RAF ‘ The Weather i U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast Partly Cloudy, cooler. (Details Page 2) ‘THE PO | T AC PRESMAE é ae OVER P 116th YEAR akan PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, sdidbdeltoranb OCTOBER 25, 1958 —30 PAGES | UNITED tes INTERNATIONAL ~ Explosion Rip Jet Bomber roit Home AP Wirephote picture of Edward Cardinal today in Ry STRICALN IN ROME This Mooney, Arch taken Thursday at the \ Rome to part Cardinal Mooney Dies Detroit, who died MTne ifican Cardinal to elect a New pope Bishop of Mooney, 76, was in cipat t he COM AVE Killed, and 25 Suffer Injuries ing several buildings and’ shattering windows over a’ Five Homes Destroyed; Fact Big Blast Came: Today Saves Many OTTAWA (AP) A myste- rious explosion today rocked downtown Ottawa, wreck- wide area At least two persons were killed and 25 injured. Every window in the nine- story Jackson building was shattered and part of the roof-was torn off. It con- tains government oe Several other buildings a five homes were destroy cd Equipment from every fire tion fn the Only the fact that the homed curred on q Saturday when downtown Oren, be is com paratively quiet, prevented huge casualities was called The- explosion came about % 40 aA Its main force appear ed to be centered in the Myers Motors Building and in the Jackson Build- like a ‘wartime scene Damage was tentatively éstimat ed in excess of one million dollars An ambulance driver said sea eral were trapped in a building owned by Myers Motors Ltd. ae ‘Inching Toward |. fter an ©. OTTAWA EXPLOSION SCENE — plosion rocked downtown Ottawa Blast Rocks Canadian Capital Today . oe, AP Wirephoito Debris coyers the street today. The explosion was heard 10 miles away Early investigation failed to establish Victims j in Min cause of the blast, which wrecked a block of business structures, *killed two persons and injured 25 or more. Only the early hour (8:40 am i avoided heavier casualties as would have occurred Rescue Teams Brave later in the day Poisonous Gas to Get to 81 Trapped Men SPRINGHILL. NS. uw— Rescue teams today inched down a debris- choked mine shaft heavy with pois- onous gas toward 81 men trapped and possibly killed by an explosive shift of rock. Twelve are known dead * * * others He referred to strutting A mine officia] said there was a Pontiac Transmission Service needs 50 used automatic transmissions... FE 4-9646 i , 54-year- old visiting senator said. Women's Pages. ..scss. 00+. 6-7 * nine years in the U.S. House of gloom and forebading’ he said. & eo Durante’s 2nd Banana, Jackson, Leaving Act HOLLYWOOD (AP) — “What's Jackson gonna do witout Durante?” sighed the Old Schnoz. Eddie Jackson, his show from Washington. v a Residents Hurt, Six Crewmen Believed Dead 2 Misses Marine Hospital Near Grosse Pointe From Our News Wires DETROIT — Investiga- ‘tors poked through ruins of a Detroit riverfront resi- dential strip today seeking ‘Clues to a British jet bomb- er’s fiery crash. The big bomber, explod- ing in flight and endanger- ing a hospital as it sheared ‘off tree-tops, crashed in late afternoon yesterday on a combined good will aa ™ * » o * * a and training mission from England. Six crewmen were believed to have been killed. But no one on the ground, by seeming miracle, met death. Even injuries were few though about 20 homes were set on fire SEARCH FOR BODIES UF Gifts Show Higher Average Police and Cvoast Guardsmen searched all night and into the First of Reports From morning for remains of the air- | d t | di t men, blown fo bits by three ex- naustry n ica es an , Mosions. Sections of at least two Upward Trend bod ies were recovered co * * * . The Marine Hospital on the De- ‘arly returns from the Industrial ; OS Bc ; Dn nilicared wid a troit River near Grosse Pointe, S10 Walec ae “Pad at- ee ay Slip a veterans facility, was in the di- (OEEUSS (es (IS TACTICS ites (LIS path of the plunging plane ed Fund's “giving yardstick’ as a PINE eee but she crashed ahead of it, Wit- nesses said ‘a couple seconds more and she would have landed right in the middle of it.” pledge guide the current cam- paign Universal On] ed 92 percent of its emploves have orient in this Tenth if Seal today report- sabes Three homes were demolished. The dri Si several persons > j : : + = —— a L re vn ; i ‘ ral P ™ . very Femmare hope that Some.ol (He business side-kick of 43 Anniversary Appeal the averace Anethes dozen were set afire and who had been walking outside : . — . ; . . . = iced trapped vainweire might be found years who announced Fri- employe gift has jumped to 15 40 at ot i il oe ‘ ne ? s Geparment store mere alive but nothing had been heard Th nso) 1951S emiplove parse sie ne cow mpous (of flames ht into the store” through shat ara day he was leaving the act ee mmpany s ois employe par- pe ; : , aa Be - _ " . ana since the accident Thursday night y U ne mapatton stood at 87 per cent and “Teckage and blazing oil. ferer nduws Me were ~ rate R ae ~ rou to indicate there were more sur- to do a single. average pledge was $12.09 The’ Almost unbelieveably, only two The explosion as heard for 10 MUS . Jackson told a reporter: “I gol ledge this vear totals 1,263.30 residents suffered serious enough roles * * * a feelin’ Jimmy -dont want me 2 ures iva “We're extremely proud et the injuries to require hospita! treate : cial Ve! f {i z around.” fine job >mploves have d meni ~ oo See ee aaa onion At Fire officials called ever {f Righty-one other men got out aroun ine job our employes have done ™°" ROME (#—Edward Cardinal Mooney, ar hbishop oO. Aity fireman io ihe scer alive after the unexplained earth -pHAT AINT TRUE: for the United Fund this vear,’ TRY FOR RIVER Detro d today at 76 as the conclave to elect a new hift, the © ie a eae F irmz > railing smoke and flame. tl Detroit, died today at 76 as the concla to elect a new Police and firemen day fran. : Ht, the nen severe = oe Told of this. Durante rephed Gas Leakage Causes aiaice plant chairman Ted Pear- Trailin a k | amd lame be . . in North America’s deepest coal ...,., ..> Lo nae a son. “| hope it paves the way for tmangular delta win Vulcan pope was about to begin. tically in the debris of what was ; ; : That ain’t true. Eddie's a second losi 5 3 R es Yor . see > er M Motors. mune. EMices of the survivors banana he knows dat. He's still Exp osion in mpty others to follow.” roared tree-top high chpping Cardinal Mooney's death cut to 51 the. number of the show reoms of Myers were injured. my ol de act anviime ihe want leaves and branches in an appar- alias — “ay ate r the new Pope At least twe bodies had been . part of de ae an\time he wants New House Universal Oi] Sea s the fis of sil dkeeeamnie moter te memelire cardinals who will elec de new PO taken out 15 minutes after the Ten bodies have been recovered. to come back the mine organizations in the Pon- . Bets . uf —_— 7 lan ndpbath + ct 5 \rie i 1 A tao more OC < . Fee ae aie: P PiIvel First information was that his sudden déath was not explosion. a eral a bar Auer ue Durante said the 63-yearold SOUTHFIE Mrs Oliver Hae pati ee Sb ne But bef hed th t f 1¢ : os P haa been spotted by rescue Crews woke i ra ce ve ‘oamplete its 158 emplove solic ut before it reached the water expected bo elie ic be i WUCe Rug OT ORS DES! SOMES EEN 5 mould be brought up later auhwe o poss Bealth neeentts, SEER Ak Bes Uh . SURI leeectrertenn ane a — _ it ies, apart wits a ecneeies vinning of the conclave to ; plate glass store fronts over a - ; + : + ' mre retire. When Jackson took Hospital this morning with head (Cp offre wee weloiee on eon. explosion Soy ° _ aes Ball Hops wide area. including Sparks street : sick last year Durante replaced |; face second and third degree 7 a ~ hs ce i “e Kemwld aakte elect the Pope. ne of the citv's main shopping Haroid Gordon. coal chief for tt him with Senny King. bufrns she received Vesterday a _— aie een th eat mek a I asec? id = year ° : ee . ape Gn _ “ ‘ a _ 2 “- yardstick giving scales to compen-'the roof mght o use * Sait __ The cardinals death was report- O d, thoroughfares within sight of the Mine owners, spent hours in Te “ddie wanted (a och outta hic felloaing an explosion in the house °” a ed by the Rev. Joseph Tucek on wn Accor ' . . , mine shaft and then told newsmen : teal : oe _ : : ; Pilea, Reape : : - sate for the areas in which a de- a witness There aks this term: et J Parliament buildings sick bed and come on at de Desert she intended fo move into soon Meee enenes enema) cage ble thindenelap and cen ihelplane h id of the National Catholic Wel- Battling Pair nnn “There is a remote hope—very Inn ‘Las Vebas!. but his doctor._ According to Set Charles Dur-” ; shina - pledge — wey Sota a big bail of fire ‘The fara Councilmens Service in Rome remote — that some men will be told me limmy. if dat guy comesibim. Southfield police, the explo- 7 He ces crea. Whole sky turned red i : : : = an The oa fealth wellare ecrea- urn I Father Tucek said that death CHARLOTTE, N.C. p—Meck Outlook Cloudy Cool alive at the bottom end and the on he wast gonna live So IT sion caused by leakage of marsh hon. chi ead (mil sor ice The British Air Ministry in Lone . ! r : “ m = 5 ARE VEE + a } chin? Cate an | Wis service 4 “ was due to a heart condition lenburg County pelice were called ' top end of the 13,000-foot level. wemiidn ? fet “im gas from the well, Oct urred at 1:5. acen re er . 1: SOAS don said the ship was from ‘the from which the Detroit prelate out to investigate ‘ta relling ball . He said the basis for this hope * * * pm. at 24249 Tamarack Circle. a oe) ‘ ced an a R3rd Squadron of the Poyal Air had been suffering for a long that won't stay still.” onig n un ay was an indication that conditions (haante retained King even aft _ anna was reported in. fair all a sy - ; - the total Force Bomber Command based at time. Officer Paul Reed arrived at at the two ends were not so bad 6, Jackson got well and returned Condifien this morning. She was'™ * — oo Waddington Atv Base near Lin- on i ; g We, ae fe en goal is met aceording to Karl ca He came to Rome by ship be the scene and found two women The weatherman predicts partls as elsewhere in the mine. to the act “1 hadda keep up wid ‘ Iso sulfe ae rom shock Bradléy, executive director of the coin, England cause of this condition. which did staring, fascinated at the object. cloudy and continued thiol for tos Asked if there had been any con. de tunes”. Durante s ud You Her daughter Nine) Phvilis Che. Fund . L AFEBRASKA BOUND not permit him to travel by air “It keeps moving.” said one won night and tomorrow’ Tonights low tact with missing miners that Sol fave young he aia lier, 21] aw 920 Hoffman St., Roy- Its eaptan Fit -Lt Jehn Wail- arrived Tuesday after the fi- deringly. will be near- 38 would indicate survivors, Gordon S0nna pa {to see a couple of old” cs i De ee : ‘ermratniven Sirians an eee ie ed ee a net it was a golf ball, without its * * * 2 ad x e se : ranma par to see a couple of old al Oak and a 3le-year-old grand- Next Time, Look Around loughby Moore, carried a message nal services for Pius XII a ks ive fs Wass Sarita replied: “None. test son, David, were also in the build- uf good will from the mayor of that * & * mee Due _ Little temperature change Is - _ neat the time of the explosion MEMPHIS, Tenn UPI MEoocity to the mayor of Lincoln, Neb, ; wed ing from the core caused the balls .o060q tomorrow The high wi 2 0her 9] pega cons JAR, gee ever ua =e A athe te ee t < Father Tucek said that the ca! peace. LEAS BI 3 : : ¥. They were not injured L. Grace reported his cur stolen near headquarters of the S dina cust ince bee cee : es to jump around. reach around 56 Winds will a “Naturally, What Else? “you avoudda tought the guy According to Mra, Chevalier, pol! boat ramp fast Jaume Yes: Strategie Air Command . : : : ‘ OO ‘ome northwesterly at 10 - 20 miles: = windda come to me and said. fed x 1 2 Meare Pe aaae the at a res The , “Ps i < ee per — a "The stock for GRAND RAPIDS ‘UPI)—Gars ee “4 Ee - nied _ ee _ she was helping her mother wash - I soy he ae os be ‘ae Macey rane. ee ° eae Ui “ ay. Le J z r x, 7. : : “ap ea te NEISSISSIPD! Tiver mear the 8 yi Ss, out oe doen for a rest aft Ait Force Notes ok heat Raia ime. beck ket an moon ie ee I woudda advised inst it but in rand nn is Se locion ramp—w here 5 op venti: had blocks from fashionable Grosse abdut ‘to lie down for a rest aa N re Carpe ann - ars in school vesterday after voudda advised agains tf they heard a small explosion. Le oe = of uvalified urses rising temperatures (peak COE cas yf he wantet : : os slipped into the wate: ‘Continued on Fage 2, Cof. 3) lunch,”’ he said. The lowest recording in down-| his mother gave birth to a girl. i fh a dq it ie : ao Mrs. Hanna went down the base- ; ; } Salt kat E-ddie, tr ’ e 4 elena z on . = ; “Death was sudden,” said Fa-| Nurses are in great’ demand by town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was’ “ devon an ic ean i. roe ment tg efi eee ther Tucek. the United States Air Force, ac- 43 degrees. The thermometer ree 4 la Wal leigh con ane Din. inte." OO Mae wn rele meee o Th D te is Nov ! Cardinal Mooney was able to:cording to Sgt, Charles Ahnen of istered 52 at 1 pm. | 1a alter Ra eig an Uys ene er teee oe ein haley € ate 1s. 4 attend the Mass of the Holy Spirit'the AF reeruiting detachment in = ana LONDON (UPI) — Chivalry is OS 3S TWORD fon * F . earlier today at St. Peter’s Basil- Pontiac. ; . i —s ve Low Claston, the third partner ica. The Mass was held to invoke * * * . What a Selling Job! ; not dead. Workmen paved the died in 1950 The basément cinder block walls al } OW O O e divine guidance for election of the Prospective qualified r purses may, FREMONT (UPI)—Auctioneer road outside Sylvia Bradley's Eddie had the last word. how- and the living room wall were new Pope. apply at the local office, 53'2 W.