The'Weather ® j- Westiw linn rtrtjm J, .IwreeNt HmMmttu. ■ K »*to*v»Nk» * PONTIAC PRESS New Year's Edition Hnh YRAn t i * + ♦ PONTIAC, MICHIGAK,^ FRll)AYr^ANCARY 1, PAGES BabsOn Predicts iJm. ■ i , ~r~ ./■ ,,;J'| . W a ■ .■ '~1 la Successful I960 for Pontiac Area By ROGER W. BABSON Business in‘Pontiac began moving upward after the recession-trdubled early months of 19!$, and conditions have been improving, for the most part, ever since. While the steel strike caused Sialocations toward the latter part of the year just ended, business psychology on the whole was definitely healthier. Looking ahead iato 1960, 1 -predict a much better twelvemonth for your city, with general activity probably surpassing that of 1959 by some 6%. This wiH mean, actually, one of the best years on record. Naturally, I base my prediction to a considerable extent upon prospects for the automotive industry, which has such a strong hold upon your total business fabric. Expansion is assured during-the^ new year for such branches of the industry as automobiles, buses, automobile bodies, parts, and accessories. " SEES LIVELY TRUCK YEAR Broadcasting Faces Stern Measures in I960 Need New Laws, More Enforcement of Those Now on the Books While I also anticipate a lively year for truck output, I do not thlnfcihat It will surpass the volume reached in 1959. Some of your otter load enterprises should also do better in the new year than In 1959: Dairy products, iron, electric power,-machinery. public construction! and roadbuilding, / Still ether items Should just about match 1959 high: Rubber preducts, trailers, paint, varnish, tecguer, commercial building, and industrial construction. Your retail sales should..outdo 1959 levels, particularly grocery outlets and department stores. Even luxury goods will move much more easily. Wage rates will edge higher and em- WASHINGTON UD — The new year prospect for the much - investigated broadcasting industry today was a dose of federal law against such thingg as payola arid quix riggihg. A sterner enforcement of presfent laws and regulations: appeased an even UtVTW lliuvtl tUUIC EMU/, WW MC IBWS Will CUJJC lilgtlCl MIU CHI" . . ' , . . « ployment should revaal marked improvement as the year moves jmore *m medl*te prob* along. This will, of course, brighten consumer buying psychbl- ih^ility. ogy considerably. • • . * * ★ Living costs in Pontiac will feel some upward pressure, but A day sftcr President Eisenhow-not enough to dany the rrerage more'than, say, 1* or 2 % j £ ^ above the par for 1959. 1960 should be a much better business; year/' " - ★ ★ - Looking at the rest of the werld, naturally, as I am lust back from Moscow »nd Berlin, my first thoughts are what will happen to Berlin ip 19(4. My answer is definitely, “nothing will happen.” Mr. K will make no more altint a tarns; President Eisenhower Will continue his peace taJRS. Therefore the Berlin situation will be fust the same in 1919 and llglaeit Is today. \ There wiy bqBI World War started between Russia and tate Road Death Toll Tops Nation he had. asked from Atty. Gen: WU-■ liam P. Rogers, most discussion was not about--whether laws [against" fakery are needed, but] how sweeping they should be. js I In general, Rogers recent-| mended some additional law hut I principally more vigorous enforcement by the Federal Cam-- muaieattoa* and Federal Trade Several congressmen whp have «. «*•* i*. tin*.-His not come within 10 years; but now neither country Is ready‘pvef they are now (0 for it I am oonvlnced of this after my recant visit to -Moscow. jweji ’ beyond Rogers’ recommen-AIRPLANE WARFARE DEPARTING v- .datkms for changes in the com- ... . __ _ . •.'? ^ . . v imunications and criminal laws. ] Airplane warfare with the dropping of bombs Isa thing * w w 4 of the past We are turning to rottetry with pinpoint precision. | jfon is hot now," said Rep.1 Our expensive air bases may grad sally be. vacated, William L. Springer ’ (R4B). “II Moscow is My. K's “pride and joy.’VIt Is a beautiful city i hope we get promptly into suchl with; broad streets and thousands of new apartment houses, things as better programming and Mr. K does not want it destroyed. Furthermore, he wants a |control of objectionable advertte-L reduction in armaments so that he will have money to raise *"«•” j - J the standard of living In Russia. I-forecast he-witt hajre to this in order to hold his power. m , First New Year We first feared k "shooting war"; now we are in a "coldl^Qj^y /?6pOrf©cf ■war”; but we wUl aoon be in an “educational war.’’ In I960 the f tn United States will expend far greater effort on education. Qt 12:02 Here Along with the effort to Improve education during 1960, I forecast that our teachers will be given a minimum salary of I The first pdby of the new year 95,000 and that schools Of AH states will receive federal aid. ' arrive at either of Pontiac' [three major hospitals was'a seven ( pound' eleven ounce girl bom to I Mrs. Laura Waspingtotr of 425 j Branch St. T JV _ I forecast that instead of spending so mach money on new school buikUaga, municipalities will givs more attention to discipline, promotions, and sifting, and to the teaching of mathematics, physics, and chemistry in both grammar and high schools. ' ^7,1 _ . .[ V li;.: ■ \ J __■ ^ " Little Mias Washington arrived I forecast that some of those who have gone Into business th^ .V .wnh will seek teaming jobs, which wiil be a major fores in poat-poning World War HI. School teaching will be a part pfour FT? national defense. “^utes past midnight. \ • > I The girls father, Lawrence SEE8 RED CHINA FRIENDSHIP Washington, is an oixterly at the \ . The Russians are7afraid of .China, which I hope to visit again in I960. Hence, I forecast, that more friendly relations win derelop between CMna and the UnH*«H3$ates during 1960. \ Space travel jib the moon is largely" for propaganda- purposes and to taka our minds off the military phase of rocketry, submarines, and breaking the earth's crust* Only the fear of-retaliation wifi prevent the Russians from starting js world war. \ Hb S - hospital. They haven't named their daughter as yet. Pontiac GeiferaTrepSfted its find - baby at 6:65,'a boy born to Mrs, Dawn Downs, of 'Grand Haven, f Her son weighed in at 4 pounds, i|9 ounces. • x • Pontiac; Osteopathic Hospifiji had •\ a. • \ ■ :no births up to 9 a.m. taddyC POLITICAL OUTLOOK I The Washingtaj/girinosed oi^t I wilj\now forecast who the Republican candidates in 1960 Deborah ApiK'^eweU who was will be—Nixon and Rockefeller. The Democratic candidates JeweU- of cannot now\be forecast. Sepator Kennedy thinks he has the]^^.