The Weather
U.S, Weather Bureau Forecast
‘Cloudy, chahee of showers to-
(Details Page 2)
117th YEAR
(TIAC PF FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, boi PAGES
Says THE .P kk kkk PONTIAC, MICHYGAN;
EAGAE OVER Pages UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
8c
He ll Take Ae
Troubled Castro
Threatens to Arm Gridirons May
Become a Bit
Mucky Saturday
‘Football fans may get sprinkled
at tonight's games as the weath-
erman warns there is a chance
of thundershowers. The low will
4
People’s Militia he will raise an armed militia of laborers and peasants|
if bombings by his opponents continue.
The black-bearded Prime Minister threatened his op-
position witH a militia in a five-hour television speech; Temperatures for the mext five
which included the strongest attack he has ever deliv-|days will average twg to four de-
. ered against the United States.
He also called for a demonstration on Monday by a
million citizens to protest aerial raids he charged were
carried out by “counter-revolutionary planes based in
the United States. Presumably Havana again will be
*thronged by peasants from | be about 54 degrees.
mostly cloudy and somewhat cool-
HAVANA (?—Fidel Castro announced early today that) er with a high of near ‘60,
igrees above the norMal high of 58
and norma! low, of 40. | Tomorrow, however, will be |
|
Sunday will continue cool then
a slow warming trend will bring,
mild temperatures by Wednes-:|
day.
From 10:15 a.m yesterday
until the. Same time this morn. |
ing .02 of an inch of rain fell
in the downtown area. Winds
were southerly at 10 miles an
hour. > *
a
Na] “ Wad
&, -
3 ny Tax GOP Will OK Huddle With Republican National Chairman “Declines fo Tiff
With Senators eee
| the countryside, brought ns Fifty-four was the lowest record-| Eta | beens
Judges Ponder eer te leader of the ne sein tin pees cts in Cash Crisi revolution that overthrew ;"° | ‘pm Bro In as riSis ee
T-H Injunction — May: Hand Out Ruling _Fulgencio Batista.
Castro appeared in his favorite
electronic forum affer two mys-
itery planes showered Havana on
Wednesday with leaflets attacking - Soviet Rushing
et eh te,
; Avy! A ‘e ;
o
5h
a
ae
- ek
DAE
bodes VERVRRECES pi . 4-5 i
=
Plans to Wait for Funds
Before Dems Attempt
Correcting Future Plan
his regime: anti--Castro gangs af
on Steel Strike Appedl oe vee ne capital ies Summit Par ley 3 DETROIT (UPI) — Gov. by Monday or Tuesday throwing small bombs and gre-) rs) G, Meanen witlenelya54
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The nades, and the revolutionary
army's commander in Camaguey} But'De Gaulle Is Balky;
vee
t 4
back from a tour of Europe
and the Middle East, said
steel strike, already costing bil Of hi otticers in protest against; RUMOF Says He Wants ay he w ‘c . lions of dollars, moved into its Communist influence in Castro's) West to Visit Him today he would accept any
arte day: todky ox thee federal eowerent itax the Republicans would
judges pondered the legality of 4 few hours before the telecast, | LONDON (‘AP)—Moscow urged pass now as long as:it would the government's back-to-work in-| the Prime Minister's bodyguard ‘today that the East-West summit provide enough money.
“It's a shame this is happen-| seized a drunken, knife-carrying
“It is futile for us to pro- junction meeting be called quickly—the Cuban factory worker at a street ° : The legal truce, prompted by ; ~arlie » bette wr ; : . wee o Pints — i | €orner demonstration around °#"!!«" the better pose anything that the
sag l. will extend into | C®tre on the cry of a teen-ager A Soviet statement in effect Republicans in the Senate junction appeal, will ex “ ife! lined up with the United States ao ihen anal that ‘‘that man has a knife! He I ! Sta will oppose,” Williams said
early seat . s going to kill Fidel!” and Britain, which have been a : -
The union contended the injunc- talking of a December meeting | ‘We need money in a hurry
. 1c Police hustled the man away oo 2k ;
tion, granted Wednesday by 4 U.S f th i ; Moscow did not mention French now. We can't afford anv
District Court judge in Pittsburgh, "om the pele yours pes “on Eresident Charles de Gaulle's yrotracted fight is unconstitutional and asked that ™& On whether he was Dant OM Lodour for a spring session | ght.
it be canceled. The chief argu- assassination. Hours later police * nr * “We face the stark naked realis
ment: It would halt the strike for sad the ae s " agen lesa “The earlier a summit meeting tv than any bill that is to be
80 days but wouldn't settle it othe Unt ttantl otto Salas Her) i; called the better it will be for passed into law has to be approved
hs wer. said "andez, would appear for a court »,, .. ae ; ; The government, however, sai , the cause of peace said a state ihe Renu in the &
Thursday the continuing long examination today No charges had ment by Tass. the Soviet news , : ERNE A) ON eee
walkout endangered the health been filed against him agency broadcast from Moscow Pa Af
on ean itent *~ * * j a Wi id i . and safety of the nation, and tha : Ce} he “The solution of urgent prob- illiams said if was up to the a Taft-Hartley, injunction was nec Authorities said alas shen lems with a view te relaxing Republican senators to say what
aay So eo pig tere = t Fidel” Coa international tension can = and TALKING POLITICS — At a $50-a-plate luncheon honoring Re- Pontiac Press Phote they will pass in the way of a ’ a porter > 4 as- 3 a »
America’s economy of : . . must be achieved by the heads of publican National Chairman Thruston B. Morton (center) yester- president and toastmaster fort EMTS. Seandincleane {ax masure now,
The judges—Chief Judge John tro told the television audience . : oe : ‘ _ ae
Biggs Jr.. Herbert F Goodrich (Continued on Page 2 Col. 1) government. day in Berkley were, seated, Arthur G. Elliott Jr, county GOP rem B. Lindemer tleft State OPMch alin AT ChTnTs But he added that whatever thev
a Wall ie Hast al ox anerare epee aS OTP chairman (left) and Glenn H. Griffin, Pontiac Board of Education Martin J: | committeemar the public interest: demands ” ia d ) s cast m \ . ek decision
ee Sey ee D R eee ee Willams said the Democrat
they rule on its legality “early eputy EMOVES deliberated over a pretiminary won iol ' : ‘s
next week’’—probably Monday or meeting, perhaps in Paris ,° e vee r pring ) ee Ha ,
Tuesday. This ‘Pheasant’ | The Tass statement sought to ecome O iti ait { 0 woul . to make corrections in
But the court. mindful of the F H M clear up what it called conflicting / iny tax elites passed once the
seriousness of the situation, di- rom er enu reports in the foreign press about . tate coffers have been filled
rected that the union and steel Soviet views on the date of sum e . iwain ‘ :
industry “engage in free collective; Even worse than shooting the mit talks orton vises | Or ax f . bargaining in good ‘faith’ and wrong bird is cooking the wrong “In this connection Tass has ‘BLOW TO DEMOCRATS’
‘‘make every effort to” adjust, and bird been autharized to state that. the Asked about his own political
settle their differences.” * * * Soviet government's repeatedly Reven M imbitions and whether he would
— of the —— Oakland County Sheriff's D puty stated position on this matter re By GPORGE T. TRUMBULL di So impressed was one man with I GOP he ve an Says You in for a seventh term next veur,
“ £ ne George R. Enners saved an Addi- mains unchanged.” the statement Republican National Chairman Morton's plea for financial assi Oakland audience digest ts Need Proof, Then May he said “Let's not get into poles
workers union promptly son Township family yesterday sdid. ‘‘The government of the os — . tance as one of fo ingredients tenderloin h oa sprinklin of ° now. Let's stick to the main issue
cepted the court mandate. They Vater aa er ec Thruston B. Morton called upon o ne Get It by Christmas A eedid aon coat assembled the 171-member wage rom an unusual pheasant” din- U.S.S.R_ regards a meeting of the MaklancdeGuunten basaneeemlcaders . \ yoo i] ' ampa ph that 1 humorous politic tale “ avoid anv co “
~~ ner rs of ¢ > nent 5 COSSATY “ . aed Hil a check for $ alt ! Si ssentli the Same
policy committee in Pittsburgh heads of government as necessary yesterday to become political cans mG) 2
— taxes appeared to be the stopgap
program most generally favored
at the moment.
Another drive for an income tax
or repeal of the constitutional tax unconstitutional “‘kind of brings
everything to a grinding halt.”
Republicans threatened major
budget slashes but administrators
said the state already was on an
austerity footing.
“There comes a point when the
lemOn squeezes hard,"’ said State
Controller James W. Miller, who
reported the state had more than
89 million dollars in unpaid: bills.
Miller said curtailments ordered
by the State Administrative Board
would ‘‘dry up spending but good
and hard and fast." long-range possibilities.
to wait until January,
House Speaker Don R. Pears
(R-Buchanan) announced law-
makers would not be called back
in emergency session before a
scheduled meeting next Thurs-
day. .
Several lawmakers, not affected
University of Michigan econo- |by the travel ban, were on their mist Harvey Braser said today | way to Houston, Texas, to attend the state will lose about $300,000 [2 national conference on tax prob-
MSU to Honor
Alfred. Wilson 5 Others Will Receive
Life Memberships in |
Armenian Revolutionary Federa-
with an active Pontiac chapter.
| Arriving delegates will be fet-
ed tonight at the Armenian Cen-
ter, 223 Ferry St. The convention | ; iation | Ul begin there at 10, Alumni Associa
a.m. tomerrow. : Honorary life memberships in Capping the conference wil] be
a public bal! Saturday night at the
| Hellenic Hall, 85 Mariva St Ar-
menian dancing and an old world
buffet will be featured. * * " ;
|. = = ® | Among them is Alfred G. Wil- | .AYF members seek to preserve!son The donation of their Meadow through study the Christian tradi- Brook Farms estate and $2,000,000
| tions of the former Caucasian de-! Mr. and Mrs. Wilson made
|mocracy, divided now by Russia) nogsible the establishment of Mich. and Turkey ligan State University Oakland. > * * °
Members of the loca] chapter are
all native-born Pontiac citizens.| apes awards . the Alumni
“But we feel a duty to keep alive) on hone ae
Others to be honored include the Michigan State Alumni Assn.
will be presented to six Michigan
State University boosters tonight
jin East Lansing.
the traditions of our parents,’’ said
Miss Apigian, a secretary at GMC
Truck & Coach Division, Donald F. Gerber, Fremont, presi-
* * * dent of Gerber Products Co.; C.
The youth league through the Allen Harlan, Detroit, president of
AYF, holds the political hope that Harlan Electric Co.; Clarence W.
Armenia someday may gain inde- Lock, Lansing, deputy state rev-
pendence again enue commissioner; Don Stevens,
* * * Okemos, education director of the
“Our studies of democracy make Michigan CIO Council: Jan B.
us better American citizens,’ said Vanderploeg, North Muskegon, Miss Apigian landscape nurservman.
— — * * *
Harlan, Stevens and Vanderploeg
Merchants Hear ;
are members of the MSU Board
of Trustees
‘Jingle Bells’ |
Become Candidates,
Businessmen Told Quite Clearly
A glance at the calendar ex-
plains why Pontiac merchant
groups are busy humming ‘‘Jingle
Bells." \ (Continued From Page One)
- * can superimpose our campaigns of
Christmas is only 63 days away next year.”
and the busy pre-Christmas sales x * *
period begins soon. Morton's visit here was part of
» ef a 30,000-mile nationwide tour to
Shopping areas have some new keep alive what he said was a re-
surprises ! surgence of Republican confidence
Downtown shoppers are sure to |" _ 1999 be touched by 7 ice nativity, | 1” a release, he said he sought
scene purchased recently by the ©" his trip to enlist two million Downtown Merchants Asn_ new volunteers for precinct work
, in the coming election. It'll be on the Courthouse lawn * * *
— 15 figures in all, each life-sized One reason for the resurgence,
and full-dimensional he said. is that some Republicans
NEW DECORATIONS in Congress united behind the
The association has purchased President in pushing through im- portant measures such as the la-
bor reform bill.
Secondly, he said the Presi-
| dent demonstrated with his “un-
calculating’ foreign policy that
peace can be had in the world.
Glenn H. Griffin, president of
the Pontiac school board, intro- lots of new decorations for street poles. Stores and businesses are
being urged to augment their Yule
displays this year.
At Miracle Mile Shopping Cen.
ter they're busy constructing a
life-size home for Santa Claus.
The fairv -
ready by the time Santa drops intoman Arthur G. Elliott Jr. spoke the center by helicopter at Thanks- briefly. igiving time. Santa will be at} * * * home" to all youngsters in his! Chairman of the luncheon was new house until Christmas. W. A. P. John of the Bloomfield x & * Hills advertising agency of Mac- A huge Christmas tree will dom- Manus, John & Adams. inate the center, according’to Ralph x *& * | Eastridge, president of the Miracle! |Mile Merchants Assn. |—
Teamsters End Fight
Against New Rules WASHINGTON uw — After re-iques were not paid one month in sisting for 14 months, the Team-|advance were ineligible to run. sters Union has agreed. to new Because employers often do not \tules designed to provide safe-|forward checked off dues a month ‘guards for democratig, honest) in advance, many candidates have jelections in local unions. been disqualified. The monitors | The union capitulated to de-| contended this was a device ‘to mands of court-appointed monitors|keep control of locals in the hands at a hearing Thursday before U.S.|of incumbents. ~ Judge F. Dickinson Letts. “*e ® & new rules will be in effect agreed for elections in about 450 locals in ie donna ec ype November and December.
* * *
The monitors, who have watched
over Teamsters affairs since Jan-
uary 1958, petitioned Judge Letts
after failing to work out an agree- Hill and Elliott were co-chair.
men.
locals to be remdv
ship. After that, the monitors said,
they will consider the matter
again to decide whether this pro-
cedure is required in other locals ment with the union. removed from trusteeship. About One major change allows union! 50 locals currently are in trustee- ‘members, whose dues are paid by) ship.
The new election rules are the the union has taken| monitors’ first step toward putting
’
‘ rr | President John A. Hannah will |
tale abode will be duced the speaker. County Chair- ¢
icommittee (Conlin Committee)
which recommended a personal in-
come tax to cure the state’s fi-
nancial ills, said the revenue loss MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Main Floor MONEY-SAVERS
For Friday and Saturday three-cent sales tax ceiling were |=
Some legislative leaders wanted A
F
ett 2 af E es
daily as a result of the Michi- |jems.
| Sam Supreme Court ruling that | The Michigan _ court's ruling|?
the use tax is unconstitutional, [would make isiteresting reading at
Brazer, who was research direc-| Houston. ~ &
itor of the Legislature's tax study |g ”
$2 WRISLEY 4-SEA- could run as high as $75 to $80 [E 2-CELL All Metal
million during the fiscal year. } FLASH y ( _
. | hi oD
Suggest New Basis LIGHT 5 NY . 98c Value lp ——
for Collecting Tax 19° eZ | (Continued From Page One) 3
bination of those previously in
use.
| All merchants do not belong to
Cook's organization, a trade group
with power only to recommend.
| Leck said the change unques- |
| tionably would result in the col- |
| lection of more tax. Presuma-
| bly. this would find its way to the
state. Limit 1
Pixed focus —
throws powerful
$00 {t. beam...
all metal case
lL belt ring
Batteries
“The merchant owes 3 per cent/
of the gross proceeds, less allow- | 150-Pc. Combination
jable deductions, or the total’ ’
amount of the tax collected, which- Stationery Pack
ever is ter,"’ Lock said. $1 Value
| Lock said under the old system
the department received occasional |
complaints that it hurt merchants!
who did a large volume in small
transactions — such as five and,
dime stores. |
“But it broke on the one half |
cent of tax and it was commen-
| ly accepted as fat.” he sald.
There was speculation that Dem-*
ocratic legislators might .try to
stop the nev: bracket by writing
|the old one into the sale tax law.