| John Witte Jr. ended up buying | home in a new housing develop- ‘ever “Don't rap Jimmy” he ruptured and the kitchen door blew wits ; 4 ae : Cardinal Mooney’s death ent the |iiuron Sf. oe write directly eu Air a house he was selling when no | ment so she could leave today to pleaded. “He's one of the nicest off into the living room through Michigan S general fall election (Tuesday, number of cardinals in the Sacred |Force Nurse Corps, PO Box 2200. one topped his opening bid of | get married without getting her guys in the world) Te broke my an outside window, The basement Nov. 4) is little more than a week away. To College to 53 and. incre: sed vas |W right-Patterson AFB. Ohio. $500-yesterday. ' wedding dress muddy. heart but 1 still love. | him... ° door ie also blown off by a enable voters to become better informed before cancies to17. > a = = Ss ee a blast) Damage was not estimatec castine their ‘ballots, The Press plans a num- 1 *®* * ‘ Mrs. Hanna and her husband, ian 2 { ; ante oe : y ee aor Cardin M A eth 4 s farantkt Oak both of Chicago, werefiving in a ber of special election roundups. These wv? ardinal Mooney was the secon ; nator in Roya a moray Capi on’ ‘ include: recently, (cented clude: cardinal to die since. the death of New Jersey e y motel until ue Becently rented Pope Pius XH Oct. 9. Celso Car ‘ South hie i" house was ready to be Monday—Sample ballot; state senate ; dinal Constantini, 82, died Oct. 7. OTT and congressional candidates. Cardinal Mooney's.death leaves | en, ase raises O er S @€@cor Tuesday,—Candidates for Oakland oily two cardinals in the United | Go dfre Unh urt County offices. States — Francis Cardinal Spell- | Clifford P. Case, (R-New, Sen. Potter wamn't present tojhe was keeping a speaking engage- Representatives, flew in from Y Wednesday—Candidates for State “i Y ¢ . . s ton > WT ( I . ft . P pear jeanne vin oi pnd ers@y) was. chief speaker last|hear his fellow Républican senator) iment in Macomb County. Washington Hews is i fy nek k “as Helicopter Legislature; Story on kes congressional and _ Int ae sano oe mgr © lnighMgt a rally in Royal Oak/ptaise his accomplishments in his) Among Potter's achievements, yen Ses en ~ v oanti es gubernatorial races in nation. i rep oO 108 Ange- ee : 4 ;, : “te re fan uh. in Pontia ms : i 7 _—* s staged on behalf of Sen. Charles fm six years in Miah SMe a8iCase stressed, were his efforts to the Neopolitar : Crash Lands Thursday—Background on candidates si “ "= |. Potter's campaign for re-elec-) provide Michigan with govern.) In his talk in Royal Oak he 2. and race for state offices Samuel Cardinal Stritch, arch- tion. ‘ment contracts to. ward off. dis- voiced support fgr his party's LEESBURG, Va um — Arthur , , bishop of Chicago, died -in Rome * *« * In Toda ’s Press 'tressed employment areas in the stand on the protection of Quemoy, Godfrey escaped injury when his In addition, day by day reports from our May 27 shortly after“his arrival) «m+. i. the kind of Republican) y’ state. \Matsu and other off-shore China” pelicopter erash landed here Fri- wire services will keep you posted on progress saypeey 7 lislands. av-h > tw aan LE F Static are ype mnapenyt rnc Oo take the pe vats of (Potter). that rhekes: if satisfying ™ Petter, the speaker went an, jis es « detenee wax eatin: fay ba the two-place craft was of state and national campaigns an ae me Ya can mo to come many miles to help him! church News 39 | “as been in the forefront” too ee sad ns ees ee ened dio-TV entertainer Continuing during the week will be two: ', gregation for the Propagation 0: back t0 Washington,” Sen. Case) © i ereielcieia Paleee sais & in the field of foreien affairs thing worth kee ping alive si The radia- en et ainet series of articles on: the ; Faith, _ told the gathering at-Kimball High| COMICS . oo. cv cieccesesax 8 with his work on the Senate Ap- said he supported bigger defense) blamed the mishap on ‘a mal- a * * School. o senaege ee: ess A propriations Committee spending in. this direction, and, function of some kind.” He said Should we call a constitutional conven- Cortinel Mesney “Sjed 6 4) a, Home Section. »..../...., 15-28 « . vurged Republicans “to get off the the trouble developed when the tion. Pontifical North American College) “We Republicans never — Obituaries ,...6.6 cece... 3 The good of the country alwayS'qefensive’’ in supporting their) helicopter was about a foot from The Pontiac City bond issue for more on Rome’s Janiculum’ Hill. He pas) to apologize for the kind of rep- | “Sports ............,++.-.. 12:13 , comes first with him,” Case said. foreign policy. the ground as it came in for a sewage facilities } (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) resentation Charlie has given us. _ Theaters . Pier fteediey BOLL | -* * * *We Republicans need more of, landing, . ~* He has worked tirelessly-for ev. TV & Radio Programs. . 99 Sen, €ase, serving his first term an appreciation of the soundness; Godfrey has a home at Lees- f Vot er enn tnt : : eee ie , a * Sota z = be a oe } . bh es . as ¢ a : _ n N Vv. |" eryone in your great-state,” the | Witson, Eart.. seees. DD |in the United States Senate afterof our foreign policies, and less of) burg. which is about 30 miles Be Informed Then Vote o ov. 4 | i * oome onal Stricken Plane Barely 4 A (CANDIDATES AT FORUM—Ca both major political parties + forum last night in Pontae to ans paused by citizens. The forum, lv High School auditorium, was sp Pontiac Area Junlor Voters Bra Chamber of Pentiac Press Photo didates from is a pubhe service. Above, from left to right, ti 01 a public ive Lt. Gov. Philip A. Hart, Leo P. Meagher, ser questions Rep, Leslie H. Hudson, all Democrats; Clyde id in Madison - iskull, Jaycee president and moderator: Rep. onsored by the Wiliam S. Broomfield, Allan G. Weatherwax | Commicice as a Sen. L. Harvey Lodge. # le lie Reds fo Join in Ban Urges Year Suspension of Atom Missile Tests Starting Oct. 31 WASINGTON (UPI) — President Eisenhower called on Russia to- day to join the United States and Great Britain six days from now in a one-year suspension of nuclear weapons tests while the East and West discuss a permanent test ban. The President repeated a propos- al he first made Aug. 22 that the three atomic powers meet on an ve Pain Pontiac Police to Hear Candidates Suspect Hoax An audence of Pontiac voters braver st night downpour to rath the Madison High School ; aldit note hear political cat“ittehard Hanson, forum chairman of $95 a Phony’ | didares of both the Democratic declared | nuclear weapons wiil have volun- 1d Republican parti s public : . | tarily suspended testing,” he = Republican part papel We did get answers [rom both Police are holding two men for) said. orun) ~ i parties on some ver ertinent investigation, asserting tha re- . 5 ; The question-and answer period i a oe ; i € _ The President said ‘‘The United) questions,” he said Hanson no ted cently reported gas station rob-/ 3 yi ran fairly smoothly, althouch it ,,. y : States regrets that the Soviet Un-) : that there were 35 queries posed bery and the later return of the’. : saw Rep. Leshe Hudson charge). ¢, idienc most of which money reportedly taken was all a.” Bas | tot) accepted) the jotter ol Allan Meagher of “using the facts rewercd Uieamidaee (be h . ol that ‘the holdu ey alee ted SEG) Co eo answered by didate 9f- hoa F é 4 ‘ er!... Si loceely o liaeieatien ONicaehem: doa fie yout. This waste rede . P el Kingdom” to start negotiations and ~ Ve tre Ime ran yut 1nis as CCl PAC 1 blamed the Democratic adminis ; en ; as ‘suspend tests. addition to 10 prepared ques * * * ; tration in Michigan for “chasing , he iG — _,, But he added industry out of the state” in an : a Kenneth W. Halpin, 19, of 37 N. that it will do so swer to a question from the au Sanford St., attendant at an Auburn; Both the United States and Rus- dience on the charge beu sur under way Ave, gas station, was arrested'sia have been conducting nuclear| by the Republican party in theu shortly after lasted until by police yesterday. He. had told | weapons tests this fall but the mag- present campaign a police that he was robbed of $35) nitude of the Soviet program is Meagher stated that th: | On the firing fine were Lt. pistal aay ” a Jone bandit vastly greater than the Americans.’ rit ge } . {} > . 2 > facturer’s report 11! Gov. Philip A. Hart (D-candidate p ee ning . a a & jJust one of Russias recent test Michigan had actually | ) for Michigan senator), State Rep. , ae ne 2 a ae brook more packed more than 10 times ovelace 7 Sn e entire new industries during the pact! Leslie H Hudson (D-18th Dis: - = - ace, 19. 2437 Snellbrook!more power than the entire U.S | eession period, was trumped up triet candidate for U.s, House Rd piel ee Halpin told! series - walice he he . 1e me and entirely inaccurate He of Representatives), Leo P. Mea ' i. aS , need the money over’ the report the work of a private gher (D-candidate for the 12th m ovelace that nigh organization filied with fat District seat in the State Senate). The pair told Detective Orsi are am ing ing | ments in an attempt to support U.S) Rep. William S| Broom- Johnston they plotted to the Democrats on this point field (R-incumbent for 18th Dis- the money because Lovelace was on U of M Cam us The public forum was spon trict seat), State Sen. L. Harvey behind in his car payments. ‘ . p _— Lodge (R-incumbent for 12th Dis- — ; sored by the Pontiac Area duniver a The holdup mones was returned : er eer NY uP — Po : Chamber ef Commerce as part !ict pie ie Allan G. Weather at 40) alm. ine Sivurday when a a ; Police or of their ““Get-Out-the-Vete” cam wat (R-candidate for state treas lets dipres up to the Clark nounce today »reakup of a : , urer}. ; —— ; ; football gambling racket on the paign, as a public service, Ht Oi] Station, 328 S Telegraph Rd.. ,-, are | wag ee University of Michigan campus was the first time that te Jay Clyle Tlaskiil, Jayece president Syivan Lake. and threw out an 5 . — : a which took in upward of $10,000 served as moderator for the public envelope containing $95 and a pale weekly trent stadbate. forum af : yor A + t which re - A + Three students are .to be Weather Menu —_— | charged formally Monday with Representatives of both political Mis is money from Auburn eenspiracy to violate state gam- Helping of Sun parties asserted that they fully station robber ‘ry. Have bills naid ing laws, police said. ipperted the proposal fon a Mich- for now. Get in touch with Pontiac An investigation reportedly has . Between Rains tz@an Constitutional Cdnvention police.’ been going on for four weeks. which will be decided by voters Detective Johnson said an anony- Detective Lt. George Stauch By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS!" [7° Nov. 4 fel tion. They gen- mous phone call told them the said a “leak” had hampered the Shawensid impened opposite cor- © lly feel that the state constitu- holdup was a hoax, They claim the; investigation. Me said otherwise mers of the country today—the vom Is outdare vd and in need of two men held for investigation ad-; more persons would face Northeast and the Southwest—but changes if nv time Tut the ph charges. a big slice of sunshine was sand ” ~ 7 aaa wiched in between and provided rather pleasant While chilly temperatures pro duced snow in upper elevations of Montana and New Hampshire. the weather severe else where. Cloudiness with the rain in the Northeast extend ed westward through the Great Lakes region Cooler weather moved across | most of the Northeast and exterid- ed southward through Middle At- autumn weather not Was associated lantic sections. To the West, the cool. pattern reached as far south as Kansas. Missouri: and the Ohio Valles Little change in temperature occurred elsewhere except for some warming in the Pacific Northwest and some cooling in Montana Embezzler Gets 3 Years DETROIT ®—Edward J lan- lev, 37. of suburban Wayne _h 7 been sentenced to three years in prison for embezzling $34,000 from a trucking firm where he worked as operations manager as May Visit Khrushchev BONN, Germany P—§_{ hageel- lor Konrad Adenauer says he ts ready to go ta Moscow to talk to Premier Khrushchev about easing the hardships of 17 milhen pe ople in Commumst East Ger mans Milkman Gets Title LOND. Let I Fata Dairymen s Assen ettir fanex. Tt ruled teay. that the milkmar i oh man foam Mow Oo as the n wo The Weather Full t S Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICTNIT} — Mostly cloudy teday with a fea scattered shew ers this morning high near Partly Partly cloudy tonigh! and temerrne, cen tinued cool Tow toright near » high fomorrew 56 Narthwesterty winds | miles teday diminishing ta femorrew * Fridat« Temperature (hart 18 |} «iM ; POO) ok re? her p! int 101m miles city had tackled an and “We results,” cees of the endeaver of this kind, gre satisfied with the Hold 2 Men After Tip: That Holdup and Return Dies in Hail of Gunfire After Wounding 4 Berserk Ex-Con Kills 3 Women LIECoL? ex-convict berserk salle d three we four other persons body died hin eight hours after STON. \. C tenant fat rampage ymen , (UPIi—An mer went on yesterday and wounded He died. his sheriffs’ bullets his reign of terror rid began Leroy Cook 28 described “Just plain mean.” was cornere: tast night by sheriff's deputies. was able to fire one blast from hi shotgun. which Int led Sheri Frank Heavener Then, said Deputy Grady Fisk, Cook “died in q blaze of gun- fire. It looked like a smal] war. I could never say which shot hit him first, Bhere were_a fot of ' then." . Cook sank to the ground behind He was rushed to Rea ‘ed dead a huge oak tree a hospital but was on arrival * * * The grim search for Friday pommne alter killed his wife Ra Sela Mrs at his farm hi Cook began he shot and 22, and his Jeannette Cook, chel As he was fleeing Cook chanced ‘upon Mr. and Mrs, George Smith and their daughter Marjorie, 16- Cook shot and killed Mrs, Smith and wounded the daughter while Smith stood by in helpless horror. this ClevelAnd Corts on | loe Godlev and an nidentified trusty had picked up ok < tras] with bloodhounds, Thes 0 red him but Cook thuned and Godley in the side, weunding } lightly * * * The trusty had to leave Godley behind. He was later credited with much of the in cornering .the second time, at a lum- it J] miles from Lin « T SUCCESS Cook abut Inton lor an hour and g half officers Waited. Then, moving in from all sides, they blasted away at Cook. The single blast froni his «hot- gun sent pellets into Heavener’s head, chest and legs and pellets also struck Deputy J. D. Wil- lanis in the head and shoulder He spitalived for ob: T servation but Walham nd Crodley the prise guard, were released 1. Slatjore Smith | Pointe Park with its large was reported Ir rious’ condition at a local hospital. * * * Officers were unable to find out why Cook went on his gory ram- page. Some oH Bomber Rams - Homes in Detroit (Continued Erom Page One) Lake St. Clair estates. tanks of sprayed a Exploding fuel engine bomber block ares a. re ported “s Mr. five- slight injuries. and Mrs. Otto I plane plowed into it. Ewald, 72. managed to get out, but a stuck door trapped his 63-year-old wife. \ neighbor, Michael to their aid, ‘SHE'S ON FIRE’ “Mrs. Ewald was screaming for help Durkin said. *‘She was on fire. Their dog was on fire too.” Between them. Durkin and Ewald freed the woman She and her husband were taken a hospital. The Collie dog, Las- sie, Was found safe, singed tail in a nearby canal tu »NEWSBOY HURT \ 1hyear-old Doyle Wing, who had just completed his paper route and was standing in front of a trailer court three blocks from the wreck, was hit in his back with a section of metal pipe. required first aid. A team of Royal Air Force in- vestigators flew here from Eng- land today to determine what caused the crash. Military personnel from nearby Selfridge Air bow, within hours. The U.S. Air Force vill aid in the investigation only) if its help is requested by the RAF Bar Cancer Drug NEW YORK W—The American Cancer Society has rejected a proposal. to test the value of fhe controversial drug Krebiozen in the treatment of canc® patients. relatives said that the ‘ the four- A number of persons Ewald were in their home when a fragment of the, Durkin, came, cooling her ni He | Force Base said the’ British investigators should arrive’ ambassadorial level at Geneva Oct.) 31 to negotiate suspension of tests| under international control. He pro- — that all three agreé to a one-| ar test ban dating from the sti art af the conference. Russia tentatively accepted the | Oct. 31 date but proposed that || | the conference be on a foreign” _ ministers’ level. Britain and the United States rejected that, but left the way open for attend- | ance by foreign ministers later. | In t§day’s statement President Eisenhower construed the Soviet position as failure to accept the 'U.S,-British proposal for an am- ‘bassadorial level meeting. } The President peinted. out that, ,both Britain and the United States pave now declared ‘‘willingness to ‘suspend tests’ and begin the con- iferenc e€. : “It thus lies with the Soviet Union to decide whether on Oct. | $1 all countries wich have tested | prison term for wife-beating, had ‘mental trouble.” But Ambrose ‘Hoyle, Cook's slain wife, said just plain mean.” father of he was Pontiac Woman Injured in Three-Car Smashup A thre@ear smashup at S. Sagi- naw and-Wessen streets Friday aft- ernoon sent a Pontiac internal injuries, police. * * * Ethel E, Fowler, 51, of 59 Lake’ St.. one of the drivers, was de-) scribed as being in “‘fair'’ condition | at Pontiac General Hospital today. * * .* The other drivers, Nathan Lane, 62, of 545 Alton Lane, and Vir-| ginia M. Coleman, 36, of 3461 Ar-. dreth Rd., Drayton Plains, both uninjured, said police. 5 Area Residents Hurt Slightly in 2-Car Crash Five area residents were slightly injured in a two-car collision at W. Huron and Mark St. Friday ght. according to Pontiae Police * * * Taken to Pontiae General Hospi- tal were one of the drivers, Ivan K Proffitt, 27, of 213 Parkdale Ave., his son David, 2, and a passenegr, Joann B. Jackson 22, of 649 Home- stea St. * * * Also taken to the hospital were ithe other driver, Omer W. Lewis, 57, of 2915 Woodbine St. Water- ford Township, and his wife, Thel- ma, 953, ATl the injured parties /were treated and released said po- Ice, Offer to Slack Shelling TAIPE! (UPI) — The Chine Communists announced today they. would shel) th® Quemoys and other Nationalist-held off- ‘shore islands only on alternate days, and told the Nationalist forces there “If there ts lack of anything, just say it and we will give it to you.’ Fy woman to the hospial with leg and possible’ according to city « in Voting Procedure, were | three-bloek area. crashed British jet bomber on his doorstep in Detroit. was the largest single piece of wreckage after the bomber exploded and crashed on_Detroit’s river front. damaged. The crash and explosion sent wreckage flying over a WRECKAGE — Norbert Sterling surveys a huge chunk of a The chunk Sterling home was not Cardinal Mooney Dies (Continued From Page One) been staying there since shis ar- rival Edward Cardinal Mooney was | | created a cardinal in the great | 1946 postwar consistory at which | the late Pope Pius XII created 32 | | princes of the church. The Vatican Press Office con- ie that Cardinal Mooney’s ieath would not delay the openin Le the conclave GATHER FOR VOTE ithe procession | “Ne stl Suddenly in Rome Cardinal Mooney was a popu- | lar prelate. In Rome there were those who still remembered him in 1946 when he became a prince of the church. He like to joke and quip about the Detroit Tigers. Baseball was one of his | | favorite subjects. But this was for lighter mo-| ments. The famed prelate was es-| 5 pecially noted in the church for. his supervision of the important! \Detroit archdiocese, ‘area. They will be locked later to-/great organizer. jday to elect the new jtiff of the Roman Catholic Church, \The first vote is scheduléd ‘for Sam- }day eg Last of U.S. Troops Pull Out of Lebanon - BEIRUT WW — The last Ameri- can troops left Lebanon by air this morning, nearly a week ahead of schedule. * * * An Army detachment of about 10 men is staying another month | to adjust Army claims. The last of the troops slipped 1 “poor but not se-/young farmer, who once served a Ut quietly with no official an- nouncement made. The United States had agreed to get afl its troops out ey Oct. * | American forces landed in Leb- | anon duly 15, when the Middle East crisis way at its hottest. | At the peak, U.S. land forces 13,000. They were not used in combat operations while here. LANSING (% — Secretary of State James M. Hare says a sur- vey of the state’s lecal election machinery shows it is being sloppily rin in many ‘eommuni- ties. > | * * * force of about 85 investigators, is about one-third complete. Hare told newsmen yesterday irregularities in election prac- | tices and procedures followed by | city and township clerks turned | ap in about one-fourth of more | than 400 places visited. “This is a pretty sad situa- tion,” he observed. * * * Generally, the irregularities in- avolved comparatively minor points. None that has come to light appeared to indicate crim- inal conduct, he said. $22 Million Loss Bared by Studebaker-Packard SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Stude- baker-Packard Corp. has reported a loss of $22,532,511 during the nine months ended Sept. 30. Sales were $92,005,696. In the same period of 1957 the automo- bile company had a net loss of $12,365,689 on sales of $147,431,550. Plan Halloween Party HOLLY—The Groveland Grange 443 will have a costume Halloween party and petluck supper for their families and friends tonight at 7 p.m, at_their hall on Grange Hall and Van -7oads. , supreme pon-| Baltimore May 9, 1882. He was or- dained a priest April 10, 1909. | * * * Cardinal Mooney was born at Mount Save, in the archdiocese of He was given the persona] title ,of archbishop Aug. 28, 1933, and one of the: ; Even as the Detroit prelate died,|largest in the United States, and, his colleagues were beginning to for his mission in India as aposto-| gather at the Vatican palace for/lic delegate in 1926, which signaled| to the conclave the start of his reputation as a will meet at 8 p.m, tomorrow for the 10th annual Reformation of Faith services at the First Baptist Church? The serviee is sponsored by the am Council of Churches. Guest speaker will be Dr, Rob- ert Bruce Pierce, minister of De- treit’s Metropolitan Methodist Church. . Dr. Pierce, holder of the Free- dom Foundation George W.: ton Meda! for “outstanding achievement in bringing about a better understanding of the Ameri- can way of life’ is a graduate of Northwestern University, the Gar- rett Bible Institute, Evanston, Il. * jand Union College ‘in Kentucky: The Rev. Eugene Snoxell of St. James’ Episcopal Church and pres- ident of the council said area pas- tors assisting in the service will be Dr, Emil Kontz of the Baptist Church, Rev. Robert L. DeWitt of Christ Church Cranbrook, Rev. MacKay Taylor of Northminster Church and Rev. Al- Church. Future as well as present voters will feel the inpact ‘of the Bir- mingham Chamber of Commerce's “Get Out The Vote” ¢ampaign, ac- cording to Charles Genbeiand. chairman, 5 not only earn an award for its ereator but will be reproduced and displayed throughout the city in stores and public