‘kept on ship and airplane radios in the search area in- dicated 18 bodies found. Some veteran seamen expressed amazement even two had survived overnight in 50-degree water in howling gale winds that piled up mountainous waves on the Great a. The air temperature was The 614-foot Brediey, longer _ than two football fields end-to- end, went down off Gull Island at the top of Lake Michigan in 60-mile winds, Split apart, ploded when her hot boilers. The German motorship Christian ‘Sartori, which batiled for more than an hour to cover the three |mites to the sinking site, found she apparently ex- incoming water hit jno survivors, no lifé boats: nothing except a tank that came from deep inside’ and indicated, explosion... { F Ru First mate S aot ee Fleming, 43, lew! an deckman Frank-Mays, 26, both of Rogers City, were found alive today off High Island, north and east of where the Bradley A sea. plane reported sighting eight bodies on a raft, but was ‘unable to say whether there was life in any. ~- *~ + *& | Verne Cole of the Grand Rapids Herald, keeping tab on ship and jaircraft radioed reports at the el- |bow of a ham operator, said 13 |bodies had been recovered. There was no confirmation of any body recoveries from the Coast Guard, Resciie craft, ‘with waves still - running high/ in 30-mile winds, were reported having difficulty get- ting into shallow waters where the bodies wére ‘reported sighted. At 5;20-p.m. Tuesday the Brad- ley radioed its home port, Rogers ve City, if éstimated it would arrive iy at 2.4.m. today. J/g A limestone carrier, it was en route home empty, noe left its cargo for Gary steel mills. at Buffington, Ind. Then at 5:31—just 11 minutes later — Capt. Roland Bryan, the '\Bradley's skipper shouted into his ‘radio: “Mayday, Mayday, May- | day. This is the Carl D. Bradley. Our position is approximately 12 miles southwest of Gull Island, We are in serious trouble.” Next, a voice was heard: “Run, (‘grab life jackets, Get the jackets. ‘Mayday, the ship is breaking up.” | (Mayday is the voice version of ‘an ocear-going ship's SOS. Great ‘Lakes vessels use voice radio.) i * * * Capt. P.. Mueller of the Chris tian Sartori heard, He - set his ‘course of the scene, only three. (Continued on Page 2, Col, 3) CAPT. ROLAND BRYAN Missing Brother Learns Paul Transterred to Bradley Ship SAULT STE. MARIE ®)—Robert Greengiski was surprised yester- day when he went down to the Soo _jlocks to see the freighter Myton C. Taylor through and have a brief visit with his 23-year-old brother Paul. - t+ * * He was told Paul had trans. ferred to the crew. of the Carl D, Bradley in ieee x That was A few hours al Robots: aa’ horrified to hear via radio that the pre ied see gan storm. Editorials ........ Wee ahve tay “T haven't given u uD Markets whe bacseideveria OF : Obitaaries ciccicesycassivess & Sports wseewe teers ene hanes 32-35. Thetters ... Gouna © TV & Radio Prog rams eave 8 Wilson, Earl PT eee ee ee eats K Women's Pages aeebenh ee 25-27, , ie ot _ THE PONTIAC PRE Tol Noles ‘Full 57 Season . Latest Victim. Hit by). 4 Companion’s Bullet; 7 : Die of Heart Attacks By The Associated Press A seventh hunt er has been killed by in. Michigan's n er oe That is ay * Por ; same number of gunshot vic a4 : ; oe tims in the entire 16-day season’ _ | Thus, the stormy diva still hasn't last year. ' jcommented on her most recent run . ana pha agree fp aha vin §. Thompson of Bart in Sag Italy, announced last weekend tha inaw County. He was bunting - last t yesterday near Hawks in Pres- | egg tong em eae cae que Te County when he was hit = . 2. 