Michigan's sales tax statute
|does not spell out the brackets.
|This is done by statute in some
jother states. .
| The retail group recommended
no tax on transactions of 16 cents
or under, one cent tax on sales
of 17 through 37 cents, two cents!
on 38 cents through 67, three cents |
on 68 through: $1.16, four cents on
|$1.17 through $1.49, five cents on)
$1.50 through $1.83, six cents on
$1.84 through $2.16 and so on. | Cc
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@ 13-Oz. Box ‘LADY BLAIR’
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@ mm.mm—what « e Limit 2 boxes. cherries
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36 Choice of almond,
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1959 -
fer Hits Bob Considine Has an Idea
Takk on Reuthe Prefer Holy Yule Cards? nt eacey aaeekt and RUSTY WATER! | - cs regintered in the nation Yn represented ae of 1.08.97
r "Gigantic Winter Tire
3
:
*
J
‘ | 4 |] é , NEW YORK—This year, if. you volunteer helpers live in a re- | busy, carving a tomb for his wife ~ f
{ ‘ a Claims Rackets Group are of that brave little band which imodeled stable, to continue the a aeent ‘ a ; |e YOU CAN HAVE ‘
" e irstmas cards, D the | & Didn't Exonerate Him believes Christmas cards should| parallel. The Rule of Benedict! are ahi areata ts ah Y way i i
+ @ | have religious meaning, why don't) (‘conspicuous for its discretions,” ha { ‘ tha y eal a i
t | as Bob Kennedy Said you buy them and mail them from|as st. Gregory wrote) has wat. sequins up thar in the E
t 5 SUBURBANITES | Bethlehem? Bethlehem, South Da-lered nearly 1500, years of some, |BIack Hills, They. might be char- |
t | WASHINGTON — Sen. Barry|*ota, that is. times violent social change. Bene-| Fenton - “Yr paged off- ¥ at.’ ; ¥ for P few }
+, ‘ _ : ‘ ee nyway, if you've despaired as I| 7%
4 by GOODFSYEAR \Goldwater (R-Ariz) Thursday ac- It’s quite a place. I saw it with/dictines must: not beg. They must often ee ee F ,
av c ely elim-| 4 fi a small girl friend named Debbie In building new monasteries | hat
I jcused Robert F. Kennedy of stat-la.ping the last few days of her a, they must devise prop- at een oF Chitin |e
3 Neve i ‘ing wrongly that Republican mem-ivacation, and we came awayjer means of income. the address of Bethlehem cave is| a bers of the Senate Rackets Com-|deeply impressed with the en-| ip, ; ” d City, S. D. | i ehusi hich those i t| “We've chosen printing,” easy- |Box 686, Rapid City, 4
i / “ed : mittee “gave Walter Reuther a|thusiasm whic in charge of) ing, dedicated Father Gilbert | |
ut i lf |
the installations at Bethlehem cope i. aa ok Sneed abeel te } PENNIES
per day Have a whiter wash, softer
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WHY RENT a Softener
Unit? Have Your Own sogenranns
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OI °
Size 6.70 x 15 block clean bill of health after a full)” . aks . .
twee pas tex eed Tlinvestization.” Spat Re Seneeleeeees: | place with a massive 8t. Ber- (Grazing Land in West tacappable tire ves : ,.| Two Benedictine Fathers have| nard clopping at his heels.
Goldwater said the committee’s established there a Shrine of Peace ‘Printing of all kinds. True, there Nearly three quarters of the |
four Republican mémbers and fourjin a famous old crystal cave in) iga¢ much call for it—up here in |gTazing lands in the United States 17
|Democratic members are writing |the Black Hills. Someday, perhaps the hills. We’ve got to yo out in ‘about 750 million acres, are in the
‘rival reports of the investigation. | long after Father Gilbert Stack | search of people. Our nearest 17 Western and Great Plains >
‘He alt the GOP findings will ac-| jand Father Charles Bresson are| population center, and it’s a States 3 Also available in 13” size for
new, compact cars
SAVE NOW ON
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The best winter tire ever a. at the
gone, a boys school and monastery | . ; . «| _
lowest price ever offered! Get up to 51% icuse Reuther and his United Auto-\" ‘16 near the mouth of the| — por cee the an _ i for as Low as
more traction in a : Fig ia mud! workers Union of having followed! leave, which is dedicated to the t “ I oe ‘s more. 2% Alaska has an area of 586,400
Quieter riding ai roads, tool See us a “pattern of violence, disrespect Nat { Christ. people hear about us, or will, (square miles
now and save on safer winter driving! of law and order, intimidation and mtreiey “e " | someday, : a
; Why build around a cave? Why | .. , e .
ay ee na Ganaee caw to the activities an altar in the cool crystalized |, .. he a eee ips a é s bee e
rs ge Ag A ° jof Mr. Hoffa.’ “—_ of — a . . . establishing a seasonable post Cools Heartburn! PER WEEK
£ ~ *« * 7 v joffice at the cave, so we can have .
eo Kennedy, former chief counsel) asked. ithe ‘Bethlehem’ cancellation.” 10 YEAR WARRANTY Including Sales Tax
'to the committee, and the commit-| “Christ was born in a cave,” he, x * * NO MONEY DOWN
‘tee itself have accused James R. said simply. ‘‘The church first took! The cave itself has been known}
Hoffa, Teamsters Union president,|hold in caves—catacombs—during |to the white man for more than
jof corrupt practices and other 300 years of its early persecution. '80 years. It has been explored as
misdeeds. 'St, Benedict lived in a cave three|deep as 22 miles. The priests came
= ement |Years before he founded the Order |by the remarkable place by gift—
| cae beets at and the famous Abbey of Monte/a gift out of the blue made by a For Further Information Call...
CRUMP ELECTRIC, INC.
: | In which he said published ac . , ; : % urn Rd. 2-300 FE 4-3575 |
Use Your Old Tire $ 25 counts of a speech by Kennedy Cassino. He is the Patron of 0 bem oar gmp a aac Sus NOTHING WORKS LIKE TUMS! oe Aub n ad UL 3 0 35 al
ted the f counsel FAA ees = . a > | ett oa Re Re eee he %
as Your Down Payment per week | toting seen i Entccraty ot | |The priests and their handful of!remains on the property and keeps! ee : . __ 7 California students that the com- |
mittee had investigated Reu-
ther’s activities extensively and
vee OUR EASIEST TERMS CAN MAKE IT SERVICE STORE Goldwater said it was hard to
believe Kennedy would make such e Fs}
30 S. Cass FE 5-6123 a ‘statement but added that he Yr (2E4 t Ari LO MIE LS Ever
hopes Kennedy ‘‘will adhere more 2 4 “oe
closely to the facts’’ in future
speeches.
Goldwater said Republican com-
© WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE © Pps mr mceon sc ing a critical report about the
UAW “but we are also resentfu!
5-PC. CHROME, WROUGHT IRON OR $ 95 of the fact that Mr. Kennedy and
BROWNTONE DINETTES...._........ 49 his brother, Sen. John F. Kennedy, ff did everything in their power to GOODFYEAR
——— a =
2-PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE frustrate investigations into the
(All Foam) | 39% vAW." beeen eee ee ees Le a * re
— Goldwater said the bipartisan
3-PC. SECTIONAL, $197 committee's Republican and
(All Foom) .......... . Democratic members have decided
== a informally that jt would be im-
3-PC. BASSET ; $ 95 possible for them to agree on a
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————————————— ee Reuther’s union, particularly
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I Mile East of Auburn Heights Santiago Has Odd Peak
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96 Mon. thru Set.—Fri. ‘til 9 FE 5-921 called Cerro Santa Lucia in the
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Reg. $12.95] |
NEW FALL |.
JACKETS | |
‘3° ! EMERALD-CUT
DIAMOND
149%
"een
ee
x
‘| BRESS PANTS” § ae a ‘ , ° $ 50
| Hard Finish Sharkskin Double Panel | ye 4 Lee OPEN AN ACCOUNT a 3"ROW BAND
2 PANT SUITS Uniform || oe 2 YEARS AR\aM) 195° Slips ==
$99! | =| THREESOME .
| All Three Only Ph one
The Extra Pair Will .
Double the Wear S
Compare With
$79.50 Values if
My Price Only . , (| {
I Rent $ ,
Taxedees | A triple valvel 125 OPEN TONIGHT : FEderal
SAM BENSON for Weddings) FS kN Ghee eden UNTIL 9 P.M. | 37114
"7 NORTH SAGINAW STREET © her ls ,7:.. FREE PARKING 108 NORTH SAGINAW
T terveen Huron and West Lawrence in Pontiac |
: in REAR of WKCSS CC l,l a
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1959
st ° . Ae {files will show that Acheson — Thas Show Bizz, I Alwuz Say Dean Acheson Pale Rapp
Eenunceeate Plain but Dun Be Stilted nnn, Ss
. e -«- .¢
By PHYLLIS BATTELLE and then play back the recording No. You bat the breeze with; So you try it agen. And again. . ey L c. wi N Only a month in 1947 separated
‘ew YORK — ac soe »—this is taped torture your husband using good diction. U j WASHINGTON (UPI) — in all|the two speeches in which Acheson, NEW YORK—I was one of the ntil finally you reach that won- first, and then Marshall proposed
speakers at my high school com- WE ALL SLUR You enunciate your “yeses” and drous “‘mediumbrow” vocabula me te enbaee to tee tte | 2 ‘4 speakers y hig : i vd : you breathe an h into wich. and j..6) that offend the *Y George C. Marshall and to his;# 8@8t postwar rehabilitation pro- t 103 N. SAGINAW ‘ST. mencement service. (Please do The trouble is that we Americans you eenunceeate magnificently. planet Praca gap seaeue oom 'Marshal] Pl he forgot mani™ at the expeme of the U. 5, a not think I am merely bragging. ay ee : “ : conversational comprom when ee ‘Treasury. \Aericonsune Paces’ ) merel ass S- are so accustomed to slurring.! «ppst was just great!” cries you sound as though you had a|¥@S Dean Acheson.
1am also leading up to something.) abridging and imperfecting our the producer. “But yeu sounded [good education but you never let * * The Belgium Congo’s Shinko- : PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER I am not sure why I was chosen words that to speak correctly; just a little bit stilted. Mind doin it go to your tongue. You pian say that Achesonjlobwe Mine is the world’s richest Orromsruiee to make a valedictory address. sounds totally phony it ever?” | Thas show biss, 1 alwuz say. _ lplanned it that way. The officeisource of uranium ore. Open Mouday & Friday Evenings
Unless it was because the senior We speak one of two ways: [ne a ; - Sey
council voted on the speakers i—In grunt-talk (okay, huh-uh,
And the president of the senior wefll-a), and i
class headed the council And | 2—Highbrow talk (you know as) ac { u li d - a - ' ' ;
dated the president of the senior pree-sss-eye-sliee what I mean.)
class The first form of conversation |
is natural but slovenly, and the | Anyway, I did quite weil. I second is noble but has ‘an actory U S f f)
ened) Seerny fee Seenreree taint. There probably is a delight- 7 into the future and found it radi- ; a - & « i bissed thal ae the ew ™ medium, but I have been listen- ant. inte< e beys ; : ing closely lately to my friends in would be General Motors execu ‘ a a h = len’ “th conversatior an ave A { oi
tives and all the girly would be : : lelightiul medium as hard to find happy mothers with editorships igs : s the w a Ves as ft I ‘ . ‘ ‘ e > “ :
ef “Harper's Bazaar” on the
side. AH, SURE
They « i oy trils the Nobody says ‘yes’ anymore .
senior * ee, ae ‘ ca oY
NORGE. et.
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Po 200 N. SAGINAW ST.THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1959
Keep Mum Bloomfield Hills Active Mates Guests
About Book | of Sylvanites DOR’L SHOP 4 LADIES'—CHILDREN’S—INFANT’S
‘ arner to Ca at . ountr Uu The New Sylvanites enter- APPAREL
t You Have ; " tained their husbands at a Hal- Beh ascites ee ak
rf = ‘ . b. : loween party Saturday evening —
By RUTH SAUNDERS Charles M. Drake, Mrs. Alan Lauderdale, Fla., right after Mr. and Mrs. John L. Lovett | at the Garland street home of
>| Sy GLY Peee BLOOMFIELD HILLS—The | W. Joslyn, Mrs.* Wilmer B~| the game. - Jr. ot Orchard’ Ridge road | Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Dom- Rtg pa no oye + - ©
e! Dee aes Post: Some Oakland Hills Country Club Hoge and Mrs. Frederick \W The others will spend a few have as their guest this week re exchange ne bok laachan Xk Co.
ive book ( abe love 4 luncheon of the Village Woin- Mrs. William W, Henderson | soing to San Francisco for the Beach, Calif. The senior Mrs. | of the evening. out trons uke a
ig he gee Be aac band an’s Club Jr. and Mrs. William W. Wil game there Nov. 1. Lovett is on her way home The next meeting will be at Keege Harber "PE 5-026!
and butter letter. It Durward Varner, chancellor | %0n will be junior hostesses ee ee om & the home of Mrs. Felix Wotila. oak ention an of MSUO, will be the speaker * * * Ses — —— a,
beck in our Morten aaa and his subject will be “Birth | A group of loyal football | ‘ae the FA. game wilen the SS {SII IIIIII sas. a,
ony bas Toad . Da bee of a University.” The generous | friends “jetted” to Los Angeles | | isons will be Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Judd are italien Fesmeiie tanecs \
edge the gift without saying property gift of Mr. and Mrs. | Tuesday to, be on hand Sunday = «kt planning a dinner party Nov. 7 YE G ILL \
artything Alfred G. Wilson (part of their | for the game between the De- in their home on Glengary \ . IPS
iy have it genet “Meadow Brook” estate and | troit Lions and Los Angeles. | , Nov. 1 is the date for another | 4 DR. CLARENCE I PH \
‘ something pre magnificent house) has been | Included were Mf. and Mrs. brunch.” This one will be «ke t \Y Optometrist
= — rightfully called one of Amer- | E. J. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. | given by Mr. and Mrs. William lle wit \
fea's most exciting develop- | A.C. Girard of Bloomfield | C. Newberg at their lovely | | Mr. and Mrs. Bon Miss we \ 205 Capitol Savings and Answer: Write a note of ments in higher education. Hills, Mr. and Mrs. D. Lyle | home on Kirkway drive. Sierelthel have aneal the past \ NE FE 4-3241 Lean thanks for the book without Mrs. W. S. Gilbreath Jr. is | Fife, the Van Patricks and the tk ek * rinsgiard pe PHO : ws Wen oan street \
saying anything about having chairman of this luncheon, as- Oscar Olsons of Grosse Pointe Mr. and Mrs. William J. \ Meek yeotel epee
read it. Perhaps, if the book sisted by Mrs. Charles S. The Donald U. Bathricks, | Scripps of Bennington drive t ok \
is from your own local book Shaw, Mrs. Kenneth D. Mc- | who have been guests of Mr. have invited guests to a large Also returning home next \
tr might ~ pngnatl Gregor and Mrs. W. Franklin | and Mrs. Spike Briggs for the | dinner party at Bloomfield | week will be the Jack Davises. \ LIMITED PARKING AT REAR OR BUILDING
ee exchange one Graham, past week, accompanied the Open Hunt Club Saturday, They have spent the past few .
sot ound i bank ts Stir quant Senior hostesses will be Mrs. | group and will return to Fort | (Oct. 31). weeks at their Virginia home. NO OTIITTOTIIITTT ea
neat ever tell them that the
on your . own library
— LAST 4 DAYS of SALE! FOR ] O .
‘Dear Mrs. Post: My son is ALL
one pF air scsng A roha FRIDAY — SATURDAY — MONDAY — TUESDAY
up that I need help with. My first husband died ten years - \yeq™ \ , y\
ago and [ remarried two years by-fen Ls, ~§ r)
later. My son and my hus- ne , 4 . band think the world of each | Little girls love to be seen in|
vi : this jaunty jumper with easy-sew
cela te oper rg ae ae scallops. Choose wool for school—
husband in the family picture {Velveteen for holidays. Blouse is
' ed-
Printed Pattern 4938: Children’s
. Send Thirty-five cents in coins
include your husband in the | for this pattern — add 10 cents for'|
each pattern for 1st-class mailing. |
to
are dead. Another young man [N_y. Print plainly Name, Address and I have rented a furnished with Zone, Size and Style Number.
apartment. I have no older
person available and I would . |
like to know if it would be Acquaintance violating the conventions to |
Party Is Set |
ALL WOOL have two girls in our apart-
ment to play bridge?’
Answer: This will be all right
so long as the game is over
-and you see the girls home -
at a reasonable hour,
Zeta Etas Meet
Members of Zeta Eta Chap-
las Fox. A plastics demonstra-
tion was given by Patricia The Widow and Widowers |
Acquaintance Club of Pontiac |
will hold open house at a Hal- |
loween costume party Tuesday
from 8 to 11 p.m. at Malta
Temple on Perkins street.
* * x
Prizes will be awarded for
New officers are John Wolfe,
secretary, and Mrs. Georgi-
anne Wittkopp, treasurer. Skirts Pleated and slimlines, in
solid colors, flannels,
plaids and _ imported
tweeds. Sizes 8-18.
Regular to $10.95
The club is open to single |
Boettcher of Utica. people over 40.
