£ Candidat les Take Off Gloves After TV Ends _ well- By ROGER LANE DETROIT (AP)—An angry Gov. Williams and Paul D. Bagwell, his Republican rival for the governorship, sput- tered at one another face to face last night after a tele- vised campaign debate. ~In an unusual display of ire, the Democratic governor braced Bagwell at his studio desk about use of what Williams called a “false statement” concerning Indiana’s economic growth as compared with Michigans. Bagwell retorted that Williams was “splitting hairs.” The dramatic 10-minute scene was witnessed by about illia station hookup. Arrangements a few hours earlier. * * arguments voiced many times economic climate. for it were firmed up only * The debate was almost wholly a rehash of campaign before, mostly on the state’s Williams accused Bagwell and Republicans of a “smear- Michigan campaign” attributable to a “desperate effort to s Debate candidates, who sseraiad without shaking hands. They had done so before the show started. The formal half hour debate, long advertised, had been beamed over most of the Lower Peninsula via a three- Pp utters cover up their party's responsibility for the national reces- sion.” Bagwell repeated assertions that the hostility of Wil- liams in making the business community an “object of political attack and political jobs out of Michigan. scorn” was chasing factory “At this very moment,” he said, “Gov. Handley of In- diana is going around that state bragging that almost 40,000 jobs from 38 industries moved there to escape the - labor government of the state * * of Michigan.” * The irritation exhibited by Williams after the program AKE ver LS e was directed at another measure of Indiana versus Michi- gan economic growth, based on two reports that Williams said “are in no way comparable.” In his prepared opening remarks, the governor had asked if Bagwell was “prepared to retract his false state- ment that Michigan gained only 16 new industries (last year) while Indiana was gaining 137.” Bagwell, in his rebuttal, made no direct acknowledge- ment but remarked, before bringing in Handley, that 97 new industries had moved into Indiana. Williams rose from his desk, about eight feet, removed (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) 40 newsmen, studio technicians and aides of the twe The Weather Cloudy, cooler. ! | \ I ! A (Details Page %) 2 116th YEAR kKkekkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 19: 58 —38 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Te & Hope Dinan for 91 Trapped Min + Wy aD No SEE A LOIRE MIRAI it OBER sy 5 Cocktail, Milk k Same but . ~ | Figure | in Probe Calories? Phooey! _atMental Home Kills Himself To Have Taken Lie Test PHILADELPHIA (AP)—Dieting Americans tend to be too calorie conscious and not think about 1 other values in food, a Detroit food expert says “Some persons discover a cocktail and a glass > of milk have the same humber of calories,” the in Recent Patient Death. ; expert, Mrs. Muriel G. Wagner, said yesterday. i “They drink the cocktail instead of the milk. at Coldwater | = __ The nutritional value isn't the same.” : For those interested in furthering the scien- COLDWATER - Pi — 5 tifte investigation of diet foods, Mrs. Wagner said a Charles Trombley, 37-year-, » Yum Collins or a whisky sour contain about th- old attendant involved in | same amount of calories as a glass of milk. an investigation at the + 160 CALORIES Coldwater Staté Home and She said the amount is 160 calories. depending Training School, commit- : on the sugar content of the mixed drink ted suicide yesterday, Cor-! 3 A calorie is the measure of the energy oner Donald Diedrich re- | value of food. ported. * Dieters should consider the amount of protein Prosecutor Harold J. 4 and vitamins in the foods they eat or drink, said Smith concurred in the sui-, j Mrs. Wagner, a nutritionist for a Detroit school. cide finding and said 7 x *& * Trombley shot himself in a She and other diet specialists discussed weight the chest with a rifle a mile 3 at the 4lst annual meeting of the American rth of Coldwater © Dietetic Assn. ee 4 Trombley was among attendants “Americans have apparently invented the - who loaded Joseph Kibiloski, 45,) first perpetual motion machine in history — the movement of the fork from the plate to mouth pom 7 soe . Ps jae pe a ” id. ospital, where he diec e also : ns had been assigned to the cottage : Mrs. Wagner also said: “For a lot of people diets . where Kibiloski was housed. are ineffective because they can’t break old food ulexpanded| investigations ate! habits. 