6. in the left shoulder by a com- panion’s bullet, Thompson died LaScala became the seventh Another hunter was in critica) list. . p Gal * _ epomnan he evening, @ : West Branch with a bullet wound fired Maria_only a few days en : suffered when a companion’s load- cathe: al 0@rd, radioed that Fleming said) 74. pie yarned on Lake Erie i om d ihe did not recall any : | lives. and 20-foot waves, which follow it wag his belief that heavy| in 1841, killing 175; the Phoenix, ships and cities, on which taxes are based, the reductions will ne cessitate those affected to raise their tax rateS"to still produce the| said og Dies at Home . . . * * * ach other much more closely . burned on Lake Michigan in 1847, amount of i ' Bloomfield Hills Widow on Nov. 25, 1905; a ee Likes ttiin Oh the oceans, it as broke the, Bradley apart. He) sinieg s¢7; the Griftith, bursed |tn< 12." commission hot ocdered the ‘ Will Be Buried Friday ‘ike storm ripped the lakes drop-itook him more than an hour to| Ziti in Lake Erie in 1850, killing 300; | 11. 3 in G | ping temperatures from zeré to a theré: jpoeures => = . tion. | the Aflantic, satk in Lake Erie rug en ane Sasa. 7 n nwood below and killing an unknowt num-| “J believe,"’, he finally reported, | ; in 1952, Killing 256; the. Lady ture glow. refuse to recoguize, f 7° ber-of seamen, all hands are lost. No isicss| THE oe eee te pig sank im Laké Michigan in oan ren a, Oakland ties duties that the ui But experts bere believe the jAl ie (0 iare visible." killing. 287. were many handed ' : “ ecm ine dunes yer na vm ic i ee — ae | A Coast Guard plane flew out ot Beaver Island, largest in & group : , down from Lansing which are ex- mittee will shortly conduct'a series|lies will react with these steps: Vite pr ecldeat ot norte eee) ep ed Lite oe rering 18 \rvaverse City, Mich:, taking off @t the top of Lake Michigan, to! Big death tolls weren't ail in the pected to hit revenues of dozens of [of meetings with county‘precinct) 1. Formally refuse to accept . Bere Med lace uuahe “he | pe sad Wiig 04 porvone. = ever double triangular red flags|™2" & 40-foot boat there in last century however. A total of communities in southeastern Mich-| Workers to East German controls, Les ' ast night at her) when the 1913 storm had fin-|signifying a gale. It ‘hopes of. getting into shallow wa-|119 died when the steamer Noronic igan. Party members hope to kill two! 2. Protest strongly. against a one- d , : . Bloomfield Hills home, 460 Good- ished, residents of Sarnia, Ont.,/flares, going back and fo ee ters where bodies were reported! burned in Toronto in 1949. Whe lcpedt of Ge 10 cus wes birds with one stone with this plan. sided Russian withdrawal from the bd * * hue Rd. . ‘found a supposedly unsinkable 9,-|the tragedy spotted. s * * granted to Pord Mets “We'll be working for victory four-power occupation s we Seenatieht Toemehay: den {000 ton ore carrier, the Charles S.| es ey _Lake Michigan at the spot where| The Bradley. was the 12th ship Troy Asad regptlmncenine tree in next spring’s cleioa as well (drawn up after World War II. grandchildren and five great-grand./PT1C® capsized eight miles north) The Coast Guard cutter, Sun-|ine, Ship went down is some S30)%0 sink with & possible ioM0. It] %F & implement Division fe to- | *% the 1960 élection,” explained | 3, 11 tett no choice, yield to —— POD Iie wnae neascn ver dew sped out of Charlevoix, but)’ “Tye Bradley, built in 1927 and|wae the first such disaster since| ©ated. The eriginal assesement | Eitett - >| Bast German controls while mak- Mrs. Beresford was born Nov. 26,| The Price had been seen the were driven back. Neither the) sies had a cargo capacity of|sank in Lake Superior with a lose| $0 by the tax commission, rep- jstart, is the fact thet Republicans] constitute recognition of the 1878 in Trenton, N.J. She had|day before with twe dther vessels. | ew-nor the plane spotted any-/+4 309’ tons. Capt, Bryan was from|of 17 crewmen in 1953. resenting a $282,75¢ trimming. regained, control of local