The Weather U" 6. Weather Bureaw Forecast Not Much Change in Temperature (Details Page ® % i ) THE PONTIAC PRE ¥ h 2 si . 1h0 VN a” . ™ 117th YEAR : xkeen«ek PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, UNITED . A 7 PRESS ATIONAL BSOCIA TED Rod _ City Officials: Tour ef “WATCH YOUR HAT’ — Ducking under an airplane wing during their inspection yesterday of hangar facilities at Pontiac Municipal Airport and City Commissioners Wesley J. Wood and John A. Dugan. toured one of the city’s two big hangars during a Airport ae S NOVEMBER 20, 1959—48 PAGES ¢ ‘ tas . H OS . Sees Balanced Budget ° 4 Flooding Rains Ease in Miami; 11.13 Inches Fell. |podred 11.13 inches of water on iMiami in 30 gusty hours let up \teday, but maybe not for long. | The Weather Bureau predicted |further showers. x * * | Thursday, there wad a daylong| ideluge. Numerous streets were \flooded bumper deep and some| were impassable. cars drowned out. as J — 4 4 ve / wi nl * J f Pontiac Press Phot erg oe igen uated, although water lapped into many a front door. — Business in the uptown section Four other commissioners also MIAMI, Fla. &® — Rain which, Hundreds of | | §8-10 Million Other Experts Cautious; , Ten Paintings Claimed; to Be Masterpieces BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. | today hailed a set of paint- ings dug out from under an ‘Appraiser Says. Pontiac Baby Is Found Pontiac General ArtFind Worth Safe After Kidnaping Seeks to End the long wait is over for a aaniyn vier, « 3 YOQS iN REG jyoung mother from \Pontiac working in Chicago as a | Submit Record Outlay” Her four-month-old boy, James, was, found unharmed | of $4,622,780; Holding by FBI agents last night in| Present Wage Line a Gary, Ind., hotel, about 16 hours after he was kid- By PETE LOCHBILER naped by a baby sitter. | By holding the line on The blond, blue-eyed baby had) wages again, Pontiac Gen- * been sought since Wednesday night | eral Hospital hopes to end after Mrs. Vickers, 19, reported) cal ’ ie e to police that the child had been! its three year str in th are (from left) City Manager Walter K. Willman study of its use by business and private fliers. came to a virtual standstill and |immigrant’s bed and a ‘no sightseeing buses were seen’ cioset as “the greatest art abducted from her near downtown | red next year. | | State’s Tax Battle Now Between GOP Senators From Our News Wires Back Confab, Democrats Told Justice Eugene Black t . 7 Says Supreme Court he Legislature in knots all year long settled down today into strictly a conflict between Republican senators. After four caucuses consuming seven hours yesterday, In something like F.D.R.'s fam-! ous fireside chats —,but without Disc Distributor the fire — Michigan Supreme Court istics panel re niet Claims Payola. Jemocrats over the coals last night! ° Cost Him Plenty all crisis last night. “What looks warm today may for their opposition to a constitu- tional convention * * * The outspoken justice urged his) phia record distributor said today} Basically, the fight was be- he has paid thousarids of dollars) Wee® beckers of a 74-million- LANSING — The deadlock over taxes that has tied) —*the GOP Senate majority; but despaired of an War rant Asked answer to the state’s cash) be colder than Iceland tomorrow,”’ summarized Sen. Frank D. Beadle| Oxford ‘Potato King’ PHILADELPHIA u—A Philadel-|°! St. Clair, GOP majority leader. hauling tourists who chose to spend the day in dryness and com- | jfort of their hotels. Motorists who did venture on | flooded, rain-slicked streets drove with such care that the police de-| partment reported fewer accidents than normal. ——————————— Hunting Death | Manslaughter Charge Is: | Possible in. Shooting of ‘find of the century.” | said they’re worth 8 to 10 ~~ «& * ‘million dollars. He Some art authorities weren't so sure. They said they’d like to see the works for themselves. x * * Alexander Ziatoff-Mirsky, art appraiser and restorer who has his own studio, declared 10 of the dozen paintings are masterpieces) from the Italian Renaissance. ' One of them he identified as | the ‘“Madallena” by Michelan- gelo de Caravaggio and valued at more than one million dollars. (This is not the same Michel-| angelo who painted the Sistine, Chapel.) Even as announcement of the) Cheboygan State Police today discovery came Thursday in film. | attorney Jerry Giesler’s of- hotel room while she was at work. The sitter was found with the baby. FBI agent Julius Lopez said the woman, identified as Di- ane Varner, 27, would be charged with kidnaping. A tip led to her arrest. Miss Varner was, arraigned Thursday night before |).S. Com-! missioner Wilbur Glendening at, Hammond, Ind., on a charge of; kidnaping and taking the boy| across state lines. She was held in} the Lake County Jail. ¥ * * } In a tearful voice, Mrs. Vickers’ told The Pontiac Press before she, learned her son was safe: “Tt I get my baby back, I’m going back to Pontiac.” Mrs. Vickers is the daughter of| Mrs. Martha Dietrich, 8 Henry Clay St., a nurse at Pontiac Osteo- pathic Hospital, Following the return of the ba- | ! ' | was interrupted by the A record operating budg- et of $4,622,7830—more than $1,400,000 higher than 1959’s — was adopted by the Board of Trustees last night and sent off to the City Commission for ap- proval. Adding up its estimated reve- nués, losses and expenses in: 1960, the hospital found it has a chance of ending up in black. budget showed a -end ope: : year. $329. This estimate was arrived at only. after provision for $137,000 be set aside to _ Since program four been steadily in "| Should’ Rule on Vote! | ) ’ constitution. ~aled slightly today At 10am; fellow jurists to drop everything else and rule on whether the 1958 to get records played on local radio programs. He estimated pér- statewide vote for a convention: | dollar package of temporary «| | nuisance taxes and of a com- bination personal-corporate in- ling him with manslaughter in the can be affirmative despite being !h8Ps 20 of = seal 200 disc; come tax package, rain ragiry Sy earn ; defeated as it lacked a clea cut Jockeys took “payola. It was to be resumed today, the) — — | * * |I61st working day of the record * * * majority of those voting in the! election. Edward D. Cohn, proprietor of |Lesco Distributors — one of 16 Biack said it should only take (record firms in town, said he paid a simple majority of those vet- disc jockeys $5 to $100 to play to those of us in the Legislature as! of the head Wednesday while hunt- - ing on the issue to pass, as he (popular records he was pushing. opined as Republican attorney |He said he stopped the practice general in 1948. because it got too expensive. “The Democratic Party better “I got to the point where I stop its negative attitude toward would have to spend the a convention," he urged. “We can't) from the first 10,000 records sit around and say we aren't go-| to pay the dis¢ jockeys if I'd ing to aid the call of a conven-| gene on,” Cohn told newsmen. tion until we get this or that.) Cohn named no ‘names or sta- ~*~ * * tions, but said ‘‘there are five sta- Democrats opposed ® convention |tions in town, today whose em- last year saying delegate repre-|ployes I never had to give arty- sentation under the present sys-thing to." There are a score of tem would be heavily Republican.;radio stations in the area. “The reason the Republicans * x are in the soup they are today is Cohn said he wasn't ashamed that they were against every- | of giving “payola” brt hoped the thing,” he said, ‘‘Let’s not let | practice would end. He said that happen to us." listed the payments under pro- motion for tax purposes and paid the dise jockeys by check, ex- cept for one whe made a prac- Black spoke to some 27 mem-; bers of the Bloomfield Democratic} Club at the home of Mr. and Mrs. | Joseph S, Radom, in West Bloom-| field Township. * * * His family room discussion went | “4S involved. “Dick Clark does not way bggk to 1898 When Michigan|take a Cent and never would,” he first thOught pf changing its 1850 replied. He called this the} start of ‘‘a comedy of errors ex-/ This Must Be the Place cept for its tragedy.” Like it is} today, it was ruled then that a; KNOXVILLE, Tenn. simple majority for a convention wasn't sufficient Referring to the current finan-} cial muddle, Black predicted worse| trouble if eight months. “We've; ments, (UPR— utility board had *no doubts Wednesday night that they had found the broken water main they were sent to fix. Their sanship which is tearing us apart,”| phalt, water and mud. sold | tice of demanding cash pay- | Beadle disagreed Cohn was asked if Dick Clark | Two repairmen from the city | long 1939 legislative session. | Known in Oakland County as the | * * * The despair that gripped the |crisis-weary Capitol eame in the! lit is te the people outside,” Beadje|ing 10 miles west of Cheboygan. said, last might, after the fourth) state Police seid Bauers, 52, Senate Republican caucus of the) yesterday admitted firing the fa- | day. tal shot when he saw some Beadle was asked whether he Was) branches moving in the woods. encouraged or discouraged over} They quoted him as saying he ithe marathon discussion. did not know whether he was “I'm frustrated,” was the firing at a deer. ’ ge »» | After the shot, Bauers said he — ore you opt on! {went to investigate and found Wil- we cart ee a liams lying on the ground. |, a eee al Branches apparently set up as a a on ae blind surrounded the body. Significantly, the GOP Senate) majority had retreated from the CHANGES STORY temporary new or increased taxes} Bauers and his brother Charles on beer, tobacco, liquor and serv- called police. jices it had endorsed last week. Police said Roy Bauers first | NUISANCE TAX DEAD: | told them he had shot at a deer Some Republican senators told, a9d Williams moved into his line inewsmen the nuisance tax pack-| of fire. age was deader than a doornail./ Williams was the third hunter {to die in Michigan of gunshot wounds since the season opened oe Sunday. . aftermath of a weird _and wild day| xk « of oratory, | He had a@ potato farm on Bald- Lincoln's Gettysburg Address |win road in Oxford’ Township be- was read on the Senate floor by | fore moving to Mullett Lake about Sen. L. Harvey Lodge (R-Drayton | eight years. ago. Plains), who complained little at- | tention was paid his plea for . sound management of what Chicken Out of Show monty the state hans. LONDON (UPI)—Officials of “Nobody listened to him then) next month's National Poultry jeither,” Lodge said. Show announced yesterday that | The shouts of Lodge and others) no poultry will-be shown at the ‘closed-door caucus sessions. | diseases, |were seeking a warrant against|jand |Roy Bauers of Carp Lake, charg- fice “Potato King,” Williams, 62, of, their agent, | “T know this is as discouraging Mullett Lake, was shot in the back| who developed into are . a rift developed between the lowners and their agent. * * * Alfonso Follo, 40, a