baildings. Chamberland with James Teniple and two board of education mem- bers will judge the contest. Another public service will be the distribution of miniature ballots so voters may be thoroughly familiar \with candidates’ names prior to ltke Nov. 4 election. New train schedules between Birmingham and Detroit will be- come effective tomorrow, H. H. \Wichman, Grand Trunk ticket jscent. was informed this week. Merning commuters will leave ‘Russian Loan to aon Called Blow to West VREDENBURG, South Africa ( — South African Defense Min- ister Francois C. Erasmus said here Friday that the Rassian lean to Egypt for construction of | the Aswan Dam was the heaviest blow the Western Powers had yet received in Africa, Russia has done what the United States and Britain re- fused te do and has thus found a foothold and anchor in Africa, Presbyterian len Wittrup of First Methodist \Area Churches ‘é olding Joint Annual Service ¢ Birmingham on the Inter-City Limited at 6:51 am. and arvivy in Detroit at 7:35 a.m, , Train No, 19 will leave Detroit at 4:55 p.m. arriving here at 5:40 to be followed by train No, T7 with a 5:20-6:02 Detroit to Birmingham run, . A item of special interest at the American Association of Univer- sity Women's book sale’ next week will be an 1898 phamphlet about Birmingham, its history, develop-. "jment and what it offers residents 60 years ago. The sale will be held. Monday through Friday in the Detroit Edi- son offices on Merrill street, Crash Shocks - English Mayor Men on. Ill-Fated Jet: Listed. as Missing ‘in’ Hopes Any scab: held the Air Force Cross for devo- tion to duty. Other ‘crewmen were named as:_ Flight Lt. Brian Peacock, 27, co- pilot. Squadron Leader H. J. Scull, Bu, navigator, Flight Lt. James Donald Watson, 33, radar na Dime ee ge We aorteics officer, . Chief Technician E. C, Evison,‘ 32, maisitenance ctew chief. . The plane came from the RAF’s: 83 Squadron stationed at Wadding~ ton, Lincolnshire, Another Vulcan. \became archbishop of Detroit Erasmus stated. “It is a black from the same squadron crashed Aug. 3, 1937. day for us,"’ he added. in Britain seven weeks ago. : Eyewitness Account: | in Lebanon numbered more than | Irregularities. Found. The survey, by a special task Horrible Roar, Bomber Hits Homes (Mrs. Helen @ th, 44. watched RAF bomber plun trolt River Fr — Press Internat snare is ber story it did. x & * preparing to go shopping. stepped outside of thefhouse a loud noise, so I looked up. ; * * * It was coming dewn at.an first I thought it was going our home. - WHERE JET CRASHED - flames on the riverfront. The out of rainy Det. crash into 9 fdey. of frame homes bordering the De- By Mrs. HELEN D’EATH DETROIT (UPI)—I saw it come down, it came right over my head and I said ‘My God, that plane’s going to crash’ and then My husband, Al (regional chairman. of the . American Power Boat Assn., * * * » Then I heard a terrific explosion and saw a big ball of fire. I didn’t actually see the - ‘plane hit any of the homes, but I saw that arena bi uies of belaae eae Oak ad after a Royal Air Force jet bomber ciashed in a four-jet —— roit skies and as told to Gaited big fire from my home (about a block from the crash site). ‘ I told Al ‘Let's go and help those peo- * ple’ and we tried to take the jeep so we might be able to take someone out of : there, but we couldn't go anywheré in . the jeep because ents there was a + big traffic jam. ‘and I were I had—-just when I heard had - smashed of the pieces block away. angle and at — to crash into It’s a good- ae Wing Vudean en was a Delta iP house. It threw metal all over and some I could heat glass breaking, but I didn't see anybody get out of the \plane. : It was a horrible roar. I guess the pilot : was trying to make the river, band (yan) weren’t in the would have been’ killed: When we got there " saw that the plane into ‘s. Florence Kay’s eo. broke “windows as far as a x ok \t ae ‘thing Mrs. Kay ahd her hus- ‘ ' ‘or they © sils Weth Coshe tay, Lateadox, ; ie tionare pio glad oes Neb. It’s fuel tanks Hanh sh eee. sade ys? Pe 4 .) - | THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1958 | He was a former employe of Gaparel , Meters: Treg -Sanen teria Cotte uasidag his wile. Jo- Ann, are a sister, Mrs. Ethel M. Mowe of aps hon ase and) BAGWELL RING THE | BELL! * WATERFORD G.O.P. RALLY x TUESDAY, 1:30 P. M. * CAI HALL 3640 Williams Lk. Rd. ‘be in Sak Bate Cameos, St. .|Clair County. Mr. McAlpine died early this eS ee oe oe. re "Hip. wang manele ol tay aa Church. Deaths Elsewhere CAMBRIDGE... England (AP)— Death of Prof. George Edward Moore, 84, credited with influenc- ing British and American philoso- phy early in the century, was an-; nounced Friday night. He was a professor of at Cam- bridge University from 1925 until Service wil] be at 2 p.m. Monday from Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial following in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. MES. WALTER WOODS Service for Mrs. Walter (Betty) Woods, 31, of 375 E. Sheffield St. jwill be at 1:30 p.m. Monday from ithe Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mt. itery. Her body will be at the fu jneral home this evening. jmother, Mrs. Richard M. Millstead fof Pontiac; four chlidren, Daviid, | Bethesda, Md. after an iliness of iseveral months. | Holly, died Friday afternoon at the | following a long illness. fmade by the Farmer.Snover Fu- 196 iCharies (Edith M) Hubbie, 81, of 'Jowing a long illness. rdren, Earl Beker of Highland. Ray ! OCTOBER 28th| retirement in 1939. Bjornson, 54, U. S. lend-lease ad- ministratrator in Icéland during World War II and an editorial page columnist for the Minneap- olis Tribune, died Friday after Park Ceme- Surviving are her husband; her 'Gary, Linda and Charles, ali at|sclerosis. thome; and a brother, Wendell| SYDNEY, Aystralia (AP)—The | Milistead of Pontiac. Most Rev. Howard West Kilvin- ton. Mowill, 68, Anglican a of Australia and archbishop of Sydney, died of a heart attack Saturday. NEW YORK in a hospita | at JOHN GOTHLIEB HOLLY — John Gothlieb, 75, of legislation affecting the sightless Green Leake Convalescent Home/|during his tenure as president of Funeral arrangements are being rneral Home, Pontiac. 2. -— Surviving is a son, William J.| [Gothlieb of Detroit. More Reds MRS. CHARLES HUB HOLLY Service ae Mrs. ‘ us Sa ted to Get '1021 Hubble Dr., will be held at. '2 p.m. Monday at the Bendle Fu-| neral.Home. Buria! will be in West, Nobel Prize Highland Cemetery, H ighland| Township. STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) — Mrs. Hubble died Thursday at a Three Soviet atomic scientists to- rest home in Pontiac Township fol- ony were reported slated to win the 1958 Nobel Prize in physics She was a member of the CalJ- fer a discovery built into Sputnik vary Methodist Church, WSCS of Hl. the Methodist Church, Blue Star The newspaper Aftonbladet said b Mothers and the Clyde Rebekah the first nobel physics award for Lodge. Soviet Russians wil] be split three Surviving are a son, Anson Ways between Profs. P. A Baker of Highland: five step chil-\Cherenkov, Igor E. Tamm and M. Frank. ~~ They all rank among the elite in Soviet atomic science. Tamm been mentioned as having Baker of Detroit, Frank Hubble of Holly, Lawrence Hubble of Dayton. O. and Doris Hubble of Holly: two; has Robert McAlpine 530, of 1322 Lake- view Dr. will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at the Muir Brothers Fu neral Home, Almont. Burial will American Metals Co. Suing UAW, Local DETROIT Metal Products Co. has filed a/after his car struck a tree, said $210,000 damage suit against “thé Oakland County Sheriff's Deputies. |United Auto Workers Unjon and! Gerald L. Spencer. 19, of 540 Am- UAW Local 174 in US. District berwood St., told deputies he was Court. 'going north on Baldwin Rd. near The company charges the union | Gallogy Rd., Pontiac Township, with staging an unauthorized walk-|when he lost control of the car out. A walkout May 15, 1957. oc-'on wet pavement. curred after American Metals dis-| —___—_—_——_- charged two employes for disciplin-| It was a wandering man of the ary reasons. ‘sea, a sailor, who really discov- Employes remained off the job ered New Mexico, A shipwrecked for eight days. They returned when Spanish explorer, Cabeza de Vaca, ture of a bluish light, known as the Cherenkov effect which hovers over atomic reactors submerged in water ‘Township Youth Injured Ramming Car Into Tree A Pontiac Township youth was treated for minor injuries at St an arbitrator ruled after a hearing walked from the Gulf Coast to = that the firings were justified. New Mexico in 1536. years of suffering from multiple, , following a long ill-|"' sn se afr Wayne Votes GOP Control ‘and House has received from the Politieal | Pitfalls Are Many ‘High Korean Ordered ito Die for Espionage Korea (AP)—The Court ‘Yung and Cho were arrested last spring. Yang confessed he had worked as‘a liaison agent be- tween the Communists and Cho. Both were acquitted of espionage charges in the lower court but sen- tenced to five years imprisonment on minor counts. Williams Out Lashes of State Legislature as ‘Blocking Progress’ DETROIT # — Gov. Williams jstepped up his re-election cam- the American Foundation for the ‘Ol. Blind, died Thursday. He headed publican-dominated Le gi slature foundation from 1922 until jand promised a 10-point program i] | state,” he said, im— The American Joseph Mercy Hospital early today: DA * Deluxe Dream Homes j a Ss ‘Westridge of Waterford” _ * Adjacent to Both Public and Parochial Schools a iD) Sado + ae 4203 LEDGESTONE DRIV 4213 LEDGESTONE DRIVE TRADE-IN. PLAN OPEN SUNDAY DIRECTIONS Ew6 P.M. Lane, Block Seuth “al” Waterfora For Your Inspection ioe Gee Comme (OR KELTMAN & TRIPP | oR 38-9411 3-9411 Builders and Developers of Westridge of Waterford Wonderful Place to Live : * Suburban Atmosphere—City Conveniences TWO MODELS FOR SALE Your equity in your present home may be accepted as part payment. | Se Re ' } jpaigning in industrial Wayne Coun- (AP) — Moses tY today, an area he's expected to Charles Migel, 92, credited with! iconcentrate on now until the Nov. sponsoring virtually all national ‘lection. Williams delivered a major tele- vision address last night in De-? He lashed out at the Re- |of improvements if Demecrats win! a legislative majority. * * * He called on voters to break a “Republican monopoly’ which he claimed had crippled progress in Michigan for 20 years. “Michigan is a Democratic sense in a Democratic state that the making of laws should be a Republican monopoly.” Williams said a Democratic ma- jority in the Lgislature «ill mean progress in 10 areas where he said the Republican majority had blocked progress. ® * * “First of all. we can have a diversified Michigan economy : so we won't be at the mercy of every downturn in the auto indus- try.” he said. Williams said the GOP legisla-_ ture cut funds for the department brothers, Lewis and Claude Gor- Performed important work in of economic development so it Gon, both of Holly; nine grandchil- harnessing the H-bomb for peace- couldn't do its job of bringing in dren and 15 great grandchildren. ful power. new industry Aftonbladet said they will re-, ROBERT McALPINE ceive the Nobel distinction for . WALLED LAKE — Service for,having first understood true na- Detroit Reports Total of 613 Polio Cases _ DETROIT wm — Detroit's 1958 |poho epidemic case Joad reached 613 of one new case 20 deaths New cases reported in Detroit this week totaled 22, the lowest number since the last week of July when the epidemic There have been started. Detreit recorded 175 polio cases and two deaths last year State health officials said a total of 1.078 polio cases have been re- ported in Michigan this year com- pared to 470 last year. A total of 57 new polio cases were reported | throughout the state this week. WASHINGTON (UPI)—The elec- tion campaign has reached the white-heat stage, as witness the exchange of invective by bigwigs of both parties. But that doesn’t mean anything goes in politics. * * * There is the matter of name- calling, for example. Any candi- date inclined to malign his oppon- ent must do it in the open. There is no federal law against calling as such but there is a strict ban against the anonymous variety. In addition, all anonymaus politi- |Uncle Sam is concerned, the liter- ature can be as dirty as the state| islander and libel laws allow, so jlong as the name of the sponsor | is attached. And a candidate can get im trouble ever anonymous political literature even without sending it out himself. The law says that if he caused it to be sent, or even knew it was being sent, he can be fined and sent to jail. Each candidate for the Senate government a pamphlet listing ways how not to win an election— if he wants to stay out of-trouble. It warned each fo keep an ac- curate aécount of the campaign money he receives and spends, his first report on this to be filed with Congress not Ifss than 10 days and “It makes no) yesterday with the reporting - no more than 15 days before the election Nov. 4. lhe must, within 30 days after the election, file a complete account- ing. ’ * * With campaign money scarce this year, there does not seem much danger of candidates spend- ing more than the law allows, and ways of getting around the law are| | too well | known But for the record, Specific Rules Govern Conduct of Campaigns name-|to take a contribution from any) cal literature is taboo. So far asi. And whether he wins or loses, | |here. The child's parents, Mr. and, Mrs. Edwin Bond, were hospita- | the candidate had better stick to the limits established by law— three cents for each voter in the last election for the post the candi- date seeks. In any case, a candidate can-| not spend more than $25,000 to get elected to the Senate, and $5,000 for a House seat. * * * Candidates also were warned not) person holding or negotiating a/ contract with the federal govern- ment. It is unlawful to receive such | a gift and also to give it. Direet gifts from corporations, | national banks and labor uniens | also are illegal. And still another | untouchable source is persons on | relief or receiving unemployment | compensation. Don’t ask or take | a cent from them. ; * & * Finally, a candidate must make. no promise of federal jobs in ex- change for political support. The law is very specific in this‘ area, | although it sometimes may not be strictly enforced. Baby Killed, 8 Injured in 3-Car Collision MUNISING — Seven-month- old Stephen Bond of Montreal, Canada, was killed and at least eight persons were injured yester-| day in a three-car collision near lized with serious injuries. Police said the collision, on M28, about a mile and a half east of, Munising, apparently was caused | when a carload of six. Michigan Tech students skidded on the rain- slick highway, sideswiped one car jand then crashed headon into ee \Canadian vehicle. INSURANCE tm AUTO Yes. alse Ask about our plan today. FE 2-822) important to have a complete insurance protection policy for you and your family. Austin-Norv Agency, Ine. 70 W. Lawrence. Cor. of Cass Ave. >». — “seares! ree ee lasuremcd ell The Insignia of Superior Service Sound Protection ns — —$$$$$____— 46 Gienn 8. Griffin i Sparks- Griffin “Thoughtful Service FUNERAL HOME Williams St. Phone FE 2-5841 24-Hour Ambulance Service Already, unordered Christmas cards, ties and other merchandise through the mail. rights. Waldron Hotel Unordered Merchandise! citizens of Pontiac are receiving Be smart! Never pay for articles which you | have not ordered. Ignore threatening letters : demanding payment. Companies operating i the unordered merchandise racket thrive ; only because many people do not know their | Help Stop This Racket! Never Pay for Unordered Merchandise! BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD of the . Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Phone FE 59-6148 Bidg. % is pe = rere = a7 ¥; ee a bay, See | Sa Rca Re ee] é \ i.e | ae. oe oe TOM Open Daily ‘til 9 NORTHWOOD MARKETS 888 Orchard Lake Road Open Sunday ‘til 5 P. M. We Res-rve the Right to Limit Quantities. P. M. a A ENATAEAY MNYAYATAT Nem N a NONE SOLD LIMIT ONE TO DEALERS COUPON PER CUSTOMER OR MINORS A fini) Fg RUAUAU ALS, 12,072: ‘CAN NONE 6§OLD TO DEALERS OR MINORS LIMIT 3 COUPON PER CUSTOMER N onUUTUT if CUSTOMER =e = | = => 4 Jack Frost—Pure Cane Granulated se sé SUGAR == — b . = é = —— a SF 10 LB. a | sé - NONE SOLD LIMIT ONE —_ TO DEALERS COUPON PER > OR MINORS = NONE SOLD LIMIT ONE - To DEALERS COUPON PER = OR MINORS CUSTOMER >; VRE WATT % , Y: Mihai wu WAI) Ghats Hit " | Nn Nn AVA ia Prof PoP, CAMPBELL’S 5. - a”, ania aninvan DAMA MDE NINATOYAYAYAYM in WITH THIS VALUABLE COUPON ONLY! SWIFT’S PREMIUM CORNED 39: ( UU WVU BDVIV IVI IV TRY TNTTRY TY TRY AYTRYAVAVRY AN 4j a) MAU WITH THIS VALUABLE COUPON amie a EXPIRES NOV Cy ae ay et nay WU ein COCA COLA Van Cael Save 1S¢ COUPON EXPIRES NOV. 1, 1058 laa vis) Petty OUPON => EXPIR = OV. 1 1988 =3 ) " HOH UaUAUAGG OUPON NANT “WITH THIS VALUABLE | COUPON ONLY! TOMATO SOUP e' COUPON 1. 1958 VA AUT UA ta) _ 7 PPro? AYAYINYAYIYATATAY AN meee 33 CASE OF 24 c >) 2 REG. SIZE = SB ew, com = BED Sz OR MINORS CUSTOMER NOW tase Sz) = YTV YAY AYRYT YAW AYTNO NYY Se q UU UO UTUTTTUTUTOTI ie rr DOV UHM HT) NS owe FRESH GROUND BEEF Fresh, Tender SPARE Ri wHat 39° WiLL BUY PERFECT FOIL BARBECUING or Grade A’ Medium, Fresh All White 1-Ib. ; Pkg. BS ; ws. Land o’ Lakes Eggs 2: YOUR — Cc CHOICE ace ‘i —-Yva way gave A b=) ~ingaeverlastingly over the Asiatics, THE PONTIAC PRESS Owned and Published Locally SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1958 SS MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HAROLD A. FITZGERALD President and Publisher It Seems to Me. . . [APA Strives for Ereedom of the Press in South America cities. Rie is a third larger than Detroit and Buenos Aires is prob- ably more than twice Detroit's population. In Rio, we drove to dinner with Fred Trozier, head of the Asso- ciated Press in those regions. “This,” said he, “is one of the most expensive cars you ever rode in.” It was a 1957 Oldsmobile. The price was $13,000. * * * Import duties are almost prohibi- tive. At that, I saw two ’57 fuel injec- tion Pontiacs in Rio. They must have cost a pretty penny unless they be- longed to official government fam- ilies. Ambassadors and such can bring in their own cars tax free and they’re the envy of the nation. x * * The beef down there was super. Here are some random thoughts and impressions following a few days in Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires: We were in Rio on election day and everything in the cit’ was closed tightly. This applied to retail outJets, manufacturing plants and even schools. “Are you voting today?” I asked an English speaking driver. He smiled. “I certainly Everyone does.” “They don't in my country,” I confessed. He looked incredulous. “Aren't they fined in court as we are here?”. And of course, I had to admit they weren't. “And further- more,” he finished grimly, “if the excuse isn't a good one, the judges hand out a short jail sentence instead of a fine.” The U.S. A. can hang its head. am. * * . * . They say the secret lies in the fact Many people think of Rio and their cows finish on grass, whereas Buenos Aires as ‘next door,” but up here we fatten them at the end they're 1.400 miles apart, or further ‘wjth corn. than from here to Denver. x - x * * * We had lunch with President “Saginaw Street” in Rio was the widest main drag I ever glimpsed and I commented on it so many timés the driver finally said reluctantly: “I might as well tell you. This is only the second widest in the world. The widest is the one you see next week in Buenos Aires.” He was right. FroNpD1Z1 who is an active and asser- tive individual. And believe me, he’s “well protected.” x +*« * Wages and prices are far, far below ours; but it’s a picturesque and attractive land with a bright future ahead. Their “Saginaw Street:’ named _Even so, you can give me the “Avenue July Ninth” is 300 feet U. =: A.—and Michigan — and sence Pontiac. across. « «k x And in Conclusion....... I was in South America to attend Gleanings from the well-thumbed the annual meeting of the Inter- notebook of your peripatetic re- American Press Association. One of porter: a : our primary objectives is Freedom Did you hear about the Texan who of the Press which is still a strenuous was so rich he bought his dog a little and unending battle in South Ameri- boy?.......... Recently a marriage ca. Dictators are foes of the printed authority said every wife has a right word. They abhor publicity unless to be taken out to dinner once a week they dictate the sentiments them- .......... Princeton University sci- selves and they crack down on news- entists completed an atomic energy papers accordingly. clock that’s about the size of a type- * * * writer. It’s guaranteed to be right The J. A. P. A. is fighting to within one second after the lapse of free newspapers and struggling to LOO years eee For the past five give all of South America a part of the freedom that we enjoy here and which we appreciate so little. The I. A. P. A. is cordially de- spised in dictator nations. . And we're proud of the fact. _* * * * * * Bruce D. BROMLEY, former Pon- Another main objective is to pro- tiac resident, and now a well-known mote a better feeling and under- New York lawyer, is a new director standing between North and South Of PB Mire ....An Atlantic vaca- America. The newspapers decided it tion spot sent out a publicity release was time we did a little hard work on that was supposed to conclude: “A our own hemisphere instead of stew- Wonderful place to spend an adven- turous weekend.” It.-appeared: “A wonderful place to spend an adulter- a a * ous weekend.”...-...<.- JASON L. The Association sends about ten (JACK) HONIGMAN, Republican candi- students a year to college ($2,500). date for Attorney General, is a broth- North Americans who can speak e!-in-law of Pontiac’s own MEYER Spanish are given the college of their SrMon. choice in South America; and South Americans who can speak English are years Canasta has been the number one card game in the U.S. (hours played) but bridge is recapturing the lead. ee Europeans and Africas ~x~ *« * - A pre season canvass suggests the given the same selection in the ‘ojiowing as the top TV shows of the United States. . _ mew season: “Wagon Train,” PERRY We are convinced that after this Eoyr9 “Desiju Playhouse.” “Gun- neighborly year, each will better un- smoke,” Garry Moore, “Price Is derstand the lives and problems of Right ” “This Is Your. Life.” ANN the Cue. SOTHERN, ‘“Wyatt Earp,” “RESTLESS It’s purely a goodwill move Gun.” “Mark of Zorro” and Pun * * * SILVERS. Where -are “What's my Rio and Buenos Aires are big Line,” Rep SKELTON and “To Tell the oO tava rruth?” I was disappointed with the THE PONTIAC PRESS Garry Moore show Tuesday night Published by Tue Pontiac Prese Company but it probably improved after I tuned it out. And when all’s said and done, The TV Gal I’d Rather Have Lunch With—is Potty BrEraEn. x * * 48 W Huron 8 Pontiac, Michigan Trade Maré Daily Except Sunday Jouxn A Riley Assistant Advertising Manager Reeseit PAssSert Executive Vice President and Advertising Dtrector H Fitecersin 11 rt OM Howsar TREC WRLL bone Marae Ciresievion: Maneats Hollywood Third Grader: “My pop G Marsmatr Jcrpan = ? ITRGER ALD acral dy sing . Cc , a Ly ( . Joun W. Finstess Local Adverti can lick your pop.” ‘Nother H.T.G.: RosretT B Tare, Groace C. InMon He can not! My pop IS your pop” Managing Editor 4 Classified Manager ROCESS See Oakland Citizens League came up with a well studied list of Th Associated P. is entith lusively t 4 uc tor teputiivationvof afi local news printes inthis Preferred candidates for the Novem- newspaper as wel! as al) AP mews dispatches - o als ibosciie bac enkin deliveredi ns lesreier (a: 40 cena DEL PELCCLIONE®. = eee New York re- a Week where carrier service fe no Bvailabie by mail i 2 i in Oakland Genesee. (ivingston Macomb. Lapeer and viewers pronounce the current Icé $1200 a year: elsewhere ih in the United Statas subscriptions payable in Washtenaw Countiee it te Michigan $20.00 a and all other niaces yenr All mati Capades the top ice show of all time. —HAROLD A. FITZGERALD 4 ecvance Entered as second clase matter at Pontiac Member of ABG Phone Pontiac FE 2-8181. A Japanese who once hated Americans has been turned by faith in God to the love of all mankind. The Japariese is Captain Mitsuo Fuchida, leader of the air attack on Pearl Harbor, who was once tried as a war criminal and acquitted. After the war, in the countryside of Japan, he began to think of peace. He wondered what could transform hatred into brotherly love. Then a returning prisoner told him of a Christian American girl who ministered to him in