i Z a Son ew wa Busy With Jaunts; ~ - ——_ ss Rl 5. Weather Bureau Forcast ; / a (Details Page 2)” : p * 117th YEAR - i eRaekK PONTIAC, C, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER. 13, 1959 —44 PAGES « ‘Winter Calls Early With 3-Inch Snow Sow Political Seeds 60 ‘Candidates’ Williams Fights the Snow, GOP n State Stump BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | ; Although a full year away from the 1960 big nt Braces for Heckling tial campaign, possible would-be candidates are busy) as 3-Day Drive Ends sowing political seeds. | Up North Today With New York’s Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller invading | Western territory, Vice President Richard M. Nixon) ALPENA \® — Gov. Wil- bobbing up in the Middle West, and Sen. John F. Ken- |liams, traveling most of the *nedy drawing a capacity|night through a crowd in Wisconsin, the air storm, carried his “save our all over the nation is full schools” campaign to Mich- i. presidential whispering. | ‘igan’s north country today and braced for more heck- ling from Republican “truth Airport Officials * His hat in the air — not yet in Snow-! Superstitious? Here's a Girl Who Can't Help It CHICAGO ® — Today, Fri- day the 13th, is, the {3th birth- | day of Gayle Lee Kraft of subur- ban Bellwood. . * oh oW Gayle’s name totals 13 letters. The last four digits of her tele- phone number, Linden 4-1741, total 13. She lives at 131 Rice Ave., an address that staris with 13 coming or going. * * * Tonight she’ll have sters as guests at a birthday iF went: Union Backs i3 young- voodoo Looking Ahead _ Hope to Take. Dip Into 1961 Federal Funds for Terminal-Tower Plan Pontiac Municipal Airport offi-| cials today were looking to next year to repair the damage done| to the terminal-tower project by a’ ~ * * * the ring — GOP's Reckefeller is squads.” |serenading California today hoping! R bli ; to open the corral where Nixon | epublican State Chair- has virtually all the state’s Repub- Man Lawrence B. Lindemer Trial Board ¢ x * x * * Wr * Record Storm 7 Tapers but Fall m Will Continue . Roads Mostly Slushy; Hunters Pleased by Tracking Prospects A record early snow storm swept over the Pon- tiac area and the southern half of lower Michigan last night and early today leav- _ing three inches of snow on the ground. The storm was expected to taper off slightly today, However, snow was expect ed to continue falling licans tethered. They like Rockefeller’s music but so far there are no signs of a stampede starting. In Los Angeles Thursday, he re- jceived a warm, friendly, -howdy- |podner type of welcome, when he the Legislature comes up $50,000 slash in 1960 federal aid. 2°TiV ed in the state. People turned jout ir large numbers at a luncheon | and a dinner where he spoke. AFL-CIO Council Is at-Odds With C. of C.| Police Dept. Changes | ‘said GOP questioners prob- ably would be waiting at ithree cities to argue the |governor’s contention that ‘schools will suffer unless The Oakland County AFL - CIO Council is supporting the Pontiac Pdlice Trial Board in its dispute with the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce }with-140 million dollars in: new taxes. This winter scene was taken by Pontiac Press photog- EARLY WINTER MORN’ — striking rapher Eddie Vanderworp while the city ‘slept. The street is Algonquin road. Not many actually saw such a scene The Pentiac Press Photes early morning traffic turned the gleaming white snowflakes into mud- dy slush on most streets. throughout the Lower Pen- insula tonight and Satur- day. The overnight snow left highe ways slushy and, in some spots, slippery. Northbound hunters and other motorists were urged to drive with caution, Smiles appeared on the faces The terminal building itself was | “We want to get the Republican ae ’ of local hunters, as the fall will not affected by the cutback, but/ TALKED WITH NIXON MEN | side of this thing a the be “ple,” Fred V. Haggard, council presi- _.. provide tracking smew for them, the Federal Aviation Agency Party leaders talked politics and, he—said-‘at—Lansing. dent, announced today that ‘a Jet ollision The deer season opens Sunday. (FAA) refused to allot any match-| Prospects” with -him —at —informal- ‘gales have gone on record sup. C Many traveling hunters were ing funds for a proposed $137,000 receptions. A number of in- Bad weather grounded small |porting the stand taken by Cecil . A } trapped in the storm. State Poli system of taxiways, aprons and fluential Californians, known to be @ircraft last night so Williams Mullinax, Trial Board vice chair- Claims Life | reported a steady pan oot loading areas to connect the ter-|Staunch Nixon supporters, met him) #94 Lynn M. Bartlett, state sup- man, before the City Commission | hunters yesterday and today. - minal area with the runways. in private receptions. easier pA ger instruction, earlier this week. f Ci t M tot * * “It would be a tty silly But — wherever Rockefeller | bance tenewh ine oad ok ps Mullinax, a Pontiac Motor Di- O I y afl Thirty-six trucks and about 75 terminal building te oper- | weat, saucer-sized “Nixon Now” | «. gina) | f their th ° day | vision emplgye and prominent men of the Oakland County Road ate without these facilities,” | lapel buttons met his eye. 10-city t : ot the — f UAW member, asked the council} A 23-year-old Pontiac airman Commission were ready for the city tour o state, One rt was killed yesterday when two Air ; ast ni said Homer D. Hoskins, airport = 4 toastmaster's mention of . no ag ME . \ snow last night. simaaea a 2 a If snows continue, they planned) H i oild Ge Chonier.2f Force jets collided over Tinker z ixon’s name during dinner pre-| i split up here, with Bartlett. car-|. aesard said the Cha ‘art be- AFB near Oklahoma City They moved out at 8:38 p.m., Taken aback by the FAA an- jliminaries ‘touched off a wild, *|rying the Democratic tax message nigel Ba putting the cart De’ i+ took searchers six hours to worked over the county's 2,484 nouncement. Hoskins aid he prob-;standing, — whooping-and-hollering |, traverse City andthe governor {re the horse. ‘reeover the body of Robert €. miles of roads and had them In ably would seek funds for the fa-|explosion of applause for the vice) cilities when he submits his re- quest for 1961 aid at ha end of! the month RELEASED IN JULY The move, if suceessful, would cut into improvemeyts that would) otherwise have been programmed in 1961, he said. Seme federal funds are te be released next July, and if Pon- ted next » FAA is scheduled to announce Hts next appropriations in February, |president. Rockefeller joined it. * * * \: Perhaps by coincidence, Rocke-|dreds of feller’s place at the Western States publican Conference dinner. was ‘directly in front of a huge c [Pastograph of Nixon. And finally, although the majori- ty of the people in the tuncheon! and dinner audiences rose - when he was introduced, many remain- ed seated. * * * He reads his speeches metjcu-) With charts and figtres, lously, following every comma and ‘dash ip the text. Bat he stumbled |ffequendy. Once or twice, mis-|/bag for nearly 40 million dollars reading a word, he found himself | jp.‘ ‘rubber checks” next year un-) |going onto Marauette * * * * * * | ‘JUMPS TO CONCLUSIONS’ Republicans, passing out hui| ‘The delegates are of the opinion Wiand, 48 Gingell Ct., | “facts sheets’ as the|that the chamber is jumping to Agnes E. Holloway of Marine City.’ — overnor delivered his cash crisis| conclusions in saying the Police, message yesterday at Detroit and Trial Biard cannot be an effec- Grand Rapids, promised that the |tive part of city government. They GOP-controlled Legislature would|feel the chamber has no ‘sound! {not renege on promised financial] basis for this judgment. since the support to schools. ‘board has yet to hear a case. | “There will be no cuts of any | kind in any state services,”’ the statement declared. methber Trial Board) who are | | willing to give of their time with: jliams tells every audience that! schools will be left holding the citinens of the elty.’ Chamber officials Tuesday Pontiac had sought $178,000 from|in the middie of a sentence. going| der a 72-million-dollar nuisance tax|to formally present the Commis-| FAA to help finance a $356,000 construction program next year, * * * What it got was a $128,250 grant! to help extend the--main east- west rumway 1,500 feet, strength-| Affairs Council speech, a long |Court threw out the use en it With a coat of asphalt and add lighting. To get the federal funds, the city and state now have only to put up $44,700 apiece im sonal charm appeared far more|— Waldron (R-Grosse Pointe) at! matching funds, making a total of only $267,000 for next year's censtruction program. | nowhere. Doggedly. he backed up and be-|ators. gan the sentence - over. | He was interrupted by ap- Nause only once in the World one. The applause for the dinner address came more frequently but it was never stormy. Rockefeller’s million-volt __per- leffective in the small, informal| meetings with party faithful than) (Continued on Page 2. Col. 4) } ~The city, however, has already} promised to put up $89,000 on the| assumption that the federal gov- ernmefit would grant the full $178,-! 000. The state has also promiged $89,000. CAN ALSO TRIM It will be up to the City Com-) mission and the State Board of! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) | Chrysler Shuts Off One Assembly Line DETROIT ®—A steel shortage, | which has knocked General Mo- hors out’ of automobile building, will shut down its first Chrysler assembly line today and bring-that automaker's idle to 7,500. Sign of Prosperity ‘package drafted by GOP state sen-'sion a request for a spring elec- ~*~ * * ter amendments they feel The stat® he said lost_110 mil-| strengthen Police--Department ad-| lions when the State Supreme! ministration (sales) * *® * The chamber - recommends, part, that the Trial Board con- ‘verted into a board of review, that} it give up its administrative pow- ers to set es and _ regulations for the department, and that the Wayne State University made it) police chief no. longer be respon- \plain that Republicans and Demo- sible to it. but rather to the city! erats_use—different_sets_of figures: manager_ ently, in calculating state cash needs. t |tax increase last month and must iget it back to balance 1959-60: ap-' ' propriations. A friendly debate last night be- tween Williams and Rep. Robert It also recommends that the Wiand a half-mile from the crash. ties. Twe pilots parachuted to “We cannot see how any Or- |AFB. Enid, Okla.. ganization could condemn & [trois of the trainer, circling over | group of good citizens (the seven- |the base in a flight pattern. ‘jet fighters en route from George out pay or thanks to serve the /AFB, Calif. to Myrtle Beach, S.C was taking off after refueling at are Tinker. * Both planes exploded when Capt. ‘tion to present certain city char-|Melvin V will | avoid the impact. . or how | got out of the plane,” said Corley. in heard was my aoe dae —s me, plane, , .”"” siffered when they bailed out and rode the fallen craft |ground fully. Wiand is.the sen of Robert J. and Mrs. There. Were no other casual- safety. Wiand, an aviation cadet, was a student pilot in a T33 jet trainer. lst Lt. Dale Dawson of Vance was at the con- At the same time, a flight of 19 ¥ * Corley's F104 failed to “— don't know what happened | “The last thing I ‘Look here and Dawson and bruises Both pilots Corley only burns Reports did not say*whether Wi- to the or bailed aut unsuccess- ‘WE LIKE OUR WORK’ dren of Mr. and Mrs. F. doors. There was work to be done into their task of = the walks with their mixe snow ‘movela. Karen, — Up early this morning, J. Schoeneniann couldn't wait = get out- 4, and Keith, 3 ~ State Job Ideas Pour In to U.S. Senatorial Group the chil- , plowed good shape by the early morn- ing rush hour, “There waS more slush than slippery spots,’ said Elmer B. Hess, radio dispatcher” for the Commissijon, 12,000 TONS OF SALT He said there are 12.000 tons of salt stockpiled to keep roads passable this winter. Some was used tast night, he said. He said the heaviest snowfall was reported in the southern part of the county where there was some three inches, U.S. Weather Bureau records for the past 88 years show only nine snowfalls of three inches or more recorded on ‘Nov. 12 or earlier, Hazardous driving warnings are still in effect throughout the area. The death of a Constantine woman, Mrs, Mattie Halvorsen, 60, was blamed on icy reads. She was killed yesterday—in—a eer accident on slippery M-60, six miles northwest of Three Riv- ers The new snow blanketed lower Michigan as far north as Gladwin but was heaviest in Oakland Coun- ity. The Upper Peninsula continued to- get heavy fturries along tothe 4 Lake Superior shore in the Copper . Waldron, addressing /600-seat auditorium, fol ecsimae position of public safety director LONDON (UPI)—The ‘Telegraph said Daily today it has new evidence of Britain's boom- ing prosperity. It cited a London County Council report that the number of city pawnshops had ‘tax growth, continued government| >¢ ¢timinated. economies~ ands other factors Wik) liams does not take into account|ing that the Trial Board, lars, Haggard joined Mulinax in not- P recon- will make. up the 40 million dol-| stituted. by voters this spring when ithey kicked out civil service for Investigators today are probing | for the cause of the mixup in flight | atterns. * * * The chief of flying safety for the health have been suggested to a special U.S. Senate Air Force, Maj. Gen. Joseph Cal- dera, was at Tinker yesterday for Country. “ ” The storm had football fans mut- DETROIT (P—A “GI bill” for the jobless, unlimited |, arta: tide me ee os layoff benefits and a 10-point program for economic — the 13th as they looked (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) committee as ways of reducing unemployment in Miechi-: The governor said Waldron eith-| police, has worked smoothly and a speaking engagement, He was on gan. Christmas Due dropped roan 714 to 153 since jer was overly optimistic or inac-|cooperatively with the police ad- 1951. - ministration the past six—months-+ aay Put Their Heads Together — — ee General Motors has 220,000 out of 320,000 hourly rated employes idled. * * * Chrysler announced that its De- troit Imperial assembly plant will suspend operations” at, the end “ory today’s shift, idling 1.100 and an additional 230 will be laid off at its Detroit Gear and Axle plant, The ‘conipany said its other asf sembly plants across the country are scheduled to operate next week on short work weeks of three or four days. 3 ES Pe EERO EL AEE GEE OS CG RIE In eouay 5 Press . ORL Re ae Comics ae County. News insakancn Bs eee bewccuee ones 8 High School ............... 13 Markets .. ..-.. +. : Master Your Tensions. 12. CMeeteaPA in as cence soy 8 oe a eee 30,33 Theaters .....:.. 