— eS —_— Se —-_ = The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast ' Wednesday: Snow fiurries. - Belek Page 2) THE PONTIAC PR 117th YEAR» week KS roun> MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1959—28 PAGES Plane ms GOP none Soaks Urges: ‘Adopt Dem Income Tax’ LANSING u — House Speaker Don R, Pears called today on fel- low Republican lawmakers to swal-! low Gov. Williams’ flat rate in- come tax with ‘no strings at-| tached’'—save one. The only condition was that Dem- ocrats put their name on the bill, land supply the bulk of votes for | House and Senate passage. The governor promised to take full responsibility for recommend- Enter Yuletide Season DECORATING STRE ETS — Huron street light pole one of the jing the tax a month ago but said nothing about Democratic sponsor- ship. Pears unfolded his surprise | plan a few hours after Rep. Rollo G. Conlin (R-Tipten), an income tax» man from the stact, made a somewhat similar pro- posal. “It looks like the only way to break the stalemate and settle the cash crisis problem is for the House to take the bull by the horns,”’ the Buchanan Republican said last night. + Pears said he would talk over his idea first with House and Sen- ate Democratic leaders and the GOP Senate leader, and then sub- mit it to the House Republican caucus to get the ball rolling. MEET TODAY The House was expected to have its first quorum in two weeks at 2 p.m. today. The Senate, where majority Republicans are badly split on what to do, comes in at 8 p.m. “If you went in there with. a constructive plaf under way, the! (House) caucus would be very re- ceptive,"’ chimed in Rep. Charles to Commission i. 2 Record Budget to Be Submitted City Financing for ‘60 Will Top $6 Million for First Time | The city’s finance depart-| ment today was finishing | preparation of a proposed) 1960 operating budget that | will top the $6,000,000 mark for the first time. The figures are acnaduiel for presentation tonight at the last regular Tuesday meeting of the-City Com- mission prior to the Nov. 30. deadline for submission of! the budget. City Manager Walter K. Will-| |man said details would be spelled) out tonight. , } City budgets have been rising | A. Boyer (R-Manistee), speaker pro tem, as Pears spoke to news- men. By “no strings attached,” Pears said he meant Republicans should: 1. Agree to prompt release of the 50 million dollar Veterans Trust| Pontiac Press Phete Two city workers wrap around a Downtown Merchant Assn’s ever- green festoons. Helping get downtown set for Christmas are ele¢- trical employes Norman McCormick (top) and Richard Sullivan. The association’s giant Christmas tree will go up Nov. 30 at the corner of Saginaw street and Oakland avenue, All GM Divisions to Stari rvember 1960 ‘ballot. Dec. 14 on Five-Day Week DETROIT (#—All General Motors car and truck di- visions will resume operations by Dec. 14 on a five-day week basis, John F. Gordon, GM president, said today. GM, its automotive assembly lines shut down since Nov. 11 by a steel shortage, will begin passeriger car as- sembly again Dec. 7. Gordon said assembly plants to start up a week ahead of others are Cadillac at Detroit, Corvair at Willow Run and Chevrolet at Janesville, Wis., Norwood, Ohio <*and Flint. Enough components will |be available to operate these plants four days dur- ing that week, the company Snow-Rain Mixture in Store for Pontiac : The balance of Chevrolet ‘and Rain mixed with snow is forecast jall other divisions will resume pro- for the Pontiac area tonight and/duction on Dec. 14, Those divisions Wednesday, jalready are recalling employes for A high ef 42 was forecast for to- | production of components, day with a low of 30 for tonight.| Other GM divisions supplying The high Wednesday is expected! parts and accessories for the au- to reach 35. tomotive and trubk divisions are c 2 - *® beginning te recall employes. The Southeasterly winds will become company said these recalls will northerly at 12-18 miles per hour! increase during the next twe this afternoon arid: northwesterly | weeks in order that final assem- 15-25 miles tonight. ' bly plants have enough materials Temperatures rose to a high of| on hand to maintain continuous 55 yesterday. Wind velocity at 10| assembly of automobiles, a.m. was southeasterly at 5 miles. many _ The thermometer registered 42 ae gr yt — in downtown Pontiac at 1 p.m. ployes idled as a result of steel shortage. It had recalled proximately 17,000 by the end laist*Week and an additional 36,000 are expected to be returned to their jobs by the end of this week. Meanwhile steel shortages will idle - another 10,000 at Chrysler hours to inaugyrate Trans World rage on Pamper the 2 oe chavs. Amines Jet apprice cers ine her workers laid off by parts short? jages. : Chrysler said car production at /its suburban Hamtramck plant \would stop after today’s operations lidling 5,000. Assembly plants at and #8 29% U.S. Jetliner Streaks . to London in 62 Hours - LONDON (AP) "A Boeing 707 jetliner flew from’ New York to London today jn just under 6% Thursday Edition fo Herald Season [220 employes will be laid off Thursday’s editions of ‘The |jat Newark. Pontiac Press will herald the Chrysler expects Christmas season, and pre- || sume poatertion Hak eet oh sent readers with thousands || an its idied plants. Only three of ideas for the holiday | of its seven assembly plants will ahead. 7 remain in operation after tomor- The annual Thanksgiving | row, Chryster said. paper will contain adyertise- ments from scores of area merchanfs who traditionally begin their displays at this time of the year. Watch for the many value-packed pages of The Pontiac Press. this 4 Ford, which makes about half of its steel, iS operating but on curtailed work weeks, American Motors and. Studebaker-Packard Thursday. havé not been Affected thus far by the steel shortage, . m 4 Fund as part of the Saliiccoent] package, assuméng adequate pro- vision for rebuilding it. 2. Abandon insistence on imme- diate adoption of sales tax and in- come tax propositions for the No- 3. Back away from the Republi- can demand for a new tax settle- ment of only 70 million dollars. The governor has demanded a 110-mil- lion dollar a year answer. Boyer said, and Pears agreed, that the income tax should have a dune 30, 1961, cutoff. Pears said he thought the people back home were ii undermine their 73% million dollar puisance tax program. “I think it’s pretty plain that there’s not enough support to pass the luxury taxes,” he replied. “The only alternative which re- mains is some form of income tax, which I do not favor but which apparently has the backing of the Democratic Party.” Pears said he felt the House should take the initiative in getting a bill started because time was running out on the 1959 legislature. “By the time such a proposal reaches the Senate, it will be in December and there would be little else left to do but go along,” he said. Friend anlar Tell Her SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — “‘Bubbles”’ the hippopotamus was a leading attraction at the Fleish- hacker Zoo, but she had one fault: overpowering jungle breath. Perhaps Bubbles’ best friends wouldn't tell her, but many of them told the keepers, according to zoo officials. So yesterday the zoo keepers got Bubbles to open wide, gave her a hippopotamus-sized mouthwash — then sprayed her cavernous mouth with a mixture of chlor- steadily over the years—recently | at about $225,000 to $250,000 a | year—and next year’s budget is not expected te be an exception. The budget for 1959 was set at cchnhoaemn ———- -- fF $$$ +—__—_— Next year's ey increase will be based, in part, on con- sideration of the property tax rate of $13.27 for each $1,000 of assessed valuation, which the city has stuck to the past two years. STUDY TAX RATE Whether this low rate can bring in sufficient revenues to maintain a higher budget will’ be one of} the factors studied by the city| Cemmission between now and the Jan. 31 deadline for approving the budget. The rate of 13.27 mills is the lewest since 1949. It was adopted im 1958, During the four years preceding 1958 ‘the rate was | 13.70 mills, Commissioners will be asked to-| night to consider approving “al giant budget for next year sub- wad by the Pontiac Genera!) Hospital Board of Trustees. *x * *x The hospital is asking approval! of a record outlay of $4,622,730— more than $1,400,000 more than| this year—to operate more beds For the first time since the ex- pansion program got under way) four years ago, the hospital budget anticipates a balanced financial operation. In another important matter, the Commission will be asked to gQ on record supporting the move for additional airline service ‘or Pontiac. x * * Specifically, commissioners will be asked to inform the Civil Aeronautics Board in Washington that they are in sympathy with the request-for airline service con- necting Pontiac with Cleveland and other industrial centers, Customers Bowled Over DALLAS, Tex. (UPI)—A Dal- | las delicatessen advertised yes- ophyl and milk of magnesia. terday: “g HEAPING bowl of soup, 25 cénts.” Detroit’s McLeod Faces the Music From Our News Wires ~oFrom Detroit to Australia, pay- ola charges, denials and confes- sions are snatching headlines that are rocking the broadcasting and record publishing industries. “I’m not clear as to what payola is or isn't,’ said Don McLeod aft- er he becanrtie the third disc jockey to leave Detroit radio station WJBK and WJBK-TV. McLeod, 3, resigned from WJBK yesterday, explaining ia- ter to newsmen that the move was over « “difference of opin- jon.” Another WIBK dise jockey was fired for taking payola and a WIBK-TV disc jockey resigned. go into,” said McLeod, who .con- ducted a popular program for mu- sic-loving Leodsville U.S.A, called. Me- “T realize it is not an opportune! time — that it's not very smart! of me, And I realize that by saying | no comment (about payola), I’ laying myself open.” * * Tom Clay was ‘fired Saturday| by WJBK after admitting he took! payola. Clay said he received about! $6,000 in 18 months to play certain’ songs on his record show. Dale Young resigned Sunday from W4SBK-TV, where he con- ducted a show called Detroit Bandstand. ‘ All three disc jockeys were fa-| vorités of Detroit's teen-aged set. NewscaSter Jac LeGoff, of WJBK-TV, was fired last week. The station said LeGoff had cdi- torialized on payola-on a news- cast. ; LeGoff was reported being con- sidered for a position on Detroit's WXYZ-TV.. John Pival, manager of thestation, refused to comment on the report that LeGoff was being considered for a vatiety 2 and care for more patients than|of 3 miflion dollars through eight- | ever before, thanks to near com-|year revenue anticipation notes, | pletion of the expansion program. = be almost enough to finance | the cost of the buses, he said. ‘Pluckers’ Delight x *&* * PLANE WRECKAGE’ SITE — The wreckage of a burning Trans World Airlines cargo plane burns this morning where it fel] in a Chicago shinsamiatinn section about a block southeast of Midway GMC Will Build Boy, 12 and Firemar 300 DSR Buses Die in Detroit Blast Doubled Earlier Order for City-Made Coach; Allocate $7.7 Million house at 4907 Ogden St., The Detroit. Street Railway) Commission yesterday sist wt for the purchase of 300 ~ buses from General Motors Truck | apd Coach Division. The decision doubled a previous| i ustice Voelker contract for 150 coaches. nr Quitting State for alr conditioning in 10 of the = Supreme Court buses. LANSING |\# — Justice John © Voelker, author of the best- he “Anatomy of a Murder,” | ig resigning from the Michigan | , Supreme Court to devote more time toe writing. Gov. Williams confirmed today that Voelker had written him ex- pressing this intention ‘‘but we haven't fixed q date.’ The jus- tice asked to be relieved after dan, 1, Despite loss of riders. eee Manager Leo J. Nowicki predicted | a better than 4 million dollars net | income over the next two years. x * * This profit, along with borrowing Figured in the income predic-- tion is the added revenue of a fare hike, alse approved at yes- terday'’s meeting. On a_ two- month trial basis, patrons will | pay an extra five cents for each mile of travel outside Detroit's city limits. Present fare is 25 cents within Detroit's boundaries. The first 50 coaches on order from GMC Truck and Coach are scheduled for delivery in Febru- ary, 1960. Another 125 are due for} delivery in July and the last 125 in November. * * * Neither Williams nor “Voelker would discuss reasons for the resignations in any detail. The governor said only that the let- ter, received last week, was “highly personal.’’ Voelker, 56, a pipe-smoking in- dividualist who loves fishing and the north woods, reportedly cleared more than $500,000 on his successful novel and a motion picture based on it: ee ee Take Last Resort BRIGHTON, England (UPI)— ‘ Emergency measures were called for when fire broke out LONDON (UPI)—The National | in the Greyhound Hotel pub yes- Poultry Show next month will | terday. The bartenders and cus- feature ladies feathered hats — | tomers doused the blaze by made with chic ken _feathers. squirting beer on it, jockey Alam Freed, who has lost| simiJar statement. He said then he both his radio and television out-/Was insuMed that the station would lets here, says he has plenty of lask him to. * * | ee i sy. jwork to kk a | In Viterbo, Italy, Police held Freed and WNEW-TV parted (former radio crooner Fulvio Paz- ways Monday even after the dise |7aglia today on Italian-style pay- jockey signed a statement for ‘ola charges the station denying he ever had | Pazzaglia was accused of prom- accepted yen. ising about 1,300 would-be singers x * a fame that never came and col- "The om said it wants to take lecting tens of*’thousands of ‘dol- over control of all its record shows.' Jars in return. The Freed show was a package deal, controlled entirely by Freed cai , He was fired Saturday by WABC! % “payola’’ comes ap in Par- : : | liament teday, but disc jockeys — er, Se Tees ee a) and music publishers there say Rae a oo ate [ it’s purely academic — that the | practice never took root in Brit- In Today’s Press | fin‘peascastng In Great Britain, the question VRIES. SLOPE LEE, ARP REBEL AOL LG: show. He said several people were) under consideration for the posi tion. * * * i In New York, rock 'n’ roll disc’ 4 Airport, were killed ahd a dozen injured when the plan. smashed into houses in the rain just before dawn, Ten isin were set afire. EMME ovep UNIT sD PRESS DAT ERBA SIONAL 4880C RESS Crashes at Chicago, Killing 7 FROM OUR NEWS WIRES A fireman and a 12-year-old boy were killed and 13 ‘the plane fuel, others from flames firemen were injured today when a two-story frame, in the western fringe of De-| allocated | roit, burst apart in an si sega and firemen to the ground. Koulch, 39; and Eugene Pietszak, | led in serious condition. | .szak, TATED P' — x * * - Flaming Fuel Sprays Homes in Rainy Night 3 Crew Die, 4 Others; ; Residents Near Midway | Say: Like End of World ”" CHICAGO \# — A cargo plane, returning to Midway Airport due to a fire warn- ing, plowed into a house in rainy darkness just before dawn today and sprayed a sleeping neighborhood with fiery death. Killed were the crew of three aboard the Trans W orld Airlines Constella- tion and at least four resi- dents of homes drenched with flaming airplane fuel. x * * The plane, from New York and Philadelphia, crashed three -blocks from the southeast corner of the ngtion’s busiest airport, a square network of runways and terminal buildings on Chicago's Southwest side. TWA in New York said the | plane had landed in Chicago, dis- | charged carge and taken off again when a fire warning fiashed on the instrumeht panel. The pilot began circling to land | again when the crash occurred, | TWA said, In a flash a string of houses and apartment buildings near 63rd Street and Cicero Avenue burst into flame. Firemen said 10 dwell- ings were set afire, some from AP Wirephote Chicago. At least six persons from those sprayed — gas. *® “It seemed ime - end of the world,’’ residents of the neighbor- hoed said. “They come over the house all the time,” a woman resident of | one of the damaged houses said. Ped somehow this ene sounded Suddenly, the entire house paris Pe ahd | could hear | glass flying everywhere.” The blast knocked more "°8 than a- score of policemen | Killed were fireman Bruno J. 12, who lived in a first-floor apart-| ment. Two firemen were report- The explosion originated in a coal furnace where Irene Piet- mothe rof the dead boy, started a fire, Mrs. Pletszak called firemen when smoke bil- lowed through the house. | Firemen donned gas masks and were entering the house when the} explosion occurred. One peHeeman said he- was knocked down by a fireman who} |was hurled through the air. Koulch and his partner, Glenn) Cc. Mumm, were bowled over} by the explosion when they opened | a door at the Pietszak home.' 35, Mumm was seriously injured. The bedy of Eugene was | found huddled in a bathtub in the gutted building. He appar- ently tried to hide from the flames and sm%ke, His father Richard, 32, a fac- tory worker, arrived home from work shortly after midnight to find the house in flames. Mrs. Pietszak, \32, had escorted her two sons Rob ert | | Turntable Tizzy Shakes Up World At today’s: session of the House! \of Commons, Laborite Rey Mason’ Comics .... 