camp, even though her parents had been killed by the Japanese. Also, he learned how the hatred of a Doolittle bombardier had turned to love while reading the Bible in a Japanese prison. Reading Christ’s words on the cross, “Father, forgive them for Fuchida bought a Bible. they know not what they do,’ He became a devoted Christian. he knew Christ was the power to transform hatred into love Today, he preaches to his countrymen, and heads Pilots of America in Japan, a leading Christian youth organization. the Sky Days of All Faiths Luther Revolted 441 Years Ago By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER Four hundred forty-one years ago next Friday. Martin Luther startled and fascinated the throngs of pil- grims who were gathered for All Saints Day in the German town of Wittenberg by marching up fo the door of Castle Church and nailing up his famous 95 Theses. Church doors in those days served as the community bulletin board. The ‘‘theses” were argu- ments against current practices of the church. Luther wanted to express himself about his dis- agreement with some of the things the church was doing, and he couldn't have found a better place or a better time. The town was full of people and they would all be going to church. His state- ments were sure to get attention. Luther, himself a monk, was cigticizing the church of which he was a member in good standing. He had no idea of breaking with it or leaving it, but things were soon beyond his control and the Ref- ormation, the greatest criSis in the history of organized Christianity, was on. x * * The upity of Christendom had been broken five centuries earlier (1054) when East (Constantinople) amd West (Rome) split apart, each taking its millions of followers. Now the West was shattered by the blows of Luther’s hammer, not just split in two but tor into many divisions. What had so unexpectedly hap- pened was the beginning of a process that is still going on — a revolt against authority. Luther believed, and those who came after him expanded the belief, that a Christian of informed mind and sensitive conscience needs no authoritative church to guide him. Every man, assuming his sincerity, can have his own direct encounter with God and can form his own pattern of response to that encounter. UNION SERVICES The effect of this approach to re- ligion over the past four centuries has been immeasurable. In cele- bration, Protestants have given Reformation Day a festival of its own: the last Sunday in October. wk 6k * Usually the day features union Protestant services under the aus- pices of the local Council of Churches or the Ministerial Associ- ation, though the Lutherans fre- quently take the lead in such ar- rangements. The National Council of Churches publishes a suggested ~ order of service for the occasion. PILATE’S WIFE Finishing up his second letter to Timothy, St. Paul says ‘‘Eubulus greeteth thee, and Pudens, and Linus, and Claudia, and all the brethern.”’ (Second Timothy, chap- ter 4, verse 21) Tradition holds that this Claudia was the wife of Pontius Pilate, and that Linus was her cousin. Linus followed St. Peter as bishop of Rome. s 5 io =e _ It may seem strange to find St. Paul in the company of these relatives of the man who con- demned the Lord to crucifixion, but there has always been a streng and persistent legendry about Pilate’s wife and her lean- ings toward Christianity. (Copyright, 1958) Dr. William Brady’s Mailbag: “Chewing Tobacco’ Mix— Well, You Asked for It! homemade if it is “Your for chewing tobacco, please, still available. (B.R.)” Answer. Per- haps you refer to the substitute for chewing tobacco: Mix an ounce or so each of sassa-_ fras bark, gentian root and prickly ash bark, ground to coarse powder. Add enough licorice paste or extract to bind the mix- DR, BRADY ture in a mass of the consistency of chewing tobacco. Use as a sub- stitute for chewing tobacco. Well. you asked for It. - * * * recipe ‘When I was a boy my parents- had? a book by a ‘Dr. Kneip who advocated knee baths, sitz baths etc., and especially walking bare- foot in wet grass or fresh fallen snow... (M.J.R.)" Answer: It was a German priest. named Father Kneipp, about a century ago. The baths ean do no harm. Walking bare- foot in wet grass or in the snow is fun, too, but it is silly to ascribe curative effects to such diversions, * * * “For four years have had an intense craving for (a sugared product 6f wheat), eating an aver- age of a package a day, dry, and “ 1 \ike it right after finishing a big meal, Doctors say it won't hurt me, but do not tell me how to overcome the hbit. I am 34, ane- mic, nervous, highstrung,... . (Mrs. E.W.M.) Answer: Are you overweight? Have you had urine and blood sugar tests? You should. Such abnormal craving for ecarbohy- ‘drate seems to disappear after the associated moderate vitamin shortage is corrected, in many instances. Send stamped envelope bearing your address, and ask for the FREE pamphlet Wheat to Eat. “Is it all right for me to continue daily Ca and D supplement during pregnancy? It has done me so much good’... (Mrs. T.D., R.N.)” Answer: Not only all right but extra. calcium and vitamin D is more essential for an expectant or nursing mother than for any one else, Send stamped, self-ad- dressed envelope for “pamphlet Calcium and Pregnancy; enclose 35c in addition if you want the booklet Preparing for Maternity. Signed letters. not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining ‘o personal health and hygiene, not -dis- ease, diagnosis. or treatment, will be answered by Dr William Bredy. if a stamped self-addressed envelope is sent to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan (Copyright 1958) Voice of the People 3S Py town, : For one thing, we can't afford candy of apples for the few we know in this subdivision or FY a8 g | Cancel Net ener cane EE ee SN ee St Pe this. Ex-Mental Patient to Be Dishonest?’ Judges who advocate beds not in use for the mounting list of mentally. ill patients is perpetuat- ing one of the greatest frauds in the history of medicine. There is no such hokum as mental illness. Eventually enlightened physi- cians must realize that mild and severe forms of mental aberra- tions invariably are organic in nature, caused by upsetting the delicate chemical balance of a man's physiology. The public’s immediate concern should be for the type of incarceration go- ing on today in the name of humanitarian care. * * * : As an ex-patient who served time behind the walls of name- less terror and recovered (nerv- ous breakdown) without the aid of “head boys,”’ I was shocked by the silent, maddening confine- ment of the human warehouses known as state hospitals. * * * Frankly, there is very little treatment. If one can sweat it out and maintain a sembiance of sanity until he is released by the impersonal system of a mental institution, chances of returning to normal! living are good. However, many unfortu- nates have been driven mad or- into a twilight existence by the very environment of these hos- pital prisons. Let’s spend money to keep people from entering the fantastic world of state asylums. x *« Legally, patients have been sent to prison for the crime of becoming ill. The judges and psy- chiatrists should spend one week locked in a ward to fully experi- ence the state-supported hell they so righteously, but ignorantly, want to preserve. No Name Yet for Fear of Consequences ‘Was ‘21’ Proved to Be Dishonest?’ The -TV program Twenty One seems to have left the air. Was it proved dishonest? I understand the listening aydi- ence almost evaporated. I thought it was wonderful and absolutely honest. *’ Curious ‘Oosterbaah Foes Just Poor Sports’ When Michigan tied Michigan State Bennie Oosterbaan was just wonderful. Then when Michigan was badly beaten by Ni yest- ern, Bennie was the victim of some poor losers. You would think col- done. Let’s hear from other mothers (and grandmothers, like me) about Grumpy Gram lege sportsmanship would lead the parade instead of looking as ba as this. : x *« «* The wolves haven't started shooting at the Lions’ coaching staff and their team looks a lot worse than Michigan and it’s a pre outfit. - f *~ * * College should teach gentleman- ly qualities along with the other things mae i. One Who Didn't Go ‘After His Actions, How Can He Talk?’ So much is being said and writ- ten these days about foreign poli- cies of the present administration by the cppectsion varty * I happen to remember the time during the Chinese Civil War when Truman sent Gen. George Marshall as special envoy to Citina to tell the president of that republic what to do or else and the Chinese presidegt didn’t agree te it so ‘s policy ordered su food and for the Na- * * * So we have the Red Chinese in control of the mainland of China and they are shooting their gee ets on the off-shore islands. wonder how Truman can stand up and criticize a man who has done so much to eliminate bloodsied in the nations of the world. Lather F. Wallace Disabied Veteran, W.W. I ‘Why No Pictures of MSU Members?’ I wonder jf the editors of our Press are graduates of U. of M. or just good fans. Twice in my rec- ollection pictures of U. of M. band boys from Pontiac have been featured in our paper. What has happened to the representatives of Pontiac attending MSU, or I won- der from all the attention they get, if there are any. L Certainly neither college is so superior to completely ignore the presence of Pontiac boys attend- ing them. How about some pic- tures of the MSU band boys from our fair city? Marityn Bell 186 Liberty St, (Editor’s Note: The Pontiac Press is happy to use pictures of band members from any of the colleges, However, those pictures are sent to us from the schools and we can use only those that are the most suitable for printing and which con- sist mostly of Pontiac boys. Un- fortunately, those we have received from Michigan State have been too small to reproduce well or contain pictures of too many boys from out- side this area.) Case Records of a Psychologist: What Was Reason for Crucifixion? Donald asks the most vital question I have ever answerd in this educational column, so be sure to scrapbook this case and discuss it at church to- morrow: Invention applies not just to gadgets like the elec- tric light and TV, but also to ideas, so Christ came to show us human beings an entirely new .concept of God. Calvar has never ben duplicatd in ANY other religion: By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE Z - 354: Donald G., aged 19, is a college sophomore Who - attended a convocation at Florida Southern College which | addressed earlier this year. _ “Dr. Crane,"’ he began after my talk, “I have -a fie question | wish ia you could answer for me. “Clergymen say Christ died to give us forgiveness for our sins. But \ couldn't God have DR. CRANE forgiven our sins without demand- ing that his Son be crucified? “When Jesus met the man who = was sick of the palsy, the Bible quotes Christ as saying: ‘Thy sins be forgiven thee. ~ ~“So Jesus didn’t demand that -- somebody die in order to win such forgiveness. = * * * “Surely God would be more char- itable than us human beings and we also fofgive each other without . = demanding the death penalty ev-. ery time.” WHY CHRIST DIED ~ Donald ig a smart young man and raises a widespread question that deserves to be answered, He is quite right, too, in-saying God could have said; “I forgive you erring human children,’ and we'd have been forgiven, with- out the need for Christ’s cruci- fixion, Then why did Jesus go to Cal- vary? To introduce an entirely new thought into religion! And it could NOT: have been done without Christ’s death! I'll abridge 10,000 yeays of his- tory by reminding you that all primitive tribes developed their own! local gods. These deities were ALWAYS looked upon as severe judges and absolute dictators who took an almost sadistic delight in striking down us human beings with lightning bolts if we de- viated one iota from their ritual. Thus, Thor and Woden, of the Scandinavians, were ready to in- cinerate people for any minor flaw. _ And the gods of the Persians. vand Hitidu, the Greeks and Ro- mans, the American Indians: and the African natives were likewise regarded as demafiding constant appeasement. ; a er 2 So people sacrificed rice and wine, or even human beings as ; to. allay the ill will of deity. Even the ancient Hebrews of- fered doves and lambs