28-29 TV & Radio Programe “ae Wilson, Earl . seb eeeweee : AP Wirephete the wife of the President. Mrs. Eisenhower will "FIRST LADIES’ DAY —/Mrs. Mamie Eijsen- hower and Mrs. Nixon get’ their heads to- Women’s Pagés seoerétins pi... f —,crash_ occurred. the base _when the explosion and! He_ said he take part in the investigation. GMC Gets Contract tractor and two carriages for the ther, the unit dent. Minuteman. Powering iwi he —the——trew -¥~12--rasotine engine which the division will use lextensive@ly ‘n the 1960 truck line will-as a U.S. Senate speciah committee on 1 unemployment More suggestions were expected to be offered today Early for 11,309 Here Tomorrow That little bit taken out of each tpaycheck for the past 12 months hears 15 more witnesses in®#—————— the second of its two-day hearing at Detroit. The sistance of industry in the form ‘of on-the-job training. I am con- f Mi - i C . |eommittee is headed by fident that the nation will recover will pay big dividends tomorrow TOF MISSHE Varner sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-| ¢ Cost of such a program (11/399 Christmas Club de- AM } : . | through the recovery of abilities positors at Community National r Canvey Mowe Track ; Minn). | and aptitudes of retrained work- and Pontiac State Banks eats Divi aed AY ~ : r ~*~ * * ers and through the reduction in . ~~ @-« - “ ‘$1. 094. Oi) aubeonioast “by the The GI bill plan was offered to cost of direct relief and other iets aati tied Som bende wel - ais > > tur Boeing Airplane Co. for work on the committee yesterday by Gov cushions to ae pear lmail out checks to those persons = ment of long duration inevitably : ‘ es Lats. the Minuteman intercontinental ‘Williams, the unlimited benefits * “ \who have set a little bit aside — . , leads. ballistic missile weapon system. by August Scholle, president of the . . since last November to help ease «“ * * Michigan AFL-CIO, and the 10- Williams laid much of the blame Christmas expenses. a ; ; / GMC will provide a_ truck- point program by Walter P. Reu- for unemployment with the Eisen- Commenity National aed tte hower administration , as Te 53 dewecit in Reuther blamed ‘‘apathy” on the ame stis! ere oe posers Lpart—ef—the a ale adminis-__its_1959 club. They, deposited a tration for the unemployment prob- ital st $638,345, eee lem and said his 10-point program) f $18,408 over $619,937 depost United Auto Workers presi- Others wie testified at the opening session were Louis G. going on display Monday. Seaton, General Motors Corp. vould “assist unemployed workers by 8,106 persens last year. . vice president; Malcolm and their families and help restore' Pontiac State and its branches | The engine will provide the | Denise, Ford Motor Co. vice depressed communities to econom- recorded a total of $378,949 from | Power for ground transportation | president; John D. Leary, Chrys- ie health.’ 1,356 depositors. This Tg. wagers to | of the missile, P. J. Monaghan, | jer Corp. vice president; Robert * * « , N58 total of $334,527 from 4.390 - | GM vice president and general J. Egan, mayor of Flint, and : : : . : Among his suggestions were ear- #ccounts. | manager of the Truck and Coach james L. Tanner, mayor of Bay iy retirement with full social secu * *« '® | Divietya, ‘sald. | City, whe @id net appear persen- rity be one fits tor older workers aid Monday the Pontiac Federal | Another’ important feature of the ally but’ gave his views in a off. and not likély to be rehired Federal Savings & Loan Assn, will tractor and trailers is air suspen-| Written report. Scholle recommended unlimited) ail out their 1959 Christmas Club sidn, which was pioneered by Williams, who arrived late in the duration of jobless benefits and Checks totaling $54,140 to 634 de- GMC in its coaches six years ago day and spoke before a nearly|suggested a national program be Positors. Last year it had a total and later adapted to some of its empty room, told the committee: set up to provide unemployment of $51,889 from 599 accounts, commercial highway tractors. &—-&.-- 8 ‘coverage for the entire period a Total deposits for alt -three | ‘No date for the start.of produc-, “Congress should consider a GI worker is laid off | hanks comes te SLMTLADL ae alt : jtion was announced. bill’ for the technologically dis-| “ « + | increase of $65,08E over the eom-’ ‘ |placed worker. It wouldcombine a} Seaton ‘said | technologcal prog. bined total of $1,006,353 of the a Gross Always Greener MEMPHIS, Tenn... (UPD work. yesterday claiming the an- imals were better fed than they were, gether for a pose at Capitol Hill Club in Washing- — celebrate het 63rd birthday. Saturday. Story on ton where a birthday party was under way for Page 16. . ; . A 3 4 .} * } > : { . ’ | | training, {travel aid fer—removal to such) tdemphis Zoo keepers stopped jeremy of subsistence for a subsidy for re-) Gat wher esary,|esS has played a major role in| three clubs last year. ere nece! hers nearly 100,000 ‘‘good jobs’! --All three banks announced 1 that 3 GM payrolls, -dupine the — past+ accounts 16K the “Ta bowls — Seneca the country where newly | skills are in need. dente He said the soundest sobu-| be apened beginning ety: ; learned ition to unerhployment would ‘be “The training program can more job opportunities through eco-| gave of a; 2 ‘ Terner’ ea Senile . best be conducted with the as- nomic and technological progress. our ciassified ad Ve Bt Ay < - 7 . + . —_ ae 2 a Fi q o. is , , 2 Governor Race Says He Will Announce Intentions in January; Laughs at Detroit Story MADAME PANDIT x x* -® | Herter Statement Says| Red China in Wrong;| Offers Moral Support ING (UPI — Secretary of | Democratic vote-getter in the last) el&fion, said today he is “very! governor. | Hare said that he will announce | todo, but he made it clear that! he has his sights set on the gov . All of us on the samara [J Standing board have agreed that we would owe ~ nat make any announcements with- | | members, he explained. The board | is the governor's ‘‘cabinet.”’ | “We have several members that | may run. I have always advocated A Detroit newspaper reporter United States swiftly assured said in a story today Hare told |India of its moral backing today he was going to run for (China. India says the Chinese —~ > 1960. \forcibly seized some of her ter- e James M. Hare, leading) seriously considering running for, in January exactly what he plans ernor’s office. PM GPP LPP PLP LLLP LLL EEE PA - 7 Who Is Hare? Page 4 Behind India een ~~] out due consultation with other! * * * an open primary,” | WASHINGTON The him flatly and without qualifica- in a border dispute with Red ritory. -Asked about the report. Hare = Secretary of State Christian A. President Eisenhower ‘‘the warm- est reception of all’ during his good will tour next month, pre-| dicts India's foremost woman. | feadership,” a THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY.NOVEMBE Madame Pandit Says: Eisenhower to Get ‘Warmest Reception’ By PETE LOCHBILER | The people of India will give Ike’s recent efforts to ease inter- national tensions through negotia- -jtion and better understanding have| Jefferson, we try to steer clear, the full sympathy of India, ex-| plained Mme. Vijaya Lakshmi Pan-| ldit yesterday after a talk in al Birmingham Town Hall series. The Khrushchev visit the Pres- | ident’s trip to Russia next year | —‘‘These show true imaginative Mme. Pandit had told her full house audience of | | nearly 1,300 women and a hand- | fut-of men at the Birmingham — Theater. ” Mme. Pandit is the sister of Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s: Prime Minister, and in her long career, | devoted to freedom and peace, has} held many important posts, She| was president of the U.N. General | Assembly in 1953, and is a former) ambassador to the United States) and to Russia. She also has been| India’s High Commissioner to Eng-! land the past five years. | She is on a six-weeks coast-to-| “We believe it important that there should be at least one country which judges each inter- | national situation on its own mer- its, instead of being allied to one country or another and com- mitted to its cause, “To use a phrase of Thomas of entangling alliances and, in the main, have gained the trust of both sides — the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. * * * “This is why we have been able to head such causes as the peace mission in Korea and Viet Nam. “We believe in seeking every avenue towards peace.” Now, Mme. Pandit lamented, India is being sore-tried to aban- don her traditional role by such | acts of aggression by Red China: as the Tibetan occupation. “All efforts at negotiation have failed so far, nor do | know how long we can continue to seek a peaceful settlement.’’ * * * “If India is forced to relinquish her peaceful stand, it will be be- cause there is nothing else left to do,"’ she promised. a f ~~ R 13, 1959 ‘The Day jin Birmingham — - | Charge Driver inHit-Run Death Birmingham Man Has Denied Guilt as Youth | Dies in Hospital BIRMINGHAM — Pancakes! Pancakes! And more Pancakes. | All the pancakes you can eat [are being offered at a supper Nov: ° 19 sponsored by Bloomfield Hills A Birmingham man has’ been|igh School Student Council from icharged with manslaughter in the|>:30 to 7:30 p.m. in ithe school hit-run death of a 16-year-old|°feteria. |Mount Clemens boy who died yes-| Charge for the supper, that in| iterday of injuries suffered Tues- cludes, sausages apple sauce, syrup | ay ‘and coffee and milk, is $1 for ad-| Eric ¥. Kerry—of-1989--Websterjults and_75 cents for students. St. was charged with the crime! qpe purpose of the supper is minutes after the victim, Frank) 9 partially raise funds to fi- Bono, died of brain injuries “suf-) nance a trip to the school for fered when he was thrown from) foreign student who would his motor scooter on Grosebeck| spend his or her senior year at highway | the Bloomfield Hilis High School. A passenger with Bono, Daniel The money will help defray the R. Rank, 15, is in Mount Cle- (oct of the trip and text books, mens General Hospital. His con- |.nq would reimburse the student's dition is listed as satisfactory adopted-famity during the stay in today. . jthis country. Kerry pleaded not guilty at his} * * * arraignment before Justice Fran-| In the past, the student council cis Castellucci, and was released of the school has had two foreign) on a $3,000 bond. Examination was exchange students attend senior set for Nov. 24 classes. In the 1958-59 semester, al Until Bono's death in Detroit boy from Germany studied at the} Osteopathic Hospital, Kerry was|school. This year, a boy from Swe- being held in Macomb County Jail|/den is here. for investigation of felonious driv-| Money for their trips was raised | ing and leaving the scene of an'through other pancake suppers, | accident ‘dances and donations. zs e& » % 4» The cost to bring a foreign stu-| | Pancake Supper Planned to Aid Foreign Student out-going mail, particularly where the mail have been warned by Police Chief Norman Dehnke not leave out- going letters and checks in mail- boxes overnight. Detnke said he has re- ceived complaints from residents in the Foxcroft area regarding | the mail situation. He said residents should keep) a close watch on in-coming and money or checks are involved. He warned that tampering with) is a federal offense Two Bloomfield Township men have been named to the Dean’s list at Yale University for the 1958-59 college year. This means that they are in the top 10 per cent of their classes. They are John Richard Burgis,| son of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Burgis, | 3052 Burning Bush Rd., i“ Bruce Wayland McCaul, son of Mr. and, Mrs. E. W. McCaul, 700 Lone Pine} | Burgis is studying for a bache-| lor’s degree in Russian. McCaul is seeking a bachelor’s degree in physics. dames Anderson Service for former Birmingham Police Chief James Anderson, 70, of Fenton, Mich., will be Sunday ing a stroke in Flint Osteopathic Hospital, Andersen, who was police chief in Birmingham for many years, retired from thé department in He was a member of the Fenton IOOF No. 125, the Gold Age Club of .Fenton, and |the Argentine Methodist Church. ’ He is survived by his wife Mabel, icone Emma Rips Through Okinawa NAHA, Okinawa (AP)—Typhoon Emma blasted through Okinawa early today with winds of more than 110 miles an hour ripping roofs from houses, uprooting trees and causing landslides. Downtown Naha was flooded with water 6 feet deep in low- lying areas. Debris, mud and wa- ter soaked many shops, damaging thousands of dollars worth of mer- chandise No deaths or serious injuries were reported in the Naha area. But contact was broken with the northern part of the island, where Typhoon Charlotte last month killed 45 people. The Weather Bureau in Tokyo said the storm was expected to pass 180 miles east of the main Japanese islands and dié in the laughed and said: coast speaking tour on behalf of her But armed conflict, she insisted, Kerry was picked up less than Pacific. Herter, who first told 4 news con- : * * * ; iference this country was taking or would ieave India the - nauiglal “Well, it was like this. We wee | no sides, later issued a statement Attired in a lavender-patterned |"0t only materially but also spirit- a.a_ Detroit saying the Red Chinese, in using| black silk sari, silver . haired wally. ana we were ali ready to leave for home. “He-turned to me and asked, » ‘Ape you running?’ were ‘‘wholly the wrong.”’ This word was given to the Indian Embassy here and dis- And 1 told|patched to the U.S. embassy in in Press Club Nene \force, * * * “It is still our hope that we, if no one else, can take a model stand in behalf of peace,’ she said. Mme. Pandit gave her talk again Mme. Pandit, 58, chatted easily in the lounge of Birmingham Country Club on subjects rang- ing. from China to her three a half hour after the accident by|dent to this country, under a pro-jat 2 p.m. in the Bowles and Son Macomb County sheriff's deputies gram set up by the American Field| Funeral Home, Linden. Burial will after he had abandoned his car.