The Weather ¢ U. &. Weather Bureau Forecast Cloudy, cooler; chance of showers (Details on Page 2) | LAC PRESS | 116th YEAR kkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1958 —28 PAGES UNITED PRESS IN INTERNATIONAL Te RR taste sehen es UF Starts Big Push for $501,000 Goi + ¥ | Ike Lambastes Dems, Appeals for Party Unity LOS ANGELES (?i—President Eisenhower mena Democrats last night as political radicals. He called for an end to Republican “family bickering” in the party drive to capture control of Congress. | The President flies north to San Francisco today for two more campaign addresses. His speech last night was perhaps the hardest Biting one ef his political career ee was made to a cheer- bout 6,500, Jury Witnesses or wena non an ‘Filencer’ in Use » Kierdorf Pistol Fitted (°° split ‘right dona the mae es’ Shrine Auditorium. n a peppery, fighting mood for With Device and Fired.“ as Part of Trial the first time on this coast-to- oast tour, Eisenhower sailed aa * * * He touched off a round of laugh- ter in saying they have political schizophrenia, or split personality. “The opposition record,” said Eisenhower, “is one of ever high- er taxes—of dollars worth 3; cents—of sky high prices—of an| economy harassed into producing) i'fewer jobs, chronic unemployment, | Assistant Oakland County Prose- shor strife and fear of the fu-| cutor Jerome K. Barry Jr. conmiy..” tended that with the device at- The President said A Circuit Court jury of nine women and three men left Judge’ Clark J. Adams’ courtroom this morning to witness a demonstra- tion of Herman Kierdorf’s alleged pistol silencer. the record, Dr. Crane in City for Talks ‘Area Men in Plane Smashup ning when a single-engine plane) they were in crashed on Detroit's) East Side. Most seriously injured was Ar- thur W. Bull, 38, of 2780 Bradway} Blvd., Bloomfield Village, execu-| tive vice president of the Michigan) |Wire Cloth Co, in Detroit. He is| listed in critical condition at Sara-| toga General Hospital. | Another passenger, Ear| Mor- ; gan, 27, of 3969 Cu Berkley, an IBM salesman and brother-in-law of Bull; and t pilot, Charles 8, Wolf, 31, a troit businessman, were in jeus condition, | The three men were returning |Port Sanilac when the plane's en- |gine sputtered and conked out near |Detroit’s City Airport. * * * | Wolf had been cleared to land and was circling the field when the jengine failed. He decided to land ‘in unlighted M RE fesge at 6 Mile Rd. a ify Paved area Ks than the well Six Mile road Pentiae Press Phete tached to Kierdorf's P-38 German- ° cl aa. ad i. the of three = ee = WELCOMED AT CITY HALL — Dr. George for The Pontiac Press. Dr. Crane 1s in the city I didn’t want to smash up made pistol, noise |hand is one that justifies support W. Crane (left), noted psychologist, lecturer to deliver two lectures today, one at 2 and an- | 3" of) heer care ise) 1) took it oe Oo ee for Republican candidates from : : re o ° ad . | into the cemetery,’ he said to- With the pipe contraption off, noas¢ to coast—in thé fields of ) two shots made about twice the i, loreign policy, defense, agricul-. by John A. Riley, assistant adve amount of noise, Barry told the ture and the nation’s economy, | jury. ‘and others | Jurers assembled at the old | * * Pontiac Pelice pistol range off Eisenhower was ae, by our fy an 00 ——= Oakland avenue te watch Madi. applause 35 times at the party rally where nearly every seat in the auditorium was filled. The big "sora was tied tee we Chance of Showers that under this administration: The weatherman predicts consid “Ladies and gentlemen, things ¢rable cloudiness tonight. with the are good, and getting better low about 5) every day.” son Heights Police Chief Rebert E. Richardson fire five shots from the pistol inte a five-galien ice cream can stuffed with cot- ton waste. Kierdort, former aide to Team- sters boss James R. Hoffa from Madison Heights, is charged with a a cyoudy Tomorrow will be mostly some Eisenhower came to California and cooler with a chance of owning an illegal silencer which mainly to boost the candidacy of light showers. Tomorry®’s high Chief Richardson confiscated from |" s Sen. William F. Knowland in| will be near 70. the low 48 a neighbor in August. the race for the governorship. and) For the next five day¢ tempera- kierdorf is the uncle of human'tp. pid for GOP Gov. Goodwin J.) tures will average near the norma torch victim Frank Kierdorf. whose Knight for Knowland’s Senate séat high of 60 and normal low of 41 fatal burning Aug. 3 remains UN-|_ and to try to heal a party split.) | Thursday will continue little solved | The split is over Knowland mov-| warmer. but temperatures will ‘be ing into the gubernatorial contest | colder Friday and Saturday ‘after Knight had announced he in| The lowest recording in a While Richardson was demon- strating the alleged silencer to- down | day, Kierdorf stood eff to ome jtended to seek re-election, and town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m side seemingly disinterested. Knowland’s championship of a/48 degrees. The mercury rose (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) p.m The demonstration was the finale ' 64 ba 1 of the people's case against Kier- dorf, 68. Dohany and his co-counsel, Eric E. Zisman, were-expected to open their case this morning They contend that the 10%2- ‘inch piece of pipe, with a threaded re ducer on each end, is not a si- lencer, but rather a muffler for Kierdorf's power lawn mower. ; Meeting Hours Switched Pontiac Workers to Vote With meeting hours switched approximately 7.500 Pon- ‘ tiac Motor Division UAW employes were to vote today ratification of new local agreements ending the 20-day strike ao z, ‘ * * * In Today Ss Press Local 653 production workers are to vote on the pact at : . 5 pm. in Wisner Stadium. Skilled workers are to vote there at § p.m. This is a reversal of the meeting times listed in Comnles |e ea *1 | yesterday afternoon’s announcement in The Pontiac Press County N@Ws. 2.2.6... .6e00 13 | ; Editorials .............. sees 6 | If the pact is approved, it was expected that some Mark€te: 22. -oeeese ess: 22. workers would begin returning to the plants tonight and Obituaries ...... -....3 | tomorrow, with full production expected when Fisher Sports: ooo eee oe 17-19 | Body returns. Theaters 5 a tO | oo ; ; : TV & Radio Erceeane — oF No change was reported in the status of negotiations a Wilson, Earl ............... 