^1 Blwm-, nomination ^wed up"; but Johnson And Symington, and^nljl^LJSySftt ^ Stevenson, have large followings. w * \ ; JSwjfc . •, r All babies of parents who .live 1 forecast that relations with Ruasia^WUi become farmore in Oakland County north of 14-Mile important than tHe question of toHation. Iroad are eligible ta.be entered ia The Republican slogan in 1966 will be, “It is always cont^sp^ored1 i^thTpdnSc ______ jPw^lnued on Page 2, Cal. 5) | Area Chamber of Commerce, Death Strikes at lily, Troy, Springfiekf Twp. The nation’s number one killer took five lives in Oakland County within the past 24 hours. It made I1&9 New Year’s eve traffic fatality record the worst ini ‘raanit years. ' ; I T Many were injured in smashups on county road^ A Davisburg high school student was uW^m-stantly cldse to 9 pm. yesterday when hiadirfstruck a tree near Holly, while at approxim^ei^Tthe same time a -Royal Oak disc jockey die^-m a tmo-car collision in Troy. . a a- k Close to 4 a.m. today, three persons lost j^hefr lives and two others were seriously injujwdm a head-on collisjunfin Springfield TowpM^p. * yK Morth Branch man also was killed when hkilcar crashed into a light pole in North Branch. Dead are: l * THREE MILLED, TWO INJUREO-A Qarks-ton teenager and a Flint couple - were killed early this morning when their oar* (above and below) collided head-on on Dixie Highway near Fnlbi Rattalee Lake Road in Springfield Seriously injured was the son of hisflancee. Donald E. Brendel, 17, of MU Brendel Rd., Davisburg. Carl F. Ktenihorn, M; of MS B. Maple Rd.. Royal Oak. LHht H. McMtnn, SI of tSTS MIN, FSnt. Mildred MeMinn, 49, his wife. Floyd R. Aulgur, It, of M17 Snow Apple Dr., (larkatoo. (arllon Morris, «, of North Branch. ' !*>>«■ Warn Ranchers, Travelers West in Grip Ry The Associated Preoa Thirteen persons died in Michigan highway accidents in the Oral 12 hours of the atate’a long New Ydaria weekend celebration, six of them in the Pontiac area. Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies said Brendel was going south on Milford Road when be failed to negotiate a sharp curve and crashed into a tree three miles south of Holly. The son of Mr* and Mrs. Foster Brendel,—the teen-ager was pew-pounced draft at 7:55 p.m. yesterday by deputy jeoruner Df’/.C: Er Lockwood. Junior J. Kadrozaek, 28, of 169 Hart St., TTOy, has been arrested for Investigation of thanslaught of Stenzhom, dead c 8:10 p.m- yerterday aU William Beaumont Hospital. Troy police ujcKmere were no witnesses head-on collision on Rochester Road just south of E. M«f>le Road in Troy. Investi-jtefmg officers said Kadrozaek told them”he had been drinking-and broke down when he learned StertZ-hom was ldlljed. Michigan's drath list ef 13 gave / it by for the worst traffic record/ of any afote in the nation in tha/ wiy hours of the. long weekend/ Ohio with six fatalities was The nation's motorists appeared to have started ’ the New Year weekend at a safer pdee than Hi the first bear* ef last week's Christmas Hobday. Travel was lighter «n Nam Year's Eve Ud in die early hour* °f I960 than for the comparable period at Christman* Early reports showed traffic deaths JUnSag • about 56 peri cent foyer at 29. I X!10 Nationlp'Safety.'Council, in.. a preholiday statement, estimated 326 persons may lose their lives oMhe highways during the New Ye* holiday. ‘ 1 In a quadruple fatal at Kal- Joseph Mitchell, U; Jam— E Willie May Mi. 16, and Mary Spsneo, is, all of Kal- Weekend Forecast: Light Snow, Sleet Blizzard Charles McMlan, »0, of 2816 Hill, FUat, and hia ftanM, Viola Jane Bushong, 20, of W Washington, Freeland, Ivors of the head-on eol- Other fatala included: Kenneth J. Blanchard, 35 of Kalamazoo whs killed when hfci pickup truck Skidded off the rand and into a ftffch in Kalamazoo Township. Blaiiliehknt ww tossed from toe truck and whs dragged ■long for s couple of hundred feet. . .■ EVe greeted P^n- DENVER, Colo. Uh —/feflmrds.arrive at EJko, Nev., on a flight Springfield TawntVlp which whipped the West widf Arctic fury I from Rock Springs, Wyo. 1 ‘ - - -- --- New Year' tiac area folk with more tolerable weather conditions than 1959’s icy introduction. Although the mercury failed to today - as the^dw year dawned ■bleak and^tmi across a dozen! states^Afieast seven persons died . ure mercury irereo w states^ least seven persons diedfJ^*^ ^-i*uuu climb above the freezing line, main assault of the^sivefc^*/ highways in the area were refo*Iorm front persons died in Texas. A plane i:r^T - ~ ' 'crashed in rainy weather near Lamcsa. Tex., taking the Jives of lively free of hazardous for or j jfgsh snow, and forecast^Ofmostiy Issued. Increasing Hodftfnes^ with occasional light snow possibly mixed wiUk-rtfin or sleet is the pujjpok ^ fotTRaturday. Temperatures will climb a Uttle higher, ranging from 32 to 38 degrees. The low tonight will be 20: - In downtown Pontiac the lowest temperature recorded preceding 8 was 24. At 1 p.m. the downtown temperature read 29. They are in serious condition fn Pontiac General Hospital. State-Police of the Pontiac prat skid MeMinn was traveling north on U S. 10 just south of Rattalee Lake Road when Auigur’s car qame Clouds heavy with* snoW spUiedjMayor McNeill, 58, Of Spur,------------,v„, Tr^.„ )I... . ^ down from Canada and epstiwpdlTex., and ITerberTHeimer, also of across the tyighVmy and met his along the aouthem end WTfo|S|rar. 1 auto head-on (n tof fourth lane. Rockies in a giant pincers. - 1 TwdT feet of fresh snow buried the southern Colorado Rockies and closed several mountain along the Colorado-New Mexico border. Durango, Ctdo., had 16 indiks of , snow on the ground. Banks Open Saturday Ooued during New Year’s Day, Pontiac-banks will reoped Saturday at their regular hours. The Press said yesterday they would reopen Monday. Stockmen and travelers Were warned ef bUssard conditions today fo parts of New Mexico, the Dakotas, jll’estera Kansas and Nebraska and Oklahoma. Heavy snow warnings were Issued for Utah, Colorado, Wyoming and North Texas. ’ Two civilian pitots and their light pjflnes, vanished in the cold gloom; SLOUGH, Etigiana' d'PTT—AI-Thuraday. A Denver engineer, ban Bilbey was fined $2.52, yes-Warren Racine, 33, disappeared! terday for failing to keep his dog after advising the Chadroo, Neb.,. under control, The, dog had airport he was about to mpke an I leaned out of a truck window emergency landing. A Mr. Adder- aifd bitten a passerby on the son of SumtyvMe, Cahf., foiled to! arm. Hate to Eat and Run MeMinn, his wife, Mildred, and Aulgur were dead at the scene, according to poUCe. Mias Bushong was t b-r a.w n- clear of the wreck tate a ditch. Morris .was killed and .{wo outers injurwi when their eke, driven by .Joseph gjallaho, 22, of North Branch, skidded on icy pavement and struck a light pole, in. Ijjorth Branch in I^apeer Cdunty. ' '-"x j a Morris was dead at the scene, according to investigating police. Tallaho add another passenger, Richard Forbes, M/^of Mariette, were in satisfactory condition today jfo Lapeer General Hospital. Jerry Lee Van Bruggen, 20, of Holland, waajihjured fatally Thor^' day night when an auto id Which he was a passenger collided with another auto at an intersection near Hoilandr Van Bruggen was taken to Holland hospital, and thena was I rushed to Blodgett; Hospital, Grand Rapids. He died shortly after arrival at Blodgett. Roy- Nelson, 28, of Detroit, was injured fatally Thursday, night when his / ear smashed through lowered protective crossing gates and into/the second engine of a Chesapeake A Ohio fright train at Livonia crossing. | Yea, Cottdn-Pickers v beret flex. OJPD-Ofes#-' tot Lee Jennings, the TeLCSton, opens her today pt the Cotton football game betwaeh and Syracuse. She said ild be cheering for Texas. “Tqfxas is ^rattoiiRwWiag she explained. ,. v ‘ Top Pontiac Area News Stories of 1959 Ret By MAX E. SIMON \ Herbert W. Stralcy ... solved murder , —r—« arson and Teamsters - .