county; Communist regime. East Ger- lived im Atlanta, Ga.. until moving | Some of its crewmembers were thing all night. Loudenville. N.Y. but 31 of his “The commission felt these ap-|ffices in the Nov. 4 election by) ™ans manning checkpoints would to Bloomfield Hills in 1944. wearing lifejackets frém one of the| Then the plane's crew spotted ow Won i ; her (the slimmest margins in be regarded simply as agents lether: saa ; the bodies Fleming and Mays shortly after 35man crew from the little Lake peals were justified in that their : many of the B inane. a a member washed ashore. . dawn. Bares part of Regirs Cy. UF Goals Topped ee acu all * Gibbs said the party was en- An alternative wena be for th in the Hills, the Na- | a * & . ° excess other of assess eri ds eo”. tional Farm and Garden Assn., | The Bradley few the flag of the |At Miracle Mile ments of properties in the cities tert stad eareltnamabyee Allies to attempt an airlift similar Cranbrook Music Guild, Bloom- ‘Searches a Hours for Seamen ‘Bradley Transportation Co., of and townships,” said Edward W.|" stick to the one that broke the Soviet field Art Asam. and the Birming. | jRogers City. The finn is a sub and Tel-H uron Kane, commission chairman. oa iakee poppers ger ee ” he “Allies had bam Organ Society. ° isidiary of U.S. Steel Corp., and OTHERS LESS SUCCESSFUL ; , n, however, t es had to : Ist Assi nment P roves. hauls iron-making limestone. The, Pontiac Area United Fund __ illustrate what the party hopes supply the 2,200,000 people of West , Her body is at Bell Chapel of | - ad Bradley lost Bat be Seevitec or firms iniwen't Sipgen: thle ‘time 'Berlin, With civilian traffic .not the William R. Hamilton Co., Bir- r — =e _ ; — & today announced both Miracle Mile Oakiand county that appealed their! Besides trying to hold on to Hinvolved this time. an airlift would ningtam ng IG One for Commander’? 23 nt or ana tersiron_shopeing centers 158 asesoments—there were about ihe regular” GOP ppd Service will be conducted at 2] ; for safety. ha their 1938 cam-|70, Kane said—were not as suc-| Oakland County, one of the goals aa p.m, Friday at her home. Offficiat-| : The Carl D, Bradley was on its) M6ve Surpassed their TSS ANY essful as the four larger com-| of the “start “em early” pre. \Tarely 10.000 Wester froops ana ing will be the Rev. Harold C.| TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) — Lt. eft for helicopter school a few|{th trip of the lakes shipping /Palgn quotas. panies, “Better than half of these ——————— = Det. Bara! wi beim Green Cdr. Laas N. Donne's fet wees ter Tm * "™|attag in which it had covered] tos [amet were dent," he suid |e Beg s : A : e es sat Mira- a ralua- . wood Cemetery, Birmingham. by ace after Se oe yee Pi a li cage ert Mating relatively young as lakes freight-|cle Mile have pledged $2,667.65 to didn vale tetanet- “ee vee Police Advance naae p Barter wena aoe Pe Exhausts Local Supply |i" Station was # big one. [ber of Donohoe’s crew—aviation/"® 8 . . y eal nccording to Ralph ease.| “West Bloonsfield Township, airlift proceed without harrassment : Pply Donohoe, 3S-year-old father of mechanic Charles Schrader — be-| Between them, the seamen who|ridge, Commercial Division co-| Consolidated Gas Co., from $181,- |from their fighter planes. But it CHESTER. Conn. (UPD) $0 eee a ere trctarning hed to be repkeced, e *"=|manned the ship had 52 children. |chairman. This is $447.65 in excess| 702 to $16,400, | nt oe ae oe many youngsters signed up as ex-|me yesterday after returning | alli seats Theodore Dhalberg of Sault Ste.