e 
  “the Weather - 
0.8. Weather Bureau Forecast 
Partly cloudy, cool 
> (Details on Page 2) } 
          
    Vegi, 12th YEAR. 
     
  desi Believ d   
Ex-Con Tells of Killing 
Friend in Area Cottage ‘An ex-convict. from Texas con- 
fessed that he “accidentally” shot 
underworld character George Kean 
near Pontiac last December, in an 
" oral statement made early today. 
Demitrios B, Tsermengas, 39,}. 
told investigators that he killed 
Kean in a cottage “somewhere 
near Commerce road” and buried 
him near Alpena with the help of 
‘two companions. - 
_ Tsermengas was arrested by 
state troopers led by Detective 
Charlies Leaf, of the Pontide Post, 
in front of his home at 4549. 
Sixth St., in Ecorse, at about 
8, last night. 
He has refused to make a formal 
statement in the presence of a 
stenographer, but his story to po- 
lice and Oakland County Prose- 
‘ eutor Frederick C, Ziem has filled/ ~ 
in many missing links in the in- 
vestigation. . 
x * 
Tsermengas was one of three 
hoodlums who accompanied Kean 
on a trip from Texas to Michigan 
last December, police said. 
“The ex-convict said the three, 
traveling in two cars, stopped 
“someplace along Telegraph Road 
near a drug store and Justice of 
‘ the Peace office around last Dec. 
15 or 16.” . 
* * * 
_ > Ziem said today, “We think this 
was in the vicinity of Telegraph 
and §0-Mile roads.” 
Tsermengas said a State Police 
car was parked at the roadside 
and Kean wanted to see if there 
were any guns in it. 
“] was scared to death,” he 
Sve ox ox 
1 thought he’d kill the trooper if 
he -gotcined to the car while we 
were looking at it.” 
The men then went to a cottage 
believed to be in the Commerce 
Township or Walled Lake area. 
a his com: 
oe 
Authorities “qi Teermengas 
  * 
as saying, “Kean told me to go 
out and get a police uniform some- 
place.” 
Police said Kean wanted the uni- 
form to use in a robbery he 
planned to execute in the Saulte 
Ste. Marie area. Tsermengas said 
he returned later that day without 
finding a uniform. 
He told police, “Kean had tietis 
drinking and had three guns on 
him, ¥ was getting scared and 
thought we better get the guns 
away from him.” . 
At this—point the three men at- 
tempted to take the guns, Police 
* gaid Kean-had apparently dozed 
~ off in a chair. 
* * 
“We got two and all of a sudden 
he came to," said Tsermengas. At 
that point, Tsermengas related, 
Kean shouted, “I'll kill you: all.” 
Police said that Tsermengas told 
them he hit Kean over the head 
with a pistdl “and the gun aci- 
dentally oxen py shooting him 
through the he 
The men, aeuls; then put Kean in the trunk of one of the cars and started to drive north, 
While stopped at a gas station 
somewhere north of Bay City 
they noticed blood dripping from 
the trunk, 
They stopped overnight at a hotel 
in Oscoda and when they came out 
  GEORGE KEAN in the morning noticed blood on 
the ground under the trunk again. 
“We kicked snow over the spot 
tand started north to find a spot to 
bury him,’ Tsermengas was 
quoted as saying. 
According to Ziem, the trio bur- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2)   
  DEMITRIOS — TSERMENGAS ~ US. Will Give Planes, Ships 
fo Nationalists Flying Boxcars, LSDs 
En Route to Formosa 
as Aid to Quemoy 
TAIPEI, Formosa (#i— 
The-United States plans to 
give the Chinese National- 
ists C119 Flying Boxcars 
and big new. landing ships 
to increase ‘supplies to 
blockaded Quemoy. 
_ A spokesman for the U.S. 
Taiwan Formosa Defense 
Command disclosed today 
that the equipment is on 
the way. 
The ships are LSD ‘and- 
ing ships, ‘ (dock), which 
can. carry up to six times 
as much cargo as_ the 
LSTs landing ships (tank) 
which the Nationalists now 
are using. : 
With their present ‘collection of 
equipment left over from World 
  
here. Massive Hunt for Boy, 4, 
Continues in UP Wilds 
IRON MOUNTAIN (UPI)—A frail, timid boy lost 
since Sunday in-the Upper Michigan wilds was the 
object of a widespread search today. 
State Police launched the massive search for 4-year- 
old Kenneth Scott, who wandered away from a hunting 
camp ‘in the swampy wilderness 20 miles northeast of 
- More than 1,000- searchers combed the. area yester- 
  
dey until nightfall. They?- 
were aided by airplanes, 
helicopters and blood- 
hounds. 
All volunteer civilians were 
ordered ‘out of the woods for the 
night. A relief party of 185 police 
and conservation officers continued 
the search during the night. 
They were spurred by fore- 
casts of a second night of chilling 
40-45 degree temperatures. The 
boy was clad only in a thin 
jacket, blue jeans and tennis 
shoes. 
A chilling rain fell yesterday 
over the area, which abounds with 
deer and bear. 
Hundreds of volunteers planned 
to join the search today. State 
Police Trooper Charles Felhauser 
said the search would not be called 
off until Kenneth was found, 
Hopes were raised for a time 
yesterday when the boy's trail was 
found about 45 minutes-before sun- 
down. Bloodhounds tried to follow 
the tiny tracks through the thick’ 
underbrush. | 
But a light rain had “raised 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8)   Cloudy, Windy, Cool 
With Some Showers 
will be a cool 45 degrees. 
ly cloudy. 
am. 
reading at 1 p.m. was 61. 
  
‘He Ought to Know: 
TUSCUMBIA, Ala. (UPI) — 
Herman Byrd. left Sheriff Ray- 
mond Wheeler a bit of advice 
after breaking out of jail for 
the second time this month. 
  worse than a dead man needs 
-a coffin,’ Byrd wrote, _ have mustered on one night was 
The weatherman predicts tonight 
|will be cloudy and rather windy 
with occasional showers. The low 
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy 
and quite cool, the high near 56. 
The outlook for tomorrow night is 
clear and cool with the low near 38.; 
‘Thursday will be warmer and yas 
Fifty-three was the lowest thes» 
mometer recording preceding 8 
in downtown Pontiac, The|!"& 
| “This county néeds a new jail: War II the Nationalists have not 
been able to get through to Que- 
moy the 350-tons of supplies need- 
ed daily on the —— offshore 
islands. 
-U.S. military officials have 
been urging the Nationalists to 
+ step up supply efforts. : 
ed that Communist ground fire shot. 
down one of its cargo planes para- 
chuting supplies. to Quemoy during 
the night. 
This-was the first cargo plane 
lost in 16 days of dropping high- 
priority supplies to big and Little 
Quemoy. : 
The Nationalists have been using 
old C46 transport planes for aerial 
drops so far and the most they 
20. The C46 can carry up to 24% 
tons of cargo. 
“The C119, newer but still obsolete 
by U.S. Air Force standards, can’ 
airdrop five tons and is’better de- 
signed for such work than C4é6s. 
City May Get 
Postmaster 
in Negr Future |   
Pontiac may get a permanent 
postmaster soon. The Civil Service 
Commission in Washington today 
announced that 10 persons, includ- 
ing Acting Postmaster Robert C. 
Miller, have applied to take exam 
inations for the post. 
Besides Miller, the others are 
Harold L. Clason, Charles E, Cow- 
ley, Ralph M, an, William W. 
Donaldson, Kléber P. Dusenbury, 
\Harley W. Levely, Joseph H. St. 
|John, Clarence H. Smith Jr. and 
George C: Stenson, - 
No date for the examination was 
announced. The appointment is not 
made permanent until the exami- 
nation is passed.   ‘ 
  