television) irman, and his sister, Maria 'Follo Hataburda, of Pasadena said ‘that Charles dj Renzo a friend ‘had made the matter public know said. Ziatoff-Mirsky said the master- pieces were authenticated by Am-) jadore Porcella, catalogist for the’ DIANE VARNER Vatican and an expert on Renais- Paint, Plaid, |sance art, Porcella spent four months in Pasadena examining Dungarees— the works, Follo and Mrs. Hata- : burda said. ‘Still a Deer MONTICELLO, N.Y. @—Baby, WORKED IN VATICAN | (In Rome, the director of the} | Vatican museums said Porcell® |was employed as a technician in’ rganizati he Vatican , the reorganization of t fle wa a | art Galleries from 1933 to 1934 or s shot by 11935 but, according to availabfe| even though he had ‘‘pet’’ paint- ‘records, was not in charge of cat-| @d om each flank and a red plaid aloging or evaluating and did not) ee ar - dungarees tied hold a top job. ; ’ _ . | (The directér added that he had | Baby, whe ate spaghetti and had no official connection with | meatballs, was by Me. | the Vatican for at least 24 years. | ang Mrs, N — efter | (An official of the Italian | the deer’s mother was killed by ‘government arts department said, an automobile, Every day the 'Porcella is not on ‘their list of} animal made a trip to meet the three Pittalaga children at the \first-rate and second-rate art ex-) |perts although he may haye be-| school bus stop. The animal alse icome a recognized authority} enjoyed eating hamburgers, ba- abroad.) | Manas and canned dog food. ~ * * x«* * * With the hunting season on, | “We have ae known the! Baby was painted and dressed up |paintings were worth a great deal, truck sank in four feet of as- |were clearly audible during the| show because of current poultry jof money,’ Mrs. Hataburda said.| to prevent his being mistaken (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | for a wild deer, got to get rid of the bitter =n he said. He didn't say how. ~*~ * * Now considered a non-partisan | Parting Words of Public Works Official Schone “Democrat” on the court, Black! "reece Oakland County Good, but Could Be Better } and serving as partisans. “The| present system is loaded with evil.” Black said, By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. Justices are nominated at polit) Although he said Oakland Coun- cal conventions, yet are elected|ty government is head and shoul- and supposedly serve on a non-|ders above any other county in partisan basis. Michigan, Harold K. Schone said sore plenty of room for:iniprove-' Nice Weather Seen |, ‘= for Football Fans Needed more than anything else is a top administrator, declared Schone, acting director of the Coun- Football fans are going to have it perfect weatherwise this week- end. ty Department of Public Works. Soon to leave for his new job as city manager of Arcadia, Calif., Schone was asked by this reporter for his analysis of the county government, and what the | “ future holds, | high of 38, with a chance of light) ., + bably| rain or snow by night, The™Tow Oakland Potnty is probably) zs moi ssive than the majority for tonight will be 25. * 4 etl nen aleeagey tages 3 x *& * Saturday will be cloudy with a : , of counties in the Uiited States,”| served as president of the Detroit gy Megs nag oo north Schone said ‘ os . Metropolitan Area = of = southeasterly at 8 to 12 m.p.h. to- He was critical, however, of the) ministration. : peerer, work pf the three-member Board of Auditors and the chairman of a special study committee created itwo years’ ago to study reforms in. the. government. * * * The thermometer which rose to 36 Thursday afternoon has fluctu- wind - velocity and direction was jrey and -not on the other eight realized. Much, he said, can be done under present laws. - Asked why it hasn't, Schone said Springfield Township Supervisor John L. Carey, was “way too slew in getting things done.” Schone placed the blame on Ca- members of the committee, which,} to date, has accomplished but one major reform—the merger of the offices of county clerk and register of ddeds, * * * Schone, 45, has been associated with some form of government since 1933. He is considered one of the country’s top public adminis- trators. : He is past chairman of the De- troit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission and has * * : _ The former city manager of Bir- mingham, Oak Park and Harbor \Springs said some Oakland County} officials are wrong -in_ believing! one mile easterly / a At 1 p.m. the thermometer read- ing was Kt | downtown Pontiac. y He vai. ber] the abolishment of the Board of Auditors and said / nad the special-commitiee, héaded by araggite the govertiment art be! that law changes are necessary be- é ee fore reorganization: steps to) , HAROLD K. ar \ some officials are reluctant to al | First Presbyterian Church? ‘act the necessary changes believ-;-— submitting my applications like \ing the “line of least resistance is anybody else.” | sometimes the easiest.”’ Schone, who takes over his a 4 job on the West Coast Dec. 15, A lot of the fault rests with sald «wath y io that | the lack of initiative om the part | there's much to be done but | ef the Board of Auditors,”’ he | most officials don't know whose said. responsibility the task is. He h 1 aised werent said the government hierarchy is Although he praise "| too unwieldy. There's very little head auditor Robert Y, Moore, for} - “i : contributing much to the growth! hein of commend. of the county, Schone said “the' Oaklapd County could solve this Believed by many to be in line! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) for Moore's post if he had | sp. sieneemnsenseennmiba tienes stayed on — the DPW head lt T e -_ P . estly said one of the reasons he was leaving his $17,500 position n oO ay Ss Tess was because he felt it wrong that #@> some officials were attempting to ee ae ee et tterh Oakland's new government Comics e: coc ese esseenee 40 1g he could head it. He said he, Cousty News . er t this was hampering the Editorials Se er ne mete movement i en 13 . Markets ................... @ x & Master Your Tensions <.. 9 Would he ever return to take the} Obituaries .,........./.... 8 top spet here? he was asked. oe, HOP AER SOOCOn Cocos $2-35 “| "it at thé time they Cevelopes Theaters—.. +--+ 38-39 some reorganization,’ he an-| TY & Radio Programs ... 41 iswered, ‘I'd consider very strongly’ Wilson, Karl .....4........ 39 | based on what the conditions wary Women’s Pages ......... 20-23 _|Mrs. Vickers said, a aaaee Seer oe ee ee don't have to pay me.” this Catskill mountain town, is | | church here is too small to} Pened. job is getting too big for Bob.” by naming an administrator, who) by, Mrs. Vickers restated her in- tention ef leaving Chicage te re- turn here, She has been separat- ed from her husband James since Jantiary, His whereabouts are un- known, A divorce suit is pending. ara Vickers and her husband lived in Pontiac at 27% Steut| | plant uhder the expansion program St. She went to Chicago last month} akes long-range forecasts ; : 5 a & rf thotel manager. * * * “Just before 1 left for work,” ‘told me, ‘This is an awfully sweet |Profits, baby. I'd like to bave one like| Gross 'him.’ ” Mrs. Vickers told the sitter she She told police she left wom- jan and her baby in her room }about 6:30 p.m.-when she went to! : | work in a neighborhood restnn-| yo se ar ary additional posts |rant. : in the administrative staff. About 9:30 p.m., she said, a | As part of last year's crash pro- restaurant customer reported he gram during the height of the hos- { (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) ' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Sorrowtul Curtice Attends Funeral of Friend He Shot ANN ARBOR (? — Harlow H. Curtice, retired presi- dent of General Motors Corp., planned to attend the funeral service today for his friend and onetime aide, Harry W. Anderson, whom he shot and killed in a hunt- | ing accident. Arrangements were made for a Mormon service at at 2 p.m. The Mormon yesterday how the accident hap- | , accommodate the expected, / number of mourners. * * * Meanwhilé, a Canadian coroner |indicated that an inquest into An- {derson's death probably will be ‘held ‘‘on account of the promi- inence of these people’ although Ontario provincial police agreed |that the shooting was accidental. | Anderson, a retired GM vice president, was killed while duck | hunting Wednesday with Curtice | on Ste. Anne’s Island off the Ca- nadian side of the St, Clair River, . 30 miles northeast of Detroit. ee a At Wallaceburg, Ont., Dr. C. A. Tribute will |Henrich, Lambton County coroner,| when The |said no date has been set for an 1959 All-Oakland County | inquest. Provincial - police re- team selected by \turned to the accident scene yes-' ang The Press terday to take photographs and question witnesses. | top RETIRED IN 1957 Pallbearers at the funeral include | Louis G. Seaton, who - succeeded Anderson as vice president in} charge of the GM personne] staff, be named, and Earl.R. Bramblett, director of; Sanding coaches, labor_relations. Anderson, 67, re _Den’t miss Saturday's tired two Vears ago, P . | A grave and careworn ‘Curtice the finest Oakland prep feothall jtold a news conference in Flint’ players of the year! : Read the Press for Grid All-Star Picks Saturday 7S ‘ Y. @ Plans tor Two Schools _ The Waterford Township Board}on Merrie road north of Pontiac ‘ @f Education last night approved)/Lake road. Smith & Smith archi- preliminary plans for two new ele-|tects has been awarded the con- gmentary schools, and will open con-/tracts for both schools. struction bids on the buildings De- AON cember 22. Negotiations for the Pontiac Lake | - *¢ * road school site have been com-| Part of the $5-million school bond | pieted, issue approved * voters last March, each of the new buildings| "he seheolsboard approved a | - fully equipped. ing of $200,000 against the 1959. | 60 stafe ald. According to Shunck, | The schools are expected te be | the State of Michigan is approx. | ready for operation next Septem- | imately $250,009 delinquent in ber, grow te superintendent | state ald payments to the Water- ford Township school system this year. As yet not net named one of the | schools will be located on a 9-lot! site on Pontiac Lake road, one-h: alt) mile south of the present high school, The second school will be) Board members approved opera- tional procedure involving a pay- lroll deduction plan of union dues for custodial, maintenance, engi- neer, and bus driver personnel, * * * Two representatives of the Mc- Vittie school Parent-Teacher Asso- ciation, were present asking the board to help solve the transporta- tion, and walking problem for chil- After Kidnaping \dren going to and from school on (Continued From Page One) least and west Létart street, and had seen the sitter carrying the |Olmstead road. baby down a skid row street. The | The parents had asked the baby sitter was staggering, the | board to have