|of the shopping centér’s quota. Northville, Consumers Power ay \) fd Gphate a war by sesously ite tras for a movie being made -here that the local supply of Social Security applications was ex-, hausted. i The Weather Fall U.S. Weather Bu R I PONTIAC AND VICINiIY sada Me cloudy. windy and colder tonig' Hag ~~ cloudy ané cold Thursday colder, might. from helicopter school in Florida. | The first 10 hours of his 24- hour tour of duty were unevent- ful. But shortly after 6 p.m. yes- terday, the air station was alert- Another veteran Coast Guard of- 37, Los Angeles—coordinated the Hancock, a Coast Guardsman 15 years and a flyer since 1947, alert- At the time, a plane piloted by oq the air station's 93 enlisted Mier ngs Lt. James Sigman that had been/men and 14 officers within minutes and continecd rather S¢arching all day for an Air Force | after the Bradley's may day (dis- lew Wind: ig 7 te west 18: % mikes an heer ict “down in Lake Michigan off tregc signal) was monitored here. i Hl tentghi Thursday, diminish Tharsdsy aig. ™ =~ Teday in Pontiac nit temperature preceding 8 a.m. on 8a m: Wind velocity 15-20 mph. Chicago was returning to the air) station. ft was immediately re. nals from the Bradley were sent. Flight crews were awakened at ‘routed to the area in northern Lake | 5 o'clock this morning—@0 min- ‘Michigan where the distress’ sig-| Utes eartier than usual for this |Marie, Mich., who skippered the Bradley from 1930 to 1940, said ‘ficer—Lt. Cmdr. Arthur Hancock, |«'hey rivets probably worked loose. ‘it could happen in a storm like ‘air search with Coast Guard dis-\thig one. The lake isn’t like the | ed te join the search for the ‘'ic headquarters in Cleveland. | freighter Cart D, Bradley. | ocean, On the lake storms build up waves in quick succession.” The lat previous major dis- aster in the Great Lakes was in 1953. The American freighter Henry Steinbrennér went down in Lake Superior in 72 m.p.h. winds. Seventeen of its 31 crewmen died. The Novadock and the Anna C, | takeoff. Daylight came at 7.a.m. (Mich went to the bottom in a Tel-Hurona’s firms and em - ployes have turned in $2,103.50 Co., $14,000: to $6,900. ‘Milford, Panhandle from $86,600 or 140 per cent of their $1,500 quota. Fred Niedelson is the | Commercial Division cochair. | man in charge of United Fund | | i solicitations at Tel-Huron. Employes at Miracle Mile and Tel-Huron have pledged $1,365.15: gifts totaled $1,302.50 at Miracle Mile and $901.00 at Tel-Huron. * * Both Eastridge and Niedelson ex- pressed satisfaction with the per- tg”$78,800, and Consolidated from 270 to $384,000. | Commerce, Panhandle from $23,-; 600 to $20,800, and Consolidated: } from $220,500 to $191,500. | Oak Park, Consumers from $760,- at State Supreme Court Holds Up Promotions Ordered in Pontiac The Michigan Supreme Court 040 to $433,465. tyesterday granted the third stay Lyon, Panhandle from $53,600 to * Holly $47,800. Farmington, Consolidated from $405,650 to $333,600. ‘in the writ of mandamus ‘issued and $1,192.50 respectively. Firm’ $49,300, and Consolidated from by Oakland County Circuit Judge $192,350 to $170,400. iClark J. Adams ordering the pro-/ Panhandle, from $58,400 to motion of three Pontiac police officers. The high court issued the: fast stay after Pontiac City Attorney fering. The Russians continued to Participate in air safety controls ‘during the 1948-49 blockade. ' While the Allies waited for the i Russian move, a U.S. Army jtruck convoy, returned Without in- icidént from West Germany Tues- ‘day night. The Russians stopped three trucks last Friday because the American soldiers had orders not lt permit Soviet inspection of Unconfirmed reports circulated : ' M s - { ses ome nemmentay og * + * Hancock, who has been stationed |e? dg ea a lace of Prin formances of the firms and their! Rose, Panhandle from $62,365 to, witiam A. Ewart filed an appli- i Berlin that Moscow already Moon rises Wednesday at 1:49 pm. = | Sigman remained-in the area for on the east and west coasts and) 4’ 4. "|personnel at