$73,039 Goal Set   
UF Launches Special Gifts. Drive sonal visit, either,” said McGov- paign’ a for United Fu n-d;man, -city manager, attended. 
' lworkers. Commercial Division 
The Special Gifts buffet supper,|Chairman Berkley Voss, Publicity |tiac Area United Fund Campaign 
sponsored by Community National|and Promotion Chairman Bernard jofficially opens Oct. 21 and closes 
Bank, marked the first pre-cam-/W, Crandell and Walter K. WilliNov. 11. The annual pre-campaign solici- 
tations of the Special Gifts Divi- 
sion of the Pontiac Area United 
Fund moved into full swing today, 
after a rousing kick-off supper -at 
the Waldron Hotel last evening. 
Alfred C. Girard, special gifts 
chairman and supper host, urged 
his contingent of 40 volunteer so- 
licitors to make their calls carly 
and thereby surpass their quota in 
time for the official kickoff Oct. 21. 
. The Special Gifts goal has been 
set at $73,039. 
“The Commercial Division in- 
tends to go over last year’s quota 
therefore, each of us must do a 
. little -bit better,” stated Judge 
Clark J. Adams, commercial di- 
vision chairman, 
“It’s particularly important that 
we realize our potential. If this 
group of advance givers can 
go over its goal by October 21, it 
will set the pace for the entire 
campaign,’ Judge Adams added. 
Traditionally the collections of 
the Special Gifts Division have 
amountet-to about 40 per cent of 
- the Commercial Division's total, 
The selected group of special giv- 
_ ers represent individuals and firms 
‘who have donated $100. or more to 
the United: Fund in past years.|~ 
W. E. McGovern, volunteer train-| 
ing director, stressed the inipor- 
Sa of personal contacts in. solict- 
“The best way ne 2 te 
phone when | g funds is to ern, 
  » Completely ignore it, and writing 
" Intiors te subettate for © per- ' 
o™ 
  . UF OFFICIALS CONFER: ~ Ateondlinlg Tast 
night's kick-off of the Special Gifts Division of 
the Pontiac Area UF were Alfred C.' Girard, 
| (center) special gifts chairman; and Oakland County Circuit 
chairmen. 
Vr Berkeley Voss, . (right) Commercial Division This year’s 10th anniversary Pon- The Nationalist—air force report-! 
~ 
STUDY PLEA — Federal 
Joseph M.. Woodrough (left) and Harvey M. 
Johnsen, of Omaha, study pertinent documents 
and law books after hearing a oe for an order Judges Restrain School Transfer 
  Circuit Judges prohibiting the 
from transferri 
corporation, The 
  
Ford Displaying 
Cars This Week Style and~ Engineering 
Changes Mark . M-E-L 
’ Models for 1959 
By DAVID J. WILKIE 
DETROIT # — Ford Motor Co.’s 
Mercury, Edsel and Lincoln cars 
have been substantially restyled 
and -have numerous engineering 
refinements for 1959. 
broadened Continental series; were 
assembled at the Ford Engineering 
Center in Dearborn for a national 
press preview today, Ford Division 
cars will be previewed on Friday. 
Se. 8 
tails were withheld porte later 
public présentation of the new 
models. Two new models, a town 
car and a limousine, have been 
added to the Continental line. 
Industry gossip has had it that 
Ford planned to reduce the Edsel 
line to two series, dropping the top 
tion and Corsair series for 1959. 
Company officials declined to -con- 
firm this in advance of the show- 
_ jing late today. 
The Ford M-E-L Division was ‘hard hit by the 1958 sales de- 
cline’ Mercury delivered about. 
$4,000 cars in this year’s first 
seven months against 170,000 in 
the like 1957 period, 
Edsel accounted for a disappoint. 
ing 25,000 in this year's January- 
July period. Lincoln's sales through 
July this year numbered about 
18,000 borg h sonal 24,000 in the 
same period las 
When Ford ate its Edsel 
line a year ago it was with the 
hope of selling 200,000 units in the 
model’s first year. Its five months 
sales last year numbered about 
27,000 units. 
* * * 
Walker .A. Williams, M-E-L gen- 
eral sales manager, said the new 
Mercury has a new chassis and 
body design, a wheelbase four 
inches longer, a compound wind- 
shield 61 per cent larger, and_an. 
instrument panel moved forward 4 
room. 
' In an address prepared for de- 
livery at the-start of the preview 
meeting, Williams said moving the 
engine forward with the increased 
wheelbase -made it. possible: to re- 
duce the hump in-the floor for the 
engine and transmission. 
  
Navy Gets Revenge 
HASLAR, England (UPI) — 
The Navy set out yesterday to 
make the army sick. Two army 
officers and 9% enlisted men 
climbed into rubber -rafts ina 
huge navy- oo tank and were 
tossed two-fogt waves. 
The object — to. test..six types 
of anti-seasickness pills. The new cars, along with ay 
Full styling and engineering de-|: 
six—inches_ providing -more._knee| Little Rock 
basis was abandoned today. Private School Plan LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (2—The attempt to reopen the 
 |closed Little Rock high schools on a private, segregated 
__ A spokesman for a group which had planned to 
‘joperate the schools blamed , ~ 
  
AP Wirephote 
Liftle Rock, Ark., school board 
its high schools toa private 
issued.a. temporary restrain- 
ing order against the proposed — 
Gives Up 
the federal government and   
the National Assn. for the 
Advancement of Colored 
People for the continued 
shutdown. . 
Dr. T. J; Raney, head of the cor 
poration that leased the schools to 
operate them as private ~~ seg- 
regated institutions, “said: 
Though the connected ettiets 
of the. government of the United 
Rock. Private School. Corp. has 
now been enjoined and prohibited 
from operating the high schools.”’ 
Only. a few Negro ovwn of States and the NAACP, the Little /L the high school and a few. pupils 
ed hoa up in the drizzling rain for 
" 
interpreted “ terse steerage # 
  _ (Continued on Page 2, Col. Reuther Turns 
His Atfention 
fo GM Parley Chrysler Teams Tackle © 
_thours, 
Apparently most of the pupils | we 
      3 
Final Details “After 
24-Hour Session 
DETROIT (?) — United 
Auto Workers President 
Walter P. Reuther and 
Chrysler Corp. today failed 
in their second attempt in 
a week to reach a contract 
settlement at a marathori 
bargaining session. _. 
Reuther, emerging from 
a meoting of almost 24 
said: “We have 
  
ze 
+ Me 
yl te i 
| S 
  
Braves Versus Yanke es   
World Series 
World Series: : 
OPPONENTS—Milwaukee 
pions. 
GAME pais AN 
ee 
‘4D menmees: Whitey Ford ‘ * *.) 
Gillespie, Bob Wolff). MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)—Facts and deus on the 1958 
champions, vs. New York Yankees, American League cham- 
| WINNER—First team to win four games. 
2° 2 
: D SERIES—1st and ond eieins County 
Stadium, Milwaukee, Oct. 1, 2; 3rd, 4th, and 5th (if neces- 
sary) Yankee Stadium, New York, Oct. 4, 5, 6; 6th and 7th 
(if necessary) at County Stadium, ‘Oct. 9, 10. 
Kuk’ 
STARTING - TIMES—Milwaukee games start 2 p.m. 
(EST); New. York games start 2 p.m, (EST), i i Ges. 5 
game which starts 1 p.m. (EST). 
LAST YEAR’S WINNER—Milwaukee, 4 games to 3.- 
SERIES FAVORITE—Yankees, 13-10. 
FIRST GAME. PITCHERS—Braves: Warren _— (22- 
* 
RADIO AND TELEVISION—Via NBC (television an- 
nouncers: Mel Allen, Curt Gowdy; radio announcers: Earl information 
Braves, National League 
(14-7). 
a a F: 
: it 
| if 
HHE : |   
time to duck, 
“f thought for a while I was 
going to have to wring out my 
clothes and. collect the drippings : 
for evidence,” the lawman said. ~~ 
But he and other raiding officers 
hidden around 
charged both Mrs. Brantley and 
      her husband with bootlegging. 
  
Partially as an outgrowth of con- 
troversies at Pontiac General Hos- 
pital, the Michigan State Medicat 
Society has gone on record favor- 
ing establishment_.of . “rules. and 
regulations for the control of pro- 
  
Pontiac ‘Press. Phote 
Judge Clark J. Adams (left) and * ile ' Always a Way! 
Yes, there’s always a way to 
convert unused articles into 
usable cash or trade them 
for something you want and 
the quick easy way is the 
Want Ad way. Remember, 
when you. need action, you 
need a Want Ad! This one 
‘proughtover. 20 calls. 
  