bus transportation Pontiac Baby Safe eS " THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 4 ab A, di UPI Telephete GORGEOUS, GEORGE — Professional heavyweight wrestler Gorgeous George admires himself in a hand mirror as his person- al ‘‘valette’’ Cherie Dupre makes certain each curly leck is in place. The vain villain of the grunt and groan circuit shaved off his natural wavy Coiffure last Marc h after losing a match to Whip- per Billy Watsona The gorgeous grappler also got a scalp massage in his new Chicago beauty shop. friend said, within a one-mile radius, or as- Leaving her job, the mother| sist da — ee ae _gearched the -neighborhood for 45| *g™s. y also discus e minutes without finding a trace of possibility of side road paths. There was no action on the mat- ter. A request was received from su- |perintendent of Ann Arbor schools Jack Elzay, to have a team of a tour of the South State etreet taverns. * * * -Yesterday afternoon police re- Waterford Township board meet- ing. ane said his group was in- ; .. terested in .jcedure of business, and operation! of the township's school system. * * * Preliminary plans for a second senior high school which had been approved at last month’s meeting, i iF for the safe return of the baby. Appraiser Says Art Worth Millions Found December 3, the board will | and give final approval | hew elementary school tention 4 the high school plans. The paintings have been handed ii gs g I: Lal : YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP) — A fire in a chemical plant tou off a series of gigantic spisaiea| in a heavily populated eran if i F * * to the “Madallena," | injured. Zlatoff-| There was only one confirmed death, but authorities did not rule} out the possibility that more dead Titian’s| would be found. * a. * vallino’s “Saint Cecelia”; Giordano’s “Rape of Dejaniro’’;|quickly. Before the explosions be- Tintoretto’s “Moses on Mt. Sinai"";|gan, most of the workers within| Artemisia Gentilischi’s “The An the plant had raced to cover injhave to hike advertising rates, | That 1959 occupancy exceeded| Waterford High? Nope! Call It Edison in 1961 board members and administrators | Township Senior High School will from his school system, attend a he changed as of September 1961. agenda coptents, PTO-/the Thomas A. Edison High School, names to honor two of Michigan's greatest minds. proved by the board for elemen-| tary schools in the $5-million build- program voters ed in lever, the hospital expects to have _ — | another 40 in operation, These will {come whenever remodeling of the lian A. Be Carl cast wing is finished and the ex-| iRd., try, 68, 1427 Kirkway March, Mrs. - Says 10-Cent Papers = Coming Inevitably aged, and 376 persons were/politan newspapers inevitably will | lrise to 10 cents, according to Ar-| |thur Hall,» Chicago Daily News The name of the Waterford | The Township Board of Educa- ion decided last night to call it The reason for the change is that a second school, to open in 1961, will be knewn as the Charles F. Kettering High Scheel. A committee chose the two Four other names were ap y * « * The names Della Lutes, ‘hairman of the names committee, Donald Adams, CHICAGO (#—The cost of metro-| general manager. Hall told a periodical distribu- He said newspapers also will! | pital’s City Hospital Seeks End fo Years in Red (Continued From Page One) fiscal . crisis, There'll be more employes — about 50 were hired back last month — but the hospital in- tends to continue to keep its present ratio of 2', employes per | patient, slightly below the state average, said Harold B, Euler, hospital administrator. There ear, Sometime next year, how- Sandburg, Edgar A. Guest and Lu- Pansion program is completed, ¢inda H. Stone, were selected be-| cause of their outstanding contribu-| tion to Michigan, according to the to add substantially to net profits. Ls * * The final 40 beds are expected| Another cautious attitude was ta-! one of the hospital's best sears, next year’s occupancy rate was estimated at only 87 per cent. This is a conservative esti- mate, taking into consideration — the low occupancy rates during | 1967 and 1958. Last year, when the hospital ore] dicted a net operating loss of $45,- }tors meeting the price increase will |500 in 1959 (not including $156,000. lbe one of several financial réforms| figure was forecast at 87.7 per cent, | The death toll would have been|necessary to enable newspapers to|in depreciation) Lauca|huge, but word of the fire spread/expand their role as interpreters; slightly higher than the 1960 pre-| of world events in the 1960s. diction. x. + ‘The (Day in Birmingham Mediterranean Fine Arts, | Mediterranean fine arts and crafts’ Cratts Displayed at Gallery Ind. The body will be at Donelson- Johns ‘Funeral Home, Pontiac, un- til.6 p.m, today. Mrs, Berry died today at her home alter a : She is survived by a son, John P. Charles of Bloomfield Hills and one grandson. BIRMINGHAM—A collection of wil] be on display from now until Christmas af, the Little Gallery, East waete RG, "trey x * * From the tollection of Mr. and Mrs. Albert de Salle, examples of material and workmanship from Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey will be featured. The colléction reveals the uni- Government Buys | area, the De Salles explained. hourly-em- ployes had to forego annual raises. were two cautious as-, Hall. sumptions in preparing the budget. | Anticipated revenues are based on the probable income from only 349 beds — the number expected ° to be in operation at the end of this |ken in estimating use of the hos- | pital by the public. Although occu- pancy has averaged a record 93.9! a cent so ee this year, ere the occupancy| nuciation”; Lorenzo Lotto’s “St.jcaves or behind earth and con-|publish fewer editions each day,| budget predictions has resulted so Jerome”; Claude Gele’s “Lot With|crete bunkers built when the plant, His Daughters’, and mere: a hee nae Navy ammunition | Santi's “Madonna With Saints “depot. consolidate pig and better control internal management Schone Eyes Government Changes (Continued From Page One) would have as one of his main/S°Vermment conducted in 1932 and cutting the 8&3-member Board of Supervisors in half; and| cutting the number of committees | Appointment of an administra- ter would, for one thing, get more day-by-day business done faster, in separate studies of Oakland!self-taught Schone suggested put- ting two of the three auditors on a per diem pay basis, like they) were before. “In this case we have three to a/far this year in an operating prof-| it of $43,406, instead of a loss. But} this profit still does not take into! account depreciation on buildings and equipment. When that is fig-) ured in at the end of the year,! cash. The hospital's financial aim, the hospital ‘ill show a loss of) more than $100,000. It is still undecided whether | the hospital will be in financial | position next year to fund all, | or only part of its depreciation in as stated by Clarkson, is to be able, is of the Bean’ from 28 to about 7.! instead equal authority,” he said. “I when the expansion program * | jee poy Bey Peay Aen can’t soe three heads of some- |Completed, to fund all depreciation ts edition, he sald, a so-called! of Supervisors te meet, he said. | thing.” in cash- ; ae administrative board should be’ The administrator would bring| Although he was critical of some! 4 breakdown of the budget created consisting of the chairman| of the Board of Supervisors and! the chairmen of the proposed sev- en committees. Most of the recommendations. Schone pointed out, were contained The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY = bariig pig f teday with a high of 38 is fere-| Light variable winds today ané) contibe Mostly ecleudy tonight a 4d te- merrow with little change in tempera- ny et 75. High temerrew $8. winds becoming southeasterly 8-12 miles Saturday. . these lesser problems to the ad- ‘ministrative board which con-| \ceivably, could be given the au-| |Supervisors. * * * He said committees today are \tackling too many minor subjects, | lwhich the administrator could do instead. maintained as the administrator and board would be responsible to the Board of Supervisors. As important as these revi- sions are, Schone cautioned, the Teday in Pontiac § ii temperature preceding 8 a.m. Per @ am: Wind relocity 2 m.p.h. rection: North. lorms government come Sun sets Friday at 5:06 p.m ref - Sun rises Saturday at 7:30 #.m slowly. But, he added, this Moon sets Saturday at 11:31 a.m. Moon rises Friday at 9:42 p.m. Dewntown Le geo doesn’t excuse Carey’s commiit- tee. phases of Oakland County govern- ment as it is today, ithority to act on them without|criticism was not ‘further referral to the Board of|the first time because * ‘I am ready ithe losses come about because the established rates paid by these to leave town.” ® agencies do not quite meet the’! lthat proper control still would be ‘en, he said. a second major reform being con- to Lansing every time a new law is needed. Counties, unlike cities, are gov- | Cutting into the budget forecast of erned solely by state laws. Cities.'$4.991,706 in profits from patients! in addition to coming underystate/and other income estimated at! Schone, who * * “I’ve said these things and put/average daily costs for treating a * * * Horme-rule for Oakland we idered by the committee — m t with Schone’s approval only as it would eliminate the practice of $40,000 in such areas as the pub- county legislative agents running} lic clinics and a whopping $1%5,- | 000 expected in unpaid bills, pled children sponsored by state, them down in writing before,’ he! patient at Pontiac General. said. Many of these recommenda-| |tions were presented to Carey's! Schone emphasized, however, | committee, but no action was tak-\ a+ $149.70: ives on patients at $54,000; and the | * * - The Blue Cross loss is estimated | the loss on county | oss on treating indigent and crip-; $44,000. There are estimated losses of Total losses are set at $462,400, As expenses, the budget listed a Sagenyy re = i: om. eeeeee 3) After an administrator is hired) Bam. 72720535 pam i... sland board named, another step) A a.m. nee would be drafting a code granting| llaws, too, have individual charter! 393.145 from the hospital cafeteria RA operat additional duties to them in their | Controls. As eles dowarrend new roles. ~~ * * | Frighest abhetsce-seceess 38 * * * “You can't operate an efficient|depreciation; Lowest 26 government if you have to go to in salaries and wages; Mean semperstere : Schone took some of the blame w o. Fae. off the Board of Auditors by say- se "8 under the present setup it ORT: , 3ejdoesn't have enough aiithority. He e+» @) said- the supervisors could vote more intelligently on matters pag a nog should auditors submit a recom- 12 in Be: accel before each vote. “Supervisors today don't get | 34, all the facts,” he said. i | Annual budgets aren't detailed] 3p /enough to inform supervisors and se citizens alike, Schone remarked. 