January-March Group
Meets for Luncheon
Members of the January- erson, secretary, and Mrs. Ro- |
March group of the First bert Will, treasurer.
Presbyterian Church met Tues- * *
day for luncheon at the Hick- Mrs. Walter J. Baumgartner
ory Grove road home of Mrs. conducted the Bible study ses-
>.
Smith Falconer. sion. | — ) 1 Assisting were Mrs. Christo- Mrs. H. E. McCulloch will | fo y
pher Wright, Mrs. John Peck hy, be chairman of the luncheon
and Mrs. Istvan Nagy. to be served visiting ministers Ny Officers for the year are Oct. 3.
Mrs. H, J. McGrath, chair- The November meeting will
man; Mrs. M. A. Benson Jr., be at the home of Mrs, Mc-
vice chairman; Mrs. John Pet- Culloch.
o Full Fashioned Fur Blend
Sweaters Values to $12.95 Of eee)
6
a
e “PASTELLE”
eae
spa
Raincoats Values to $15
vou 38 Wet days ahead. Get fabulous sav-
ings on our finest all weather coats.
Sizes 8-18. \\
\\
ALL WOOL
I 3 winter ()()
coats i Tweeds, zibelines,
i} cashmere blends,
pile lined, some with
zip-out liners. Sizes
8-20.
Values to $45
CLOSE-OUT SALE |] of i)
Fine Imported China
Service for 12 Was $124.95
NOW %&4@@%»
. 53-Pc. Set Was $68.10
NOW #24495 BETTER WOOL
winter
coats In finest fabrics.
Worumbos, Forst-
mann’s, Nockanem.
All higher priced
woolens in the lat-
est style. Sizes 8-20.
Values to $65
if We have on hand 32 Imported China
Pattern Sets for close-out
at % price BURTON'S SMART LADIES’ APPAREL 1? 3 : SSS
| DIXIE POTTERY | 75 N. Saginaw . (| OR 8-1804 | Open Fri. and Mon. Nights ’til 9 P. M.
5281 Dixie Highway of Waterford ~ | Sat. Nights ’til 7 P. M. Naren
ees a ” ."
~ Sage atas ek been Kate d . Sheree pio yet ee Pe HO ow .we
4. . ‘ . ‘ at on a mpi in, a e v <
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1959
MSU Has CCC Which Does Just That
Do You Wish Plants More Compact?
By TOM SHAWVER
EAST LANSING (AP)—Two big
water-filled jars containing six-
week-old cucumber plants stood
side by side in an agriculture
Jaboratory at Michigan State Uni-
versity.
The vine that grew from one was
six feet tall, about what you'd ex-
pect for a cucumber plant six
weeks old. The other was little
more than. a foot high. but the
stem, thicker and tougher than
the other, contained just as many
leaves. would cheer this development.
Delays Deportation
by Crashing in Car
SAN FRANCISCO ‘AP: — A
Filipino ex-seaman, due to be de-
ported with his family today, in-
: stead was recuperating from auto A new growth-regulating chem- < . . crash injJunmes, ical dubbed CCC has been ap- *-« &
plied te the smaller plant, a- Felix Montalban, 36. who served
mature as its six foot companion a US. Army transports in World
despite its compact size. War II and also as a guerrilla in
Its potential value to agriculture his native Philippines crashed his
is tremendous and. quite possibiy, auto a bridge ramp Thursday
it may bring some basic changes He told
in the industry.
MORE TESTING NEEDED Hospital authorities
; talban had no broken bones With the caution customary with ole. . N. E. Tolbert n bruises and lacerations research men. Dr. N. E. Tolbe: ra cident suspendel plans to officers he had blacked
sald
but
ne at
SU v gricultural . _ MSL professor of agricultu al iepart Montalban and his wile
chemistry. declined to evaluate , 7 ay
the importance of, his discovery —_ with a price cut the likely result.
Housewives who flinch at the high er areas to pfoduce equally large
price of tomatoes out of season yields.
Squash, cucumbers and other MORE EYE APPEAL
Mon- «
Plane Probably .
seine use wat eae wan FELO Dy Storm CAB Hits Dispatchers
for Failure to Warn of,
Turbulence Fatal to 31” And the stronger stems
would aid harvesting.
Treatment on flowers could pro-|
duce shorter, more compact plants |
|with ‘greater eye-appeal. | WASHINGTON (AP) = The
Advantages for other plant Civil Aerpnautics Board said to-
‘species have yet to be determined, iday a Capital Airlines plane which |
(but the possibilities are obvjous. >Toke apart in flight over Mary-| . jland last May, killing 31 persons, |
CCC, though possibly more (snparentiy fell victim to a vicious important than mest, is Lut ene | thunderstorm.
ef many advances to come from
agriculture laboratories at col-
leges and universities across the Violent air turbulence’ which
lovertaxed the plane's structure
was listed as the specific cause. country. Michigan State, with
ecune 308 cermatnal and «. Sear | ‘Rhe plane, a Viscount turbo-
million-dollar annual budget for POP, fell to earth in flaming ipieces near Chase, Md., north- its experiment station boasts one of the larrest jeast of Baltimore, on, May 12. It
was bound from New York City
Agricultural research generally to Atlanta, Ga
produces less spectacular results| Capital dispatchers were criti-
than research in nuclerr physics cized by the CAB for failing to
medical science, and budgets pass along important weather
usually are considerably smaller. data to the plane's crew. The
Agriculture, however, is one vital CAB said this information might
area where the United States still have prompted the pilot to avoid
outstrips the Soviet Union by a the storm areas or take other]
wide margin. precautions
until it can be put to further tests
The American Cyanamid Co. its
doing that now, making quantities
available to researchers around
the world for testing on a wide
variety of plants
Fer hothouse operators, the
new compound may come as 4
special boon.
Tomatoes, for example, could be. LOs
grown in considerable less spact
LANDSCAPE ANGELES (AP)—Air pol
lution eXperts say a device in
lear scientist May
battle with vented by a nu
end this citys long
smog
Smith Griswold, head of the Air
Pollunen Control Distnmct, told the
supervisors Thursday
capable of
pre-1940 board of
that the device ‘‘is
rolling back smog to the
cons ‘eo
* *
WHITE'S NURSERY There wasn't any smog to men
71 S. CASS LAKE ROAD uon in Los Angeles before 1940
Supervisors immediately clam Weekdays 8:00-6:30 : ; spat : Closed Sundays ored for a state law requiring the
FE 5-47)1 invention—an afterburner exhaust
4 manifold—on all 196] cars sold in
California
e a 2 Griswold’s experts say
SANDERS haust is the last unchecked source
FOR RENT of
TRAVIS smog-producing hydrocarbons
HARDWARE Los Angeles. Exhaust fumes
iM Orchard Lake Ave FE 3-80"4 vwvvvvvvvrVvTy
i Mi i, Mn, An, A, A, Ml, Al, A, Ml he, dn,
auto eX
known to contribute to
pollution in other cities, too
Griswold said the new device
no more than $125 and alr
will cost
FALL CENTERPIECE
Cornucopia of Straw Flowers 4%
and Colorful Fall Fruit
Use it for any and all fall functions ... this basket of
artificial fruit, foliage and flowers.
Jacohbsen’s
FLOWERS ¢ipn GIFTS
101 N. Saginaw , FE 53-7165
Delivery twice daily to Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills
and Detroit.
FEED & FEEDERS FOR
WILD BIRDS REGAL REGAL WILD BIRD SUNFLOWER
5 Lb. Bag... 60; ILb.......... 19 10 Lb. Bag...... 1.10 5 Lbs.......... 92c¢
25 Lb. Bag...... 2.50 10 Lbs.......... 1.80
Cracked cor& & wheat mixed—right size—10 Ibs. 65¢
Whole corn & cracked corn .......... 10 Ibs. 58c
AN ATTRACTIVE DISPLAY OF
Wild Bird FEEDERS Priced From $1.00 Up
> e Popular Brands DOG FOODS Economically Priced
50 Lb. Bag “KASCO” sss 495
50 Lb. Bag “FRISKIES” 4.95
50 Lb. Bag “HUNT CLUB” 495
25 Lb. Bags 2.69
Strew-Cedar Bedding-Dog Accessories
_ FEED. & LAWN SUPPLY CO. PONTIAC STORE WE DRAYTON STORE
28 jackson Street
Phone FE 2-049! e DELIVER 4266 Dixie Hwy.
Phone OR 3-244]
Nuclear Scientist Is Boosting —
_ Auto Atterburner to Kill Smog llr pump—its only moving part—
oxygen onto the exhaust
blacksmith’s _bel- will be 80 to 90 per cent effective
in halting a car’s -emissions of to blow
iiAnc hydrocarbons gases the
* * * ws, to burn the gases at about
Dr Stuart Ridgeway of the 1,200 degrees
Thompson Ramo-Woolridge Corp. “This device would replace the
invented it normal muffler,” Dr. Ridgeway
Other campanies developed anti- Said. * It could also replace the
smog mufflers which use catalysts;heater as a source of car heat
—chemicals which burn the hydro- if there was a need for it—say if
carbons out of the fumes as they there wasn't room for a heater
pass through. Ridgeway'’s system UNder the hood
builds up the heat to the point * * *
where the hydrocarbons — smog The afterburner system has
producing elements in fuel—are nothing to be replaced and com-
consumed pletely eliminates carbon manox
* * * ide. The system. said Ridgeway
The Thompson Ramo-Woolridge ‘‘probably draws less from the op-
Device 1s a manifold with an erating efficiency of your car than
— ; ———— the windshield wipers.”’
He's now working on a version
{ the afterburner which would fit LJ
Sa Policeman where the muffler goes on norm-
y lal cars. Theoretically it could be
placed on any car now on the
Pals With Hood wuld have
Department Seeks to
Fire Officer in Europe Girl, 17, Angry;
With ‘Boss’ Accardo Scolds Adults
CHICAGO (UPI) — The police for Materialism
1 today to
vy and fire a licutenant accused
of touring Europe with the reputed
boss of Chicago's crime syndicate
Police Commissioner Timothy
J. O'Conner yesterday suspended
Lt. Anthony de Grazio.
O'Conner said information from
London's Scotland Yard disclosed “We need to re-establish values
and find a purpose in life,’ said that De Grazio ahd Tony Accar-
do, regarded as the hoodlum boss 17-year-old Sue Stewart of Tulsa,
in Chicago, were traveling com-, Okla.
panions. She is the youngest of eight
The police chief said he would) Youth members of the presiden-
file civil service charges with the tlally appointed 92-member na-
police trial board to dismiss De tional committee meeting here to
Grazie for *‘associating with known lay plans for the golden anni-
hoodlums.”* versary White House conference road. Manufacturers w
to allow room in the eng
partment for the heavily insulated
afterburner manifold
tm was ready
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A group
of angry young Americans took
adults to task today for caring
more about car tail fins than
school and for letting the United
States drift to ‘‘materialism by
default.”’
Scotland Yard detectives told OM children and youth next
O'Conner that De Grazio, his wf spring.
Henriette. and Accardo and his —_ —_——
wife, Calrice, were in the plush The famed American magician
Savoy Hotel together and checked Harry Houdini was first
out last Saturday bound for Paris. performer, i trapeze
\ that actually vacuums
\ your lawn!
19 inch—2 hp. mower
with bagging and leaf
mulcher attachments
21" self-propelled 3 hp. model, 113925
PICKS UP AND BAGS eee Crab grass
seeds » Elm and maple seeds + Grass clippings «
Twigs » Lawn litter - Dandelions » Weed seeds +
h, Cottonwood fluff - Leaves
Compare with any other rotary on the market!
This is the mower with “wind tunnel” design that
actually vacuum-cleans your lawn and bags vacu-
umed-up material for easy disposal! Outmows all
others, too. Built and backed by Toro — builders
of the world’s Host complete line of power mowers.
Easy Time Payments
KING BROS. 2391 PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE RD.
FE 4-0734 FE 4-1112 |
|. }
22 Bushel, Zipper Top
Trash & Leaf Burner
*1 68
GENUINE SKYLINE PRECISION
BINOCULARS Layaway Now for Christmas
7x35
7x50
7x35
7x50 Cen. Focus .
Cen. Focus ....... $28.88
Ind. Focus .......
Ind. Focus ....... $18.88
Values to 59.40
Hard leather case with extension shoulder
trap—
th
of Bino
Man UEURURUER, 13) te aa
COTO EN OTT
WTA TT
NEA SL UL NA i ie ies
neck strap and silicone cleaning
Regular $7.50. $1.00 with Purchase
culars.
COUPON @
18 Inch Bamboo
Leaf Rake |
3D a Without Coupon . 69¢
eee . = ORT CTW T OTT TOTO TWIST CIO TRSOT ORO)
SPECIAL
TIDEE
SPONGE
MOP
$
12--16--20 GAUGE ~
SHOTGUN SHELLS
$ 229 Box
$ 27 Box of LIGHT LOAD
HEAVY LOAD
Expires Oct. 29
Reg. *6.95 Bissell
Ht o| WITH PURCHASE OF
Or Full Gal. Bissell] Shampoo .......
i 22-02. Bissell Shampoo, Enough for 9x18 Rug $1.98
Or '/2-Gal. Bissell Shampoo ......... 3.98 ¥ BRAND NEW SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED
100% FIRST QUALITY
Rubber Insulated Boots
SKAGWAY INSULATED
Quilted Underwear
, i oS
| BIG FOUR 4. 9 7 ‘| SPECIAL for
Shampoo MasterSQ997_
oerees .
eee $6.95
we
DOO
All 1°" Sizes
16x25x1
20x 20x1
20x 25x 1
10x 20x 1
14x 20x 1
15x20x1
16x 20x 1 ese. (Pt i? esses rsesr= 7
?
SESS SIS
$443
Reg. 25c¢
FELT WEATHER STRIPPING
Reg. 1.35, Complete With Nails
Bronze WEATHER STRIPPING
FULL LENGTH
SUEDE GUN CASES
LIQUID ROOF COATING
IRONING BOARD PAD
TOM'’S HARDWARE 905 ORCHARD LAKE AVE.
J a ee
KELLY’'S HARDWARE 3994 AUBURN at ADAMS, AUBURN HEIGHTS
FE°2:-88I11
KEEGO HARDWARE No.| COMPLETE WITH SILICONE COVER ar 195
nt OOF
99°
54,53
99°
YOU ALWAYS GET MORE AT YOUR BIG 4 STORE
20 GALLON
Garbage
Can With
Cover
3041 ORCHARD LAKE AVE.
FE+>2-+-3766
McKIBBEN < CHILD'S 1576 UNION LAKE RD.
EM:3°3501
‘ ad
AVAILABLE
AT ALL
BIG 4 STORES
*
ba. .
“rvrPr +
vvveveureuCeueenaeeeeuweewewwers —... . .
PPPS SST Tee TT eT ee
-
Grain Market
Dealings Light é
CHICAGO «— Grain futures
were mostly easier in light deal-
ings on the Board of Trade today.
Wheat started fractionally lower
on scattered selling by brokers
representing commission houses. A
processor was the best buyer of
the December delivery.
Some early buying of the grain
was attributed to an unconfirmed
report ‘that Brazil had purchased | Apples, Northero
3,750,000 bushels of hard wheat |4DPiee Gre
overnight. Pakistan also is expect-
ed in the market soon for substan-
tial amounts of wheat.
* * *
Corn was off fractions on re-
ports of overnight rains over part/pm coy
where the corn Sebbes
and soybean harvests are under |Capbag. of the Midwest,
way.
Soybeans
fractionally higher around the
opening. Near the end of the first
hour wheat was %& to % lower,
December 2.00%; corn \%& to 4%
lower, December 1.095%; oats un- a
changed to % lower, December
74%: rye unchanged to '% lower,
December 1.35%: soybeans % to
4, higher, November 2.13.
Grain Prices
HICAGO GRAIN
CHIC scor Oct. 23 (AP) — Opening
grain
Wheat Bev. . cesses 1.15
De 2.00'% Oats
Mar 2044's Dec 7474)
May wercecee 2.01'.s Mar aie oe e
Jhy 1.84'2 May wee ne
Sep 1.86', Rye
Corn Dex ; 38 ia)
Dec. eeees 109%, Mar 79
Ma 1.14 May t 38'6
May ..116'» Jly 1.334%
Jly 1.1878
F od p {
. . .
Possible Radiation Is
Barrier in $7'% Million
Preservative Study
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
Army canceled a_ $7,500,000 food
preservative project Thursday aft-
er experiments with animals
showed that the new high-energy |C°
process resulted in possible radia-|
tion damage.