SMALL gee ORGAN, MA- 
hogany $100 or swap for 16mm Bell-Howell ge tig Ry 
era and equipment. MI 
To ce Your Want Ad 
IAL FE 2-8181- 
Just Ask for the   
rx 
  fessional practice within hospi- 
tals,”’ 
The society's house of delegations 
adopted a resolution proposed at|J 
its meeting in Detroit last night   obstetrics at, Pontiac General, 
Dr. Furlong, former Pontiac 
General chief of staff, said that” 
if the society doesn’t do seme- 
thing to clarify the situation; 
there is-going to be a rash’ of 
suits all over the state.” 
He said that the troubles at Pon- 
tiac General have ‘statewide sig 
nifieance,”’ 
At present, four general practi- 
tioners are suing! the hospital for 
gery. Members of the hospital's: 
junior staff, they say the hospital 
  WANT AD DEPT. 
  rules and regulations illegally re- 
ao 
\ i by Dr, Harold A; Furlong, chief of| 
the right to perform major sur- [serve major surgical priviliges to 
senior staff members. 
‘SAY RULES ILLEGAL 
They argue that the rules and 
regulations in this instance inter- 
fere with their right to free prac- 
Jtice under their license from the 
te state. Circuit Judge Clark 
. Adams is expected to announce 
‘a decision. in the case soon, 
The Dr, Neil H. Sullenberger 
controversy revolved around the 
same legal point. The hospitel 
said its. rules and regulations 
allowed it to bar the ‘heart sur- 
geon from its medical staff on 
grounds that he wae a trouble- 
- maker, : 
reinstatement, contending that his 
right to practice” médicine ‘ freely 
was being violated, 
In April, Circuit Judge Timothy 
C. Quinn upheld ‘the ‘hospital and 
tossed the suit out of court on the 
technical grounds that Dr. Sullen-   berger had not exhausted the grie- Dr, Sullenberger brought suit ie . State Medical Society Proposes Rules” 
to Clarify Practice Within Hospitals 
vance procedure set up under the 
rules and regulations, Dr. Sullen- 
berger is appealing the dismissal} 
to the State Supreme Court. 
Dr. Furlong helped lead the fight. 
against” Dr. Sullenberger® testify 
ing against him at the Board of 
Trustees’ hearing that led to the 
heart surgeon’s permanent dismis- 
sal from the staff. last month. 
- * * a 
Neither court case has questioned 
the right of private hospitals to 
have rules and ame” ve 
  a vanere*** teeny bop 
Sports . eee Loeewenens wes “ee 
Theaters Tee eee eee eee eee BE 
“TV & Radio Programs. .i... & 
‘Wilson, Earl. ick, eri   
  Wenea’s eons 1213 =e          
   
       
     
            
    
           
          
     
         
est : 
    anal He ! | ‘3 |Sees Williams | &    < 
ee ae | | : 
A & * i fe 
    
  
  
mington (D-Mo), # 
son, who got the nomination in| | 
~ Morse said he had no 
tial ambitions himself.   
    Kennedy (D-Mass), and Stuart Sy-| 
  
      
Near 
of the Midwest, with 
readings in the 40s near the south- 
_ <@astern edges of the cool belt.’ freezing temperatures 
in some Northern 
2h 
The Weather — _ ren A pe gn ANIEY. meet 
Today tn Pontiar ; 
temperature preceding 8 a.m. 
B,, s om. Wind velocity 20-25 m.p.h. 
‘rises Tuesday at 7:42 v.m. : 
pee sets Wednesday at $:65 a.m. - 
‘town 
53   
Temoeratures 
ii-a.m..,.. we tener ee 
Monday in Pontiac 
ere Tere) Lee 
unny 
: One Year Ago in Pontiac 
ature ghost temperature .......2..000000- 1% 
i ture pike Bttubers ketenes + OO 
ir 
Highest and Lowest Temperatures 
2 30 in 1695 
eeagtastessarses eesesrsserartsecse | 
     
ile Rock Gives Up   t Eee ° 
F} 
ag! rye 
ll ‘Geek ie 7 i [ 7 ! i fe | The order instructed all persons 
connected with the private school 
“status quo of the senior. high 
schools insofar as their integrated 
status is concerned.” . 
The order came a few hours aft- 
er the School Board has ‘turned 
the four high school buildings over 
fies, to the Little Rock Private School! 
;|Corp, and plans were in the: mill 
to open the schools today. 
The judges made their ruling ret- 
roactive to last Th y after 
Justice Department Atty: Donald 
MacGuineas said. the schoo] lease 
had been executed in haste to com- 
plete action before the hearing. 
| The retroactive clause apparent- 
ily was aimed at nullifying any 
fi legal advantage sought by the 
quick transfer. 
An official statement of the 
‘School Board said the board 
| would comply with the court's or- 
| der. 
But Dr, T. J. Raney, president 
of the corporation that leased 
the schooi facilities, said, “I 
don’t have any idea what will 
be done.” 
He made the stafement after 
‘hours of conferences and declined 
Yo say anything more. 
Teachers were advised by their 
attorneys not to take any part in 
the operation of the high schools 
on teachers and others connected 
with the schools, . 
*®Marshals tried to serve a copy 
to get past guards at the gates 
‘of the governor's residence, 
A   on Gov, Faubus. They were unable},    
juntil their problems were settled. 
He said the votes of the two 
locals did not represent a rejec- 
_tion of the International's back- 
to-work order, . 
Both Chrysler and General Mo- 
tors offered the UAW three-year 
contracts almost identical with the 
Ford settlement. They provided in- 
creases of 24 to 30 cents an hour 
over the life of the contract and 
also carried increases in supple- 
menta] unemployment pay and the 
union. long sought severance pay, 
plan for displaced workers,         
    
           
   
     at it, 
Dick ‘Blake 
been invited. 
> ‘* * * 
Besides the two congressional 
candidates, those for State a 
lature seats and county offices, 
James M. Hare, Democratic in- 
cumbent for. secretary of state, 
Sanford A. Brown, state treasurer 
Democratic incumbent, and Jason 
L, Honigman, Republican candi- 
date for attorney general, spoke at 
  TIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, er : 
aoe 
         
         
scribed 
   
BEFORE THE FEUDING — Leslie H. Hudson (left) and 
William §S. Broomfield, Democratic .and Republican candidates 
for Oakland County's seat in the U. S. House of Representatives, 
_ posed together last night minutes 
gift from the Teamsters Union which Hudson accused Broomfield 
of accepting for his 1956 campaign. as “punk” by Miss Lillian H. Davidson, chairman of the 
program. Not showing also were some 15 candidates the League 
had invited to speak on their qualifications for office. ‘ img ij | The Day in Birmingham 
Award Bids for Paving     a 
“Pontiac Press Photo 
before they argued-about.a $1,000 
  
Peasants Join Commune   
TOKYO (AP) — More than 4 
million Chinese peasant families 
have been drafted into people’s 
communes since Red China 
launched its latest communization 
project in Juné, Radio Peiping re- 
ports. 
These are township-sized work- 
ing ‘organizations directed along 
.|military lines in China’s “Great 
Leap Forward’ program. 
: x* * -* 
Peiping said seven million wom- 
en have been “freed from house- 
hold tasks” and put to work for 
the state in the new drive. They 
toil now in such fields as commun- 
ity restaurants, nurseries and kin- 
dergartens. - 
* * * 
The communes—large, self-suffi- 
cient communities of villages and 
former cooperative farms - em- 
bracing up to 50,000 persons ‘each 
—have been set up with frantic 
haste in an effort to weld some- 
{thing more effective than the old 
cooperative system. 
v * * * 
The movement is one of the 
most important steps since the 
Communists took over China eight 
rs ago. Recent_visitors to the 
Ey the program aie Fe fective and is proceeding ; 
The families already enrolled 
represent 37.per cent of the peas- 
ant population, Peiping said. : 
  the rally at Pontiac Central High 
School, v “People’s communes , , . are   
Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 
plans to use radioactive materials 
to aid in the diagnosis of cancer 
and other disorders. 
Hospita] director Harry-W. Whit- 
low announced today that a license 
has been granted the hospital by 
the Atomic Energy Commission, 
permitting the use of radioactive 
by-products under a training pro- 
gram set up by a national firm. 
The initial cost to fhe hos- 
pital of from $15,000 to $20,000 
for the ‘first year includes the 
purchase price of radioactive 
installation of a diagnostic room 
that is shielded against outside 
ve interference, Whit- 
low said. -: 
    Hospital Is Planning to Use 
Radioactive Material Here 
to handle the diagnostic program, 
Whitlow said. They are Dr. Har- 
vey Bridenstien, hospital radiolo- 
gist, and Dr. Lawrence Billodeau. 
tive of the firm, estimated that 
in about a year the hospital may 
be ready to use radioactive ma- 
terials in tgeatment as well as 
diagnosis, : 
“The amount of radioactivity 
used in treatment is thousands 
of times greater than that used 
in diagnobis,” he said. 
Diagnosis, he said, uses ‘‘very 
minute ies” of radioactiv- 
ity and is “very, very safe.” 
. The by-products that Pontiac Os- 
* 
Mosier identified isotope as 1-131, 
or radijactive iodine. Although 
dine is frequently associated 
crontanens ot eeumee Seereae, ie with} scintillating ’ 
radioacti many areas of the body, he said. 
Mosier explained that the first 
step in the diagnosis involves in- 
scintillating. counter, similar to a 
Geiger counter, he said. 
“It ig the degree to which the 
is i 
  jodine would 
partic! 
does 
z a : Z the » ? . Chinese Reds Dratt 
46 Million Families - - 
‘already crumbled by the coopera- 
troducing the minute radioactive 
Alfred V. Mosier, a .representa-|*°7"* seh 
within the body by means of al - Leh com- 
the 
farmers’ “enhanced political un- 
tk | 
The communal life would push 
the peasants still further from the 
traditional Chinese family system, 
tives. 
x *&* * ot 
“Cooperatives. were too small in 
scale to meet rising needs in man- 
power and funds and impded the 
full utilization of land and better   
  -itomorrow at : 
-|Country Club, Alvins..of Pontiac 
\Seek to Limit     Queen of Martyrs Church 
scheduled its ne for 12:30. p.m. * : : 
  