the two shopping cen-| $47,700. cation for leave to appeal Judge ual nedcat—~> sheielenen jless than an hour becattse the|the Gulf of Mexico, said this was yn, oe i ere care aes ters. Moreover, Eastridge expects Adams’ decision of Oct. 9. port ghar Phar Pings ; Down: mperateres l wmld. : | ; * . ’ L : 4 i ; we $s. a. ee Slee a. ..4y/ Plane was low on fuel and had only |the biggest ship disaster search he and killed 254 persons. additional returns to swell the Mir: More Ore Boats Afloat The stay, # legal order- which|sion to give their share of the _o7 Seen 38 n — eae anun 43 |two flares which give in excess of has ever participated in. acle Mile total reported today. holds up the already ordered pro-joccupation controls to the East oa m.........37 “m5 gg One million candlepower each.. + e+ & ee , ' . CLEVELAND More iy ; ‘ ; wR aoc FP “nen the Grumman Albatross| Radio operator Ciittord Tally, 28, Label Children, Please ‘| mmanhiy st’ tke Commenags | ore carriers were operating on jmotomm will be in effect until Germans. pivelan dieliints ten teeerdee Govuteen) pro rieagh pared ennccer-ricdliron }enoar ta Nes amgauer tals UL, Korea (UPI) — Séoul | Division this year with Judge | the Great Lakes during Novem- |yieq to hear Ewart's request for|seemed convinced Premier Mighest IMD cesszssh.-0 ieee: «air station, it was immediately re-|through the night as did three eelies to | Clark J. Adams, \ congratulated | ber than were operating at the | aonea' meant Sasa a at eo ee ek ee HO) a aon ge yy Sts “rsa | em mss yo AO eae An mw he ten 3 | dashes ohoe and a crew éf Gk efter: took s« * child under school age. Police | elt job successfully completed.” | vey by the M. A. Har Co. |stays while he studied the city’s|lies leave Berlin. The impression REBtONe .c.cccicsccccccsel 3B] In addition to the Coast Guards- much time search- | whole still needs an additional $25.-| %, tue Great Lakes’ 248 ships \was later denied, and while Ewart\¢rs was imminent was strength. . In all, Donohoe made three |™en. the operations office was) ing for lost children and returning |009 to reach S19 by| Still in operation on Nov. 15. A ldratted his appeal. ened by an editorial in Pravda fights over the area last night |KePt busy answering queries from) those they find. ‘i {ts $179,371 quota bY’, year ago on Nov. 15° there were ss Tuesday saying the Soviet Union ; and during the early hours to. Neatly a dozen newsmey who neat Tuesday's final report lufich-| 13 fewer ships still in service as The judge's order called tor vas. determined to act . without | day. He stayed out three hours |"¢adquartered here. eon at the Temple. the Great Lakes navigation sea- | the promotion of oT L. [western consent. the first time, two hours and 15 | Although there are seven large Lyck Not All Bad son neared its close. Goines to Heutenaat De sar’ ee malutes the second tine and two (2™Phiblous planes in the Coast) Be Polite, Boys vey . ee Oe West German Chancellor . Kon- | heures en bie final ‘Guard hangars here, only two of} JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (UPI Ms : f James F. Bale to sergeant open on his final flight, {| JEFFER , Mo. Come Back Next Year 2 rad Adenauer told a political rally, Fe fewer 6 ter ot teed them are operational. The other, —Marvin Jett Jr. of Owensville | JACKSON (UPI) — An edi- ings on the force. in Frankturt the Kremlin obvious- ° ther the 14 veare T’ve beem in eve, 2f€ being stored temporarily spent am entire day tramping the ; torial in the inmate newspaper | GLAMORGAN, Wales (UPI) — | They contended in their lawsuit ly was preparing to break the Coast Guard.” Donohoe said before going in for modification’ woods without seeing adeer. As | at Southern Michigan Prison | Cline and Christine Jones went to (that. City Manager Walter K. Will-\Allied agreements on Berlin. ‘But the wind wai ai Wtbadent bar repair at the Grumman Air-| he drove honje, unhappily, a 190- | complained today about the pa- | a local pub for a drink to. cele- /man and Police Chief Herbert W.