- the beginning at aufolden Age of Learning. These were Pontiac's headline stores during 1959, a year of con-flict/ violence — and of progress. /Qyt ending of the year's most sensational story -f the Pontiac Police department controversy — cannot be\wriitten. It is a story with new raapters appearing day As tlw year ended, the city watched anxiously as Stniey, The fire brought to mind that y dramatic day in August * ol 1956 wheq Teamster Frank H Kierdorf startled the nation with hiy dra-, matic appearance in -Pontiac as ai •'human torch” victim. j The collection . .. Teamsters] ■« m.. fkljiff arson. * Police were m mystified as ever] • - ♦ v w ■ w':' \ - . ■' . afiar checking^ htmdMds M-1^kda| the eyes of leading edacafors1 in their starch for the Jdlier ofithroughout to* world foedsed on reinstated, prepared 7l-year-old ‘ Pontiac physician Dr. W. Carleton Warrick. FATALLY WOUNDED The doctor was fotally wounded by a gunman in Us downtown office late in July. , Aa arsonist pat the torch to the Bloomfield Township home sf Charles O’Brien, -Teamster pel ef James R. Haifa. The rase is still aaaoived. (Pontiac as Michigan State University Oakland, toe nation's newest university, bperted in the fall. Pontiac bounced back vigor-oosty from llM’s business reces- fortunes sf Panttee General Hospital rase, and, after a protracted battle, Oakland County's new courtbouee was ea the way toward becoming a In capsule form. here is view at the major news events that 'occurred in Pontiac Mluring, the [past yenir: ;v;v ■ \ * 'JAN. l—The year begins sWrhi-i iy as freezing rain and sleet turn county roads into shambles. Thousands of celebratprs are stranded land hundreds of rare abandoned. ! -JAN- ■—Mayor Philip E*. Rows-ton advocates boycotting movies and West Coast vacations after Los ’tWack D. Thompson, Angeles mayor urges Califofniarts OTtoycott hew cars, ffjf ' JAN. f-Caty MamgreHrUter K. WiUman Indicates showdown is near on Mrnley. Pleading for time, he teUa city eommls-Wooers: *T don't want to are the In Today's Press ' Fliht Teamster agent, is ordered to stand tralTCir a^im of the Flint dry-cleaning pickup station Where Kierdorf was fofotty burned. JAN. to—A man from Texas, D. B. Varner, is named MSUO chancellor. JAN. to—Dimitries "Jimmy” Tscrmenga*, . 46, is cdnvkxad of second, degree murder by a Cir- Oauki ft; m Editoriato 6 Obituaries .... 8 Apart* .'»■», 25-27 Theater* a-» TV A Radio Prwgrani* —« Wilson. Earl ............. ... » Women’* Page* * . 13-17 cuit Court jury in the Dec. 1967. slaying of a .Texas hoodlum, I George Kean. Tsermengas had led [State Police and Texas rangerajo Kean’s grave Hi Alpena " I JAN. JS—City Commission, forj the second straight year, maintains rtfv tav rateTat 1997 County’s newly formed AFL-tlO. The two unions merge three years after being ordered te by JAN. '99—Willman says ‘‘Stralcy must gp” or foce charges before Civil Service CttoMtfssiOn. Pontiac General Hospital- office ials voice optimism for 1959-after writing off record josses the past totes dty fox rate at 13.27 ‘mtiix. JAN- H -Tnd V. Haggard In i elected pwrideat of Oakiaad j CIVIL SERVICE BALLOT JAN. t7—City Commission (daces foc ^njSrt^'cfoto. April ballot, jftN. *8—Supervisors order social welfare rolls screened fo/ effort to cot costs and determine .jt^dchiseiing^xists^ .■•.•^-.4-.aeJ to Mrs. Onto Collins, Ponttoc’s oldest resident. FEB. 2—The Oakland Coun] Table Toppers Assn., an tion of tavern owhersrteitor at April election to okay opening at noon instead of 2 jp.m. Sundays.1 FEE. J—City CtmunissionTgivcs WiUntane-a confidence vma in police dispute, refuses to lire Public Safety Director Gmrg# D. Eastman, and calls for/citizens’ Committee to arbitrate Straley- Anthony Jasinski, 51, a Southfield nursery night watchman test year. _ , Citizens’ committed fads to porsuade wbaky to resign, or to arbitrate a settlement ef dispute. OUSTER FILED / ~ FEB. > — WiUman filed oust*? FEB. 4-Circuit Judge William Tt. Beer -dismisses hung jiiry after a week of fruitless deliberations .In'mincer trail of Raymond Atyca. JANr at)—A woman hunt to j.Alyea, an n«onvict to accused slavery iSS years ago dies, She jot beating and totally stabbing ctarges against Btntey with Service Commission. Stratoy m suspended. PT3I. H — Sx mSn are arrested ' by Pontiac ViCe Squad officers ta > climax montii - long probe into ‘ Illegal sale of dope, Police say; i those arrested sold 8260,000 wori^ of narcotics yearly. _■ ■ Ill M Mf ijtos Hill'. 71 deatb of her 12 yrar-rid daughter, -,-ZM t Continued on Pagt?' 2, Gp. 2» airww THE PONTIAC rttESS. FfelDAY. JANUARY 1. MW ♦ Wop Pontiac Area News Stories of 1959 Reviewed • (Continued From Page Oms' Judith \niM-, la fa tamiiy'a OUMPW Township boHSe. Incumbent Cifcult judges II. Runet Holland. Clark J. Adams, and Beer lead as voter’s nominate 10 candidates "In judicial primary ejection, ►mu — Sttstey bearing opens. Commission Clwirman Stuart A, Austin’.gets anonymous call threatening violence to Eastman if Stra-' ley Is fired. , JL EEB.tS — State Supreme Court dears way for cotirtbou«e by. re- \ A TTyear-old Auburn U‘rT*,‘VU,# hottamUr ^r^dreuit judge who ra Giri, 17. k SMI Jailed for Check ‘Auburn Heights Wife Can't Post Hot Bail, ; Unhappy New Yeor yearp fi the ipiost critical in tbe state, a Health Dept- official warns. JUpiE »—Convicted in a second Alyea It sentenced to 1 to IS In prison by Judge-Beer. --'j&jE ' * * ,* |g . * JUNE ll—Instead of aft across-the-board increase, the Board of Education approves a new pay ptaa for teachers, giving raises on the basis at education and experience. HIKE 1WA federal grand Jury to New York Indicts West Btoom-field Township industrialist fay A. ex-Teamsters bass Dave Beck, Gary A. Taylor, Royal Oak's phantom turiper of IN7, he placed sn parola. . ..$..0, SEPT. 15—A final report on Pun-tine's $4,000,000 urban renewal pm gram ts submitted to the City Plan Commission and city commissioners prior to submission Jdr federal approval -—- SEPT. 17—MSUO holds Its first Hospital continues to care for in> digent patients although receiving no payments bum tbe county and •tots because fa State Health Dept- rules the hospital is ww* Frcuehauf for loaning money to academic convocation. ThohiaS .. .: Ichmuti judge who ruled , fat mi ^ ^ T jcounty $|,fi million JniMhs fund I vWjftttog ^ provision of ihe.Tafoj Hartley act. Yaw's Pay to Jail awaiting mu9RH~;:"fwjr. ^mfr. . ^ _.........■■■■I Day wt-tt tog and publishing charge. |thb Hurohfawl in Waterford To»;n-j ship housewife, Mrs. Edna MiU. Mrs. Noney Harper.- MIA Are- ishtpr^fifc hutto.ng tontted the; ySV 34. sbbota aag UOs her tots-Inn St-, demanded era min shoo area’s largest howling alley'. ! band, Ernest, 41, after a quarrel. MARCHy * — Pontiac QcneraJ; Hospital charges tt’f considered a dumping ground (or Indigent patients throughout fa county. MARCH .t - St. Joseph MeftcY Hospital also blasts * county and state welfare practice*. MARCH S — Pontiac Northern High-School Is dedicated. MARCH 11 —Glenn£.-GHIespie, farmer Circuit Court Judge dies to OUahamr auto accident Hamilton, president of the Slate Unfarsity 'of New York, tell* ‘The nation looks before lodge Maurice a. rm- u tiegan yesterday. Enable to f famish U.SSS bond, she' was returned to fa Oakland Cswdy Jail to await tbe Med tor Wi' ‘ .Mrs. KkfMr was Vfednptofty while attempting to na i bogus check at the Petty 'street branch of fa Community Rational Batik. •She admitted to Pontiac. Police detectives- that she cashed mote1 than $2,000 in bad checks since fac. 7. Her husband, David, 20, was arrested a Mock away from fa bank. \ h * ■* ‘He was turned over to Blrming-ham police yesterday. Potice said the car he Was driving was stolen i^ Birmingham. •He to hi probation for an uttering told publishing conviction to Oakland County Circuit Court. Report Djilas, Still in Jail, Writes Anything WAim HIGHER PAYMENTS MARCH IS —■ Pontiac General Hospttei demands higher payments from Oakland County Welfare Board to cover actual expenses of caring for social welfare patients. . AV MARCH 2*—A Good Friday explosion tips through'a Troy apart-ment, killing Harry Fegus. 