Gas Stations 128736| Planning Group Sees proj- Too Many Spring Up Within Pontiac 
'* 
  
U.S. and Britain 
Agree on Troops Plans for Withdrawal 
- From Lebanon, Jordan 
Reported by ‘Dag’ 
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y, (AP) Secretary 
Hammarskjold ‘made his an- 
nouncement in a 30-page report to 
the General Assembly on his re- 
cont, MiGie Kane. ponae mission. 
He said he had appointed a spe- 
cial representative to’ work out 
arrangements to facilitate the 
troops withdrawals and that the 
representative, Pier P, Spinelli, a 
U.N. undersecretary, is now in 
Amman, — 
* * *-- 
Hammarskjold said complete 
mutual confidence among _ the 
Arab countriés has not yet béen 
restored. But he expressed the be- 
lief “the implementation of the 
good- neighbor policy will méet 
  equipment,” the radio said. with growing success.” 
e ns o 3 
nti 
boulevard and Motor street to per- 
sonal service, . 
widening -pro- 
gram, another the Opdyke road im- 
provement. 
Mass Hunt for Boy 
Continues in UP   
  
Business Is: Booming   
DETROIT (UPI)—Drive a. cab? 
If so, here’s one way to make an 
extra buck. 
-Put a phone in your hack. Yep, 
that’s what Jim La Rowe of De- 
troit did. Brings hinr some extra 
“ |eabbage, too, . 
x * * 
La Rowe had serious financial 
telephone in jhis taxicab Aug. 4. 
Since then, the 54-year-old part-   
       
     
              
          
     
    soticeunek hay € mpm ap 
tment to suceed retiring 
Presidential Aide Sherman ~Ad- 
    
weg 
if particles tnd that's why it is Mosier ‘sald, afi i* 
4 Detroit Taxicab Driver 
Installs Phone in Hack — 
problems until he installed a radio-| wife, 
desk in the White House after | time cabbie says, business. has 
boomed, 
La Rowe's sister’s family was 
burned out of their home and his 
brother-in-law couldn’t find a job 
in unemployment-riddled Detroit 
last December, So, his sister, her 
husband and their four children 
moved in with La Rowe and his 
A full-time employe of United 
States Rubber Co. and a cab driver 
at night,-La Rowe needed more 
than hig total weekly income of 
oo ee 
He recalled that many of his pas- (Continued From Page One) 
havoc with the scent,” police 
said, and the bloodhounds were 
unable to follow the trail. 
lost Sunday afternoon’ when he 
followed two older brothers out of 
visiting. 
The boys told police they saw 
Kenneth coming behind them and 
Kenneth apparently got lost on his 
way back. 
Iridustries in the Iron Moutitain 
area closed down yesterday and 
workers joined in the search for 
Kenneth. High school -students 
Upper Michigan post. ak 
The Salvation Army provided 
food for searchers in the com- 
  
YMCA Drive: 
for Members 
Adds 149 Here 
A two-week membership cam- 
paign at the Pontiac YMCA con- 
cluded last evening with the an- 
nouncement by John Benson, chair. 
man of the drive, that 149 new 
members have been added to the 
    ant to the President, ! ae ams. Persons was deputy assist- | Kenneth; son of Mr. and Mrs, +Elmer-Scott of Kingsford, became 
a hunting camp his. parents were _- 
told him to return to the camp, 
helped state troopers from every - 
munity-wide effort to find the boy. ~ 
   
     
   } 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, DUESDAY: SEPTEMBER 30, 1958 & 1 
      ¥ 
‘soe LOOKING AT 
_ LIFE, THROUGH 
“COFFEE CUP - 
} EYES”! 
_ Does the caffeinin coffee cause you 
| tension? Sleeplegsness? “Coffee 
: ; Cup Eyes?” Then discover this . 
wie 
din A Sie Cerree 
Te >    
    MBS. SAMUEL, LAWSON : 
Mrs. Samuel {Mildred L.) Law- 
ison, 82, of 68 Murray St.. died 
{Saturday. at her home. She had 
{been ill two. years, oe 
‘Mrs, Laween was a member of 
Newman AME Church. 
| + Surviving ake two daughters and 
a son, Mrs. Eva M. Spears, Ruth 
E. and Olliston Lawson, all of Pon- 
tiac; and two sisters. 
‘ Service will at 2 p.m. Thursday 
from the William F. Davis Funeral 
Home with burial in Oak Hill) 
Cemetery. Mrs, Lawson's body will 
be at the funeral home at noon 
Wednesday. 
EDWARD McCAUGHAN 
Service for Edward McCaughan, 
72, of 2100 Woodward Ave. will be 
at 3 p.m. Wednesday from the 
Huntoon Funeral Home, with bur- 
ial following in Oak Hill Cemetery. 
- Mr. McCaughan, an employe of 
Bloomfield Hospital, died Sunday 
morning at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- 
pital after. an illness of two years. 
COTRELL. w. McNEARY, 
Cotrell W. McNeary, 49, of 431 
Raeburn St. died-Saturday in Vet- 
erans’ Hospital, Dearborn. He was 
ill two’ years. 
He was an emptoye of the Pon- 
tiae Retail Store and a veteran 
of World War II. : 
Surviving are his wife, Mary; tavo sisters and five brothers, Mrs. 
Bernice Harris, Mrs. ~ Dorothy 
Garth,- Harry, Eugene, Louis and 
Floyd ‘McNeary, all of Pontiac, 
and Lawrence of New Albany, Ind.   
  
JUST ARRIVED!   
and 
Imported Bulbs 
Tasker’s Seed 63 W. Huron St. 
FE 5-6261 .   Service will be at 2 p.m, Wednes- 
day from the St. John Methodist 
Church with burial following in 
Oak Hill Cemetery.. Mr. Cotrell's 
body is at the Frank Carruthers 
‘Madonna ‘Lily —e Home: ” 
MRS. THOMAS MORAN 
Mrs. Thomas (Beatrice G.) 
Moran, 61, of 4141 Meyer Rd., 
Drayton Plains, died yesterday in 
her home. She had been in ill 
health about a year. 
Surviving besides her husband 
‘fiare a son, Ray Hayward of. Poh- 
tiac; two daughters, Mrs. Viva 
|Wright of Clarkston and Mrs.   
    