|Service, is $1,000. follow at the Fairway Cemetery. On information from his wife,| Bloomfield Township residents' Anderson died yesterday follow- U.S. farms have more automo- biles than telephones. police found Kerry in a restaurant| in Fraser | Deputies quoted Kerry as say-| ing ‘I expected you and I'm glad him ‘Syre, I am’.” Mayor of Utica, Father-in-Law Sued for $50,000 A $50,000 damage suit has been i ted against Utica Mayor Ed- Ch j fath ' ' by the mayor’s former son-in-law, Fred Riebel, 21, of 454 Gateway St., Pontiac. * * * The court action stems from a tee ae OG ‘ married daughters. > *. “President Eisenhower's visit to | President Eisenhower is sched-|New Delhi won't help ease tensions juled to go to New Delhi on a good-|petween India and China,” she will mission within a month. Offi-| said. “His will be a friendly visit, | teials were afraid that unless Her-|and besides, our two big democ-| |ter's remarks were clarified, re-|racies see eye-to-eye on the China |sentment against the United States| situation. . | might sour the President's visit. “But his presence will give us| x * strength and determination to con-| Replying to news conference|tinue our efforts toward a peace-| States has no way of knowing di- * * * rectly whether India or Red China) 4 seq to tell what she thought of is right in the disputed territorial : ean | , communism, the petite but’ ener-| claims, and has taken no sides on getic Mme. Pandit replied, the issue. sharply: |New Delhi. trom the —pubttc~ptattorm —Thors--- s+ it is over. I don't know why I ran ’ I just lost my head.” today to another sellout town hall audience. ‘60 Would-Be Candidates Sounding Out People lican stronghold of Marshfield, | Every item in this adv day price (Continued From Page One) | ANACIN Tabs day. Kennedy's latest tour, which in- Rockefeller’s lieutenants, how-\cludes sevén stops, will be cli- ever, profess to be anything but) maxed tonight when he delivers disappointed today. the keynote address at the state Bj imit 1. S-L-A-S-H-E-D. | for FRIDAY and SATURDAY is guaranteed below our every- rights reserved to limit quantities. Reguiar $1.09 pack of 100 tablets NATIONALLY ADVERTISED one i te 2 San Francisco Bay area radio Democratic convention in Milwau- | scuffle May 31 between the mayor, his father-in-law, Henry Kollmor- gen, and Church's daughter's ex- husband. * * * But 35 minutes later he issued a formal statement saying “The questions asked me on this subject seemed to me directed at the legal rights along the bor- ders, and my answers according: The family quarrel occurred at Kollmorgen's gas station, 44880 Van Dyke. Riebel says Kollmorgen him. } y related only to the legality of I , 69, subsequently! tne rival claims. There is the paid a $25 fine after pleading guilty |turther and more important point to an assault charge in Macomb Justice Court. . .. .,/of a dispute, forre must not be wre pleaded “‘no contest" at! used to settle it. The Chinese Com- hie epptarence, and i plea of| runist regime has clearly used guilty was entered for him. He was force and, in this respect, is wholly fined $25. in the wrong.” Riebel, divorced last March from Gather Stewed Pigeons - ‘’s daughter, Barbara, aims he was dragged from his car by the two older men, was beaten and suffered} BATH. England ‘UPi)—Police rounded up a flock of pigeons yesterday on drunk charges. The birds were wobbling in the street after invading a malthouse and sampling fermenting barley that, whatever may be the merits injuries.”’ As a result, Riebel says he is limited in the type of employment he can seek. Winter Sneaks In Early | and Dumps 3-Inch Snow (Continued From Page One) quette, six inches at Mount | ahead to watching contests on slop- Cienfens, two inches at Muske- py fields from their wet seats in| 8°. one at Oscoda. three at Sag: the stands. inaw and five at Ypsilanti. F “CAS ‘ | «.[raffic in Oakland County They ns bagi occas tons 4noved normally during the earty |S"°W Mixed with light rain to the) morning rush-hour traffic. No un- Pontiac area. Winds will be east to! sual jams were reported by po- northeast at 12-16 m.p.h Occas-| ‘ee. iona] snow will fall tonight, dimin- . ak t ishing to snow flurrics TornOFrOW + Lad One inch of additional snow is like- Pontiac State Police Post/}y to pile up.’ ed atieup on Waterford) Little temperature change is ex- Hill -early Jast night before the pected, with the low tonight 30 county road trucks swung into ac-|and the high tomorrow 33. The tron |high today will be 34 | Snow depths in other areas | In the Upper Peninsula light snow or flurries were expected to- day, tonight and tomorrow. Snow flurries—and -continued cold -will| continue through Sunday. greeting | re two inches in Flint, three inches in Grand Rapids, 10 inch- is in Houghton, three inches in Jackson, three inches at Mar- * the masses of deer hunters en jroute to the north The Weather Over the weekend temper. | atures will average 8-19 degrees | Full U. 8. Weather Bureau Report below normal, with the cold | ND VECINITY—Occasional aoa abe bard rain or freezing rain| gTipping the area through Sun- | r ~today. East to winds 12-16) day: | «miles. Occasional snow tonight, diminish- — oe One) It won't get warmer until Mon- orrow. inch of snew likely. Lithe temperatare | change. Low tonight 36. High temerrew day or Tuesday, 33. Kast te northeast winds 12-16 miles . High teday 34. Teday tn Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding the Weather Bu- ‘|reau reports. ; | The barometric pressure was} 8 am |30.1 and the humidity dial read t 8 am: Wind Velocity 10-15 mph | 100 at 10:15 a.m Difection. Northeast | Twenty-nine was the lowest + - 9 ) De ee tereasy at 0 ke \temperature recorded in downtown | Moon sets Saturday at 6:25 am \Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. e| |mercury was at 34 at 1 pm Moon rises Priday at 4.37 pm Dewntewn Temperateres — EE 30. lh am.. : 33) . ; . | pie Re Going Shopping? " nymagenu _Put License Tag ee ee ~ On Your List Mean temperature _ 30 . Weather—Snow One Year Age in Pentiac Highest temperature Making out a list of errands to @ |do this weekend? Why not include} purchase of your 1960 license tags. | Lowest temperature . .e gt ry This was the suggestion from| a — Willis M. Brewer, branch man- a This Date in 81 Tears jager of the Pontiac Secretary of; 70 in 1009 11 in 187) |State’s Office, who. said sale of \-~"Phursday'’s Temperatare Chart ithe new license tags are about ee 4 =| even for what they were this time ‘Bigmerek 15 5 Milwaukee 31 26 last year. “patiaid ‘ is Rew Grleans 78 3 : urged a again not ‘Crieago lorget their car titles. inctnnat! . 31 #17 . “lerela & 4 Pein 38 22|| ‘The office at 9 E. Huron St. is Daren 3 Bs Pittoaryh b+ 3¢\open weekdays from 9 a.m. _until 4 she 4 Ce 4 a5 p.m. afden Saturdays from 9 ae 8 i Se wane at tam. until-4-_ p.m ‘J v 0 ‘. Siemens City 40 31 Washington §0 40\ |New tags, which go on the 1959} / “Lansing as) Seottie 45 -20\full-size plates. have been on sale ie ” n omer ” ™ since Nov. 2 throughout the state. | wei a |! *” a . . . ‘ polities is everyone's busihess now- | adays, women-as well as men. “ja non-political tour today. men in every level of government,|a mid-morning panel discussion, she emphasized, the highest as well as the lowest. | | his terical forces that have |and TV stations plan to cover his jvisit today, despite a furore in Los communism. | think only positive . thoughts. If everyone t esti a over the governor's policy id iof holding separate press confer- only pope borsacpeine fences for the press and radio-TV' newsmen She was firm in the belief that) “T’m not a bit interested in * * + Nixon continues what he calls And women can do as well as; He goes to Appleton, Wis., for jon world problems at Lawrence College. | Thes tonight he is in Indiana. | polis for the national convention | of Sigma Delta Chi, a journalism fraternity. Nixon will make a | talk and answer questions. “1 believe the common man, using his coMmon setise, comes to decisions on important prep, | lems that are usually right, or not far wrong,’” she said. Appearing on the Birmingham| It was a bad time for a top) Theater stage, Mme. Pandit’s first|Republican to come to this part! words were a request to have the/of Wisconsin. It’s a big cranberry| theater lights turned up. | S@fiter, and the administration has! “I can't talk well unless I see|warned that some cranberries) who I'm talking to,"’ she explained.| might be contaminated with a! Her talk dwelt largely on the |weed killer that has caused can- cer in rats in laboratory tests. shaped modern ndia and the (Nixon gallantly came all out for| unique but difficult role which | cranberries. | her country has chosen in to- | * * * day’s troubled world. | “I° certainly expect have our : : ; icranberries for both Christmas ahs hgracebe = = mand Thanksgiving,’ he said at a “In our 5,000 years of religious |"€WS conference. history, Buddhism taught us tol-| The way Nixon figures it, the erance and non-violence and Hin- duism taught us to bargain rather than try to conquer by force.’ * * * } to candidates for the 1960 presidential | jnomination. He didn’t say who \these two would be but he appar- ently was referring to himself and India’s habit of sometimes ap- pearing friendly to the Western Rockefeller. world and sometimes to the East- John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) | ern gives rise occasionally to mis-| drank a cranberry juice toast | understanding, but is explainable,; Thursday night and drew a ca- | she said. | pacity audience in the Repub- | Kreps Gets Pro-Tem Post Sylvan Mayor Re-Elected . Sylvan Lake Mayor William B.| Also sworn in was Joseph E.| Taylor was re-elected last night|Gilson of 1915 Woodland St, the| at the City Council's 1959 reor-jother newly elected councilman. | ganizational meeting. \Gilson, who formerly served on the | He will be serving his second|Council for 15 years, was elected! consecutive one-year term as may-|t0 the post left vacant by the or. Also-re-elected to his second |'esignation of John N. Doherty. term’ as mayor pro-tem was for-| x & * mer mayor Anthony Kreps. Kreps, who lives at 2282 Gar- Taylor of 1935 Warwick Ave. land Ave.. is serving his 11th year hes bore & cstetaen wow. io the Council. He was mayor 1908. Me wae re-elected te a eee- |for seven years ond three-year term Iast week | The Council also reappointed and sworn in at last night's | Donald R. MacDonald to the Oak- | meeting. | land County Board of Supervisors ’ and William Bigford as the city’s | . second constable. TOP In other business, the Council | : ordered a public hearing to be! s held at 8 p.m. Dec. 2 at the City! * Hall on an appeal by Sam War-| wick, a city builder, for a change | in zoning ordinances so that a res-| taurant might be built on a lot! owned by him at Orchard Lake! Avenue and Warwick street. * * * A new fire contract with West Bloomfield Township was accepted. The agreement wil] increase the basic cost for the first five fire runs from $2,500 to $3,200 and add a $25 charge for each-resusci- ator call. The Council also agreed to re- number some 20 ordinances and amend several others in a codifi- cation change, transfer special sewer assessment funds to the gen- eral fuhd and to change city em- ployes’ pay period from the Ist and 16th to the 10th and 25th of each month. ocratic gathering in the history ‘of the 7th district dential nomination, attended the Republics shoud ave one £0 61 Funds for Help |port, $144,050; F | mittee which’ kee. Delegations came from as far as 150 miles and all areas of the state to hear Kennedy at the rally. The crowd was estimated at 1,500, called by backers the largest Dem- * * * Kennedy's only comment on the cranberry issue was that he felt the federal government had the | right to act. « ye ae, Completely Assembled $7.95 List 8 8 Choice of 2 Models Famous Thimbie-Drome ‘Super Cub 105" (pictured above) or Air Force “‘Super-Sabre" Easy start- ing motor easy - to - control. $1 HOLDS Yo in Layaway L, a S 8 TOY DEPT. SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSSSSSSSESSEEEESE | HOUSEWARES DEPT. SPECIALS for Week-End 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS English ‘Shetfield’ STAINLESS STEEL Steak Knives SET of c 6 for Maker's list $3.95 value — sisialons| self, Molded ‘MELAMINE’ 12” HIGH 3-TIER Tidbit Trays $4.95 ! $8 Value Artistically designed 3-tfer tray for candy, peanuts, ros d’oeuvres, crack- ers, etc. Tiers are 5%" top tray. 7” middie tray and 9%" lower tray. Workers’ Lunch Box $2.49 ] 99 Seller _ As shown — hip roof box with pint size thermos bottle for het or cold liquids. Chapel for All Faiths Dedicated at Pugsley TRAVERSE CITY #@ — Dedica- Fanos by W. C. Taggart, Big tion services were seheduled today | Rapids oil magnate and philanthro- Ousts Reporter From Poland; Knows Too Much for an all-faiths chapel at Camp :pist, Pugsley, Michigan's only probation | presentation. > camp. for the chaple . were q who will make the a ob Judge Earl C. Pugsley of Hart, | The dedication address will be UNDER-PRICED FOR TONIGHT G SATURDAY WARSAW, Poland (#—Poland’s government Thursday accreditation of New York Times |correspondent A. M. Rosenthal and ordered him to leave the country as soon as possible. Rosenthal, wha has been assigned to Poland since June 1958 said he was told he had “probed too deeply into the internal situation in the He added that no accusation of false reports had been made. A foreign miniStry official, asked if any of Rosenthal's articles were untrue, replied. “The question of falseness is not the question.. You have probed too hower can count with a measure jdeeply into affairs concerning the) of confidence on getting in what} (Communist) party and the leader- | he came here for—his_ favorite|ship.’”’ HHH AUTH ETOH Regular 20c Value Color Books & Crayons — t0c Box of 8 crayons with choice of 10¢c COLORING OOKS. Every Item In This Adv. is CUT-PRICE —but You Can SAVE $49.51 Here at SIMMS’ Hf Exactly As Pictured —Ne Charge for Layaway mm Floor Sil J rat INN 2AM Thousands Throughout The Nation Paid Up to *109” argus c-4 Camera-Case & Flash —with fast F:2.8 Cintar Lens for Color-Slides Only 31 at This Price Better. BUY. _NOW... - Brand new 195@ superceded model +» » Viewfinder and coupled range- finder for more simple picture tak- ing 1/300 second s tully synchronized flash .. usr anteed both by ARGUS Fi ‘gt $2.50 HOLDS YOURS for Friday & Situtday (= SQNOWIV Chocolate Drops | FULL POUND Lo | ° = < PPPTYTTITTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT TTT Tee Te Pa < ei oF Rs ‘Shop These Money-Savers Fridey & “Saturibey Value to $3.95 LADIES’ — MISSES’ — GIRLS’ mwa ' s “Stadium” Boots ‘J Values .to $5.00 _ Black rubber boot with zip- 97 __# per front, fur trim top, he warnily lined. All sizes. (Colors at slight higher and cost! 4.88 6 RE RSS The latest rage in foot wear for school, sports or casual dress. Assorted colors in sizes 4% to 9. LADIES’ — MISSES’ — GIRLS’ Cha-Cha Boots - 27 FLASHER & BLINKER Safety Lantors "lL LAA LA As shown — regular letely when not used. Red f linkér and regular spotlight Popular ‘STURDY’ Make Pocket Watch steel blades with serrated edges that) never need sharpening. Lustrex life-| time handles. Buy for gifts or your- | Accurate and dependable timekeeper. Unbreakable crystal. 10% tax. 4-Turret MICROSCOPE. Regular $9.95 Value IN With wood carrying All Metal with THERMOS Bottle GENERAL ELECTRIC ELECTRIC- Alarm Clock Regular $3.98 Value ‘Starter’ model is self- sarting electric clock. 