and bul- locks as sacrifices to win the favor of Jehovah from day to day. GOD’s DESPAIR _ '~ Apparently, God despaired that we would ever get over this false notion that he was a vindictive, cruel dictator. He had told us in the first book of the Bible that we were his children, made in his own likeness, and he expected us to Jook upon Him as a loving father. . y But nobody did so! As a final resort, therefore, he reversed the universal habit of having human beings sacrifice to win the favor of deities, for God sacrificed to win the favor of us erring human children. , x * That was unique in all world history! God sacrificed to -rnan! No other religion had EVER described its deity as sacrificing to us human followers, So it was a radically new concept in re- ligion! * * * And until Christ made this su- preme sacrifice, nobody ever thought of the idea nor would have believed it possible. So Christ’s death was primar- ily to prove a new point re- garding the extensiveness of God’s love for his human chil- dren, and not primarily to grant us forgiveness. For God could easily have said, “| forgive you,” just as Christ did to the man with the palsy, with- * out demanding a Calvary. Always write Dr. George W. Crane in care of The itiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan, é@fielosing a long 4¢ stamped, self-addressed envelope and 20¢ to cover He ®hd printing costs when you send of his psychological charts. and pame- phiets, (Copyright, 1958) ~ ay eae THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 25, 1958 MAKE OVER NINE -- Today's “Télévision Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed in this columm are subject to change without notion Channe) 2-WJBK-TV / Channel &-WW5-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 9 CALW Ee . i eae rs es ee TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 11:00 (7) Federa] Men, “The Case|1:30. (2) U.N. Dateline. ~ 7) Bowlin a ede” Untan bs Geese, How. 6:00 (7) Bowling. ) ater. : ‘ (9) ee Robert Young, "House i cl aa * ” ’ (2) Honeymooners. Rothschild.” ('34.) 1:45 (2) News. (4) News. 5 , 6:30 (7) Bowling (cont.) (Gy News: 2:00 (2) Movie. PA ieee 11:15 (4) Weather. DG nd a (2) Racket Squad. Gy) Witon: Fak -wenthes: 2:15 (4) Toy World Fair. ; : 11:20 (4) Movie. Joan Valerie,|s.o, ,. 6:45 (4) Patti Page. “Read Demond.” 2:30 (4) Pro Basketball. 7:00 Re 1 Becwnie sys Nightwatch Th. Cary 3:00 (7) Open Hearing. (9) Gilead Baptist. Grant, “Every Girl Should!s. 59 (2) 20th Century. (4) Political, Be Married.” (48) Tom Con; (7) Roller Derby. (2) H’way Patrol. Broderick Sey Falcon in Hollywood. (9) Movie. Crawford. > 4) * Wie ie 1:15 (4) Political. 11:30 (7) Shock Theater. Virginia B12 Kickolt Grey, “House of Horrors.” |4:15 (2) Press Box. 7:30 (7) Dick Clar« Show, (9) Theater (cont.y Frankie Avalon, Psy Holly (4) Movie (cont.) 4:30 (7) Bowling Stars. and Crickets, Gibson, , : (2) Football. Bobby pew (2) N’watch (cont.) (9) Damon Runyon. (4) People Are Funny. SUNDAY MORNING }:0@ (4) Omnibus. (2) Perry Mason. “Case of (7) Paul Winchell. the Sulky Gifl.” 7:55 (2) Meditations. \5:8@ (7) Lone Ranger. 8:00 (7) Jubilee, U.S. A. Jim 8:00 (2) Religion for Shut-Ins. | (9) Telescope. . Reeves, guest. (9) Hockey.. Boston at Mon-|g:3@ (2) Christophers. | treal. | SUNDAY’S TV HIGHLIGHTS (4) (color) Perry C9m0./g:55 (4) (color). News. Lena Horne, David Wayne. (9) Billboard. 6:00 (8) Movie “The Underworld (2) P. Mason (cont.) o | Story,”’ Dan Duryea. 9:00 (2) Court of Health. (7) Annie Oakley 8:30 (7) Jubilee (cont.) (4) Chureh at the Cross- (9) Popeye. (9) Hockey (cont.) roads. (4) Como (cont.) | ( Understanding (6:30 (7) White Hunter (2) Western. Our World. (9) Bugs Bunny | (9) Oraj Roberts. 9:00 (7),Lawrence Welk. Musical | ;=00 (2) Lassie variety. (9:30 (2) Detroit Pulpit. ! (7) You Asked for It. Visit (9) Hockey (cont.) - | (4) Big Picture. with Rhubarb, movie cat, Na- (4) Steve Canyon. Para- | (7) Christian Science | tional Historical Waxworks chutists face ordeal in wild (9) Film feature. 7 Caricaturist tries tolearn if mountain country. ! you look the way your voice (2) Gale Storm. Guest star) 9: 45 (4) kecent sounds, man ropes horse Jacques Bergerac takes al while standing on his head sea voyage. 110:00 (2) This Is the Life. in a bucket, mcn who build yee (4) U. of M. Hour skyscrapers. 9:30 (7) Welk (cont.) { (7) Faith for Today ' (9) Movie. “The Big Tip (9) Temple Baptist. \ (9) Sacred Heart Off." Constance Smith (4) Cimmarron City. Youth) \ Bruce Bennett. Richard seeks to avenge father’s'|10;15 (9) Modern Science Conte death in showdown gun bat-| tle with Matt j20:30 (2) Cartoon Frolics 7:30 (2) Bachelor Father eave an Travel.| (7) Western Manhunt (4) (color) Northwest Pas- Crooked sheriff puts Paladin (9) Christophers. sage on the spot i7) Maverick t) Ma _ 11:00 (2) Sagebrush Short; PBL Sta Ss LSS aa (4) (color) George Pierrot. 3:90 (2) Ed Sullivan Esther Wil- orchestra with musical va- (7) Johns Hopkins. liams, Janet Blair, Lisa Kirk riety. (9) Movie French comic, Johnny (3) News. ; Mathis, American comediar ca Cimarron (cont a ___ 1:30 (4) Cartoon Carnival Martin Brothers. jugglers (2) Gunsmoke. Dillon has (7) Wrestling. Lenny, the Lion. ventrilo much at stake in holdup quist. , * 10:10 (9) Weather '4) ‘color) Steve Allen. Pe SUNDAY AFTERNOON ter Ustinov, Dorothy Collins 10:15 (9) Nation's business Dave Brubeck, trombonist 12:00 (2) (color) Littie Lulu. Warren Cov ne singe: 19:30 (7) Target. When young lad (7) Bowling Laura Leslie, dance duo tries to escape environment,; - hoodlum follows to wreck 12:39 (2) Face the Nation 8:30 (7) Lawman his life. (4) Michigan Conservation. (9) Charlie Chan (9) Selene Filan ai 9:00 (2) GE Theater At Miss i4) Brains, Brawn. Flying (4+ tcolor) Dinah Shore pioneer Bert Balchen.'12:45 (4) Industry on Parade Maurice Chevalier Joan decathlon champ Bob Ma-! : Davis, Elsa Lanchester Ju- thias, explorer Sir Hubert 1:00 (2) Detroit Speaks lus LaRosa Wilkins, pole vaulter Bob (7) World Adventure Series (7) Colt 45 Richards (4) Crowded Out. (9) M ovie “Gentlemen (2) Sea Hunt (9) Movie Jim,” Erro Wane nn Today's Radio Programe WIR, (76% CKLW, (308) WW, (958) WCAR, (1130) WXYZ, (1270) WPRON, (1460) WIRK, (1490) TONIGHT WWJ Sunday Mosie WWJ, News, Meet the Pre CKLW. News, David | CKLW, Christian witness WY Paul tiarvey | WJBK. News. Tom George | Heeece tem nese | eports WJBK. Viewpoint CKLW News Album om (Geores WXYZ News, Weber | WPON Armenian Gos Hr. | WPON Bod Wesley 9:00-WJR, News, Page CKLW Musica! Airs . = WWJ News, F. Elizapeth WJBK. Don McLeod 16:00—WJK. Wews, Hymns 1:00—WJR, Indictment WXYZ Breakfast Club WCAR. News, Page WWJ, Radio Pulpit WXYZ News, sdanpower CKLW News Toby Darid WPON World News WXYZ News. Sun Best WWJ Mews Mon‘tor WJBK. News George aq caLw Radie Bible Gane Sen Ma Healing WPON News Bob Lark ; ~ News, Episcopal : ews. an WCAR News Mart 6:30- WJR. 3 Sons WPON Christopher WCAR News Thomas seme etsy e WWJ, Monitor \ Sports Parade j Word of Life j WPON, Handy’s Houseparty/ WJBK McLeod | 7:00—WJR, Guest House WJBK Jack, Bellboy WCAR. News Logan | 7:40-WJR. lown Meeting | CKLW. See of State WWJ, 3 Star Extra 8:00 _WJR. Amos, Andy | CKLW, Album Time | WCAR. News | $:30—WJR, Answer Please CKLW, Quiet Sanctuary 9:00—WJR, World Tonight CKLW. Bible 9:30—WJR, Opera WW4J, Old Oprey 10:00—WWJ. Dick French WXYZ, Surrell WJR, Album Time 11:00—WJR, News WW4, Bandstand WJ BK, News CKLW, News, Enovles WCAR, News WPON News. Sports il: 30—WPON. House Party News, WXYZ. Melodies SUNDAY MORNING 6:°0—WJR, Farm Review WJBK. Blessings 6:30—-WJR Laymen Hour WJBK, Another hance 1:00— WIR eros Hymns Ww ‘drm News WJBK. Crucified Hour WCAR News, Woodling WPON Sunday Serenade 7:30-WJR, tarm Forum WW, Mariner's Church abernacie) WJBK, Protestant Hour WPON Meranian Gour $:00— WJK, Mise Service WW, New usic WY CKLW Your Worship our WIRK Avmne Light 8:30— WWJ, News, Muste WXYZ Win od WPoON @ Iohn'e Lutheran om own News, dart’ WWJ, Crossroads Chureh WY Religious News CKLW Gethesdsa Temple WJBK News Music WAR ews Patrick WV? Votre ot Prophecy 9:30 Wd, Album; Méligion “Tut ‘yt 10:30—W.oK Unepe: Hour WWJ News, S¢outs CKLW Votre of Prophecy WJBK. Town Hall WPON fmmanus! Baptist m Wih show’ Biggs WW, St. Paul's Cathedra) WXYZ News, Suriday Rest | CKLW Portiac Raptist WJIBK News. dia WPON Central Methodist 38 WIM Lanernacie WWJ, Riva) World WJBK. Fdtn for Blind ew Soomnenenl SUNDAY AFTERNOUN '2:00—WJR, News. Quest WJBK. News, Lenhardt WPON News. Bob Wesley WCAR News Woodling &: waeaue Suppisment ZYZ, News. ens Best ORL Newe Album 1:0@—WJIR News, Longines CKLW frank and Ernest WPON Cranbrook Air WJIBK. News. Football t:30—WJR, Football CKLW. Lutheran Hr. WCAR, Music WPON Rob Wesley 2:00—WJIR. Longines WRYZ News Sun. Best CKLW flder Morton WWJ, News. Deland WJBK, Football 2:30 CK' W Bible Inst 3:00—WJR, Kostelantz WWJ, Monitor WAX Orai Roberts repped Light. Life oer CAR Newe f.ngan 3:30—WJR, Perey Faith WCAR, News, Logan WRY2 Hour of Decision 4:00—WJIR, Football CKItW Newe Croaby 4:30—WJR, Football WXYZ Hadic Bible Clases CKLW. Sports, Album WCAR Newa Cogan WIBK Sunday Sounds ore no Dr. Pierce Newa Album 5:30—-WXYZ, Truth Herald CKLW, News, Album WCAR News. lores — SUNDAY EVENING 6:00—WXYZ, Drew Pearson ue @ Goa an WPON pide Religion WIRK News Sounds 4:30—-W JR, Football WPON Episcopal) Service 7:30—WWJ, News Monitor WXY4 Sunday B CKLW. Radio Bib WPON Pontiac Notes R:OR—WJR, J. Dollar | WWJ, News. Mon'tor | WXYZ. CKLW WJBK nCAR WPON College Choir News, Album News.* Stereo News. Thomas ~ | Another Show 8:30—-\\JR, Road Show: FBI | _ CKLW, The Quiet H WAY? Pilgrimage Lit: 9:00- WJR. News, Music CKLW Grosse Le Baptist WXYZ UO ot “WCAR, New WPON Ciberts Baptist ¥:30—WWJ ee eeas Hour, CKLW Bible Stud WXYZ. Pgrimanee WPON WNete lo.00 WJR, Symphony CKLW Billy Graham WXY% Christian in Action WWJ, News, Guest Star WINK Newe Misic 10:30—wws ternal cight WIBK, Viewpoint WXYZ Revival ‘CKILLW Rack te God 11:08 WJIR News, Sports WWJ. News Monitor WXKY2 News Israel CKLW News. Religion WIRK Newe Coneert Gall 11:30—WJIR. News. Spmphony WXYZ [t's Your Business CKLW, Mt Zion Chureb WIRK Adolescents ee MONDAY MORNING 6:08—wJK, News, Ag’cit WWJ News, Roberts WRYZ Fred Wolf W Rooster Club WIBK. News [om George WCAR News, Shertdan WPON Bob Wesley 6:30_WJR Music Ball CKLW Nunn, David WJBK farm Reprt. George WPON Early Rird Spts {:00— wan. Dan Kirby WWJ, News Robert WPON faa tart 7:30— WJ, Music Hal} Baye News, Wolf David K, News, fom George WCAR News. Sheridan 00 WJR News, Guest ts WJIBK. News Tom George WPON News Bob Lark 8:30—- WIR, Musto Ball é 9:30—WJH, Jack Harris CKLW News Myrtle Lanbitr’ 1¢:00—WJK. Arthur Godfrey WWJ, News, Monitor wxy2, Curtain Calls CKLW News Mary Morgan WJBK. News Clark Reid WCAR, News WPON Chuck Lewis 10:30—CKL W News Davies a or Wil OWhtisnertng Sts WWJ. News. French WRY4 Curtatn Calls CKLW News Davies WIBK. Reid WPON Lewis VJR Time For Vuste CKLW News Davies tine MONDAY AFTEKNOON 12:00—- WJR. News WWJ, News. Maxwell CKLW Grant. Livestock WXYZ M Shorr WJBK, Stereo WCAR News. Purse WPON News. Lewis 12:30-—WJR, I'tme for Muate CKLW. News, Davies WXY7 News. Shorr 1:00—WJR. Peter Lind Hayes. WW) News. Maxwell CKLW News. O'Conrtive WPON Bob Lark WJBK Reid 1:30—WJR Ur Malone WXYZ News Shorr 2:06- WIR, Rt to Happiness | WWJ, News, Stortes CKLW Austin Grant Davies WIBK News Ret 2:80-W'H Coupe Nett Door) WWJ, t Man's Family CKLW News 6hift WHY? Newe dreak Shorr $:00—WJIK Aelen [rent WWJ, News, Matinee WJIBK. News Me WXYZ McKenste i2 CKLW Shift Break, Davies! WCAR News Rennett WPON Jim Ameche 8:30 WJR, House Party WW, Woman in House WXY2 News McKenzie CKLW WNewa €& Chase WIBK Newer Moleod 4:— WJR. Muste Ball “ww. News, Deland WXY2 Wattrick. McKenzie ‘CKLW News. Godfrey WCAR Wews Bennett. WJB eLeod WPON Don MacKinnon 4:90— WIR, Muste fal WWJ, Jim Deland WXY2, News, McKenzie CKILW WNewa Chase 6:09. WJR News. Muste News, Deland ww 8, wate Wattrick, MeKenste, Sports, C hase we CAR Wews Tenn Ernie WIBK. McLeod 6:39 CKLW News, B. Chase WXYZ, News, McKensis The ical baiget tor the Uisted States Inorg Agency is roughly. $100 For just one Wren their propaganda efforts — the instruction -and duction of 325,000 expert Coto. munist propogandists each year— the Soviet Union and Red China spend an estimated $3% billion annually. Their training Communist day and again on Nov. 2 on the CBS Television Network, chan- nel 2. The job of mass persuasion and distortion of fact