27 | Fisher Body Division, which als@ has been closed down over Women’s Pages. .........; 11-13 | local issues since Oct. 2. author, and columnist was welcomed to Pontiac on ~ other at & m, School auditonum = - > iac CGC 7 p at the Pontiac Central High | day. | The plane struck some high trees jand one wing hit a tombstone as| it came in for the landing. The plane flipped over on its back but gid not catch on fire. Authorities ‘City Students Pear tee Dr. "Cr ane’s War ning Announce Belle Isle. When you select an older person to imitate as you fo Be Missile Base move up the ladder to adulthood, be sure your choice is a wise one, Dr. George W. Crane warned a large crowd pEtTRoIT (UPI) — Belle Isle of high school students this afternoon. " the Detroit River will be ; f . urned into a new Nike Hercules >d psvc : . The noted psychologist related some of the hundreds ji. base and armed with | of questions directed to him | from teenagers across the atomic warhead rockets, accord- country, and advised why’ ing to an announcement yester- - day from Army Secretary Wilber so many start up the ladder M. Brucker. rtising Manager was gist,”’ appears daily on the edi- torial page of The Press. on the wrong foot. Brucker, who was touring the ‘olowing tonights lecture ‘brvysier © issi Hie addressed a capacity crowd Follo ing tonight's lecture, Chrysler Corp. missile plant in which is designed for adults. cards Sterling Township, said Belle of Pontiac Central High semors ,. : imb hose : will be distributed to those in the) Isle would be armed with the and representatives of ofher area audience who have questions to atemic weapons within five | schools in the Central High audi-'ask Dr. Crane weeks. : forvin Dr. Crane holds degrees as a The former Michigan governor Dr. Crane's talk this afternoon Doctor of Philosophy and Medi-| said the Hercules is 10 times cine, and is recognized as one of, More effective than the Ajax. was the first of two which The Pontiac Press is sponsoring to- day. His talk to the students was entitled "Be a Good Ape.” The Hercules is known to have a range of 75 miles and is cap- able of carrying more explosive force. ithe most outstanding psychologists; in America today Just a Little Twisted Tonight at & he will talk on Upon completion of his tour Sex Problems in Marriage” be yesterday, Brucker said the fore invther expected capacity KNONVILLE. Tenn (UPI) — Jupiter and Redstone missile crowd the school anditorium.| Court officials had to change the programs are four months ahead | There wail be no admission charge. | wording of a warrant under Of schedule. and people are urged to arrive which Doyle Dixon was arrested sarly as there will be no reserved The warrant accused him of be- How Figures Can Lie SPAIUS , ing ‘dumb to cruel animals.” | Parking . I] a ay “able in the — —_—— | WASHINGTON (UPI) — A top 7 Oe - government official -said the Plasteld) ares Ot (000 enon! | Capital Still Grounded _ stock market boom reminded : “ " af ine high school on WASHINGTON (UPID—A. fed. | him of the old story of the man il ‘ who said he sold his dog for Readers of The Press will eral mediator reports no settle- $25,000. A friend, somewhat in- have their first oppertunity te = ment is in sight in a dispute that | credulous, asked if the man had hear the man whese column, | has grounded aH Capital Airlines | received cash. “No, two $12,900 “Case Record of a Psycholo- | planes. | cats,’ was the reply. Peripatetic Reporter Writes of First Flight on New Jet By HAROLD A, FITZGERALD Publisher, The Pontiac Press Some four dozen hardy souls are home today after a meteoric, world’s record breaking clipper flight to Brussels. Within tfiree days, we spanned the Atlantic, visited the World's Fair, attended numerous receptions, luncheons a formal din- ners: flew to Iceland for an hour's visit, skirted Greenland and landed back in New York. x *«* * The Baltimore to Brussels record-shattering time was seven hours and 14 minutes and in the jargon of the ring “in this corner we have the winnah — and new champion — Pan American.” The flight also set a record for congeniality. There wasn’t even an unkind thought. x * * The event was off to a “flying start” when Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower christened the huge ship the “America” at a colorful ceremony in Washington. The bottle contained water from the seven seas, in- cluding melted snow from both poles. But the crew decided on Baltimore's * * the Baltimore observatio gaining speed steadily a whoop and roar. We were air borne. The huge, “in action.” x * “Nope, me,” I insisted. 9,600 foot air strip for the takeoff as they wanted to “play it cosy.” So, the loaded departure was moved from Washington. The powerful sleek craft poised at one end of the long runway as a big crowd watched from seconds, we raced down the concrete runway her come off. Inside the great, the entire assembly cut loose with a spontaneous deluxe airplane I was sitting with Norman Chandler, publisher of the Los Angeles Times during the take-off. ‘I’m the most thrilled man aboard,” I said excitedly. He shook his head. “T am.” “But I’m a director of Pan American,” man and I lost the first argument of the trip. Two Oakland County residents; were injured early Monday eve-| mberiand Rd. | \from a weekend of hunting near, jones, eyes to the fact that in our/ isober up as they go from one to. Torch-Lighting Opens Tenth Fund Appeal Gala Kickoff Show Here | Spurs Area Volunteers on _ 3-Week Campaign — Touched off by the traditional torch lighting cere- mony and a two-hour variety show, this year’s tenth anniversary Pontiac Area United Fund appeal moved jahead today with more than 4,500 workers engaged in ‘collecting this year’s $501,000 goal. For the tenth consecutive year, the charitable volun- teers g mesidents and workers in the ontiac-Waterford area to Bive all they can for the pport of the Fund’s 55 community service agen- cies. This single campaign enables these agencies to continue caring for the Arippled, diseased, mental- ly ill, orphaned or destitute in our community The torch was ignited by 13-vear- old Jacquelyn Morris, a Camp Fire Girl with the issistance of Philip J. Monaghan, campaign chairman, and Lenard Lewis, pres- * “+ of the local fund. , mn has been in the Camp oFire ( for six years. She lives _at~260 W. Longfellow and is an Kh ~ i eighth ggader. at Lincoln Junior TUSNCNEV itigh SArooi The Gala Kickoff-Show; held in e the auditorium of Pontiac Central * High School and sponsored by Com- |munity National Bank, followed the \traditional torch lighting ceremony. The volunteer workers attending the show were entertained by vo- \ealist Fred Kendall, Miss Padd \Nikita Khrushchev, himself noted! ‘Beach who mixed ‘ined ma jfor his tippling at diplomatic re- magic, Warney Ruhl with his 11- |ceptions, has warned Russians the piece orchestra and featured sing- government is planning a crack-/¢t Patti Brown: on Drinking: Nyet! Nyet! LONDON (AP}—Soviet Premier! Victor Hoerath, a Commercial Division cochairman, welcomed he volunteers ici in “We must proclaim the sternest | this year's See neire eee struggle against drunkenness and and introduced Warney Ruhi to put an end to this evil,’ he told a' open the show. ‘group of farmers at the village’ down on drunks and moonshiners. * * * | John Hirlinger, manager of the of Malinovka near Kursk last Fri-' Pontiac Chamber of Commerce, day. Moscow radio broadcast the was the featured speaker for the levening. He appealed to the volun- iteers, who will sacrifice time and shoe leather during the next three (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) speech today. * “Drunkenness antisocial and profoundly alien to our order and, times,’ he said. “One cannpt shut | * 1s * society there still are drunkards, | thieves and swindlers. “Drunkenness = saps man's | health. The drunkard disfigures | family life and damages so- | ciety.” * * * Khrushchev said the Soviet gov-, ernment is working out a bill to, provide sterner action against} drunkards and ‘‘those who con-' tribute to drunkenness."" One law) will lhmit restaurant customers to! one glass of vodka or other spirits’) * * * there are people who like: their five tots, they will have to go to five restaurants,’ Khrush- chev told the farmers. “They will Pentiac Press Phote TORCH LIGHTER—Camp Fire “Tf Girl Jacquelyn Morris, 13, light- ed the United Fund torch_ last night propr to the kick off cere- the” pibee | monies. Shortly, guests began wandering around the big aircraft. She can handle around 165 passengers, but at the moment the Number One Model is set up for 86; and we had approximately half that number aboard, so everyone was free to visit with neighbors -and.congratulate our host on Trippe’s Tremendous Triumph. 4 * n tower. For a long 40 * * * Juan T. Trippe, president of Pan, was the spark of this tremendous event, aided and abetted by the finest flight crew ever assembled. They were strictly All-American. I'd gamble the man at the controls could have flown that gigantic and luxurious jet deal the last half of the jour- ney, purely on savvy and experience, minus fuel. The hostesses were hand picked from 1,300 Pan Am beauties and if that Joan Schroeder isn’t Miss America, it just means one thing —she never entered. nd at Jast the pilot let luxurious liner, was officially * x * * This airplane is larger and more powerful than any other jet in service today. It cracked England’s Atlantic record with aplomb—and even disdain. said Nor- ie We flew 3,900 miles non-stop from Baltimore and averaged more than 550 miles an hour. Just a week before I flew to New York from Buenos Aires (ap- proximately 6,700 miles) in about 25 hours and that flight was a de luxe deal, but with piston engines. - * * * After the early excitement died down, crew “announced dinner” which proved to be many, many courses including caviar, cham- pagne, filet mignon and crepe suzettes. The meal was “by Maxim's” of Paris and par for all the courses was about 4,000 calories. * * * We climbed to 20,000 feet, to 30,000 and then to 38,000. We were told that if the oxygen supply ever became insufficient, individual tubes would auto- matically lower in front of our seats. (Who says we can’t get to the moon?). In mid-Atlantic, the cap- tain announced that eur speed was just under six hundred miles an hour. Boys and girls, that’s knock- ing ’em off. the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) gent or We { . “erlpatetic TWO O Writes of Jet Liner Flight in Conference ‘Continued From Page One) I know that speed is pos- sible for a tiny Air Force jet. but it seems fantastic and incredible to summon suffi- cient power to hurl this great 250,000 pound craft through the skies and at any such rate. Why, it’s 144 feet long and the tail is four stories high. In fact, to a dull, non- comprehending lay man like vour peripatetic reporter, get- ting it off the ground at all comes under the head of a major miracle. There was no sense of great speed. There was no great noise. There was no confusion and there wasn’t enough vibration to tinkle the ice against the glasses in the- er-Coca-Cola. x * * Finally, some-of the boys set- tled down to catch forty winks as Brussels was operating on a time schedule five hours ahead of ours. Unchanged watches still showed 12:30, but shortly the sun began to dawn in a gorgeous crimson sky and suddenly Old Sol broke through and we were facing the beginning of an un- expected tomorrow. xk * * Somewhere along the line, a few of us glimpsed London under the left wing, but London didn't look as large as Clarkston — or nearly as important. Oh, she looked well enough in her stolid, stodgy middle class British way, but we were in the midst of glamour, excitement, world rec- ords and just the Dawn of To- morrow was infinitely more im- portant. x * * By this time, those who had sneaked a dash of sleep were awake with the new ex- citement and we began to descend. DeWitt Wallace, publisher 4 The Reader's Digest looked around with an easy smile. “This is the first reception I ever attended that lasted seven hours,” said he. Finally, the. giant craft lev- eled out and everyone sat up expectantly, until the wheels brushed Belgian soil. Another spontaneous cheer arose from 40 tired but excited pas- sengers. We were there. We were “in.” xk * * The record was now a fait ac- compli and we all shook hands amid good will and general ex- citement. A dozen limousines met us in the early morning of beautiful Brussels and the next two days were a round of entertainment, receptions, dinners and visits to the Fair. - * x * Sunday, we headed for home. And new surprises were in store. High winds suggested one stop for refuel- ing and Mr. Trippe — what a man — had elected Iceland. Yes, I mean Ieeland. So-0-0-0-0, our big glamour baby headed northward across England and Scotland and like a frightened shadow eT TUESDAY, OCTOB Reporter — we sped over those Nordic lands to challenge the frozen north. x * * It wasn’t long before the Cap- tain told us in dolorous tones that