* * *
The action halted construction of
$1,000,000 plant at Stockton,
Calif., which was to have used
the high-energy irradiation pro-
cess designed to kill germs and
preserve foods for lengthy periods. a
Richard 8. Morse, Army re-
search director, told a news con-
ference results of the animal
experiments were inconclusive.
But he said sufficient doubt ex-
isted to call a halt to the con-
struction phase of the project.
He said some animals put on a
diet of the irradiated food showed
loss of fertility, a shortened life}
span, bleeding, blindness and heart}
damage.
* * *
However, he said anere was no
said the damaging effects might fats
have resulted from destruction of
vitamins by the high-energy pro-
cess and that no radioactivity re-
mained in the food,
News in Brief
William D, Johnstone, 51, 464
Auburn Ave., was found guilty of
drunk driving by Municipal Judge
Cecil McCallum yesterday and
fined $100 or
Jand County Jail,
Rummage Sale Friday, Oct. 23,
9 to 9; Sat., 24, 9 to 1 at the Re-
organized Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Saints, 19 Front
street, back Elks Temple. Adv.
Rum am, Old Cadillac
Market, ‘ord Oct. 23rd, 9 Fri., til 8. Sat, Oct: 24, 9 ‘til 4, Spon- sored by Kingsbury School. adv,
Rummage Sale D.A.V. No, 16)
Auxiliary, 199 Auburn Ave., Sat.,
8 A.M. adv
Rummage Sale, St. Vincent’s
Hall, 197 8S. ginny Saturday, Oc-
tober 24th, Adv
Rummage Sale Fri. and Sat. Oct.
23 and 24. 9 a. m. till 5 p. m. 128
W. Pike St. Spon by the
MOMS of America Unit 19. Adv.
Good Values in Reconditioned
Furniture of all kinds. A wide se-
lection of newly upholstered and
refinished articles in stock at the
Salvation Army Red Shield Store,
West Lawrence Open da
9:30 to 5; Friday evenings til 8.
Adv.
Rummage Sale Sat.. Oct, 24, 9-5.
4665 Dixie Hwy., Drayton. Plains.
Adv.
Colonial G R Sale,
Saturday, October oath ates a. m,
First Congregational Church. Adv.
Someone broke into A&W Root
Beer, 991 Baldwin Ave., and stole
an undetermined amount of
change from a cigarette machine
and jukebox.
Two radios valued at $92.44 were
stolen yesterday from the Fire- |bile
stone Store, 140 N. Saginaw. St.
Someone stole five off drums
‘ from the reat of the Progressive
Oil Co. station at 477 N. Saginaw
St., it was reported to Pontiac were unchanged to bon
15 days in the Oak-| » ii -
23, 1959
The
produce
Market aed waarmee
pot
ee
eevee ap tmaeeas ice
ssieecuss sbpeyeect seepssessess cesses
MABEETS Asien Rally
2B space age issues ran to 2 points
beseessece NEW YORK wm — Steels, elec-
tronics and most motors advanced
in a rallying stock market early
today. Trading was fairly active.
* * *
Pivotal issues rose from fractions
to about a point. Gains among
38 or better.
The market was irregular at
the start with heavy trading
putting the ticker tape behind
transaction for a four-minute
period. Sizable blocks were
traded, most of them in high
quality issues.
Gradually, plus signs increased,
jon a Taft-Hartley injunction there outnumbering minus signs by about
2 to 1. Brokers saw it as a tech-
Inieal rally after four days of de-
cline and said investors were ac-
;cumulating favorites at knocked-|
\down prices.
~*~ *« *
With the steel strike in its 101st|
day and a decision still pending
was little change in the over-all
background.
Gains of about a point or better
FRIDAY, OCTOBER - Rae
BEBE
ree
wok
+3 | + 3 }
fy were made by such issues as
eek ae . : U.8. Steel, Bethlehem, Good-
Peppers. Sweet, bu. ee nena 3 | year and International Nickel. toes, Gu-: ; } ; ;
a oe eget a1 | Opening blocks included: Sand!
iRedienes. red. doz. bu. : wd |ard Oil (New Jersey) unchanged By BEN PHILEGAR
adishes, white, doz. <2 ares: “ic AP Automotiy er Rutebegns. bu. . <, '209/at 46 on 6,800 shares: American | t e Writ
Squash. Acorn. bu es 189 Motors up *%& at 67 on 5,00 DETROIT — Chrysler's Valier
ross | ot ee hog cu ncucccueuce eS American Can off *. at 425, on bowed into the new compact ¢
oe ser ee ts seeeees seeee So he 5,000; Lear up %s at 1844 on 5,000; field today, completing the lineup
|Turnips; dos. behs. . vec ues . 1.10 and Studebaker- Pac kar d un- of 1950 models.
iTurnigs, topped BU. ....5..500-5... Sine at 21 on 5.000. | * * "
GREENS The V , ; 1¢ Vahant is longer, heavi Cabbage. Ro. ow. .. . $180 |Collard, No. t bu. o. 1.28] N Y k St k jand more powerful than its new ew Tor OCKS . | Kale, bu 1.50 irivals—Ford’s Falcon and Chey
IMustard. No. 1, bu. at .
| Sorrel ta MICO ee 1.78 Psd YORK. Oct 23 (AP) Stocks rolet’'s Corvair. It still is consi ie
Spinac ‘ ; . 2.00 gures alter decimals are eighths ab ys ian thine Soey sized Bwies oy i ie gc Ee al 160 ‘uslesy: Hay .. 4081" l maller than standard-siz
Turnipa, (OE. oe. oso 6052s os. eaeaccuee -25 Air Reduc 77.6 Kennecott , .. 912 American Cars.
[Allied Ch 117) s-Kimb Cl« 62 6|
— ay GREENS Pray _ Kresge. SS ..- ee While the Falcon bears con
abbage, er seersoccce orger : : Banat .
Ddive, bu. .. _ poceereteseses a 1 Alcs Ltd 32.2 ae Ginae 70°| Siderable similarity to the Ford
See hy CO RCOCOSAUICOC EEC IEE EOE ave) Arcee . 100 ' c&l 107 t- carrie :
Retines, beef, BGs cc. cccccececceess . 250 Am Airlin .... 26 ole My 925 and the Corvair mulls om i Romaine, bu. on Goes moece 2.25 Am eal ‘ “He Lockh Airc 266; same ‘greenhouse’ window ar .* ’ 79 § :
jaa M&Pdy .. 94 yc oe 5, rangement of other General Mo
Livestock ka ae a Lone 8 Gas 396) tors cars, the Valiant resembles
|Am N Gas ... $7 0 [ete Nash |. 774 Reither Plymoutd nor any of the
DETROIT LIVESTOCK . jAm Tel @& T:1 783 Mack Trk ... ss other Chrysler cars. ; Am Tod 02 Manning ..... 2 DETROIT, Oct. 22 (AF) Cattle— 4 4 atone Comair ~ tenn {31 | salable ae Small supply slaughter steers arose at) 49) Vahant, Corvair and Fal :
and heifers in a cleanup affair; prices armour & Co 732 into the price structure left oper
unchanged; cows steady: smal) lot high rebel Ss '8 . ' } good around 1000 ib steers 27.25: scat- Aveo Corp ... 1 1904 when Plymouth Chevrolet !
—— standard and good steers and Balt & Oh .. 9) | Ford dropped their lowest pi heifers 2250-2650: utility cows 1650- Beth Steel . 48 4 7 ee - :
pean canners and cutters 14.00-16.50 Boeing Air ... ao” jines
| hett mpared last week slaughter steers and —_— Alum 177
ers stead cows fully 5S0c higher rden ° 1229 ‘KR MO :
— 1.00 h or: bulls steady to :trong: | Borg Warn ... 26 6 FFER MORI
t four 4s high choice to prime Briggs “ig ... 265 However all thre« pp {
1090-1137 Tb. steers 26.15 early: -mall jot |Brist, My |. $1.5 5 1) ' prime yearling steers late 28.75: most -ler Beike ; 646 Offer considerably more than the
\choice steers early in week 27.50-28.50; Bu ° } 50 4 7 ~ck I mn the Diz
late 27.28-28.25; high choice to prime|Burroughs |... 28 | Nat Gri ¢q stripped-down versions of the bi; 8.50; good to low choice steers 25.50-|Calum & H .. 234 yo tang 1092 ger Cars
37-28; standard to low good steers 23 a eed : ah NY Central 12
; most good to average choice heif- . Norf & W 944 he Valiant is described hy ers 24.$0-26.75: few lots average to nigh CD Pac ae rage 38 2 i : jehetce 833-840 Ib. heifers 2700, few camial All ‘38 Nor Pac ag 7| Harry BE. Cheesborough, general
jhead up to 27.25; standard to low good 15 Nor Sta PW 231 re > Ply JeSoto
heifers 22.00-24.50: utility hetfers 18 00- pa Mead re ned ie manager of the Plymouth U
and cutters 1400-1650; utility bulls . 3 4 Valiant division, as a family-size 21.50: til Cater Trec ... 31
EaSie wi ck lie Oso 66 6 Gi $22. economy car, with elegant style ° ppg Cities Svc oo 4723 V ir 23 ~ - .
_ medium and good 690-740 Ib. Year-|Ciark Equip .. 82 pl 453) and luxurious ride.
"ya pga ap — |Coca Cola ...1574 Param P 442 , enoug one = 3T8 ; a 412 The Val > feet aches
to make a market. Comoared last week | bene el Seer! Aid ; ie 17 4 The Vah anu is 15 fee 4 inch
— most choice and prime vealers Con Edis 602 Pa RR 163 long, 4 feet 6 inches high and 5
00: standard and good 25.00-'Con N Gas 561 Pens! Col 226 1! Spd hes > The F r 138.00: cull and utility 15.00-25 00 ont mak 435 a ~ aK feet 1 inches wide. The Falcon
Sheep—salable $0 Not enough done to Cont Can 473 Phelps D ..... 56 is 15 feet 1 inch long, 4 feet b's
make a market. Compared last week Cont Cop&S8 13 Philco 254 \ ok — fe *h slaughter lambs 0c lower: slaughter (Cont Mot AO) eine ‘12 inches high and 5 feet 10 inches
[toe ancien woshed sisughirs lames 16 66. ne gs rH Proct & G 836 wide. The Corvair is 15 feet lon
121.80: utility to good lambs 15 90-29 00 Corn Pd AG cE oon oO Se { feet 3 inches high and 5 feet 7
Jaut, ta, chotce naushter Cowes 4 00-638: Curtis Pub "+ 124 Repunite ‘BU: 704 inches wid ° er lambs ere + Revion 56 : Det Edis » 42.7 Rex Dru 471 * * *
Pigg ig rae 150 — — 250 Doug a ofl Reyn Met 9 The Val 1 101 horsep } er: wetehts ov 250 1» Jo ae \ it , : nse S
jand sows steadv: three bends inlxca No ean 2554 oat tl , 494 engine mounted in front on a
|2 and 3 184-220 Ibs. 13 75 mall lot East Air lL - 372 Safeway St 26.6 ~ on , “ “ |mixed No. 1 and 2 198 Ibs. 1425: mixed (Bast Kod ..... 906 &t Ree Pay . 53 degrec slant, providing a 1OW No. 2 and 3 250-300 Jb. butchers 12.50- |Eaton Mfg ... 394 Scoville Mf .. 254 hood line The Falcon has a ‘)
13.00: mixed grades sows 300-490 Ibs./F] Auto L ... 506 Sears Roeb ,. 48 7 Heed No. 2 and 3 400-600 Ibs. (fl & Mus .... 77 Shell Oil 72 horsepower engine, also mounted
-10.75: boars 900-1950. Compared |Emer Rad ....15.7 Simmons oN ront. The Corvair has an 30 week ago barrows a gilts 1.00 higher; |Frie RR ..... 13.2 Sinclair 1.7 in front. is a
ws 50-78 highe \Ex-Cello-O ... 34.3 Secon 4) ~ | .. 123 Sou Pac 69
\Pocd Mach tes ee ean et |Ford Mot - 81.2 See . | Std Oil Ind .. 406
Pouliry and Eggs pega Bi ice: £4 Burglaries Solved, ae tad gag Std OU Of xs. 58 7 5 oRETROMT POULTRY oo teh Den 121 Stud Pack 21 ETR ( ) — Prices r : : Sun O} 622 . pound Se Detroit for No. 1 quality — dota . Modi Suther Pap ... 351 Chief Howlett Says
ve poultry: en Elec ..... Swift & Co 42 Heavy type cae 16-17: light type hens ren Pds ..... 966 Tenn Gas 313
9: ery Say broilers and fryers 3-4 Ibs. aa es . - 1 Texaco pas 3 .
es «6184-19; Barred Rocks 21-22; G Tel & -. 715 Tex G 8u 2OCH ESTE ‘he burelar caponettes under § Ibs. 20; over five lbs. Gen Time . 742° Textron 224; ROCHESTER The burglary
25-26; ducklings 26. Gen Tire 725 Timk R_ Bear 584 of the Carmichael School Bus Lines Genesco : 32.4 Tran W Air .. : _
perad DETROIT EGGS Gerber Prod .. 486 Transame 04 garage early this week and other
IT. Oct. 22 (AP) — Eggs fob. Gillette 60 Twent Cer 2 + ote ie area are VEL iD eler silt taiecacctiiat Raerae stake (Oueeel Bn as uinactenad ,.2 break-ins in the area are believed
igo Goodrich 85.5 Un Carbide 934 to have been solved with the an
tes—Grade A jumbo 43-44: extra Goodyear 123) Un Pac ae n 18-vear-old Ut th large 41-42: large 37-40: medium 24-30. Gt A&P ..... 376 Unit Air Lin 42 (rest of an IS-year-o1 Bitar fhe Le
small 19-22; Grade B large 29-36: Browns Gt No Ry . $1.2 Unit Atr 28 Rochester Police Chief Samuel
—Grade A large 37-40; medium 23-27: Greyhound 22 Unit Fruit 255 . ;
sie 21: checks 19-21 Gulf Oil 111 Un Gas Cp + Howlett said today.
mercially graded eggs: Hammer Pap 34 I§ Rub ..ee. a .
om eee A large 33-34: medium /Holland F ... 113 US Steel... 985 William H, Dickson, of 2121
— rewne—Grade A large 32-33; me- Homesth ose Ve Scion a ; 5 Burnham St., has been charged
Indust Ray .. 38 | =e a" 372) with breaking and entering in nd .... 82! festg k ye
. Infand Bt 464 Westg El... 95 the nighttime. He waived exam-
Ox en Fa H lf 4 Bus Mch Mit Miles a Ce 423, ination before Rochester Justice * Ss c .
yg ure qa Siz Nick £8 Woolworth 59.3) Luther Green and was bound
Int Paper 128 Yale & Tow .. 32 K . . 5 nt Shee 351 Young sew .. 39 | over to Oakland County Circuit
not Int Tel&Tel . 384 Yng'st Sh&T 126 | Court,
Johns Man 495 Zenith Rad ..101 |
Jones & L 145 | Dickson's bond was sect at $1,000.
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
8/Calif. @ — Crack test pilot Scott
Crossfield starred in a short but
v. tense aerial drama high over the
California desert Thursday.
* * *
His oxygen supply failed mo-
ments before the X15 rocket ship
was to be launched on its third
powered flight.
The supply was restored aftcr a
minute or two, but the flight was
called off.
* * *
It happened at 45,000 feet as the
X15 was to be dropped from its
BS2 mother ship. Plans called for
it to spurt to 80,000 feet, then
land on a dry lake bed.
Business Notes L. W. Patterson, 4567 Dow Ridge,
Orchard Lake, has been elected
ogee of the National Automo-
Transporters Association at
the American Trucking - Associa-
tion 26th annual convention now in
session at the Statler Hilton Hotel
in Los Angeles.
Patterson is the general mana-
ger of the Motorcar Transport
police. ( Company of Pontiac. STOCK AVERAGES
Compiled by
NEW YORK, Oct. 233 — The Associated Press
30 5 60
Indust nels vil, 27 ks |
|Prev. day ......326.4 13 9.0)
Week ago ......335.7 re 70 209
Month ago .....329.4 1320 953 220
Year ago ..... 290.9 1269 854 197 M
1959 high .,... 355.6 1476 1026 235.8
1959 low . 306.1 127.2 934 2115 11958 high . 3120 1365 95.7 2143
1958 low 2347 809 729 1566)
° 4 F; :
Airline Won't Dispute
Loss of North Routes
PETOSKEY (®—Capital Air
Lines officials say they will not)
contest a Civil Aeronautics Board
examiner's recommendation to sub-
stitute North Central Air Lines
for .Capital in northern Michigan. |
District Manager Dick Lapeer at t|
Petoskey yesterday relayed a state-|
ment on the matter from the|
firm's Washington headquarters. It)
said:
“After very careful, study and)
much consideration, Capital felt it!
best to accept the examiner's rec-|
Yommendations in the Great Lakes}
service case and gill not file an;
exception to the ; examiner’s re-
port.”