10% tax. 98 N. Saginaw —ind Floor 9 N, Saginaw Your Best Friend on Cold Days—WARM JACKETS and COATS MEN’S-LADIES’-BOYS’-GIRLS’-CHILDREN’S Just look over this adv. and see how much more you save at Simms on winter jackets and coats. Compare ‘em anywhere. A small deposit holds your choice in Free Layaway. Boys’ Striped Lined Jackets Reg. 99 $3.95 Polished cotton with flanne! lining, 2 slash pockets. Sizes 3 to 6x. Boys’ Lined Rambler Jac Reg. 99 $5.95 Zipper front. knit collar and cuffs. Wool inner lining. Sizes 6 to 12. $7 Value 99 Size 3 to 6X Sises 7 te 14 $5.99 Lined wate r repellent Cie ne Toggle button. Men's Suedene Wool Jackets Orig. 99 $10.95 100% wool lined with rayon. Knit collar, waist & cuffs. Sizes 36 to 46. Boys’ Zipper Hood Jackets $8 to $10 i” Values Water repellent treated with detachable hoods, Some fur trim. Sizes 6 to 1 Men's Gabardine Sur-Coats $9.95 99 Value Water repellent gab in 3 colors. Sizes 36 to 46. Innerlined Boys’ & Girls’ Sno-Suits $10.00 88 Value Washable, 2-piece suit. Water repellent treated. Lined. Sizes to 6x. Foam Insulated Men's Coats $17.95 88 Quality Rambler style, charcoal color. All sizes 36 to 46. Men‘s 100% Wool Suburban Coat $16.95 88 Value Dressy style. Warmiy lined. Grey or charcoal in sizes to #4. Girls’ 4 to 6x 2-Pc. Coat Set ves 19" Coat and leggings. Sizes 4 to 6x. Tweeds & solid colors. Girls 100% Wool Winter Coats ness, 19 Rich. tabrics, a + ag A tailoring sizes Men’s Lined Winter Coats rom 14" Hooded parkas, lo ‘ - na styles, F san coats. nes 36 to 46. F Be | DATA TA SD secraies \ 98 N. Saginaw —Basement & Main Floor *Cb¢EebhAAAAAAL A A * 2 Year Guarantee Electric Blankets n early backer of the theory of a/ robation camp. } All Smart 3 Shoppers Follow the Footsteps Into SIMMS — Where SAVINGS Are BIGGER! OPEN TONITE and SATURDAY ‘til 10 P.M. “When Pennies Count ‘. You're Glad That Simms is About” Double Bed 72x84" Size * 138" ® Automatic Thermostat ® 3 Heat Switch ® Machine Washable Choice of paste! colors. Wide satin binding. Gift boxed. U-L approved. —$i HOLDS YOURS— Electrical —2nd Floor CUT YOUR KID’S HAIR at HOME, and the MONEY YOU SAVE Buys Their School Needs © Trimmer Guide © Clipper Guide just little effort vou can give the entire family hair cuts with professional results. money saved can buy the Kids their back to school a , Bez BARBER SHEAR oaanee COs fer tapering & Famous Endicott-Johnson Brand — Playwelt Quality Children’s ‘sci: : Footwear —~ Oxfords, straps, saddles and others—— for boys and E girls. Leather uppers and long wearing composition = | Wahl 6-Piece 4 Electric Home Barber Set Regular $9.95 soles. ALL SIZES. Child's 4 to 9—Boys’ and Girls’ 82 to 12 and 1212 to 3. ENDICOTT-JOHNSON Men’‘s Oxfords Blac*k or brown leather. Styles in End- well i Cru- sader irst quality. x SUNDRIES —Main — eeeeccesesseseseeseseese SLM M DS sxctiies ) BOYS’ ALL LEATWER Sot om | COMBAT BOOTS Read the Small Print for Big Values! | Shop for these Specials Tonite and Saturday — compare the savings | anywhere in Town! Buy now for Christmas! USE SIMMS FREE LAYAWAY PLAN Sirah cpesit | PHOTO DEPT. VALUES | A eee cee eee —SS ee | bys Reg. $1.56 Cin. es Choice of M2. #5 or Press 25 bulbs. Limit 3 cartons Ma as black and white.- Camera, bulbs, Take color snaps and slides as well 7” film, etc KODAK 8mm TURRET MOVIE CAMERA | Regular $79.50 Value a Turret sen with {1.9 lens for telephoto, 49” ‘ * A’ \ VESTS—Regular Size wide-angle and regular shots. Roll load. Regular $79.50 Value 99 Blower cooled 500-watt projector with forward, still and reverse features. New | 400-ft. reel capacity. pucsndl eta = as show -— $10 Value 998 Leather uppers built-up heels. 8 6 to 12. As Shown a” } | | } | | ~—SYLVAINIA & AMPLEX M2 - 5 - sd RADIANT ‘Stipe SCREENS $12.95 gin. 95 PICTURE-* | METEOR $7 «MASTER 915" 30 x @Inch .... 30 x «640-Inch $14.95 $70.95 PICTURE- METEOR 5g” MASTER a | « x #-Inch .... 4 x «4-Inch oped $26.95 PICTURE- ETEOR . 415” MASTER 520” 50 x Inch . Se x SW-Inch | Guaranteed screens on tripod base. Folds up for com-! pact storing or carrying. For. brilliant color slides. For Perfect Indoor Movies MOVIE BAR-LITE Hunters’ LEATHER With 4 FLOOD BULBS Field Boots le Arctics | Zipper Arctics Regular $13.00 99 Values 88 Sizes As shown—4 brilliant flood bulbs to $12 and bariite holds any camera. With handy storage, carry case. a? Cuts Down Harsh Light Glare BOUNCE Lite BAR-LITE Regular $19.95 Value — Now Only Instead of glaring light into 3” Choice styles in heights | s to 14 inch- es. Pirst quality. subjects’ eyes — bounce it off the ceiling. Complete with flood bulbs. $ oe oe oe oe ee oe Oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe ee oe ee ee oe KODAK ‘Starflash’ CAMERA KIT Regular $10.35 Value Sizes 10 te 1i $2.95 Quality Durable corduroy nis with fitted ttom legs, si T back. Choice of sorted colors in sizes KODAK Pony Ii 35mm CAMERA | Regular $29.50 Value 22° F3.9 lens miniature 35mm easy to use as a snap camera. Takes B&W and color snaps and slides. Syn- | | chronized for flash ‘ \\ Smooth ten vest of ribbed cotton knit, { © oe oe Oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe oe . ; ff ri tarens the te XXXL Coea ates ECTOR BF ( // _ PANTS—Medium & Large Regular $64.50 i and. comfortabie New Ready-Matic chang- 99 ty Elecite te waigt and fer. Kae Knee iength. er, 300-watt model. 68e* (500-Watt Mode! $59.99). KODAK 500-W. MOVIE PROJECTOR \ TURRET KODAK ‘Scopemeter’ camera Regular po Value 99 — cam z ra with built-in 6g" ht meter greene ee os el ie ons mgaete plan r seding. 1.9 ae KODAK ‘Showtime’ p,. } Oreo roa - 89" Regular $123.50 veto. Blower cooled Paes with ee te verse and still projections Simm). ROTHERS 98 N. Saginaw * bad dtiw wisvivb luq of. avawdgia * fe , ae cee, *S ae “3+ a a cae irate a —? ee Se. ey eee OE ae se eh i i A / Peeks at Willidtns’-Chair ; Office Doo RK LANE ANS > —Tinkering in mat-! ters medical is a long time hobby) of etary of State James ‘Mc-| NefleHare, the fellow in Lansing’ whe signs your driver license. c y he camesesbysthe: bobby telig°a good deal about Jim Hare, A@ptrapping, 6-fgot S-incl_ ex- athi@t®, he was. Classified 4-F be | his jocal draft board in 1941+that is, $physially unfit fo military + service, Hare, 30 then, was sick and had been for nearly two years “J ran frem doctor to doctor. They told me it might be any iv’ number of things. I was told | y tags ‘ | might die tn» couple of years if I didn’t find out what it was,” he reealied, j “The fourth doctor said I should | go to a psychiatrist on the theory | the trouble was psychosomatic | word and phrases and an academic knew the pains were real. I think. background, Hare ig ne high domed that’s what got ige started. | intellectual—strietly a Jow pressure Hare, sa Detroit school teacher, legged’ it to the Wayne University j ; , : pe hs store and bopght ajA CUP OF COFFEE? couple +of amedical books, deter-| The first thing a visitor gets mined to solve the mystery him-[when he walks in fs an offer of self, coffee brewed @aily in an ante- GNOSED TROUBLE ricky a silvery, Sputnik like urn, dAMES M. HARE | Zealous Williams followers. pri-;politics—in -1943, when he - first |vately frown on some of the aecre-| THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1959 { . & r Always Open was elected a Democratie precinct tary’s behind the scenes moves in |delegate in the 13th Congressional this direction. They feel he is| District. . trying to feather his*own nest at} A strange blending of his aca- ithe expense of the ‘‘cause.”’ demic and political careers cata-| At least a few Democrats —in/|Pulted him into high state office. | high office fee] Hare overestimates * * * ‘his strength in the party, an esti- “Jt sounds strange now,” said mate that leans heavily on his Hare who has been having differ- \ticket-pacing 303,471 margin for ences with the state civil service | an unprecedented third term in, commission, ‘‘but I wanted to write 11958 imy doctoral dissertation on civil They say he would get slaugh-/|service."’ tered in Wayne County if he bucked | x *« * ea ees at: PATTY With the help of Hicks Griffiths, KNEW HIM .. . ONCE {then Democratic state chairman, ' Even some Democrats are sur-|he was installed as personnel di- prised to learn that Hare's ac- rector at the Michigan State Fair, quaintance with Williams dates|+ SUmmer job in 1950, hoping to from boyhood when their families | ather material for the disserta- lived around the corner from one | "on. ‘another in the Detroit neighbor-| Soon afterwards Hare was made ‘hood where Wayne University|State fair manager. The fair, now stands |formerly a steady money loser, | “1 knew him casually,” Hare {Showed a profit in‘ the next three! | recalls. “I used to play with |Years. .He was rewarded with the |HARE’S OFFICE , Democratic nomination for secre- ~ itary of state, an office no Demo- his older brother. We went to [ort had filled since election of different churches and schools (| eon D Case in 1936. and. didn’t often see each other.”’ When Williams went East to| The Democratic tide of 1954 | prep school in his early teens, swept him into office over in- | cumbent Republican Owen J. | Hare stayed in Detroit For 23 . ‘ years they didn’t see each other! (Pat) Cleary by a margin of ate Uc '& tops for yourself or for gifts comes from Watie’s ! The Use Waite’s new — 7 \» \ — @ F-L-E-X-I-B-L-E ae yh CCC Charge . best of everything in Luxurious Lingerie... smiles a lot and_ talks os sec the \peadily. As he talks, he’s likely to|again, to about 82,000 in 1956, 55,132 votes. His margin swelled | emit’ a®® oécasional deprecating The year before Williams was Aneminent’ ; Gla gnosticran chuckle fike a housewife in her confirmed Hare's bunch—amoedk morning clothes welcoming an dysentery,” then widely : regarded unexpected guest a€“plitelya.a tropical disease. It | apparently was picked up on a. Im the wuling clique of Michi- visit to the 1939 New York World's’ gan Democrats, he has a Fair: | reputation as something of a Hare recovered although not in ‘‘loner.” time to see military duty. Some persons, fastening on com- did net forget: about the paratively trivial differences with episode. Me bought more medical «phe Chief’'—as the secretary calls ge Bho extended the range of qi, Williams, are tempted to call his ries hin a ‘‘renegade"’ but that is too P how it is he maintains orong. . today@ small medical laboratory in hi&Pasement the all-Democratic state adminis- * * * _ trative board voted against raising At #9. Jim Hare's pompador is the meal allowance for state em- Two years ago, Hare alone on ing back, “The Jean 170 pounds business he packed as a varsity football ~ ke t end at Wayne has grown to a ; . are Where others accepted in silence comfortable but'not.bulgy 215. the civil service commission's His clothes; “usually a little | ecent multi-million dollar pay rampled,” give "more the appear | increase for state employes, Hare t ance ofa well-todo farmer) _— * sa cra yn thane tg ry cx fa UE a sckéol (dmtier he is basically, °C" ‘tore? more fo benel fow: “'|pay workers He's not much on formality. In late October, he criticized) The door to his office is 'reflectorizing state license plates open, allowing passersby ia few-months after the governor pet im or wave a greeting. (signed a bill approving it. There lie it that way. have been other similar differ- lences. : He once startled newsmen by | saying his office ran its business; Although he is appropriately coy publicly, it is universally in a “vivarium.” This, it turned out, is a kind of rectangular gold-| accepted among Democrats that off-beat’ Williams steps out as governor. |the political and social sciences, Hare yearns tq step in when along the way getting active in the graduated from Princeton and en-| Williams and Hare came _ to- tered University of Michigan law gether again after the Democratic school, Hare left Wayne for the/disaster of 1946, crossing paths in school of hard knocks. the formation of the Americans ‘I graduated as a business edu-'for Democratic Action (ADA) in| cation major in June 1932. It was Michigan. jat the depths of the depression,’’| Hare, sparkplug in the organiz- jhe said. ing move, was elected its first | . x ke chairman. | “I got a job in the Ford (Motor) Less than two years later, he, \Co.) foundry pouring steel cast-|fell in with early supporters of ings for 65 cents an hour, the/Williams, than a liquar control roughest job you'll ever find. |commission member, in Williams’ | “Every week or so they would|bid for governor, and help put over | ‘line us up and count off. Every |the election of Griffiths, Williams’ | sixth or seventh guy was laid off.|law partner, as state chairman. I lasted about nine weeks. There | x * * + In_Lansing, he has built an im-+ * * * pressive economy record. “I gyess that’s what made” a! Not so long ago, a Republican | Democrat out of me, born andjlegislator interrupted a_ tirade raised as I was in a Republican against Williams as Hare walked | family. (His father was an at-/through the chamber. orney).”’ “We wouldn’t have the same He bounced around at other | trouble with him,” said the law- factory jobs, meanwhile picking up|maker. ‘‘You can work with credits in night school, and joined | Hare.” the Detroit public school system in} Not a few Republicans make) 935. ithe same distinction between Hare | inthe ensuing year, he -man- |and Williams. _ i aged to work in $2 credit hours | at Wayne and U. of M., winning his M.A. degree. For 19 years, Hare basically followed the teacher's calling in) WE'VE MOVED] Te 2945 Steed nag Rd. | fl } \ i) COVEY’S KEEGO DRUG ay Pharmacists Detroit ‘Téaichers Federation and t+1-+-+--~ eamomsieal ~ MICHIGAN S LARGE ST JEWELERS ¥ S33 aN ELECT settings to change the shavi 24 North Saginaw Street .. . ve 14 yen” SCHICK ‘3 First and only electric razor that lets you % shift the speed and adjust the shaving head to shave as close, as fast as you like! New! 3 Speed Control— You pick the speed that shaves you best. Three action to fit your particular beard ~~ SSS NEW HOME/TRAVEL SCHICK 3-SPEED ELECTRIC Day Home Trial Beginning Christmas Day! SPEED Ric RAZOR q SET THE SET THE SHAVE TO FIT YOUR FACE... it's the combination that counts! Speed contro! and head control. Only SCHICK 3-SPEED has both That's why only SCHICK 3-SPEED jets you shave es close, as fast as you like New! Adjustable Custom -Comb Head—with SCHICK you adjust the ng shaving head itself. You change the shaving angie to fit your skin and beard RAZOR gives him the added versatility of being able to _ Shave in his car or boat. For the man on the go—the ideal . gift for years of top shaving pleasure. Highest temperature Lowest temperature .. Mran temperature Weather—Rain |, Mimest and — a 90 in 1008 4 Th A 47 % Alpena Baltimore St 33 , Bismarck g eo “puttaie 4 30 : Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. Surviving are his wife, Evelyn; two sons, Theron Dion of Troy and Robert O’Connor of Lake Orion; and five grandchildren. Three sisters and two brothers also survive. Ex-Pontiac Woman Dies in Fort Wayne Mrs. Eleanor Schuck; 69, a for- mer Pontiac resident, died in her sleep while visiting her daughter, Mrs. Anne Hartwell of Fort Wayne, Ind. * * * | The daughter of the late George tery for Baby Girl “Schulz, infant|Patrick’s Catholic Church, White|tiac 35 years ago to make her John} daughter of Mr. ‘and Mrs. | Schulz of 244 Whittemore St. Surviving besides the parents;by Denelson-Johns Funeral Home, | Lake Township. Arrangements are being made are a sister, Cheryl, at home; and/Pontiac. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred] Schulz of Pontiac, Mrs. Eva Hight) of Pontiac and Ben Goodman of! Grand Rapids. | The baby was dead at birth yes-| terday at Pontiac General Hospital.