we weren’t even averaging 500 M.P.H. as the headwinds had increased to an amazing 110 miles a hour; and it was 60 be- low zero. But even such titantic and glacial blasts—straight from the Big Deep Freeze of the frozen north are just trivia in the life of this new jet air liner. We headed into the teeth of the op- position and in an incredibly short time were advised that Iceland was directly ahead; and we'd circle to show us the coun- try and show us to the country. x * * Don’t bail out over Iceland. That’s a friendly and earnest tip from old Uncle Harold. The land of big ice and for- midable snow didn’t earn its name through whimsy or geo- graphic caprice. It’s really ice land. And how! x * * The country is mountainous and even those big hounds with the little casks under their floppy ears would never negotiate the deep snows and the frightening declivities. Marshall Field of Chicago, called it yesterday's “baked Alaska.” x * * We spent an hour there—just a goodwill visit — and our boy scouts bought souvenirs like all get out. “How,” someone asks, “can you land in Iceland when you can’t take off from Washington, Dee The answer is simple. “The US. Air Force has pre- pared facilities in Iceland that leave Washington runways look- ing like a half mile dirt track at a county fair. * x * When we left Keflavk, Iceland, we took a cozy little swing across part of the ice cap of Greenland (courtesy of the man- agement) and then headed for Montreal, Albany and New York City. It was a great cruise. No one will ever forget it. If they let you sit down in a quiet corner for an hour’s earn- est contemplation of what you want in the way of a 72 hour trip, who could conjure a more thrill- ing deal than this? Echo answers, “No one.” * * * We saw the Fair, we were dined and entertained and last night at home I looked around absent-mindedly for the caviar and assorted hors d'oeuvres before our simple Pontiac repast. Cinderella, the gong has sounded. Back to your corner into sack cloth and ashes. The glorious and golden hour is over. . But. what a ball! If Juan Trippe runs a flight to the moon, count me In. ‘|Quemoy, compared with more The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS, Plomfl Hills to Slat Home Delivery of Mail | Dulles, Chiang Communist Guns Rack Off-Shore 2nd Day, Only Lighter tary of State Dulles and President Chiang Kai-shek opened their con- ference today against a backdrop of renewed Red cannonading of Quemoy. After a 22-hour meeting be- tween Dulles and Chiang, a State Department spokesman said that “Mr. Dulles is not here to twist anybody's arm or apply any heat! or pressure.” * * * While the talks progressed, the Chinese Communists put their shore guns into action for the sec- ond day but on a much lighter scale. The Defense Ministry said up to noon only 362 shells had hit than 11,500 Monday. But there was no doubt the ab- rupt Red decision to end the Com- munist-imposed cease-fire had an important bearing on the Dulles- Chiang discussions. * * * Joseph Greene, special assistant to Dulles, said Dulles’ first con- ference with Chiang was ‘‘a stock- taking of the present situation.” He said the political and military Situation was being assessed along with Communist propaganda. * x * Greene took this tack on reports that the United States might bring pressure on Chiang to cut down the off-shore islands in the hope of obtaining a permanent cease- fire. He said applying heat or pres- sure ‘‘would not be in tune with the relationship of mutual trust and confidence of the two coun- tries as allies.” * * * Vice President Chen Cheng, Chiang’s right-hand man, de- clared that to cut the size of the garrisons or to pull out of the off- shore islands would ‘‘definitely lead to a large-scale war.” * * Chen told a rally in Taipei on Overseas Chinese Day he was not surprised that the Reds had brok- en the cease-fire because all Com- munist pledges are worthless. He said the United States fully un- derstands the true nature of the Communists. Owosso Hunter Shot to Death At Least 40 Woundings Reported by Troopers, on Opening Day By The Associated Press TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)—Secre- rectly to home mail boxes. HILLS — Home BLOOMFIELD H mail delivery will begin Nov. 15 injever, Bloomfield Hills, Postmaster|struction ‘of these drives, accord- Islands for Wayne Mortimer announced today.|ing to Gare, - Three rural routes are being replaced by four vehicle delivery | drive is a necessity from the point routes, which will bring: mail di-|of safety, Correspondence with the state and the request it rescind its The rural pattern of clustered ban brought a statement from Hill that the possibility of adding an- other lane to U.S. 10 made the access drives impractical, mailboxes will be eliminated en- tirely, Mortimer said. The Bloomfield Post Office staff will be increased to 12 to 14 full- time workers, Carriers will go on a five-day week. They presently work six days. Mortimer said Civil Service ex- aminations for the additional help will not be completed in time to meet the immediate needs, and that temporary employes will be ired. x * * Plans already are under way, he said, to secure extra trucks, clerks and carriers to handle the Christ- mas mail rush, Extra space for the processing of parcel post probably will be set up in the former Kings- ley Inn building. A comparison between educa- tional systems in the United States and those of Western Europe and Russia will be the subject of a talk at 8 tonight by George A. Roeper, headmaster of City and Country Day School, at the school’s PTA meeting. Roeper recently returned from a tour of nations in Western Eu- rope and the Soviet Union. The meeting will be preceded by an open house. Refreshments will be served. The Women’s Society of Redeem- er Lutheran Church will hold its fall rummage sale Thursday and Friday in the church basement. Hours will be Thursday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., according {6* Mrs. R, K. Lewis, genera) chairman. The first edition of the Bloom- field Hills High School newspaper will be published Friday, accord- ing to Donald Gregory, journalism instructor. A temporary staff is headed by Marty Cole, editor in chief, with Nancy Sharp and Dan McClellan, assisting. Chris Newman is busi- ness manager. The paper has not been named yet. * * * A Birmingham. Chamber of Com- merce suggestion that temporary stores be barred from the city dur- ing the Christmas season was re- ferred last