01... ee eeee eens 21 |— who used to be a jazz drummer) County mews ....,.....0.00% 15 |himself — will ask Postmaster| Wdifertnla ...........scccsce 6 |General John Bevins to rule “rec-| Markets _........ . 22, |ord-boosting programs” off the air’ Master Your Tensions ee Ae in view of discrimination."’ Ohidemries ounce sceectsccss. 4} And in- Austratia, Postmaster} pert) 2.3 css eee 17-19 |General Charlies Davidson told the} 1). ERC OD OOD UR CCC .. 16 | House of Representatives today TV & Radio programs ..... 27. | he was looking into the payola op- , eee ree 27 (eration in Australian radio and; Women's pages ......:555: 11-13 | television, al 12, and the dead boy's twin, Gerald, ; 1, to safety. * = * Mumn was the only person seri- ously injured, The others hurt in- cluded two policemen, two neigh- bors and eight other firemen They. suffered burns, cuts or smoke inhalation. Mrs. Pietszak told authorities the furnace overheated, sending |, smoke through the hot-air ree isters. The mother said she tried to enter the basement, but was forced back by the -heat and | smoke. Shortly after noticed the smoke, the lights went out. She said she thought she had rotinded up all three of her children in the darkness but Eugene was trapped in the bathroom she When she discovered he was not With them outside, she was un- able to re-enter the burning home home. Turkey Dinner Takes Back Seat; ‘His.Dog Is Hurt SYRACUSE, N. Y. (» —Kevin Miller, 10,\ earned $1.80 by do- ing odd jobs. The money could go toward a turkey for Thanksgiving, which his niother had said they could not afford, or for\a veterinar- _| Jan's fee—for—treating Kevin's injured dag, struck by an aute Monday. Kevin chose the dog. > “I don’t care if we don't\have turkey. FH eat bread and jetty if he lives,” he said, | Flights from all points of the compass use Midway. The rate of traffic is nearly a movement in or out every minute of the day and night. * * * Thomas Fracassi, 31, occupant of a house hit by the plane, said the aircraft caved the roof into a bedroom. Two of his three small childrep were hurt. Fracassi, his wife, Geralding, 29, and their third |child, were unhurt, The Fracassi home burst into ‘flame and fire enveloped a six- (Contimeed on Page 2, C on Page 2, Col. 4) Southern Felons Shoot to Escape - Woman Tells Story of Prisoners Stealing Car, Leaving Dead Man JEFFERSON, N.C. (AP) —, “T didn't know they had already killed-a man...that he was in that truck out there. “Oh, if L had known that...” Her eyes were welling with tears and her voice was trembling as s. Edd Sheets described her brief, unwilling role in the escape ‘of five dangerous felons from an Ashe County prison gang. She was alone Monday morning with her sick, 6-year-old daugh- ter at their home about 15 read- ' miles north of Jefferson in the rugged Blue Ridge Mountain country. The daughter was watching a children’s television show, “T had seen the convict truck go down the road. I never do. fest until it's gone,’ said the 32-year old mother of four daughters. The truck carried 12 prisonérs and three guards to the day’s work assignment, a spot in the remote Cranberry Creek section. While en route,;some of the prisoners cut a hole through the top of the wire cage | When the vehicle stopped, five |prisoners scrambled through the hole and onto guard William F,. ‘Handy as he dismounted. Handéy was knocked down and disarmed. One prisoner shot work foreman Fields Absher, 55, near the heart. * * * Guard Jud@ Jones exchanged ifire with the felons, but one of ithem held agin muzzlé against Handy’s head and ordered Jones to. drop. his weapons. “{ didn't want to. God knows I didn't Want to,” Jones said. “Rut \ 4 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) ~ Launch Drive By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. Oakland County residents who haven't already heard of Citizens fow Michigan probably will between now and Dec. 15. A steering committee of 35 per- sons met last night at the Birming- ham Community House to launch for funds, according to C_ Allan} an intensive campaign gar member-|Harlan of Bloomfield Township, a ship in a county committee of mem ber of the state board of! CFM. |directors. They announced a genera! | As a safeguard against any indi- membership meeting for 8 p.m. |Viduals or groups dictating the! Dec. 15 at the Pontiac Northern High School gymnasium, > ‘We'd love to set up for 200 and have it overflow to 2000,’ sai Murray D. Van Wagoner, chairman | CFM. * George Romney, president of American Motors Corp., founded thé statewide Citizens for Michigan of the Oakland * * in hapes of bringing about the re-| birth of citizen particpation to hefp solve Michigan's problems, Regional committees like Oak- land’s, which will be subdivided inte chapters, will study four basic concepts. They are: 1. What services do Michigan citizens need from their state gov- s for Michigan in County. | over and began to flout in our | face that this country |, dominat- | ed by economic and minority | groups,” declared Romney, a | | resident of Bloomfield Hills. | Along with a drive for Oakland members, a drive has been started | group, no pledges exceeding $100 ;will be accepted. Romney said ‘Harlan said the state organization d has set up a budget of $75,000. * * * Van Wagoner, former Democratic 'governor, said he expected the Oakland committee probably to be divided into 25 or 30 different jthe four basic fields. | It will be up to the statewide | committee to gather all recom- | mendations—only to be consid- ered will be those where there is unanimous agreement—from 14 | regions and to draft a proposal | to present to both parties by | next June. . In discussing how to sell the organization, Robert Browning of ernment? 2. How should these services be|Royal O&k warned: paid for? “It takes some time before you 3. How should the state govern- ment be ‘structured to carry out its responsibilities? 4. What can be done to accelerate Michigan's economic growth and its cultural and social develop- ment? * * * “Oné's responsibility as a citizen is third only to his responsibility to his family axd church,’”’ Romney stressed to the Oakland group. Although CFM is a nonpartisan organization which will support no candidates or platforms, it will attempt to sell its recommenda- tions to both parties by next year's fall elections. Democratic and Re- publican leaders alike have pledged their consideration of the findings. “My conviction grew for this organization as Khrushchev came can convince people this is ‘the greatest thing ever.’’ He has pre- pared 300 letters soliciting mem- ibers, “This is a beautiful chance for all those people who want to help, their state but don’t want to declare their political faith,"’ Van Wagoner said. 5 Southern Felons Kill Man, Escape (Continued From Page One) Handy was begging me. He “They ll kill They mean it” ” The seven prisoners who did not participate in the escape pleaded with the felons not to kill Handy,} as Jones had surrendered me chapters, all of which will study | screaming: | Pd tt ee, ee ed a - = =—_— =- —_- — = = =e mere 2b & are elie i 8 B oe Rp + / | check back into jail six Clarkston balance of 25-day terms rather They Prefer It to F THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24,1959 Ye, % BACK TO JAIL-— Three Oakland County sheriff's deputies area boys who chose serving out than pay fines or be placed on ine, Probation Six of seven young Clarkston area boys received a stern lecture yesterday and then chose to spend Thanksgiving in jail rather than pay fines and be placed on proba- tion for rowdyism. The alternative was offered the boys — all but one of.them high school graduates — by . Circuit Judge Theodore F. Hughes, who called them “‘bullies’’ and their missile throwing escapade coward- ly, After the judge questioned each of the nervous boys, he sentenced each to pay a $100 fine or serve 10 days in the county jail and ordered them on two years pro- bation. In addition, Judge Hughes ordered the gang disbanded, telling jthem they could. associate only as. the closest chums, and imposed an 11 p.m. curfew on} the seven. * * * Then the judge interposed: any of you. don't like the sentence ‘fied 6 Youths Take Choice---Jail. Most teplied they thought the terms too harsh. Emmett J, Leib, himsetf a jus- tice of the peace and attorney for See, urged probation for the boys instead of bringing them in contact with hardened crimi- nals in the jail, Another attorney, Brakie J, Orr where other than with the boy’ themselves.” He criticised Clark- ston for not having sufficient recre- ational facilities Norman, who was a‘ spectator in aw: When Will Summit Come? was|with the two friends each "DY June “= or | LONDON (AP) — Diplomatic|April 5-8 Following that, Western! “nr circles in London believe the date! discussion of the Khrushchev visit! for the East-West summit confer- ence is getting farther and farther said, ‘‘Maybe the fault lies some-! Pieretle ene ialte oe ' Ad See BIRMINGHAM — at the City Commission meeting was presented with the annual ‘| "Traffic Court Award by the Ameri- can Bar Assn. The award, which began in 1947, is given to the court which has shown the greatest improvement in handling traffic cases. * * * Birmingham received this year’s award for cities with a popula- tion of 25,000 to 50,000. . After the plaque was presented by Henry L, Woolfenden, of the bar association, Emery turned the award over to Mayor Harry Den- yes. | Builder Wallace J. Newton of the Wallace J. Newton Co. appeared! before the City Commission last, night asking that a parcel of land) on the west side of Woodward ave-! nue north of Oak street gbe re- \zoned so that he may be able to) ‘construct a three or four-stery) “luxury apartment.” ! The present zoning ordinance calls for the construction of twe- story buildings only. Pentiac Press Phete probation for vandalism. The youths are (from left) James B. Lowe, Kent R. See, Kenneth F. Stock, Gary R. Beach and Jerry N. Terry. Obscured behind Terry is Thomas E. Robey. — Pontiac Fireman Gets Probation the court with a friend, stood up and defended his buddies when Judge Hughes said the gang had} we stolen the Norman said he| Civil later made restitution | * * * | The boys denied making state- ments while out on bond that they | would get even later. All but Robey = F have jobs : tenant was placed on six months |°! & unis. . They had no explanation for the probation by the Civil Service “Following the present orii- judge who asked them how they,'Commission at a hearing last night.| mance, eur architect feels that high school graduates from good x *« * ; construction of the apartments families, could get in so much trou-; Lt. Raymond R. Fay, 35, a vet-| would be disoriented,” Newton ble. Few of the parents were in eran of 13 years with the de-| said. a the courtroom jPartment, faced dismissal charg- “The apartment would not tower rr taling oat 0 over adjacent property since the ‘t tavor 4 pe — “\best part of our property is con- a Se ee siderably lower than the front fac- In their decision the three-man |in'; Woodward,”’ Newton explained. Commission stated that “due te * * * his (Fay’s) length of service and | “We find it impractical and eco- | position in the department we do nomically unsound to erect a fine | mot recommend that he be dis- (building which would be overshad- | missed.” owed by the adjoining structures.” | The Commission ordered that] “We are asking for relief so that Fay’s penalty consist of loss of|W@ May erect a building that would pay during his period of suspen-|b€ a credit to the community. sion and that he retufn to work} \V ednesday to begin a six-month) sketches of. the proposed apart-' = . ments and their relations to adja- vervice ~ Considers Past Record at - Dismissal Hearing eggs |mitted to the city Plan Board for } study, * * * Newton told the Commission that plans new call for the construction A Pontiac Fire Department lieu- Maybe 1961 plus time required for technical arrangements could take up an- - The commission accepted City you can serve out your jail terms other two weeks. | period of probation during which Manager's L. R, Gare’s recom- County Resident The escapees donned the guards’ ream ye j away. But officials in Paris and! DE GAULLE MAY BE HERE ltime Fire Chief James R. White |mendation to assess only businesses ‘fronting alleys on both sides of . caps and uniforms and ordered Bonn say the meeting with Soviet Killed as Auto Jones and Handy into the truck] Up popped Thomas E. Robey, Premier Nikita Khrushchev still cage. The other seven prisoners! 