2a. Ralph LaBarge, H. -dies liter Of injuries suffered in fa Mist. APRIL 1—Htghiaad Township fstber, Joel M. Bachman. to, kHis hi* son Daniel, 15, and Mm-■elf with s shotgun. April s — Oxford p a to olfti an r Yu- ‘VIENNA (UPI) — A former Rostov official says that former Vice President Milovan Dfilks, who was deposed and Imprisoned fa “political heresy." now tog allowed to write andftubliih Whatever he pleases and soon may ba set free. , ' * A • The official, who asked fat fa name be withheld, fled- to Austria recently and sought asylum a) * political refugee. * Ha said he .last saw DJBas, whom be had - known as Vtoe President, when fay were both 'Msftod to Belgrade's Central Prison. Ha said Dfiles has Mem Roscoe Zelman. 28. admit* a story home of Charles Q Bnen, Team* ster pal of James A. Hoffa. JULY 17—The Michigan Public Service Commission grants ex-Pontiac Teamster agent, Louis C Linteau, a franchise to run a limousine bus service to the public Interest despite two convictions for shady business deals. about being shot by a traffic violator to a hoax. Zelman. who shot himself accidentally, said:was attained.” Eight months to the day Kler-dorf Was burned, Thompson to found guilty of arson. fash ;eeR with a typewriter aai a radio. . Yugoslav President Yfa tolf authorized Djilas to WrifagS OUt U fa refugee said, in a s venal of fa policy which sbven years to Djflas’ ae after his smuggled book “The New Class" was published outside Yugoslavia. * ★ ■ dr 'He added that It seems “quite possible” tint Tito's former lieutenant will be released from prison soon. APRIL 4—Aftet a marathon 18-tnt*V- fafctow hearing, Civtt Service Commission fires Straley. the vote to M. APRll, #—Pontiac voters repeal Ivtt service lor potice, reject bond issue far more sewage treatment facilities and earlier Sunday opening hours for taverns. HMU*** I if>. aw PwsecUtor Frederick C. Hem sad Royal Oak Attorney Stanton G. Doadew. Theodore Y. Hughes of Berkley I* elected to fill ,a short term expiring APRIL S—The rbody of Parvin 'BtU" Ussiter of Beverly HUis is . ound in a ravine off the Willow 1 fan tofaessway. Lassiter, a car dealer, purchased the far of Hermon Kierdorf, Frank's unfa, before Herman disappeared for IS days last Yew- -.— i The Bloomfield Township intersection of Telegraph and Maple road to declared fa most hnz-the fate’s trunkline srdous i i Mayor Certificate of I Goesfofonla I ; LANSING (UPI) Tony Bailee was given fa certificate this week recognizing Ionia’s progress ^ developing itself for in-.(jfatrUd .growth-. / .The certificate, spottooced by fa Michigan economic JDevelopmait Commission, was jfanented^ hy Cjpv. G. Mennen Williams, realice, Ionia mayor for 13 yens, raing more informed torces for attracting /said, “And now our i Ionia as s place for r( move to.” House! Committee Sets ijomb Rearing Date NGTQN (UPI) ^ The Home Agriculture Committee will begin binrlngs Jan. 11 on the Agriculture j Department’s decision to ' 1 the federal grading serv-"foit lamb and mutton. aepartment'“nwtnirared ____«y that the suq>enskm, Easily scheduled to take fat Tuesday; has. been postponed month to give the cortunittee an opportunity to potiauct public parings. The Weather m i i*... nifa b fasi ’• <* 1 .us smshm swam ■fast BinswetoM'....» jpm tMipmtm ....... Unl MWWN i.A.j ’we»th>f—WrUy fator-1* «m T*»r «as ai hstoi Hjf.:::1'':":: —Detective August Martinez kills a berserk man, Manuel Gomes, 83, aftet the latter attacks him with a knife. The Mexican consulate demands an inquest. —Mistaking a baby-sitter for his estranged wife, Bruce M. Taylor savagely beats Phyllis J, Keel, U, with « baseball fat to fa Tudors’ Ponttoc home, i hospital out —Oakland supervisors reject s plea by the Pontiac Greater Community CoundUthnt fa vacant Contagious Hospital be used to Care for mentofa-in children. The 50-bed, facility Will be retained for the county’s use, they decide. JEEY tf — AVState Supreme Cfart dectoton clears the vw tor controversial Twelve-Town storm sewer which wd8 serve l4 - —Ctty ofBcUls btvak ground tot communities in fa southern put of the county. ■ .. dr JULY U—A coroner’s Juty finds w killing of Gomez by Det. Martinez Justifiable homicide. JULY is—iFire set by an arson- TERM APRIL to—Delores Hamlin gets npreeedented fourth term as chairman of Board of Supervisers. -Eight days after bring farfad, 20-year-old Harold Martin of Pontiac li arrested for fa; kidnaping-rape of s 16-yeaj-old Pontiac girl. AYRIL is—Berkley mother, Mrs. Wayne Sue Lawrence, shoots and kills Mrs. Wyvona D- Crensfaw, 33, - Independence Towfafa . APRIL- JS—Fliy V b I e f John F. ichroeder -Twlrr* after tt years of service. James R. White tfas over fire depurtment. APRIL M—Straley appeals his to Circuit court. Commission names seven to new Police Trfa Board. office, 24H E. Huron St. Tbe gunman flees without taking 91400 the doctor is carrying. The doctor dies the following evening pa Pontine General Hofat&l. JULY famA swollen Po Creek overflows, flooding hundreds of city homes and businesses. JULY as —Sophia Chavez Zimmer. dragged from her heme by her estranged husband, Defart, to killed ak her husband’s car collide* with another at a dty intersection. ORDER EXPANSION —Pontiac to ordered to expand its sewage treatment facilities following n hearing before fa State Water ResowceS Commission. -«x Little Leaguers are rescued by aarfaftavy frogman and their coach as • large cabin cruiser on s man-made lake In Township. MAY Instate Police crack Lassiter case, arrest three men ih robbery slaying. They are fay Hicks, a former business associate: Richard Jonea.,27, an pnrotee; Charles W. Nnsh | MAY •—Social Welfare Board i to pay higher rates for wel-patients treated at Pontine il and St; Joseph Mercy,. COMMITTED MAY IS—Mrs. Lawrence to com-litted to fotyto'-Sfate Hospital. MAY ss—Mrs. Gall is committed kafaifate Hospital. ~. ★. *... i JUNE 1—Former' Deputy City Treasurer LaRue E. GuUett dropped as a defendant hr a gam; bling conspiracy case. He vyas of five persons arrested-by I Police to an' August. 1958. The ofher lour defcndants/ eventually released, ' JUNE S—A new . . peare to threaten buildlnJ of a new csMUwe. A Circuit j Court lawsuit is filed protesting etstsn at tbe Board of Supervisors to award ITfanfawewm' pan tract to a Poattar firm, rather than to fa- tow bidder from JUNE 4—Ground is broken for fa -$12.^67.000 Farmington and —fa-Interceptor sewer 7ays-tonztrtytioti of the sewer Americans Should receive. . (jenrra| Hospital Ad- minis!rater ' Harold B. ' Enter presents a bright pirinre of hospital finances, nates fat fa faih pita! Is iterating at M.7I per cent of capacity. KEPT. 21—MSUO opens for i charter Mass of 570 freshmen. —Jubilant county officials break ground for a new courthouse, in the heart of. fa Qousty Sendee “enter. fW ’ .A .A BEPT. 87—Wind fanned: flames rstroy a Kroger's supermarket at Perry street and Joriyn avenue. Damage to fatimated at $250,000. ' -A Civil Aeronautics _____________i»er recommends re ulariy scheduled alrltoe service fl Pontiac as construction begins < an airport terndnSU-tower. LIBRARY STARTS the hew Ponttoc Ubraor to fa Chic Center, ’ OCT. IS — The year's worst fire tragedy. Mrs. Mildred Gotoas, 24, and three chiMren—Martha Jean, 4, Danny Las, 2, and Pamela, 5, months—perish to an eady-morning disaster. The death toll In the fire to fa highest in 9 years. OCT. 14—Georg* F. Bfa . .... serving asm to five ware prison terns tor pisstsrisn of a pistol sUwseer after several np- july *4—Dr. W. Cnrleton wir-ck, 71. is abot to hi* downtown plane IU8T .S — A sfale-eagtae Vrasbes into a rornfield in WMto Lake Township, killing two nr lea and a young boy. AEG1 [JgT 9 w* Downtown Pontiac is iUun tinated by new fluorescent lights. viction on\ charge. State Supr -The fat to prison after gross indefaicy Appeals [ie Court,' “ Pontiac auto- mobile. AJhAd R. Glancy, dies to 'Atlanta. 