night to City Attorney James Howlett by the City Com- mission. Charles Mortensen, chamber manager, asked that the Commis- sion adopt an ordinance to this ef- fect, pointing out that these tem- porary merchants hurt stores which operate the year-round, x * * City Manager L. R. Gare, Major Carl Ingraham and City Engineer One gunshot death, that of an| Owosso area hunter in his own! |barn yard marred the start of| |Michigan’s small game hunting season Monday., * * * State Police reported at least 40 woundings of hunters, none ser- ious, by accidental gunfire. The farmer victim was Albert Crandall, 42, father of two chil- dren who was found shot and killed in his corn wagon. Crandall apparently had reached to the back of his wagon to get) Grover Serenbetz asked commis- sioners to attend a meeting with them next Tuesday in Lansing to discuss access drives with Howard E. Hill, deputy commissioner of engineering for the State Highway Department, About a year ago, commission- ers notified all business places on U.S, 10 that they must have access drives installed within a period of two years, At the time, the State Highway Department had considered these drives a necessity. his shotgun and the weapon dis- charged. The charge entered his right hand and abdomen. * bd * It was presumed that Crandall itook the gun in the wagon with (him in order to fire at birds while picking corn. A son, Rodney, 10, found his father’s body upon returning home from school at Chesaning. A recent ruling by the state, how- _ om hag in hen’ cn ENS re rs ygidiggs union shop in California. Ingraham stated t ccess SR 8 caer nll saath Knight, running for an office he didn’t want, is against the pro- United Fund Opens Annual Campaign (Continued From Page One) weeks, to make this year’s drive the most successful in the fund’s history. * * * An evening kickoff featuring en- tertainment was a United Fund in- novation this year. It was a fine| show and a fine tribute to the men and women who work so hard each} year to make the Torch Drive a success, Monaghan said’ Its theme was built around this year’s cam- paign slogan, ‘Care Enough to GIVE Enough.” A More than 12,000 businesses pro- duce oil in the United State, and the largest of these doesn't pro- duce as much as 6 per cent of posal and has said he may not vote for Knowland, Organized la- bor also is fighting Knowland on the ‘right to work proposal” and he currently faces the gloomy prospect of defeat by his Demo- cratic opponent, State Atty. Gen. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown, With Knowland and Knight side by side on the speakers’ plat- form with him in an outward show of harmeny, Eisenhower told his applauding audience: “Lets have no more family bick- ering — fancied or real. It just helps defeat what we want.’’ Knowland and Knight joined the prolonged applause. A bit later the President said the Republicans “have had our family spats.’’ But he went on to say at that point that the Democrats are worse off—that they are hopelessly split. Eisenhower picked Vice Presi- dent Nixon's home state to say this about him: Nixon is ‘‘one of our most effective leaders in this great fight’ to win control of Congress from the Democrats in the November elections, Eisen- hower added: “He is giving us a shining example of dedication to the nation’s total output. the cause of good government.” another big round of applause in talking of efforts to win a just world peace. er said, ‘‘They know that America will.not countenance territorial ex- pansion by force... “America is allergic to appease- Women Will Be Women LOS ANGELES (UPI)—About 100 reporters waiting in a press room at a hotel yesterday for President Eisenhower to make an appearance thought the Chief Executive had arrived when they heard loud shouts of feminine joy. Rushing out the room, re- ‘porters saw a large crowd of Cd THE EASY WAY to get cash for things around your home that you are no longer using is to place a quick action Pontiac Press Want Ad. The cost is small, results are big. This little ad brought a buyer right away. * 9 GIRLS BANBURY WINTER eoats, 3-pe. set, size 3, 2-pe One of the injured Monday was 17-year-old Diane Wilson of Dear-| born. A hunter’s buckshot struck) jher in the legs. A total of 78 pellets’ were removed. Mrs. Mae Marquand, 55, of su-) burban Flint, was struck by buck- | shot while in her backyard. She; set, size 8, $10 each. OR 2-1771, Tp Place Your Want Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 Just ask for the WANT AD. DEPT. was not seriously hurt. Dr. George WV. Crane Pontiac Press Editorial Page Feature writer of “Case Records of a Psychologist.” Couriciler te thousands om a variety of problems from personal to community. Read his column daily and hear him next : Tuesday, in his . Personal Appearance TONIGHT Lecture | | | — Cape Canaveral Cost Cooler Air Fans and Eastward Across Rockies, Plains | | | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Full U. 5. Weather Bureau Report | ppge worm ame, new nou Near $306 Million 74, Considerable cloudiness tonight, low 53. | Tomorrow mestly cloudy and teenies | : cooler with a chance of some ligh CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) showers. High temperature Wednesday | ; near 76. Seutherly winds increasing to —The Air Force expects to spend 15 -%5 miles per hour teday and tontcht.| F: | becoming westerly 10-20 miles per hoor a record total of $305,886,000 oP | Due to the @ © Sudden Death of Our Yard Foreman, Question and Answer Program Cooler air from the West spread| * Sun sets Tuesday at § 41 pm Sun rises Wednesday at 6 53 am Moon sets Wednesday at 2 05 am Moon rises Tuesday at 2 47 pm '175 million dollars will be expend. ‘ed in Brevard County and central Florida and about $31,600,000 in other sections of the state. tumn weather prevailed in the} Eastern third of the country. | * * * | tomorrow. erating the missile test center —— ——— : : . a south and eastwe i , C Today tn Pontiac during the fiscal year 1959 of ae sand into sections) . Lowes! ten.perature preceding 8 am aa of the Southwest and mid-conti- | — ——— a8 Officials announced that about nent today but generally mild au-, CARI SHORE . . Pontiac Central High School Auditorium Dewntown Temperatures sboc 48 tlem. ... 6am oe: Only a few wet spots were re- | Tam. 480012 m ..... 4... 