19. To the surprise of their at- (Is likely before June. Rams Abutment A’ Madison ‘Heights man was killed Jast night on the U.S. 16 ex- pregsway in Novi when his car rargmed an abutment of the Novi road bridge. A witness told Brighton state police that the car driven by the . victim, Bernard J. Tyler, 49, 676 Highway | out of control near Toll in "59 | the bridge, veer- ing off the ex- pressway and on- to the shoulder of the road. - Novi Police Chief Lee BeGole said that the west- bound car rammed the abutment with such force that special equip- ment had to be used to pry the auto open in order to free Tyler’s body. -e BeGole said that Tyler was driv- ing anew car with only 128 miles on the speedometer. ; Its speedometer needle was stuck 638 ‘Last Year to Date: 78 loaded the mortally wounded Ab- sher, a grandfather, into the cage 80. “I saw the prison ttuck come said Mrs. Sheets. “One man got out and came to our door. He had on guard clothes and | figured he was all right.” _ Mrs. Sheets opened the door and the map, with aimed pistol, de- manded the keys to her 1959 auto- mobile, The five piled into the red- and-white car and fled. Jones, Handy and the seven oth- er prisoners rushed Absher to a hospital. “He died before we got there,” Jones said. ‘1 don't believe he ever said a word.” The State Highway Patrol, as- sisted by city. county and federal officers, set up roadblocks in the northwestern section of North Car- olina, trying to keep the heavily armed felons within the mountains where escape routes are few. Of- ficers in neighboring Virginia and Tennessee also were on the look- at 65 miles an hour, he said. out. -—— ee No Relief | in Northwest Floods [rescued from the Green River boys, although twitching uneasily, | believed ‘to be explosions could Valley and {rom the Snohomish'retained their composure. But as!have been roofs collapsing. » By The Associated Press The worst floods in 26 years, plagued northwest Washington to- da¥, with no immediate relief in- dicated. Hundreds of persons have been forced from their valley homes, Hundreds of others have been The Weather Fall U.s. Weather Bureau Report iC AN tenight and temerrew. é Teday in Pentiac Lewest temperature preceding 8 am 3 At 8 am.” Directipn—Southrast Sun sets teday at § 04 pm Sun rises Wednesday at 735 am. Moon sets today at 1.42 Moon rises Wednesday at 7 Dewntewn Temperatures 37 11am... s Indicated back and it stopped out front,’’|Cecj) . Weber, 17, motioped for their son to stay seated. He did. After conferring with his attorney, e who was found guilty by \18, of 54 N. Holcomb St., Kent R. torneys, five of the other boys stood up also, indicating they'd take the judge's alternative, The parents of the seventh youth, | Circuit Court jury, said he rather take the fine and probation. * * * The boys were part of a gang of 12 that went on a rampage of egg throwing and other malicious) mischief last month. They were caught when they heaved stolen eggs at the car of an off-duty deputy sheriff. Police said the gang had been ‘‘terrorizing’’ the Clarks- ton area for some time. Independence Township Justice William H. Stamp sentenced 10 of the boys to 25 days in jail. They appealed the sentence — their attorneys called too se- vere for the crime — to Circuit | Court. Six pleaded guilty Oct. 27. Marched off to jail yesterday with Robey of 5 S. Holcomb St.,| Clarkston, were Jerry N. Terry,| See, 19, of -8480 Andersonville Rd., James B. Lowe, 19, of 6141 Over- look _Dr., Gary R. Beach, 18, of River area, in the Seattle area. Thousands of acres of rith 'farmland were flooded within a lradius of about 50 miles. The dis- astrous floods resulted {from tor- rential rains, strong winds and heavy snow that had covered mountains and melted into swol- 0 } * * r-| Rain fell in the warm moist air in the Gulf states while rain and | snow hit the upper Great Lakes region, most of the upper Mis- } Wind velocity 2-4 m p.b. Sissippi Valie, and in parts of H-| linois and lowa. Skies were clear}Judge Hughes asked each of the|craft flashed on the instrument jin California, the Great Basin re-| Bm. a(gion and from Arizona and Colo-|their jail terms like another, mem- jrado- eastward to Texas, Okla- &am Tam. 37 «12m 4g cloudy oweathe GO OW... -ccenese 37 DPM. cscs: “2 t lou - eather prevailed in eee 37 other areas WO a A rain. belt extended” ffom Monday in Pontiac Georgia and Alabama north@ast- (As recorded downtown a Highest feaiperature ss \ward through the eastern Ohio Lowest temperature .... «+--+ 38 'Valley and Mid-Atlantic states to Mean temperature io 47 ; Z Weather—Partly cloudy the lower Great Lakes and New * One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Englarid There was no severe cold. Tem- | Stock, |Rd., all of Clarkston. | Sitting in a row waiting for their 5751 Main St., and Kenneth F. 18, of 5421 Andersonville the full schedule of engagements Sometime in May, thus pushing a/ for the world's chief political lead-;S¥UMmit date back some more. ers. They see signs that Commu- nist China is trying to put the|Khrushchev might lose any desire|Stanaback Dec. 1. brakes the Soviet Union and | will fil e monthly rt “ y repo 0” | Woodward avenue from . Lincoln javenue to 14Mile road when it is determined that the alleys be paved. Though no petitions to pave the alleys have been rectived, the Commission directed Gare te gather cost estimates of the paving should the work be done in the future. “Normally, where an alley abuts busirless property on one side and residential property on the oppo- site side, the procedure is to place that portion of the assessment, not carried by the city, against the businesses and not the resi- dential property,’ Gare said. - “To my knowledge this is the There also is a possibility that}Fay's conduct. Gaulle will visit America | ~ *& * Fay now faces examination on la felonious assault charge before! There is a feeling here that|Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Diplomatic observers here cite De between for a meeting if it fails to ma- West. |terialize by mid - June. Several here is speculation t- the leading British newspapers point t won't be reached until jot that by then the WS. presi- 1961, when a new American presi- dential election would not be far dent will be in the White House.|ff. and Khrushchev possibly But West German press chief| would prefer to talk with the new Felix von Eckardt told pewsmen|President rather than outgoing} Fay requested last night's closed Monday the prevailing opinion in| President Eisenhowér hearing. The officer was arrested Bonn is that the meeting will be| These papers maintain there is|Nov. 6 after he allegedly went held in April. \little to support Prime Minister|to the home of William H. Whit- American and French diplomat- Harold Macmillan’s continuing|mire, 19, of 3715 Grafton St., Orion ic sources ‘in Paris say the most! display of confidence that an early|Towrshif, armed with a shotgun. logical date appears to fall some-|Summit can be held. They say his| ~~ & on negotiations The dismissal charges were prepared by Public Safety Direc- ter George D. Eastman and Chief White and submitted to the Commission by City Manager Walter K. Willman. Judge Emery Accepts City Traffic Court Award Municipal | way “previous assessments within Judge John C. Emery last night/the city have been made and fee] it is equitable.” Mental Patients Pr Need Gifts, Too Remamber Sick Souls, Director of Relations at Pontiac State Says Pontiac.State Hospital today ap- pealed to the community to re- member the ‘forgotten souls” in the institution at Christmas time. * * * “Aa large number of the 3,100 patients is not going to be re- membered unless the community pitches in and lets these lonely | sick people realize that somebody is interested and cares about them,” said Ted Panaretos, direc- | tor of community relations. “The patient who is remem- The commission told Newton that) bered retains his dignity and has a reason to want to weil and return to his respective com- Verdict | cent buildings be made and sub-| munity again as a useful mem- ber of society.” Pgnaretos listed the following items as examples of things the patients can use: * * * Christmas cards for the patients \to mai] out of the hospital or exchange with other patients, stamps, cigarettes, cookies, cakes, writing material, gift wrapping, ribbon, cloth and thread. * * * Games to help pass the time away: checkers, cards, monopoly, jig-saw puzzles, scrabble sets, ping pong balls and paddles; soap, tis- sues, deodorants, talcum powder, wallets, cosmetics (not in break- able jars), art supplies and equip- ment. . : * * Clothing could include sweaters,’ gloves, handkerchiefs, socks, slip- pers and similar items. Packages should state their con- tents and the name of the donor so that the hospital can thank the giver on behalf of the patients. * * * They should be addressed to Ted Panaretos, director of community relations, Pontiac State Hospital. . * * * The. deadline date is Dec. 11. .- “Don’t send perishable goods or glass containers,” Panaretos cau- tioned. _— Saugatuck Banker Dies SAUGATUCK (#—Funeral serv- ice will be held Wednesday for |Lemuel R. Brady of Saugatuck, t of the Fruit Growers |Bank and insurance agency oper- jator, who died last Saturday at | Dougias Hospital where he was admitted after a heart attack. Brady was 70. where between the last week in | hopes received a rude setback} Oakland County sheriff's depu-! April and the end of May. |when Khrushchev failed publicly|ties, who arrested Fay, said he They agree that it can't be set,to oppose De Gatlle’s call for aldemanded to see Whitmire who, before then. Khrushchev will visit) slower approach to top-level nego-|had been cleared in the knife-slay- | France for two weeks beginning |tiations, and when he agreed to| ing of a Pontiac man, Louis Van-) March 15. French President} visit France in Mamch rather than/|itvelt, 26, in a tavern brawl. Charle de Gaulle will be in Britain in February / Fay is a friend of the Vanitvelt x * * |family. He was suspended on Nov. Belief is also growing that)? by White. SAN MARCO D’ URRI, Italy (AP) — More than two weeks after their neighbors struck it rich, three residents of this moun- tain village still won't accept. a gift of stock in the world’s largest bank. “Nobody in this world gives away money without asking some- \ | Khrushchev already has lost h . Plane Burns, Kills 1 |of his interest a aa East West | More people have been put on ° ’ . ‘conference, due to pressure from|bread and water diets by waiters at Chicago's Midway Communist China's Mao Tze-tung.|than by wardens . . . The success- According to this theory, Redjful diplomat is the fellow who . . China wants to prevent the sum-|knows hew to use his head with- (Continued From Page One) | mit meeting because it would not lout anybody suspecting it. —Earl apartment. three -story builling be- hind his house. A woman living across the street participate. Wilson. ~ from the Fracassis, Miss Gertrude jinterrogation by the judge. the |they were marched out of the courtroom handcuffed together. Stock began to cry while others joked and laughed. Stock made in- sulting gestures to a news photog- jrapher. Terry, attired in a suit and mecktie like some of the others, len streams that poured into val-| chose to serve out the balance of | Lockheed constellation was run- leys and rivers. Nearly 14 inches} pis jail term despite telling Judge |"!Ng behind schedule and was due lof rain drenched the area in @) pfughes: VICINITY—Cleudy | week. | | “A weekend over there (the jail) was enough for me. I was sick.” The judge said the days the six jhad already served before they ap- |pealed would be deducted from the 25. ¥ * * Before he issued his alternative, boys why they shouldn't finish out iber of the gang, Gary L. Norman, ao homa and Kansas. Partly cloudy |18, 6247 Snowapple Dr., Clarkston. | Steel Mediators Stir Preventive Talks WASHINGTON W — The gov- |peratures were in the 20s in partsjermment is moving back into the steel labor negotiations in ‘an ef- fort to head off a new stoppage. start tomorrow in conferences among mediators. Joseph F. Finnegan, chief of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, announced last night that . his staff will confer Wednesday with the three-member fact-finding panel set up by President Eisen- hower to deal with the walkout S1iWednesday of ways to detect un-|that shut down the industry’ for pilot's body was recovered from Later in the day a meeting will $$'day to iron out details of proce-|be held with Secretary of Labor taken from the apartment building \ Mitchell, _ Weather—Snow of Minnesota, North Dakota and Highest a This) Mic higan Preliminaries 63° in isos 10 in 1950) Monday's Temperstere Chart ‘Delegates Plan Study rene ak 2 Mion's go S8l0f Nuclear Detection 34 22 Milwaukee 6 32 se an New Orleans Tt &| GENEVA (AP) — The U. S., of omen Ht Bvooleay test ban talker agreca to “ # Piimbureh M % day to star a new scientific study oy 6 % 4 Se Marie HH 3s'derground nuclear test explosions. 116 days. . * er p 4 | The delegates met. infermal}y to- : 41 Beattie $7 Ly > Tempe ©" © gure for the scientists. « jJames \P, 4 Bolin, said, “repeated explosions”’ awakened her. She said what she The three dead crew members were identified by TWA as C, W. Helwig, pilot; Db. Eb. Waters, co-pilot, and A, L. Auge, flight | engineer, all based at Los An- | geles, | The 116-feet-Iong four-engine lin Chicago at 1:50 a.m. It left New \York with a 6,576-pound cargo in- \cluding an aircraft engine and lother freight, 99 pounds of mail and | 106 pounds of express * * * | It landed in Chicago, unloaded |some cargo and took off again for | Los Angeles, TWA reported, when |the warning of fire aboard the panel. The pilot began circling to return to Midway when the crash occurred. First firemen arriving at the iscene reported fhe entire area was ablaze. One worfian ran from the blazing apartment building screant-| ing “oh my god, my babies, my| babies.’’ She collapsed in shock. | John Ascher, chief of Chicago detectives, said there were four residents of dwellings killed in ad- dition to the three airline em- ployes. The badly burned bodies of a man about 40 and a woman about 35. were brought to the morgue but could not be identified im- | mediately. Fire Commissioner Robert Quinn said the body of the pilot was) found still strapped. to his cabin! seat 50 feet away from a building’ jat 6355 S. Kilpatrick Ave. The co- iERI MALES Stil & Orta Pe ST} Pontiac Press Phote Mailbox. The bank sends the letters to Santa Claus, Ind., for dispatch to Pontiac or elsewhere bearing a-‘‘Santa Claus’’ date mark. Mrs. Donald Doyon, 732 W. Huron St., one of the first cus- tomers to use the service, wants the secret kept. from her son Michale that she’s Santa's helper. SANTA’S HELPER — Mom will be able to help Santa Claus with his mail this year through a service of the Pontiac State Bank. The. bank is providing free of charge through Dee.42--four different letters from Santa Claus and the en- velopes for mailing. The letter can be addressed to any child and ‘deposited in’ the Santa Claus the bhilding. | Quinn said two other Bodies were ' iat 4651-59 W. 64th St. ae Poor Family in Italy Afraid to Take Gift thing in exchange,” said Gentile Cassinelli, 57. * * * “Mother says, ‘never put your signature on anything and you'll keep out of trouble,’ added her brother, Mario, 53. * x From a corner of the large, dirt-floored single room of their unpainted house their mother, Virginia Cassinelli, 81, glowered at the village priest and officials of the Bank of America who wanted the family to accept own- ership of 75 shares of the bank’s stock. So for the fourth time in 15 days, the bank’s representatives Monday trudged back down the twisting, mile-long trail from this in the northern Italian Apennines with their job of giving stock to all local residents unfin- ished. ‘ * * * Nov. 8 bank representatives delivered $340,000 worth of stock on behalf of Victor and Joseph Saturno of Reno. Nev., parents were natives of d’Urri. The. father — the sons — built up a for- Nevada. & -® * Although the two brothers had . More than two-thirds of all the gas pow stored —-under- ground in the United States is lo- cated in Pennsylvania, Ohio, MfCh-~! igan and West Virginia. sl es a ne ata PF chan phar emg om ne . TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1959 — Decentralized Bargaining Plea NAM President Says All Suggested Curbs Would Limit Freedom DETROIT (UPI)—The president of the National Association of Manufacturers said Monday de- centralization of collective bar- gaining rather than increased gov- ernment participation in labor- management disputes is the ‘‘logi- cal remedy’ for industrywide strikes. C. Hope, speaking be- fore the Detroit Economic Club, said decentralized bargaining would be a ‘way out which is con- sistent with - individual freedom and infinitely preferable frem both the union and management. stand- point to having Washington, D. C., take over, He said that “actually when a menopolistic union in a basic industry lays its demands on the bargaining table, it’s the consum- ing public which sits on the other side of the table.” He said there have been pro- dosals for fact-finding boards with settlement powers, compulsory arbitration, government seizures and labor courts to end industry- wide strikes such as the steel strike. But he said ‘‘none of these is compatible with the principles under which Americans have al- ways lived. They would lead to price-fixing, to production