4 MORE CONSCIOUS “People are more diet conscious “The figure norm of the culture is slim, trim “ and almost emaciated. But with the movement of neaees in the death Oct 8 of Kibil-| population to the suburbs, there is a growing gour- oski, a mental patient met emphasis on food. There’s father in the back- * * yard barbecuing. That brings up the problem how Phillips told newsmen he also x do you eat and not get fat.” - planned to review testimony given) 4 to Branch County Prosecutor| ; . Smith, who issued a report saying| si . ; a 2 there was no evidence of any mis-| |treatment whatever which could! ihave ‘contributed to or hastened” the death of Kibiloski. Phillips isaid: the death of the patient has been promised following the suicide. Rep. Harry J. Philips (R-Port ‘Huron), said his legislative com-| mittee plans lie tests for three wit-| “As soon as it is made avail- able, I am going to review testi- mony given... Smith and check ‘Bermuda’ Contest — Winds Up Saturday 2223893 : For those with ambitions of wearing Bermuda shorts! Phillips said his legislative in- on a free week-long vacation in Bermuda, time is get-|vestigating committee had planned ting short. it o ask Trombley to undergo a lie idetector test in its probe of Kibil- Deadline for entering the contest Sponsored | by t the oski’s.death. | the roof breaking x * * x & * x & * Reports on Rescue Attempts ANY WORD? — William Jambs, o1 rescue trapped coal draegermen working to Timbers Split, into a station wagon for tcanstet I) St Was Thick, Sula Miner ‘William Cornier a veteran miner. Was one of the miners who were res- cued early today from the Sprir N.8 disaster This is an ac his ordea! : As Told to United Press International SPRINGHILL, N. S.—A terrific vibration shook the floor and roof of the level and we could hear overhead ightl count of The timbers began to crack and the area became filled with dust. You couldn't see your hand before your face. The (pit) telephones were out of order and we went back into the level. But we ran into gas so we returned to the slope. One of the men smelled gas and one of the officials with us tested it with a safety lamp. and con- firmed that it was gas The heavy concentration of gas forced us to move to the west Side of the slope which was cleat ,issues of GM's of fumes. We jmorca the main | air course to the 7, 800 00 foot level and met the draegerme n «rescue team) who escorted us to the surface. Downtown Merchants Assn. ‘of the Chamber of Com-, merce is tomorrow. The contest is being offered as part of the “Salute to Industry” celebration. It’s No ‘Quack’ Complaint All you have to do on enter is | complete the statement “I like the, 1959 Pontiac because .. .”” in 25 additional words or less, En- try blanks are available at all member stores of the Downtown Merchants Assn. ties, who ean tell a/mate one, hit the jackpot yesterday Completed entries must be turned in before 5:30 p.m, The winner will be announced Saturday, Nov. 1. Contestants must be at least 18 years old. The winner and any other person he chooses will spend a whole week at the island paradise. They will be flown to Bermuda by Pan Ameri- can Airlines, and stay at the lux- urious Belmont Hotel. The lucky twosome may, If they choose, take a yacht cruise around the isiand and listen to songs by native calyp%o singers. Another thrill available is an all- day sight-seeing four by bus, For gourmets, the trip offers the oportunity to eat in,some of Ber- muda’s most exclusive establish- ments: Many other fascinating tours can be. chosen by the winner. 4 Pontlae Press Photo THEY WON'T TALK—These ducks, a portion of thousands housed at'a wild duck preserve and private hunting farm near Clarkston, aren't exactly silent, but they are witnesses. They saw someone steal off with 200 of their fine feathered friends recently, but can only offer an occasional quack to investigators’ How Can They Miss It? LONDON (UPI) — Police hunt- ed today for a stolen 14-ton, eight-wheel truck carrying a five- Kidnap 200 Ducks in Area Oakland County Sheriff's Depu-|‘‘quack”’ usually complaint from a legiti-|when they got one that fit both de- scriptions. Detroit Police Detective Lt. Glenn Coller reported the theft of 200 mallard ducks valued at preserve at 9529 Perry Lake Rd., Independence Township. He told detectives that all the birds were marked with leg bands bearing serial numbers and a small hole punched in the webbing on the) right