'Ta-S&Cx1'-.. AUGUST S-rGakland Republicans barge that the Ponttoc postal as-ership to n political fbofam. Despite protests, Senate Democrats fail to confirm “acting^ postmaster Robert C. Miller, a Repub- utf robbing a Pot A, A P manager ef $9,000. IHSC. 2t Straley's reinstatement as police chief is apmwved by Ionia Judge- Darts. Blaze Causes $6,000 Damage to City House The new year wax little more] than four hours tod When Pontiac firemen were at werk extinguishing n $6,000 house fire today. The Maze started from an overheated furnace.to fa home of Chester j. Moezarski, at 642 Jos-lyn St., at about 4:30 am-. *tod firemen. Two stations fought fa fire tor abent two boors before os-tlagvlaiUng It. Itomago was sot j at 44,see to fa borne wttb item to tbe contents. The basement was gutted. Yfte-mep said the dining room add Idtcfhen floors burned through and fa fire burned upward between walls. The ownef and hte family are vaentiontog fat Florida, fire- Ztem as prosocutor. OCT. If—The 7,000,000th Ponttoc rolls off the assembly lines. * A * -Twenty-two year-old Robert L. Crandall, 34 Murphy St , and Pato J. Carry, 21, M U4 E. Howard St„ admit to FBI agents t fat to ■teal more than $3,000 from fa i Community National Mink. Crandall, n bank teller, slipped'inaney to Cany, fan reported he’d been robbed. OCT. tfc-The United Fund goes over fa top. STEEL STRIKE HITS OCT. I»-The city begins to feel fa eftecte of fa steel strike. Some 2,000 workers ere laid off at Ponttoc Motor Division. OCT. to—CRy bus fares up a nickel. OCT. 2S—WUlmaa elected president of the lntornattonto Ctty Managers Assn. NOV. s—The Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce urges a spring election to knock the post to public safety director 'teem charter... / "" \ - West Coast Duo to Gain. 2nd PopulatiOiL jump SAN FRANCISCO (UP^l --The westward drift of fa U.8. population to tbe Pacific Coast and Rocky Mountain arer wfil continue in IMQs, Chamber to Commerce officials believe. The jpopulation of this region, which jumped 40 per cent to 27 mllfion In the past decade, is ex* pected to gain another 22 per cent during the coming 10 years. NOV. 14—The Oak Park co-owners of Lord’s Furniture Store, :1JS\W. Huron St., are arrested to pfot to burn their store to collect insurance. Two Detroit men are also Arrested.. ~ -. NOV. IS—Pontiac General Hospital officials voice optimism for iSRP-moee beds, more' patients, more gross income. BACK TO WORK i NOV, M—Workers start returning to atoo Thants as federal Injunc-tion forces steel workers hack to thptr Jobs. - —Calvin J. Werner is named new general manager of General Motors Trudt and Conch Divlfan^ Philip J. Monaghan, whom] he replaces, is appointed GM vice president to charge to proecss development at the GM Technical Center. DEC. 1 19-year-old High- land Township gas station attendant is shot in fa back and vnrrnt ini m j palAlyzed, perhaps tor life. Arrest- VOUTH KILLED . are Victor Hood. 25, of Pontiac, AEG. II—4 15-year^old escapee ^ L. tjiy, 17, and Theo- dore: A. Mendoza, 16, both ~ a Orion Township. fa dnkituid Coupty Children’s Home, Robert..R'Martin, is killed to a gunpattle with police officers from half a dozen departments in a West Bloomfield Town-sbip swamp. AEG. It—The Ponttoc Area “‘to ^ United Fund antiounces a goaf < $647,696. \ ■ 32-year-old Detroit man Z Bloomfield Hills S lived (or three , tAo*t textiles and plastics wllimufor toss in 1060. Boap and all forms of wash-log Rpwder will sell for less in 1660. This applies also to “wonder drugs” and other chemical products. Cost ef wooden homes—dne to labor—win advance la price during 1600, Cement and modern machinery will displace bricklaying. Rence, there may not be much increase in the cost of building fireproof apartment houses. The cost of electronic machinery should be higher , because gf tne growing demand tor automation to offset the ’rise ln pagre. 8teel products (especially stainless)—from tha table-. ware used in homes to the steel used to buQd bridges—will be in greater demand in 1660. The demand for most food products will Increase during 1960. This should especially help the United Fruit Company, as bananas give the most nourishment, at the least cost, of any known food. _____1 it. it. PH I forecast increase* in rents, maintenance, and taxes. But supermarkets will compete with one another and the house-wife should benefit therefrom. Florida is a good place for palddle-aged people to buy a home in a small city, as Insurance for the time when they rd-jtire. Persons buying such home* should depend upbn a check! ih every month and not depend upon getting a hie Iron I960, and you may find that you are living on a v deposit, if not oh a gold mine I INVESTMENT OUTLOOK For the first time In the 40 years that i have been preparing these annual outlooks, I shall not takma position ofetiie Dow-Jones Average for I960. I am, howevw, Inclined to believe the stock market in general will hold up at toast until after the election. Then there may come a break, whichever party wins the election next November. I forecast i960 will be the year to buy good bonds. United States Government Bonds yielding 5% are a great bargain. I~ also like aU non-taxable bonds and also some taxable but convertible bonds. I forecast some chemical stock will still be a buy in 1960, although they yield Utile income and are good only aa growth stocks. There will be failures by the thousands among tbos# companies now Issuing electronic stocks. Electronics Issues have become a popular fad. There to also unemployment ahead for many who ere new working in electronics factories. I forecast that tike stocks it electric power companies, hut net these of targe cities, will he in greater demand in 1966. Of all stocks, I forecast that United Fruit may be most in demand in 1960.1 predict that only a few railroads will be popular during I960, such m Canadian pacifiCj UniPu Pacific. Northern Pacific, and perhaps Southern Pacific and Atchison. I am bearish on Pennsylvania Railroad, New York Central, New Haven, and all short lines except for the Norfolk to Western, my “pet gravity road.” I Also fear a short railroad strike. ’ * * ' it * '' Failures will- continue to Increase during 1960. I forecast that the huge national roadbuiidlng program will give an uplift to business as it progresses. There wiU be no marked changes in money rates during 1960. Inflation wUi graduaUy continue, but may not be .serious during i960. The best investment'policy during 1960 will continue to be a well-diversified portfolio with one-third in stocks for possible growth profits, one-third in bonds for safety and Income, and one-third in cash in-order to have -funds available for Investment In the severe ann sudden itioP In the stock market which will come some day £ ^ CONCLUSION •• • •’>' '** The three handicaps to American business in 1960 will be increasing installment purchase*, ihe unfair demands of labor union leaders, and President Eisenhower’s physical condition. The three hopes for America are our churchee, our achools, and our praying parents. dec. e — Pontiac Police arrest | from the North every month and not depend upon getting \ ’ DEC. I Ionia County Circuit Judge Morris K. Davis rules Stra-ley’s firing by fa Civil Service Commission Illegal on a legal technicality. DEC. • — Pontiac . Osteopathic Hospital announces a $1,000,000, expansion program.