con- trols, to manpower regulation.” Convention on Waekendi 110,000 Products, 12,500 Plants Chemical Competition Rugged 1,429 for paints and 90 for between raw/oxygen. The chemists get really com- for Great Lékes Skiers DETROIT (UPI) — The Great Lakes Skiers Convention, includ- ing an exhibit of- ski equipment and resort attractions and the crowning of a ski queen, will be held in Henry and Edsel Ford ‘Auditorium here Friday through ae © 4. tees es * MOVIN’ ALONG — These youngsters can't walk but they can still enjoy the thrill of moving day. Here they are wheeled from an obsolete building to a unit of the new orthopedic center of Orthopedic Hospital in Los Angeles, Calif. The raised. By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)—Competition from within and from without the — industry is growing al- |most as fast as the industry itself. The Manufacturing Chemists’|ical divisions. Assn., meeting here today, notes x *& * tween changing }making products, processes materials, and finally between the| all-out chemical companies and |petitive with their own products outsiders with a chemical as ajamongst themselves. High tenaci-\ity. side product, And these last some- ity rayon competes with nylon. Cel-| lophane competes with polyethyl- ene film and wax paper porcibel with both as well as with “| \times grow into full blown chem-| modern center cares inn children suffering bone, muscle and nerve disorders. Nearly half of the $6,500,000 cost of the hospital “Money in the bank” for young folks, fleet owners, traveling men, budgeteers and two-car families. Cuts fuel bills, maintenance, insurance, and repairs “#~ Provides light- touch agility in traffic, parks in pocket-sized places, delivers tireless all-day driving across country <® The only new dimension car to pass this acid test with flying colors: already” chosen by more than one thousand fleet and taxi owners. Records show: operating and mainte- nance costs 19% ‘Tess with The Lark <> If money matters, here’s the mostest for the least— at your Studebaker Dealer’s “# YOUR CHOICE OF SIX STUNNING STYLES—PROVEN B COMPA ”750 MILLION OWNER-DRIVEN MILES. RE LARK PRICES...INCLUDING THE LOWEST-PRICED U.S. MADE CONVERTIBLES, HARDTOPS, AND 4-DOOR V-8 WAGONS. See it now—at YOUR "STUDEBAKER DEALER'S ~MAZUREK MOTOR SALES 245 South Bivd., East Pontiac, Michigan DAVIS MOTORS ~ 606 North Main St. Rochester, Michigan RINK MOTORS 4455 Highland Rd. Pontiac, Michigan Walled BOB SOTHERN* 990 W. Maple Rd. Lake, Michigan SAVE WITH PENNEY’S BUDGET-PRICED SHEERS! Full - fashioned, first quality 15- c denier, 60-gauge nylons give you glamour sheerness plus an excellent measure of wear. Neutral tones with ‘dark seams — Sizes 81% to 11. Ss . a oa a randmother Comes for Holiday SAVE 16” § g eas 4 , Has Pretzel Top By JANET ODELL |C. Claus this year, Het busband) Mrs, Claus’ parents, the William and as long after that as her, bar goes out in the yard wear. |BYas= ALUMINUM 3 Pon es tiac Press Home Editor jis the pastor of Trinity Lutheran/Wahrows of Astoria, N.Y.,! daughter can keep her, the daugh-| img a harness. -His newest food x | Our annual Thanksgiving pic-,;Church on Auburn avenue. They came for a visit two weeks ago. |, ays. itt] _| likes are brownies and peanut ; This flavorful main dish that! ture and story abouf™a minister's! have four children: Julia, aged 13;|Mr Wahrow had te go back to er a “ ae ° ae Ge | butter, * STOR »b ” can take the place of both meat!wife and her preparations for the Laura, aged 8; Chuck, aged 7; and work last week, but Mrs, Wahrow an, : ” ahrow fits rignt in "1 But back to the hms alk, —————— and vegetables on the family or)holiday tenters around Mrs. Ralph|Michael, aged 2. is staying on for Thanksgiving —the usy lite at the PArsomag®. instr Thenkegiving which is ust “company” table is filling, sturdy, | 2 ae , SS ON A oe TO FAMILY 'gaing to include Hassenpfetfer' and substantial-looking. It lends| -* One other -important member; There will be etght people sitting » siaation. wiasneas, ind eacd! ak of the family is Tibbar, the petidown for dinner early'‘in the after- full Piane Hinge : ’ & . lrabbit. Fearful that their father/noon. In the morning there will 4 : : g ing to the “a x might not be enthusiastic about;be church. Then the children will such a pet, the children presented| watch the annual parades on tele- Tibbar to him as an Easter pres-| vision while Mrs. Claus finishes ent last April, Tibbar doesn’t/the food preparation. ’ ta. 1 , | know he's a rabbit; the Claus say| ‘tee: sneen: Kees. eek Sow a ae ee eee, | key with Waldorf dressing; In the winter he lives in ® | mashed potatoes and gravy; cage in the kitchen. When he t greeg beans with mushrooms; sleeps, he hides his head in @ | ‘frozen fruit salad; ice cream cardboard tunnel, As a small | and fruit cake. ’ hid him com- ; | arr ne uunne! bane like an | To make the dressing Mrs.| estrich. In warm weather Tib- |Claus uses prepared stuffing mix. | * — —|To this she adds celery, nuts, /B% ichopped apples, raisins and melted butter. ; | Here is her salad recipe: ere | y le S FROZEN FRUIT SALAD By Mrs. Ralph C. Claus ® . 1 package lemon gelatine 1 package lime gelatine Main Dish 1 large can fruit cocktail, drained % cup mayonnaise 1 pint whipping cream, whipped stiff | Dissolve gelatne in hot water as) \directed on “package. Chill until | partially set. Fold in fruit, mayon-, * naise and whipped cream. Pour|B 4 erland. Called “Quiche Lorraine” into mold and chill until serving| a ’ time. % cup crushed pretzels in that country, oe aoe * * * | ] = entree is a tasty blend of Swiss . a tat Sea arrange| cheese, milk and eggs baked to a — wantee er settee * layers of one-half of all the re-| si golden perfection in a pastry shell. | iat in't a } s. c aus for a) * maining ingredients in this order: And for the American homemak- or" ek m si acl x asparagus, peas, sliced eggs, THREE GENERATIONS — The Ralph C. : Pentiae Press Phete (er who may want to prepare this meee slight pled pin tom cheese, shoup mixture, and pret-| Claus family of Auburn avenue is happy to have (center) helps her granddaughter, Julia, (right) flavorful foreign food, here's a ~~ ‘| zels. (Be sure to sprinkle pretzel] Grandma as a guest for Thanksgiving this year. and her daughter, Mrs. Claus, arrange a center- gestion for c ye — of| crumbs evenly over the soup lay-| Mrs. William Wahrow of Astoria, New York piece for the holiday table. swe pee. ye i; unks 0 Wh Sa T . er). Repeat layers, using remain-| eng — ~~ von _— _ 0 ys UrnIpS ing ingredients as at first. Top) rom the sea — for flavor a | aroma that are bound to have the wate” "Creamy Lemon Sauce — (Comish Hens Make ,ssre mr mae "Are Unpopular! | It's a casserole creation that not only supplies satisfaction with its high protein content, but looks appetizing and tastes the same way. It has been a favorite dish for many years of a Southern fam- ily and it is invariably served at big holiday meals as well as at family dinners when the meat bud- get is low. z It is called ‘“Asparagus-Pretzel Queen”” and contains canned as- paragus, condensed cream of mushroom soup, grated cheese, hard-cooked eggs, and a surprise ingredient—pretzel crumbs. Serve it with pride and watch everyone glow with eating pleasure, and ask for more. Asparagus-Pretrel Queen 1 10%-o8. can condensed ‘cream of | m sou | COMPARE THESE FEATURES FOUND ON!’ IN $39.95 DOORS KKK KKKKK KK } ee SS eee eee oe ae Soe @ WATERPROOF UIP tae ; @ FULL LENGTH PIANO WINCES @ | SOREEN, 2 GLASS PANELS + @ PNEUMATIC DOOR LiMteR = y @ KNOB LOCK @ STORM CH’ @ FULLY WEL” | } | | | zKkkkKe Swiss pie — reminiscent of high Alps and quaint chateaus — has long been a favorite dish in Switz- % soup can milk | % teaspoon pepper | 1 14%-oz. can asparagus, whole or! t-up, drained 4p eS cu 5 1 16-08. cam green peas, drained 4 eggs, hard-cooked, sliced % cup cheese yf BAK BO Aiea tenant clin; suncvored la a very sat : Ni § cup for dessert will complete this) New cooks should lean to se FSFE COCO CO ew wwe we ee b J ' +. be > oven (450 degrees) for 20 ery bt 20eS Wi th Many Desserts Dinner a uccess Stile designed to please i aP las many vegetables as . possible. ————= mata acura —— 1} Ss be eee bo or until surface is bubbly. Serve , . r | : Here's a small-size basic recipe; ll MSnsitiod 8 lO io r hot. Makes 6 servings. In_some countries a woman is thawed frozen berri¢s spooned) Flegant main dish! Tuna Swiss Pie for the often neglected white Brace - Smith Funeral domes. ) recognized as a good cook-it she/WEer Tops. Stuffed Rock Cornish Hens —,_-} (An (@ie-ounce) tune || turnip. Terns bee Masa . knows how to prepare interesting Ice Cream To | etetrone® Rock Cornish hens 2 enspeene mines onion | » Saaah: 440 ante weenie fakenl 3 + NSURED FUNERAL-ARRANG ENTS PIA uces | eac 4 ounces). : im ‘abo 2 Special Bonbons Add a es page Spoon Basic Sauce over Chocolate | ‘ _—tar ae eee ‘unbaked #-inch pastry shell \""Socup betting war Gives you acceptable collateral wid = quite aware ucesjice cream. 3 tablespoons tantent suineod onion. 3 eges | 1 teaspoon salt h : . . give personality plus to many)| M% cup boiling water T cup milk |} 12 to 3 teaspoons butter or margarine that any bank will ac t weet oOuc fo a foods. _| Creamy Fruit Cup 2 peckaged herb-sefsoned bread Drain fish and flake. Combine Pare rare S iin Kieth | 9 6 . rs s . , ing ‘ | are urnips; cu into 4-inc * A basic Lemon Whip Sauce can! Blend 1 \cup Basic Sauce with) "Y . ,/cheese, onion, flour and salt in| s A little extra that you can make/be easily made and kept for a va-|1 cup sweetened orange chunks,, 7?&W hens comp letely; remove} medium-size bowl. Fill pastry shell |CUbes: there will be 1's to2 cups. Please write or -call for further at the last minute to add delight to/riety of desserts. It's delicious as |1, cup miniature marshmallows |= ets: wash in cold water, drain) with alternate layers of tuna and| Turn turnips, boiling water — details at lige a that holiday meal. the filling for cream puffs . . . Or and % cup toasted coconut, Spoon /#"4 dry. Melt butter in a l-quart/cheese mixture, Beat eggs and |Sar ne : es te ) qm: Creme de Ménthe Bonbons |©2" be varied for fruit cups OF |into sherbet glasses, Refrigerate|Saucepan over low heat; add cel- mas together, pour over fish and eed lode sal 10 salah, BR ACE SMI » cup fine vanilla cookie crumbs used as the topping for ice cream) several hours. Makes 4 servings. jery and cook lightly. Add onion, © sia tk t Drain; add butter and pepper to) ° oilli 3.62 ; ap epee Sarees Smarts sundaes. winavi boiling water and stuffing; mix’ pire at 450 degrees F. for 15)'@ste. Makes 2 servings. FUNERAL HOME:.<> tablespoons corn syrup Lemon ip Sauce | aang : n }--.-) 1 | - eee or extra; ‘% cup fresh lemon juice Start Bacon Cold well * * * — oe 4 _ ; i ° : con. Ly suger . , |degrees F. and bake 30 minutes| For best keeping quality, pota-) - L sugar 1 cenapeell’ grated temen pect s i bees: alee 4 tif fi - teed i eeel 138 W. Lawrence St. - Mix together the cookie crumbs,| } Su; ?icarf ie Frying bacon? Place the strips; Stuff mixture into hens; turn or just until firm in center. Yield: |toes should be stored, in a : filberts, 1 cup confectioners sugar,! Combine lemon juice, sugar and|** they come from the package |wings back akimbo fashion; eS generous servings. "__ Wark place. Mixture should be moist when | Fold into lemon juice mixture.|P@%: do not try to separate. As!, shallow pan in a hot (425 de- touched. Form into balls about the Refrige il needed, b#con warms, over moderately ; size of walnuts. cae, a Ropes eee "|low heat, it will be easy to place grecs) eves fr 1 bow ~ — Roll in grated sweet chocolate or Cream Putts |strips apart. Turn the bacon sev- Skin is very brown and crisp and extra confectioners sugar. Store in| Slit sides of baked, cooled cream eral times, so it will cook evenly; \drumstick meat is very tender covered container for 1 or,;2 nights |puffs;. fill with Basic Sauce. May/|it will be crisp in six to eight|when fork is inserted. Serve at before serving. Makes 30. ° be served plain or with slightly| minutes. once. Makes 4 large servings. corn syrup and creme de menthe. | peel. Chill. Whip cream until stitt. | (and the refrigerator) in a cold jiegs together. Roast on a rack “{ | DOUBLE STAMPS EVERY Wednesday — AT THESE WRIGLEY STORES ...hardly anybody misses Christmas Club payments! .. andonce you have had a BIG, . | bill-free holiday (thanks to Christmas CHOOSE YOUR 1960 CHRISTMAS CLUB | tN PONTIAC: Club savings) you'll know how easy | peposit EACH WEEK| RECEIVE IN NOVEMBER, 1960 | . 7 3 . it is to save in Christmas Club. Take $25 $ 12.50 | your choice of savings plans. Mail = 25.00 | * Tel-Huron * 536 North * 398 «59 South * 5060 your deposits, if you wish. Wrap up ae a | Shopping Perry Auburn «Saginaw Dixie Hwy. Christmas 1960 now, start your Christ- ene oped Center Drayton Plains mas Club today at any Pontiac State ; 45 S. Telegraph j Bank office. . Get Finer Gifts”. Faster with Gold Belt 12 ay PONTIAC | STATE BANK quve tch Vow Exchanged at Church Mary Elizabeth " deantion be} came the bride-of Richard Tritch “before 100 guests Saturday eve- ning at Perry Park Baptist Church with the Rev. Hilding Bihl THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1959 PRE ae EE RN: apes ¥ FF Re Mrs. J. A. Ferguson of W ichita, Kan., announces the engagement of her daughter Juanita to Robert E. Leonie B. Adams Says: More Poetry, but Readership Lagging NEW YORK (UPI) — Leonie B. Adams, America’s “poet laureate” for lifetiine to make the lot of the poet an. easier one,” said Miss Adams, who is nearing 60. “The many awards and * a major talent at the age of 19, is ex- cited about the forthcoming republi- cation of her volume of selected sad a i RE RCE, LEMME IE TN ici , , said today that more try is — * * * : pe ora aie ever satire tia iin fellowships established by various poems in an inexpensive, paperback Flanders. Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Zegelien United States but a smaller propor- foundations are tremendously helpful edition. . son of of Frembes street are the bride's tion of the reading public is poetry in getting one’s work published and in “Poetry in paperbacks is catching 7 d J parents. Parents of the bridegroom ; providing financial security, and on and attracting thousands of read- © r. and Mrs, minded. “When you consider the wide popu- ' larity of poetry in the Victorian age and in the highly productive 1915- 25 period, you must admit that the Theodore R. Flanders of James K boulevard, ‘a ers,” she said. “Recordings of poetry readings are having increased sales, and there are a number of small maga- zines, some published by universities, that are printing good poetry and -en- equally important is the employment of poets. by universities and poetry - workshops all over the country.” * * * Miss Adams has been teaching are Mr. and Mrs. Eshu Tritch of ! Hudson, Ind. The bride’s gowa was floor length with white lace over white satin with train. She wore RS finge arried resent era is predominantly one of ” raduate o white meine wee red roses novels and non-fiction,” said Miss poetry since 1930. She presently in- i eet heal . Fentval f and white streamers. Adams. “But several thousand seri- 8tructs three cour ses at Columbia She does not think the beatniks » oe University and will teach at the Uni- _—will produce anything new in poetry Michigan oug poets are at work in our country, and I see hopeful signs that poetry is coming into its own again.” RECEIVED AWARD . Miss Adams received the coveted Ruth Zegelien was her sister’s only attendant. Her floor length gown was of royal blue taffeta and she carried white carnations with yellow roses and streamers. * * * David E. Large of Hudson, Ind., was best man. Ushers were Lee Zegelien, brother of the bride, and Robert Léckamire, also of Hud- son. Mrs. Zegelien wore a blue crepe dress with a e of white carnations and yellow because they .are “technically uni- ventive and abjectly romantic.” But she does look forward to the de- velopment of something “quite differ- ent” in poetry as a result of the space Academy of American Poets. $5,000 poet, but it is good for us if we are age and the changes it will make in Fellowship Award for distinguished not drawn too fully into the academic the life of man. . poetic achievement” earlier this life,” she said. “I am glad when I can - a * * month, based on her three slender withdraw to my mountaintop home in Poets always have been credited | volumes of lyric poetry. The award the New Milford, Conn, and my award with prophetic vision because they nearest thing to an American money is going to give meafreesum- Dave had to come to terms With every Laureateship, has previously been crisis of human experience and looked | | University and Delta Sigma Phi fraternity versity of Washington next year. She has taught poets who in turn have taught poets who are now emerging as leading young writers. “Teaching is exhausting for the ORE A SEER t McLE AN IU AMTA I, ————— ee ——_ Some Members to Attend County Party City GOP Women Meet MRS. RICHARD TRITCH 4 ae mer ther olish some of m held by Edgar Lee Masters, E. E. Cum- new es ser y in the inner recesses of their beings roses. . N t R d . mings, Padraic Colum, Robert Frost, for knowledge of what is to come’ | Mrs. Tritch wore grey with O ude ' William Carlos Williams, and Robin- RECOGNIZED EARLY she. said. “This has resulted in new Mrs. Daniel T. Murphy Jr. | Mrs. Charles Crawford, Mrs. white accessories and a corsage son Jeffers. _ Miss Adams, who like the late Edna _— poetic imagery and language in the © | and Mrs. =~ McNeese gave diet te a ae | a carnations and pink to | eave “Many things have occurred in my _—St. Vincent Millay was recognized as past and I am sure it will again.” aver tea ite — ra P Ae had C i page ok Following a reception at the : ee tts tte wee ate sauce oe . publican Women’s Club met | cussion on the Michigan tax church, the couple left for a short Gi rl Alone SERRE Sea SE MLC ae SEE SPE. DOGS SOT Nis OL ts BE SEAR PAR RB MTR Ri REIT CE SEA RK ost itedee % ; Monday evening at Adah Shel- problem. 7 trip. They will make their home Cn E = ly Library. 4s thar t Pay ices Bouquin hese in Hudson, Ind. By EMIL 2T- rve ner . It was announced that trans- rs. ey were we ‘Ae Mrs ia i have ne SY | Chevalier portation will be arranged for té membership. iia members attending the Dec. 14 .k® *& just returned home from a | Names Ten Oakland County Republican Tea chairman was Mrs. Wil- week's vacation in Florida. I ea O uSe x e ves. Club's Christmas party and liam Kreklow with Mrs. Maude went with a girl friend of | Top Women gift exchange at the home of Place, Mrs. Maude Ashwin mine and we shared a room | | Mrs. Harry Henderson of West and im — ag an hi a ; : LYW ( —) “iC 13 Mile road. sisting. rs. Ne r togzther. While we were there, By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN = ae Pee ener eer eon a rea seraya cca Transportation committee is poured. I met a very nice young man o> i is ¢ i ink that tho was staying at the same It is a human trait to think ie ae it cannot happen to us! Others may ] Hollywood's publicity gimmick | Pes of selecting the 19 most beau- | Pay r .> otel. He -invited me to go i ; ; hot to dinner with him one j|break a leg or become a victim of} | tiful girls or the 10 most any- ‘It’s Natural evening. I accepted and when one of the chronic diseases or have; | - ins. , 7 : . : ; art : << io Sir'| i “N that I'm 71," says the I told my girl friend about it, {8 heart attack—but not us! No Sir! i . ow my a ys | ‘B dl f J “M B she was very peeved and said I have written before about the : — = it is safe for me | un c O OY ay ring that I was very rude to go off {madness of superlative health.) [-%s ° wr cm about by vente. : and leave her alone. . |Those who are blessed with an| -) fo Oe | p | Bl “I was very much hurt by overabundance of vitality may be} | — we period. — ostnata UeS =) her attitude and thought her |in greater danger than those who! | boat Age fae phat de must care for and hoard a smaller Rida ae bow 10 ee * Doctors agree that every , tension most mothers of first pe y rig n acce store of energy. : po ee = . : babies experience, according this invitation and just because . world as picked by Maurice | young mother is subject to | fe pe * * * Y | to a study made by a diaper service industry which in- cluded the emotional and psy- chological factors: connected with motherhood. BE PREPARED - postnatal blues. Back from the hospital, the props of security” and service taken out from under her, she’s scared and bewildered. She's on her own, with a tender young life in her ##)} Mrs.‘ Eleanor Roosevelt . She has added more great- ness to the Roosevelt name. “2. Queen-Elizabeth ... a lovely and gracious queen. “9 3.. Marlene Dietrich... . we went away together was no reason why I had to spend all of my time with her. I would very much appreciate your opinion on this matter as it has caused a rift in our friend- It is a great temptation for the one who is never ill or tired to abuse himself. Actually many of| those who have lived happily into late years were physical weaklings at middle age. They HAD to take! } § 2 ah # oe : ship.” } . ay ee SEs whale ta hak The very essence of glamor keeping. Here are hints supplied by cae of themsejves. % ot 3 ee ie ‘4. Grace Kelly _ . . one of imag ite a “bundle of joy,” | the counselors: Know what | Answer: If you gave your | BEST INSURANCE = Pow, , wiih 2 gh $e ihe i the world’s most. beautiful but it’s more responsibility you're facing with the arrival ~ friend sufficient notice so that Perhaps having some handicap, | igg “3 A Ee ns yar women. than shes’ ever had. And the of your first baby. You can’t she could plan for her dinner |, physical ailment or weakness} | ts + SO PEO. Te “9. Mrs. Nikita Khrushchev | - work has piled «up while she prepare for all emergencies, without you, you were certain- ee Cee ee ee eee ae coe | lis the best insurance one could = jhave for a long, ue life. Such) If you would like'to have Jasephine Lowman’s |folks know what they must do in) shore routine of exercise planned especially for jorder to survive and therefore fol-| low the routMhe outlined for them.| women, send a stamped. self-addresséd envelope with but you can eliminate a great deal of worry over trifles. Attending pre-natal classes. is one of the best ways of con- quering your worries. . for her touching gentility was in the hospital. How ‘s and comportment during -her | shes going to face what lies recent visit to America, . ahead—her reguwar housework x *x* * * and the baby's care—and still “6. Brigitte Bardot . . cope? Will she size up to her 4y not rude in accepting the young man’s invitation. “Dear Mrs. Post: \When our club néws ‘ts written up for the .-an et y A champagne brocade dinner dress from the Suzy Perette fall and winter 1959 collection,. this frock is softly belted with a self-tie atop a gathered Skirt. A basque neckline, deep U back and short sleeves make the bodice an eye-catcher. paper, a friend insists that the name of a married woman musician on the program should be given as Mrs. John Doe. I think the musician's professional name should be used (Mary Doe or Mary Grant Doe or even Mary Grant) because her public doesn't connect her married name with the musician. I claim she is Mrs. John Doe Our health is more important to us than we ever know until we lose it. Haven't you often had the experience of recovering from a virus or bug of some sort and thinking, ‘‘I had forgot- ten how wonderful it is to Teel welt!” Health adds an extra bo-. nus to life and is se well worth working for. When you are in fine fettle move- your request for leaflet No. 19. Address Josephine Lowman, in care 6f thts newspaper. Man: Understands: Women All Right! authentic Parisian beauty. “7. Madame Yvonne de Gaulle... her steadying in- fluence in assisting a great man attain his goal. “8. Aviatrix Jacqueline Au- riol . . . for proving women can be just as, brave as men. “9 Marian Anderson . , . hu- mility and nobility. “10. Joan Crawford... all the qualities’ of a great artist | new job? ~*~ * & This is the question that lies at the root of the nervous . If no such classes are avail- able in your community, your lf you have a friend or relative, who has recently successfully managed an infant, she will be a good source of help in day-to-day problems. - Don’t at first try to learn everything about child care and rearing. Take a phase at ment is a pleasure, hectic situa-| tions seem humorous and we are} too busy living to fret over’ non- . RUTH MILLETT essentials. We are too waarieasdl *‘Why do women go to such great | a time. Find out what you have to know to keep your baby healthy and ted. Then tackle each new a~l socially and Mary Doe profes- sionally. Will you please settle this controversy?” ‘and person.’! ‘Ashes Can Fool Use a low heat setting when ironing synthetics to prevent shin- ing or fusing of fibers. , never would have jemailoced. it at the original price, se why does Answer: You are quite |in interests, work and people, to pains NOT to say what “they | she think she’s saving money by Aft ment as it arises. i i : bu ? ; er-party clean-up should MEET f LUNCH right, her professional name, |b ae or oe, fee asks a man wha reads ying it at half price? uo tactuee Wie’ Gan’ ace ree aa or not her social one, is correct [Ce CAE, “She is also very proud of ‘sav-| unless you can dump their Don’t wear youreal out with in this inst. L RIKER FOUNTAIN oo ee Sealtest Ice Cream Popular Prices The search for or the care of health usually involves seemingly! “My wife, for instance, almost ing me money by buying an in- d ti h ttine | PCVer BUYS anything. She always expensive dress and then buying mundane routings such as getting! comes home all excited over hav-'expensive hat, shoes and: bag to enough sound sleep, relaxation, | ; fine nutrition, regular exercise and| ins eS aa [make = a contents directly into an in- cinerator, or covered metal pail out. of doors, Otherwise, let trays stand on sink until unnecessary chores. Make a list of the mists. Then & list of the chores in order of their - importance. Take advantage of “Dear Mrs... Post: Will you please tell me the correct way to sign Christmas cards when Riker Building Lobby ig intaini 7 , |hat or just the right lamp for the| Women certaifly can misuse that} «Morning. The cigarette you _ all the labor-saving services SS ota parent tudes. When phe it ie rerolary living room. What does she -nean| word, ‘save.’ ” THINK ‘is out is the one that at your disposal, such as pre- these-can-make life glow for-you.;5!¢-FOUND them — when she i a a starts the fire. pared baby foods and coe . | walked. into a store and charged them to me? “My wife will work for weeks planning and preparing for a party that is to be her all-out social ef- fort for the next six months and service. * * ’ Learn to budget * * * If you would like to have my short routine of exércise planned especially for women, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. For all your fretting it sounds to me as if you understand “‘woman talk’’ only too well. ’ Answer: You could sign it from, ‘‘The John Smiths — all Five” or from ‘‘The Smiths — John, Mary, Johnfy, Marie and Tim.” There is no rule * | Christmas ~ | SOCK PACK The Knitting Needle Young fashions do not belong on middle-aged women. Button caps, ae ie flats, layers of petticoats, iddy handbags with poodle trim) More than half the population oftall belong'to the youngsters. You'll about anything as informal as h t - 452 W. Huron ‘FE _5-1330 car 4 , 19 to Josephine Lowman in care of|t0 which she'll inVite anywhere i . =: SE in Wil ifind per attractive fashions de- should take and allow sufficient — this. newspaper. from fifty to one hundred persons. Signed just for you, __. ’ time for it, so that you don’t Pe Sipe ceria Tomorrow: “Even Many Beau-| «pat ae get that harassed feeling that a time is running out. Fit your work and leisure schedule into the baby’s. Plan the necessary jobs like cooking, cleaning. laundering; while dated is nap- ping. s ties Don't Have Nice Neck.” when she is inviting them that " _— —— : . — s this is going to be fest anasind ec Saint hae c Have You Tried This? Ke She says, quote, We are having a . . Honey in Cookies Keeps | Play Bridge Six tables were in play when few friends in, anquote. = s ;Pontjac Bonneville Duplicate| “Another thing my wife is al- | ¢ Whe NAP OFTEN i ke : : Bs » Bridge Club met Saturday evening} ways telling me is that she. got Th M - d F h GUre Plenty of rest is essential not 4 _,at Hotel Waldron. something for ‘practically nothing’. el Y ) O | st an r es : | only to your well-being, ‘but to s / Winners were Mrs. Ernest Guy| When I finally pin her down, ‘prac- ,| Pamper your toes with .cozy,) the baby. When you are tired Ms Today S Story jjand Mrs. Mary Steele, Mr. and| tically nothing’ can mean anything By JANET ODELL ty. cup honey. 2 flexible TV slippers: Make em cf] ang irritable, baby will be Fs Mrs. as Jarno, Mr. and Mrs./ from $2.98 to $200.98. Pontiac Press Home Editor Ieee, well beaten COnnerny, age, Mey erets | fretful. Remember, baby re- : James Sweeney, Mr. and Mrs. E.| “That. ph 4 , 3 “cu nut butter »| See diagram—2 pieces plus sole) , ; ut ul a phrase, ‘in a minute, There A DP pea ; | acts to your moods. Naps : EVERYBODY SMILE J. Formhal, and John Kraus and| wheh used by a woman is very Real ae east” helen" eet fue eerie ad * for boot or ballet style! Pattern while baby is sleeping, even FI . ' Ernest Guy. -| deceptive, too. If I come home pai wala | Thi My teaspoon soda , 885: cross-stitch transfer; pattern) ji¢ of short duration, are te- 4 Thanksgiving ranks on our list as one of the top “family-get- = starved and ask when dinner will gro x es ~~ Cream shortening, honey + Pieces, small, medium, large, extra vitalizing. You'll do your work © together’ days of the year. Eve ‘s under one roof with noth- ; one from Mrs. Dan Akers large included 5 we " _— CS st f . J |be ready I am always told it will! uses honey and brown sugar Md sugar until light and | /@7Be included. .__| So much more efficiently for = ing on the, agende but a hearty meal. Oo oO Loving! be ready ‘i imate.’ which +| Send 35 cents (coins) for this} having had the And don’t 3 : eady ‘in a mimute,’ whi for sweetening. fluffy. Add well-beaten egg. tt 4d 5 cents for Sach. bat: aan =m. All of which leads ‘us to suggest: Wouldn't Thanskgiving be sometimes means fifteen minutes, * * *t * gipattern—eed 5 Cems for G8cn PE) fed guilty when you steal Add peanut butter and salt. Stir in flour and soda sifted © together and mix well. NEW YORK (#—The cost of a marriage license here will go up from $2 to $3 if City Clerk Her- man Katz has his way. He in- cluded the suggestion in a report - tern for 1st-class mailing. Send to The Pontiac Press, 124 Needle- craft Dept., P. O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station. New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly pattern num- a great day to take those pictures your whole family will treasure in later yeats? If you don’t have a camera able to handle the job, put us on your shopping list. We'll be glad to show you the new Brownie twenty winks—they’re an ab- solute must. * * * * Also, a good time to get a ERR: sometimes means a solid hour. “And the way my wife ‘saves’ my money always costs me a pretty penny. She ‘saves’ by buy- Mrs. Akers is secretary of the J. C. Auxiliary of Water- ford. She has two daughters for whom she likes to knit ret Form small balls and place sed c : rest is while baby is feeding. nasi — that’ deat for snapehooting on. Thankspiving-—or RS on how to streamline the mar- | ing a §150 dress marked down and wi: ; . ee co cage — ber, name, address and zone. Choose a ptr Re hele =| riage licénse bureau. to $75. But the catch is that she MONEY PEANUT BUITFR os bake in 350-decree Oven New! New! New! Our 1960 Laura} and hold baby in your arms The Brownie. Flash 20 has a built-in flashholder:that makes fee a, rrr ST TOE COOKIES ; Makes | Wheeler Needlecraft Book is ready; while you feed him — this from 8-10 minutes. By Mrs. Dan Akers about 4 dozen yummy cookies. “ pictures every bit as simple as sunny-day shots. tt also has % cup shortening ‘zone focusing’’ systern that makes all kinds of pictures ‘extra & | : pny Just turn 2 dial, and you can take big close-ups of the small © fry. Dial again, and you can take a big family group. (For outdoor pictures, there’s another setting for taking sharp scenic views.) Best of alt, this camera lets you concentrate on your snap- shooting. Once you take your first picture .the film automatically locks into position for the next shot. No little-ted-window to watch. Arid no chance for annoying. double exposurés either: Sound good? So will the price! SS now! Crammed with exciting, un-| ~ usual, popular designs to crochet, | Sas a Tt x knit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave} al -|~ fashions, home furnishings, toys,| it gives you the rest and emo- (Seeressessserersen Ce a cau Ba i eee N EYE GLASSES CONTACT LENSES : serves..a double purpose: it gives baby the attention and sense of Security he needs and Ce | Going Away For The Holidays? CHECK YOUR INSURANCE! A ty Se — me ‘send 25 cents for your copy. to baby. DR. CLARENCE I. PHILLIPS Optometrist Bk Fee Ma 5a ee % Remember.....Wednesday is DOUBLE STAMP Drug Stores | 25 Capitol Savings and \ PHONE FE 4-3241 Lean Bldg. N 75 West Huron Street | PONTIAC, MICHIGAN | % Haye a holiday vacation ond be fully covered with the Proper Insurance before you go. H.R. NICHOLIE INS. AGENCY FE 5-1201 | 49 Mt. Clemens St. | at Hagy For Holden Red Stamps | a a PARK A J OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 ING AT REAR OR BUILDING LO Re ere Ct ee a a ae TO eee eS a NIA SIXTEEN __ Now ht Dramatic Roles Judy Bemoans Decline of By JOE FINNIGAN” ances, Judy says it would be tough HOLLYWOOD ‘(UPI)—Judy Ca-|for a young hillbilly act to be suc- nova, who paflayed pigtails, over-|cessful today. , sized shoes and a hicktown phil-| “It's hard trying to get some- osophy into a multi-million dollar|thing like a country act started fortune, bemoans: the decline of these days over the objections of folk humor. ithe Madison Avenue boys,’’ she “Some pedple in show business) said. too put too many curfews on humor |corny. these days,”’ says Judy, a movie}, and nightclub fixture for years with her yodeling voice. DIAMONDS & MINKS Dressed like a rich city slicker,!she claimed. “After I got started sporting a 10-carat diamond ring'doing country stuff with my broth-| and a mink stole that almostjer and sister, I couldn't get out of touched her toes, Judy mentioned jt taboos against references to cer| “‘A lot of my act was tongue tain racial groups in song or skit-\in cheek. But, I guess I did it so “For instance, [ had-an arrange-|well that people took me se ment of ‘Shortnin’ bread’ that I riously.”’ used to do,"’ she said. ‘But, net. | work officials wouldn't let me sing resembles a countryfied Dinah the line ‘Mammy’s Little Baby’. Shore, is making her first picture 1 had to change it trom {iP “NO Yeu entures. of Huckle ‘Mammy’ to ‘Mommy’. That bes Flies.” srt of thing rules out all the[ gy Stephen Foster tunes,” she com- plained. “They'd say it was my stuff was corny in the be-) . “I've only done one other straight dramatic role and 1 want The prosperous owner of val-'to do more,” she said. ‘‘It’s the uable California and Florida reai|same old story, every comedienne estate which give her a chance|wapts to become a tragedian and STUFF WAS CORNY’ “Some folks may have thought), i ginning, but the public bought i” [f] Miss Canova, a blonde now who, Folk Humor | “People told me my first dra- imatic part came off pretty good,” |she said, “It made my lawycr cry. | “And, that’s pretty hard to do!”’ | Set New Jury Lynch Case District Judge Against Recalling Panel From First Parker Probe JACKSON, Miss, (AP) — USS. Dist Judge’ Sidney Mize will em- | pane] a grand jury Jan. 4 at Biloxi to hear the Mack Charles Parker lynch case. Mize said Monday the case would get priority over routine matters. * * * He said he advised U.S. Atty: Robert Hauberg of his decision to empanel a new grand jury at Biloxi rather than recal) the exist- to pick and choose her appear-|vice versa. YOU CAN ing grand jury in Jackson. The Justice Department re-en- | tered the case after the Pearl River County grand jury declined last month to act. * * * | Parker, 23, a Negro truck driver, was dragged from _ jail! April 25 at. Poplarville two days| before he was slated to go on trial on a charge of raping a white mother in the presence of her 5- year-old daughter. His body was found several days'| DIVORCED — Actress- COMEDIAN'S SON model Susan Magness, left, holds her six-month- old daughter, Susan “Maree, outside. Superior Court in Logs Angeles Monday after she and Charles Chaplin Jr., right, were divorced. She testified that Chaplin, son of the movie comedian, drove her frantic by staying out all hours. Chap- lin, 34, and Mi a half interest a ME ee ew ee eh, a OE,” AP Wirephote, ss Magness, 23, were married in August of 1958. They separated in October of the same year. Chaplin agreed to pay $150 a month for support of the daughter, and to be- ueath her half of his estate. Miss Magness got in his book about his father, “I Remember, I Remember.” \Little Cutie Is Big Boxoffice Eleanor Powell, 47, Debbie Rockets to Top Divorces Glenn Ford “Next year I'll only -de twe By VERNON SCOTT | movies,” she added. “But. I'll HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — It’s been} a year since the Debbie Reynolds-} #!se star in my own hour-long mer dancing star Eleanor Powell Monday divorced Glenn Ford, 43, the movies box office king, on SANTA MONICA, Calif. —For-|cive him a report were two aides ke’ Clearing | Decks for Tour Much Work Remains on Such Things as the’ Budget and Address By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-| dent Eisenhower is back in the} White House today for 10 days) of deck clearing in preparation for his 20,000-mile good will male sion abroad. - MICHIGAN'S OWN PICTURE! EER EE: Eisenhower, smiling and _ look-) JAMES STEWART ing fit, flew back to the capital |] LEE REMICK late Monday from Augusta, Ga.,| BEN GAZZARA where he had spent a dozen days | ARTHUR O'CONNELL jmixing work and golf. | EVE ARDEN fede | KATHRYN GRANT About midnight Dec. 3 Eisen-; hower will be off again—on a fly- ing tour to 11 countries in Europe, | Asia and Africa. That trip will’ take 19 days, with a return to) Washington scheduled Dec. 22. Between now and departure the President faces a busy schedule. | om ‘On his agenda are more confer- 3 ences on the budget, drafting of ce the administration’s 1960 legisla-| tive program, preliminary work |\ / on the Jnauary State of the Union| message, and sessions déaling) with current domestic and inter-|| “BIG CIRCUS” national problems. “WATUSI” AT 8:50 ~*~ * * Eisenhower's forthcoming three-| cortinent tour got his attention} | N N oceans ae HURON Bt t on his return m Augusta | shortly before the dinner hour. | W THEATER W Waiting at the White House to) — 9 STARS! 1001 THRILLS! THE BIG 7:00 & 10:15 |who . completed .Sunday a_ flying advance tour to each of the na- tions the President will visit next T rn These prog a phere River, He had been | Eddie Fisher marriage rome television show — the first one |testimony that: . month. “~~ * | ot to dea y : u . over the Elizabeth Taylor affair,| I've ever done without Eddie. Ps — : : CIRCUS and in reviewing the past 12) The other times I've been on ap gee sec fy and antl He was briefed by James c.| social . . he made me very /Hagerty, press secretary, and| nervous and embarrass¢d me |thomas E. Stephens, appointment | considerably. I had to be undef-|.ocretary. a doctor’s care for nervousness, | Jt was announced just before the He just doesn’t care for people. (President left Augusta that he and He’s anti . social, I suppose. |Mrs. Eisenhower, who was with| Sometimes he would just get up [him in: Georgia, plan to spend | CINEMASCOPE jmonths Debbie finds her career) TV was for three of his shows.” TECHNICOLOR has rocketed to the top. Debbie talks about Eddie freely | She has starred in five movies,'and fondly. She appears to bear ce ‘ |waxed a record album, appeared ; : , .| in some 2 ot dhete and — ill feeling toward her former Distance Mark |preparing her first TV spectacular. Debbie Scinted wok tere ew i | CASABLANCA, Morocco (AP)| Before the scandal broke the | significance to her latest record,| ®@4 walk out at social affairs.” |Thanksgiving Day. at the White) '— Max Conrad took off for Miami} pixie-faced cutie was just another |‘Am I That Easy to Forget?” Miss Powell 47. was relaxed, House. \ today in an attempt to set another; little actress, not much in de- | “I just happen to like the song,” tand joked_apd chatted with news| 1. ) lrecord for Class 3 light planes —|She’ bi bo {fic dances and a few laughs.”’ : s . y FEATURE 1:14 |2,204 to 3,858 pounds gross weight se pone. [roe ae N : 2 5 : : Public sympathy for Debbie is When Debbie completes her | She said at that time: ‘My OPEN 12:45 ee Ee — set by the late Capt. William| ian in 1949. * * * is | Odom's distance was 4,957 miles |'* ware of it. . fronr Honolulu, to Teterboro, N.J.|TALKS ABOUT EDDIE “It’s silly for me to be so busy,"", ™4!T!age together. | \Conrad planned to fly via Trini-| “Five pictures in one year are She said. “It doesn’t give me time; Miss Powell retired as a top idad for a distance of 5,310 miles./t99 many,” she said during a re-|to enjoy being young. Once youth| screen dancer after the mar- \He expected to reach Miami|hearsal break at Paramount Stu-|is gone you can't get it back. | riage. Her chief activity since | Thursday morning. |dios where she is starring with | “I work for my living, but not! has’ been as Sunday en =| —_—— EE responsible for her tremendous| current picture she plans to re- (Marriage wouldn't have lasted this, - — : surge to super-stardom, and she decorate her home and spend |long except for my religion and/| THE WARM-HEARTED STORY OF A TEEN-ACER AND HER some time with her children. a in The Pontiac: Press GONE MULE PERKS THE DIARY OF | ANNE FRANK : CINEemascoPEe ADDED! Movietone News Events - |my feeling that I should keep | WORLD FAMOUS DIARY! Monumental in Its Impact & Suspense! 20. Bontery Foe Tony Curtis in “The Rat Race.” for my life. In another five years| teacher. The University of New Bruns-|Her other pictures were ‘‘The|I may not be working at all. Sooner The two. greed $350 wick in Fredericton, founded in| Mating Game,”’ “It Started With or later the pendylum swings in have perdi ‘| : , ed ae ” a z : : 000 property settlement that pays 1785, is the oldest university in/a Kiss," ‘‘The Gazebo’’ and ‘‘Say the opposite direction, And I want Canada One for Me.” It tt : fully.” |her $40,000 a yeaffor six years and \ : a o meet that occasion gracefully. $30,000 a year after that for life. ‘ She receives half of the commu-| nity property and support for their Trade Publication Wrathful 14-year-old son, Peter. Ask Probe of Free Discs wiser rescvier | } | | | ; | ADELAIDE, Australia — Brit-) CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI)—The | ‘‘freebies’’ in disc jockey parlance. | “Lest you overlook how this can/ish film actress Deborah Kerr said | Billboard, a leading publication in Billboard said freebies have |Corrupt the public,” it said, ‘‘bear Monday she plans to marry Ameri-| the record music industry, Monday| become ‘‘a cancer on the record |in mind that boxes of free records |°®" film writer Peter Viertel in ‘called for a Congressional inves-| business’ corpus, having grown | influence the re ports of many deal-|>Witzerland in July. Miss Kerr di- |tigation of the practice of giving| '® ® monster of such propor: |... 1, their local radio stati jvorced British television producer} away records. | tions that the costs have become | 4. su = ag ae Barlety last July after 14) | The publication said in an edi-) Completely uneconomic in terms | 2 ie eas This, in turn, influences air play. of marriage. They have two) ‘torial, “Memo to the Probers,””| % aay possible results achieved. land “— ily, record ‘ealen:” |daughters, 2 and 7, who live. in that the practice ‘“‘has fostered) ‘Yet those involved admittedly | } Billboard said ‘‘a considerable | -"8!2n4- t KILN ~ KEGS KITES ~ KNIVES KODAKS KNITTING MACHINE KNICK-KNACKS KITCHEN UTENSILS iH KEEGO | The free records are known as said. taxes. : | prepared. The charts are sent out| NEW YORK # — The “‘Golden'able. I advise caution in the stock | “We have nothing but contempt ‘the opportunities for profit that 50 bad as they seem in advance. * * * The editorial said another evil 6 ld S | | ) ) ( by some radio stations and trade! | Papers. | ans e q S Nd S Billboard said positions on the | y charts “are bought by recording Sixties” axe tek beoual Ga ae for those who prostitute their| b4 iner — but Wall Street's attitude to market — keep your funds no tmore/charts for this dirty money,” the] lay in the 60s. They based it| Everything isn't all black and all igreatly on the fact that the rash|White, or all bull as against all 'crookedness on a grand scale, far|don’t know how to get out of it, | body of opinion” holds that some| beyong payofis toa few isolated feeling impelled by competitors’ | methods of dispensing free records | is correptton of programming and disc jockeys by record charts | companies in return for cash or ives ik teed with Calli, - than 65 per cent invested. Save 35) editorial commented. | Time was when stock market Per cent for a reserve. TC es ‘of wartime marriages in 1941-’45|bear. Nevertheless, the prudent | produced ‘a bumper crop of babies investor faces many uncertainties. | jockeys.” actions to continue,” the paper/violate copyright laws and excise | which are dishonestly or poorly : advertising. By ED MORSE looks overdevioped and vulner-| a ‘analysts spoke in glowing terms of} ‘Things seldom turn out quite — and these ‘babies’ would start|! suggest he watch his step.” — With Our — IN-CAR HEATERS It's Always Comfy At No Extra Charge PONTIAC: DRIvEaN: VEE rere, Dixte gery (U819) + 1 Bleck No of Telegraph Rd. oo | | | | | KELVIN ATOR re joss betoning in te. " OPEN 6:30 P.M.—SHOW STARTS 7:00 P.M. | NOW! “UNTAMED” and FLAME" | They'd want new houses,-new jcars, new refrigerators, new tele- |vision sets — everything a young family wants — and the companies ithat make these things would en- |joy a booming business. Their} istocks, too, would soar on the na- jtion’s exchanges, it was said. | ‘As the ‘60s approach however, ithey are beclouded by — i An unresolved steel strike. | A possible railroad strike, | LAST TIMES TONIGHT — 2 FIRST RUN] Thurs. at 10:00 A. M. Starts WED. ~—DOORS OPEN 9:45 A.M.