- Lord Mayor Willy Brandt. of lay T'v0 ‘ever seen.” jeraft factory. They were trans- pound eight-point buck jumped | trons who disturb other prisoners | brate their first wedding anni- Straley violated the civil service West Berlin said the city's. resi- fy on | ferred to the Coast Guard recently | in front of his car and was by leaving the hall before the’ versary. They were fined $2.80 law by not them to dents should have faith in the , ££. (from the Air Force which used’ killed. Sympathetic conservation | end of the movies. ‘‘Where are | each today for drinking in a bar these positions they claimed they Wester promise to tise force if » * Actually, Donohoe arrived here | them for yéars.in air sea rescue commissioners permitted him to | they going?” the’. newspaper | before reachirfy the legal age were entifled to after examina-/necessary’to protect the Comnim © nh duly from Kodiak, Alaska, core é keep it. = asked. 18. Both are 17- c, tions. {nist-sycrounded., area, 1 pee i e , | a 4 # § ; “ * \ ' : ; : ? ‘ : Pd *e . 3 [ 16-Inch ‘ROUND ~-" §-Ft. Rubber Covered WALL MIRROR | EXTENSION CORD E“ Reg. $1.49 : Cag aissien 50¢ Value | Plain mirror or it tf B7e| 33° ¥ with yo rubber Use veka —s oom. covering Limit 2 y —2nd Fleer - GOFFEE-GARAFES Uecins in 138 i : net bargains are listed ot a Car oy | To clean snow os oe aot Pr pie c alae | ee eHow ve ew eee ey» Weighs up to 260 pounds. Choice of assorted colors. Sir chloe sealing 1 51.40 Hel & Cold Water} Mix Hose 87* Piss Watermixer "Y’ hose. Pits- standard faucets ee Se $4,95 Famous Bathroom Scales : Ro Add $6.95 Rural Mail Boxes 499 clapeccsschideeattnenapteccnsassegpcooce eevecccccegecccecoccececocococccoccccocccces “Eee Bahn Mile | Gt °22.96 Fall Size Ele. Blanket 377 Single control unit. Assorted colors, satin bound....... $1.96 Screwdriver Sei-10-Pc, : Famous name, Limit 2 lamps. tnd Fleer 8 8 ¢ New Magnetined blades, plastic handles, With metal wall rack. : Mont Roe camer Steam-Dry Iron 20c Flashlight Batteries—ea, Ray-O-Vac leakproof battery. Regular cell sive! Limit 6... : 10° > Sng $17.85 Value 44.96 Battery Booster Cable To start doad battery off another car. For 6 or 42 volts... HARDWARE DEP’ T. ok & Decker Drill Kit 9O88 oir | Deluxe : Y-inch electric drill. 19-piece set in metal box. *1.00 Wood | Mitre Box 59°« 11.00. Bornz-0-Matic Toreh Kit 7* "2.2 ) Gara Troub le Ligh ft, ] *2.96 Folding Step Ladder—27-in, 977 51,95 Nest of Saws-5 Pieces Interchangeable blades into wood handle. Saw for every need. a F 8 7 Fall QUART Bottle Paint Thinner Regular 30c Best for thi Bult cleaning Ribbed All-Rabber 9x18-INCH. Stair Treads gm Regular 35¢ each, Ribbed rub- Black. Limit 12, 10%" Diameter—PLASTIC | pai ag Bowl ‘Regular $3 Heatproof carafe with Banh San stand, civing. 65c Car Windshield Solvent, 6 0z. 2 Q< 3 9: __ For fall and winter use—keep in car water jar to clean es. $1.40 Hammer Sel-3 Pieces 9 3° Upholstery hammier, claw hammer and household hammer., _ HOUSEWARES *2 Canister & Wastebasket Set 88* 130 1 Mi includes I all metal 5-4 fo and wastebasket. . be ouse Tr, Pour-way action. Baie metal . spring... : 28° *6.96 Portable Can Openers — 2 : acuum cup holds opener to surface. For home, outdoors.. SA +1 Metal Waste _ | 1 Metal Waste Baskal-12-Q1. Ge | neta, 54,00 Children’s Hassocks ee Famous ‘Davy Crockett’ imprint. Washable top, steel Jee... 41.00 Aluminum Skillet-7-in, 69° Heavy gauge, heats fast, cooks evenly. Basy to clean. Lithit 2. Ee 53.99 Upholstery Shampoo Kit 478 Bie __plssel’ with new foam applicator. Cleans upholstery perfectly, 4.96 Dazey Super-Juicer "OF Made of Plastic, Wall model, squeeze fresh juices. Only 15., TIT iiiiitiitiiiiiiiiiiii irr rrr PYREX 8-Cup Size All Metal—Rubber Edge DUST PANS Regular 39¢ *~ ‘ye: = Aged a = 2c | that peseel “ies afaheosttointocesssnssoccvesnstia Sitebevenes “ ew Bx 42.00 Fold ’n 0 cr Many uses; footstool, Ga dg 3 tool stand. . 