| Surviving are two brothers and seveal nieces and nephews. JOHN O. O'CONNOR AVON TOWNSHIP — Service for John O. O'Connor, 69, of 3605 Culbertson Rd., will be held at 11 MRS. RAY ANDERSON a. ._m. Saturday at St. Andrew’s LAPEER — Mrs. Ray (Grace) |Catholic Church, Rochester. Burial Anderson, 73, of 806 N. Main St., | will follow in Mount Avon Ceme- died today at Lapeer County Gen-|tery. eral Hospital after a brief illness. | Arrangements are being made by | Baird Funeral Home here. | Mrs. Anderson is Past Noble Grand of Maine Rebecca Lodge and Past Matron of Martha Chap- | ter No. 146, OES, both in Lapeer. | Surviving are a_ son, Lloyd of; Pontiac; three daughters, Mrs. | Hymen Hoffman of Fenton, and Mrs. Clark Gregory and Mrs. Har- | old Worden, both of Lapeer; 12 grandchildren and five — great- | grandchildren. " | Two sisters, Mrs. Ethel Dock- | ham of Lapeer and Mrs. Harold Rowden of California, also sur- | Mr. O'Connor died yesterady at| Avon Center after a lengthy iliness. Hospital ‘home in Florida. | Fla. levening in Coral Gables, Fla. | ‘Cheating on Nudists SPRINGFIELD, Ore. (UPI)— Resident caretaker A.B, Stevens narrowly escaped when the main building of the Willamettans Nu- dist Colony burned to the ground Wednesday night. Stevens said he had time to take with him only a few personal possessions and ‘‘the clothes on my back.” Reducing Pill Ad Claims Under Probe NEW YORK .(AP)—Advertising used to promote sale of the Regi- men brarid of reducing pills is _un- der investigation by Dist. Abty. Frank S. Hogan who said his of fice is. seeking to determine whether claims made for the pills |constitute false and misleading ad- |vertising urider the state penal {code. : | He said that the Regimen inves- ltigation was part of a probe into lcomplaints of false advertising and has no connection with his offices inquiry into television quiz show fixes. There was no immediate com- ment from the pill manufacturer or its advertising agency. Avery Estate Seeks DETROIT #—A suit seeking re- She leaves another daughter. | tung of $1,573,329 in estate taxes’ Mrs. Jean Everingham of Miami, | was filed by executors.of the estate|Defense Department, Critchfield’s a. . lof the late Waldo A. Avery in U.S./estimated $40,000 annual salary) Service will be held Saturday | nistrict Court here yesterday. |was to be continued by Convair.| Avery, a brother of Sewell Avery, | \former chairman of Montgomery Ward & Co., left an estate valned at 19 million dollars when he died Feb. 3, 1958. He was a co-owner of Detroit’s Majestic Building and a resident of suburban Grosse Pointe Farms. The suit charges the government lset up by Avery for his four chil- idren. a Also Acts Against Reluctant About Federal Job Ike’s Research Projects! Choice Seeking Advice After Criticism SAN DIEGO, Calif. Charles L. Critchfield, newly ap-| pointed director of the Advanced} Research® Projects Agency, Pentagon to advise him on wheth- er to take the job in view of con- gressional and press criticism. . x * | Critchfield, #, director of scien- tific research at Convair, was named to head the agency Nov. 4 | * * * A 1951 law permits the Penta- gon to employ up to 10 unpaid consultants. The same law forbids jsuch men from engaging in any jdiscussion on defense contracts with the firms paying their salary. * * * | and certain newspapers as a ‘‘pos- ‘sible conflict of interest.”’ ‘The Alabama {mined to strengthen its stand-for/They previously had cleared the! port in the passed House. |bills to finance private segregated | The first al®ws a board of Oct. 7. (AP) —Dr. Schools and put brakes on Negro/registrars to use 12 days a year | Both Al Ah ite catch up on its paper work ‘reported fro XED 50 by Defense Secy. Neil McElroy| to succeed Roy W. Johnson, He! was scheduled to assume his jduties next Monday * * * | « | Under the arrangement with the Alabama Legislature OKs Segregated School Funds MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) Legislature, racial. segregation, has yoters registration. ‘The action came without opposi- bills Gov. ture The were sent immediately school measure would deter- al-| low the state to appropriate public|to cut down on the time a board : | unsuccess —iboards of registrars were passed | tragi Pre by the Senate without debate. |con It The second iwithin the precinct The effect of these measures is funds directly to private schools of registrars could be available because of orders to integrate. | Try lraq | newspape abortive at allows the registrars tempted assa said tion Thursday night the last few to spend up to 20 days in each | yesterday i Thursday night he has asked the|Urs of the 1959 session. The even-numbered year —visiting the proadcast. to|precincts within the district—and | John Patterson for his signa-|registering only those applicants, | earrying unk sneaked into the Kassem is conva CAIRO The report s Al Gohmouria si iwhere public schools have closed'for interviewing voter applicants. |fire and hurled a h In most counties the boards now ‘the direction of Kas The bill is patterned after an ex-|Meet about 58 days a year. Since |the second floor listing law which permits alloca-|they can use 12 days for clerical) Al Ahram said t tion of state money to private col-iwork and then visit around the'changed fire with t country for 20 days they will only!guard, using sgb-mach leges. a measure to authorize the grate brought against the state. ithe National Assn. After Critchfield’s appointment vancement of Colored People and| The third measure makes _ it} jwrongfully collected estate taxes) was announced, it drew criticism|similar organizations which might|mandatory for all courts to report lon ‘trust funds totaling $6,311.832|from Rep. Chet Holifield (D-Calif) |finance a suit seeking integrated|to the boards of registrars those |Schools Two of the bills dealing with a person frem voting. z pay- \26 days. at mass registration) that numerous: Negroes Under law the registrars leonvictions that could disqualify Al Ahram. said two m CLERKENWELL, | (UPI)—Magistrate T. F. D offered no consolation * 5? Stores and Services l-ONE LEVEL SHOPPING @ Parking for ‘ 000 Cars CLE MILE “toursn taph at Square Lake Kd. : / . The Legislature also approved be available for interviews only grenades. The newspap two men gave up the at ment of schoot tuition directly to! A board probably could avoididrove away in the ambul a student even though his school 4ny attempt was not under a threat to inte-|/by Negroes by shutting down for jiders chased them but le iclerical work on a day it seemed |. chicle in the Baghdad stre: Three measures dealt with vot-jlikely ler registrars. Another would make/| were preparing to register. And} jit possible for state attorneys tolit could avoid Negro-dominated Classical Cuss Words \find out who was behind any suit | Precincts on its visits in the even This | years. measure apparently is aimed at|Must visit all precincts at least for the Ad-|gnce during the odd years. E ae ngla to a man who complained “my, * “You ¢an't landlord swore at me in Greek: swear in Greek,”*~ so * Davis replied. ‘It’s a classical language.”’ VIVE. ALBERT M. GAYLOR IMLAY CITY — Service for Al- bert M. Gaylor, 79, of 861 Blacks Corners Rd., will be held at 4 p.m, tomorrow at Myir Brothers Funeral Home here. Burial will follow in Mount Pleasant Ceme- tery, Dryden. Mr. Gaylor died Wednesday aft- | er an extended illness. His body will be at his residence until noon | tomorrow. | Surviving are his wife, Lizzie: | two sons, Leon of Lake Orion and, Alvin of Fibre; qa daughter, Mrs. Eathel Dockham of Dryéen; 16 ° REGAL §j WILD BIRD SEED Aan attractive mixture of sunflower seed, milo, kaffir, millet wheat and canarv seed. 5-Lb. Bag ....... 10-Lb. Bag ....... a 25-Lb. Bag @ REGAL | SUNFLOWER SEED Medium size seed, heavy and well MISSILE LAUNCHER & EXPLODING BOXCA Heres what you get: Magnet traction steam filled. Very attractive to cardinals. T-Lb. ........... 19¢ 5-Lbs. ..........- 92¢ WO-Lbes. 66.65.67 ... 1.80 ; Q 4 WHEAT and CRACKED CORN Right size fot birds. 10-Lbs. .......... 65c 25-Lbs. .......... 1.35 & e POPULAR BRANDS | DOG FOODS § In Thrifty 25-Lb. 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Watutsi ‘NOTHING * By ROBERT MUSEL LONDON (UPI) —A David and WORKS |Goliath war is being fought in | Ruanda-Urundi, next door to the 'Belgian Congo, and what is dying with the Watutsi warriors is the LIKE | UMS legend of their invincibility | The Bahutus, who are a people ! of medium height, are killing off for You! ———ae Fines td itheir masters of 300 years—the giant Watutsi, one of the strangest jand _ most fascinating tribes on’ |Polk & Co. to Start . i ; . ‘Worldwide Operation _|report of mew car sales. } DETROIT Ww — The organtzation | Polk's -internationai section will Tl e osin S reng which has compiled statistics on|be headed by Dus F, Collins, \motor vehicle registiations In the formerly of Chrysler Corp. , since 1924 United States said | Free Parking for © 000 Cars SHO. MIRACLE MILE “Cextex’ 5S. Telegraph at Square Lake Kd. 'uwn—but tourists pay to see folk on Stewart Granger (star of the, ‘‘What do you Americans ‘ay? Thursday it plars to expand ‘ts! South Dakota's Bad lands are dancing. So the Watutsi got them- filny) and not enough on them,” |Hams. are, hams.” Yes, that’s what they all service to a worldwide operation.|in the southwest part of the State, | The R. L. Poik & Co. figuresislightly east of the Black hills. HOLLYWOOD selves a choreographer afd quickly she said worked out a few folk routines For years they spread around the fable that they could jump over eight feet—a good foot over . the world's record. I paid a bottle of whisky and got permis- sion from an aide of the ruling Mwami, or the eminent propri- + : : earth. etor as he is also known, to No other ee on bbe | * * * watch his high jumping. Deep Tufted Mattress medically-recognized foriu or | | spent some time among them . . “ relief from Acid Upset ... (in- in one of \their capital towns, | It turned out they jumped off Box Spring digestion, heartburn, gas). Each Astrida, where the Watutsi—they {om an ant-heap about a foot high Tums tablet is scientifically com- prefer that spelling to the Ameri- instead of the flat ground. Combination pounded of three carefully se- |canized Watusi—have ru led for I estimated that off the flat they} lected antacid medicines... which are recognized by doctors as be- ing among the most effective known to medical science. TuMs three antacid medicines | work together to: Neutralize excess stomach ® acids... for FAST relief. Headboard , , . “les ; | ‘three centuries over the cool hills Would be lucky to clear six feet. | of their beautiful land. DIDN’T LIGHT A PIPE They came down out of Egypt | Ingenious people the Watutsi, or Ethiopia centuries ago, bring- |for 300 years they parlayed one | ing with them the lyre-horned |bluff after another into a life of | eattle exactly like those depicted {luxurious indolence, never raising | on ancient Egyptian tombs. And a hand to light a pipe or pick up, their legend of invincibility had the gourd of banana beer while protected them ever since. one of their slaves was around Soothe and protect stomach Without really fighting a battle © walls .. . for LASTING relief. jthe skinny giants, many of them |seven feet and vver, made slaves Act gently ...for Sarg relief! |of the pygmy Batwas (four feet ® No acid rebound of side ef- |high) and subject peoples of the fects. |Bahutus. re ; They have brought in the ste scientific Tums formula hes pygmies and their blowguns and pov n surpassed. That's why poisoned darts to aid them in their today you're so wise to rely on pattie for survival. ° Tums for fast, lasting, safe relief | The Watutsi are people of tre- from Acid Upset. Always keep mendous presence, Their faces are ‘TUMS on hand. 3 rolls 30¢. delicately chiseled, their swaying \walk gracefully impressive. To |emphasize their height they wear ™ iromanesque togas draped down ‘from the shoulder. | The Batwas and Bahutus had | never seen anything like them. NOTHING WORKS URETUMS | They accepted instantly that | these towering invaders must be the great warriors they said they were. And the Watutsi, without throwing a spear or fir- ing a poisoned arrow, shrewdly added to the legend—for they are most remarkable people. ’ For example they have large - drums decorated with souvenirs itims. No one knows where they got these private mementoes— since no one can remember that ‘separated from alleged battle vic-| The lazy life did the Watusi no good as a race. They were racked with disease and declining in num- bers ‘due to their deficient diet of banana beer and cereals—they do not keep cattle for meat but for social position, 7 COMPLETE © Z ; at the Y MODERN SLEEP SHOP FURNITURE and BEDDING TELEGRAPH RD.—MIRACLE MILE—BAZAAR AREA FE 8-9551 | There are stories that during a | great famine 40 years ago some | even died alongside their cattle | rather than eat them. Meanwhile the hardworking Bahutus were multiplying and acquiring political Jeaders who had shaken off the old taboos about the \Watutsi. Now that Ruanda-Urundi iwill be given its freedom by Bel-) gium in a year or so, the Bahutus| are striking at their old masters to ensure that control of the land will be in their hands. ; x * * They are cutting off the fret of the Watutsi they catch—an old ifighting method in that direct part lof the world. | In a way it Is sad to see the Watuisis go. When Hollywood | filmed “King Solomon’s Mine” some of the Watutsi were used as atmosphere. Later the film company flew a| copy of the movie down to Astrida| jthey ever fought a war before this : The| jone—but the ‘sight of the drums|Pircpean woman proprietor” of {was enough to make every male 'j,-a) hotel was in the audience and }pyemy and Bahutu amore devoted sno speaks the native language. |Servant. | “You should have heard the LEARNED TO DANCE Watutsi complaining that the cam- i : E ae ‘Fhey had no folk dances of their era was spending too much time meroRd Ine. SENSATIONAL DEAL Brand New 1960 Plymouth | Savoy 6 Pass. 4-Dr Sedan | 2.195% | FULL PRICE ywooLa | OUR REGULAR 19.95 - -PILE-LINED: i BLACK COATS. eee #es i “2% © COSTLY DETAILS include — ~ Mee a cozy buttch-up collar, push-up dolman sleeves, shirred fullness at back! ® TOASTY WARM plush rayon-pile lines the © luxurious soft-touch blend of 70% wool, 30% alpaca! ~ © HARD-TO-MAICH quality - at our regulor price... . — : .. er low price! Misses’ sixes... =D days only! First time you ride in the new solid Plymouth for 1960, built with unibody construction, you will find that you have more room to yourself inside the car and that you sit better. You will feel a new solidity and a glider-like king of smoothness. You will hardly hear the ride at all. “And when you | own a Plymouth, you will learn that it was built to last. COME IN NOW -— BRING YOUR TITLE SPOT FINANCING — SPOT DELIVERY B&R motors, Inc. CHRYSLER — PLYMOUTH — IMPERIAL “Sales — Service — Satisfaction” 724 Oakland Aevnue FE 4-3528 Pontiac Me IMMEDIATE DELIVERY , . FULLY Heoter & Defroster tay Wheels ALL WOOL BLACK | Arm Total Contact Brakes ‘ EQUIPPED: Sir MS Tn | ZIBELINE E Torsion Air Ride Transfer | , SUBURBAN COATS ay ] Q5 D aw hp” Per | lay oway plon | Winter-warm quilted linings! AS ow AS Month | eth y's ; pa Kobe, Pall AMERICA’S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN COMPARABLE 4 VALUES 16 Imagine getting all-wool zibelines ‘La for so little‘money! And when you see - all the costly features—striped knit trim, expert tailoring, quilt lining then you'll know they're worth many dollars morel Perfect _ .