— KNOTTY PINE KITCHEN SINK Get the kids out of the house while you prepare Thanksgivin ner ae them to our BIO — @ @ @ TOMORROW @ @ @ EXCLUSIVE — FIRST SHOWING Strikes in other metalworking industries. Sell Them With PONTIAC PRESS “Want Ads FE 2-8181 foreign competi- tion r A drain of gold trom the’ coun THE BEAT GENERATION’ try. Apparent Soviet superiority in PRESENTED BY M-G-M-IN CINEMASCOPE en ce Veteran stock market analyst | Edson Gould of Arthur Wiesenber- iger & Co., ‘a distinetly upper- | bracket investment house, en these elements and said: ‘‘As I | uw Ad a 4 { a8 WN Y AN ALBC Uo y ‘ STEVE COCHRAN: MAMIE VAN ay =tleute)-) a -);-eeel- a BIG OPERATOR CINEMASCOPE MICKEY ROONE a ee “PTRae see it, the outlookis not good. For the immediate future, the economy) a a | 7 ee ee eS Se eee ee NOVEMBER 24, 1959 NETEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. Look Shaky AFL Draft Pick by Denver * x * * to Cage Game's Hall of Fame LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ten former players and three coaches were named today to the Helms Hall ..college basketball hall of x kt kk a pe Seems Headed for Baseball Tigers and White Sox, Interested; Ten Other Area Boys Chosen MINNEAPOLIS —Dean Look, Michigan State's All-Big Ten quar- terback,-was gobbled up quickly by Denver in yesterday's Ameri- can Football League draft. But it’s a sure bet Look isn’t interested in pro football. Leok, who has turned down $50,000 bonus offers from -major league baseball to finish his om lege grid career, was for‘a diamond job while the APL - AP Wirepheio PICKED — Roger Leclerc, Trinity College center,_.was a ist-draft choice in the new American Football League's Ist draft. Leclerc. was drafted by Denver. ‘M’ Varsity Trims Frosh ANN ARBOR ® — Michigan's, varsity basketball team, led by, adadinn te acct, John Tidwell’s 26 points, rolled tof “** conducting re 81-70 victory over the freshman} The Lansing star went to Chi- an , oa re ‘cago to talk baseball terms with team last nig the American League champion The varsity jumped off to a 12-0!white Sox. lead before the freshmen finally countered, then built up a 43-23) It was reported in Detroit Look lead at halftime. |wouldn’t sign a baseball contract Tom Eveland of Livonia led the|yntil he talked with the Tigers. freshmen with 14 points. General manager Rick Ferrell said |the Detroit club was ready to make HOCKEY AT A GLANCE Look a substantial offer. * * * WE AY HEDULE NATIO ALL UE Look has played both outfield Reston, of Ree ann LEAGUE and infield with the baseball Spar- Cleveland at Buffalo jtans. He hit .412 and .298 in his Hershey 7 Springfield ASTERN LEAGUE Charlotte by Clinton Washington at Johnstown IN pi ag erg LEAGUE Omaha Indianapolis two Big Ten seasons. Look has one more season of baseball eligibility at Michigan State. But he’s ex- pected to sign a major league contract shortly. The Denver football club ap parently knew its chances of signing Look are slender. Den- ver made an optional choice of quarterback Jim Monree, of Ar- kansas, Others with Michigan affiliations |selected by, the AFL were: | Denver: ‘Tackle John Dingens of | Detroit and.center Larry Cundiff! of Michigan State. New York: Guard George Genyk | Martin of Michigan State. -Minneapolis-St. Paul: Tackles |Bill ‘Boykin of Michigan State and {Don Deskins of Michigan, and} lguard Jim Chastain of Michigan | State. | Houston: Halfback Bruce Maher ,of Detroit (already drafted by the |Detroit Lions of the NFL). t WHITE SWAN Prue - oe cich of Michigan State and Iowa's pon Horn from Detroit. Join the parade of smart diners who eat here regularly. Expert ro Retepuaty” Se Front- Running moderate prices. Pi N y rma | ‘sions at DRIVE-IN | Western Leaders Play; Pontiac Cincinnati Tonight and Host Hawks Tomorrow M S59 (Ak€ ROAD one FEB OFAI sor CARRY OUT Professional WRESTLING PONTIAC NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY 57 WATER STREET WED., NOY. 25 | NEW YORK (UP 1)—The Detroit | Pistons put their newly acquired first place standing in the Western | Division of the National Basket- | ball Association on the line for the A first time tonight against the Cin- cinnati Royals at Madison Square Garden. The Pistons grabbed first place with a 115-104 win over the New - 8:30 P. M. |York Knickerbockers at Detroit teki “The Crusher" Cortes me ae ofa Fale Garse It they get by Cincinnati, the Time Limit) Pistons return home to face the images, Te Teg Team Ma St. Louis Hawks, previous divi- OT. Penske’ ‘and Fumy Cup sion leaders, in a ladies’ night and The Brews Fanher |! attraction at Olympia Stadium. “Dradtapie” Isha Gatey But Cincinnati comes first, and| the Royals are fresh from a 106-| GEN: ADM, 3.3565.060 « 3.30 7 100 upset of the Hawks that | RINGSIDE .....2.00 & 2.50 yo helped put Detroit on top. ADVANCE TICKET SALES: Griff’s Grill, 49 N. Saginaw | VFW Post Ne. 1370 FE 5-4201 398 S. Saginaw without the services of guard | Dick McGuire, out with Charley horses in both legs, and forward | Earl Lloyd who has a strained |knee ligament. _ Matchmaker — Bert Ruby One of AMERICA’S LARGEST BRAKE SPECIALISTS! BRAKES RELINED 4 , 1~HOUR SERVICE | A LABOR AND MATERIAL = a Pr INCL Wi Other U.S. cars $8.95 and $12.95 NONE WIGHER! NO CASH NEEDED! LOW BUDGET TERMS! . GOLD KZ CREST IN DAILY 8 A.M.. 7 Pm, oe oe BRAKE Bilis a cae LAKE RD. FE. 3-7936] ; nr rraph Rd i Aolahite Pvc twin. Cities Set for AFL ‘of Michigan and fullback Blanche | Los Angeles: Fullbacks Bob Ber-| 3oiten’ + The Pistons will probably play fame. x* * * The players are William Chand- ion, BO ler (Wisconsin, - 1916-18); George Williams (Missouri, 1919-21); ESTIMATE : : : 1922-24); MINNEAPOLIS (AP) —. Or-,planned to select at least 400 in the AFL next year despite re-;to steer a lot of talent their way. ae ie mmr egg sl FREE ganizers of the new American|more within a few weeks, and ports that a franchise in the Na- | The nation’s ranking stars were 7): . California. | NO OBLIGATION | is Cities |Plucked early. Houston ct fulk|2.): _ George Dixon California, Football League girded for a dol-ithen announced it is squaring|tional is open to the Twin Cities. back Bob White of Ohio State and 1925-26); Bart Carlton (Ada, = , _ ilar duel with the National League|away to go into operations in| “We will be playing football in halfback Dick Bass of College of 1923-3; Lee Guttero (Sout rm| pesong le —s jena Pars 1900. a ee the American League next year|Pacific after picking Louisiana pone ariaiey ors "Cree TRANSMISSION fer ri names of college the Mi polis St. Paul and we have no intention of go-|State’s All-American Billy Cannon Lo 5 i = (Kemeea 198052): or 964 plavers in Owen ee eS tnee|iNg into the National,” said H. P.|in the first. round. ues oe ee | REPAIR e chose 264 players in|ownership came a assurance | cogiund, part owner of the Twin ‘i. ‘Bobby Moer: On a day - long draft yesterday,!that it definitely will field a team Pitlen teearhiae. ea. waned taieck hex * * * | Left unsettled, however, was se-|Burton of Northwestern and cen- . Ne. iy gi (Niag-| EASY TERMS lection of the new league's com-|ter Max Fugler of LSU.. Buffalo} ‘"" EST Raat Recadie Shands | | missioner. The list was reduced|picked halfback Ray Jauch of basen sig ewe ry a) yesterday to two, unidentified can-|Jowa and end Jim Houston of|>e!ton (Sacramento State). Bring your transuitaston didates, one now in the college/Ohio State. Two of the South's , pene AN oper aig = pMINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The American die Meyer, West Texas Siais. Gene Miler, engl ~~ pther connected _ berg —— ae of/St. Louis Teams Take cal al oe ae oe | League announced Larry Texas; . a om oore ander- 4 4 @lagnese your cal 8 Taunton to the first ‘ple ot Gragueat East Kentucky State; uate League-founder Lamar Hunt of/bilt were drafted by Dallas, whose Top Places in National — | apiece : backs — Jim St. Clair, Barbara|/Dallas said the two under con-| first round selection was SMU’s ) : “ ” _ { ee woe erase eee etn fmt are’ mame" “sero Nrc Seren | MRNAS AP) — Oat ae oa ote os uct, Macks, Pag, Tex sae | Angle Ce, U8, Mas Mer. Ker land both, reportedly, are in-| Denver drew quartérback Dean|1"S,,NMEVCy Myfwn "6.508 pins | SUMS ETANSMISSION ex, SMU, and Irvin Nikolai, Stanford:|tice Gautt, Oklahoma, and Blanche Mar-|terested in the job. Wheh a news-|Look of Michigan State, New York iad ‘night for a fotal point count 49 N. Part FE 5-4987 a ‘eo x - — Pa > an iman suggested that Northwestern|took halfback Ed Kovac of Cin- { 30.098 to take the od at the Prestel, Idaho, and Al ran, Colo! pads — ag Baylor,|Athletic Director Stu Holcomb 'cinnati, and Los Angeles tabbed | iwa «mark of the rpund robin! pn James Goodyear, |C Pollard, Rice, Carmen, Cavelllihad been mentioned @s @ pos-/halfback Bob Jeter of Iowa, and) © y" oat match: bowl were Verge, James & Pena| Techine’ ““4yiiters “Serie” ‘Mikivea| sibility, Hunt agreed he was aj fullback Charley Flowers of Mis- oS kas Pos m Sials; Centers = “Jeuee’ Davis, Obie,|Siait, Jim O’Brien. Boston College “big name” but went no farther. | sissippi. ———a ae | | seks eee, eaecsennnrtN Rane Tusklegures =" Goes) While some AFL owners dis + + vee total” beed 2s one pointl BRAKES RELINED pment nacgge — g whe Ch ;| Mabe ake. lee Dumbroski, ae counted predictions of a full scale Minneapolis-St. Pau], after nam- _ eigen a Sa Ford-Chev. $9 rh ee ee ee eee Roland. Georgia; Centers — James|bidding war with the National, it| ing quarterback Dale Hackbart ot |for — gts hry orn Ply. . and Twrey Willemon, “SMU. Pulibacks —|Aismr ef Florids; Guartervacts = Beouy|seemed obvious that the en-|Wisconsin in Sunday night's open-|{F €Very 290 Pins Knocked’ down.| ee ee ee OS Pons, | tees Pran Curei, Miami/trenched NFL would not yield|ing round, added Iowa end Don ~~ * * 1 KUHN AUTO SERVICE BUFFALO a ad “Ponte coteen,| easily in competition for the top|Norton and halfback Aber| Falstaffs of St. Louis had the 149 W. HURON 8T. John Biack.” New. Mexican, Ron Miller,| wade, Smith. North in Georee| players it wants. Haynes of North Texas State, _/runnerup spot with 29.168 points) PE +1215 Tackion tent monde” Utah” state, Jos) le Pepperdine vera and Rey Bini, veLa.|. “I don’t think there is going to| In two cities, Los Angeles and|and 6,418 pins. | Acsatter, Tennecsee Gale Oliver, Texas Ends — John Lands, Montana. Gene} Pf fierce competitive bidding all|New York, the new league Will | poses Soe —— -- SS ee eee , Boston U, Robert Simms, Rut-/down the line,” said the nillion-|be in direct boxoffice competition State. pogan. Utah, and Charies| fers snd Wiltom PYoumane, Syracere|aire owner Bud Adams of Hou-|with the NFL. Gulia, ast Texas State, and Ken Kirt,| MSE Messner," Cincinnalt iiiam|ston, “but I know that I'm will-| Hunt has insisted the NFL has YOu CANT Mississippi: Quarterbacks — Ivan Tonete. Betecl!, Lovlaville, Gecree Hering, Nerix|img to spend some money to get/been holding out for enticement ee Texas State, Don MeNeese|the players I think Houston|of franchises to various AFL. Ray | Petersen, W rginis, | Charies| bon Bit, Le: Sees needs.” member cities in a campaign to ; AUTOMOBILE Texas, and Wayne : a armed 5 egg a aod Ba officials agreed that each| block formation of the new league. GUARD a Jun Comey, Use, ek WhM®! Pepperdine; Halfvacks — Gary O’steen,|Of the eight clubs could expect a) “As far as the Minneapolis-St. on DALLAS calleg ot| Crandall — nas a stiff argument from the National|Paul situation is concerned,”’ he AGAINST COVER AGE — e " * ry ry ’ Pacific. . : "|Coleman, (Olineis; Pullbacks — Deugiin the competition for at least|said, “‘the issue is closed. I don’t Kansas State. ‘a ‘inck Alchasea, ‘West Sees Welk nn WORRES Gee choice players. think the Twin Cities owners ever] EVERY RIGHT AWAY! a mg Young. Garp Foe ee LOS ANG It was clear they expected the|/had any serious intention of shift-/] RISK... George Boone, Kentucky, aid Earl Ray| Ends — Russ Sloan, Missouri, Ted/jure of wide-open job opportunities|ing to the National.”’ . No matter how careful Cline? Lewis, Gtishewsa, dene Hetesvery,|bema, and. Baraey Beriinger, Peas: * ke you are, something can poor ge eson, oT getag = f i agg Players picked in the 32 addi-| | See us today . ..] happen to your car that | Nelson, Wisconsin, and Glyn, Boston » and John Stolte. Kansas State;/ F]) j ° i SEER See ee tit Hal Bont 11a ae for at] | you cam be eure | wiley money. Yow eons: Spter. Rice, and Carroll|Andrew Styncbula. Penn State, and) gan FRANCISCO —Ray El- | that will be augmented by another ° service: surance! |Zaruba, Nebraska; ks — Jon| Wayne Stewart, Citadel; Centers — James f | pepsi. bcm soe Keotschy. and Comeren, East Texas Stale. end_Charjes acme pe renggan ag aie “sd to 55 players for each club in) . ey , Boyd. : Bobby Franklin, ersity of Hlinois, e ater sessions. FES Oa Secs et te Ee Baki Sa“ | Unnery at lanl, wit lone later wats |. OW. HUTTENLOGHER AGENCY | lara’ Sisies’ kemeea ‘Sonar eo Bereich, Michigan Biaie. and’ Pioyd Few ing as an assistant with the East '|within a couple of weeks to name! “All Types of Insurance and Bonds” and Ken Young, Valparaiso; | cette. libacks — Don| squad in the annual Shrine Bow! (its «commissioner and “complete f- 306 - 320 RIKER BLDG. : FE 4-1551 co Lae Se ee eS MOO) charity game Jen. 2. the draft. kins," ege of Pacific, and Bernard ~~ |Denpene, Doth Ren aawesee, fam dose _— | State, Bob er. Green and es: sn sitaaamiee 8 7 me sh ne ng |John Wiklener, + Cen’ — Larry ‘ H Cundiff, Michigan State. and Gary Huber. we ; |Miami (Ohio); Quarterbecks — Jim : s Walden, Wyoming, and Chariey Britt, - F é —_ Miami (Pia), Willie West ; Ray Norton, San and Peal ci is Ends — Lewis Akin, V Larry - ; ~~ | Grantham, Vis Ross, Leos 2 . be Angeles State, an@ Curt Mers. lowa; Rel i Tackles — Floyd TCU, Michael e axation ; Magac, gers _— w , SMU, ; ; and Chuck Tackle} =; $ — ag WO a - Michigan, Ea- | ; Ronger Recall Paille, [Demote Gump Worsley | | ; NEW YORK (—The New York Rangers Monday called up goalie Marcel Paille and demoted vet- [—— \eran Gump Worsley as part of a 4 | four- player swap with their Spring-| f° | field a in the American Hockey &- = ' * Leagu : with Paille, the Rangers recalled defenseman Jack Bownass. Wors- ley and défenseman Noel Price were sent down to the Indians. a ‘Mac’ Bowl to Orange NEW YORK (®—Syracuse Mon- day was. named the first winner of the Gen. Douglas MacArthur Bowl, presented by the National Football Foundation to its choice as the top college football team in the nation. As seen in Reader's Digest | se OOP ni { For your family room—a noise-absorbing | ceiling of | NU-WOOD° | Here's the beawriful way to | control noise in your family room! Nu-Wood Micro-Perf ceiling tile ends the noise nuis- 1 ance while it adds rich deco- ration. Patterned tile surface resembles luxurious marble... | tiny, almost invisible holes | a call, A din. Nu-Wood icro-Perf tile goes right over tia ceilings—or builds new ceilings quickly. Low cost, too. | DONALDSON | LUMBER 27 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2.8381 ‘ |: it’s a pastime, a mood, a wonderful drink! “It’s the hourwhen cares fade as swiftly as the light of day. It’s the time to savor with deep satisfaction the whiskey that suits this leisure mood as pleasantly as a favorite pastime. To millions of people across the nation, the hour of relaxation both —_ and brightens with Seagram’s 7 Crown, the most widely enjoyed whiskey in the world. SAY SEAGRAM’S AND BE SURE a . =—— Se aeee Ss ll NT eee TF ee eee See ee ee ee eee ee ee eee y “he * - ~ — il THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1959 , a Sek agape mer ite. ie Steels, Autos [MARKETS [Chrysler Shuts Nudge Mart Up |-reruc"sc*.e's8 es 3 More Plants iproduce brought to the Farmer Market by growers and sold by) FOR LEASE NEW MOBIL. . 1,000-1,112 Ibs. 27.00-27.15; good to low for a time was working short mother 33 years ago for marrying | Ines terminated on Movember 1st. 2960, NEW YORK uf — Steels anditbem in wholesale package lots.| Steel Pinch Forces) 2 OE Meee PRETO autos, improved a bit, nudging the Quotations are furnished by the] Move; 23.4 Are N . ten line nn stock market a bit higher in fairly| Detroit Bureau of Markets. as of eae 3, 30 e Now pave’ TER WE i Tie a SERVICE active early trading today. Monday. Laid Off by Firm | ; STATION Gains of pivotal issues were} ‘ . > . { apr _—_ A few went to} Detroit Produce DETROIT uw — Dwindling steet| Clintonville and Walton Rds. point i supplies have forced Chrysler ” Training Profit taking slashed some of ageiee, nie ee “oe oeeeee 33.15| COFP- to shut down three more Z at - the more widely-moving electron- |Appies. Greenings, bu. ... 