______■ 1 LOCAL JET AGE DEC. 1# — Pontiac is recommended for a prime role in fa jet age. A technical study by ex-yperte studying the air needs to Southeastern Michigan boosts Pon-I use Municipal Airport, or a spot nearby, as a good Ute for a major ' jet IteM. ■ v- 33; DEC. 14 — Hiland M. Thatcher, t* to iVest Bloomfield Tbwmhip, to' count: p road commissioner fa fire ‘ to stealing from the poor. DEC. IS — The Twelve-Town Storm Cfiain crashes amfewt a new legal shoal. Judge Beer rates costs job in Florida. Even today in Florida one person in/fen is over 65 years of age. . / REAL ESTATE . ' ./, The price of city real estate will depend upon its parking privileges. Wise muiilcipal officials will pull down old two and three story butldlnga to make parking lots and municipal garages much more plentiful. Thit also Applies to suburban' Veto estate. I. forecast that new suburban sorting laws will require housqs to have vacant adjoining lots sfifflclent for present and future parking needs. \ ★ it ■ \(' . / * ■ The demand for modem stores and tor centrally located upartmentrwitt^ continue to tn«e«sr durfi^ I forecast that those building a “single” house for their own ocmipancy will also provide an apartment , for rent. 1^ forecast that faro* commercial fanes should hj profitable ie I960; but many operators of small tarns, net property located for suburban growth, will sell to some adjoining farmers. Small farms on well-drained Jznd and near enough to a city for future aubnrbaa developments should be bald. I forecast such farms ahonld some day sell - for triple their pffaeent price. Seashore property should be held. The government can print more bond* and oorporatlon* can split and declare stock dividends to make more stock; but only God can make seashore property. I forecast that rfeal estate taxes will increase during 1960. Wise are property owners, who make their rentals “Wu* Annual Taxes.” y.W ■'.\ ' dr ■' it \ it 1 As the Russians gradually move westward like a glacier, felting ow'nership of all property, wise "people in Europe will sell their present property and businesses and move to the. iraBCM - a. Joseph forecast that smputtons in mining Will continue during MI0HI0M STATE UNIVERSITY Off-Campus OMrsw - WINTER 1960 Michigan Stats University invitss you to snroll in fair Off-Campus courses in the Detroit Metropolitan Area. Tht courts* beg)" the second week tn January and run for ten weeks. Tuition is $27.00 for three (Si term hour*, payable -*t the first dstp meeting- * . lAKLANDi tkanlir, Jaseaty 11 jrall (») AES «sa. bctinnlm Samuil fa UaSanbl* (g AES ia«, W|t»la| a In ESaeaUaa—Driver EUaeaMaa (S) TE 4*1, keelaalaf WaS-. ncaaar. Jaaaarr 1»- I Carriaatssa tepniaeiri <*> V* 4*4, Saflaalat Uaatar, hlarrMtai 1a. SW «sa. fcaataalat Wa*aaa4ar, lap- - Art far ClaanM TaaaSara (I) AfT 11* eattaata* TaaMtoy, Jaaaary It Aaurtaia Ctre-War aa< BaaiaatraaMia (t) Hst Oa, kastaala* Wa«-aaaAay. Jaaaarr It m 'iaaaaat'a* Tl1"11 l,1>l 1,11111 m far 4«a, WfUatar' ■aaerrlataa ntfk Sakael PaMaaUaaa (tl JEN MI. Wdaalac TharaAar. ■ ^foaaarr r. . BaaMatr •< SfMaatlaa (I) SOC 411, Saftaalaa WaeaiaAar. Jaaaarr^' AH eaaraaa aaprared far fraSaata aa i . AS claaaea will mitt treal 7:ia t. A I Waits far tafanaatlaa aeaaarataa tta I = am ka kau aa 4*e MSt’-O - ■SeraraSaatr nlil! i ia aa r.m. 1 * AatSa a«a—4 llllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllUllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllltllHIIIIlIji wBm THE POKTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1960 THREE JK menace U S. farm crops. OutgoestheOld .. . the New has arrived! Our many, thanks far your loyal patronage in I960! C & V Electro Mart 158 OAKLAND AVI. TV SAUS AND SBVKE llato’^luarrelr Spill info 1960 1959 Has Bad Record for Strikes; 'Both Sides Fumbling Ball' Scientists Study Wea of No Night WASHINGTON (UPI) — Navy Mfendata have km toy!** with Ibe HM of oUmlnsOax night. Mi could ho done, they *«y, U mu were able to WMle • thick layer of dust la a region far By NORMAN WALKER WASHINGTON IB - Dissension sometimes bordering on chaos Iwdffiyd ^abof-manaRement relations during moat of 1969. And K looks al though the quarreling will HM into I960. ^f| Strike statistics tell ther sfftfV. Drs. Herbert Friedman aad The year 1959 is going down in the James Purcell of the Naval Re books as one of the warnsffjkfr search laboratory teld H is Hke- The layer « dust would he Hke Saturn’s major rtag, which Is aa area of extreaaety line particles about ten miles 'fit depth, located tt,M mi lee above that planet. --- ------/- ....... M lam aaO a*ret*es, ONE LEVEL SHOPPING rr»* r»rk!n* tar S.SSS Can MIRACLE MILE tSfg? «. Trlstripk at Mnn Utl M. L C. WILLIAMS Salutmon SEE US FOR EXPERT SERVICE ON • CHEVROLET ';• PONTIAC • BUICK *15 Minutes from Pontiac’ Homer Hight Motors 100 S. WASHINGTON ON MeZ4, OXFORD PHONE OA 1-2521 yews on record. Only postwar IMS took a ^greater toll in lost I working time. In a widely discussed speech, Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell charged both lahor. and man igement with 'tumbling the ball. Ha aaid the problem at making Ad American economy work more efficiently is a real one requiring cooperation from both sides. MttcheU said employer* are trying to change loug-establlahed work practices too quickly and resisting change. Wages and prices meanwhile continued their steady climb tbrpugh the year. bjty, 4t # The flood of. I960 strikes — in the steel, maritime, copper and meat-packing industries, Just to name a few — led to talk of arming the government with more power to deal with labor atrife. ft's a question likely to be raised a good dehl iri the 1960 politicking. INJUNCTION 1;se6 Twice within a few dayv President .Eisenhower invoked the in- W „..i . . , junwton Efthfoions of tSsTlft- Hartley Act to twit the record 116- to°bi*iR t» year sentences tor conspiracy in a tax case. Hartley day steel strike and a sudden walkout of the East-Gulf Coast longshoremen. Labor corruption disdAmrot over the past three yean culminated in passage of a new labor law after a bitter fight in Congress. It represented a bad political setback fur the uni out. The new law puts tight eagtrob an internal union procedure* and Imposes stiff penalities tor corruption. Powers were upheld after long litigation for court-named monitors to institute reforms in the teamsters union headed by James R. Hoffa. But Hoffs continued to fight back. Former Teamsters leader, Dave Becki meanwhile was convicted of federal income tax fraud. Sell Million FM SH . .1 I NEW YORK (UR) — Sales of FM -radio receivers hit a record! 