Capital pioneered northern Mich-
igan airline service after World)
War II with flights to Traverse
City, Pellston and Sault Ste. Marie.
lin the burglaries, arrested by
\police when he was reported to be
| spending excessive amounts of
|money in local stores. He is alleged
ito have taken $600 from the local
bus garage
* * *
Three hundred dollars has been He was
jrecovered, Howlett said. He added
that Dickson's arrest also clears
up one other local and three Oak-
land County area break-ins,
A juvenile, said to be involved
also has been
japprehended, the chief said, The
|youth’'s name was withheld by Po-
Hee,
Boy, 11, Struck by Car; |
Is Treated at Hospital |
An 11-year-old boy was treated
lat Pontiac General Hospital and
‘released after being struck by a’
jcar on Perry street near Gladstone
Place yesterday afternoon. |
* * *
Michael P. Painchaud, 20 Taylor
'St., was hit by a car driven by
James H. Hester Jr., 62, of 79%
Montcalm St.
Hester told police he did not sec
the youth crossing because a
parked truck obscured his vision. Rochester | occasions, added gasoline to the
tank and returned the ear to the
officer's home each time
Asked why he didn't take
Chryster Imperial belonging
Patrolman Jack ©. Chappell's
neighbor, the boy replied, “I like
a straight stick and you've got
a real nice car.”
* * a
to
MOUNT CLEME? P
Alton 1]
wing tomer
W
ss Co.'s tomation
In new will
* h,
Chappell was told by another
neighbor that his car was being
“used” each night between 11
p.m. and 4 a.m.
Officer Chappell,
about the = story
checked his gasoline
ularly, sat
revolver,
outside, row on
Cre
pliant
be)
t
skeptical
because he
gauge reg- |vio
up with his service ja dispute over ne
watching his car parked
He dozed Wednesday tor The ! lermanded
moment, woke and found the
car gone! charged f iM
He he dashed the five
street in’ time to car
fading into the night. hibiting pie
Fellow officers picked up the Juds
youth in quick order and found hearing the contempt
that he had been arrested seven terday and said he
times previous for car theft. We ederal
a
said into
of a court
{ line vy
completed vee his
ke
A Noe
on
will h
His TruIng dnesday
YOU CAN PAY MORE BUT YOU
CAN'T BUY
the
ti
ma
votiation
d
ne. State Companies
says it A 25TH SERVICE ANNIVERSARY — Two eral manager of Pontiac Motor Division,
Pontiac executives found a moment during their sents the traditional watch award to Frank
busy new car announcement schedule to observe Bridge, general sales manager Bde, who ie.
a 25-year service anniversary. S. FE. Knudsen gan his career as a ca aleésman in
(left), General Motors vice president and gen- sumed his present position with Pontiac in 6.
‘Last of ‘Little 3’ for 60 Appears
Valiant Rounds Out Car Lineup
{
¢ ympared rsepower engi mounted 1 but no mpt -
' that speed n open highwa
The Corvair engine is mostiy ALL 3 COMFORTABLE
aluminum and is flat, pancake All thre e comf{
style. Both the Valiant and Fale ino supp -. room t
con use considerable aluminum. = ¢, 1 inches I {
All are six-cylinder engines. back headroc
Here are some personal observa-,OF better than i }
tions from. this writer who 5 Cars,
ridden and driven th: Lec room in hack is fess. bat
Al e in the Corvair there is an almost
All three of the cars are cap flat floor. The floor hump in the
4 running well at turnpike speed Falcon and Valiant has been re
The Valiant probably is the fast duced proportionately to the size
I drove it 97 m.p.h. on a test t of the car.
I f ] t } the
. hiche t t +}
Young Auto Thief «- z t novelty . f . r \ trans
Likes Officer's Falcon the mos
Straight Stick Job * * 8 t I f th
DETROIT (UPI)—Poltce in easiest steering. Valiant is th
Detroit have captured a most with ¢ | I
unusual car thief, a 16-year-old 30 1 t With ¢
boy who stole a policeman’s careful « I nad proval \
“straight stick’? Ford on several get 20 in {
Will Open Hearing
fo Close Cross Plant
Circul
open
Unitec
» close Just a Moo Away From Sausage
Girlish Bull Sold at Last
SOLIHULL, Fated (UPI) —{ Other sources said the purchaser
Brook Mandore, the: sweet - tem-|
pered Ayrshire bull, got another
lease on life today.’This time Brit-
ish pride and journalistic enter-
prise were reported to have rushed |
to the rescue. |
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. William Titcumb,
owners of the gentle animal, said
they had given up hope that Brook
Mandore would settle down to a
quiet pastoral life in the United |
States — too much red tape, too
jmuch delay.
They said today they had sold |
the animal to a party who has
| assured him a long and happy
| 826 for-the
t
é i
1
hinery
iny
1aws J
ol
‘
10-day
case yes
2nd down
ETTER!
Mono Chain Saws
2'/2 HP.
16 inch cut
os he
Just received a shipment of chain saws from the
Mono Factory. We are able to offer these famous
saws at reduced prices because we have bought direct
from the factory! And remember: when you buy
your chain saw at Lee’s, you are guaranteed of serv-
ice and parts at all times!
4.7 Cubic Inch Displacement inch piston
Tillotsor
starter full 4 7 cubic
Direct drive
Recoil Engine has
placement
phragm carburetor.
8.1 Cubic Inch Displacement Full 8.1 cubic inch piston displacement high
compression engine. Outperforms many saws
with higher horse-power Ame ae
24 Ibs., less bar and chain. ;
We Service What We Sell
LEE’S SALES 921 Mt. Clemens Street | §9”
FE 3-9830 ick the plant
has
n
i «
der pro-
fe in pasture. They refused to
name the purchaser but said def-
initely he was not an American.
They also said Brook Mandore
was not going to Ireland which
first offered him political refuge
“We have received another of-
fer but are not able to say from
whom,’ Titcumb said. “We have
accepted the offer and signed an
agreement that makes Brook Man-
perfectly dore safe."
~ Report Earnings
KALAM. ise Pp — oe oo
for
Were the
rarer
299.000 for
It
1959 S Sales
ota thi
compared with $42
period
for the
$8 615.000
$7533
Earnings for
iod were 61 cents a shar quartet
OO
ne Ss year
q8 its
third
ym pared
000 in the
the pe
against same 1 said
earnings
a irter were
th earnin
1958 peri c
gs of
od
HX cents a year ago,
P DETROIT —
earnings
ended Sept
61
earnings
Io8 third quart:
X cents a share. The
third quarter sales were
mpared with $1 |
19938 period Udslite Corp
for the third
7 30 w
cents 1 SALA suys Its
quarter
3 equal to
“
Avy BS ty: with
¥
a)
TR0.000 « DETROIT
f $F Third
mpat quarter
les ed witl
{1{ d have
en reported by Wyandotte Chem
ils Corp. F:arnings for the qu
1, 16¢ S
<
tw OO0 in the 1958 peri
$ to
a share, ¢ ympared with 195
third guarter_ eapgings of $1,272,500
equal to 80 cents a share. ter were 0, equal
ae wvvvrvvrvrvvvrvrrVrTy cents
s
About eight million American
families own one or more pet birds away
| American bidder,
'Titcumbs last ni was a British newspaper—but up
to edition time today no newspaper
was owning up to being the buyer.
JUST A SHORT MOO
Brook Mandore was just a moo
from the slaughterhouse
when the Titcumbs began trying to
sell him. The British Ministry of
Agriculture feared his girlish looks
would be passed on to future bylls
and that the Ayrshire breed would
suffer.
The Titcumbs thought they had
a buyer in Ireland at first, but
regulations rose to stop the deal.
They were sure they had a buyer
in Tom O'Loughlin, a Seattle,
Wash. fight manager, the No. 1
but again red
tape arose.
The importation of Brook Man-
dore into the United States would
violate regulations against bring-
ing in animals from countries
where there is hoof and mouth
disease. O'Loughlin telephoned the
cht not to be
the unknown Brit- aise
heartened—but
itish buyer turned up today.
Need Another
+(uest Room? Use Pontiac’s
SAVOY MOTEL To Accommodate
Your Out-of-Town
Guests
Fully Carpeted
Tiled Bath—Shower
Restiul Double Beds
FREE TV
HI-FI MUSIC
Air Conditioned
Sound Proofed
FREE ICE
Double ‘
Single $7
Twin $11 Kitchenettes
F120 S 5. Telegraph Rd.
> -_f_ 4. 4 ty ty ty te te te te to te te , 4
}
z af
“It's o s on the | Way”?
BEAMS—PLATE—RE-RODS—
PIPE—BARS & FLATS—TUBING—SASH—ADJUSTABLE
& FIXED COLUMNS—CULVERTS FOR INDUSTRY and
BUILDING TRADES
115 Branch St.
FE 4-0586
5 Acres of Storage Facilities
. Overhead Crane; C.T.R.R.
RE-MESH—ANGLES—CHANNEL Pontiac
8 Oz. Net — 12
RIB EYE
2 =O.
Fillets 24 per B
T-BONE 10
Steaks Trimm
GIANT CHOPPED
DEL MONICO BONELESS
STEAKS
BREADED
Vealettes Fed Fed STEAKS Warehouse Sale BUTTERFLY SIRLOIN STRIP
STEAKS
49. Beef Patties Man's; Size Per Box
eft
ox
10-Ox. Net
ed 10 per Box 715° Ea.
223-Ox. Net
56 pet Box 10° Ea.
8-Ox. Net
12 per Box 53 Ea.
223-0. Net Ea. 11'/ 7
36 per Box 2
All Products
ALL MEAT U. S. GOV’T INSPECTED
@ Wrapped for Your Freezer @ Save—Quantity Buying
@ Closely Trimmed @ Box Lots Oly
Guaranteed
124 W.
SATURDAY ONLY 9 to 4
PONTIAC HURON
en Ne
The Weclres
Us, ‘Weather Bureaw Forecast
‘ loudy, cool
(Details Page 2) - THE PONTIAC PR
117th pane ake KE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 24, 1959—32 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS
You Gotta Start Off Each Day .
*¢
POODLIN’
about to say
maestro,”’
Durante,
AROUND — Looking as if he’s
“Lemme hear that high note,
and go into an imitation of Jimmy
this poodle by the name of Mozart salad. So, hurry
can start re ‘2
AP Wirephete
(naturally) can pound out a mean batch of ivory
and get your requests in so he
for his seth
2 Top TV Quiz Figures Romney Urges
Revise Statements NEW YORK (®?—Charles Van Doren and Hank, Says
two top money winners, have revised) Futile Until Causes Are Bloomgarden, Stop-Gap Taxes Permanent Plan
their original statements about the television quiz show’ Dealt With “7 2
“—,
_|FBI Unmasks Leaflet Attack ,
sFromUS.RaidedCuba- Could Use Little More Seasoning Ex-Castro Chief
Led Attackers;
Reprisal Feared | American Base Could
| Be Shut-Down as More
Pamphlets Are Dropped
“
Williams Calls
Legislators for
Tax Conference Pledges All-Out Effort.
for Speedy Solution
to State Woes
WASHINGTON \?! — The LANSING (®?—Gov. Wil- man who once led the
liams and key jegigtators | Cuban air force for Fidel
will huddle Tuesday on a} Castro led the flight that
tax answer to state finan-| showered leaflets against
Castro in Havana Wednes-
day. the FBI has revealed.
Meanwhile, mysterious
shpped past Cuban
alr force patrols and show- cial perils, with the gov-|
ernor pledging to “turn |
every wheel” to reach a.
speedy solution. |
The conference was called planes
by Williams yesterday two
|hours after his return here ered Havana with more
antigovernment leaflets
~ | from a month’s trip abroad. Friday
| He acknowledged Repub- The raids were the latest in a . .
SETICS ha bevan Wednes | lican Senate spokesmen will dav th \ . weht dhe nue KA a
how of opposition to Fidel Castro
nce he took over the Cuban gov- |speak with the strongest
| voice. HAS NO BEEF — Gary Neil! }, ENJOYS a bite UPL Iciephote
“Twenty-One.”
Both men showed up voluntarily but separately at
Dist. Atty. Frank S. Hogan’s office Praaay: Hogan said
the changes they madet
were “substantial” but de-' |
DETROIT «®—The chairman of
the Citizens for Michigan organi-
zation has urged consideration of
stop-gap taxes to meet the state's
renewed financial crisis,
ae knockout of the use eae
tax increase act of seven weeks goti
jago. PITTSBURGH (AP)-
ators return to the Steel ne
bargaining p Bot! ire
« te t Ais . : sure to end the dispute. but tained a Taft-Harth
of free bar 3 é ge : | ( = -e barbecue at a huge feast put on by the pers and strkers lined up at the d ntows ernment New Year's Dav. “What will they accept? What), Downtown Gary Council to boost the morale of siche ilk barbecue to vet their share of the’ * * ® do they propose to do?" These, Indi: ; harden ‘ F i , } tact GAvenhire in the lite he said, are the important ques- this ——— town, hard hit by the stecl strike QU pounds of beef that city merchants at P ; bn L ay wae pe tions ‘ Singing “Happy Days Are Here Again,” shop for the event Us, edi : mits BY Ue ed by the el n response to
“The time has come to cut out lestions Friday ght He would _ this bickering and get a tax pro Pressure Mounts in 102-Day Strike t comment on the report, but it | Kram ready for the Lagistature’s | Known that tt MAts bore his return Thursday,”’ he said.
ith
The governor's arrival found the| The FBI's account will prob asp reeling from the jolt fea wbhly stir even more fervor into y the Supreme Court's 100-mi Castro's denunciations of — the
United States. His government is
expegted to increase demands
* * | table late today under orders to ne.ther the industry 1 the Un aad an 04 : rs that the United States take steps clined to specify just what Gridders Bring Cheer : * * * jtry for a speedy settlement of the ted Steelworkers would comment ~~ ™ ‘ MST’ ' to prevent unfriendly flights to they were George terday xu ‘I 7 state-| Even before he came, adminis- 102 - day - old nationwide steel on possibilities of a new offer be. the mulls for x0 day But the Cuba : ment yesterday that ichigan’s > g ; we US) Third Cireunt ¢ 1 Ay
Hogan said the possiits of £9 PNH, Waterford siterma points up the tty of Stone towers Renee ace strike aoe seals Mee rates at A. The fate the hi ! perjury action is being considered. Seek ral permanent solution for the the state’s spending hatches. njyunction pending outecon PAS es ABA My SU. but that nothing would be done un- . , avid cs tax problem without first dealing nion appen n doubt. tod he ‘ til after. Van Doren appears Nov. omecoming activities of Pon- a Others more dtastic were being = linister ¢ s ea Iv b : , ith its fundamental causes. These 2 in Washington before a House| tiae Northern and Waterford high ie listed ab | set in motion, including post. Our es er ey IT * s * ter criticism of the United tates subcommittee investigating TV renee were dampened he —Citizen ‘apathy poned use—for lack of The court directed beth sides TAnhicelatactratt Castro made ut both schools’ football mane a t ake eve effort to settle eile threat) regatding— the a | tanmeaith came through with | —EXCeSsive politcal partisanship aad stating cash—ot weary com | Al fter Mother Bars Blood | mie sto te ste as m5 i , eams came rough wit : | plete institutional units at Pilym- the strike by collective bargair lantana bas« Van Doren, 33-year-old English | biz victori and economic group power. ne instructor at Columbia University | * ie - eaten (uecaennes aes ¥ elas: age euth and Whitmore Lake. ing while the appeat was being * * * No : I —Reluctance of sta eaders : : ie : ge he reparations continued f who won $129,000 on ‘Twenty- | 19-13 and Waterford prenate to sage ieneanlliny for nec- | Board members gave him a [ill- If an 11-year-old Berkley girl has to have brain sur- veel i ‘ ccpcted earl ne ee ! ti . lled by C : om agen first at pmol Berkley, 19-18. essary programs. jin on their efforts igery, as doctors believe, she's going to get blood transfu-. 0, eG Ei Siosion ae - otett the office with his attorney, Cari J. . . | i j - . de akin . 4 In a game at Flint, Pontiac | Archaic state government oj ee summoned s bipartisan Sions she needs—despite her mother’s objections on Pye py ce aerial raids and to show contin . al en wae, Beaben SS Re racine: session in his office at 2:30 p.m. | Teligious grounds joint ne collapsed last Wag support: for the revolution He spent about an hour with) Northern, 19-0. —The number and complex inter- teed: : week in. Washineton eure cated in a marathon Asst. Dist. Atty. Joseph Stone, who’ The football weekend continues reiniiooshig of the lane accu Wayne County Juvenile Judge Nathan J. Kaufman » (Continued on Page 2. Col 2) had investigated the rigging of Sunday at Wisner Stadium when lation of state problems. |\NO BATTLE made Carol Krumm. 3309¢ MITCHELE GRATIFIE® quiz shows. Then he talked several’ crosstown rivals St. Fred and * * * “The worst thing thal’ could hap- Kipling St., a ward of his” fides Fauhaan look lecd on In Washi - ; minutes with Hogan St. Mike clash in the 25th game Rosmey indicated he would acc |PeM 0 the state is to have another oe i os fie | mother Ph hin dhe i .