8 8 68¢ Silverware Cups Pits all Rubbermaid dish drainers, to air dry silverware, ete. 290 Metal Stove Top Mats With asbestos backing. Limit 2...,0+ pay 9 al supose rab Il -inch wwe ih Hi - Dome Cover. | uses, Bhses pa areca , ; iM ae eye | Friction Tepe: ! Regular 50c. : | Black coed al Pod Cc ber treads with curve nosing... 3 Children 3 to 14 Years. pee Ed-U-Card Game : pitt: 29¢' Deck . make tt interest = Heavyweight ALUMINUM DOME’ : = Fryer ; caret oo eeanne ity. White with Sr & Evening - shams will be CLOSED ALL MORNING tomorrow . . . promptly at 12 NOON with the greatest single-day. PRICE-SLASHING a in months and months Plan to be here early to get your share of the. super-savings! OPEN Tomorrow NIGHT until 9! timely bargains in drugs, cos- metics, houseware Everybody shops! spies saves! needs, hardware, a parel for is the ee family, ‘gun- Every item inthis FRIOHD, Weve UNDER: — “t's things you need, to pay. all. Just’ 4 Don't Miss This Event! {rip through siuas ‘o- We | Angle gen but EXTRA gay 1Nas. tog A Low Overhead “SMALL PROFIT” Store Like SIMMS . Afford to Slash Prices So Lew on Se items. tes Size Cigarettes—Limit 2 (6c Tax) Carton $2.15 King & Filter Cigarettes—Limit 2 (7c Tax) Ctm. $2.25. 10c Fairway Lighter Fiuid— 3-07. Can. Limit 1 .. Se $3 Emerson Cigars—Limit | box ... .Box of 50 $2.39 25c Book Matches—Carton of 50 books. Limit 1.. 9c -, 59¢ Hersheys Instant Cocoa Mix—Pound box . .. .35¢ $2.95 Fruit Cake—fruit filled vcsesses 2 pound 87c 10¢ Hershey Candy Bars—Limit 6 ....... prone © , 98¢ Stationery Pak—100 sheets, 50 envelopes ..39¢ Se Lead Pencils—misprint No. 2 leads ....10 for 16¢ _ $2.95 Pinking Shears—‘Acme’ seconds ... 1.33 | 98c-Pocket Knife—Thin style, 2 blades ........ 39 49c Paper Mate Pen Refills—fine point, blue ... .29¢ 15¢ Flashlight Battery—regular size. Limit 2 .... 5¢ 25c Fingernail Nipper—all metal ‘Trim’ ....... 9c 98c Barber Neck Brush—nylon bristles ........ 39¢ 10c Men’s Pocket Comb—heavy duty ....... ... 26°E 25c Barber Comb—flexible nylon ........ eziea 9c $9.95 Elec. Barber Clipper Set—5-piece ....... 5.44 $6.95 Big & Little Ben Alarm Clock —10% tax ..4.99 '-23¢ Retractable Ball Point Pens—limit 1........ Se DRUG DEP'T. SPECIALS 5-Grain Aspirin—Pack of 100 tablets .......... 69c Wildroot VAM Hair Tonic—now only ...... 37 50c McKessons Tooth Powder—save 3lc ....... 19¢ $1.50 Pinwave or Rand Home Permanent ....... 59¢ 55c Lady Esther Face Cream—liquid .......... 19¢ $1.75 Egg Creme Shampoo—16 ounces ........ 44c $1.25 Jeris Hair Tonic—with dispenser ........79¢ 79¢ Hazel Bishop Deodorant Stick—Limit 2..... 34e 10c Bobby Pins—vVial of 24........... 4 for 19¢ $1.40 Chas. Antel Hair Spray—7 ounces ....... a 69c Seaforth Shave Lotion—After or Pre-Efect. . $1.19 Pepsodent or Stripe Toothpaste—With HB i $1.25 Lanolin Plus Medicated Liquid—Only ....29¢ 75c Wrisleys Superb Bubble Bath— = ...... 16¢ $1 Courtley Baby Powder—antiseptic & deodor. . .39¢ $1 Hazel Bishop Skin Cleanser—save 66c ...... 34c $3 Perfume Atomizers—imported makes ......+..98¢ ES ga PHOTO DEPT. VALU 93.25 Airquipt Slide. Magazines — All metal, 6 Slide Trave-3 fo sta a, $1.50 TDG Slide Trays-3 for Holds 30 slides, With cardboard covers. Limit 6 trays..... ee. hot een be Te a ee eeee “ANSCO FILMS 5 Take perfect: sc ander all 1200 . Limit 3 ols,“ Pe | Bone bt gp ond Limit 4, " Red-Black—Brown Colors AREA. Fe-enen wba 16. : 88° all artes Uist '¢ tube. ache .