1 million units in 1939 and 1960 "should be even better.” accord-ling to Henry Fogel, president of iGranco Products, Inc, iy that there Is no night on Saturn because of the euntiwtal brightness at the ring. He mentioned that the crop-tiaa of ML Krakatau on m Pacific island In IMS apewed forth many millioas of tana of dust that visibly affected the atmoa-fhsrn far yaara nftoiwnid. The. Krakatau drat- waa nil enough to eHmtaate night, il-though It canoed tong, exceptionally rod sanada. Connelly and Caudle Win Another Stay ST. LOUIS, Mo.r tAPI-Two Trumkn administration officials have won another skirmish in telr fight to stay out of prison. *■ * The U. S 8th Orcuit Court «f Appeals Wednesday granted « 30- The court said the stay would! remain to effect until the U.S.j Supreme Court rules on the defendants’ motion for a review of the appellate court’s denial of a new trial. Connelly was White House appointments secretary to formin' President Truman. Caudle was farmer chief of the Justice Depart-! ment's tax division. Japanese Nearly Hall Jump in Population TOKYO (API—Japan in 1939 almost held the line in its fight to keep down its expanding population, but there has been a boom injnarriages The total pop-ulation is now more than 93 million. ■ dr ★ ★ The wedding of Crown Prince I Akihito to a pretty commoner, Mlchiko Shoda, sparked the matvj jriage boom. I tyles-*- SHOP and SAVE on these DOOR-BUSTER VALUES! 3l4loiiiale! Pkg. 200 Sfcoofs KLEENEX TISSUES IT Prices Slashed On Every Iteim In This Adv. Simms waits fha Maw Yaat with BARGAINS m big, wa mutt limit ths salt to just 3 Vi haws Saturday morning! So. Harry tor yam shara ■ . . wo have plenty pf sama items, tow at “♦hats . . . hat tha mar# yau hay the more yea sava- Righti reserved to limit quantities, W wora people ma> sham to thrsupar bargains, . . sorry, no phone or mail ardera and aa layaways. Start tha year right — shop the S1MMS-IQW-CASH way —- no astra costs tp you! ■my wii KOTEX NAPKINS 29* Regular toe ta|*i tail efUaaalm. napkins tor feminine hygiene ‘ -Main fleer 5-Grato ASPIRIN TARLETS IT Pull VA.P. S-irsln aspirin in full J“ count peek, Uastt Pack of » Gillette Thiii-Blades 24* Bssular tils pack of akiiHt sim Hants fit Jtag. 59c Cm SHAVE BOMBS 39* 4-Woy COLD TABLETS 39* Works combat cold Regular Sic -“-Main Hoar WATCH FOR KAREN'S BIG JANUARY CARPET SALE 452% Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains OR 3-4109 g OR 3-2100 | (Closed Saturday, ■HlHNMIllllIM^ All Sizes 4 to ' 14 Girls’T Skirts Elastic waist ond bands in ; back. Choice of checks, and stripes in- assorted colors. Sava now- 49* Choice of Assorted Styles Child’s Headwear Regular [1.49 vgluf. Or-lons, wools, tips, caps, bonnets,] h o 6 d s, scarfs •tc. Colors. -M»ks Waee 79* Broken Sizes' 14 to 42 Ladies’ *2" Dresses c V-neck, but Lott front styfas with belts. ^Stripe and prints in wfoty of totorc---- Panty and Girdle Styles Ladies’ *1* Girdles Popular 2-way stretch with vatoiek grip. Sizes small and medium only. 77* Popular Blouse-On Style Ladies’1* Sweaters Orlons and cotton knits in small and medium six* in solid and stripes. 99' Rayon with Lace Trim Ladies’T9 Gowns Smooth rayon gowns in blue, pink, yellow colors. Sizes 32 to 36, Soft Cotton Knit Traiaiig Pants Regular 29e! Elastic waist and leg opening. White only in sizes /to 6, 7 —Mata. Peer. GIRLS' DRESSES 99* LADIES' BLOUSES tin Sailer # Round collar, V-neck, tic* trim, button front Jit. Assorted prints; Sizes 2 to 31. • .... Only 10 UtU i Soya on . 9x12 ft DUGS Warm Fleece lined — MEN’S Sweat SUitt IW LADIES' SUEDENE FLAT-T STRAPS IMS 100 Values | Choice el black, red • . grey suedes* finish fe files 4to • rf , Magic' tadtttkuw 1e*p cleansing Rem 7$c ~ FAMOUS DEODORANT I397 Famous Evening in Paris deodorant in stick or roll-on styWT Limit 1 J i \ —Mala Plear 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY White Broadcloths—S2.50 Mens’ Dress Shirts r •N3®3BEH3EHHB•* •*- Just 80 Sheets Left-r fMnslin Bed Sheets | 00 Wtator got HAIR SPB1T 39* nsmees Proctor and —Main Fleer - Wrislere SPRAY C0L06HES 69* ifiir ifiniif Regular $1.49 valuB. — large 81 x 99 inch size. White1 only. 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY Waterproof PLASTIC Mattress Covers Regular $f .29 value fulb or tykin size — contour fitted."' Your choice. 88’ Alto Headlight T2 'M-Ounc#i "GO-GAS" Gas-Line Antifreeze rX. 19* JPX 16 rto rie/lOi-Al ¥Drop Cloths -bi t a 1 '1br~fnwKti«g . Moors, furniture against D| M»W splatter while fifl ’ painting. _ * w nuU Genuine O'CRDAR SPONGE MOPS sirs '■R49 Value ' Cotton Knit—Long Sleeve Boyi|PoloShi^ Regular ■ TpC , vak*»s ' cotton knit poks shirts in , VaHpty o)f coiors. Sizes 10 to 14; . 10-Qt. METAL PULS 59 legihr 75c Value Full 9x10 ftch sheets of sandpaper. Rack hes fine, medium and coarse grits. 20* full fx 12 Ft. PLASTIC Ful-Vue for Automobile Windshield Washer Regular 59c value — washer and solvgnt. Worn .freeze. Full 16-ounct bottle. Limit 2. 37* -KORDTTt Plastic Covered Clothesline-50 Ft Regular 98c valuf. Wire canter- clothesline. Frag -i dampening bag. Limit 1 50‘ For Next Christmas—> 8-Lite Tree Set Regular $1.00 valua — set has dipt and add-on plug. Cotorad btifos. Only 55' Spying Coilr-Aetion—Bag SO 50* Clothespins Eotiro Stock Sc CANDY -BARS 10-29* Chaise of Hsrsbsr’t, Nmtle’s. Clark. Milky Way, etc. Limit it bars per person. 148 59' Bonkof'o COCOA jm ^35* M ima a instantly is hot Or cold water 52 Kr&sr- "• Standard FLASHLIGHT BATTERY 5* Regular Ua *Marth Star' leakproof bat- 98 North Saginaw ; street m shoot* NOTEBOOK PAPER 62* ^r%ek%ri&as that m t aa* I rtag notebooks. Retractable BALL POINT FENS 5* Waatoar Ms yah,, smooth writing poag. Blue Ink only, totalI MU Motel 2-CELL FLASHLIGHT 19* Blackboard CHALK ERASERS 18* Heavier Ifc CRAYONS R0X«f II 6* Heatflar 30c MODELING CLAY SIT 18* Patk of assorted color cloy tw iboacltoa. Always pHabto. aSl Regular 20c Dailla Sida MIRRORS 13* THE PONTIAC PB&SS, * FRIDAY, JANUARY h IfBO mvfc Centennial*! Corning Up Add TwoU.1 Greats^ to the Hall of Fame NOTICE! The Yard and Offices We’ll Refight Civil War the pee* decade to the Hell of Feme on the campus of New York University. The College of Electors voted in 1MQ to include a bust of Woodrow Wilson, the Conner President, In the open-air colonnade. In 1955, the honor wont to Wilbur Wright, cobv ventor of toe airplane. A total/of IB persons are how enshrined in toe Hell of Fame. To qualify, a subject must have been dead for 25 yean or mote. New "In Friendly Candor'' by Edward Weeks By COBENNA ALDRICH K* The biggest difficulty in describing “hi Friendly Candor” by Edward Weeks is to woid excessive use of entho^Mtlc .liffinrla-tores, both lor the book and the author. : , For those who tore to read'but sometime* fail to see the great adventure in the world of words art writers, Weeks is the man to clear one's vision, to t series of Short essays, readers relive With the editor of the magazine “The Atlantic, Monthly” jt|)fr excitement yttoaeovery in npw and promhdng wtobn. I Oaly the moat blase will mlea 17 MABKEKS ADDED —Although the Legislators did not appropriate momy lor fluK torical marker program in 1991, Jf new ones were added. Private funds paid for 12 and the Mackinac bland State Park Com mis- Will Be Closed All/Doy SATURDAY, JANUARY 2nd But -Michigan sorters, the commission realizes, were among the most courageous in the war, psT* ticularly at the Battle of Gftty- Thc Poole Hardware Store SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS HARDWARE .