- ~- color, perfect style .. . to team with everything! Misses! sizes. meee? f SABER ee ell a THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1959 PATERNAL PROOF—Professor Sandor Okros - of Debrecen, Hungary, claims to a foolproof method for determining the true par- enthood of a child. He says his child’s fingerprints always bear marks corre sponding to the characteristic pattern of both the mother’s and father’s. The method has been used have discovered fingerprints in studies prove a are represented from left. The mother’s are second from left, and the child's are at right. Close examination shows |and immediately surrendered to! that the father’s prints are third from left, sim- |the Frankfurt prosecutor.”’ Arrest 2.Men for Nazi Crimes Neurologist Surrenders;|” Face Murder Charges FRANKFURT, Germany #® — Two men accused of crimes as Nazis were arrested Thursday aft- er dodging the law 12 years. Dr. Werner Heyde, a neuroldgist charged with doing away with many—mentally ill persons under Adolf-Hitler’s program, gave him- self up. He had been living quietly under an assumed name the last 12 years, practicing at Flensburg. Arrested the same day was Robert Mohr, accused of respon- sibility for the death of a Jewish judge in Darmstadt, where he was Gestapo chief. Mohr had been working as a traveling salesman in the Rhine-. land. Both men were wanted on murder charges. * * * Dr. Heyde formerly headed the Neurological Clinic at Wuerzburg} University. The government says he was in charge of the Nazis’ pro- gram of euthanasia, the deliberate) killing of persons suffering from!) mental or physical maladies. A week ago police received a tip that a respectable Dr. Sa- wade, advisor to the Flensburg Social Security Institute and a court expert, was Heyde. When they got to his 7 Heyde was gone. A countrywide! hunt was launched. Today, accom-| panied by his lawyer, Heyde turned himself in. “My client had thousands of UPI Photo possibilities to flee,” said his law-} the photograph illustrate the |YeT: “The fact that he turned him-| method. Two men suspected of being the father jself in preves that he considers himself innocent. | “Dr. Heyde learned about the |search through newspaper reports by prints at the left and third THU GEORGE'S F ric ndly ey pt Storc |Over Racial Bias Issue SHREVEPORT, La. (UPI) — The national commander of the| |Forty and Eight, a fun-making so-| \ciety-of the American Legion, -said| 7\yesterday he thought his group | ‘should have the right to select | its own members.” John Hobble of Liberal, Kan., predicted a floor battle at next year’s convention over the recent directive from National Legion Commander Martin McKneally that the Forty and Eight remove a | racial clause from its constitution. |} McKneally holds that a clause in the affiliate organization's consti-| © tution restricting membership to| = } white only is illegal under the} ~ legion's congressional charter. a. Detroit Cranberries Clean’ in IstTests DETROIT — Federal food in- spectors said. yesterday initial tests showed no signs of a weed-killing chemical in 30 samples of cran- berries offered for sale in the De-| = itroit area. * * * The chemical is said to induce | cancer in experiments on rats. T. C. Maraviglia, chief inspec-|f tor here for the Federal Food and |Drug Administration, said, ‘‘We jean't say, everything is all right until we've checked about 400 : Butt the rest; of the | tests run out like the first ones|\*™ did, there couldn’t be any danger in eating cranberries.” * * * Most of the cranberries sold in Michigan come from the East ‘Coast or Wisconsin where no con- tamination has been sic iii Sees Forty, Eight Fight | | British Crew Launches | 8th Thor Successfully 1 VANDENBERG AIR FORCE |BASE, Calif. (UPI)—A Royal Air| | Force crew successfully launched | SAVE 50% From a-Famous Maker of Actual $59.95 SAMPLE in Hungarian courts to settle paternity suits. The _ ilar to those of both mother and child. | Castro” Turns Fire jing on whether he should be sent j|back to face charges of murder, [5 |but the United States informed | | Cuba the bomb bay on the plane | jhe flew was inoperative and there | 'a Thor intermediate range ballistic|| = Only one of eight men registered) missile yesterday. for the draft in World War I actual-| The firing was the eighth made | § lly became a member of the na-| by RAF crews trained at this cen-| tion's armed military forces. \tral California missile’ base. | ae ONE-OF-A-KIND DESIGNERS’ ORIGINAL SAMPLES This artnual Sample Sale is greater than ever! -You'lt find the most expensive fabrics and fashion de- tails in this fabulous on Enemies at Hom | HAVANA ¢(AP)—Looking grim; Obviously weary from his hours | and haggard’ Prim Minister Fi-|of directing the search for Maj. | del Castro told the Cuban people} early today that his revolution| faces difficult days. Castro took only a sideswipe at the United States—usually his fa- vorite target—but lashed out in a three-hour telecast at his enemies at home and called them “hypro-| Visi crites who once posed as friends of the revolution.” “Rats are going to abandon the ship when things get rougher,” he declared. ‘This is. going to re- mind me of the bad days of the revolution when many gave up the fight.” + He predicted that the revolution would march on even if its ene- mies “‘try’ to mobilize God against us.”’ ‘This won't work,” Castro said, “because one cannot have a good idea of God if he doesn’t have a notion of what it is to love his neighbor.” iCamilo Cienfuegos, his missing | army chief,-Castro showed only | }occasional flashes of his usual fire mB and spirit, At times his custom-| arily free-flowing oratory lapsed} as if he was grasping for a word. | a under his eyes were clearly: x * * He rejected the U, S. contention that there was no evidence U. S.- based aircraft bombed and strafed Havana in a laflet raid over the| capital Oct. 21. Castro reiterated raid. He claimed again that two fected, was responsible for the/ vear. persons were killed and scores | | wounded. |was no evidence the plane did | fany bombing or strafing. * * * In an obvious reference to the United States, Castro declared neither ‘‘threats, calumnies or in- |solence will intimidate us. We are happy just where we are because ason is with us. Reason is not |with those who have more money, ‘more resources or more news agencies. If they want to discuss matters quietly and treat us right, |we'll treat anyone right.” Ferris Institute Seeks Funds for Expansion BIG RAPIDS (UPI) — The Board of Control of Ferris Insti- A request for the funds has ‘been submitted to the Legislature Diaz Lanz .was arrested in Mi-|as part of its 1960-6] budget. New ami on a Cuban government war-| construction would take up $2,102,- rant seeking his extradition. He is 500 of the request and remodeling now out on bail awaiting a hear- and alterations would cost the rest. NO CASH Ladies’ Rubber 499 sB9? » 99 12. All first grade boots. & Fric ndly STADIUM BOOTS Black -and white *with matching fur collar, fleece lined. quality. First Childres’s-Insulased PULL-ON BOOTS Brown, red and white. Small five to large three. All first grade boots. Men’s — Boys’ — Youths’ 4-BUCKLE BOOTS| Lined boots. Small 11. to large EORGE’S GEORGE'S BOOT SALE |. =| NEEDED! | Buy Boots for Your Entire Family | Now on George’s Worry-Free Credit ~ 299 to 3°? . ey pt D 7 Stor ANOTHER 500—WHILE THEY LAST! ge BY Eis in is Setnae new color and FINiSh KEROSENE Look Smarter in These Lovely FUZZIES or SKIRTS "3 FT. ® Wears Size 3 Clothes ® Rooted Hair ® Movable Legs, Arms ®@ Washable, Non- breakable Plastic Tiny Large Large Boys’ Boys’ Diesel Engine. . .5.98 OO Venker-..i.. 2.00 You Cattle Car .....2.00 eee 2.00 Pay Tr +..4.00 Only 8-Pc. Track ...4.00 vais = 19,9 NO MONEY DOWN © Toys, Dolls As Refrigerator, Stove or Sink, ea. $2.98 Tic Toe Clock, 44 parts ....... $3.99 Hydraulic Dump Truck ...... a Te Get All This: $ DOLL Hooded or collar styles, water- repellent poplin or corduroy. 10 to 18: Flannel Slacks .......-- 3.99 Seen on TV Tears Doll ............ $7.99 Coat Sets, 3 to 6x .. . Coats 7 to 14 Doll Carriage .......+. $3.99 7 Bride Doll ............ $3.99 @ if GIRLS’ COATS and SETS Satellite Interceptor ... $7.99 Ricochet Gun .......... SUBURBAN COATS BOYS’ WARM 9.99 Wool, quilt-lined, large pock- ets. Solid colors, stripes. 6-18. Double Knee Tweeduroys . $2.99 COPPER ; bes : ee | 4 : style. Misses’ G half sizes 4 < HOLIDAY KNITS) = Ladies’ Long Sleeve Orlon is Keep Your Child Wain = os Save, Too! GEORGE'S DEPT. STO , ne Mee 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1959 4 Is IRS Grabbing Censorship? Internal Revenue Men Want to Tax Lobbying Business Expenses WASHINGTON \ — Witnesses) from trade and labor organiza-} tions today challenged a proposed | regula-| Circumstances Beyond y Control Rat Gs “You can take say I must way I can it at once! service internal revenue jtion on lobbying expenses as be-| ing what some called ‘‘censorship | by taxation.’ The rule would broaden the gov- ernment’s present stand agé st W permitting the deduction of lobby-| ling costs as a business expense. | SAVE UP 7 Lg & v~ AP Wirephote LEAVES COURT — Thurman Whiteside is shown outsidd a U. §S. District Court in Wash- | ington Thursday after a judge | ruled that a second trial}, for him | and Richard A. Mack should be | It would rule out advertising | intended to ‘‘promote or defeat | | legislation , . . even though the | | legislation may directly affect | the taxpayer's business.”’ Leading off a list of 46 witnesses scheduled to be heard Thursday jand today, C. James Proud, presi- ident and general manager of the |Advertising Federation of Amer-| lica, called on the revenue service | ito postpone adoption of any new jrule until Congress can act on the Six bills already are pend- Communications rig the FCC’s award of Miami | issue Channel 10. The trial will not ing “What we are talking about is| the basic right of any citizen to} jexpress his views publicly, through} jadvertising, without being penal-| . “4° ‘ized,’ Proud told a three-man IRS Irish and British hearing panel. Court rules on a pending appeal. “Almost every advertisement could be considered as politically controversial, if it happens to deal with any subject under the | sun on which any member of | government or a politician out- side of government has uttered | a single word... by Compromise |Harold Macmillan to delineate . . . distinctions be- tween ‘political’ on the one hand, jand ‘economic, | cial’ on the other hand.’ The AFL-CIO, along with nine Sir Hugh Lane, a rich Irishman, \other labor organizations, raise \its voice against the proposal. Its | usitania in 1915 | spokesman, Robert C. Mayer, said} Although claimed by Ireland, | ithat legislative and political ac-| tivity is a normal form of union Britain for four decades. j activity. | Macmillan told the why the Irish hate the British. The collection Oil 1st in Louisiana PUBLIC NOTICE We nor International jisiana in 1901. Charge Accounts — During } this Sale we can arrange a iff S22 6 Month Budget Account— 20 WARD AYeERIBA GS !:3 io yelsst say “Charge It!” igivpe London. Every five two parts will be exchanged. On Borromean Islands in Lake |Maggiore in North Italy, Napoleon Believe in Irrigation fonce carved the word ‘‘Victory” ion a tree, Souvenir hunters ry" carved away the whole tree. |Morocco are irrigated. WHY SO MANY FAMILIES ARE BUYING Aton od Oo Ge IN PONTIAC KNOLLS HUGE 8-ROOM, 2-STORY HOME : » with 2: BATHROOMS - 3 BEDROOMS Big Bo » Tremendous PANELED VICTORY ROC D we “Country Kitchen, Built-In GE RANGE and OV LUN eS ee a ae g “Unfinished 4th BEDROOM or DEN + GAS arena SF ith ‘PULL PRICE INCLUDES: Large lot and all — mentioned in this ad. . NO GIMMICKS... .Just jcman-aal Proctical Pricing aMITHU oc ke ae ee PRACTICAT HOME BUNDERS VICTORY OVER RISING COSTS WAS MADE THIS BEAUTIFUL MOOM POSSIBLE— ed + & | Lo . LASS DOOR AND MO oy Se "4 monoons «ru HAS were CLOSETS » EXCEPTIONALLY LIVAB 1 ana It pal outs! . sakes RA LARGE COUNTRY kc BUILDERS. INC 7O0OAD UMNiversity 4.8272 MODEL PHONE: FE 3-9156 ee ee FA an =~ proceed until after the Supreme | Settle Old Dispute | LONDON w — Prime Minister | announced | |Thursday settlement of a dispute, lover a two million dollar art col-| | “In effect the IRS is taking unto/lection which for more than 40 itself the role of censor in seeking | tyears has been one of the reasons About 500,000 acres in French | put off indefinitely. Mack, for- mer member of the Federal | Commission, | and Whiteside, a Miami lawyer, | are charged with conspiring to | consists of 33} financial | and SO" | paintings — most of them by | ‘French impressionists — left by | who died in the sinking of the liner the paintings have remained in House of Commons it has been agreed that ithe collection will be divided into ltwo parts, one 40 be placed on Oil was first discovered in Lou-|exhibition in Dublin, the other in years the COUPON THE BIG-4 MODEL 740 REMINGTON AUTOMATIC 30.06 Regular $134.45 { RIFLE The most wanted gun $7 0 90 760 REMINGTON SLIDE ACTION RIFLE */9* REGULAR $112.45 — MOST CALIBERS 4 BUCKLE ARCTIC JERSEY HUNTING GLOVES TT GENUINE SKYLINE PRECISION BINOCULARS No Human $ 00 Layaway Now for Christmas Odor. Lures 7x35 Cen. Focus ........ $24.88 7x50 Cen. Focus. ....... $28.88 . mould 7x35 Ind. Focus eee. $16.88 Hard leather case with extension s' er . — k str d sili leaning 7x50 Ind. Focus ..... $18.88 cloth. Reguler $7.50. $1.00 with Purchase of Bindculars THE ORIGINAL — ‘JON-E HAND WARMERS Values to $59.40 SKAGWAY INSULATED Quilted Underwear Reg. $Q?> . - equior $4988 J $ Lanse @ $3.95 9 w INSTOCE MOLDED MAPLE Carving Board Wino MP AYe uss —| BIG FOUR c Sie Noe SPECIAL for OVAL ENAMEL ROASTER 99° Self basting cover, easy to clean. Holds 6-8 lb. fowl or 12 lb. roast, PIE PLATE SALAD SERVICE BOWLS A WEEK ONLY BISSELL $99 | 99° INSIDE OUTSIDE Thermometer $7 SAVE OVER 50% SHAMPOO MASTER 22202 ~ ALUMINUM OVAL ROASTER nes. 319 $949 LARGE SELECTION of CHRISTMAS GIFTS and MERCHANDISE TOM'S HARDWARE 905 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. E+S+ 2424 KELLY'S HARDWARE 3994 AUBURN ao! ADAMS, AUBURN HEIGHTS FE°2-88&11 KEEGO HARDWARE No.| Fen 2 3766 Rake McKIBBEN < CHILD'S Bay Ve 1576 UNION LAKE RD EM:3°350! LAY-AWAY NOW , Ciera s. NOVEMBER 13-1959) If You're. Superstitious: a NEW YORK — Today is ‘Friday! stars. the 13th—but who's counting? x * * Well, if-you are one of the great Money brings bad luck. * is touchy about the number 13/tle faith. ‘ Americans, including 70 per cent of| our bright, brash teen-agers, are} superstitious), here is a suggestion. | 100,000 COLLECTEN Toss out all your dollar bills. Go en—pitch ‘em. The American | dollar bill may be somewhat a symbol of suceess, but since the . tit yéar 1935 it’s been, even more, a | 100,000 = symbol of flagrant thirteenism. ment, Friday the 13th—Throw Out Dollars By PHYLLIS BATTELLE , Over the eagle’s head are 13/Henry Morgenthau Jr., who was |secretary of the treasury in 1935, |As all Americans should know, the Oh, really? Obviously, to the superstitious,’ ™@"Y uses of the number 13 re- jfers to the 13 original Colonies. 