25|More explanation should be given $4} tor increases and decreases each ae year, h em Ye ain Marquette 36 «(21 his IM Serasssyueysesese * *® As an interim step in the direc- ia) on of ges an administrator at top of the coufty hierarchy, 67 ‘| a EsSeussseresyess $0 61) = &- problem to solve,’ should be a he said. But Schone again stressed that) fees. jmuch can be done immediately to; jimprove the county’s government. C. Gale Welch Dies Reject Stinging Proposal, Nicholson offered the Ministry. of Agriculture yesterday a sure way of solving a dispute about whether certain flavor sprays harmed bees. Sir Godfrey ol- fered j@ bring .a deputation of angry bees to the ministry. He yas turned down. am resident said. Home - LONDON (UPD—Sir Godfrey * C. Gale Welch of 1255 Vaughn} Rd., Bloomfield Hills, died last; night at William Beaumont Hos- pital. of His bod¥ is at Bell Chapel, the William _ R. Four-fifths of all the bituminous Hamilton | Funeral Home, Birmingham. shows the hospital still. anticipates big losses on state and county al- never went to college, said his) jyances and Michigan Hospital | being voiced for!corvice (Blue Cross) payments. | the land other minor sources of profit. record $2,903,230 | $1,239,950) {Lansing every time you have a in other operating costs; and $292,-| the Birming-|/600 in fees for professional serv-! rule ices in anestheology, radiology and/ long-range objective,/nathology. The hospital levies spe-| |cial patient charges to offset these | coal produced in the U.S. makes! at least a part of the journey from! ~ [pe to market by railroad. Beef for Schools WASHINGTON. (UPI) — The Agriculture Department has - an- jnounced the purchase of 5,985,000 The collection includes a book of pounds of frozen ground beef for charts with eight miniature ‘paint-’ $2,423,000. | ings, probably done in Siena in the| x * * early Sixteenth Century to a group | This brings the government's of wood carvings made by a con- i beet purchases in recent weeks temporary primitive in Madrid in}to a total of 10,584,000 pounds at 1958, |$4.2 ,278,000. The meat will go into x * * thé school lunch program. Also included are several exam- ples of ikons in the Byzantine tra-| The Coast Guard protects all dition, a Spanish coat of arms'U.S. ports against fire, sabotage, and a group of flamenco dolls, negligence and other important vergality of beauty and craft- manship though it is representa- tive only of the Mediterranean Sorrowing Curtice . Attends Funeral ‘(Continued From Page One) industrialist said. “I knew him for at least 30 of my 4 years with General Motors.”’ Curtice retired as GM president last year but is still a director. r asked why Ander- up in the duck blind just as Cur- tice fired a ¥2-gauge shotgun at a flock of ducks overhead, * * * “I don’t know,” Curtice said. “That’s one of the things I can’t understand. He may have stum- bled. He lurched my way. The ground was very uneven at that point.”’ Newsmen asked Curtice whether he had any suggestions on prevent- ing such accidents, “] think that there should be just one gun per blind,” he said. “That would be my suggestion. I mean, just one gun in-use at a time.” Then he added, ‘‘I have been told by many of my friends that it could have happened to them.” Curtice talked to newsmen in his perils. office in the Genesee Bank Build- ing. He sat on how he and Anderson were seated in the duck blind. DECOYS IN FRONT the floor to show - “The decoys’ were in front af both of us,’’ he said. ‘The ducks came in upwind. “I don’t know what happened to Mrs.. Ande make Mr, Anderson get up.” rson, 40, a tall, au- burn-halred woman, said she held no feeling of ok nag Curtice as she arranged : stood) day for her husband's A statement on her behalf was He said, made by Richard Cross, family at- torney. “She understands the circumstances of the accident and is deeply sorry for Mr. Curtice. Mrs, Anderson says there is not a shred of bitterness about the trag- edy—only oe, x Besides his wife, Anderson leaves Cross said a 4-year-old daughter, Jane Kris- tan, and a sister, Mrs. Agnes Pe- terson of Cadillac, Mrs. Anderson is a Mormon. Anderson was not. Thief Has Big Plans DENVER (UPI)—A young man stole seven blank marriage li- censes and the city seal from a city hall office yesterday. A 77-year-old Birmingham wom-! jams an was admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital and released yes-| terday after she ran into the rear| of another car in front of Harlan’ Elementary School on Adams road. Police said that Marie Sprague, 3108 Talbot, ran inte | a car driven by Rebert South. | ard, 17, 45600 N. Adams Rd., | Troy, after he had stopped for a | red light. Police said that only minor dam-| age was done to both cars, Regular $21.50 | | (Model FPM) The Women's Fellowship of the NEWEST MODEL | Congre ational Church of Bir- in Choice of jminghédm will hold its monthly! | meeting and luncheon Dec. 1 at 3 COLORS }12:30 p.m. in the church - Social! Tonite & Sat. Only * * | Mrs. William Milligan will be guest speaker. Her topic wil] be ‘Christmas Time.” | rate thermostat’ for uniform, Mrs. Lillian A, Berry Service and burial for Mrs. Lil- Electrical Dept. —dlad Floor Bloomfield Township, will be ‘held Sunday tn New Castle, Doser, ae WEEK-END | SIMMS SUNDRY DEPT. MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Pack 100 omdls wanna Ggaaune | 140-Pc. Combination STATIONERY PACK | results every time. Pink, yellow or turquoise Metal COVERS te Match at Preopertionate Lew Prices BUFFERIN Tabs Regular $1.29 pack of 100 tablets. Does not upset the stomach. Limit | Automatic ELECTRIC perfect cooking Rights Reserved te Limit All Quantities 19° SAVE $8 OFF Maker's List Price Fry Pans FULLY GUARANTEED =" Original Factory Cartons Deposit Holds Yours In Layaway The original, the genuine SUNBEAM with accu- Complete With FASTEETH aitesive Regular 67c¢ value—powder adhesive to hold dental plates in firmly. $1 Yalue | 100 sheets of fine writin paper and | standard size envelopes. Regular 65c seller. Full 25 tablets. Dissolves in’ water. ALKA-SELTZER pack of 30° especially for ath ABSORBINE JR. Regular $2.50 bottle of fungi killer lete’s foot. 1 LISTERIN WASH C DRI TABS Regular 89c bottle of 14 ounces Regular $2.89 pack of 100 famous antiseptic. Kills mouth bacteria. decongestant tablets for colds. | Regular $3.00 value—pack of 78 safe ! reducing tablets: Advertised on TV. Regular $1.95 bottle of 12 ounces for heartburn, indigestion. Limit | BAUME PROTEIN 4-WAY ABDEC KAPS } SHALL BEN-GAY LAXATIVE POWER PAC COLD TABS VITAMINS sal Cones 388 steele | Reg. 89c Reg. 79c Reg. $3.00 42« Reg. $5.08 ¢ FITS ALL ¢ | 69* 3 tase 2” Pack of 36 tab- 3” = 3 JE | cestnend in tabe, Fg ors. ID Srocin® fabtets! PNG ior coids. “ems FAM Bases ot rogue ngs Standard 8'axil imch size. Ruled! and punched for 2 and 3 ring note-/| SUPER ANAHIST hips SR, DOANS PILLS AG DEEP-RUB aa Cc eee ee , a lec — t ru roi oie a 90 setiat ~— bottle of 40 Regular 98c_ saller =e lee malles Addi REDUCING 9 mut 06 Machine REGIMEN “incrs 489) MAALOX Liquid PALMOLIVE RAPID SHAVE BOMB Instant lather for shaving. Adds & Subtracts Reg. $3.95 Regular C KLEENITE DENTAL PLATE CLEANER Regular $1.00 seller—powder clean- ° UID ULA Regular 27c can of famous Borden’s baby formula. Limit 42 cans. BREMIL LI BABY FOR BABY NEEDS Ak positories in infa 79¢ can pressure lather. Limif 2 er-——no scrubbing of plates. Lustre Creme UNICAP MULTIPLE MEADS SHAMPOO VITAMINS VITAMINS POLYVISOL a | bookueerers, “ease: | Meer $2.00 "939, E29 77, wives engineers, : Eco 1 2 -) a0 Resi use. [ ple ial rite iF famens Ln Aaa” ape! ood S0cc’s of ee oe oe ee oe ow oe oe oe oe oe oe ef rich wren «74 SB A “Ts be — >» vitemin a INFANTS’ GLYCERINE SUPPOSITORIES Regular 59c seller—pack of 25 sup- nt size. YEAST Reg. $2.49 ]”9 Pack of 240 tab- for your N health, Dextri-Maltose big a 1" BABY POWDER Regular 59¢ can of johnson G John- son talcum. for irritated kin. . Famous Meads #1 -formula in 22 can of farmous powder. Limit FLETCHERS CASTORIA Regular $9.95 Value With wood carrying 5" case, dissecting set and 12 slides. $1.00 holds: | 98 N. Sagjpew —Maia Floor! infants’ laxative, ’ Regular 49¢ bottle of this popular SIMMS. BABY CREAM Regular 98¢ bottle of Johnson G Johnson all-purpose skin cream. Ke ROTHERS >a. DRUG DEPT. —Main Floor ¢ » Ye? eoelterdia Wewsr? eds brortigret beerebibbewed brredébinge bebe reeds erdddengsiereeds) —~=_3- Chale THE RONTIAC PRESS _ MAKER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 9 | roa “PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. . : (‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes’ evening on the first performance | ganization. of ‘‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.” | Presented by the Waterford Letters of commendation went |Township High School Dramatics} the National Merit Schelaraht Club, the play tells the story of| ) ) ‘orporation eek. Recelv- itwo teen-age girls and their ad-! ¢ bet’ © ventures on an unchaperoned tip to Europe. Most of the action takes place in Paris as Lorelei and Dorothy are in and out of trouble with money and handsome gentle- men. The comedy, adapted from Ani- ta Loos’ book of the same name, is the first production of the Dra- matics Club this year The performances tonight and tomorrow night are the result of work on the part of the cast, stag- ing crews, committees and direc- ltor, Patty Looman THANKSGIVING ASSEMBLY Waterford’s annual Thanksgiv- ing Assembly will be held next Wednesday. The program includes numbers by the choir and choral, groups and an original play writ- ten and presented by the address class Monday night will be the organ- izational meeting of a new club at Waterford. The Future Business Leaders of America, affiliated wit's both state and national organiza- tions, will be formed. The FBLA club from Holly High will be there to give aSsistance YOUNG_AND GAY — These Oxford Area Community High formance tomorrow evening. The principal characters in the thtee- [8d advice as Waterford High School students seém to be enjoying their roles during this re- act comedy by Jean Kerr are (standing) Clinton Yerkes as Leo, |Students launch this new venture. | hearsal of ‘“Oyr Hearts Were Young and Gay.” The play opens at 8 Diane Yost as Cornelia, (kneeling) Jerry Brown as Dick, and cs tae Be higg Bere era tenight in the Junior High auditorium. There will ¥e another per- (foreground) Kristy Pearson as Emily. : YWCA. "The vow caaabire al ithe La | ‘Our Hearts Were Young and Gay’ Clarkston Hi gh St Michael's Has ) Oxfor d P resents Comedy tah ie reery Thanksgiving Dance Welcome. , By BARBARA ARDELAN Sta le at BATTLE OF SEXES — Waterford Township By BEATRICE KRUG | Yost as Cornelia Otis Skinner; By PAULETTE KIMBALL The Thanksgiving dance spon-| | High School actors rehearse a scene of rivalry | between the sexes in the school's production of . Waterford Curtain Rises Frankowski and