* RGAINS EVER at SIMMS Children's Sleeveless és Undershirts Reg. 2 49c t ‘Happy Kids’ famous undershirts. Sleeveless ae te for comfort, Sizes 2 and 3 ge —Main , hens to 52.95 Ladies’ Girdles ‘Sizes S-M-L . garter tabs. Some with satin’ fronts, Ladies’ Jackets recip ge 88° — aed a. —Main Floor Irregular Famous Make PADDED STYLE Ladies’ Bras $2.95 Value straps, elasticized band. Sizes E 32 to 38 in A and B cups. Main Fleer 3 10-Ribbed Type Lady’s Umbrella Regular $1.69 — Assorted plaids & SO" Mplenised Acetate | Ladies’ Half Slips t. Regular $1.00 s bottom. White, me colors. . S+-M- .. Main Fleer erry Cloth ; CANNON" ist Quality | Wash Cloths Reg. | 4 ¢ 22¢ 14 x 14 inches square, solid e colors, absorbent — terrycloth, : ~-Basement ‘Hobnail’ CHENILLE fo pha ie $5.98 BOYS’ and GIRLS’ | Storm Rubbers | $1.98 Value PAIR "190 Dress or storm styles for win- B ter wear. Sturdy Sizes small (3) to large (5). "live" rubber, NOON 'til 9p. . Assorted colors and —Main Fleer 99° : Circle stitching, adjustable “2 [T° “148 Sola Pilows-10x10" 778 SPECIALS for 7 WOMEN ~ | Laer ie Sete cs 69* "2,96 Ladies’ “Pucker” Panties 2 2¢ °6.96 Ladies’ “Playtex” Girdles 966 Slight -irreguiars, fablined, garters, Sizes to extra: large... er *4.35 Ladies’ “Levi” Jeans Slight tmpertections—does not affect wear or looks, 23 to 32, Coeeevoecoocerooeosnsovosesoooeoecoooesooee® Cotton Flannels Ladies’ 1-Piece ; Ladies’ Dusters ‘Matoraity Dresses . Reg. $2.49 66 miastineea™ Sin, Cc I nee SF pee. white as 88 Sizes ei ine 15216 —Main Fleer fon tri Some ny- trim. Sizes 10 $2,49 Ladies’ Flannel Pajamas 1% Sanforized 2-piece style. Red dota on white. Sizes 32 to 40. 93.98 Ladies’ Chino Slacks 1°? Washable, bélted with side sipper. Sand color, Sizes 24, 26, 28, * = 52.98 Ladies’ Dress Gloves 97 ¢ Moyers doeskin soft, hand sewn, Gome al! nylon, white. . . 52 Ladies’ & Misses’ Loafer Shoes ] 67 Penny loafers with hard and crepe soles. All sizes 4% to 9. : $1.98 Boys’ Flannel Robes 8 §* Sanforised flannel in plaid. Limited styles. sizes 2 & 4... 4 52.89 Girls’ Orion Pull-Overs § §* 100% hi-bulk orion. Mock turtle neck. Sizes 10 & 14 only. ith ipbpippbiti daar irarititiiiiiiitiitiiit, | Helenca NYLON Siretch Shirt-Tie-Cull Links Girls’ Panties | Boys’ Dress Shirts Regular 69 R - $2. - ; : 24¢ a 7 9Qc t Fingtie - pwralet and thirt wan cee leg openings in sizes 8 — xy caccenncapoanononscenseqnceiisssocennenesees $1.69 Baby Kimono & Bootie Set 97° 2 cotton plisse kimonos & 1-pr. booties.2 Gay designs...... $7.96 Baby Jumper Chair — 4T _ Spring action steel frame, duck material back and seat... 5c Baby Receiving Blankets 25 ¢ Famous “Regal’ 24x34-inch oe Pink, blue, maize & prints. te $2.98 Boys’ Orion Sweaters | | |? Washable 100% orlon in pullover er coat style. Sizes 6 to 12. BARGAIN BASEMENT 19c Hand Towels-3 for Dundee ist quality. White and three colors. 16x28-inch sire. T SeceessocossoseesoseooecooooososoeesoesseeeeSS Big 6x6-Foot ~* ‘ Waterproof Plastic - Shower Curtains | Mattress Covers Regular $1.98 Regular $1.19 Clear plastic covers are contour fitted in twin ih oe _ Vinyl plastic in choice of blue, green, yellow colors, 88° 88° conccenecensceeebontecoucceseteonsenesensiun $2.98 Striped Sheet Blankets 17? 70x00-inch. Blue or green stripes, 4-inch acetate binding... 54,98 Warm Blended Blankets 2 : T2x84-inches. Choice of pastel colors. Satin bound........ SPECIALS for MEN Se “1? Short or long sleeve, ankle length, Winter weight. Size 36-46. ee 49c¢ Men’s Work Sox-4 pr. : }° High tops, ideal for work or hunting. Heavyweight. Al! sizes. : Sseeesecessesooseesoseooseoesecossoeseeeoseees $1.98 Men’s 1-Pc, Union Suits Ivy League—Flap Pockets wusiety of Styles in Men‘s Pants |. Men’s Jackets a $3.69 Lt tga Value to $12.95 ; : Sheen ero Nylons, gabardines, : th ioc ee fronts, quilt- Adi fly. Won't shrink gs nba pe ag ™ 1%. Sizes 28 ~~ ca "