81 * * * otter : ; ; M P : Woes e so ported across the nation, with no tt Sam TPR The air force will have spent severe storms. the Yar d and Office of ALO ils 2 215 million dollars on payrolls * «& & | Menday in Pontiac alone in Brevard County from . . . . “>. ° ® bd OQ silgtesl LM Recorded aoe ptowt ‘6 1950, when the Cape opened. to (is cool ur that chilled the i Public Invited ~— = Free Admission Lowest temperature ...... 40 the end of fiscal year 1959, which Rockies and Plateau region dipped ROTH LUMBER ‘COMPANY fi Mean temperature Weather—Sunny southward to the Mexican border A in Arizona and New Mexico dur- ing the night. As it advanced east- 45 200,000 will be spent in sections of “@". temperatures dropped the United States other than Flor-|?°!5S the Plains, Minnesota, | ida and another six million wil! “ estern Iowa and most of Kansas. | 23 in 1895 be used outside the United States. | ~ * * 88 began July 1 * One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature Pu eNere) eyetey Lowest temperature . Mean temperature Weather—Clear, mild Parking Available on Crofoot School Athletic Field aN Presented as a public service by : . Of the total for 1959, about $93,-; J y Will Be Closed All Day, Wednesday, Oct. 22nd #eeeen Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 86 Years 81 in 1920 Mentayis Touperatere Chart se Lowest readings were in the cen- Alpena . 32 50 Cincinnat! 73 49 The “‘hurst’ at the end of ajtral and northern sections of the Bismarck ; Clevelian G3 82 aie | 5 ‘ 5 see 2) peciend = 3 32 name of a village or town means Rockies and Plateau states. They . Buffalo | 68 $4. Detroit es 7 that plenty of trees are in the were mostly in the 30s, with some . ' Chicago 75 57 Fort Worth sé° 79 Vicinity ‘areas colder. a ae a a = ‘ ee. Sr 8 Bre OE “a f - Pe GB ea Gr ae ge gp aa BR gee ge ge ea a gcc gg a a aig itn i li A ARG A er ae seats He said he based his optimism on farmer talk he heard during his travels through the farm belt states. “The farmers have an ideal combination,’’ Benson said, men- tioning “abundant production, good prices and stable costs." “Pure demagoguery’’ was his an- swer to a recent claim by Sen. Jehn Kennedy (D-Mass) that fam- ily farms have dwindled by four million under the Republicans. “It is not true,’* Benson said. “The facts are available from the Litedaes Sevens,” Ollicial: tig show that 3.3 million persons left the farm in the last four years of the Truman administration while only 1.8 million left in the past five years of the Republican ad- ministration.” * * * At Flint, U.S. Sen. Charles Pot- ter (R-Mich) told a dinner group won’t/his Democratic rival, Lt..Gov. Phil- ip A. Hart, was a pawn of United Auto Worker President Walter P. ther. He scoffed at Hart's assertion elected he probably would vote for successor legislation in 1959. Hart’s statements were dis- missed as “a pre-election switch.” ommendations of the McClellan "a- bor Rackets Committee, followed the UAW pattern of “misinforma- tion’ as to Potter's voting record, Potter said Hart criticized rec-| oid pas lifted a seas against inet two wwocke it eas btidlaen labor violence in Michigan. a move designed to “buy votes” The state's senior senator spoke with a wave of radio and tele- at a dinner in the Masonic Temple! vision which was attended by 175 persons and later briefly appeared before an audience of about 100 assembled at the Dom Polski Club to hear a talk on behind the scenes poli- ticking in labor unions. * * * Big businessmen are rallying around Potter and other Republi- cans in an eleventh hour move to stave off defeat in the Nov. 4 elec- tion, Lt. Gov. Hart asserted last night in Lansing. Hart, Democratic candidate for the U.S, Senate, assailed Potter in a television talk as ‘the voice of big business. bosses.”’ Those same men will donate $300,000 at a $100-a-plate dinner honoring Vice President Nixon next Monday in Flint, he said. Earlier, he predicted Michigan Republicans “will cut loose a million dollar slush fund’ in the Ld In Sebewaing last night Gov. Williams urged voters to break up the Republican. monopoly in the the Legislature. “Michigan's biggest governmen- tal problem is the two decades of foot-dragging we have had to un- dergo while Republicans held un- broken one party control of both Houses of the Legislature,” Wil- liams told a Democratic dinner group here. Williams said that for more than a century the Republican Party ihas had legislative control. “For 20 years without interup- tion,” he said, “Republicans have THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1958 had a majority in both Houses and enjoyed the power to block or «in oe legislation needed by & industrial state.” “It pares t make sense,” he said, “for a state which is heavily Dem- ocratic, whose people obviously want to see a forward-looking Dem- ocratic program enacted, to leave the law-making function entirely in the hands of those who repre- sent the minority party.” 7" * * And also in Lansing, Paul D. Bagwell, Republican candidate for governor, visioned Michigan as a future center for Polar route flights. 7 Bagwell proposed that the state start a study to determine the feasibility of optioning from 3,000 to 5,000 acres of land in the center of* Michigan to be held for a jet age intercontinental air field to take advantage of Michigan’s ‘ideal geographic location” with the respect to Polar flight. The proposal was spelled out in Visitors See orld’s Fair World’ ska mpgs than ‘ Ai ths, Faaar , BRUSSPES (UPD _ Fair, which attra 40 million visito ended with a be bout 50,000 persons from Iron Cur- in countries, 5,000 of them Rus- é y Day record § The performing arts theater at- d about 175,000 persons, and ) voting machines, put in at the . Aman! ing the spread of different na- thatitionalities and regional products riwere snapped up by visitors. | * * * Par-| The fate of the six-million- 7 4 $23.80, Paldwin Rubher Co* Tha. 1A @ Rees Orer Oo) oe ae a Mrs. Jack Prasil, of 10] Me- Howe Flee Mie Gas «4 «7 Chanic St., reported to police | enineula Met Prod Co* 4 10 while + trenff : Rentnsuin Merle : 2 hile He Was walking on W. Rudy Mie Co ¢¢ 94 g4 Huron St. at Pontiac Central | oledo Edison Co 148 145 145) Hi sc j ; ° Warne Screw Prod Co* $0 8G rh School, iwe ot *P ae caine Ge) OR) CHIE proached her and snatched her ee purse. Doctor Says Children Getting Ulcers Today NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — Even children are getting ulcers these days, President-Elect Dr. Joseph Shaiken of the American College of Gastro-Enterology reports. Uleers in youngsters are a re- sult of tension from unsatisfactors family situations, difficulties with playmates, trouble at school and éven imaginary difficulties, Shai- ken told the group's annual! con- vention yesterday. An uncoated steel panel will corrode about five times faster in New York than in Arizona iN | $25 cash taken from the cash The boys, described as about! 