'The number should be considered harassed horde of people who still! Give it to your enemies, ye of lit-|jucky for ~ Americans today—but |most people live, without realizing (surveys prove a majority of| That way you can touch all the| it, in a far, ‘far past.” bases, trading safety and savings) it was the ancient Hiadus whe | for peace of mind and poverty. started the “unlucky 13” super- stition, But it was in a remote Our expert on superstition is} Scandinavian legend that the rea- Claudia de Lys, the world’s fore-| $m for fearing 13 was pinned : ~ what @ | M0st colleetor-of tore-onluck and; down. .. jthe lack of it. She has nearly, Loki, the principle of evil, is sup- ns stashed away posed to have joined the, 12 Scandi- in the files of her New York apart- navian demigods at a feast. He iwas uninvited, of course, but the Turn George Washington over on ‘The design on the dollar bill,""|Scandinavians are hospitable, so his face, look at the seals on the Cjaudia says, “was ordered by what can you do? 5 backside of your hard-earned mon- wine ey, and cringe. _ There are two seals. On the left is an incomplete, or truncated pyr-| amid, shorn off abruptly at the top| of the 13th step. On the right is the great Ameri-) can bald eagle, holding in one talon! 13 arrows, and in the other, 13) leaves with 13 berries on an olive branch. VG sha FREED. : Man, 82, Dies; Was on Casey’s Ballad Train NEW ORLEANS «® — William H. Crittenden, 82, who was on| Casey Jones’ “Cannonball ‘Express | when it was wrecked 59 years ago, died here Wednesday. Crittenden was the last known survivor of the famed wreck on the Illinois Central at Vaiden, Miss. MERITS OFA TWO- STORY CAR ~-.— Jones was trying to-make up -an hour and a half. Crittenden, a native of Centra- lia, Tll., remembered the crash vividly years later. Looking from broken train win- dows into the predawn half-light, Crittenden said he watched four men carrying a cot. He said Jones was on the -eot- V4 fatty, CL G5 LA GALE 9 iy FAP/ IN THIS, MY GREATEST HOUR Y OF TRIUMPH,L AM A PROPHET WITHOUT HONOR, AND WELL NIGH PENNILESS! CHOMP-CHOMPF/<_ GF BOT IF THE BANK WILL ADVANCE ME A SMALL SUM ON THE STRENGTH OF MY CONTRACT WITH UNIS CORN, WHO WAS QUICK TO SEE THE \\ | with an arrow of toe. After’ that, 13 guests at one table became a taboo. How mistletoe preserved its good name only Santa Claus knows. : ee @ As for exactly why Friday is, considered an evil omen (when; everybody knows that eggs laid on Friday will cure stomaechache)— that is something we forgot to ask it-probably+ has something to do with the fact that Friday is payday and, since money is jinxed, isn't everybody? Of course we are. Cross my heart and hope to be third on a match. ‘ BOARDING HOUSE © ONT Pw O° ° UM, I HAVE ONE $4 DOLLAR LEFT/ I SHALL SPEND ITON A SUPERLATIVE ¢ CIGAR FOR MY BANKER /a— ) “Hom PELE ~ ‘eo %.‘ “~ | nh H SS SS OAS AS ee oa 5 Ss * Q eazha) a yy 3 ia t OUT OUR WAY > and that was his last memory of | him. # at a * . Weis E1959 by NEA Sermce. inc TM. tog US. Pat. OFF Later he heard that Jones: was’ dead and that his Negro fireman, Sim Webb, had leaped to safety ju ore the crash. Webb died ' Svea are ago il (2S } Crittenden said he rode in an | | CHEWERS, THAT express car behind Jones’ engine ACTUALLY AMAZES when the train plunged into the —— THE OLD BOY--THAT'S rear of a freight train.” Negro t rail laborers sang about the big smashup and a writer later g imamortalized it in a ballad. + | The official account was that f the freight train should have been di off*ona side track to let Jones by» Railroadmen tried frantical- ly to flag Jones down, but he dida's have time to stop. TA U.. of M. to Show Works of Franklin P. Adams ANN ARBOR (UPI)—An exhibit of the works of former news-| paperman and author Frauklir} Pierce Adams, widely known as, FPA, go on display here today in the main lobby of the Universfty of Michigan library. The exhibit, to run one week, is <\ being held in connection with a Adams’ 78th birthday Sunday, m Nov. 15. Adams, who attended the uni- versity in 1899 and 1900 and re- ; oy ceived an honorary degree here ZzZ=_ in 1914, is now living in New York. |. — Shenandoah National Park in| northwestern Virginia amie mi AN EXAMPLE OF NOT HOLDIN' YOUR TOBACCO WELL? THE HAYLOFT THAT'LL NEVER BE A NATIONAL PROBLEM--THE CRAVING DEMANDS MORE AN’ MORE, BUT PEOPLE | F 1959 he WER Service inc TM, Reg US Pat OFF TRwiutiams I-13 193,473 acres. 4 DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney > (NCA DONALO,Y | It I WANT iT f 3 > XA DRINK ¥ You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Press Want Ad Section WRIGLEY’S SPEARMINT is most- satisfying to solve your buying end ‘walling problems. To Place Your WANT AD DIAL FE 2-8181 Every Day in the Pontiac Take advantage of this easy-way racy be) x <> neat eta clea oe THE GIRLS tah he Me : al ye bend 4) at “Oh, dear, that reminds me, I'vg got to have that smashed fender repaired before my husband gets home tomorrow,” ADAM AMES » a. f ‘ BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES / —— : ~ Wal Wha Vin Oren aD ASKING AEE _| SAAD, DORN? THAT EVERX VIOLETIO®S, BO MATTER. Pa hy | i 1959 by vice, be TM, Reg. U.S. Pat, Ott, LY BET THERE'S PLENTY OF OU" MOTH-ERTED LAWS TH! POICE DON'T EVEN RHOHOW PROUT... LESS ENFORCES THE BERRYS Hi, PAL! HOW ABOUT A DIXIE DUGAN SMACKER FOR DADDY ¢ | y ~ 43 Y= ‘ > == ALLEY OOP eke THAT TAKES CARE \ PALACE OF TH LEMIAN'S } THAT'S FIRST LINE OF PROBILY IT DEFENSE! £\_ RIGHT DOWN , ee ey oY YEP! NOW ON KING WUR? YEZZIR! TO OL wuR'S WHO SHALL I CE... ANNOUNCE WANTS TO CAPTAIN EASY WE CAN BE GONE Wis ZE FROM HER ALL WE NEED TO KNOW, DAHLEENG| IMPORTANT ONCE IN A Te Reg GS Per OF ~ 68 ghee conerved LRM LE LUSHAN Eke MORTY MEEKLE S|] APPLICATION FOR A LOAN HAS BEEN © 1959 by NEA Service, toc, T.M. Reg. US. Pat. OFF. | = GRANDMA ' ONE --TWO-- MY, GRANDMA , WHY ALL | TH’ EXCERCISE ? E MU WELL,I FIND I GOTTA DEVELOP MOR saree = > © ar C1000 by WER Geren, te Fe ee, we Mek, Oe EVERYONE IS AFRAID OF ME By Dick Cavalli By Charles Kuhn IF I'M T* HANDLE THOSE BIG BLANKETS ON MY BED THIS WINTER / ~ Grain Prices | MARKETS - Stocks U to Get Flat Rates for asinine said te SacH008 not te “ n : ” ¢ name ballot in curean ene, oma pace pD Business - the race even though he filed for tain prices: we the job a week ago. — wie Mer wei denae ws, The following are top prices * . The Board of Education last}« He said Dr. Lawrence Frost, a Mar. 2....5.-9.05% iy. ;\covering salgs of locally grown in | f a ef night unanimously voted an annual|Monroe chiropodist and former Oy TER peel. 1.34% | produce brought to the Farmer's flat rate expense account of $750|city ‘commissioner, would be the <= rm oS ‘13780 Market by growers and sold by for Dr. Philip J. Proud, assistant}man for the position and said, Bar. AIT% Bly, 130', them in wholesale package lots. NEW YORK low superintendent in charge of certi-|‘I plan to work for his election : erie aioe © tel Yara (drums) jQuotations are furnished by the — A few space fied personnel, and $500 for Dr.|whenever and wherever possi- aE Nov... 437 |Teeroit, Bureau of Markets. as of 28° Stocks posted gains in a nar- Otto C. Hufziger, assistant super-/ ble.” Dec. ... 2.006 78% May 9.42 |Thureday. ts irregular | ssi market early intendent in charge of business. Mayor Milton lnabusch is seek- oday: | Past practice provided reim-|ing x © * bursement for business-connected To Visit Paris fruits , 4 d apart Superintendent Dr. Dana P. ics advanced severz ints. . bmi . . . ra remtnes, be: an a 4 sill iia ‘ Whitmer said he submitted the | Chief Justice Earl Warren of Apples. Jonathon, bu. ............ 290 Motorola «spurted about 3, Am- recommendation because his two | the United States Supreme Court oo! e'> tos ‘ . a i ld rave ogue |Apples, Northern Spy, bu. . the aldes were paying from their |), a salary of $35,000 a year. |Abpies. cide: 4-eas. Case .. 20| rocket fuel stock, rose around a salaries expenses incu by na: : | Te O.. JES t) LSE =| point, ture of their positions that were [| Second Kiwanis Show VEGETABLES hard to itemize. i Beets topped. WE) 4. caavecceens $2 Continued profit taking oe Hard-to-itemizes expenses not @a 0 ices in Current Series Offers Beets, Noi. doe vee. 2020000201., Lasivailed among others of the ‘sci. previously reimbursable, accord jence’’ group. Raytheon slipped - f en : : : i Curtis Nagel Films iCabbene. cur. Z shines [133 | about a point. Radio Corp. and SERVICE MANAGER OF YEAR — Named- Hales, the Division's general service manager. |ing to Whitmer, include such items} "45A"Di NOV; pure. wailed Lake, {gasnene Soronts | bu. 3 35| Sperry Rand dropped fractions. service manager of the year at Pontiac Motor McGarrity, who is now service and parts man- a meals and overnight guests for , ae Ee The second show in this spasun's |Corrots, doz. bebs. . 1.25;- Major steels showed virtually no} Division's National Service meeting was W. D. ager in Pontiae's Los Angeles zone, competed ae pt apes STaREROnS awe survived ap ta A ea * ‘ i 275 “Mac” ae: . ic c s ; ae toc Se . : lH Travel and Adventure Series, spon- \Gelery, root, ot sereeeteeccecen, 1.15 change as the job of getting the| fac’’ McGarrity (left). He is shown here ac with representatives sia 26 other sales zones. Wen quae serial wt for Sai gt Dene pe-seuns Dupers! ems. a panera THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVE. ~ 3ER 13, 1959 _ | | Detroit Produce | were fractional. Changes of most leading stocks Selected electron- J. . Expense Money Gets Board OK Two School Officials expenses. Monroe Legislator Bows to ‘More Qualified Man’ LANSING (UPI — Rep. Wil liam Sterling (D-Monroe) won't run for Mayor of his hometown because he thinks another man seeking the position is “eminently qualified for the post.” Warren Salary $35,000 sored by the Downtown Pontiac] gennel, 328. a, mills. back to full production pro-| cepting an engraved desk trophy from H. announced later rate expense accounts are based Kiwanis Club, will feature Curtis) Leeks. dos. oe Nagel Tuesday night at the Pon- Beene Sty 4 tote B. bee. ceeded. U.S. Steel eased, Lukens, | 90/4 specialty producer, gained about! on what the government allows JOHNSON, NOV. 12, 1959, ANNA L_ 593 Raskob, 55; beloved wife of Edward W. Johnson: dear daugh- for men in their positions,” he said. ‘‘Expense monies are not sub- parsiev Root dos. mae er: curly, doz, to A Parsnips. Cello Pak, dos. ter of Anna Elrod; dear mother of Mrs. Ward (Lois) Rathbun and Edward W. Johnson; dear sister tiac Central High auditorium. * * * ei a point. Ee * a Severe Cold Dems Stalling GOP Plan : Pars BDU. cece ee ec eees f Cl Ray Elrod, Mrs. O ( Nagel and his assistant, William Aetegmary 7 oo ag General Motors ste oie ee - - ject to income tax payments pro- Fi rte ‘ap @ Mrs. WT, Medien, Moore, have won top honors in the oe os bu. a ee dropping a point yesterday. portal H 1 ts Rockies viding that expenses ineurred are Soturtay. gg 1959 at 1:30 ( travelogue field. Radishes. red, doz. behs. ‘"r'* Yosiler also was firm but American| reported,” said Whitmer. “This Ne Na ie ge Rect omega prmr . we 17")Motors was off another point at’ hes the doll ‘ived b ing. Interment in Perry Mount Tuesday's program, * ‘Portraits of|Rutabagaa’ bu. 1.79 ; po Att S stretches t ollars rece ry ing. Interment in Perry M Paris and the Riviera,” is sched-[S¢uash ‘sutternut, bu 1 3s] (ne start before it erased the loss. 0 f ac q e ax: | SIS CIF ONOW ithe administrators.” will ue jg tate atthe Muntoos jo ee neral aome. uled to begin at 8 p.m. p nose Mabberd we "tse Generel Tine. slo in the MARSH, NOV. 9, 1959. WIXOM A. AR icenncaecroonee + Oo! “giamor’’ stock department, rose Season ticket holders will see Turnips r DENVE ® 1621 N. K. St., Lakeworth, Fis. NVER, Colo. (AP)—lIntense formerly of 4865 Westlawn, Pon- the grand age ans —— GREENS 3% to 85 on an opener of 1,200 LANSING ( — New doubts; lions. Organized brewery workers |cold that plunged temperatures to oman | @ Manldree phy am wage Bg ; poreeoaiag ye la alac com of ‘ome in| aed ee pina re commer! mart shrouded the fate of the Repub-| had protested the higher rate. near-record lows locked the Rocky a at ae ee Sets { au. fest ect IN) Ksie, ‘bu. a 130} Rails were unchanged to veryjlican cash crisis plan today as 3 The tobacco bill called for a Mountain states in a wintry grip|e Holler, Mrs. Marilyn Haines and Paris fashions and spend a night pore, We 4, We Gaxcescensves 2.00 narrowly mixed. Southern Pacific|lawmakers oiled their deer guns|,~ today on the heels of a 2in a] Mrs. Barbara Prench: dear broth- ’ Wc occccrtrccecccceoces 2 y SUNS, two cents a pack, rather than a one y on t C er of Howard Marsh and Mrs. { in gay Paris via Nagel's colorful] Sent gris _ ee I oeereereeaiienre 1 39| (new) recouped a fraction of re-|rested or worked at home. ? — ‘ctine five Snowfall that buried Montana. | l [ Ethel Cloonan; also survived by film. Non atiibae) Senooorooddccncaberce: 2.00 ‘cent, increase in the existing five 31 grandchildren and’ one great- { There also will be a 30-minute SALAD GREENS re losses. nd K tt leaned w © cents state levy, to yield 17 mil- ~ * Ge held Gaturday, "Nov. 14, att na a a ennecott le Meanwhile, over-all cash in th The as ° ° gam ofthe Brumels Fa ig, iets 886 the apie Ole lged ofl nate wee anton tes an cals, ead of S830000 a] The emnarare as 2 below! Auto Collides With] Ex. ass, Seater Proceeds from the sale of season| fseerole, bu, ---s....csee..cs.240-.. 178] A two-point gain by Du Pont and The key general fund balance| Montana-Canada ‘bord Another at LeBaron| will’ in state st the Donelson: tickets. to the series are going Lettuce, leaf. ‘bu. ..........---:----. 