ANTS? ROACHES? 
MOSQUITOES? Kill roaches and ants — 
Johnston’s No - Roach, 
Brush-on insecticide. Color- 
less. gs for months. 8 oz. 
ih anon annette & with 
Johnston's Hadabug, the safe 
bedroom spray. Safe to use 
near children and pets. Hada- 
bug $1.98. Available at Cun- 
ningham’s, Kinsel’s, 
Cloonan’s, & you favorite drug 
| news snd it, Welt beets mses ents aR al Frederick Dorothy Frisk - of Pontiac; 10 
grandchildren; and two great- 
grandchildren. 
Service will be at 9:30 a.m.| 
‘Thursday from the Melvin “A. 
Schutt Funeral Home with burial} 
in Mt. Hope Cemetery. 
MRS, ALBERT W. RAYNER 
Mrs, ‘atbert W.- (Florence H.) 
Rayner, Ti, of 278 Ferry Ave. died 
of pneumonia m 
USE lat Pontiac General Hospital follow- 
ing ah -ogpration. She was ill two 
years; 
Brande was a a member of All Saints 
  — Rayner, both of Pontiac; 
six grandchildren; 14 great-grand- 
children; and two brothers. 
_A memorial communion will de, 
heereuh at her church at 10 aun. 
Thursday, _ 
Service will be at 2 p.m. Thurs- 
day .from All Saints Episcopal 
Church with burial ‘following in 
Oak Hill. Cemetery. Her body -is 
at the Huntoon Funeral Home. 
MRS. ALMOND ROWLEY 
Mrs. Almond (Anna’C.) Rowley 
of 225 Mechanic St. died yesterday 
at the home of her son, Albert of} - 
3470. Lakeview St., Ortonville after 
an illness of: six months. She was 
96. 
Mrs. Rowley was a member of 
Central Methodist Church, 
Surviving are three daughters, 
Mrs. Hazel Britton of Pontiac, 
Mrs, Roxana Griffith and Mrs. 
Stella Furney, both of Dearborn; 
three sons, Henry of Utica, Austin 
of North Branch and Albert of Or- 
tonville;.and four grandchildren. 
Service will be at 2 p.m, Thurs- 
day from the Farmer-Snover Fu- 
neral Home. Her body will be taken 
to the Prestonville Cemetery for 
burial. 
MRS. SAMUEL WHITFIELD. 
Mrs, Samuel (Courtney) Whit- 
field, 64, formerly of Pontiac, died 
lyesterday in her home, 20849 Men- 
dota St., Ferndale after a brief ill- 
ness, 
She was a member of the Oak 
Grove AME Church of Detroit. - 
Besides her husband, Mrs, Whit- 
field leaves three daughters and a 
son, Mrs. Betty Mills and Mrs. 
Mildred Chenault, both of Detroit, 
Shirley and Alvin Whitfield, ,both 
at home; four sisters and a brother 
Mrs, Frances Bell of Evanston, 
Ill, Mrs, Mary B. Scott, Mrs. 
Elizabeth Noble, Hortense and Ce- 
dric Riddick, both of Pontiac: 
Service will be at 2-p.m, Friday 
rom the Newman AME Church 
with burial in Oak. Hill Cemetery. 
Mrs, Whitfield’s body is at the 
Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. 
MRS. FRANK SCHOCKE 
ALMONT -—Service for Mrs. 
Frank (Emma) Schocke, 60, of 
8382. Tub Spring Rd., will be held 
at 2.p.m, Thursday at Muir Broth- 
ers Funeral Home, Almont, with 
burial in Romeo Cemetery. _ 
Mrs. Schocke died yesterday at}, 
the , University of Michigan Medi- 
— |eal Center, Ann Arbor, following 
a long illness. 
She was a member of St. John 
latheran Church, Romeo, and 
Almont MOMS Club and Almont 
American Legion Auxiliary, 
Surviving are her husband; .one 
daughter, Mrs. David (Marian) 
Campbell of Imlay City; five sons, 
  and Ray of Almont, El- Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas of,ton and Garencs m sealay City, 
Harold of Capac; one sister, Mrs. 
Mabel Terry of Romeo; two broth- 
ers, Irvin Engel of Romeo and 
Clarence of Detroit; and 14 grand- 
children 
MRS, DAVID WILLIAMS 
ALMONT — Word has been fe- 
ceived hete of the death of Mrs. 
Davié Williams at her home in 
Chicago, The Rev. -and Mrs. Wil- 
‘Hiams were members of the Al- 
mont Baptist. Church and. were 
frequent visitors here during te 
past few years, 
  
é : 
Service Tomorrow * a 
for Crash Victim 
HOLLY—Service for Miss Edith 
Sutton, 20, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. Russell Sutton of 300 Davis- 
burg Rd., who was injured fatally 
in an auto-train collision Sunday 
in Hammond, Ind., will be ‘held. at 
2 p.m, tomorow at the Holly Ad- 
ventist Church. Burial will be in 
Oakhill Cemetery in Holly Town- 
pital Schoel  « 
Nursing in Hins- 
dale, Ill. 
The crash also 
claimed the lives # 
of two of her com- 
panions and se-™" 
riously injured an- MISS SUTTON 
other, They were returning from 
an outing at Emmanuel Mission- 
aby College in Berrien Springs, 
Mich., when their small foreign 
car was struck by a freight train. 
  
Western Electric Strike 
Threatens in 33 Cities - 
NEW YORK w — Ten thousand 
repairmen and other workers in 
33 cities will strike against the 
Western Electric Co. at. midnight 
tonight unlate their contract dis- === 
pute is = by then, their union 
chief 
lepariey of a strike against 
Western Electric, the manufactur- 
ing arm of. the Bell Telephone 
System, was declared yesterday 
by Joseph .A. Beirne, President of 
the Communications Workers of 
America. 
The workers involved handle 
switchboards and other heavy 
equipment. : 
  
Two important B vitamins are 
found in eggs — thiamine and 
riboflavin.   
—————   = 
7   
  
   * * . S 
‘ 
SHOES   
    
  87 N. Saginaw St.   “OPEN MON, and FRI. TIL 9 P. M. 
  All Famous Brands 
Shoes of this quality, to our knowledge, have 
never been ad at these ridiculous prices! 
‘Look at These Names.   
I. MILLER ~ iaRrnague ~ 
ANDREW GELLER - NEWTON ELKIN 
' MATRIX MADAMOISELLE . 
PALLIZZIO VALLEY — 
TROYLING BRITISH. TROTTER 
FOOT FLAIR 
Blue Suede Blue Lt 
Black Calf Black Suede : 
Red Green. 
Brown Brown Calf 
Brown Suede _ Genuine Reptile 
Patent Grey 
FAMOUS BRAND 
OF LATS and ‘WEDGI ES 
Values to 12. 95.     
+g28 , 46 
   | 638 
      High and Mid- Heels 
Sizes 3 to 12 — 
AAAA to C 
  acting, ‘singing, stage managing, 
directing, producing 
aes ”. SHOES 
  values 
to $34.95 
Be here 9:30 
Wed. Morning 
for Best Selection _|of Impeding Progress 
   
     
       
   
      
     | : RECONDITIONED 
    
     
      
  Blonde Decides. 
H usband Beats 
Mere Money 
BALTIMORE (AP) _ ‘Shirley 
Klein, a 2l-year-old blonde secre- 
tary, has decided she'll forego $2,- 
500: in favor of James A. Halloran, 
24, Woodbury, -N.J. 
The couple were in a traffic ac- 
cident last May in West. Virginia. 
She claimed she received injuries 
and filed civil action. against 
Halloran, Then she became en- 
gaged to him, 
* x * 
Last week Miss Halloran won a 
$2,500 court verdict against. her 
husband-to-be. The money would 
come from an insurance company, 
not out of his pocket. 
Miss Klein might still get the 
$2,500 by delaying her marriage, 
scheduled Saturday, and waiting 
out an appeal which the insurance 
company has filed. But that could 
take months. 
; * * * : 
A West Virginia statute provides 
that a woman who obtains a judg- 
ment against her husband-to-be 
and then marries him prior to the 
appellate court action, forfeits any 
further contest of the case. 
Potter Accuses UAW   
MONROE w — Labor officials 
are trying to kill a private atomic 
power project that would offer 
more employment, prosperity and 
a higher standard .of living in 
Michigan, Sen. Charles E. Potter 
(R-Mich) Said last night. 
Potter addressed a Republican- 
sponsored dinner at Monroe near 
‘the site of a nuclear electric plant 
now under construction. 
He noted United Auto Workers 
leaders have questioned the safety 
of the plant being built by the 
Power Reactor Development Co. 
(PRDC) 
“The Atomic Energy Commis- 
sion enforces rigorous safety 
standards,’ Potter said, “but. the 
labor bosses, of course, will stop 
at nothing to discredit, PRDC, even 
if it kills off their own members’ 
livefihood.”   
Deaths Elsewhere 
LANSING ®—Fred Walker, 55, 
of Carson City, a prominent Michi- 
gan dairy executive, died here yes- 
terday in Sparrow Hospital. Walk- 
er had’ served as past president of 
the American Dairy Assn. of Mich- 
igan, and was vice president of the 
Midwest ~ Producers Creameries, 
Inc., a milk cooperative. He is 
surivived by his widow, Rosalind, 
a son-and Fy daughter. ae 
ST. seven, Minn. (AP) — Dr. 
-| Edwin J, Vickner, 80,-a former 
professor at Gustavus. -Adolphus 
‘College in St, Peter and at the 
University of ‘Washington, Seattle, 
died Monday of cancer. He headed 
the romance language department 
at Gustavus Adolphys from 1903 
to 1912 andthe department . of 
Scandinavian languages at Wash- 
ington from 1912 until his retire 
ment in 1947. He was born in 
Stockholm, - Sweden. 
. * * .* 
ORANGE, N.J- (AP) — Law- 
rence J. Bolton, 60, featured act- 
+ fh in New York's off-Broadway 
comedy “Comic Strip,”* died Sun- 
day of a heart attack, His theatri- 
cal career covered. 37 years of   and writing. 
x * * 
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) — Mrs. 
Mable Wolfe Wheaton, 68,~ sister] == 
of novelist Thomas Wolfe, died 
Monday: after a brief illness, She 
had suffered from diabetes. 
* * * 
MIAMI. (UPI) — William Ed- 
mond (Dick) Breese, news edi- 
jtor of Pan American World Air- 
| ways and former city editor of the 
Memphis Commercial Appeal died 
today after a long iliness. The 58- 
year-oh] Mr. Breese had been ill 
for the last two years. | British to Consider 
New Cyprus Plan _ATHENS (AP)! ~ British Prime 
Minister Maémillan told -Arch- 
bishop Makarios today Britain is 
willing to consider his independ- 
ence plan as part of a final set- 
tlement of the Cyprus dispute. 
* * * 
“But Macmillan said the - inde- 
pendence proposal falls outside 
the scope of the immediate prob- 
lem of setting up an interim ar- 
rangement for restoring order and 
developing representative institu- 
tions. 
Makarios, exiled Cypriot leader, 
sent a personal message to Mac- 
millan. Sept. 27 saying ‘Cypriots 
would accept as a solution to the   
      