foot. | Theses were all full grown, weighing an average of three pounds each. The birds were ta-) ken from large cages located near- by at 5850 Oak Hill Rd. * * * Coller has several thousand ducks and pheasants on the pre- vate hunting farm. found a marked trail leading to. the cages through a wooded areato the north. ‘Look Who’s Talking LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Ac- tress Carol Davis was granted a divorce by default yesterday when she testified her husband, Clarence, objected to her eating because he thought she was too fat. Miss Davis weighs 114 ton, 11-foot-wide ship’s propeller. | questions. pounds and Clarence weighs 210. , duction at $1,000 from his private wild duck | serve which he operates as a pri-, Investigators e of the counts his expe miners in a shaft at Springhill, ~ AP Wirephote Nova Scotia, re- rience to anxious townspeople. UAW Demands Reasons or Unsettled DETROIT ‘?'\—Leaders of locals still on strike against General Motors ‘Walkouts some United Auto Workers have been ordered to explain in person tonight why the walkouts have not been settled. Presidents and bargainin striking locals which have g committee - chairmen of not scheduled’ ratification meetings on local agreements for Sunday or earlier were directed to appear before the UAW’s International executive board at a special* “Miracle Mile Gives session in Detroit (at p.m. EST). The Union said they would be asked to present the unresolved’ they believe justify con- tinuation of the strikes. Unresolved local issues at 126 plants have kept about 25,000 workers. idle, more | than three weeks after a national | settlement was reached. The union said that since opera-: tion of many of the struck plants) is necessary to achieve full pro-| GM, “continuation of, the stoppages could shortly affect ‘tens of thousands. of employes) now working in plants where all, local issues have been settled. ‘the pockets idows. Away Silver Dollars Free silver dollars will jingle in and purses of many \Miracle Mile shoppers this week- end as the shopping center at iTelegraph and Square Lake roads in Bloomfield Township celebrates its first anniversary. The center is offering the coins in its “Treasure Hunt.” one of many special events pnd dur ing the anniversary: festivitie All shoppers must do is check lists of names a in store Win- If they find theirs, they'll ireceive a silver dollar ‘As the union attempted to | settle the last of the GM disputes, it also announced that its Chrysler membership had voted overwhelmingly to accept the | three-year contract recently negotiated with the company. Next week Miracle Mile stores (will hold special one-cent sales. at whieh patrons will be able to, buy various items for a jwith the purchase of other chandise: penny mer- had aging. | . The mine ‘of the (Coal Co _minion Steel and Coal rs Passages Choked Off by Tons of Rock, Coal 1 Body Recovered, 80 Others Safe After Violent Shift of Earth in Nova Scotia SPRINGHILL, N:S. (?—A violent shift of rock in the depths of a coal mine today trapped 91 men, six of them supervisors. Hope of rescue grew dimmer by the hour. Eighty miners had reached safety. One body was re- covered. A company spokesman belatedly announced that six supervisors were with 85 men still trapped hours after tons of rock and coal tumbled down from tunnel roofs, choking the passageways. After talking with the rescued men, Arnold Patterson, a_ coal company spokesman, said: “The situation is not encour- It looks pretty grim, We are hopeful, of course,” A .company official said a bar- rier of gas prevented rescue work- ers from reaching 55 of the men lwho had been working 13,000 feet ifrom the pit head. The other 39 | apparently were scattered at other ‘coal faces blocked by ‘the up- heaval. DEADLY GAS FORMING A silent crowd shivered in a cold drizzle through the night as five- man teams of draegermen—volun- teer mine rescue workers—cleared, rock and debris from dust-choked tunnels, The draegermen wore respira- tors, One of the first survivors to come out said the “‘bump"— the miners’ name for under- ground rock shifts of explosive | force—had smashed the mine ventilation system and pockets | of deadly gas were forming, ~ | is the No. 2 colliery, Cumberland Railway and . a subsidiary of the Do- Corp. Cum- berland No 2 adjoins the now- closed Cumberland No. .4, where, an explosion and gas killed 39 per- “ sons in November 1956 The worst mine accident in this town of 7000 near the New Bruns- wick border