motion picture “Rebel Without a Cause’ at its smeeting Monday evening. The film starring the late By JOHN TEEUWISSEN ;club who joined this fall will agp this hésér were Bill Pof.en- | Dramatics Club will present the in goes up at 8 this made official members of the or-| berger, Leo The curtain goes up a peey™ The letters are congratulatory | James Dean, is the first of several te thtee Waterford stydents from notes to students who rated high, movies that the club is sponsoring in the competition but did not'this year. The public is invited to qualify for the semi-final test. isee this picture. Pontiac Press Photo tain goes up at 8. Shown during dress rehearsal above are (from left) Susan Shaw, 3071 Old Or- chard Dr.; Roger Myers, 5743 Cooley Lake Rd; Kathy Bray, 114 Calvert St.; and Don Wennsten, 944 LaSalle St. The Senior class of Oxford Area, Kristy Pearson as Emily Kim- | The curtain will go up tonight sored by the combined junior} : ; Commminity High School is pre-| borough; Jerry Brown as Dick |on the Clarkston High School senior|classes promises to be a success | “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.” Performances are senting. the delightful three-act} Wisters; and Cllatom Yerkes as |ciass production of “The Night is'®t St. Michael School judging b’ en fs d slated for tonight and tomorrow night. The cur- comedy, “Our Hearts Were Young} Lee McEvoy. My Enefhy,” @ mystery thriller by|“¢ amount of tickets already sold. and Gay,” 8 p.m. today and t0-| Other parts are portrayed by | Freq Carmichael. The dance: “Redskin Ramble,” torium, ny | The play was shown to the | day in the Parish Hall, P eh Schoo! stu- Kennedy, Ed Erskine, Lucille At-| junior high school Wednesday | Heading the committees are Rus- a stu Included in the cast are Diane (wood Rod Wingett, Pam Broome,| and the senior high Thursday in |seli Greenices, tickets: Margaret dents and faculty are happy to| Singers welcome back Principal Francis |Grating; Bob Sabourin, refresh-'which sidelined him the first two s las. West Bloomtield {* >» -& & Though primarily a mystery, the ments; Pat Bums and Margaret) months of school. story is filled with a warm ro-| Worden, publicity; and Andy An-| Staley has been back part time ahd Jerfy Limbert. The student di- x «tk jassuming full time duties as prin-! Students on the makeup com-! The cast includes Paulette Etter,/tainment committee and has pro- The senior class of West Bloom-;Mann and Kiku Hayashi. von Moller, Sandy Hollis, Bob Lawson, jJaguars. field High School will present the/°" costumes are Paula Mann, Ja-/Georgia Robinson, Jim Manning, | play, “Henrietta The Elighth,”|"et Bass and Harriet Moore. Bill Rausch and John Kieft. records. principal as well as his own. the PTSA sponsored show will be ton. 'by the Business Education Depart-|C@talina swimming. club. two business education students! be Nancy Hibbard, J . " Linda Under- | Chorale which Sonja Johnston fima Janet Miholek, ith Magee pa ong q a W ae — mee in the teacher's workroom,| hill, Sandy Hilderly, Judy Sutton, Fran Lobeok as Dela Sut- |Diane Mann. Larry Spickler is in ; y matinee performances, Tonight c ‘ “ye : " , Claudia Wood and Karen Doug-| ary a eanctlan lwht Steck and Kitty Daugherty, dec-lstaley after a mild heart weet Visit Northern for 60 Chorale . By JUDY DUCKWITZ iors oduce The directors are Richard Siler|" derson and Al Tunny, door prizes. | Le sa } By ED SANTALA | Six Walled Lake High School stu-| oo couti . Seni Pr : mance and moments of comedy, n fer two weeks apd soon will be The famed University of Michi- dents last week attendéd the fist) p och wee ay Dames af ie ; ‘Henrietta the 8th’ |rector is Peezy Rich. * * t Sharon Saxton heads the enter-| cipal gan seimming team, formerrehearsal of tie 1959 Stiriiun Oi p.o4 ; : Inational champs, will give an rale at Ann Arbor. ° an i i j i i By DOD . mittee are Janie Langley, Phyllis|\Lucy Oakley, Ron Russell, Diane|vided the Ferros and Nick and the During his absence, C. T. (exhibition 8 p.m. Tuesday in the} Tp idi ae r officers include Pat Reid, ¥ I DWYER ley Forsman, assistant principal, | Pontiac Northern High School pool. | ry Wik, Lyme Aubby, Dodie Dack|ViCP et: Sad, Sas eae, Music wil] be provided also by| Bas carried out the duties of | One of the special events of witz, Dan Jackson and Jim Men-|S¢cretary-treasurer. morrow in the junior high #udi-trois stoddard, Paul Ludwig, Dough | will be held 8:39 p.m. Wednes- By BARBARA GRIFFIN "M’ Swimmers \Walled Lake High Shelton Voted Band Tune UP ‘Exec at Rochester By MARCIA SEED Ralph Sheldon was élected chief Senior High School Willa Huizenga, Cathy Hohnke, , iar i by i - | $ p.m. today in the gymnasium. a &-- 8 A new project has been launched 2 routine by the Northern all on More than 400 students from | 2#™@ Frost, Jackie Scheehan and southern Michigan schools au- Mary Lanktree, all juniors, are Students in cast | Members of the scenery Wi . ods Mbéa panty uns Be eentetan [ate Diena Shanes, Shason Souders, ‘Gold Cadillac’ Hit at Orion: this semester, Each hour,| The Catalinas in the show will | gitioned for the 1960 Michigan | thé semi-finalists from Rochester will tour Europe | High being considered for ‘the Kern, | next summer to give concerts an- | foreign exchange student whe — 7 ° filts typi i i . ton, Jack Parker ag Baggy Pants charge of properties. By DAVE NORTON |Shafer, narrator; Carrol Wiltse, —- duplicating copy for) Ann Phillips, Carol Campbell, | der the auspices of the Michigan | Will be sent to : try in Baldwin, Charles Graves as Dis- When William Shakespeare wrote Sandy Sheldon. John Mcintyre, | : aAdits a Charlotte DeRouse and Ruth | Council of Churches’ “Youth for | Europe this summer. ay . and Steve M = es . . “1 Julius Caesar’’ he had one thing Harry Rule, Mike Batinski, Sharon ! . “s bl peal u an ing hiret Ann Kramp. Understanding Teen-Age Ex. The fiv - ; Lady towesd. etaia ‘Avondale High Skiers in mind. He hoped to create a Taylor, Larry Middleton, June T hool en Pl ee | Included in the U. of M. squad change Program.” . beens ive — picked after they Salve are Kay Crowiod te an Are Getting Organized play that would draw many the-|Drake, Jerry Exline, Marilyn | excellent work expericace (272 national champions Ron Clark, | win . — = application in nabelle Mason, Scott Couzens as {atergoers-to-his Globe Theater. {Woodcock, Al Garcia, Ron Bell-|x45.+ O¢ them are seniors and wili|D&ve Gillanders, Dave Gerlack and’ Emangel Pypils Start essay. ne Ray Taylor, Nancy Macduff as By IRVIN GINGRICH Lake Orion High School's pro-|Ville, Doug Mickena and Janet iy. engaced in business jobs after| Pony Tastintk, | ri hess The names have bee Maggie, Judy Wahlberg as Lizzy,| \ Belieying winter is here to stay,|duction of “The Solid Gold Cadil-| Workman. graduation. Nara tae ions for students| Work on Yule Program | ew York where the final decision and Sharon Thornton as Martha.| Avondale High School’s Ski Club |/@c"’ received such results as last * * * Tickets are now on sale for “The | and $1 for adults. : wan he + agai jon Director of the play is Lorna'has organized and elected its of- night's opening. Student directors are Janetipijary of Anne Frank,” starring! A a ee ey pr locas i is; Pearunty @ a. Wildon, She is assisted by Jody| are Ah ; Workman and Karen Craven: Judi Johnson and Jim Baker, to|C0™bined Co-op Club of Northern) Officers of the student body at time in February or March. wil * —s s. bing ouaeet be ha een a - be held in the Pontiac Central audi-/@24 Central are Central's Bob| Emmanuel Christian School have Sue Schiecte, senior, was chosen Bennent, Bill Bergman, Judy Elii-| Barbara Tallman was elected | | 3 today in ya Committee chairmen are Jean|torjum Saturday night, Dec. 5, and|D@Vis. President; and Northern’s/ begun work on a Christmas pro-/by ret orp ne ick bee, Fay Anne Burley, Pat An-| president, Bil] Deveraux, secre- nreemte CR y Lewis, Otto Knibbe, Bud Bass,|Sunday afternoon, Dec. 6. All seats C@7e¢" McClements, vice presi-| gram. as iacaieds a eee ee thony, Rose Mary Nelson and| tary, and Clifford Rock, treasur- | *2°S speech room. - Karin Church, Beverly O’Tysen,/are reserved. The ticket price is|4¢"t: Carelyn McBurney, secre-| Planned are a bani concert, bu-|other schools in Michigan for the Norman Masters, er. The play's cast includes Jim!Carol Wallis and Pat Beraud. |75 cents. ee eee tte oe ee ee Aeron Rent p. ‘ | treasurer. senior girls trio. The program will' tion award. A CHRISTMAS TREISTRE Fashioned and Designed to Priced at $] ] 2” Only ~ Link Sets with genuine Star Sapphire set in 14 Kt Solid Gold *60 Transistor Radios in all the latest models. t THEY ALL EMOTE — Lake Orion High School seniors are producing, the Broad- evening in .the school’s speech room. The above picture shows how some of the way hit, “The Solid Gol¢ Cadillac,” and hoping for similar response. T! » play was characters emoted for last night's auglence. They are (from left) John McIntyre, well received at the opening last night. The last performance will be given this Harry Rule; Mike Balinski, Carroll Wiltse, Sandy Sheldon and Sharon Taylor, 45 N. . from LEONARD'S Full “4 Carat Diomahde Excite Any Diamond Appetite styles, makes and Our Stiver every item you may choose. Chafing dishes, we $500 | ESET LEONARD'S IMPERIAL CULTURED PEARLS See Our Complete Selection of Finer Diamond and Pearl Jewelry Priced at « Unusual Savings From $] 6°’ SILVERWARE Dept. main- < : ains a daily stock of ticks, compotoes, trays. Save Up Te 50% At Our New Location Saginaw — 4 Doors S. of Court House DOWNTOWN PONTIAC » \ ote : ¥ Ac « » “ : s } a , { . THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1959 f: oe. r 3 ; s y G Pretty Much of a Mess’ | i owe teas riaay an Ee Se | ony Milwaukee committee has aN iy Proposes , in which its own main office ‘ Geum. ’s Downtown Milwaukee Suited St 20 25 | wie om mtn | : Eliot G. nie he pumas ree = me opt wet Grandpa; Now It Needs Change sss." "ar “It is vitally necessary,” he says, ios “to encourage private capital to pentagon br " No Man's Land Says Both She, China Should -Vacate- Disputed | Border Areas By HARRY CHANDLER constructed downtown since 1937 | story shoppers’ plaza ever much (create a new siping ih rt for Grandpa all right. The met | MILWAUKEE W — Shabbiness and only a half dozen other "4 of the distance, — orton: ae io “tion now boils down to this: is i structures have been put up with : a= can e — wn- rs pes NEW DELHI, “India ~ (AP) — land decay have been painfully and private capital since World War II. | Mayer Frahk cedar wasn't en- jtown can be recreated with private good enough for: ws Prime : Ke A = oe ! : 4/5 QT. Just One to $988 8.95 ae oe f @: ‘ g ae Seneeeen: . ne Bots Tot __‘Sell_ ot Ladies’ Salil Gia’ Weddi OR SO LET WS a r f] x fifth comes superbly gift-wrapped ries Rings Vales to 24.50 ..... 