the stand of Greek-speaking Cyp- 
riots that Cyprus must be _ per- 
mitted to unite with ‘Greece. It 
was accepted Monday by Greek, 
Premier Constantine Karamanlis. 
  
Slate 4th UP Ciashaited: 
HOUGHTON (#—Michigan Tech 
announced today its fourth annual 
Upper Peninsula conference on in- 
dustry-education cooperation will 
be held Oct. 16-17. Dr. Kenneth 
McFarland, educational consultant 
of General Motors. Corp., and 
President Charles L. Anspach of 
Central Michigan College will be 
speakers,   
        
  Reg ular $17.50 
With TRADE-IN 
    «pao SSUIIIININUNANUVURALAOAAISULU AL 
BRAND NEW —Famous “VARSITY” Model 
SCHICK Electric SHAVER 
        STMMMI«* tt tT,       
   
or Limi 
ttm 
in y   (Add $2 Withow Trade) 
Full factory guaran- 
tee, complete with 
» case as pictured. 
Trade-In must 
be standar d 
brand men’s 
electric razor. 
N. Saginaw —Main Floor 
  
  WEDNESDAY ONLY! 
     
     
       
             
Se 
ee acd 
tiall 
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: 
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a 
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   — Basement Special 
‘54x87-Inch PLASTIC 
$1.00 ©   
  
Mi Fine vinyl_in variety of pat 
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house, Also tier curtains, 0 bide   
  
(81x108-Inch Sheets 
only. regular values to $3. 49. 
six 108-inch Sheets ie rs 
98 North 
Saginaw 
t Street Guaranteed First “Quality — 72 + 108. fad ‘Siad 
High’ count muslin? in gleaming white — choice 
of flat or fitted style. Regular values to $2. 49. 
72 x 108-inch sheds in high count piel. White _ sg 
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Weeseserewewrer ea e® 
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     Simms 
te. ‘Bring Sovings. Up to 
HALF OFF 
$2.000 becausé our 
shoppers. 
‘Sale Starts NOW ! 
      
Factory R tative Here 
E WEDNESDAY —2 to 3:30 P.M. 3 
REMINGTON Electric Shaver 
   @ ADJUSTED E @ STERILIZED 
E @ CLEANED / 
       
     
        
  pene inage ya ee will Be tn our store 
- every ednesday of avery week — 
e New GEnViGe. Remington factory 
etme 
  
     
   ~ SHOES   
      
         
   
    TTT     Plenty of some =, 
52-inch squares 
and plains .. 
LOT No. 1—-Fo ormer 
$2x52-Inch 
~ Squares 
Dacron & rayon Th 
solid colors . «. im- 
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damask in floral de-   
signs on white. Easy 
to lsunder. 
PANUEUUNEVANGOAGAAAOOTOTTETEETTTAATT no 
  
50 to 54-Inch Squares 
Lace-edge dacron/rayon, SBelgian 
linens, rayon/cotton, etc, Checks, 
prints & plain colors. 
LOT No. 3— Regular 
All 52x70-Inch Size   
cron/rayon. Solid colors or floral 
designs, Limited lot. 
LOT No. 4—Original. 
Se de Only 
Fine ‘woven. cotton and-   
      
     aan eliita 
ASTHMA RELIEF = rayon, Goloriaet, easy to wash 
; is ot ~ formal—or informal, 
LOT ies Biss 
60x80 and 60x90-Inch Solid color dacron/rayon or 
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terns. Washable and color   SUITCASE Tt 
tooo Buys a 
an of 5 ETE Gre > few of others! Sizes from — 
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. white and colors, 
LOT No. 2—All: $2.49 Quality 
Imported Belgian cottons or da- 
2 
aa: $5.98 Sizes 
273 
oe Other TABLECLOTHS iy Quantities Toe ne 
to Advertise at Even Greater Savings. Ouc customers will save over — 
buyers 
made this lucky purchase. BUY 
NOW -— best buys go to early      
   
             
   
         
    
      
   
           
           
       
  LACED ont KNEE- HI 
Girls’ Socks © 
Reg. Dr. 1%: 
79¢ ( - 
Cambed cotton, nylon reinforced 
- heel and toe. As shown with 
shoe-lace trim. Size 8¥2 to IT   
_ 4NFANTS’ and CHILDREN’ Ss 
          
        
            
                  
         
       
       
    5 Fate Shirts . 
  
inet NE mam 
lis Sis     iP 
    
   
        
     
   
             
         
  
   
       
Patterns ;    
      
     
           
        
          
      
   
   
      
      
    
   to “$1;70 
1? $3.29 Valuess 
    
    
        
  $4.49 Sellers 
me 
                       
          
  ~~ 13x23-INCH OVAL Ruse 
Fa ER te | 
    
    
— Flexible tips that scrape 
- mud '& agg off ‘of shoes. - 
etly pictured.    
      
             
     
   
    or 
mer 
‘i 
ad i 
s 
i 
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: 
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  ci 
i 
LSE i 
  a 
OB eg dispati 
- LONDON (UPD — “This is peace 
fn our time,” cried the old man 
prth the umbrella, waving a scrap 
of paper. 
' “Peace,” roared back the crowd .: events that led up| - 
Ja national hero. AQ WY 
With him, Chamberlain also 
back a. document to 
people never to go to war with 
‘one another again.” 
That warm, muggy September 
night in 1938, Neville Chamberlain, 
the “nian of peace,” the man who 
won “peace in our )” was 
PLEDGES BROKEN 
But a year later, Britain and 
were locked in World War 
II with a Nazi Germany which had 
broken every pledge made to 
Chamberlain. The very name of 
Munich had become for all time pifeat and sell-out. Two years later, 
*|Chamberlain, chased from office a 
: dead. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2958 fort   
  r 
broken and. discredited man, was 
But on Sept. 30, 1938, Britain 
felt only immense national relief 
at being rescued from the brink 
of the abyss. 
The Czechoslovak crisis had been 
in fact, ever since Hitler grabbed 
Austria in the-spring of 1938. 
* « * 
Neary 3,000,000 of Czechoslo- 
vakia’s 14,700,000 population were 
G . Most of them 
lived in the Sudetenland, the strip 
of territory bordering Czechoslo- 
vakia's frontiers with the Reich. 
TROOPS MOVED 
Within days after the Austrian 
Anshluss, the Sudeten Germans     b-\the symbol of. pepeennnent, de- begain agitating for an Anschluss   
NEW YORK (UPD _ Former ra 
Fe 
id. a ege 1 4 t | i z 
5 
  a 
~ 
  bs * 
* 
ty | 
f tat ut g 
® 
af f i pd J 
a [ 
i & & 
i i A i ‘ 5 t 
met . the State Department aide 
“who later . was to serve a prison 
= sentence after -being convicted of   
Today! 
  Ms iat von concerted te 
good sleep, too! Try delicious, 
er Teetant Siesta today See how 
fritich better you feel tomorrow! —     " (December, 1944, was decided on 
on the committee t0 | fore the delegation arrived in the could Not Afford Warning 
Of First Atomic Bombing} 
He sai@ that evidehoe indicates 
that the U. S. policy at Yalta in 
Crimean port and that Hiss oc- 
cipied a back row seat during the 
conference.   
Stressed by Japan 
American military bases 
in Japan, Kishi told the- Diet: ‘‘Co- 
operation with free nations, espe- 
cially the United States, is the 
keynote of Japan's foreign - pet 
  