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1959
in Birmingham
=
—
ly of Five ; | -
P 4 ° Lad ooms | | Family of Commission Will Learn in Collis in Water Cost | . | Hurt in Collision of Hike in Water Ss. :
e
”
+
. aie A Serve Education With Food . sesh stair aE sth ae ae ;
: .
Crash
r 2 ham City Commission will be By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG [well and should [Rccuomed to eating that songs
Seriously in water costs, The -pradents protahiy den'rjshe says.
"he: . ot eek alize, and the parents may
injured Department chert he, 2 cafeterias
‘tytn irting fe 6. hend-sa|pty ef Dear hao Pontiac's school system vate
bay ona the Southeastern more than a Bearty lusch st
Nine Mile ta Seetashakd | Comey Woter Aumochy thet afternoon meal,
a increase of 12 cents ‘The additional cones sail
* isn feet will become Py ae
seat ee tera Cats ' dich of obo
luadiep Rd syne have been paying an average of linchrooms is a side
son, ‘abe "s” Women #144 per 1,000 cation,
ous
established welch Ni tag Meg ers
Beaumont Hospital. ois tame te. Margaret Johnston feels
Officials at the a lca) oll te seine jest as tnportast.
Hagan, 4; and twe oth- feet, effective .
Bruno 9: and |1,000 cuble A dietitian, Miss Johnston is the
er childres, Kenneth, fet. |1960. first to fill the newly created posi-
Marelyn, 7, wilt be relensed * tion of coordinator of school food
lowing treatment today. ep cuteatieh suited to services.
Driver of the other car, Walter the rate increase for ‘NOT JUST FEEDING STATION’
S. Jenking. 2. of 2TH Kennowsy | ¢ November and December, room is not just a feeding station,
:
released from hospital. % coe ae but is an educational facility as
. buying
“_ * thet yp peter 4 -
in larger amounts.
Ragan told Southfield pee Pa aX. Miss Johusten says she decen’t
Julian oe G6 asf have te Bg time ao comin . prepare ene mens fer use tn all Pentine Presp Photo Oo ails deelioueee on oa er at ee dees at lons ree 0 en pas T'S FOR LUNCH? — Margaret Jéhnston is responsih a as lee dees a rate decrease may be possible, “Pontiac has the second largest WHA ee ee wane 00 be tatentansed. Yockey said. school lunch program in Michi-| for providing in school cafeterias. A dietitian, she said, —_ . : Z ” says. “Each school whe.cat their haches coordinator of school | Jenkins was not held, police Two area and their t clic feeaio in the city may hove cases] tan uret w fl the nowty crested posiaon of ener Ronn mn ON iB vy ted, A ,
Airport for a vacation SPECIAL DELIGHT
Ford SS a lps og pens pepo, etiring Doty Dreads New Year |ra'o= United States, the Sovie | o Pre-ispecial lunch favorite of its own.
Y 0 other nations have agreed|que said that satisfactory prepares
Ww. & preatdent at tee cheat cooperation gress is being made. nd pe accordingly.” , distance and direction.”|with an ear peeled to tind out] |W. Tracter inaalfonpecra'sae Seeddin'Gae memaere Giegeee a ec oe pees (Continued From Page One) "Whe serving his second trm| when the Tage would be loving] Oftt Lated Trt : be con- produce Miss Johnston
j-|
bench to return : of the fied) Tanker a eqseeed) aae|easurcesaa acnem aa ane ot Penneyivante Sate University |yer by profession, judge by acci.| White serving his we seaiveatlacaven an ay eee tinued \Sclgating couteion te ne Gs) SASe eke aufwet ts soam (27, °7, weston Sater bs 2” |first elected in 1912 and Com-|StAYED Seat actu. comhae? _ib seaty could make tbe South kos waseand area the Sots|oAeTe she maloed| ine How did he become a -lawyer: nay "i" af a Dee beuhigun Judge Doty said the ol ly Sens Saoe Pole congnent 2 jtboratory of i |Pole for peaceful and scientific] See BOUGHT THE BOOK National Guard Regimen, seeng|cOMDlimen ever pam was] by Fonts ‘Tr eee eg caused by pressing ‘ival terrors] She took —— (emul palin ia Weskad esa carviea wis Can’ Pacis ter iS ia bel Slerces erie as Fifty-two other expert sem was announced|al claims, ag ia City Club and re. a this book store anditive Expedition on snaal 4a ak to stay on and finish out os vrag(salesmen ae Ping “we ins Soemigae Nosed ising] Ll Hen ‘greed Astarvinalonaleed tare. srcen years, rising|* l'ed a book of the life of James far lcney aacipuane ta 007 pictorial don, Parid so Ramee. if c
was
3 | :
. Sa
ea eet me ON
tee vert}, He Femained on the bench Ae x iat coe Johnston left tor New Yorkin Congress, ts for the} But his life as a civilian didn’t}. oite knowing it would mean Merritt D. Hill y jthere should be prohibited. — ild’s Restaurants as| He put down 75 cen ill has/last long. Feeling it his duty to re- rede gh hcore ot exper Mumma vice president ’ ’ “*-* « «* SaaEacsnes of tsa gasdeation astlback 04 df oda bie. Ha ats wTeahington and paaved Baa payst-|"aiaals, Now ie is enahie to spdh/Townshio, | viee peat 0 ind al Friday night's agreement on|°° Me Michiga it. ' n ink-|Washington and passed his physt-| ro siection—although he —— . They took ay means -5|returned eee Coteadey | ic iwcaall ala is \coteoiiabaedd ia: Ue eee ee y age into custody, but had booked only : second hurdle passed. ering ne mapervising luncheeern {ling that someday I mig tenant as a flier. of 7. | nit ct 9 yours Ser jndgns. : Wi 60 by early today. Most of the Over New Raid Sa ag Agel be the| saamamur of de Dieartors scheots, |* Fotce Goly ‘wees aw Selec France Deeg ig oe ie bos eatuieed a samme alt IV Quiz inners Ce ae ye cotates stacle is in the way. This is the; manag’ Whether Dot questionable. “I got y : which he adopted when he a lottery, a felony. drafting of a provision by which Currently president of the Michi- = sscieager aglloun 872 eases once,” he reminisced. enema He the Seach 32 years ago. Revise Statements erates lod gaa Esc Nehru Begs Indians all 12 agers ager te ge ry gan School cheese Saree — Sept. 1, 1927 iM) as commander of the ist =sapeeare then:
ie aa le Gyrecese, Ai- pending territorial] m: Miss Johnston ‘ : the iron, he said he was con-
L ; , to Control indignation P< put into a “deep freeze Pos of the American see poe dire Sea ait ie: bectnt 2 More! sidered “a safe flyer, not a spec- The jadicial vie, oa (Continued From Page One) bany, ee po Mose vide - os 17 Die in Ambush ean _ _ apparent. eae ee” bre | dice so that society a well as pei ar ca congres- ord stores, beauty shops, news- The countries which have made | a en a al lon was on one of wrmce the Ck fOs nes ijamual eoteunes paper stores, apartments and pri- EW —Prime Min- i Argentina ° genuine necessity for an The except on iene ccused vate homes. , seeded ea said today] traiie, Cuie. “France, Ped oo Davison Girl, i9, aha judge in the “county i on vicina ol German am. fixed and charty proved, justice bp pa hg agem mm yep Supt. Francis a the Pre | be “no war with China” |iand Norway and Britain. In addi- . . order to secure anything Wke |take photogral be served by pronounce-| by NBC from the State Police ae ee mc on to thee seven andthe United Kiel 1n Crash prompt justice,” said Gov. Gree® | munition ead Ye Cera ment of sch sentence at wl Pun position ae a consultant. te “ “broke the beck of a sambling 17 Indians were killed in ambush, |ciates and the Soviet
in appointing Doty. ing runs. He sing| ish the offender and deter the pro-| network clarification ¢f | dicate apread Communists was ceasing “prave|Cter conference participarts are! AT 6/17 Lapeer : pe reali Bites Kigali eli fed cape og ag Ew eg wth el ead aoenbiianeas "Through the syndicate, he sald Commas Wie caadiag “#8VC | Beigium, Japan and South Africa. ot wale ae ce Costas re ce et ee nie, oa The end of his long career is Meanwhile, NBC Friday ended braggio ag ie generac, yd gee ety” * Davison girl w charge ven a cross sadly reflects, d '| bookies anxiety” in India ff A aed a natorial’ campaign in Oakland] ing nearing, Judge on the worst part|{ts quiz show “Tic Tac Dough. a particular sports event could . e+ Officials are uncertain how ,itled yesterday chairman of the county
What's going in-|The network said it would replace| a ’ the wagers with other Nehru, speaking at Meerut pg|"UCH longer negotiations will con-|érashed into a trailer truck near| Crore as hairs The tail of his plane got hit enee/ 1 ivement is the fonelinen. the show as of Monday with|“lay off’ and tus spread the Uttar Pradesh Province, begged| NC) ‘She remained optimistic/the Lapeer - Genesee county line.|GOp — demonstration of|on one of these missions. But Capt. flicted because of having po igor “Truth or Consequences.” © money men, the Indian people to comtrel their) oo. reaching a treaty im the; nos is Victoria 1. Koneicaxa. desea ks toareed (rons ila ie eac| Clg” get Ga, dae off my fine associations kers.”| FURTHER EVALUATION risk. investigation ‘commission a be oe oy ee eee ae the shortest distance be- 7 you, went down wth Me™ he eye ans, miy fellow workers.” tak production ie tea cats nea toe Gone by fear or indignation ever the One objective generally agreed | 34 to be pried loose by Lapeer |— is a straight line/days you went down with it,” he Oakland County, too, NBC had taken ower said Wisconsin. f tween two points is a . , the e. of “Tic Tac Dough” from Jack! ifications in Minnesota, latest border incident. on im preparatory | County sheriff's deputies Doty once got caught on a|said. There were no parachutes. judg
Ses Enright who also New Jersey and The Indian government teday a system of inspection to be sure! The truck driver and witnesses |— wire fence on his dad's} In April of 1919 Doty was dis-
Barry and . ’ ; eee crime agency t the peaceful uses provision) Koneiczka’s car|barbed charged and returned to Pontiac ° had produced “Twenty-One. Connecticut. ordered fresh army reinferee- | tha told police Miss farm
f did pot elaborate. ments rushed te the norther® of the treaty is carried out a pia into the path of the truck. . te ¢ to resume the law practice he be- Expect No mimi “Despite NBC's initial decision frontiers in the wake of the Red | a1) |The driver, William C. Racine, “This happened,” he remem-jgan in 1907 in partnership with to retain ‘Tic Tac Dough,’ turther raid into Ladakh im Kashmir. / Many authorities say that wy ,|35, of 2676 Carpenter Rd., Lapeer. a went over to help|George A. Cram, still a practicing ill F N xt Year evaluation of public rection fol | Calls Parley The raid put a heavy strain on cess of such a system in suffered only minor injuries in the bers, in the field. I tried to go/ attorney. e | ar e towing recent evidence of previ- | iams between ica could lead to a more|SU! him out This practice was started after
of the has already-tense relations Antarct: mishap. in a straight line but the barbed- pra
ous rigging program . india and Commantst China. complicated inspection system ee ee ee ee aie it coe" Sn Ket Oe he ae, (Continued From Page One) | ied te the conclusion that ite pub- of Tax Peril Tuesday vere tatheved kel ak a ee a cain of Meals te of Michigan Law School the Will be able fe say he has | tic standing has been impaired— The Chinese were raid,| policing disarmament. and M21 BELIEVER BREVITY year. = recently | even though the testimony clearly ripped heme Gey
Doty is a firm believer in brev-|" ie said he enjoyed the study of| seen acahenes ead tenes, established that the show had | (Continued From Page One) mm
A
~ Eisenhower en but Indian troops were be-' . Old
ity. Most attorneys wre neve law, especially a course in evi par presumably, has the dest | been honestly run ia every re- they don’t like and te force the lieved Jo be only a little south of Six-Y ear s Mother Bars Blood ee hearing Wis|O"*: ~ imsight into the Kremlin chief's spect since NBC took ever its pre- | At Oras to. accept aon there. "Het. Springs ks a moontake . hool ’ Da eee that dat lne |ON CHAMPIONSHEP TEAM feeling. duction in October 1958,” the net- they insist upon, or face top 18,000 miles above sea level. Reign at Schoo ( f Takes Girl treat pty axing Before his start in Ann — The . que on the| Work said. plete disaster. hi ~ * * ee
yer ' ‘’s education was cente Frenc delay Colum Broadcasting a far cry from his The Chinese were believed toF Gir in Avondale ou ck Bont ber Grmuteatratad Gasllthc’ ass] arate ak his native| Khrushchev - shore adequate Rooting the po president.|gogger insistence on an income tax heve moved up modern weapons| . ; Page One) jin his court, he de township. He said he came to Pon-|would be best has ordered ll! olution during the last spring and ; : " (Continued From still as keen as the
ion for the East-West talks.|Frank Stanton, a Hee Seton! to man them) A pair of the Fall. Festival pyicien wrote the court that oor the gold eagle that hovers sid esa hace ee S that view, cet ay [Bersonnel to play it straight with\summer, but be told gre at Hot Springs. |yesterday over see ; eye of -|School because “it had one
blic. In keeping with this!newsmen it was short or ; School in Avon- in operation is scheduled F h. In his closing argu-|S ope ” shares that view, and 80|the public. sae as an wood Monday to determine definitely if over ns raya the defense at- pete causa te nrc do poy American policy-makers. |policy, ar peg Locus bao For one thing, he said, the pro- Gov., Mrs. Williams Se ened King was Robert Allen./Carol has a tumor. torney made what the judge ie Michigan. He was graduated in > ts parton Friday night: gram would have to be “adequate” Host Foreign Students 2384 Devondale. His queen aS | IMMEDIATE SURGERY Heved was an erroneous eget os 11901. There was tion in Paris “Some interest has been ex- —presumably consonant with 1959- Shannon Reed, 2865 Grant.
leading statement. Doty inter at left tackle on the Gaulle was dragging his ‘ " already voted by cere-| If the diagnosis is correct, an imme.| He starred that De pressed on how we do Person to|g9 appropriations LANSING — Gov. and Mrs.) Participating in the royal archs| immediate operation will be neces-|rupted and corrected him imm champlonship tear of 13 players in|7.4+ on an East-West summit until Person.’ We go into the homeithe Legislature, with some provi- Williams, just returned trom almonies were last year's monarchs| im ne diately, 1000. “I guess this was the onlyis ice could join the “atomic with three or four cameras, mtt-lsion for debt retirement. th on foreign shores. will host! Jean Kirsch, 11, of 3171 Auburn/sary. ing regret at the court's requent visitor to |time that Pontiac ever saw alironce, could Jolt States, Britain crophones, Nights, special fines, 8)... 0 sane PACHAGE m group Fige Ueded Walken ee) ns ncrronden at iin ae Krumm said: “I i recently pabsted green court- |championship team,” he said. and Russia. The newspaper Paris- mobile unit, and 15 or 20 people. "ee would make any solution Midvale. : ‘ le
expected test : as part of the United Nations Day| 2731 Midva od|know I won't be held responsib om the second floor of “Then we sometimes played as Jour said the long * *« * of a 100-million-dollar Sponsored by the Elmwood) ing agains 's will. They| "oom
loved French nuclear weap- in the order vibe. ve_ en at thee BTA te ret dr te wi het anewer to Cod] te coe, mht ere every mate af To" lone oul cer rn “I saidvoten advance plang ‘wth our PRCHREE not counting reese liams’ home in Lansing will be/than 700. litre books what they do.” of his own, far away from the week of next February. It
Senate has j has not lost his love be de-\guests as to what we will show,| 0 fund which the served an international menu/to purchase library
Ae rd Judge Doty the exact date could not what March. ,
ng heard. f although today it leans would de-|what we will discuss, and in been holding up since featuring dishes from 10 countries.