4 ‘ “on ‘i SAGINAW STREET “Sor = famous tacked inside. anithtiane = CUCKOO CLOCK Gents’ Linde Star Ruby Ring $§g° - Reduced for $588 or 149.30 ...... ‘ PONTIAC BANK BLDG. eo — GQUR ROSES DISTILUMRS COMPANY, IN.Y.C. BLENDED WHISKEY - 86 PROG - 60% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS Quick Sale ° ONLY SOc A WEEK * Open Monday ond Friday Evenings till # PA % t . . a / THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER < 20. 1959 New Catholic National Shrine — Paraplegic Can Opens Today in Washington Hunt and Farm Michigan Man Is Able) to Do Most Everything He Did Earlier WASHINGTON (AP) — A na-! tional shrine for the 36 million| US. Roman Catholics is being dedicated here today with impres-| sive ceremonies. Francis Cardinal Spellman of; New York was scheduled to dedi- cate the edifice and celebrate a; eee of hunting + despite a crippling Pee — ool Pes eae y Be setback. $ SS ee ee "tee [tt ee | The 36-year-old Oeverman has dinals, archbishops and bishops, | ' been a paraplegic for two years are taking part in the dedication) His back peck i ceremonies which will last three| is back was Sroken and he was days . rmaneptly paralyzed from the Vast and gieatnnd the Notional 'waist down ina tractor accident Shrine of the Immaculate Concep-| | But this fall, Oeverman made tion is the largest Catholic church| | a giant stride back te normal in the United States and the eave! activity when a new tractor ar- enth Jargest in the world. St. John| rived at his farm. the Divine, an Episcopal church | in New York City, is the nation’s largest church. * * * / With its sheath of pale lime- stone and its lefty, blue-and-yel- low tiled. dome, the shrine domi- nates the northeast section of) Washington, It is on the campus of Catholic University, three miles north of the Capitol. U $29 FEET HIGH { TUSTIN, (UPI) — William ‘Oeverman Jr. is determined to keep up with the rigorous ‘job of \farming — and his favorite sport | bars and a safety pelt. man to work on a_ cooperative jbasis with his neighbors. They | will do much of the hand work cn | AP Wirephete PAUSE THAT REFRESHES— An unidentified Muskegon fire- man takes time out for a drink while battling the $250,000 fire which raged through a 26-apart- ment unit and Hosler’s clothing store in downtown Muskegon early Thursday. The general alarm brought six pumps and an aerial company to the- Scene. Freezing temperatures hampered the fire fighters. |hi§ tractor on their land. * * * Meanwhile, a special permit from the State Conservation De- partment allows Oeverman to go hunting right from his car. “rm not feally at a big disadvantage, he says, “I've got a radio, heater’ Peat et ee ‘ heat Siege RIDAY according to laboratory | SATURDAY - ideal Gift for “Littl ay exe own suitcase. Tiny Tear Doll $7.9 Ken ie RAP ORE The shrine is ag blend of the feet from the entrance across 50,- Most of the interior ornamenta- for Gargoyles altar. Shrine of the Immaculate Conception which will be dedicated in the shrine, gave the ,dedication) feet and a bell tower 329 feet tall. Francis Cardinal Spellman of x ek C WITNESS land,’ he said, “but particularly you for the gutter system atop the of the United States and of the’ \‘ that the gargoyle project is not Mary Immaculate.” i would be carved into the stone Cushing of Boston and anether # ' spouts that throw water from the Funds to build the shrine were mind passersby of the threats of II. % ~ § ~ \ : e 2.99 Flannel and corrupting ideologies — “‘of- Hunham has been named head of Byzantine and Romanesque styles. From the ground to the top of its ‘goid-tipped -belt tower-is 329 feet. The wall behind the altar is 459 000 square feet of marble floor. Pews for 3,000 fill little more than half the huge interior, the rest be- ling taken up with the sanctuary and altar. * * * tion is still to be added, but en enormous mosaic showing a seated figure of Christ in brilliant reds AP Wirephote and gold is in place behind the -TO BE DEDICATED — The upper church of the National hurch in Washington Cc h | Washington, D. C. today is on the grounds of the Catholic Uni- Needs Sculptors Who | Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of} versity of America. It is the largest Roman Cathdlic Church in Like to Experiment St. Louis, chairman of the bishops'| America. In style, it is a blend of Byzantine, Romanesque and committee in charge of bailding)- modern architecture, with a blue and gold tiled dome rising 237 WASHINGTON (UPI) — if re sermon. pay aye the at fhe New York will lead the dedication. A procession of 1,000 priests; have a talent for gargoyles, one ‘of st significant in the| archbishops and cardinals will open the ceremonies which will last Washington Cathedral would )ike| history the Catholic church in| thieg days. to hear from you. States. ” An ordinary watch crystal will pressure . . This shrine stands as a ma- : , The long a-building Episcopal jestic. and compelling witness not crack under about 50 pounds of |tests. church needs models of about 30/only to the physical and mate-| pp or so fanciful gargoyles, chim- (rial maturity of the church in our FRIDA hat-have- — a <= be its spiritual vigor, et ; Y- junity and dynamic faith. “ gine ec. Aad Deen Fas Mi de soe was an “x tive sculptors to create them. Lemans of the Catholic democracy | * Dean Sayre carefully noted |Catholics’ love and devotion of} a contest and no prizes are to * * * be offered. The only satisfac. | Other special masses will be of- | tion, should your model be fered during the dedication period. picked, would be that your work |—one tonight by Richard Cardinal | fabric of the cathedral “‘to re- | Saturday by James Francis Cardi- th ” pnal McIntyre of Los Angeles. . j — en Penge Starting Monday, the shrine will ; i Gargoyles are ornamental! water be open to visitors daily. ; roof gutters high up on the cathe-' donated by millions of Catholics. i é dra] walls. In medieval days Construction began in 1922 but was|@ they were put on cathedrals to halted for more than 20 years dur- F represent evil spirits and to re-|ing the depression and World War} \€ the Devil and the safety of the ' Church. ‘Dr. Dunham Appointed * * * Dean: Sayed ‘tated thal today’s Chief Trustee at MSU is “demons” — anxieties, phychoses! Fast LANSING —Dr. Douglas) j fer endless opportunities for crea-| ithe Michigan State University De-| § tive fancifulness in carving.” \partment of Social Science by the Photographs of any work to be|msu Board of Trustees. t submitted should be sent to the'* He succeeds Dr. Walter R. Fee). You Get All This: Sale of 19.99 The vehicle | | has hand controls, protective roll | | The tractor will permit Oever-| his farm and in return he will use - SATURDAY - © Mothers,” Washable Plos- tic, Drinks and Cries, Root- 8 ed Hair, Complete in her 16-PG. ELECTRIC TRAIN © a . el Ba ie Pin Thue One | FRIUAL —SuTUADaY —wlJNLA’ av LUIAES! i GEORGE’S FABULOUS. jand roof over me while the other | z | hunters have to be out in the cold.” 5 Oeverman also has a saddle | horse on the farm which can take ‘him where his’ wheelchair won't. |He can accomplish this by ‘hook- ; jing himself to either side of the | e saddle with leather straps. : F hi | : | 4 “ a Unchaperoned Mingling |¢ baer ‘Sought in MSU Housing F : EAST LANSING (B—A bill to!: jpermit unchaperoned, but mited, 2 mingling of the sexes in ies haslfl sity-approved housing fucilities has | been filed in the student congress | © at Michigan State University, ‘ Under the measure, students of © ,both sexes would be allowed to| ‘mix in living rooms and lobbies |" of housing units if at least three |) members of one sex or the other! were present. Guests would be re- : quired to leave by 10:30 p.m. on ¥ weekdays and 12:30 p.m. on week-|\ ‘ends. li : | | Current campus rules ban members of one sex from un- chaperoned visits toe on-or-off- | campus units housing members MORE STYLES, MORE FABRICS! MORE SIZES, MORE SAVINGS! me Exceptional coct values in a mag- mp niticent selection of designer sil- houettes featuring quality fabrics, fine teiloring, new colors! Sizes for misses, women, juniors, some with costly fur trim! Don’t miss this great sale! No Money Down! | of the other sex. | The university congress has re- ferred the bill to its students’ rights and welfare committee, Even if it. passes the student legislature, it can't go into effect, * without approval of Tom King, dean of students. And, King ig on); record as not particularly favor- |} ing the measure, One-seventh the total area of Jreland | is $_peat bog. MONDAY SPECIALS! TOYS SEEN ONTV... ® Dolis © Plush Toys ® Doll Cribs © Doll Buggies ® Sewing . Machines ® Bake Sets ®@ Tables, Chairs © ye , Wt NNN YAY © Chemistry Sets = Buy Now for Christmas 5.99 Complete 11-Piece e 99 Your Choice For $29... 9 @ imported Plush @ Peerless Overpaid | @ Mohair Loop @ Lusterglow Wool @ Mohair Zebiline @ Wool Plaids @ Fine Broadcloths @ Embroidered Wools Asm ft @ Ombre Meltons SAVE 50%, 19.98 § NO DOWN PAYMENT AMONG THE BETTER THINGS Clerk of, the Works, Washington who will continue as head of ‘the: 5 ' Wool, Quilt Lined Diesel Engine ..... 5.98 ‘ Cafhedral, Washington 16, D.C. | Department of History. Carthe Ga i 500 Y ; CANTERBURY The American flag has 13 hori- tigi yronie. 10. wm ve SUBURB AN Coboote eee. 2.00 Ho f zontal stripes, six white and seven degrees from the University ot| Sse: Trask «<<... 4.00. © Only f FULL FASHIONED SWEATERS ; _ Michigan — 7 OF LUSCIOUS i — FUR BLEND 5p || COATS OUR GIFT | — ” | FREE TO YOU... |) sant... 14.8899 for Thonksgiving i 29.99'Orlon 19.88 re. Special Purchase 14.99 Hunting or Work hed THERMAL TOPS OR BOTTOMS 1.88 19.99 Wool, Quilt Lined, Solids, Checks, 3 to 6x, 7 to 14 Sea: 14 , t Tors’ NYLON SNOW SUITS. .PARKA HOOD JACKETS 16.88 . * x : 5 ? oP Fa ; > it get BS * $ 2 - 5 ‘ % $F p " -™ f “ . 4 pe: “3 Pe ‘ : al Seah 74 N. Saginaw Ne wren. - - " ee ri *, , 4 : r A * “aove" Bowie JACKETS GIRLS’ COATS © 3-99 74. N. Saginaw Near Huron - BRIE FS CANTERBURY MATCHING SKIRTS - 10” WARM QUILT-LINED 10 te 18 LADIES’ oo Ragen eC Nee ty sae Pension BRE Sipe -- ii— wes imn~ rTCOlClUl Tl Pa . " é THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 - Farmington Votes Monday on School Iss spray Dir ~~ TThree Proposals Up for Decision ——— Se Farm Labor Rules | in Effect Next Month | ‘Should Have Followed Spray Directions Growers Share Fault in. Cranberry Scare WASHINGTON (UPD — A con. troversial new set of farm labor the government ‘experimental stations with In addition, state’ the any, Such research can be long and FDA bases its decision. lof a new pesticide, some of the ultimate responsibility for seeing Officials Say Approval Necessary to Continue By JOHN W. BECKLER | department sai okay on the regulations will go into effect late WASHINGTON —The great, Corn fields, but tujmed down the next month Labor Sf cretary James P. Mitchell announced fast night.