Eddie to Debut Alone 
-HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Eddie 
Fisher opens his television season 
tonight but wife Debbie Reynolds 
won't be ‘with him as originally 
They ‘separated over his “1access, 
upon ‘viser Harry) -Hopkins, 
jhas received in the field of se- 
— jeurity problems came from. the 
Fiendship With US. ere me. 
ae Psychologist to Speak “Tt is ‘Plain n that Hiss had easy 
qued or evil, to (then 
Secretary State Edward R.) 
Stettinius and (Presidential Ad- 
who were 
trusted advisers of the President,” 
Byrnes. said. 
*. . He sat in the rear of the 
room and was frequently consulted 
by Hopkins and Stettinius.” 
* * * 
Byrnes said that the most harm- of eo own. To eck their de- 
mands, Hitler moved troops toward 
the Czech border. 
The government of President 
-Edotard Benes in Prague offered 
the only answer of Sudeten bosses 
man Frank, both Nazi henchmen 
‘of Hitler, was to increase their 
demands. With Hitler’s army 
and Luftwaffe massing men- 
acingly, tension mounted. The 
Chamberlain gevernment sent 
Lord Runciman to Prague as 
mediator in the hope of ve 
a conflict, 
Benes offered new occvaans, 
including virtual autonomy for the 
Sudeten—everything they wanted, 
in fact, short of handing the terri- 
tory over to Nazi Germany. 
On Sept. 12, in a speech to the 
Nazi party's annual congress at 
Nuremberg, Hitler upped his 
mands and called for ‘‘the right 
of self-determination” for the 
Sudetens. At the same time, he 
ordered his general staff to pre- 
pare for “Operation Green’’—the 
invasion of Czechoslovakia. Now 
he would be satisfied with noth- 
ing short of outright snn¢xation 
‘ot. ‘the Sudetenland. 
harangue that he was willing to 
risk a world war to obtain the 
Sudetenland. 
Chamberlain consulted with the 
British cabinet and on Sept. 19 
he urged Benes to surrender the | Sudetenland, 
def would destroy Czechoslovakia by ee ciaeday German areas of 
‘the Sudetenland in exchange for 
“general guarantees” against un- 
provoked aggression. ‘ 
. + * &* 
_ The Czechs accepted — reluc- 
tantly—in order to save them- 
selves from isolation. On Sept. 22 
Chamberlain flew to see Hitler 
again, this time at Bad Godes>erg 
on the Rhine, to tell him Benes 
had agreed to give up the 
But once again Hitler upped his 
ante. 
He told a shocked and angered 
Chamberlain that it now was too 
late for the terms the Prime 
Minister had pressured Benes 
into accepting. , He demanded 
nothing short of imm@diate Czech 
withdrawal from the Sudetenland 
and completion of the handover 
by Oct, 1, failing which Hitler 
force. 
On Sept. 23 he- Czechs mo- 
bilized. Next day Chamberlain re- 
turned to London. , France, botind 
hy treaty to come to Czechoslo- 
vakia’s aid, mobilized 500,000 men, 
The British government distributed 
gas masks and began digging air 
raid shelters in London's parks. 
* * * 
With war clouds rolling up fast, 
Chamberlain made still another 
desperate attempt to save the 
peace. — 
He dispatched his close advisor, 
Sir Horace Wilson, to Berlin 
with a final appeal to Hitler to. 
agree to an “orderly settiement”’ 
by an international conference. 
That same night, Sept. 26, in a 
speech at Berlin’s Sportpalast, 
  ae ‘that the Sudetenland be 
surrendered by Oct. 1. Once this 
was done, he declared, “I shall 
have no further territorial claims 
in Europe.” 
.Twice in the next 24 hours, 
President Roosevelt appealed to 
Hitler to avoid war. Hitler's reply 
Green” to begin Sept. 30; 
* * * 
The night of Sept. 27 Chamber- 
lain broadcast a pathetic message 
‘a quarrel in a far-away country 
between peoples of vom we know 
nothing.” 
Next day, Mussolini urged Hit- 
Jer to avoid force. As Chamber- 
lain addtessed the House of 
Commons on the afternoon ot 
Sept. 28, he was brought a 
message announcing that Hitler 
had agreed to a four-power meet- 
ing at Munich next day. 
“I shall, of course, go,’ Cham- 
berlain told the wildly cheering 
House. “4 
* * & 
On Sept, 29, Chamberlain, Hit- 
ler, Mussolini and Daladier met 
at the “Fuehrerhaus” in’ Munich. 
At 2 a.m. on the morning of Sept. 
30 they put their names to the 
Munich agreement. 
It provided that the Czechs 
should begin evacuating the 
Sudentenland on- Oct. 1 and 
that the surrender should be 
completed by Oct, 10.. An inter- 
national commission was to 
supervise a plebiscite in the 
areas without an overwhelming 
German population, was to give orders for ‘‘Operation|. 
to the British people speaking of| © edt oll ‘as “‘a sentence without | 
‘right of appeal.” 
Later that morning Chamberlain 
visited Hitler again before return- 
ing to London and signed with him 
the document pledging the desire 
of both peoples “‘never’ to. go to 
war with one. another again.” 
  Six months later, Hitler in- is 20- Year-Old Manich Pact Still Symbol of Appeasement eats Oheshesiaieabts. alta seer 
later the world was plunged into 
the greatest conflict in its his- 
tory. Even that was not the end. 
China, Korea, Indochina, Ma- 
laya, Suez, Algeria, Cyprus—hard- 
ly for a day have “ie guris been 
silent. 
“Peace in our thie < * 
  
sible. 
the 
Home, knowing 
Phone _ FEDERAL - 
ae 4511 
  Jan Masaryk, Chacheuiovakia's 's 
  Hitler delivered an ultimatum de- Foreign Minister, described the 
  Parking Becomes 
_ More Important 
... every day. And at the Donel: ~ 
sor-Johns Funeral Home, this is a 
problem we have met squarely 
by .acquiring more space. : 
have’ taken measures to better 
serve our patrons whenever pos- 
Parking areas at the rear, and 9 
* directly actoss Huron Sireet’ are — 
always available. Come freely to 
Donelson - Johns 
- parking will be awaiting you. 
        
           We 
          
             Funeral 
that convenient _      
      
  
      Parking On Our aren ==     
   
HOME 
  
ful publicity the State Department 
- |eharges against Hiss, 
He said that, as secretary of 
tioned Hiss about reports he Thad 
jheard that Hiss was a Communist. 
He said that Hiss did not flinch when he suggested that Hiss sub- 
mit to questioning by FBI Director 
J. Edgar Hoover but that Hoover |. 
was disturbed at learning that, 
Byrnes had questioned Hiss. — 
¢ he was reluctant to 
ask Hiss for a resignation “that 
would ruin a man’s life,’ so dur- 
ing the investigation of his activi- 
ties, “Certain matters. of impor- 
tance’”’ were not sent to Hiss’ office 
for the remaining months that Hiss 
was with the State Department. 
  
on Child Relations Here 
. Mrs. Ruth Szabo, psychologist at 
the Oakland . County Children’s 
Home, will address the Oakland 
County Association for the Handi- 
capped at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the 
'Cook-Nelson Armory, Paddock and 
Auburn, 
Her subject will be ‘‘The Psy-] 
  ‘planned. 
ee 
York, :   
    
      a 
ETUDE 16-pe. “Starter 
Set” in storage 
tray, $94.95 Vi 
Reed & Barton, America's ol 
' major silversmith, proudly 
- finest stainless steel. Visit 
and SEASCAPE. 
  The ultimate in Design 
Studs by 
REED & BARTON 
   
          
                  sents two handsome new patterns 
in Studio Stainless, the world’s 
oe store today and see these 
- truly fine designs, ETUDE 
| “JEWELERS 
16 WEST HURON ST. - chologist’s Relations to the Child.” 
nd Craftsmanship 
dest 
pre- td 
7 ¢ 
    