—A series of booklet*’ for use in high schools concern lumbering, Indians, Civil War. art other ftablj historical subject* was begun.] ^ork continues on a 'history of Michigan education to be published I talfOL, WtltlNO Will It Open as Usual Saturday, Jan. 2nd old Michigan military records, dating back to lift,, were released to the state archives lfi lSto and should prove valuable to histeriana]| who wish to study Michigan's parti] in the Civil War es well as later MMriatkMM With aome ef toe finest writers of the century. -Associated with “The Atlantic Monthly” for 35 years, longer than anyone in the magazine's history, | Weeks describes his experiences in the field with warmth that only ]a man cl .great feefing for his Um am pfOv. PLENTY OF INFORMATION The records are being listed and sorted Beeson said, art will b* reedy tor use by historians shortly. “they contain much more than records of individual sorters,*’ Beeson said. "For instance,, commanding officers were asked Just after the war to write accounts of the most important or exciting bat- 2 DAYS ONLY - Satirday and Monday Barnetts Big From the difficulties of its authors’ shaping of “Mutiny on the Bounty” to typographical problems presented by a doctor who insisted on reprinting Jiis entire edition in another type lace, he •bows the publishing business as a vital and human moving force. . Headers sbeuld .be prepared to begin an extensive literature program after *'b Friendly Yee've Seen too lost, Naur * Try art Yra'll luy tos RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-Door ...... $1660.20 4-Dr. Dlx. SMI. $1701.40 SMiM Wagon .$1070.20 . , ncK tobs couts- cnooss rocs ititnntsNT The commission has also prepared film stripe and booklets for t^wwlt and general use describing gsa did parti dpitie, and la which Detroit .was a British stronghold. The observance will be to ISO*. Beeson listed some of the important commission activities during the, year: _ . ‘_____. —Work began on the papeta of Gov. A. J. Groesbeck, throe-time Mate governor (1921-38) who start. ■'ZaTrot tSHxas nOOl SANDERS ax ruesvil scu MANECK'S I sire for literary excellence. He j may not even have realised When writing this that he is just rack »' .person. Both his magapna- and Ids book vividly attest to that fact. •tan ter-- -* :.—» ^ ed the Administrative Board ana Conslentation Department The commission hopes to have toe papers. ready tor publication in I960. —Another volume id a series of books on Michigan governors is j inert? are auuui oi,wv J units in the United States. 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Dmmslairs liua rwii a xrtu rnooa* r 1U1MI, JAAtAHI 1, 1»BU I960 I As we ring out th« old, Irtog in the new . . , we want to say it 'pm a pleasure to be of service to you! Mr. aid Mrs. Dies and all the folks at DIEM'S „ PONTIAC’S POPULAR SHOE STORE p=Mr. Diem Says . . » = Sdon’T BEY MY SHOES Until You Sot the Sensational Shoe Values We Hove —i ir O u r Great Semi-Annual Shoe Clearance. -DIEM’S- PONTIAC'S POPULAR SHOE STORE 8T"North Saginaw St. y.S. Rules Out I CBM J as Key Defense Device $d>* would guarantee that UJ, missiles wouldn’t be caught on the pound, ' If Russia attacked, would know for' suit retaliation would conie, or 90 this Pentagon thinking goes. By RAY CROMLEY WASHINGTON (NEAj-HefcVt (Til surprise. The giant intercentineiital ballistic missile* already may be well on the way to becoming obsolete. Studying and thinking in the seen* back rooms of too Pentagon now favor some aort of slow flying platform or radically different type of airplane as the major deterrent weapon. It would be able to stay in the [air indefinitely—or ~at least"lor long periods=at low cost? •PATROL CAR* -- It would be a- "pltrol ear” constantly on the prowl, carrying Mtort-range, Hydrogen missiles maybe to the 500 to I,000-mile class. Key Deportment of Defense planners have already made up their minds that-too huge, powerful intercontinental ballistic miaaiie mast never become the central “decisive” weapon in toe U.8. war arsewal. They fed this must be so — even if the U.S. should be able to {leapfrog well ahead of the Soviet Union to ICBM quality. ■r _ it \ b : jjjkJ Already to their private skull ‘aessions, there’s growing doubt among Air Force, Army and flavy strategists as to the overall worth of the big ICBMs. There’s as yet, of course, a* There’s a good deal of"agree*| The big ICBMs are too costly Industry Confident ment, however, that it should fly to and vulnerable. Constantly T* t f* m ^ . ptoring -lHeiP big bird* as tbey|0f V*0PP6f jUPPlY air—not. in space. Arid *liat there should be an old-fashioned pilot, Using his brains—rather than electronics—to make decisions. w.oiild be become obsolesceut ruinous. Meat ICBMs would have to be —r—:.j an fixed sites. These an easy to Seriously considered as flying! “sees to” on in advance. Oily platforms or super-long distance! a limited number could be put patrol planes are: on railway ears. Atom-powered winged . mis-siles, whh* would circle toe world endlessly. They might be supervised by HUB In some sort of long-distance craft. ..... Atom-powered airplanes. —— NEVV YORK (A - The copper industry heads into the 1960a confident of an adequate supply of the red metal pt a more stable price, says Clyde E. Weed, chair-Board of Anacpnda Co. man of tfai.BMEBEWBBBEMBR 'Barring prolonged work inter- ruptions in major producing areas, thf lndusoy has toe reserves and the. production capacity to meat the demands for copper which we] confidently expect develop’ ICBMs,once-; fired, 'can’t be Called back.—In modem watt-sit electronic detection system could ’ make a dreadful error, mistake some innocent objects for a missile attack. Then the fat would be in 1 the 196Pa,;’ be'saki. » »____w ---I- ■®re' Plane# can be sent up,; ‘‘These will result from stewed-. . ' .then called back if there's a mis-up” research for new and brbaderi Or a radical new type of stow, [fake. • [uses, an ever increasing demandfj lumbering airplane, styled some- * * * from developing countries and the w™* modeF? Though former Defense Sec. Nell "**ds of an explosive population and a glider, that-would be ^(McElroy announced the possi-iincrease here and abroad.” 1 as dose to floatingin tjto bUity of a constant 352 air Weed noted that Anaconda, ?“■** ™uld a!»,e the experts have studied this pro- which has ,he worids largest ore to almost hover in toe air. usingLosai and"Ibund it wanting—exYr>t re*erves' has doubled productive much \H* fl*l than conventional fa dire emergency.The .^ capacity since, 19*. *ble -*°reaten^.it woullcost an additiohal stay aloft longer, at much less ex- -- 1 These * platforms would, of course, be supplemented by a image of weapons In eluding Air Force KBMs, Navy' missile-firing submarines, Army shorter^1 image missiles, sad a handful of radical new weapons go» being studied. ..'■ «-;=4 - What’s behind the de-gtorifica-ion of the ICBMs—shiftiiig them] from the center of the stage to] ‘just another weapon?” PENTAGON THINKING Here’s the thinking as the Penta-j gun planners see it: several billion dollars a year. Silk Makes ComBback ting on ICBMs | ___ to' much of Sran.ry.nfy R1" T j«* after year, «f decline. the . ***"„ . ‘ . . . American SBk Council says. Im- to^lWe a well-rounded force ■ for finit 10 months of able to fight a variety of types ^ year 39*33 ^ m. "PfV \ against 25,392 to the same period Flying platforms plus missile-of 1958. Nfw, hood eliminates cooking bmttom grtastl titm REQUIRES NO DUCTS ...FITS ANYWHERE! Get rid of cooking odors, grease and smoke before they damage anything in your kitchen. And with the new NAUTILUS No-Duct Hood you don't need expensive ductwork: it fits in any kitchen — anywhere — with no cabinet space at all! 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