requires profes- sionals indoctrinated in the classics of Communism, the report stresses. is entrusted to Viewers of “The Tweatieth |thousands of special propaganda’ broadcasts of the Voice of Century” will witness the (schools situated in almost every America than the United methods and the efforts of Seviet city and village in the Soviet Union. States spends to operate it. propaganda first-hand when the | Under the administrative wing of) What’s more, Russia has de- award - winning “Agitprop,” a subdivision of the vised thirteen different jam- Central Committee of the Soviet ‘Reds Spending $3.5 Billion on ‘ this Sun- (duplicated in Red China) wenduce | 325,000 trained propagandists every} year. The cost: an estimated $34 billion. But this is only one aspect of Communist propaganda. * * * Other startling statistics un-. covered on “The Red Sell” in-) clude: 1. Russia spends more to jam ming methods. its special, two-part report en ‘Communist Party, these schools} 2. The Seviet Union alene pub- 9:30 (2) Alfred Hitchcock. ‘‘The (4) From These Roots. . . Crooked Road,” Richard) (7) Who Do You Trust? Widow Has Choice | | owe oe | (9) Hour of Stars. | (7) Crash. “The Listener,” | Ida Lapino. C 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. of Welfare Or Car | (4) Queen for a Day. 10:00 (2) $64,000 Question. (7) American Bundstand. | OLEAN, N.Y. (AP)—A widowed | (4) Loretta Young. (9) Big Rascals. leather of seven must decide! | (7) Ice Hockey. ‘whether to keep a foreign car she oe _ 4:15 (2) Secret Storn.. won in a drawing or give up wel- (10:30 (2) What's My Line? fare assistance for her family. (4) Arthur Murray. (7) News. 11:00 (2) News (4) Meet the Press. Mrs. 5:00 Eleanor Roosevelt, inter-| view | (7) Movie. “Out of the Blue,” | Carole Landis, George Brent, ' & 15 Virginia Mayo. (9) News, Weather. |s:30 /11:15 (9) Movie. “The Night of the | Hunter,’ Robert ee Cal. Shelley Winters, Lillian Gish. | (4) County Fair. (9) (2) Susie (4) Toy World F. (9) Looney Tunes. (4) Patti Page Sherwood Forest. A drive is under way among the populace to let her keep both. [Sore than 500 names have. been |put on a petition posted in a store. | Mrs. Frank Marshall, 38,: said air lishes 30,000,000 books a year in dozens of languages, expen- sively produced and cheaply sold, extolling Communism and attacking the West. | 3. Last year’s Moscow Youth Fes- | tival beasted 34,000 partici- | pants from 131 countries. the entire annual budget for the U.S.LA. . Communist presses are. busily producing books of nursery rhymes in many Indian lan- guages picturing the United States as an evil wolf. - Communist’ China broadcasts — 241 hours a week in 16 lan- guages and dialects — 66 hours and three languages more than the Veice of Ameri- ca from Okinawa and Manila. 6. Last year Red China produced more than a billion and a half books, 600 periodicals and 57 daily newspapers. a Viewers of ‘operate in Part I, * gets.” fouthpieces’ It | cost $100 million, more than | “The Red Sell” will, |see how these propaganda outlets | ‘The Propaganda. Mill.’ Their effects will be shown | in Part II, ‘‘Report From the Tar- “The Twentieth Century’”’ is pro- duced for the Public Affairs De- partment of CBS News by Burton |Benjamin. Isaac Kleinerman is |Associate Producer. The narrator \is CBS News Correspondent Wal. iter Cronkite. The series is sponsored by the Prudential Insurance Company of America. | GOOD LOOKING! RCA COLOR TY Sales and Service jtoday she wants to keep the Car, a {German single-seater, and is try-| ling to find a job to help sup : >a: (2) Detroit. Bandstand. oe wren. They are 4 to 17) (4), (color) George Perrot)” , 5 P wal Welfare Department sticiat| (7° Mickey Mouse Club. SWEET’S RADIO-TV Open Mon. G F: 422 W. Huron Night FE 4.1133 GOOD HEARING! Others have tried — now ‘Sonotone has hidden its latest transistor hearing aid in light, gracetul eyeglasses. Worn as one unit — nothing said they would give her reason-| jable time to decide ~ Under state Jaw, she must con- 11:20 (2) Sports vert the car to cash and turn the} U. N. Day Concert j|money over to the department if| 11:25 (2) Movie. “Vivacious I she continues on relief : i | Ce ieee. cious Features Casals | es on reli | James Stewart, Charles Co-) The Welfare Department pays’! burn on Sunday TV |Mrs, Marshall $140 a month in the 30 141) Movie. “Blockade,” . . jwinter and $100 in symmer, She Madelaine Carroll, Henry wnt” ae the eRe al also receives $166.20 a month for, Fonda. Leo Carillo sary of the founding of the inter-|S0Cial security as a widow with national body and f ‘aluring world-| |minor children ae y blo Casais, will — Mo! NING renowned cellist P ) INS los , ibe gn over CBS tomorrow | Joan Fontaine Held 6:30 (4) Continental Classroom. [2¢ 1! am to 12 2 pm : (4) Con a assrnom. : ne ee conce rt actual y took|e 50 a ‘ace in the General assembiy 1M’ Contempt of Court — He 7 of the United Nations on Fn- ~, —. dz Z - Vider = a . 6:85 (2) On The Farm Front, yan a ork for presenta, SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)— , tise as a %minute special pro- Actress Joan Fontaine has been t:0¢ (2) TV College eran thiseSundas held in contempt of court for not (4) Today aa es consulting her ex-husband about (7) Big Show a . . * their 9year-old daughter's school- The concert will open with @ ing 7:30 (2) Cartoon Frolics iying of Honegger’s Fifth Sym- * * * (7) Breakfast Time sak ny, Charlies Munch Segharel But the judge indicated Friday ms will be sagen ON set 1e m igt ht clear her of the charge | 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo ~ Day message by cre if she and television producer| tary- veneral Dag Hammerskjold. Wijjjim Dazier can work out dif! 8:30 (7) Our Friend Harn Theale asals and } oS ferences over care of their daugh-| wski ia play Bach's mata ter Debra 8:45 (2) Cartoon Classroom MURS 2 D Major for Cello Dozier contended Miss Fontaine . and Piano had deprived him of visiting rights! 9:00 (4) I Married Juan * * * by taking the child out of a pri- The 90-minute concert will be vate school in Los Angeles and $:25 (2) Mews presented as a special program in enrolling her in a public school the CBS Television Network's ay Lake Arrowhead 9:3. (2) Jimmy Dean U.N. In Action” series A * * (4) Romper Room \liss Fontaine now married to ‘ film producer Collier H Young, 9:35 (9) Billboard C g q t t V t testified the move Was necessary : on re d lon 0 0 e hecause she and the girl are suf- 10:00 (2) For Love or Money fering from infectious mononu- (4) Dough Re Mi—Quiz on Rochester Church cleosis, a blood disease (9: Movie —— ——— — ROCHESTER—Members of the State to See Sputnik 10:15 Lady of Charm ngregation of St. Paul's Method- - t Church will meet tomorrow at CAMBRIDGE. Mass. 1®—The or- 10:30 (2) Play Your Hunch 10 am. to vote on the final ap- biting rocket of “Russia’s Sputnik (4) Treasure Hunt proval of a bid of $292.301 by III will be visible over Michigan Frank Rewold & Son & Roches- Sunday and Monday nights. The 16:35 (7) News the first unit of th e Master Smithsonian Astrophysical Observ- ; Plan for the new church atory says the rocket should be 1, Ww (2) Arthur Godlrey The bid has already been ac- Visible Sunday between 6:49 p.m. o) Erce by Rigne cepted by the executive building and 6:54 p.m. on Monday the rock- peas a ook . committee of the chureh. Nine bids et cartier will pass in view be- 11:15 (9) Nursery Schooltime were submitted and Rewold’s was tween 6:14 pm. and 6 19 pm Ar the lowest and specified that the - _ 11:30 (2) Top Dolla. twocievel brick. stone and Gathes. Dog food sales in the US. have (4) Concentration dral glass building with a large incre ased by more than three times Sj eee te : chapel and religious education hall “)thin the past Ut years: a he) SOW y ind offices would be completed in — July at 632 R S | MONDAY AFTERNOON Uy sanGre Romeo st GREAT FILM SERIES . : LON CHANEY in the 12:00 (2) Love of Life. 2 Oil Barges Burn “Ph " j . antom of the Opera (4) Tie Tae Dough z : : 19°5—Orieinal Version | (9) Follow Me ALBANY, Ill. (® — Two big : “Aico a barges containing nearly 1!) mil- - 12:15 (9) Uncle Chichimus lion gallons of fuel oil burst into | ,, JOHN BARRYMORE OS ae flame near a Mississippi River Dr. Jekvil and Mr. Hyde’ 12:30 (2) Search for Toimmorrow terminal last night and burned | ‘19*7RORT, LEWIN STEVENSON (4) (color) [f Could Be You menacingly nearly five hours be- (1) Mother’s Day | fore being extinguished. Clawson Playhouse (9) Mary Morgan | ; JU 8-3977 | Dwight D. Eisenhower, in 1956, WU Go Mi. = of Wimare Ave. 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. “eceiv “4 reo: Barking = Smee: . hereto eas Popular vote Only Michigan Engagement — ‘1:00 (2) Ladies Day. - : ———————————_——_— (4) Amos 'n’ And ’ (7) Liberace. ae MICHIGAN HEATING, Inc 1:30, (2) As The World Turns. : 5 bd iD (4) Margie | ETV Digest 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. 2:00 (2) Our Miss Brooks (7) Chance for Romance (4) (color) Truth or Cuonse- quences. 2:30 (2) House Party (4) (color) Haggis Baggis. (7) People’s Choice (9) News. (2) Big Payoft. (4) Today Is Ours. : (7) Beat the Clock. (9) Film Fare. (2) Verdict Is Yours. Answer to Previous Puzzle IPLAC IE LAIGIAIRG | : Pie AlID i Nel sis} Fite Cae ee ae esi | Peal yb 7 ios Tie MiP Ea i=l PINT ak. [Ol Alli iC aM | lA! WIE SDL. {a CCAR f ha ch a, FEATURING: IN GAS: cy IN OIL: 40 Th Winkler. With ces Savings in Fuel. Gas Conversions Installed Starting MICHIGAN HEATING, Inc. FE 8-6621 Complete Line of Furnaces - The marvelous Burdett Burner. Boilers — Conversions % More Heat From Gas. e Famous Stewart-Warner Perfect Combustion at $189.50 88 Newberry St. FE 8-6651 FE 2-2254 LITTLE AD BIG DEAL Since’45 Free Estimates FE 2-2671 @ GARAGES @ PORCHES @ ALUM @ STONE His Inc. Complete'® $ _ MODERNIZATION | RoW Ko} oN RoYo im =I) or Too Smal! Call BIG BEAR FE 8-6553 FREE ESTIMATES ee else to wear. Choice of smart styles for both men and women. Look your best while hearing your best. COME IN, PHQNE OR WRITE FREE DEMONSTRATION SONOTONE OF PONTIAC 511 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. Phone FEderal 2-1225 Call for FREE Home Demonstration. Just Arrived 1959 TV's * ADMIRAL * GENERAL ELECTRIC * RCA VICTOR Yod are invited to attend SENATOR POTTER'S BIRTHDAY PARTY SUNDAY, 3:30 PM From Detroit's Veteran's Memorial Telecast on Channels 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 13, 57 * EMERSON | * PHILCO | * MOTOROLA | Note: Bargains in 1958 TV's While They Last! HAMPTON’S ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525 Contest 825 W.-Huron St. GET A PARAKEET FREE WITH ANY MAJOR APPLIANCE PURCHASE! Enter Parakeet Speaking Contest! Teach It to Say: “Hampton's have bargains in Home ! Appliances. and just as Reliable” Near the New Post Office Ends December 23, 1958 Portable Television—Grand Prize HAMPTON ELECTRIC Open Nightly ‘til 9 P.M. FE 4-2525 Macaroni is belleved C& ¥ SALES & SERVICE 158 Oakland, FE ¢-1515 CONDON'S RADIO & TV SHOP 86 6 Telegraph, FE 4-0126 AUBURN RADIO & TV 30 Auburn, FE 4-1655 DALBY RANIO & TV omer ice 348 Lehigh, FE 4-986 HAMPTON ELECTRIC co. R2\ W. Haron, FE 4- HOD'S RADIO & TV 770 Orchard Lake Ave., JOHNSON’'S RADIO & TV 49 E. Walton, FE 4-7601 NEIGHBOR'S TV 1095 Joslyn, FE 8-2383 RICH TV 1969 Opdyke, FE 4-022! ALiLe77 lr Sal DAKLAND COUNTY = FE 4-584! y, Ss (oe TS AS lechonics Gi lisocca a Ort to have been intro- duced into Italy by early Greek olon- ‘ Ist s The Chinese t ti were acquain ice mith | x the dish pre- s oe oe * Tralian tim ie l FOL FUCK. | when you call an Oakland County Electronics Association TV service dealer you can be assured of top quality electronic service, backed by the OCEA guarantee of satisfaction. Members of OCEA are accepted only after having passed rigid inves! ga- tions concerning their ability, mtegrity, amd service facilitres BE ASSURED CALL OCEA TY service dealers fer top quality Service PONTIAC PONTIAC 36 Associated Members Cak laud G ounly ORIGINATE INITALY | OBFL RADIO & TY 1930 Elizabeth Lake Rd & 1515 Union Lake Rd. STEEANSKI ogg 4@ T\ 1157 W, Hur ine WKE 186 WUPR ick beet N. Perry, FE A “pes RADIO & ar FETSNEE 4799 W. Haron, FE 4-113 WALTON Sis Jesiyn, FE CLARKSTON LAATSCH'S TY SERY ae 8734 Dixie, MA 5-58 DRAYTON PLAINS PHELPS TV Bl 1217 FE 1-486) EM 4-AA11 RADIO & TY Fe di PP) 4348 Ditie Hwy... LATIMER’S RADIO 3530 Sashabaw Rd., ROCHE DOBAT TV & RADIO SERVICE 104 W. Sth St., OL 2-472? in Oakland County