| The rules apply to farmers who! hire domestic farm labor through other suggested u¥es. And for (knowledge of the spray were close- costly. It generally requires two (that it is not harmful lies with the — it could be used only be- |) questioned by the Department |“Years of testing with laboratory individual who uses it. . ore the crop was planted. jof Agriculture | animals to discover if a product i , Aminotriatole was never sup- AR After still more tests the de- MUST BE CLEARED | hay Marmful effects. posed to touch a cranberry. The || F wil beceael Mane | ere > ask onday Present Standards lfuss stirred up by the discovery ithat a weed killing spray can con: /taminate cranberries raises a question about the use of chemi- se Pah le aia Employment ieals elsewhere in agriculture partment permitted the company, put that’s not all ; In the case of* aminotriazole,| manufacturer clearly specified Servite. ww et * in 1958 to register a label specify-! an, spray intended for use on.COMpany scientists established that} this om the label. If the direc- | to approve three separate } The regulations would require Aminotriazole, involved in the ing aminotriazole’s use in cran-', fooq crop needs to be Cleared by "ats fed large quantities of the, toms bad been followed, the school pro in order t employers using this serviee to jcranberry incident, is ang Of 56.500 berry bogs—a week to 10 days after the Food and Drug Administration. |Chemical developed cancer of the eramberry grewers would have |- proposals in order to provide farm workers with pre- jchemical formulations registered 'the harvest, Still another revision 'yj, Agency of the Health, Educa- (hyroid. The FDA refused to grant! spent their usual enjoyable continue the same type of vailing wages, housing and work- with the Department of Agriculture !last Month okayed it for apple and tion and Welfare Department must |@ tolerance and when residue was| Thanksgiving. education program present- , [ se ai insects, jents, | s—~ej . 2 ic : eee ee eae ey at cL, peat Orchards—either before the orant a tolerance—in other words “iscovered in parts of the 1959! The same is true of-all the other; ly Set up in the Farmington ing conditions, , sys , : { weeds and other pests that plague /fruit forms or after it has been fix the amount of the chemical CoP, the cranberry crisis erupted. | sprays on the market. The De-! School District according, and transporta- as contrary to the spirit of- the | history of aminotriazole, a syn- | et te farmers, advising them how to use| three propositions after a tion, ; ithe farmer and home gardener. _[ pic’ j Farm organizations and Agricul. | | ‘How is the public avealth profes Ked. * * * that may safely be left on a crop USER RESPONSIBLE | partrnent of Agyiculture continu- rd * d ture Secret a T. Bens : : - te ; ble danger! Thue * in the form of residue, ; ae ‘ally checks them, taking them off to the School Board. ee Secretary Ezra Jenson Op KARL D. BAILEY tected against any possible danger} Thus for four Years there has This case history shows that no) . ing The School Citizens Ad- posed the new rules | ffrom these products? ; |been constant testing of the prod-| UM is up to the manufacturer {Matter how carefully the govern. | Fiore shelves to see if the manu- e joo! * * & . | A good way to arrive at the UCt by both the manufacturer and to conduct the research om which {ment watches over the marketing fled ate is a. eee speci-| visory Committee has rec- Benson recently denounced them Horticultural | amswer is to follow the brief i _ ees ocaare pron io Pe¢ ommendéd approval of all Lisenhower administration Agent to Retire thetic chemical containing car- bon, hydrogen and _ nitrogen atoms in an arrangement figured | out by the American Cyanamid Co. the new chemical products. * & &* But there is no policing of the spray is used. The government individual farm to see just how the’ study was completed of the area’s school needs. The first proposition asks that voters approve transfer of }463,- 000 from a previous $1,300,000 bond Salieeeemetcnail can extend its protective arm only so far. i ifietd Twp. Man Betore it can put a pesticide or — “Bloonifi d- Twp ni in pul a pesticide or issue for an addition to the 0. E. other agricultural chemical on the} Served 10 Southeastern market a manufacturer must reg-| ister a label with the Department} ol Agriculture telling how fhe prod- uct is to be used. * * * The department first heard of aminotriazole in 1955 when Ameri- can Cyanamid asked that it be approved for use against weeds in pastures and areas where no crops are grown * * * The following year, after many tests conducted both by the manu- facturer and by the governntent, the department allowed the com- pany to register a label specifying the spray could be used on lawns, along roadsides and other noncrop areas, but not. on pastures where cattle grazed. In February 1957. the company | proposed that inotriazole’s use Michigan Counties Alte 29 years of service with Michigan State University, Karl D.| ; Bailey of Bloomfield Township, ' idistrict horticultural agent for 10 |counties in southeastern Michigan, will retire Jan. 31. } | His retirement was announced today by Lyle B. Abel, MSU's Co-| |operative Extension Service direc-! tor for Oakland County, ' Bailey joined the extension service staff as Oakland County | agricultural agent in 1931 after | teaching vocational agriculture at Holly. He has been southeastern horticultural agent for 10 years. | He earned his B.S. degree at The engagement of Marion J. cag ; m ; MSU in 192] and took postgraduate | Lenz_to_B.Ford-Thompson II work at the University of Michigan’ “MARION J. LENZ Z * * * Department of Agriculture) official who works closely with the pest control problem: provides probably the best answer to the question of how the public health. Dunckel Junior High School build- ing. * x * Money for this construction is available except for a legal tech- nicality. can be protected against the J bond mone chemical sprays. . outa by Pike = poo * *« & ‘1.’ t ~~ We'd have a devil of a time a ten voters to have it | elec i | is up one case where any-| thing went wrong if directions | transferred. were followed,” he says. Proposition two asks voters to japprove a $3,000,000 bond issue to Seek to Elimi ura junior sn jfurnishing a new junior-senior lo iminate j|high school building and new ele- mentary school buildings. WASHINGTON (UPI}—The Food ; The bond issue would help — D Admini in cutting the cost of erecting an jand Drug nistration (FDA) ¢.:,nishi adits at |has launched a drive to elimifiate | ishing additions to existing |defray the cost of erecting and . > . ’ Residue From Milk WOULD CUT OOST , residues of penicillin and DpT {School buildings and acquiring nus been annoum by _ her jand Wayne State University. i be broadened to include : parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph | Bailey organized the first county- ‘ran berry bogs, corn fields, soybean fields and apple and pear or- chards. Ten months later the Auto Mishap Breaks Rochester Boy's Leg ROCHESTER — A 10-year-old! Rochester boy suffered a broken leg when he was hit by a car yesterday on West University drive near Helen street Jack~Oisen of 415 Walnut St.,| suddenly left a group of boys | |Standing near the curb and ran| into the street, police gaid. Lenz of Sebewaing. The prospec- | wide 4+H Fair in Oakland County, | ithe Oakland County Soi] Conserva- Mr. and Mrs. B. Ford mpsori, 2 151 Albertson St., Rochester. A tion District and the Southeastern He recently developed a program . y for the selection and improvement Horticultural Society to Meet in D be rhubarb industry. ° mber He also is the author of ‘‘Agri- gan Horticultural Socfety wil] meet’ land-use publication, here Dec. 1-3 with discussion cen-, Bailey bas been piesidént of the img. grower association bargaining | agricultural Agents and was’ and selfing, asd chemical insect awarded the distinguished service Dr. John A. Hannah, Michigan tion of County Agricultural Agents State University president, will ad-|j,, 1948. tive bridegroom is the son of | euinmer wedding ig: planned. Michigan Fruit Growers’ Society. of parent stock for. the forced GRAND RAPIDS %—The Michi-; eulfure in Oakland County,” a tered on mechanical fruit harvest-/ Michigan Association of County and disease control developmests. | certificate by the National Associa-| dress the group Dec, 3. ‘. — years re = — | The driver of the car wal . . s annua eave for e eC: Howard Q, Guelker, 30, of 116 | Sociologist to Talk | lon of natural history material Crane St.. Pontiac. He said he! . | : P for the university museums at cow the boy. Gt Seapion of PTA Ann Arbor and East Lansing and a ROCHESTER — Dr. June Col-' the Cranbrook Institute of Sci- blew his horn, but | the boy seemed to ‘‘freeze’’ in his} tracks. Guelker was not held | went out to the }fices last month. Officials said lready have been tested. * * * ‘from milk, | The FDA disclosed yesterday | \that orders to start the campaign) |some milk samples probably al-| school sites and additions to school sites, the School Board stated. School officials claim the agency's field of-| meney is required immedia-cly to satisfy anticipated classroom needs in 1961 and 1962. They said it takes a minimum of Rochester Yule Parade Pentiac Press Phete the event also will be highlighted by the appear- ance of Santa Claus riding in a pony-drawn PARADE ATTRACTION — The ‘‘Rae-vens,” all-girl precision drill team from Pontiac, will be one of the featured attractions in Rochester's sleigh. The Rae-vens’ color guard is shown | ninth annual Christmas parade Dec. 5. Sponsored above | by the Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce, . - } | | ‘Predict Decrease Exports of Wheat | ‘WASHINGTON (UPI)—Agricul- ture Departrhent experts predicted Brings Santa Here Early (public health problem. But he said new classrooms can be ready in U.S.,Canada_ | A spokesman said the residyes|18 months from the time a bond were not considered an immediate | issue is approved by voters until for they are illegal. If FDA inspectors occupancy. , find any interstate shipments of | No increase in the 1959 tax rate milk with penicillin or insecti-/of $12 per $1.000 in assessed state cide residues, the milk may be equalized valuation will be neces- sary to meet the payments on the seized. $3 million bond issue, schoo] u- thorities said. They said by the time the first payment comes due in 1961, they estimate that it will be possible to reduce rates on previously approyed bond issues enough to offset the rate that would be added by the $3 million bond * * * Before the enforcement cam- paign was ordered, the FDA, the Agriculture Department and farm) nizations conducted an educa- tiohal campaign to convince farm- ers of the need for care in the use of penicillin and insecticides, Commetce Methodists ! The vouth was taken to Pontiac | ROCHESTER — Santa Claus will television star, “Sagebrush today that U.S. and Canadian issue. sociologist at Michigan State Uni-' jie and his wife Elizabeth and General Hospital. arrive in Rochester a little early, Shorty’ riding his horse, “Snoop- wheat exports would drop in the |to Mark Anniversary The third proposition calls for an phone i i ped hgh ate two sons reside at 527) N. Adams ‘again this year. | er.” current marketing season. COMMERCE—Commerce Meth-| increase of $2 per $1,000 in assessed High saat PTA geeting at ae near Birmingham. He will ride bis sleigh down) Two Nike missiles, one from the; Over-all world exports were not. odist Church will join in celebrat-H”aluation for a period of five years Main street Dec. 5, only it will be installation at Auburn Heights, the expected to change much. But ing the 175th anniversary of the *© Pay part of the school district's p.m. Monday. ° . | i } The title of Dr. Collins’ talk wi Timber Production Up Ag-'pulled by ponies from the John F.;other from the Utica site, will be there are larger supplies available | Methodist Church in America with operating expenses. PRESENTLY $16.52 lins, cultural anthropologist and ence in Bloomfield Hills. Boost Pork Support | WASHINGTON (UPD — The be “Your Child and His Heroes.”