00/4 drop of more than a point by Al-|showed $4,959,703 in the red. A net! As charged, the overall value of a er. be Panera Home ar Th aaa toward the various childrens lied Chemical highlighted chemi-|of $7,942,907 was available to the {P® Package was boosted $1,500,000; Mt-was 18 below at Great'Falls | and Barkell a groups. aided by area Kiwanis Livestock cals. treasurer for all purposes [i> 18 pation tole. and 13 below at Helena, Mon- Gerald, Lee. adall Air Fores . ’s capi 7 bore Base ama la. e am DETROIT LIVESTOCK . * = The GOP sales tax proposal | ot rund grog — Th A 5S-year-old Pontiac woman To oe om “ot, Laura “Pier- No tickets will be sold at the! pgrrorr, Nev. 12 (AP)—Cattl Goodyear and U.S. Rubber were) wa, temporarily on the shelf, ° — ® |was killed yesterday ‘in a- two- Pierson; dear father of Roderick Salable 150. wodaces 4 Th day dow fractionall coldest temperature ever record- P and Gerald Lee Pierson. Pu- door. ay’s and Thursday's n y. stalled by Democrats, and it was ol at bel car collision at LeBaron and Bark- neral service will be held Satur- i i, ae —-- steady ‘biocks included: “Ray anybody's guess whether the at Helewa.was 37 below sere. {on srests Gey. Nov. 14, at. 3:30 pm. from ar Pas Hoe La witty and theon off % at 52% on 3,500 shares;| ganate would hustle through Sub-zero readings were common x « * Home with Rev. W. J. Teeuwissen Fruehauf to Pay 30 Cent i wut “cows. 18.00°16.00;" canners | Boeing up % at 34% on 2,000;) emergency nuisance tax bills from Montana south to Colorado! Dead on arrival at Pontiac Gen- Ay oy es as 12.00-15.00; few thin att son will be buried with ful) mill- on wien ce hood Chutce “Soe i | Sperry Rand off % at 23 on 2.000:) atter its return Tuesday night. along the eastern slope of the/eral Hospital was Mrs. Anna L. Missing 4 Days DETROIT — Fruehauf Trail-|teeder steers 27.25. Compared last weak and American Motors off 1% at ; ' |Rockies. The Continental Div ide| Johnson of 593 Raskob St. oa bettttten Ar Goves Been, ALC. er Co. resumed dividend payments |, co h — and prime’ 89 on 1.500. Some Republicans, miffed by formed a barrier that moderat Pierson will lie sin tate gt the | ne er! ° e yesterday on its common stock by undies beth uerre 8 tnd. hetfere 3s-t0e The ticker tape was late briefly, aaa i geal ose ee Kentucky Police Comb temperatures west of the moun-| > er —- hong oriven _ after “lpm. Priday, Nov. 13. declaring. a 30 cent dividend pay-|{e all : ing transactions. would wi votes for the y e- » 38, NOV. 12, 1959. BABY able Jan. 4 to stockholders of rec- fem, am ae Dig chstes Se prime se. i epecing nuisance taxes until . Democrats | Auto Found Near River|"" 3180 Watkins Lake Rd., Water- wwe bay Bk = coma Sarees = ord Dee. 4. at tens oon eae nie lowered the blockade on the sales| Thursday Nicht BRINGS 14 DEATHS ford Township, Norma Schulte: dear sister of $0; small lot high choice yearling New York Stocks tax resolution. ursday Nig At least 14 deaths have been! Mrs, Clark, eight months preg- Seasbter ef fir’ end bare. ‘Alfred NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE __ [BeSe-20 28" sttncara to low good, ster semiras aa * * * . attributed to the massive storm|nant, was in the hospital for| Bch “Goonman. “Oravesitie. ser: cipued igh ea Wolsotag, 11-10, 19th. geest ped to ntereme ena #00. 32°00; Air'Reduc"... 17 Bennecotj.” . 9 | In major events yesterday: _| CORINGTON, Ky. u# — Police|which rushed out of Canada and) treatment of head injuries tog wee held Priday, Bev 0. enti te -¥ Doms By ‘Michigan, ee Rasiery Suaren: vane | A ihed Strs 22.1 Kroger. soe at 3 1. Minority Democrats, saying) were combing the abandoned auto-/now has engutfed much of the na-| The accident apparently had no Mount Park Cometery wih 4 a public sale of a 1958 "d Dr. bear-|utility heifers “1150-91 60." waitity. Sows afi Leese 38.1 EOP OMe «ie slit was a case of “first things mobile of an anti-Hoffa Teamsters tion's midsection, from the moun-|effects on her pregnancy, doctors Fangemenis "mage. by Sparks- for cash eo the pighest adder ee oo iy of 100 earhrt noun ptility ieee mete ar Locth Airc . 3 ij urst” demanded that Republicais| Union official today in hope of/tains to the Midwest. said. She was reported in. satis-| _Griffin_ Puneral a yee thereof , made at 8.8. Perry|ters 1 0. 18a per cutter, wand Am Airlin ... 348 Ven= 8 Gem 4 ai ‘deliver on their 74 million dollars | turning up a clue to his myster- Seven deathe a factory condition. Funera! Directors 4 4 ’ . cows 4, ry eoeee * L@TwMIATa «sess BAALL BB. OOeowns>s>ov~ ‘ee aerage. Coens gas, ate et ont - i. i Seaney|am TN ses Yori Nash |. 744(in Duisance taxes before providing | ious disappearance. aoe snelied Page Pht “ Sine tanked tet Whee Sale > 14'S. bulls up to 21.50; cutter bulls, 17.00-19.50;,Am Mé&Pdy .. 485 wack Trk 45.3\needed support for a sales tax in-| D ] J h “©. B HARTLEY jr. |smail lot food an choive Tie To pam Met Cl .. 248 Manning ..:. 251| rease referendum in 1960. anne Curtsinger, a trustee of | whiplash storms. Four were air- | jes was Mrs. Clark's 19-month- oneison-jonns leane “ate ee we ® ~ , Re eee Se Teamsters’ Cincinnati Local | men who died in the crash of | old son, Gerald, whe was re- NERAL : UNIVERSAL C.1.T. CREDIT . calves 28.50: Am WN Gas ... 875 482 ; , tel Petinn Dacha hae than, hea ige\better calver hee OTe HO al it... 804 Mey, S -- 44) 2. Four bills carrying the (ax) 199 has been missing since he | three jet fighters. Two motorists | jeased. LL 38 N, Saginaw St.| Veaiers—sal Am TeiéTel 777 Merr ch & & 17 | Package were reported to the floor,’ ier his home at nearby Flor- COAT Pontiac 16, mons 6 mareet, Compan rote| Assen seneee 103.8 with changes in beer and cigarette | e af Rearby r | were killed and a Dutte man died | pojice said Mrs. Clark appar- FUNERAL HOM ‘Nev.18 4 oat i rng arm a ih rol lan = ety itax increase, for decisive action| nen ny. ae” to attend a | of exposure. ently ran a stop sign, or stopped) Drayton Pils Pisins. Gr 2 SE eee Frime,,24,00-41.00: ‘standard | and geod ? mour « e 33g Mont Ward .. : OF Inet week. : Icy roads caused six highwayjand entered the intersection when Voorhees- Siple sides - te a nm “| Sheep—Seiabie wee. Rot enough we Aree a Ok wr ay Mieelier Br 33 3| 3. A second 1960 ballot proposal His car was found parked nefr|deaths in Illinois, and another ac-| her car collided with that of the siris oeagh am sh 0/8. Retz ot |lteentr Temas eeeyPechetir Tene Rett ° SRE. Ret ios ye | om taxing corporation profits was |e (iio River yesterday. @ Park-jcident took the life of an Iowa/dead woman. awe as oesran Bese or Sve Oakland County sichigan: trate to Se higher: Dpethe” Sethian ir +s <4 Nat Cash R a6 ing ticket tim p.m. Tues-| motorist. mn FE 2.4378 public sale of a 1950 2 Dr..\ steady; Borg Warn .. 43.5 Nat Dairy ... 503) changed by Republicans into an | LLL “no. soTMv0a24. will be lambs" 18 00-26 86: ‘eed “nigh pet ig My in4 Net 12a "//107.6| income tax proposition unaccept- day on i armenia . Two hunters are unaccounted H ] Park Man eeenend a an Inepection ‘Uherect may vermade ot 16 Tome’, iumes reached 2160 in a forced Burroughs |... 324 Ny Cén'rsi’.. 293| able to Democrats, who sald they | Police found some of Curtsing-|for in mountain terrain near Mis- aze ae iets 5 @.. Pontiog, ty.| utility to good wooled | “4 wo-i8 00: 1 wee a Be Nort & West.. 9% 3| would never take it in its present - en ee but eau jeoule. in western Montana. Critical After ~ s2. : choice ter ewes 4.00-6.75:\Can Dry ..... - t i & pee Ag manmiay pe, |, eas ene eee ee Sheu Be Beene | practice of carrying spare clothing | _ THE snowfall tapered off along Pty TVERSAL C.L.T. CREDIT ‘| hae (i a1 one te : io 4. Only 24 of 109 members an-| They were dusting the car for southern _ Montana Thursday Car Bashes Tree e Religious Liberty. FE 27001 = te Bank Bldg. Fa =e pity BT eee a3) pwens I Ot.. 9° ¢/swered roll in the house. No busi-\fingerprints. today to. determine| MSBt, leaving 20 Inches of snow ek Pee Pontiec 18 Michigaa| ieee, 28 cents. lower chan Wednesday: Cities sve... 483 Pan ‘Aw alr’ 92) (Ness was transacted. whether anyone else had been in it.) ©" the ground at Billings. A Hazel Park man was in criti) 9 sz = done on Clark Equip .. 89 Panh . 44.6) 5 at Pontiac spaces. Spread of the Gospel. OR Secee Cole +S Parke Ba 22 $84 * © * | Curtsinger’s wife says she fears) The Weather Bureau issued|cal condition today eppees. — Colum Gas |. 901 Pe RR” alt] The growing urgency of the cash! for her husband's life. heavy snow warnings today for|General Hospital with injuries suf- ITE —j CHOICE LOTS. Poultry and Eggs Con Edis 60 Pepsi ‘Cola... 344\situation was underscéred by the the area from Michigan through|fered when his car smashed into terms. FE 3-7412, after 6 p.m. wien cecxead Cont Bak ™ 803 philco on 2a 3 treasury ——— = ths se musk retain. = hall yn ‘Iowa. Snow and freezing rain fell/a Sg lard Lake Township| ? | et ses on the eve of t ay 7 payless| a ; P is TO NEW mand Los. Deivot tor No. i quabty Cont Mot --.- 12) Pure Gi °..': $81 payday total treasury balances} tween Local 109 officers, who ——he “Oakland County. sberit's dept a ae | ~ 7 |Cont OW ..i.. 49.5 RCA - 66.4 150 million dollars. | oppose the policies of Union In- ties identified him as Morris ap At 10 a.m. Today |, deery type hens 16-18; light type bens |S is Se oes were bs [topped ternational President J Hof- x ke were replies at The Press PROGRAM (8-0; heavy brotlers and tr [Gurtis Pub ... 123 Reyn Met ... 62.5) Since then, a succession of new | ames ates J Rateman, 35, of 459 W. Goulson Whine iv-i9; "Barred yj en- pace Me TB Boltuna ling devices have been| fa, and a group of- pro-Hoffa a He suffered multiple face cuts office tm the following ! r] ties over five Ibs. 25-36: “Guckiings a oe . a3 ae . bed = jugg ing d trat drivers. and, in some places, suspended. we ible ] i ries. . Bi Sees eric cesar HBS, ee oe) BE a? ety“: HEilimtreduced by state administrators assault and|SCROs, Were closed in scores of}@nd Possible Tiere able to mak DETROIT EGGS Fast Koo =o Bears Reo. $03 in oak cha | siery.tharges sonia vt eel = ees, ee eee areas “ee t~ dg 2, 5, 7, 14, 22, 25, 35, DETROIT, Nov. 12 (AP)—Egags fob El & ry wee 105 waren 2 a in the main tax package inges: battery_charges against-one-of the - [ Deputies said he was alone in 58 e0. 63. — Tl, 80; 94, “i Detroit in ease lots federal state Emer Red ... 15.7 ginciair ..... $1.1) 1. All the temporary levies were drivers, Morris Isserson, whose pu , 60, 63, 75, 77, 30, Whites—Grad ‘Firestone. “it R +++ #9 , given expiration dates — June 30, | trial is scheduled later this month.|, Joe Venuti, compoger-violinist his car driving east on Elizabeth 103, 121, 116, 117, 118, 119. ' |arge 3941, large 3039; medium: 30.20; Pood Mach i $0.3 Boerry Rd... 23 */1961. A date of Dee. 30, 1960 was | James Luken, president of Team-|with Paul Whiteman’s orchestra|Lake road west of Williams Lake 4 7:30 P. M oop SE fs Sui 22, aaa Std Brand --- 348) mentioned when the GOP program|sters Joint Council 26, told police|for eight years, wrote “Ain't Doin’|road when he skidded 200 feet . ae ae iprech Tra 314 S04 Ot Ind .. ‘1 1lwas first unveiled Wednesday. |Curtsinger ‘was scared something|Bad Doin’ Nothin: He can't give|and smashed into the tree. The) ? Monday Thru Friday | Wines Sirade pee a pres . a Stevens JP ot 308] *. The beer bill called for |S going to happen to him if he/a birthplace address because he — happened shortly before The Pontiac Press 4 o e aC . | - se: ” . Featuring Broadway ~ age ei wel 2eS7; medium | 73% ype 8 at Sun Oi) — ey doubling, instead of tripling, the testified” against Isserson. was born at sea. wr FOR WANT ADS oo Parte 3238: medium 33-26; small 1% Gen Motors | $0.6 it & co 1. a2) present $1.25 levy, to produce a “HIT-SHOW TUNES [Gea time” + ‘Tenn Gas ---- 33j| revenue gain of seven million ae DIAL FE 2-8181 , ——— ; i $38 Tex @ Sul ... 171 dollars a yeur instead of 14 mil- Ta . “MOVIE SCORES” | Cor Smashes Into Tree; |gorbel ne. 28 Tm" sear From 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. i ic 20 6) — /Rochester Man Hurt Goodyear 138.4 Treneamer - 304) . . Ail errors shoaid. be, re “FAVORITE LIGHT | ; St Nery. 48s Un Carbide 128.4! News in Brief a “rato: " | TROY—A 5l-year-old Rochester) Gur on 1104 Un Pac = 3031 sibility tor ners oa CLASSIC’S _man was injufed when he lost con-|fsmmer 58? 17, Unit “aire. 308! for that portion of the first trol of his car this morning and omposth at a at gd a |NEWS .IN BRIEF . ot ihe advertise- ‘hit a tree in front of 5253 Crooks|{ndust’ Ray. 191 $s steet “21. 96 | The theft of $338 from a wallet oe, Shae eae Rd. here. Inland Sl. 486 Wejone? "°°: 424)in his room was reported to Pon- error. When cancellations x * * : oS ae Ward Bk PF 924, |tiac police yesterday by Sam Sea- ’ we number.” {ro es n e given “ | William G. Holland, of 53072 Au-| ine Nick io" Werte AS. -. = ton, 494 N. Johnson Ave. it. - ‘ \gur Dr., was taken to Avon Center Int Paper 2 weotworth | 55, Someone broke into the ~Sears Closing time for advertise. . < \Hospital near Rochester. Extent of| tnt Te. & Tel 40, eS ee i | Roebuck & Co. warehouse, 481 N. — yg hg - 7. ihis injuries was no immediately| Jones & L 72.6 Zenith Rad . 118 ted t type is elock the rr «Sa naw St., it was repor 0) | Kellore 36.2 Lear ........s gi fay previous to publication. “ determined. *| Pontiac police yesterday, Nothing : F Troy A ee was reported missing. The deadline for, cancelle> : he a Jest. Ret *..| Two burglars broke “into a build- tion of Want Ads . s | was crowded off the road by a prev Day Banst me UU, Bes ‘ fo pow 5 om. te day ivehicle approaching in the _oppo-| ae ing at 1200 E. Walton Blvd. and ation the first . 1460 — id dial _Bsite lane. ” . ° | Month Ago “se 333.7 iat ore 308 stole 128 sections of galvanized bver — = ous virh Lill dene Lars 2a genera tiie By ag CASH WANT AD RATES ; 1989 Low .... 3961 1972 “8t4 211.8|Pontiac police yesterday. The build- tines aden. SOee0 | AME Mich “ge ue 987. 3103 ing is leased by Clifford R. Eliott, p ag at as STEEL AVAILABLE wiki lo , i oH OSS oe Inde omnes up 00. (SEP. fd de 8S 8S 20 Ratis 151.60 up 0.16 3.50 . 9 66 s Rummage sale, Sat., Nov. 14th), s ie | 68 atts For IMMEDIATE DELIVERY as Follows: |: Serr src% from’ tori, 138 W. Bike,” Adv. $38 GR BS °. t . 8 J . . ume to 11 a.m Ru sale, First Methodist An itional ot 6.722 Ibs..cf 19 guage 04) toltrance, 04 thick and DETROIT STOCKS Church, corner Saginaw and Jud- iat ¥ ~ hy 463/84 inches tolerance, 1/64 inclies, wide. 30,815 Ibs. Wapaves cher decimal points ate aes 8 Pontiag Breas box oum of same an -width is § 17/32 inches tolerance, 1/64 High Low Noon] Rummage sale, First < ‘ inches wide. All extra deep drawing cold rolled steel Baldwin. Runoer Bue. Coe’ 38 g2tirian Church. Pr Nov. 13, 7 to Help Wanted Male 6 and coils. “This steel has been wet and has been Bove Geer Cee wl cheese. rr jem. Sat, Nov. 14, 9 to 11 on. pickled and cited to remove rust. This processing has Yowell Electric Motor Co.* .... 10.4 11. “2 lek Gomes te = one -~ Rot proved satisfactory to the consignee and this steel Srnnveiec ety! Fred. Ons’. 23 2 | Rammacy sale, 008 W. Boren, ee eee . pro ae is on hand, refused at Memphis, Tenn., Terminal of Rudy Manufadtaring Co.* ..45 10.6 11.2) gas’: a — 12 —— Shrube, windows, Toledd Ralsoy Co." .....-i..; as 36 jot, Bev ee om, to oe sarees. would a. nat- Ellis Trucking Co., Inc., located at 1334 N. Second St. *No amle: bid and aseed. First Chi rch, Adv. ura for you. Ben come "ip us : Memphis und may be inspected there. Invoice price , R corner of Mariva and| much as double their incotne with . was $3,045. Sis 1H) an ele. fhe entize, int—a0 past The ‘= largest salt water|Auburn, Fri, 9 to 5. Sat., 9 to 1. i gS “eres o the same eft Sas one ase lets. Best cash offer takes. F. O. B. Memphis. pier is Pier 91 in Seattle, Wash. United Church of of Christ. Ady. SAARINEN PLANS FOR YALE—Noted'archi- Wirephote Oe ag | “ae itt moor two ships the size . St tect Eeero Saarinen of Bloorhfield Hills points to are scheduled for completion in 1962-43. Models — EA and ies with - ELLIS TRUCKING co. lof the Mary on either side|Vincent de Paul Hall. 197 S Parke,| model of one of two new residential colleges he of the proposed additions are to left and right Who Are sceutamed to ‘eating - a land still have more than a city | S86. pi a iM Ro, ~ has designed for Yale University; New Haven, of Saarinen’s pointer. Buildings in the foreground Roosevelt fete. ‘s. 9 a.m. tf ‘ ‘block jeft over. 5 yrs. free. Ady,' Conti. The new colleges will cost $7,500,000 and are models of the university's existing plant. a 2 Wentins Pree s / eae “ir ‘6 = / } : . 4 - A f 4 j 4\ s \j —_