was an explosion in 1891 thar killed 12>. Canada’s worst mine disaster was at Hull- crest, Alta in 1941, when 193 were killed The bump econrfed| at 2 ° ‘Continued on Page , Col == i Sec. Weeks Resigns WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre- tary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks | resigned today, and Adm, Lewis I. Strauss was named to succeed him in the pcabinet: | just * prices,’ Eisenhower said. poe I PRINCE x ! EDWARD |! wew Sos Ss BRUNSWICK f ~ "¢ MAINE As “ f c au 4 i) ~ A'S Barge’ i” re SPR inc ae Hable cee VA NOVA SCOTIA oy Scene of disaster— Factory Wages at Record High Cost of Living Same; Ike Hails Evidence of End of Recession From Our Wire Services WASHINGTON—President Eisa hower today hailed the leveling off _of the Cost of Living Index as proof that the’ recovery from the reces- sion is ‘possible without inflation." The President said the nation must preserve this stability in the value of the dollar without recourse to stifling controls.”’ The President issued his state- ment a day after the Labor Depart- ment reported that for the first time since the winter of 1950-56 the Consumer Price Index has held steady for a two months period. “This means that the recent ; gains in the weekly earnings of | American workers represent real increases in buying power, not offsets against higher “These earnings have increased more than 5 per cent since Feb-— ruary, Their actual buying power (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) The UAW said production work- Operation on Neck Arteries “New Hope for Stroke Victims ‘ers voted 81 per cent in favor of, the agreement, while 70 per cent! of the skilled workers supported The Chrysler Corp.., (Continued on Page 31, Sun, Little Change. to Follow Cool Night :: The U.S. Weather Bureau pre- dicts partly cloudy and cooler to- night with the low near 44, * * * Fair is the forecast for tomor- row with little temperature change. | For the next five days tempera- itures will average about four de- me antime, Col, 2 igrees above the normal high of! '58 and normal low of 40. Sunday, will be a little warmer. Precipi- tation will of an inch as showers Monday or Tuesday. * * * Forty-six was the lowest record- ing in downtown Pontiac preced- ing 8 a.m. The reading at 1 p.m. was 52. | | By RENNIE TAYLOR | Associated Press Science Writer SAN FRANCISCO tAP) — An operation described by its origi- nators as offering a way of suc- cessfully treating some kinds of stroke Was reported today. * * * | Stroke is a paralysis of some |body function such as sight, ispeech or movement. It is due to the stoppage of the blood supply to a certain part of the brain, usually because of a clot. When it hits the part of the brain gov- erning breathing, ‘ten fatal. total about one-tenth) * * * has achieve little toward damage by Medical science up to now been able to undoing the ment has been a dismal one, the sponsors of the new said. the result is of- stroke’ and the outlook for curative treat-, operation | But a large percentage of the ethe neck leading to the brain, not to clots occur in arteries in little arteries in the brain itself. These trouble spots in the neck can be reached handily by sur- gery, they said. Results of 67 of these neek op- In Today's Press Comics pocemmonencuon £4, Cotnty NeWs 0.2.0.5. ee, fj Editorials .............2... 6 | High Schoot ...: 624: :ss.465 21 Markets: 526.3 :400s66e50:5 31 Obituaries ..... phooecoo 0a. _&8 Sportage ee erie 23-27 Theaters 28-29 TV & Radio Prearensl cae ST Wilson, Earl ........... oes 29 |; Women's Pageg ,...... 17:19 i erations on 50 patients were re- ported to the American Heart Assn. by a surgical team from Baylor University, Houston, Tex. The team was made up of Dr. E. Stanley Crawford, who reported the results, Dr. Michael E. De- akey, Dr. Denton A. Cooley and Dr. George C. Morris Jr. + & X-ray studjes showed the clots in these 50 cases to be located in blood vessels of the neck or upper torso. The treatment tas to re- ‘move the blockading material sur- gically. Normal circulation was restored to a majority of the patients, Dr. Crawford said, with the return of the lost functioning. * * * “It is felt,” Dr. Crawford added “that a curative form of treat ment now is available for many people with strokes.” ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1958 Bagwell-Williams Debate Dulles Reports Sputters Into Overtime (Continued From Page One) from Bagwell’s and separated by one between, and asked to examine the Indiana department of commerce and public relations report Eagwell relied on. * * * The 6-foot, 4-inch governor bent. over Bagwell’s desk to look. “This doesn't show a single move-in,” he said pointing to a place in the text. Bagwell began to protest. Williams said “Read it.” Read it.” “Let’s take one,” he continued, pointing at a list in the | mimeographed booklet. ‘Where did this one come from?” Bagwell attempted to renew a proposal that the candidates agree to lef an impartial committee of experts undertake to deter- mine who was lying in the economic climate debate * * * “Will vou agree, Governor, to submit this to an impartial mittee?’ Bagwell asked. He previously had advanced the proposal in a joint appearance before the Detroit Economic Club. Williams, ignoring the question, returned to the 137 to 16 com- parison published originally in a Bagwell newspaper advertisement about a month ago and challenged by Williams in an impromptu debate last Saturday at Marshall. “At Marshall, you promised to check this list and you haven't done it,” he continued. “What kind of honesty is this with the people?” Bagwell said Williams had accepted the 97 count as accurate but the governor denied it. If, as Bagwell said, newspapers re- ported that he did, they misquoted him, Williams replied. * * * At first, Bagwell remained seated while Williams bent over him and those in the studio gathered around. Then he stood up and Bagwell and the taller Williams continued their sputtering argument. The GOP candidate said the exact figure was not the important thing. He added: “The point I make is that Michigan is not getting its fair share of factory jobs.”’ “You've been telling the public there were 137 and you lack proof,”’ the governor came back. * * Bagwell again brought up the Williams said: “If you are trying to crawl into some other hole to get out of this one, it’s very disappointing—a pretty bad dodge.” * impartial committee idea, and | “You're splitting hairs,’ Bagwell said. “You are being terribly misleading to the people,’’ Williams said. Paul Weber, the governor's press secretary, walked up to the governor, as if to try to say something, then retreated. The .exchange gradually tapered off, as Williams returned to his desk to gather up some papers. The governor walked out of the studio, remarking over his shoulder: * * * “Well, I hope you'll do better next time.” Both candidates appeared tired from the campaign ordeal. Ten minutes before the debate began, Willams was lying asleep on a sofa in a reception room of the studio. In the formal debate, Bagwell said Williams had failed to establish how a Republican president, confronted by a Democratic congress, could be held responsible for the recession. * * * He emphasized the length of Williams’ regime, and his alleged failure to cope effectively with what Bagwell called a problem deep, too vital, too critical to be dismissed as as a smear.” Bagwell said: “Perhaps this comes from being in office 10 years—two terms or four years longer than any other man. from answering questions.” After Bagwell spoke his opeyjmg piece. Williams ~ that the Republican nominee had *‘proved the case of smearing | Michigan.”’ He said Bagwell had failed to connect the failures he mentioned with the Democratic state administration. “The best thing the people of this state could do to improve their economic and political climate is to break this Republican one-party control of their legislature," Williams said. He said the Republicans have controlled the lawmaking branch for 101 of the last 107 years and have “forgotten that the legislature belongs to the people.” GOP lawmakers, he said, have written every Michigan tax law for the last 20 years, and if the states tax structure is open to criticism, the GOP is to blame. The Day i in Birmingh am Robin Hood tfineneis Forced to Cut $370,000 LONDON «- Classes to help beginners correct faults in archery are to be held at three evening/-1. - You. Became 2 INCHES: SLIMMER” _, without Dieting or Exercising uReduce Exe” Gi Girdles. ; | Alluding to Williams’ touchiness on the economic climate issue, | to lke on China War or Peace Answer ‘Up to Communists; Cannot Read Minds’ WASHINGTON (AP)—Secretary of State Dulles reports to Presi- dent Eisenhower today on the prospects for war or peace which ‘he found during a three-day con- ference on Formosa. The answer, he told newsmen, (is “up to the Communists, who are aggressive.’ He added: “I cannot read theitminds. * * * Landing here shortly after mid-! night, Dulles said in a brief air- port statement that his consulta- tions with Nationalist Chinese | President Chiang Kai-shek had been “eminently satisfactory.’ He praised the Chinese Na- tionalists as country's of Communist encirclement, Dulles that institute a ‘modern weapons and Chinese Communists jlong-term cease-fire. cuss the reports. The Red Chinese have refused thus far to make any agreement regarding a halt to their artillery the Na- itionalist- held island just off the |barrages on Quemoy, ‘China mainland. Hope Growing Dim for Trapped Miners (Continued From Page One) p.m. Dishes tumbled from shelves in Springhill and houses also shook 14 miles away in Mac- ean. Veteran miners called it the worst in memory, Six smaller bumps between last March and | Sept. 1 Injured 14 men, The | cause of bumps often is undeter- mined. The mine slopes to a depth of of 14,300 feet, sometimes descend- ing as steeply as 45 degrees. The ‘company considers it North Amer- lica’s deepest coal pit. “too | ‘HELP POURS IN Help poured into Springhill. A navy helicopter flew blood plasma |from Halifax, 75 miles to the being among this staunch allies without which, he said, the United States jwould be in a desperate position was reported by in- \formed officials to have obtained ‘from Chiang a conditional prom-; ‘ise to cut his forces on the Que- |moy and Matsu islands. The con-. iditions were that he get more the Dulles himself declined to dis- 4,400 feet underground in a length) BIRMINGHAM — Stressing that no construction standards will be lowered, architect Linn Smith of Smith, Tarapata and McMahon has set about eliminating $370,000 from building costs of the new Birming- ham Junior-Senior High School. * * * Bids for the three main con- tracts, submitted by Pulte-Strang, of Ferndale, general contractor; Allen Briggs of Detroit, mechanical ‘contractor, and Smith Brothers Electrical, also of Detroit, electri- ical, totaled $3,731,950, according to \Dr. Richard Featherstone, school (district administrative assistant. | The low bids of these firms will | be accepted when they are brought down to the estimates | made by Smith, Featherstone said. Smith said he had neglected to include 16,000 square feet of tun- nels and overhangs in his original estimate in the specifications for jthe building. To bring the construction costs Ball Kicks Off | Series of Five Dances for UF Tonight's Torchlighters Ball at, the Elks Temple kicks off a series: of five dances being held this year for the Pontiac Area United Fund and its 55 community service agen- cies. The Elks dance is being spon- sored by the employes of Oak- land County. Tickets are still avail- able at $1.50 per person, and may ness office, according to dance chairman John Witherup. * * * Witherup, personnel director for |Oakland County, is directing the solicitation of funds from county employes for this year’s tenth anniversary United Fund Appeal. Tonight's dance is scheduled te begin at 8 p.m, and run unti] midnight, The music, un- der the direction of Roy Hess, is being donated by the Pontiac Federation of Musicians as a public service to the Fund, dances will be held in four of the ‘six townships included in the Fund's area of solicitation. * * * in School Building Costs ipleted by that time, there will be; ‘enough classrooms ready to ac- commodate the 1959-60 enrollment. be purchased at any county busi-| The four remaining United Fund | institutes in London. into line with the money allocated for the building, Smith said he will have to pare $122,000 by modifi- cation of plans and substitution of less costly material. Construction of the school will | be a race against time, Schoo! | officials said Derby and Barnum junior high schools and the | senior high already are over- crowded. They forsee part-time classes if the new school is not ready for occupancy in Septem- ber as scheduled. Smith said that while the new school cannot possibly be com- Birmingham Police are warning) city merchants of a_ bad - check \passer, who they say is operating in the city. This week, he has cashed bo- gus checks at two shoe stores, a jewelry and dry goods stores. Detective Lt. Merlin Holmquist said the checks ranged from $30 to $00. Commerce will open its two-day pumpkin sale tomorrow at 1% Pierce St., just south of Maple avenue. The Jaycees also will tour the city’s streets with trailers and tractors, making door-to-door | sales. Proceeds will be used to aid un-| derprivileged children and