18-years-old, escaped on foot. The: purse contained $10 cash and per- sona] papers. Shortly before this, Mrs. Gail Ronan, of 162-.E. Iroqueis Rd., told police two young boys at- tempted to snatch her purse | while she was walking on State | St. near Porter St. She said they pulled so hard the strap snapped and the purse fell to the ground) The youths ran east on Porter | | Monday afternoon, Mrs. Charles ‘McPherson, of 130 Baldwin Ave.,| reported that someone had stolen’ her purse from a counter at 66 Saginaw ney predicted yesterday Rambler ‘sales in the 1959 model year will in's be double the 170,000 sold in the) company’s 1958 fiscal-model year. cars is higher than the 300,000-car estimate Romney made only three weeks ago. The executive noted that in its first quarter ending Dec. 31 sales will be about double last year’s total of 36,000 Ramblers. — Alliys of nickel and molybdenum, because of their outstanding re- sistance’ to' hydrochloric acid, are widely used in the chemical in- dustry. The latest estimate of 340,000 (Late Morning Quotations) rece and | ody an eesioe cain Waterford Township police. jpastor Dr. Joseph I. Chapman that! Figures after decimal point are eighths| utility 16.00-26.00. : ww. Cc : jould be de of can-| j no mention wou made of c my | Mrs. James Miller of 7790 Gale| "0, ™ent Admiral .. 14.§ Holland F .... 11.6), Sheep, Salable 2.000. Bulk of supply, : : ‘didates. They held to the stipula-| Air Reduc .... 716 Homestk .... 37.6|feeder lambs slaughter sheep; slaughter|Rd., Waterford Township, reported ,, : | Allied Ch ..... $3.4 Hooker E) 36.6 aaa in moderate supply trade on alll, ‘ li that Bee ition carefully until some of the Allied Strs .... 49.5 Ill Cent ..... 4 _| classes: active prices fully steady. Good/to police that approximately $17| poctators started asking questions Allis Chal .... 374 Indust Ray cae cose aleve ee ee choice was stolen from her purse in her Alum Lid -.... 30-1 Intend ae. Ah g|6@T6 Ib. feeder lambs -21.00-22.50. home sometime yesterday. Dr. Chapman had to break up | AmiAlriin 2 30S te bes ch 436 A s an exchange between Lindemer | See aS +P ummage Sale Redeemer Lu-| and a woman who charged the an M & Pay . a2 tat Pick #2 Poultry and Eggs peren gouh of Bian 1800 W.) p a hit Sennkusted YE .. 27.4 Int Paper aple ’ . urs. See He 32a: small 71 parece B. large = Bag el] Jalopy |are coming, not leaving Michigan, | 1 : ilarc . . Browns: Gra | W - | ‘ . tee ed | EEO sc 16 Douaewenn 10 48: medium, 33. emails 215 Checke wee | . as Republicans say. He criticised jee Mack Trk 282 Wid. avg. 29. i i Calum & H ... 175 Martin Co 331 Commercially graded: Running Afoul the Legislature for cutting appro-| Genen P. ie May D Strs . 462. Whites: Grade A, jumbo 48-50: extra priations for the Economic De- Can Pao. 397 Mead C 452 large 46-59; large 44-49; medium 31-32. ° velopment Commission Cantal Ail aah Merck 69 7 small 22%-24. Browns: Grade A, jumbo of Detroit Law ” ~~ gant ; ey 4 Mergen Lino 456 46-50: extra large 44-45: large 42'-45 a ‘ er Cp ... 395 Merr Ch & & 17 medium 294-3044. small 22-25 | He said the GOP legislators ase, JI -. 196 Midl sti Pd , ; exercised a “‘ ; wise, doll Cater Tree, SS Mole He ars Paul D.-Bagwell’s 198 jalopy, exercised a “penny wise, dollar Ches & Oh ... 631 Monsan Ch 37? a was dealt a blow yesterday when| foolish’ economy. He said his- rersier a es Mont verde) p 0 rea Ins Detroit Traffic Judge John D. Logi mer otfered 8 padi Cities Sve |... §9 Motorola 4n3 ‘Watts said it belonged in a mu-| 8° "UPrevement without) an | Clark 1 Murray Cp 221 | : = eee Clestt Bae ws Nat Birc | 482 iseum and not on the streets, Cole Paim J. Trg Nat airy 476 . |. The judge found Donald E. Bar-| | Col Brd A 38 Ral Gyos 7 urse { ‘ber, 26, bf White Lake Township, U er rouses [ @ eae oo Be Nort & West Pf 216 guilty of chauffeuring Bagwell’ e | eouanncee a5 Nor Pac P 522 around in the antique car mnichial Dixie Democ at | C Pw Pt (452) 98 Tera aur ane Ph CG Stati let off too much smoke, the judge if § C Pw Pf i443) 846 Textron 11 armacy, as tation aA E: ’ Cont Bak 451 Thomn Pd an . said. ‘He suspended Barber's sen- Cont Can |. $24 Tran Weair 16 Looted, Pontiac Women tence. ee By The Associated Press Cont Mot 11. Twenty Cen 775 | Southern Democrats were feud- Copper Rng .. 328 wm Pavoide | ie soze Handbags _ Barber, a political science major |ing today with their party's na- Corn Pd .... 148 tm Pac "308 Pr tis : . at Michigan State University, was|tional chairman—just as President Curtis Pub ||. 147 tit aie tin 373, Pontiac Police reported Several ticketed while driving the jalony 1 Fisenhowe: Aamithe : Deere 0 483 omit Atte! a breakins and a pair of purse ti ke Ww ue iw ng the jalopy in| Eisenhower was saying the Denwo- Dis C Seag 325 tm Gas c sa snatching incidents Monday. ela tak USRe . . oa are a hopelessly split party bow ches) lengine nin: we. Thieves broke a 24 by 50-inch Jason L. Honigman, Republican offering only deadlocked xovern- Ge ape nae ma Steel e> 4 Plate glass window from the front candidate for attorney general, de- mene ; Gillette.) ae a re} 32> door of the J. & V. Pharmacy, fended Barber. What aroused the ire of the Geers Ls al Woste * Bk 289.89 S. Saginaw St. and crawled Southerners was a statement Sun- od rem &F ~ . a av j tations Goodyear 4.4 White Mot t, . through. Predicts Rambler Sales 22. by Democratic Naticnal, Gre Paige 48 | wilkan & Co. 27 Missi Chairman Paul M, Butler. He told, t No Ry yaolwort Miss j , . . ; A Grevhound He Ses i sng were five cartons of Will Double in 1959 interviewers Southern Demccrats Gulf Of1 1174 vnetShaT 1129, Cigarettes valued at §20, two . ought either to accept a strong! Hersh Croc 65 7entth Rad 1214 wrist watches and a cigarette DETROIT (UPI)—American Mo-| civil rights. plank in the 1960 STOCK AVERAGES _ lighter, total val § | i = i =e NEW YORK—iCompiled by the As-| ue of $13.60, and tors Corp, President George Rom-|Democratic platform or leave the, party. | Several Dixie Democrats said, Butler should leave the party, One’ called him a radical and another said he was pitching for ‘‘North- ern radical votes and _ special minority interests.” agreed last night that the number) yi. remark prompted Lindemer one issue in the Nov. 4 election to remind the audience that the is the status of the state’s indus-/p.mocrats in their state conven- tion adopted a platform ‘‘the likes of which you've never seen.”’ “And ‘where will the money come from?” cluded Michigan’s Federal] Em- ployment Practices Commission) (FEPC) laws, mental health, help for the aged, and education. His counterpart said too strong government control and fiscal re-) sponsibility are the other major issues which voters will pass on in| two weeks. 3 Area Disputes End for GM “Five out of every six cars | declared Staebler. ‘And if they | Leaving Total of 72,000 Still on Strike, With 203,226 Back on Job DETROIT (UPI) — General Mo- tors announced today that three more United Auto Workers local |bargaining units have come tO\capsule and escape systems. Both men had promised church terms over local disputes leaving, . a only 72,000 GM workers still on strike, * * * | A spokesman for the firm said powered combination space craft so far 87 local units have reached agreement and 203,226 workers were back on the job today. New-car production continued at Buick and Oldsmobile and at | a few other Buick-Oldsmobile- Pontiac plants. The spokesman said “We don't know how long our materials will hold out. When they expire the plants will have to close again, unless the other strikes are settled.” GM resumed some production yesterday in five of its 22 as- sembly plants for the first time since Oct. 2. * * * The UAW international office an- nounced that the GM-UAW national agreement reached Oct. 2 has been “overwhelmingly ratified” by UAW members: at GM plants. * * * Chrysler Corporation’s 8-Mile Rd. plant in Detroit was struck this morning. A company spokesman) \said about one thousand UAW! members walked out “‘in continua- tion of a dispute that started last Friday." The plant, a parts and equipment center, was hampered, but not closed, by a. walkout Fri- day. > Kellogg Shareholders to Vote on Stock Split - BATTLE CREEK W — Stock- holders of the Kellogg Co., world’s largest cereal manufacturer, meet here Nov. 17 to vote on a proposed general manager of Ford Motor Co.'s trac- | tor and implement division. WILL... if you can’t! FE 4-2541 15 W. Lewrence, Pontiac ANSWERING SERVICE Two Test Pilots to Orbit Earth | DALLAS (AP)—A couple of ex- perimental test pilots here hope one of them will ride a rocket out into space, whirl around the earth at 18,000 miles an hour and land again, all “in a couple of. hours and be home in time for dinner." The pilots, William Becker and| Ralph Cokely, are here to study \Chance-Vought’s plans for pilot) * * * They work for Boeing Airplane |Co., which is trying to gain final’ Air Force approval of a rocket-! ‘aircraft and missile. | Chance-Vought is one of a sev-| jen-company team competing with \a Martin team on the craft. , Becker and Cokely expect, if) Boeing wins the contract, one of! them will ride the rocket far out) into space, glide a full turn around the earth, and land at the! jsame base he used for takeoff. | The flight is planned for some-' time before 1965 and both pilots will work nearly full time getting| ready for the space venture. “Even at that, it will be nip and tuck for us to get prepared! for this thing,’’ Cokely said. I They will undergo simulated space flights and centrifuge tests and make exploratory flights in advance supersonic aircraft. “‘My family believes in anything I want to do,” Cokely said in an- swer to a question. “If she had’ the chance, my wife said she’ would do it herself.’ Studying Plans | PONTIACS HOME _ FOR RETIRED FOLKS Folks our homelike accommodations with the convenience of being right downtown where things are happen- ing. No need to travel for entertainment. Why don’t you stop in our air - conditioned atmos- phere, have a look at one of our spacious rooms, then ask and be amazed by. our down-to-earth down- town prices for retired - folks. For further inlocmations phone federal 5-8126 ~« e@eeeeeseeese Walled Lake to Hold Antipolio Clinic WALLED LAKE — More than 3,000 applications have been re-| ceived for polio shots at’ tomor- - row’s immunization clinic at Walled Lake Senior High School, accord- ing to Mrs. Charles Palmer, health chairman of the Walled Lake Council of Parent-Teacher Associa- tion which is sponsoring the elinic. * * * 2-for-1 stock split of the firm’s common stock. The proposal was made yester-| day by the firm's board of direc-| tors. If passed, the proposal would) increase Kellogg's authorized com- mon stock from 4,500,000 shares to 9,000,000 shares. The firm did not give the number of its shareholders. Injections will be given from 4 to 6 p.m. and again from 7 to 9 p.m. by local physicians and registered nurseé, -assisted by PTA mothers. * * * The clinic is available to all chil-| - dren one year old om over and adults living in the Walled Lake Consolidated Schoo] District. A nominal fee will be charged. = In Wheeling, W. Va., Butler ap-. peared to soften his stand some- what , Monday night, __ saying, “We're certainly not going to read anybody out of the party.” “Inevitably there will be some people who will not go along with. the party platform,” he, added. Butler said he did not think such a split would hurt the Democrats | in the 1960 presidential campaign. sore? to % fie * iis Now in One Broader | Pe | protection fat | Policy— de Now You Can Save Money When You Buy Home Insurance! You Receive Protection for Your Home, the ~ | Contents, Theft and Personal Liability. P Low ‘A. W. Hattenlocher Max E. Kerns esurenct js T i werue[iew pure 306-320 Riker Bldg. FE 4-1551- | mmo YOUR Insurance Sssaena vow pPrest* Broom ndependen. Phone Richard H. DeWitt Res, FE 5-3792 Accident Insurance Automobile Insurance Liability Insurance Burglary Insurance ; Tenants’ 714 Community Nat’l Bank Bldg. BAKER & HANSEN Homeowners’ Policies FE 4-1568-9 Donald E. Hansen Res. FE 2-5513 Fire Insurance Life Insurance Plate Glass Insurance Bonds — All Types - Policies A single conversation a@ wise man is better of books. across the table with than 10 years’ study ~ Fiuman bees make more honey when investing their money to yield them a useful return. if it’s income you seek why not ask us this week hovv to help you to make money earn. You may be particularly interested in an “accumulation” plan which enables you to invest as little or as much as you wish—out of income. You can consult us without any obligation whatsoever. . * C. J. NEPHLER CO. 818 Community National Bonk Bldg. Hours 8:30 A.M, to 4:30 P.M. _. FE 2.9119 —~