| WASHINGTON (UPI) = The-riculture Department announced: Ivory Estate in White Lake Town- included in the line of march. ‘for export in nations outside North ® SPecial service at 11 a.m. Sun- LEVY She will explain how moving to|U.S. Forest Service says timber yesterday that it had purchased 4,-ship. * * * | ireeeetien = day. The t operstion millage ~ : che . = duction in 1959 will total 524,000 pounds of rk and gravy! ~ ’ j , ‘ presen . : ~. the suburbs causes changes in liv- production in ) i ) pounds of pork and gravy) (Santa’s reindeer are resting fl ‘The parade will form at 2 p.m * tk { All four choirs of the church | tax levy is $16.52. It was estimated ing habits and affects families and! 11,200,000,000 cubic feet of wood. in its effort to, bolster hog prices' family relationships. iThe figure is 9 per cent above/by taking pork and lard off the Refreshments will be served. Hast year. imarket. wp at the North Pole for Christ- (at North Hill Plaza, proceed dawn The experts pointed out that the here will sing a commemorative that the proposed two mill increase mas Night when they traditional. ‘yfain street to Third street, then|United States and Canada have a hymn written for the occasion bY | wouid provide $140,000 in additional ly whisk jolly old St- Nick on his (turn up Walnut street to the Amer- vital interest in avoiding any the Rev. Donald Williams of North operating money. rounds.) ican Legion Hall where it will dis-serious breaks in world wheat, Andover, Mass. Teacher's ‘salaries account for Each year the Rochester parade band \prices. They said this meant the! The Rev. Perry Thomas, pastor.» major portion of the operating ‘vets bigger and better.’ Already,! Coffee and hot chocolate will be two countries would have to give will preach on ‘‘Possessing a Good- expenses. entries are pouring in, according Served to all participants in the ground to competition by reduc- ly Heritage.” There will be no 8) to Rochester Area Chamber of hall after the parade. jing exports. ja.m. service Sunday. School officials said a con- siderable portion of the money {Commerce members, sponsors of , |the event this year. i taco gl mie egy mill ai | crense prove * * * d More than 40 entries have. regis- agg teachers’ salary sched- tered so far, said-Ther Clseth,-pe- Approval of all three proposals jrade chairman, These include bands {rom Avon- would result in a tax increase of ldale High School and Roclrester ‘$16 a year for the average tax- . Junior and Senior high schools plus payer, schoo] authorities estimate. This is based on an average Government Is Paying Soe to Close State Farms |r: ta ea Other participants will be the | OWOSSO «™—With overproduc-|{rom the couhty, will quote the farm owner must plant his land Buick “Liberty Drum and Bugle |,:. 'maximum pricé-per-acre it consid-| with what the conservationists | All registered electors. wil] be : Re a tion and surpluses plaguing Amer-} pn 2 ow Corps” from Flint, the oe ican agriculture and its farm jers equitable for the involved. If} call “cover.” This can be either | Permitted to vote on proposition vens,” all-girl ision «drill | . mar, ; F — ‘kets, a growing number of farm-|"'8 application is panorores. Os grass, legumes, —— or | three. farmer will be as ° are} forage crops for small game. Only taxpayers will be per- team from Pontiac and popular | The special service will be held in the new audi- ~__./ers are voluntarily snapping the! NEW SCHOOL ADDITION — The $310,000 ad- dition to the St. John Lutheran Church and |padlock on their farms and hand-| |the lowest payment per acre nel Government School, . Rochester, will be - dedicated Sunda. tion, at 3 p. m. Services Sunday in Rochester Will Dedicate School ROCHESTER—The youth center tendent of Lutheran high schools, and school addition to St. John Detroit Lutheran Church and School here Others participating in this will be formally dedicated at 3 Join, wit ieckods (al J. Ge ¢ ew ‘ . i Ay Sunday, the Rev. W. G ford, chairman of the buikling Gerken, pastor, announced today committee: ‘RK. L. Williams. con = + & gregation. president; Calvin Guest speaker at the special King, chairman of the board for services, to be held in the new auditorium-gymnasium, will be the, Rev, Dr. John F. Choitz, superin- parish education, and the prin- cipal, Erwin G. Bauer. Services of Thanksgiving also : will be held Sunday morning, “ e Thanksgiving Eve and Nov, 29, the MSU Experiment Station pey. Serken bine Releases New Broccoli | + -8.,% en sgt "The Rev, W, Harry Kreiger, EAST LANSING (®—A new va-'Traverse City, president of the riety of early, maturing broccoli/Michigan District of the Lutheran, has been released by. the Michigan Church—Missouri Synod, will de.) State University agriciifiral ex-jliver the sermons at the 8:30 and periment station. (11 a.m. services Sunday. torium-gymnasium, a major portion of thes addi- | ‘stage, dressing rooms with show-| Additi General contracter was Joseph Palazzolo and Sons, Inc., Detroit. The new facilities provide seven additional for the | school, a library and conference room, two offices and a reception. room, auditorium-gympasium with’ classrooms ers. rest rooms and a_ heating! plant An intercommunication system} links all rooms. * * * St. John day school has an en- rollment of 200 im grades one . s through eight. Students occupying BARBARA 40 ANNE STOKES temporary classrooms will move, The engagement of Barbara into their new quarters this week | JoAnne Stokes, daughter of Mrs. Some 500 are enrolled in the) Clayton A. Stokes of 75 Highland Sunday School. | St., Lake Orion, and the late Mr. The Rev. Gerken will preach the Stokes, to Gary Allan Hendershot __MSU researchers «id the vege-| The addition was designed by:7:30 Thanksgiving Eve service.! ha¢ been announced. He is the table, called Spartan early, can be Chance Enterprises,” St. ier than some of the more popularcinder blpck and brick at a cost varieties grown in Michigan, ‘of more than $310,000. 5 Clair| The special community servic on the market 10 to 14 days earl-' Shores, and constructed of stéel, 's public. f is' son ‘of Mr, and Mrs. Allan Hen- scheduled for 3 p.m, Nov, 29. | dershot of 7127 Arrowood Dr., All services are open to the West Bloomfield Township. A t March 36 wedding is planned. \ ' ing the key to the government|°4" afford to quit farming. to keep for three five-or 10 years | When the county soil bank acre- x * *& ‘age quota is announced from Lans- The practice is being encour-'ing in November, it is apportioned aged by the U.S. Department of 2™Mong farmers who require the Agriculture through its soil bank lowest payments program. In return, the farmer is} Contracts are then signed stip- jgiven a payment for each unused ulating the farm will be left | instances approval under cost shar-| jacre and left free to join the ranks| dormant for three, five or 10 ing will be given for damming! of industry or seek some other years. Nothing can be harvested form of livelihood. | and livestock grazing is not al- Shiawassee County, which | lowed. ranks high on the agricultural | The national average for acre- income list in Michigan, has seen age payments in 1959 was $13.50. closed-farm count jamp from | Michigan was paid on an average zero In 1956, the first soil bank of $15. year, te 67 in 1959. {better than The figure is expected to reach | drew an average of $16.50. ; . - cost-sharing is) mitted to vote on Proposition I lavailable for seed, a minimum| ®ad IL |amount of fertilizer and labor and} Polis will be open from 7 am. |gagoline used for planting. The ex-'t) § p.m. Monday at the Farming- |penses are shared about 50-50. (ton Junior High School, 33000 Woodlots can be planted on the! ‘Thomas St. and at Dunckel Junior same basis if the land is retired * : ‘ for the full 10 years. In somel na School, 32800 Twelve Mile letfeams as a refuge for “water , animals and fowl. ‘ te" Says Administration | Atthough the conservation « Fights Farm Prop F serve program is not designed to; make the farmer rich, the fact ‘ : ‘that 1960 applications in Michigan! DENVER, Colo (UPI)—The Na- tional Farmers* Union charged to- _|day that the Eisenhower adminis- tration is trying to discredit all the 100 mark in 1960: \ ea one farm were Crs a strong popular appeal. Sarth price The. farms __ involv av ‘limit 0 9, . Farmers ior executi about sos sora pnathap oes or geri oie .{2 Beard of Education jonatenas caiticleed. the ‘Adminis. either elderly couples who can‘aug-|W8Td ¢ MES WES COLONEL | tration's to ask Congress ment their gover emai payment indicated in 1958 when it pushed to Meet for Parents year ne veteewd po ncegm , with retirenient income Or \up_the national average payment) qe Avondale Board of Educa-| wheat, tobacco and peanuts. |to early-middle-aged farmers who| an acre. ‘tion will hold its regular meeting! .The farm organization said that are beckoned by the financial sé-| Under the conservation reserve/vignday evening at (the; Stone the use of the term “price sup- ‘curity ofa city job, program, farmers may shut down school fo let parents in the Storie ports” to describe the Adminis- | ‘They apply for @ farm shutdown; Part of their land, receive propor-|.54 ayburn Heights school argas|ttation’s proposals was “‘a fraud through the conservation reserve|tionate pay, and farm the Te-!.cs how board sessions Operate, | language.” ‘program of the soil bank, admin-/mainder. But A.S.C. administra-| guooig: Supt ’ which said “it is istered. on a county level. by anitors would rather it be all oF saig | : Agricultural Stabilization and Con-hothing, encouraging total shit) secioy - ) fail- servation Committee. ~ <- |downs with a slightly higher Day~/tuture re until’ pro- ~*~ * * | ment. oo ithe spectator's. * . |grams are completely discredit: | | The committee, elected at large Once “out of production,” the | The meeting will start at 8 p.m. ed.” ~ | @ ‘ ¥ + . or ae Ge mpanssinnn elit} f 7 s u of