“oe te istaken im- see aie baseball. It’s not un-|termined since the test conditions Beyond that, we make no| co. cide H, Geetlings (R- Is U.S.-Based pression.” He ‘hears every" word) my a [idleness Defi ove to wares se as caper (ane, ent ta they |S°°| Holland), Seriate taxation chair. Weath FBI Reveals — that is said. Seldom does he have| radio in his chambers to hear De-|It gave officials said mon|at all what I had expected." |™@, and some other Republican The Weather ° ed H a to take notes because of his €%-ltroit Tigers Cis deur. leiped toe a0 sapeasiomeab asin na chert tan oon, have talked ot = conan PONTIAC AND VICINITY -Cloeay and Planes Raid avan ono it comes time to charge|~ “when | wee in high school T|that hold poet meeting] “These batervions La record-lfund use, and obviously had in cooler with occasional light rain iedey.
a ride bike to Detroit| will a
on tape two! mind far less. 1 Or to pass sentence On &/ used to ~ week in Decem-led in Hollywood m Seethvesiery wings at 18 les becom (Continued From Page One) gt pee ie ne nt mr notes are sertbied in ie ~ sve the Tigers. 1 ot 5 sent Ke nell Paris the first weds ogo." ‘sae weilh warr ing wes ™ hed s
m §
ae * 4 EE ate ne SNS bth tat ee i hain lf" a : : aye ee oy a Seams longer considers bombs on Havana.
“It wasn't too bad riding
- way Lowest temperattre" preceding § mlarmy as his main strength There was no immediate indt-lHaS A WARM SPOT he recalls, “but it was up hill Off iCial ' P rom1ses Calm Se ee ae at oy velocity 3 m.p. h. “We do not meed guns and (cation whether the Justice De- He rulés his court with stern-| coming back.” 1c
statewide vote on a Pee. Direction—Southerly
9 tment would take any legal but fairness. Most of the his climb to the top of , » salés tax until November Sun sets Saturday at $37 p.m. tanks — we have the people oh i ree
Cal
B d e rotes Ss Sun rises Sunday at 646 am. he declared. action against the Cuban. time he appears as a harsh un- the Oakland judicial ladder he = Mot ers Tl g Somé Republican lawmakers re- rr se vines Matias ac 11:52 pm. Diaz Lanz, who fought with! * hae Pad ‘ smiling judge. ont Bowe “= mine Oe maak faaes ty, poo Downtown Temperateres Castro to overthrow the Cuban! Diaz Lanz and friendship end Ot the right men women sa ie pare si/regime of Fulgencio Batista, quit| seclusion in Cubans ance, his Tee lthe right persone ing their language. Te m
as ° time. MP Dp... "?'as head of the air force last June|ignation as Cuban eo Showing their refusal to comment on ee ty’s senior 108 Cr» iment rh Ca et wn Tay M8 | ant cing" wth some “ee Pridey tn Fontioc resgplet A premanpegetina ‘comment’ on several ether mat |and_ old attorneys in hie ottice, Zeer tn the, Zs 2 called , | Each decors ren gg |e cal has charged that the| to comment on several other mat tay ted hf eB ge inn ee eseieees caeeaneten 50 | Wednesday = eo rage man Dick Lobo of Miami TV sta-l ties with respect for the judge eons ots pre Ometeeace = Toate 4, |charged’ that, te plete, attention WORP that Cot differene| ritten all over their faces. he was’ dionstesing temperature... .....§9 |Charged that P der some bombings in One of the judge's closest friends Highest erature 202200005 {3 ,|bombs, not only leaflets, on) ajaces so he can blame heli the courthouse le C. Richard] Sty at the end of Mean FOCUS .ceescccccccecee:>
” Weather Rain. Havana. eae United States. Smith, veteran assignment clerk. @ pamaae thank: Highest and Lowest Temperatures This
He added that Castre intends Inch of them (before Smith went! wpa Ta tothe frst charge, the FBI evd| 1 cce that theee Dunsbtngs win [=O St tees (oetore Senkte won The boys 8 8 Phase Temperatere Chart" linto the Oe 0d Gaetan ns nail boost 0 enh hailed TEs dhauae. would walk down West Huron from during am Siemers Sh oe peewee 73 91) ‘the fight 1 emanate from Diaz Lanz/the courthouse on their way home. | gotten either. 4¢ 34 Miami Beach 9¢ 178] United States. In another interview,
stice Day recently Bromacrite $32 Milwaunes. gt 41 Agents questioned Diaz Lanz in|told The Associated Press lie fears Serine ten one ee loving age Se Bee 2 2 a era de S| et hs aunty Cherish 4 8 8 Omaho s¢ $\“He admitted to the FBI that he|a. former Castro rather |springer spaniel x = «8324 Pelisten «= St " under arrest in Cuba. relented. which for many @ & «Phoenix $3 | headed the flight. “ been able to hear}
.’ $0037 Pibargn 74 87 No one has * With @ little persuasion, he'li|death accompan 7% 50 St. Louis 72 47 He was the instigator of (80 | 40° uatos has to say,” Diaz H s 8 ” tell how he learned to fly a hunting trips, a. @ » 74 58 §2| Whole idea,” 2 spokesman 26é- Lanz said. “f have information netee end 33 be-| He would Jackson BS tees § Hl ow. ee ny oat te Al se hee and 22 ae good] door back Los Advis 50 36 Tome =o 8! Regarding the second Castro! him.
¢
—__ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1959
New Book by Jules Abels Out Tuesday ra re moos oe OSE
a ve M . . Government On report whale that some O ‘ad d “But ae action appears to 7 ead Is Hospitalized Men in Dewey Camp Still Burn to Stock Scheme ixzzzeteme tered eit er ; too many instances in which we , — WASHINGTON W& — Dr. Allen for themselves and their friends. by ] O hnson have pushed the bytton but our © ¥, Austin. 35, head of the National) By RUTH MONTGOMERY Paul Porter that “Dewey snaiched| socialized medicine and govern aff al givers onto pad" Sehaaag oui “at Ga ee apt snve :90ns ” ses B rokers public and violate fraud provisions WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate pad,”’ Johnson said. ‘At the same Burea andards ‘|; WASHINGTON — Author-econo-‘defeat out of the jaws of victory.” ment building of transmission jines|} ACcu Some of the securities law, the agency \time’ the Soviets are making a
suffered a heart attack Sunday/mist Jules Abels believes he has from dam sites to main cen of ill | She . said Democratic leader Lyndon B. | pull’ — and Abels, a government econo- ters. ega nanigans . ull’s eye out of and placing and is hospitalized, it has been|uncovered a hornet’s nest of still mist who authored “The Truman a 2S in Glamour St ‘ty _ «ee Johnson, asserting that “many the satellite in orbit around — the learned smoldering passions, peeves, feuds| Scandals” a few years ago,| “Since the American Medical Philip A. Loomis Jr., director of weaknesses” have been indicated moon. ; ; : the SEC's division of trading and “The American people are ask- Aides confirmed pe hate yenjend resentments in the so-called) eubts that - mew book xg Assn. would have been up in arms! w ‘ASHINGTON «®—Government |¢*changes, is directing the investi- in the U.S. air : nen entered ing why, and they deserve an an- taken to Doctors Hospital a day|-Dewey camp” that could affect bose 4 8. , against the first, public utility investigators said Thursday illegal/®@tion of “‘hot issues” — brand|® Preliminary inquiry Friday to €X-| swer,”” Johnson said. after he was stricken with what , Harry 8. Truman, Henry companies against the second pro- shenanigans by some, brokers ap-|"*W stocks which, in some in-|plore the need for a full congres- . the outcome of next year’s presi- nd Bo aingr a as a mild heart dential election. nag. py te pre = posal, and the GOP against both, parently helped skyrocket some|St@nces, have doubled in price on| sional investigation,
: ; ; i ; ithe fi ing. Abels arrived’ at his conclusion! chief strategists in that whacki. |“° Yetced it, whereupon Warren|recent new issues of low-priced "Loomal wend "the ‘commission| _ TR Texan, who heads the Sen. = They said the noted govern- ; retorted: “Then I have nothing glamour stocks. 4 t CORImIARSTOR ate Space ‘Committee, issued ment scleatist was resting com. after interviewing most of the Re-| est of all election campaigns. more to say in this campaign’.” Amecttinkls, 4 clitibeion toe! most of these issues ‘were low tatement Pri Pp rs Soot fortably and was expected back |Publican principals in the ill-fated) He is convinced, however, that| One of the bitterest issues at the ea Maca ien cae Exchange Com. priced, had no public market prior eaet es ae | Destroyer at his desk in about three |!948 campaign for a new book, to|Republicans can draw some les-|time was President Truman's de- mission said it expects to take © the offering and often involved ie ago pi i sermaseny Mermmatc aa Eliminate unsight- ., Holt and Co., entitled ‘Out of the\avert another such party catastro-| “turnip day’’ session of the Repub- firms “‘once all the facts are in »|Sile and related defense fields.”’ ies ly dirt in” your Astin was asked to resign in 1953| Jaws of Victory.” phe next year. jlican 80th Congress pass a broad) 7 Space Agency (NASA). home! In the] during a controversy with the then! Former Republican National; With the South again in revolt/Program of New Deal legislation, Some cases already have been ‘Soap Cures Rash Johnson called it “gratifying that handy spray can Secretary of Commerce, Sinclair Chairman Leonard Hall suggested! about civil rights, the Democrats, 4bels quotes Rep. Clarence Brown referred to the National Assn. of the need for action has been recog- at your hardware Weeks, over the merits = 4 bat: the title, which stems from the|might also glean a few points/°f Ohio as telling him: “Warren! Securities Dealers, it said. This Washing with repeated lather- nized.” ee owe tery additive called AD-X2. The quip attributed to New Dealer about how to avoid another Dixie|Semt word that the Republican! SToup. can suspend or revoke ings of a strong laundry soap is| He said he hopes: the transfer . Bureau of Standards, an arm of — lwalk-out at the 1960 convention. Congress should pass Truman’s| >rekerage licenses for certain |, recommended first-aid treat- will be ‘‘an effective step” to help Oakland Chemical Co. the Commerce Department, had) But Abels doubts that Wallace wil]|¢™tire program.” No one else imfractions. ment for sufferers from poison|preserve the valuable experience il etd said AD-X2 was ineffective — “R.C. Allen Directors be able to profig by the book, “‘be-/Seemed to agree. ' The SEC would not rlame any of ivy. igained by the Army missile team conclusion which Weeks disputed.|"- \- cause he’s had no kind of conver- ee see . *. .
\ x * * Reject Fairchild Merger sion — he’s as contradictory andi Weeks later asked Astin to re- politically naive as he ever was.” | : : GRAND RAPIDS ® — Directors ee oe the ehition of R. C, Allen Business Machines, CAN HEAR STEZLES ; . of the Bureau of Standards. Inc., Friday rejected a proposed On the strength of his interviews
City, Astin | ™¢™Ser Of the firm with Fairchild|with Dewey and the dozens of men A native of Salt Lake City, Astin|canera & Instrument Corp,- of/around him during the ‘48 cam-
joined the Bureau in 1940 to help} ¢ |. Abel : yosset, N.Y, \paign, bels said he has reason to
pp allergy Y wi - Their official announcement |Pelieve that Herbert Brownell, : said: Dewey's former campaign mana-|
s ; jger, “has little use for Dewey, or, ‘
. The board of directors of R. C.lfor what he always calls the! a Allen Businees Machines, Inc.,|, , , } nite -weled tas ‘ ‘Dewey crowd.’ You can almost | s . " : , ay he to approve inear the sizzle when Dewey’s chiet the merger of the Allen corporation |b aintruster, Elliott V. Bell, talks into Fairchild Camera & Instru-| about Brownell.”
| MORE ment Corp. 4 a an et i | athe
“The board of directors declared e sald all those inter- the regular dividend of 12% cents! viewed spoke in belittling terms | per share to stockholders of rec-| Earl Warren, —T 4s | MONEY? ord Nov. 16, 1959, payable Dec. 1,) Tuaning mate, and : t Bell re- 1959.”” | irre to him as “that queer
Officials of the firm declined im. _ . : mediate comment on the board) “I found Dewey himself ex-| action jtremely bitter about the cam- , paign,”” Abels said. ‘‘He told me ....join a Credit Union! | life was short and he isn't mad at
janybody, but his peeves at his ad-| ore RaPLoveEs Special Trade-in Allowance on | visors came out all the time as we
ral pany geen Musical Instruments |t2kea.” PONTIAC CO-OP ~*~ * *
Waldron Hote? Bide E-Z PAY RENTAL LAYAWAY Hf tie said Dewey told him that CHIEF PONTIAC p 18 8. during the last two weeks of the
ae oe a ee EDWARD'S cians campaign, when it became appar-
ent that he was slipping, he want-
— —— mied to change his tactics, but was
dissuaded by his advisors. {
| “I asked him whom he blamed
Austin = Norvell most,” Abels continued, “and he promptly replied ‘Hagerty’ He |
Pl said Jim Hagerty (now White
> | AGENCY, Inc. House press secretary) took a : poll of newsmen on the train and
“Our 39th Year of Distinguished er oe [i ane fe a a Instrance Service” Others also told him not to rock
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‘ ‘ ‘
S Le THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1959
indness Just Can’t Prevent This
a
*
oman’s Success "\—- -
Confident Living - .
Does Well a She can, October Loyalty
Leaves the Rest to Go Crusa de to End
By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
One night I was invited to a dinner party in San Francisco. |
My hostess was a charming Mexican woman and the dinner |
which she served was a Mexican dinner. |
I have had some very good meals in Mexi-
co itself but I have never had a Mexican din- |
ner like this one. There were 16 courses. They) The October Loyalty Crusade at
weren't large courses—but every course Was the Oakland Avenue United Pres-
delicious and different byterian Church will end tomorrow |
I soon learned that this woman was one of with land eos rie aed
ln’e erent : She tev veodore R. Allebac wi the world’s great experts on Mexican food. She “The Christ Patterned!
had owned a famous San Francisco restau-
rant; she had written = suecesstie conrees A new Sanda® School dines in
She was a happy, bubbling personality and high school seniors and Gost-hiek!
one of the most charming hostesses I ever young people has been organized
met. And she had cooked all 16 courses Qf our, with Mrs. Theodore R. Allebach,
dinner with her own hands. the aa” . +
Yet this woman, Elena Zelayeta, is totally blind!
“A Barrel of Good Things’’ will
The natural question to ask her was how she was able be the theme of the Pioneer youth
to cook. Her answer was quick. “Sightlessness doesn’t make [group at 5:30 p.m. Sunday and
any difference,” she said. “You cook by the sense of feel, (“God's Medicine versus Black
the taste and the sense of smell. I have all three of them | Magic’ will be the Builder's topic.
left.”
. dent of the newly organized Her story is a fascinating one. Blinded early in life, she, Nics's Khaamas &. G. (len Secs
was very ‘much dependent on others. When she married, she) president; Dick Wilton, secre-
transferred this dependence to her husband. Then, one eve-) tary; and Jack Thomlinson, treas-
ning, she was alone at home when her telephone rang. She) urer.
groped her way to the instrument, picked it up and a volc€’ The first fall skating party is|
told her, “Your husband has been killed in an accident!” scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Monday
The blow seemed too great to bear. Byt, as she told me @! the University Skating Center on
that evening, she struggled within her darkness and finally “est “ ann ‘sition
got hold of herself. She turned her thoughts to God. One dae at Pane Tes ee eae , - _ fiance $ in that terrible darkness, she says that she felt a great, enor the Boys’ Brigade leadership train-|
mous hand take hold of her and lift her up. ling conference from 7 to 10 p.m.
BECAME TRANSFORMED Sunday.
From that day forward she became a transformed person.
She traveled up and down the coast demonstrating her cook-
ing secrets to big audiences, wrote books of inspiration, ran a
packaging business as well as a restaurant.
I asked her that night just what the secret of her success
Sunday School Class:
Organized for Seniors, |
Post-High Young People|
preach on
Life.”
4
Ernal Lloyd was chosen presi-
was
“I always act,” she told me, “as if the impossible were
possible all the time.” ; ; | Churchmanship School This woman's life is but one example of the power of posi- ~ !
tive thinking—a technique I have seen demonstrated over and! Closes Monday Evening |
over again in the lives of countless people to lead them to, at First Methodist
richer and fuller living. It is a technique based on two prin- |
ciples, both of them perfectly described by texts from the Bible.| The Rev. Paul T Hart pastor,
< a “uSSC
One is from the 84th Psalm, “Blessed is the man who nian set “receive pane trusteth in thee.” This means that the happy man is he | ombers into. the fellowship of|
who puts his trust in God, does the best he can with what (First Methodist Church at. the
God gives him and calmly dedicates the results to God. Sunday morning service.