sponsor | summer camps. Mrs, Parker Eckerson of 624 W. Lincoln Ave., will play host- ess for a 1 p.m. dessert-luncheon Tuesday of the Past Matrons — OES. Members have been asked to notify the hostess if they can- not attend. Joseph Hetler { Service for Joseph Hetler, 84, formerly of 224 Gray Ct., will be héld at 11 a.m. Saturday ‘at Purs- | ley Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Oak View Cemetery, | Royal Oak. Mr. Hetler died Wednesday fol-| lowing a 20-year illness, He had been employed as a custodian for | the Birmingham Public Schools. | Surviving are two sons, Joseph | B, of Berkley and Robert V. of| Each will take the form of a record hop for the teenagers of, oe area. Price of admission is. jsouth, The Red Cross dispatched 50 cents per person with proceeds. 30 beds to supplement the town’s|again going to the Fund. nex. lances. The son of one trapped miner, | Gary Embree, said he hoped that | “after this they close the mine for good—even if it means the _ end of Springhill.”’ Mayor Ralph Gilroy agreed this! imight be the end. The No. 2 col- \liery was the only mine left open. A reporter from, Halifax was, ,killed when his car crashed at ‘Truro as he hurried to Springhill. | ‘He was John Thompson, 28. Accepts Nixon’s ‘Apology’ Truman Buries Hatchet NEW YORK (UPI) — Former: President Truman said today he's) last night: ready to bury the hatchet with his) party in the United States. The | arch political foe Vice President only party of treason in the Unit- Richard M. Nixon on the basis of ed States is the Cammunist Par- a Nixon television statement last) ty.” night ; . | He also hailed Truman as “Td call that an apology, " e also hai 1 gallant warrior’ man said. mill “Making up our Gitterences is" okay with me’ Truman has in the past refused/" to be in the same room with the ’ Truman said. Nixon had charged the Truman ad-| ministration with ‘treason.’ a of the campaign Wages Set Record, Living Costs Same (Continued From Page One) - Nixon told the TV audience [is higher than it has been for well “There is no war over a year and is 15 per cent) ‘above what it was in 1952.” “He throws the mantle of state patriotism around him to keep |20-bed hospital and a converted armory Used as an emergency an-! The Navy sent three ambu-| record hops will be held Satur- day night at the CAI building an. Williams Lake Road in Water- ford Township. Dates and locations for the re- imaining three dances are: Saturday, Nov. 1, at High School, Ortonville. Brandon Wednesday, Nov. 5, at the Elks) | Temple, Pontiac. Saturday, Nov. 8 at Clarkston High School, Clarkston, All four record hops will begin at 8 p.m. Disk jockeys will spin ithe records. A comet's tail may be as long as 100 million miles. Jersey Senator Flies fo Rally for Potter Sen. Clifford P. Case (R-New | Jersey) was flying into Michigan | today to appear in Royal Oak to-| night at a Republican pep rally| for Michigan Sen. Charles E. Pot- ter. Sen. Case will deliver a speech | entitled a “Case for Potter’ at” 8 p.m. in the cafeteria of Kimball | High School, located on Crooks’ road just north of 13 Mile road. The Oakland County Republican Committee, which is sponsoring the Royal Oak rally, has arranged for Sen. Case to attend a Pontiac meeting at 9:30 tonight of the Neo- politan Club, to be held at 177 Bon-: idale Ave. The first of the four teenage | | | | | | The President particularly noted | TO ‘that the cost of living report shows | successive | [month the retail cost of food to! the American housewife is down.” that “for the second “To be sure, some retail prices Wel that was very nice of} have gone up In recent months,” he said. “But others are lower ‘Truman was told of Nixon's re- | than they have been in a year or |; ‘ d b |marks by a United Press Interna-| ice President because, he said./tina) reporter, the only newsmen more.’' fighting campaign speech against base period. | the Republicans last night. The Weather Fall U8. ‘Wea ther puree Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly, cloudy with scattered howers today, high near 60. Partly cloudy tonight and| temerrew. Ceeler teday and tonight: Low tonight near 44. Little temperature. | you the trath but I guess when him at his value,” Truman said. “I don't understand it. to tell | a fella gets religion and reforms, | the only thing to do is to accept They had risen for two straight) years until they dipped a bit be- tween July and August. | Family living costs averaged the |present when he arrived by train