236,auto plants today and tomorrow. | ompany’s Expense les which took losses of around [Apples Jonathon, bu. -..+.+.-+--- 30¢/ The shutdowns affect more than Fieeaciel Aséistesce 2 te 4 points. Some of the ethers (Apples. Northern Spy, bu. ....+4..-. 3.00; 10,000 workers, bringing Chrysler's Available in this group were steady to | ppbIet sider, Neel case ere 7) layoffs of hourly-rated workers to| For Info * apeliacalmeiincies cl er or Information ‘ With steél industry operations | Beets my eee cone s200| Chrysler said car production at| FE_5-9466 scheduled at 88.1 cent of ca- ee, actenmunnsnet oe 3-$0| its suburban Hamtramck plant | FE 2-3433 pacity, a big jump m a week abbare } ae saaeean peeeS: 3.99] would stop after today's operations, ' After 5 P. M. ago, there was some fundamental |Casliflower. doz. ys ease 275) idling 5,000, | ee Laas basis for progress despite the un- end ob - ; aa | Assembly plants at Los Ange- ‘ % : 2 ae settled labor situation, Leeks. dos. bens. - 1.73) les and Newark, Del., will close * * * Parser Thar’ oe. Cae : 138, down tomorrow, Chrysler said. | Pai —— | GET Republic Steel rose about a point |Fersiey.. curly, dos. bets. «- + 9) The corporation said 2,200 em-| [oF nf ; Bar “a and Jones & Laughlin a fraction. |Parsnips 42 bu. : 1.75) ployes will be furloughed at Los | ° - id —— Bethlehem and U.S. Steel were eee cy 4. ; : 12 Angeles and about 3,000 at New: | . : tiae Press Phete firm. > a dos. : i a ark. FIRST OFF LINE — Pontiac Coach Company plant superin- Drayton Plains plant closed in July. When in full operation the | American Motors bounced up Squash. Acorn, eres TT 125} Chrysler said it expected to: re- tendent Frederick Lindsay directs factory manager San G. Har- company will employ 150 men and produce 10 trailers daily, ac- more than a point. Ford and Chrys-| aah MBuliercus, bee OR RO 133 | sume ‘production next month at all} "80" in hauling out thé first new house trailer made since the cording to owner Melvin J. Hutchinson. SHARE OF a iners Gene . Neltet 5 + eer eeesecsere 1 B a eae ae > Se ee call ral ek Hubbard vs a datiosiiaserine 1§0/its idled plants. The exact date, es 7 | 3 = bout —— be Purnia. 0G. ccccwcssscccscecsssccces *% | depends on when new supplies of | 4 . ; , 'P ti C h B ild «. ; PROSPERITY Dee 7 2 MOT ee ne ee cone gg Meelare anand ony we ot s\Berlin’s Linda — GOP Women’s Club 7 ORUAC OaCh Sul Ing | opened late on a big bleck of ‘cars ennai in operation after tomorrow, | d A M 4 4 . ‘ . te 33% SALAP GREENS : ‘an nne arie : Taliers to ] eman An interesting 20-page 12,500 shares, rising 1% to . 'Chrysler said, ‘ The firm hes wnveliod a new [TUt? Cedbege, GOR oe. eee, $1.75 | ~ * * 'M ke’ R gister | € Launcne | booklet, “What Every, In- he | MaKe egdl tor Should Know”, is lightweight internal combustion | Production on Chrysler's Val- ; | vestor - engine, Livestock | telat Imperials and Dodee Trucks . ; | WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — The first Rouse trailer to be daily, Hutchinson said. ; At the yours for the asking. Cover- Radio Corp., up fractionally else | already has been halted. seared ng oni ae i oda Final plans for a White Lake Re.| produced since the Pontiac Coach eee ne pd producing from, ing fundamentals of invest- "? ’ DETROIT LIVESTOCK | . : | society put ifs Seal Of approval on) ; Pn eB ; : to uni i \ * 5 " attracted interest. RCA hes devel Tani org es cous! Motors, meanwhile, was vse belay ~ pean Marie| Publican Women's Club were made Company closed its. doors in July| Sen G. Harrlon bes beon' rig it’s pate oped a new electronic device said /Snlstis 130. jeers and a etl peers J _ aM auto Rasmussen Rockefeller made the|here yesterday. ‘ {rolled ‘off the assembly line in’ named factory manager. Frederick | b ' ber rock . St nae to operate at faster speeds than Bra Sand, goed Stades predominating: |D caninas b "lack “y i : mone social register. ae | Drayton Plains at noon yesterday. || indsay is plant superintendent. vyer 0 aoa $. : op in, the transistor. ” {8nd heifers; cows comprise nearly §0/4). 1) three. of steel among) The daughter of one of the na-| The women adopted a constitu-| More than 100 employes are a iy write, or p one or your Among high-flying “science aeste alien unnky to oA ghee | ies __|tion’s greatest song writers also (tion and will elect officers at their| back with the company building! wotice is hereby given to all creditors | ©°PY- stocks, Ampex dropped about 4,\cows opened steady with iast week's) Ford, which makes about half its) was listed for the first time in next meeting. Dec. 9 {Detroiter trailers for coast to of Whizzer International, Inc., whooe| , Motordla and Texas Instruments |lste decline, a SS steel, has continued production, but)the Register which booted out her a , + lcoast distribution, according ne poe po ag Be a ' . ~ owner Melvin J. Hutchinson. term ‘of existence of said vorporation| a v7 Vel, tee The group, which will become more Asso- ciates point while |cbeice steers 24.59.20.28; few good to low|weeks, American Motors and) Irving Berlin. Their daughter, Lin-| 3 - and it is requested that you present : : 94 le 2 : _ a member of the Oakland County This plant was re-opened be- {your cia t the cor tions’ office Sa ae oven yd Snore by OTE manent tad tees 1 oe e nand were not se-ide, made it by marriage tv Council of Republican Women's! cause of the abundance of or- [re es before Desgmber Mis. 1059. ° LERCHEN 00-16.00; canners and cutters 12.00-|". , Raytheon and Sperry Rand. |} $0. lriously troubled by steel shortages.| registerite Edouard C. Emmet. N. Woolworth advanced about a ‘Hogs —saiabie 900, Trade limited to| . sili ¢ a an mag sae a New| Clubs, is. headed temporarily by| ders impossible to meet prop- ’ weights under 240 ibs, these 25¢ high- The 1's-ine oie” 0 *W' Mrs. Gordon D. Brooks | erly at our other two plants,” Nov. 24, Dec. 1, 8, "58. point. Eastman Kodak added & er; most mixed No. 2 and 3 190-240 ib . lyork society — officially Social! “3. & . 3 : | CCachece $290-13-00: ‘motety $5.79-12.60.| |Y y y a; - « he said. These are lotated in NOTICE OF TERMINATION couple, Moderate gains were made | oina’ No. 1 and 2 190-240 Ibs. 13.25- usiness 0 es: | Register, New York, 1960 — came/ ._| Notice is hereby given to all creditors) : ; Hutchinson, Kan, and im St. |.¢ pontiac Precision Tool Co Ine. by Allied Chemical, Texaco, Amer-|13-80; small lot No. 1 21¢ Ib. weights loff the presses Monday to be quick-| Interested Republican women in) 2g os aay [hose office is located at ‘south || Member New York Stock Exchonge | ican Tobacco and International |"’vesjery—salavie “180. Pully steady. | 0 —“ a ily thumbed for the social accepta-/ White Lake Township are urged to; "* ain Jessie Street, Pontiac, Mic . that! asl ies a , | Robert C. Frayer, co-owner of . ; \the term of existence of sai . leading exchonges Nickel, rooney ve prime 24-40; ptanderd and|rraver's Refrigeration Sales 599| bility of marriages, divorces and contact Mrs. Brooks, 1131 Lake| Approximately, 150 Waterford) iio, “Sin “terminate on Sekar ta) “os cists The ticker tape was late for a alable 1.000, Slaughter lambs . e lassorted scandals. {Lane Dr. |Township employes were either 1959, and it is requested that you pre-| [== SON around 1.00 higher: slaughte }Orchard Lake Ave., and his wife eS sent your claims at the rations’ |f ° Watling, Lerchen &@ Ce six-miaute spell at the opening. Righer:, ‘most food cna®thoice eeoled have just returned from™ a five-|~——— —— laid off or transferred to the other|ottice on or before December 18, 1860-11 © ee pontine State Bank Bidg. | : Opening blocks included: Radio/lambe ‘18 00-2000: one load high choice 4... a . ; plants’ in the shut-down move MARTIN GOLDMAN, i § r “ql i at 68% on 5,000 gs: Fooled lambs 20.50: utility to good day holiday at the Fontainebleau - July 21 y-Treas. fs 1 Corp. up Shares; | 14 00-1800: cull to choice ewes 400-7 00, Hotel, Miami Beach, where they . = . eee eet Pee. 4, 8, "50. g Please send me more information § Allegheny Corp. off 4% at 13% onjsmall lot up to 7.25. | Reason for closing the plant was were guests of Easy Laundry Ap-| . : NOTICE OF TERMINATION g Sbewt Diversified Investments. § 5,000; General Motors unchanged 4 ¥ for consolidation purposes, Hutch-| Notice ts hereby given to all creditors, at 505% on 3,000; and American Mo- pliances, division of Murray Corp. | I . id ’ of’ Pontiac Automation Company, Inc.|f @ 1 : : Poultry and Eggs lof America. Frayer won the trip| a soe _. __|whose office is located at 359 Sonthii B Name ......6. .......00-.eeeees . a tors up 1% at 87%4 on 3,000. las one of the top prizes in a re However, company officials said/fes¢, SMPtt. Tenes’ of said’ corpore- if & 5 ae DETROIT POULTRY poate cual pales e . they soon realized that the demand|tion will ‘terminate om December 10,1 8 ' New York Stocks DETRO?PT, Nov. 23 (AP) — Prices per —— ee |was greater than the supply, and 1959. and it Is Pe that youl § ASSES «oveeceseee . an | we , tii“ cuality| Carter A. Justin, vice —_— U S | |they reequipped the sect ‘planticction oc cr ‘caters ammuner al. tien 8 t Admiral ...... “ee 93. ry: = SUAS, : | 1 RTIN GOLDM 5 CHI .Srpeedscecic cesses ee.eseed Air Redue eee Kresge, SS .. 31.4) Heavy type bene 18-19: heevy "ype|of Kramer Bros. Freight Lines, |with new machinery, = el Se uae ue Allied Strs ...- rd Giass | .. 00.6 oo . Hon gang he ie Sh lInc., of Detroit, has announced the Extensive improvements have : Nov. 24, Dee. 1. 8, "60, ——— Allis we-« McN. .; over . “on; al . ; Y } . —— — um La « ee BS ie 33 my Rn Rg Ml ag — Bd seese Jappointnent of Roy V. Parker, of) sTILLWATER, Okla. (AP) —|parently were drawn into the field-\heen made both inside and out- er et yeew's Inc .. 33.1/29-32; heavy type young toms. 26-28, 422 Bay. St., as the -company’s Carbon monoxide fumes disrupted house by air intake fans. side of the plant at 4615 Dixie nee Lene 6 Cem .. 31.8\ small type (in ry wille whites) ia = : i p | ; i Pp Ae Mone & Gas .. 38.3/hens 34. _ c area sales representative. | , huge choral festival and sent) Hardest hit were the soprano! Highway. Installation of new light- & Péy .. ye +4 ge Parker has been with Tarbet/ some 500 high school students to and alto sections in the balcony) ing ~ modern assembly line equip- ee " Tre .. ~ Trucking Co. for two years. He | hospitals and first aid stations | at the south end. Girls out-| ment and $21,000 paving back of é D 7 a= . j : 4 |Betroit in cage lots federal stele greaed:|'8 &@ Member of the Traffic Club| Monday night jnumbered boys at hospitals @nd/the building have been completed. of Detroit, Motor City Traffic Club,! Many were ill with carbon mon-|aid stations about 10 to 1. he company wil) have 150 em- graded: — Grede A jumbo 39, extra srersninis £89 sizes Hi 9 age? chases it large 38-40: large 37; medium 28-30; The ; - QeaFeD-weses. Hon inhA4 small 22-23; grade B tad 32-34. ; | and Pontiac Traffic Club, Parker j y i sy ; M&M 1M ; ree 32-34; browns . loxide poisoning. Others thought} David Pursley, a Lawton High | yes on the 1 and will : rmes #8: Th, Monn co. x04 —~oe Se ae 09; large 31: is married and has two daugh-\they were and had to be treated | school sophomore, said, “I was| Preojuce — a, mec. Atchison... 38-1 Mot Wheel .-. 204 pang gg _ lfor hysteria. None was considered} downstairs and I turned around) ai & Ob sees a3 cp 7 large 34-35; large 32-35; medium 25-26. | ‘even seriously ill. Doctors guessed | and looked up and saw them fal-| f ee ee Be a. orede A plane ok a ay wow ll : ‘ jabout 200 had varying degrees of jing I helped several out. I was) = “ re] Sey ae Gin” pase SP SNES Soe City Hall Switchboard moose mionne walking around Joking for some! News in Brief org toe : : “ to carry out and one, girl) - riggs .. 2B The youngsters were part of|™more : } brun Balke ... 42.3 Nort & West .. %2 6 h Bii k : . | who was seated in the balcony fell| William Studaker of 137 Raeburn, .- . ~——. e | ‘ £ : i judd Oo 5-0: 333 Ror Bees. 31\Gronchi to Visit Russia | oes on the. Blin beret toa Ona chow | and hit the rail, then bounced to- St. reported to Pontiac police last Insurance Dal Pack ..... = me ot mall Se, eA ward the floor. I and two other/night that someone stole a purse Can Dry ...... 19-4 - 4, rs in January, Says Tass ; taking: part in the eighth annual ad & her toh OS i “° Rowe 109 ' | Telephone calls to Pontiac City Thanksgiving songfest at Okla-|SUYS caught her a A took her tojcontaining $60 from the front seat Carrier Cp } pee 2 a dic: 21.4) MOSCOW (UPI)—President Gio-|Hall were disrupted for half an homa State University. Another |“ room for oxygen ae pede: it was parked “| Ches & Ohi’... es Pont Ey: $3lvanni Gronchi of Italy will make |MUr this morning-when the’ head- 3,000 or so persons filled Galla- | The Program was — ~ — i arene: a Chics 2. 336 pemney. 30 aie" an official visit to Soviet Russia |" pce —— operator gher eo — eae 7 im yn HM . $100, Reward For Information| sass Clare Sect -. pe Zin J ,went on the blink. voices. | Hallelujah Chorus from Han- |jeading to recovery of Bronze tur-| 9%» Soig Palm: aay ( Cois ... iin early January, it was announced) Mrs. Goldie Taylor, the operator,| 414 ogg school and charter | o¢l’s “Messiah.” Were taken*from farm on’ M-o4.{ i Colum Ges... 1. D .... $3itoday, said she was unable to handle the | Witnesses. sé drawal |}, "ni" south of Lake Orion. onan Kk ...00 @_ Philo ....-- . itnesses said the withdrawal) ;;, m 3 Cont an re ye -::: : $ The official Soviet news agency |calls because she couldn't talk with rr me Se ee en aecaaa from Gallagher Hall was orderly. eect tide of Righway sometime * oot fast. 48d ROA nga dag| Tass said Gronchi and Foreign |the callers. | th the so wi ss many |But once outside many more |Sun. om, —— llingwood | ie BOS cave ie} al = ashe 4a7{Minister Guiseppe Pella will ar-| “The calls kept piling up eer ran haan a ont Fe |youngsters became ill. Parm. ~24. INVESTMENT SECURITIES and para a8 Rex Drug ... «9@\rive in Moscow on Jan. 8 and/the switchboard was all lit up, but — the b , Phe 4 Ambulances, oxygen and doctors ACCURATE QUOTATIONS col Reva Met ++: @ /remain “about a week.” .|there was no way to communicate | hea — triP | were assembled from Stillwater Gunlitied Ge testament —— “ ' air, :::: H* poysi Dut .... 405| It will be the first visit to the with the callers,”’ she said. : and communities surrounding this e g Associated Press) | |i are rgd } : 2$$|Soviet Union by an Italian chief} The trouble lasted from 9:45a.m./ Weldon Barnes, OSU public re-|north central Oklahoma college'p.., gay .. sek aed OSS doe ALL = Ke ae @coviie Mi .. 25.4/0f state. to 10:15 a.m. lations officer, said the fumes ap-|of 25,000. Rescue parties formed Week ago sieees 331.1 134.3 938 2188 Ys ‘ : : te ee cies ot suas teeta wt Et i ~6C. J. NEPHLER CO. -= mer fad 7 Sinclair csuw OOS | n unknown number or stuaen S| i980 cow veer 08 1 1298 934 2115 ae e e e e re % Brie RR ..... 11.6 . 38.7 were sent home aS soon as buses |1958 high ’....._- 3120 1365 987 2143) 2% : - 4 a: oes | Pirestane “ah Bou 1 - 08 a = loaded. The highway pet ee ele. FE 2-9117 7 3 rol Sak some oO ese came | iF . bo prea ot SS ae oe ll the buses. Eight were hos-| Princess Margrethe, young heir- ; StS Community National Bank Bldg. ve Pru La ae oe Se oe a : : ie ae LISTED & UNLISTED SECURITIES — MUTUAL PUNDS $ a , 8 ~ on hogy . vr pitalized when they reached Tulsa, | ess to the throne of Denmark, is | ¥ OUR FACILITIES EXTEND FROM COAST TO COAST $ pen * 3 sta of On .. 504) about 80 miles away, but néne was studying constitutional law at the | ® ies . i aa : of ee eee lin serious condition. |University of Copenhagen. hi OCR Pi Sra | panied. THe x Bia, en .°.. 504 seeee } - —— — a - — es es - $$ -- ee 2 ee ee Le Sa on eel aa Seitt abe : «| qaaccasnusupocneneneee te ea. aie te ee em