The second principle for successful living is from the New, ‘The Master's Touch’ will be)
Testament, “I can do all things through Christ which strength- ies topic ot the ‘pastor's sermon
eneth me.” The simple meaning of this is what when you al er ie 4: ee
sirengthened by God. there is no limitation to what you can ine the Meters aia ant the ene
do with your life. This is the extra plus that gives power to tuary Choir will be heard in
personality and victory over difficulty. / |"Praise Ye the Lord.”
(Copyright, 1959) The final session of the School
| of Churchmanship of area Meth-
The Portis &
e
BRINGS FAMILY TO SUNDAY SCHOOL — Louise Bartle of
35 N. Ardmore St. is shown with neighbors she brought to Sunday
School last Sunday for the Round-Up Attendance Contest. The fam-
ily, of 56 N. Ardmore St., includes Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Blaylock
and children (from left) Allen, Marshall and Bethany with Mrs.
442nd anniversary
“ad | day Martin Luther nailed his 95 from
0 eceive | theses to the door of Wittenburg gather
!Cathedral will be observed in Prot- ganized
SUNDAY SCHOOL. 10 A M MORNING MESSAGE. 11 A M
~ by the Pastor Special Music
eninge Service to Be Announced
PRAYER MEETING and BIBLE STUDY at the Joseph home 7
YOUNG PEOPLES’ HALLOWEEN PARTY. Oct ait
REV oP M
30 PM
LEROY SHAFER, Pastor
odist Churches will be held at FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN wan pan Meshes
Bearing Burdens. Sullés.Sptriveas Tissue” Conducting the study class of
‘FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw
Pontiac, Michigan
Rev. H. H. Savage, Pastor
RevwW. E Hoakes, Asst P !
9:45 A. M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL _ i Aes
10.00 A. M.—MORNING WORSHIP “HE WENT ABOUT DOING GOOD” Dr, H. H. Savage, preaching
Evening Service—7:00 P.M.
UNION REFORMATION SERVICE, 7:30 P.M.
Raymond Lindquist of the Hollywood Presbyterian Church
2 -'or
~ for Licsse Oo!
Na Mahe Tomorrow Is Reformation Sunday
of the = ps]
Reformation
to Be Observed Senior High Members
Participating in Debate
at First Presbyterian
Reformation Sunday will be ob-
served tomorrow at First: Presbg-
terian Church with Dr. William
H. Marbach, pastor, preaching on
“Our Heritage and Our Task’’ at
the 9:30 morning service,
* * * 24
“Protestant Perils and Pros-
pects’ will be the theme of the
Rev. Galen E. Hershey, associate
pastor, at 11 a.m, i
The congregation will join Other
Protestant churches in the special
Reformation Day service being
sponsored by the Pontiac Pastors
\ |Association at 7:30 p.m, in the
First Baptist Church.
* * *
Participating in the Junior High
Pioneer program at 5:30 p.m. will
be Avril Davis, Susan Hales and
Elizabeth Grimes.
Senior High Tuxis members
will meet at the samc time for
a debate. Taking part will be
Roger Riley, David Monthorn,
Christine Bos, Linda Brooks,
Ruth Ann Hoffman, Carol Nich-
olie, Diane and Judy Hillman.
At 7:30 p.m, Monday, the Synod
development program will be pre-
sented to representatives from six
neighboring Presbyterian church-
es. 2
Pentiac Press Phote
Blaylock holding baby John. Other boys and girls brought 41 visi-
tors. The contest, which started on Sept. 20, will continue through
Nov. 8. Dr. Tom Malone is pastor and Eugene Goff, Sunday School
superintendent.
* * *
Sunday School teachers and
workers will meet for a staff ses-
sion- and the board of deacons
will meet to sort and pack clothing
for needy people overseas Tues-
day evening. Across the country, Christians! ments the offertory Association, will read the scrip-
many denominations will! prayer lture lesson and offer prayer.
n citywide meetings or-! Presiding and giving a short talk!
: ° se ee | Presenting Dr. Lindquist will and through on ‘‘Our Heritage’’ will be Dr.|
state and local counciled churches. | Milton H. Bank, minister at Cen- be Dr. William H. Marbach of.
The Pontiac Pastors’ Association tra] Methodist Church and chair-| the First Presbyterian Church. W 1 { H |
will sponsor the ‘‘Protestant Re. man of the special service com-| E. Kyle Wilson, youth director, an S 0 e pD
formation Festial’ at 7:30 p.m. mittee of the Pastors’ Association. and minister of music at the host!
Sunday the First Baptist! ~*~ * + ‘church, will direct the First Bap- | ®
Church | The Rev. Myron E. Everett of tist Choir in two anthems. Africans learn
FROM HOLLYWOOD the Baldwin Evangelical Church, | Dr. Marbach will give the clos-
president of the Pontiac Pastors’ |ing prayer. : SS = 4 . .
, Specialist Goes Abrodd Goming from Hollywood, Calif.,
to speak is the Rev. Dr. Raymond
for 2 Months in Order
to Make Survey and give
sponsored
in
I. Lindquist. minister of the First
Presbyterian Church L th Ch h R l]
Dr. Lindauist studied law at u €ran urc a y |
Columbia University and = was . a;
groaned fom Prneeon sem Qt POntiac Northern High nary and Universitv. He has re. }
ceived honoray degrees from Cum- ”
herland University and Bloomfield; Lutheran churches of the Mis-* “Its purpose is to strengthen
College souri Synod will begin the Christian the Christian convictions of Luther- |
President of the Board of Na-|E¥angelism Endeavor in the Pon-
tional Missions in the United Pres. | "ac = with . rally at 3:30 ii
byterian Church in the USA, he Sunday in Pontiac Northern High
is a trustee of Princeton Seminary, School. The Rev. William F. Fore of
|New York and Cresskill, N.-J., a
‘specialist in mass communications
for the Methodist Church, ts en
route overseas on a two-month
ans in order to equip them to do|assignment to develop a mass com-
Christian evangelism every day,/munications and audio-visual pro-
and to bring the unchurched under|gram for Methodist missionary 'the influence of the Gospel.” work in Africa.
director of The Presbyterian Min-
ister’s Fund, a trustee of Presby- | The Rev. Louis Grother, of Zion
Lutheran Church in Kalamazoo
will preach, and the Rev. Walter
New Methodist terian Hospital in Holbywood and ea
the Woman's Society of Christian ; ; _ ar - .
Service Wednesday morning wil] DR- RAYMOND FI. LINDQUIST ja member of Rotary Club No. 5 Gerken OB _ wil eutheran ° ee see mf lin Los Angeles Church, Rochester, will serve as Pro ram Will
en ee raed ee tnre estant churches throughout the; ~ ° : iliturgist g subject is ‘The Role of the Unitec ae | Seventy-nine young people of | The Cherub, children’s and adult + - ae et country on Reformation Sunday, : : g peop e Cherub, chuidrens : é jNations in World Affairs his church are preparing for the ‘choirs of the St. John Church will Help the Deat
| The Intermediate Group of Meth- laiiiale .. ministry in missionary and sing odist Youth Fellowship will make) Sponsored annually by the Na-) Christian education fields. Th lly is the “kickoff” of | The Methodist Board of Missions
house-to-house calls and return ‘o tional Council of Churches, the ; wt thy os Une Shot ig launching a program to serve 4 =e . J eercice this wens aii follow ani. ™ the Sunday evening meeting) Lutheran Open House Week, a handicapped group of Americans the church with collections for servi US year i u au Se wie Mine ; - an, h | .
UNICEF Thursday evening order first used in the German he Rev. Lenworth R. Miner of} scheduled Nov. 1 through 5. |—the deaf. : g. city of Strasbourg in 1537 Macedonia Baptist Church willl ‘The open house is not a mem-| The “Ministry to the Deaf’ pro-
| . give the invocation bership drive, said the Rev. Ralph gram will collect information on
The “proof” of whiskey indi) John Calvin introduced the pr HOH. Savage, pastor of|C. Claus of St. Trinity Lutheran f, helpi . ; a : | the needs of the deaf, helping cates twice the amount of alcohol’ service in Geneva in 1542, and
in it. Whiskey that is 90 proof, for
example, is 45 per cent alcohol. | land by John Knox. after 1560, it was used in Scot- First Baptist, will make announce- Church.
ST. PAUL METHODIST 165 FEF Square Lake Rd FE 8-8233
Church School 10. A.M. Morning Worship 11:15 A.M
Rev. James A. McClung, Minister
“I PROTEST,” Rev. McClung, preaching
Youth Fellowship 6 P.M.to8P.M
Supervised Nursery —~All Services — Ample Parking
CHURCH of SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP Malta Hall, 82 Perkins Street
Sunday Service, 7:30 P.M.
Speaker: John Mead of Pontiac
“SEARCHING THE
SCRIPTURES”
with
Roosevelt Wells, Minister
CHURCH CALENDAR
Bible School Sunday o-ss 0:45 A.M
Sermon and Worship .... 11:00 A.M.
Eve. Worship & Sermon.... 600 P M
Bible Study Tuesday 800 P
“COMMON RELIGIOUS ERRORS
NOT ENDORSED BY THE BIBLE”
It {s said of Jesus that he did always
those things that pleased God Jno
829 Surely tf we are to be tmitators
of Jesus we also must at all times in
“do those things that please
God" I< tt unreasonable to. strive
to pleace the God who created us or to
obev Him from whom all blessings
flow? I think not We should obey
Him as it pertains to faith. repentence \ |
baptism and as it pertains to living Roosevelt We!! jooseve'! . holy, righteously, and Godly In this Present world.” Tit. 2:12b. All of God's commands should be respected and obeyed whether it is in prayer teaching. giving. communion or music In the latter I am persuaded that many fal) short of pleasing and obdeving God with respect to worship
There are two types of music, vocal and instrumental
should we USE IN E WORSHIP OF THE CHURCH”? WHICH KIND DID THE CHURCH OP THE FIRST CENTURY USE? The answer to these uestions do not depend upon what we like or what may please us and t majority but what pleases God. I believe the answer to the question WHAT PLEASFS GOD I8 FOUND IN THE WORD OF GOD THE BIBLE ol prrcioduony oa —— ogee think we should remember that we commande Oo worshi ... Matt. 4:10. Jesus says, “THOU SHALL WORSHIP THE LORD GOD--". In view of this the question arises HOW should we worship God? Jesus says, “THEY THAT WORSHIP HIM WORSHIP HIM IN SPIRIT AND IN TRUTH.” Jno. 4:24 To worshi which kind
God in truth is to worship God as the Word of God directs. Jno Vici Thy word is truth. QU ON: DO THE WORD OF GOD DIRECT OR DEMAND THE USE OP MECHANICAL INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHRISTIAN WORSHIP? ADMITTEDLY HAVE NEVER READ IT HAVE YOU? A few questions are in order here to those who use it. 1 Christ ever command it? t
2. Did the Holy Spirit ever command it?
3. Did the aposties ever use it?
é. sen the ee doctrine a it? : s ever mentioned in t lew Tesfqament as being use r beg « A | the ct we in : = oes once rd a sta m his sermon that all CHURCH J MECHANICAL INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN ITS R TO ‘cob am y to reply that he
in the Bible 18 NOT SAID raise the question WHY DO CHURCHES USE IT TO because they have gone BEYONT) THE TEACHINGS OF THE NEW MENT? ul says, “THAT IN US
REYOND THINGS WHICH \ARE RELIEVETH TYOT THIS?
Por further information. write to Roosevelt Wells
21@ Hughes Street Pontiac. or call PE 5-1156
WELCOME TO THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
210 Hughes Street. Pontiac, Michigan EST A- YE MIORT LEARN NOT / O00 4 Thursday, Oct. 29—Silver Tea
Columbia Avenue
BAPTIST
CHURCH
Rev. M. P. Boyd Ir., Pastor
Cooperating with Southern Baptist Convention
— 9,000,000 Members —
Re, i 64 West Columbia Ave
iitestioe FE $-9960
Sunday School ..........cceee eee sence 9:45 A. M.
Morning Worship ..........00ceeeeeeeeeee 11 A. M.
Salt Sn 0 Fan 6:30 P. M.
Evening Worship ..............-eceeceeee 7:30 P. M,.
Wednesday Prayer Meeting ............-5. 7:30 P. M.
* * *
Mr. Fore's trip will take him
to Angola, Mozambique, South-
ern Rhodesia, the Belgian Con-
go and the Union of South Africa.
He will survey and discuss the
needs for mass media and audio-
\visual facilities, including radio,
|television, motion pictures, film-
\strips, mobile units, recordings,
|flannelgraphs and picture sets.
| He also will study ways in which
|the church can do a more effec-
itive job in reaching non-Christians
lthrough the mass media.
In several places, Mr. Fore will
{meet representatives of other dc-
| nominations and of national Chris-
tian councils.
He represents not only the Meth-
odist Board of Missions, but also
the interdenominational communi-
cations agency. RAVEMCCO (Ra-
dio, Visual Education ,and Mass
Communications Commission of
the National Council of Churches).
* * *
On behalf of RAVEMCCO, he
will visit Nigeria and Kenya,,
where the Methodist Church as
such has no mission work.
A landmark since its erection
in 1861, it will be torn down to
| make room for larger quarters,
the Rev. Botruff said.
* After morning worship the con-
gregation wil] assemble for ground-
breaking ceremonies at 1 p. m. on} * x * . iNew York's Wall Street
the sing aie ; Miss Hollyer is a former pupil} A
The Tast_-service in’ the pre sent lof Percival Price, carillonneur at) The occasion was the fourth an-
the University of Michigan. nual service for the blessing of
- * * {God upon the courts of justice,
a. Stephen Starting | The semiannual rummage sale cnonsored jointly by the Church
jis scheduled for Thursday with'ciy and the Protestant Council Building Fund Drive idoors open at 9 a.m. lof the City of New York.
Frank Quackenboss and William, * ra *
Heaton will be cochairmen of the! ° Simplicity marked the service, in
building fund drive in November 2UGgeSts Matchmaking contrast to its British precedent
\for St. Stephen Episcopal Church | CHICAGO . — Parents could When for many years it was held jfor ministering to them, and re-
Ortonville Baptist Church 'y7",0,x0% 2 ms sea I O I p | The project will be a part of
P . for Ne Era ithe national office of Goodwill In-
reparlng D.C. Goodwill Industries is a Meth-
‘odist program for employing and
Ortonville |building. at 7:45 p. m.,
Baptist Church will observe twojclude with baptism rites. | capped and emotionally disturbed.
special events on Sunday, accord-| x & & | Those selected under the pro-
church pastor. igation will worship in public school College in Washington, the nation's
First it will mark the last day {buildings a block away. The edi-|only college especially for the
by Evangelist Charles E. Boren, |SPring. fice for Vocational Rehabilitation.
and second, it will be the last
in the building used for services Carillon Concert
for nearly 100 years,
at Christ Church
sent the carillon recital at 4 p.m.
Sunday at Christ llocal churches establish facilities
'eruiting and training ministers and
|dustries, Inc., in Washington,
ORTONVILLE — The | will con-| rehabilitating the physically handi-
ing to the Rev. Roy F. Botruff,; During construction the congre-|cram will be trained at Gallaudet
f a series of meetings conducted |fice is due for completion by early | deat. and through the Federal Of-
time the congregation will meet
Julia Hollyer of Detroit will pre-
brook. ch Cran-| judges marching slowly to church
startled homegoing throngs in
SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY
“PROBATION AFTER DEATH’
“~~ 0% 4 |Adams and Westview roads. Guid-
“jing the congregation will be Dr. | Starting two years ago as alcut America’s high divorce rate if|in Westminster Abbey, In New
mission of Christ Church Cran- they'd take a lesson from India, York, the scene was famous Trin-
brook, services are currently /and help their children chooselity Episcopal Church, standing
being held in Eastover School at|mates, says Dr. Marine Finger|Wietly in its churchyard at the
Bale. The Methodist missionary-|bottom of New York’s commercial
educator has spent the last five) canyons.
years in India, where matches are
made by parents and divorce is al-
most un.
¥ * *
In his address to the judges and
members of the Bar and Bench of
the city, Whitney North Seymour, Burton Levering, former rector of
All Saints Episcopal Church of
Detroit.
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ree AMEE | we Bae a iia 6. Silas tical