      
        ~ 
'S CARS!   
Here’s a new kind of gasoline that has a powerful new way with . 
today’s high-compression engines. It’s SUPER-M—made for Mid- 
west driving, made for you... and the best gasoline Marathon 
has ever made. 
Once you get the feel of SuPER-M you'll never settle for less. Toe 
the accelerator hard and feel the power of SuPER-M push you 
back in’ the cushion. There’s no lagging actéleration - with 
Super-M, it’s a real power tonic. Cruise along a turnpike with 
SupeRr-M and get: the comfortable feel“of your car ticking off 
‘miles with effortless ease. And if top mileage is your aim, 
Suppr-M is really for you, with all the power you need to put 
away the miles with a minimum amount of gasoline. 
Drive in today for a power tonic, SUPER-M gasoline. At all 
- Marathon stations . . . where you also find the best buy i in reg- 
ular gasoline, Mara 
# 
  thon MILE-maker. 
         Eq 
4. 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, | ‘TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER. 2, 1968 
    
  | (Weeks Is Optimistic   
  
      Rashid ond Ep 
i ty Rit es paid Grain Futures 
Edge Upward : of wp ees fe See ate ks ge om CHICAGO u—Most grain futures} 2' caponeties 
showed a tendency to move higher) _,, meaner 0 re 
in early dealings on the Board of; Detroit. Js age eins fodoreheiate grade; 
Trade today. - : me 7 
+ .-f. € 
Corn and soybeans sone atlas ive die 
  
) — Detroit 
|p i ae Sea 
bout head stockers and : 
  
seteness £507R SURF te enee 
oeeenene 
$ 
4 
F + eee ee te 
‘ eerne ee 
  
ae eeeeneee 
63% 
Mey a abeeeas we 
TUlY scesteee . 
ELECTRONIC 
BURGLAR ALARMS Jhrocisies 
if ea 
H ie 
ch eee BR e 
      
      
  
  
STOCK 
YORE—( 
Press): AVERAGES 
  OCT FEE ON Oe ree 
BaES: 
Snnviricem:   enmiouin:   
  
gastseee ‘JACK COLE'S . 
Auto Super Mart 
PLYMOUTH - DODGE 
CHRYSLER DEALER 1000 West Maple = ss MA 44-4511   
  
  
    
714 Claiessiaiey Nat'l Bank Bldg. 
Phone FE 4-1568.9 
BAKER & HANSEN Richard A. saDeW itt - Donald E. Hansen fas Res. FE 2-5513 
  Homeowners’ Policies 
Aciideat Insurance _Fire Insurance 
Automobile Insurance Life Insurance 
Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insuran 
Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types 
_ ‘Tenants’ Policies 
  
There is no greater mistake than the hasty. 
conclusion - that s are worthless be- 
cause they are 
: ce : A Huxley. 1890. 
  
    
  
    
Wondering how to 
| Se your saved dollars chance to grow? 
Learn what they may do for you. 
C.. J. NEPHLER CO. - 818 Community Nat'l Bank Bldg. “Hours: 8:30-t0 4:30. FE 2-9119     Stocks Heading 
changed 
| be F 
: small 59608; grade B/ higher 
‘| ally as a labor agreement was - 
y|while Bethlehem and U.S, Steel 
advanced fractionally. : 1, . i 
for New Highs NEW YORK ® — The stock 
market resumed a rise toward new 
record highs in active early trad 
ing today. - 
Key stocks rose fractions, to about 
‘Chrysler ‘@esobeed fracthe- 
anticipated, General Motors and 
American Motors also were up 
a bit but Ford dipped a frac- ten, o- 
Lukens rose more thes a point (Business Outlook Good’ 
He blended politics with eco- 
nomics in a glowing account of 
“wise geverninent leadership” 
which he said has helped restore 
public confidence, and has “con- 
.| founded the carping critics and 
. the fainthearts,”’ 
Plans reported by industrial 
to speed up their invest- 
in new plants and machin« 
Year, Weeks said. 
‘* o* * 
Bat he cautioned that advocates 
of what he called “Socialist 
witchcraft” and ‘sky’s-the-limit 
government spending” could   
, American 
  
Reports Burglary 
of City Gas Station 
Owner of the Watson Service » Ray-|. 
  E 
i             
      FFE 
E   
  
News in Brief 
reation; 18 S. Perry St., netted 
thieves a total of $95.75 in two en- 
velopes that were taken’ from an 
unlocked cash register, Pontiac 
Police reported Monday- afternoon. 
Farm. equipment 
was reported stolen yesterday 
from the Pontiac Farm & Indus-| © 
trial Tractor Co., at 825 S. Wood-| F 
{ward Ave., “ according to Pontiac; _ 
Police. : 
  
    
  ~ Would you be able to replace your home 
if fire ruined it? Have you really enough. 
insurance to cover ‘its present value.as — 
well as alf the contents? If you have any 
= doubts, ask our advice... = 
BUD NICHOLIE ~ INSURANCE ond REAL ESTATE | 
: | Phone FEderal 2-2326 
49 Mou wena 
. ew: Mich, 
me     
    A breakin at the Motor ian'Ree-| fi 
valued at $268) Zul Navy Plane. Missing 
‘With Ten Aboard 
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)—A Navy 
e ® *& 
It ig declared missinz but not 
lost, said Cmdr. Dan- 
’liel Decker, administrative offfeer| at. Brunswick.’ 
The plane made jts last radio 
contact with the Key West base 
at 3:30 p.m. Monday after taking 
Eo ovr atlas Ia ati 
instruments 
* *&* * 
Cmdr, James F. Rumford, op- 
erations © officer, said the plane 
“just disappeared.” 
The Nery ectined Yo" Monty 
the crew. .   
t | 
Public Schools Borrow. 
|25 Million Dollars ‘Employment en business incentive, cut down 
take-home pay and dry up custo- 
mer power.” 
He urged the businessmen to 
resist new spending proposals. 
  
Over Idleness See Better Conditions 
in Major Job Areas 
Across Nations 
WASHINGTON (AP) — For the 
first time in two years, the num- 
ber of the nation’s major job 
areas reporting improved 7 
ment outnumber those showing in- 
creases in joblessness, 
*° x..¥% : 
The Labor Department an- 
nounced this Monday in reporting 
that the job picture improved d 
ing the late summer in all but a 
few of the nation’s chief labor and 
production centers. 
Surveys showed four-fifths of 
149 major labor market areas re- 
" 2 & Coal Loader TOLEDO (®—Toledo was virtual- 
ly guaranteed a continued long run 
as the No, 1 coal port in the nation 
today as Chesapeake & Ohio Rail-|)... 
way drew the curtain on the |S 
world’s biggest and fastest coal- 
loading dock, 
to: 
can move 6,000 tons of coal an hour 
jfrom railroad cars inte vessels. 
It adds 40 per cent to the ca- 
pacity of the rallroad’s Presque 
Isle facilities where three other 
coal loaders hit a peak last year 
by dumping 138,700,000 tons into 
lake freighters. 
Announcing full operation of the 
new loader at a press conference, 
the railroad noted that it comes 
at a time when Toledo is assuming 
the role of a major world port on 
the St. Lawrence Seaway, 
+. £ 
    
Bighth Man Squawks   
motorists and started writing 
stop sign, 
the ticket.” ~ 
a stop sign. 
  '7 Innocents Get Tickets 
’ MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—A traffic policeman Uned up eight 
tickets for failure to heed a 
Seven accepted the tickets, iis they hadn't seen | 
sign. The eighth anid, “Show me the sated sign and I'll accept 
“ “So you can’t see a big red in on a tall green pole?” 
asked .the officer. "(Come on.” « 
They walked back to the intersection, but there was no 
“Somebody must have stolen it,” said Be. red-faced of- | 
  
‘ 
MANICURE, | N 
/ wrist of «lant stats 
  *, ee poet as he tore up the tickets. 
— Perched on the: fe fies 
, in Rome, ceulshhediehll (dibilacis: coubiehjnele ais 
Momo Paparozzi has the situation representating of tie’ four Seasons’ ty city's 
“el in hand. —— ——   ‘et peat 
i 
sean 
4% A ‘ & 
A Sak os Through high-speed conveyor 
.|belts and other features, the 7-mil- 
lion-dollar mechanical ship loader 
The-all-time record for coal ship-|_ 
| Hurricane Helene : 
} ‘Typical airline   BIGGEST COAL LOADER — Chesapeake & "conveyer. belis and a'stiovable loading tower, the 
Ohio Railway unveiled this $7 million coal loader ‘ device can transfer 6,000 tons of coal an hour 
today at its Presque Isle docks in Toledo. Using on eee ee 
  
World's Biggest, Fastest | 
for. Toledo 
ping here was in 1956 when 
Presque Island and the Lakefront 
Docks loaded 27,142,941 tons. Last 
  
Ey-FCC Head 
Breaks Down Richard A. Mack Said in Miami Hospital; Due 
Before Grand Jury . 
MIAMI (UPI) — Former Fed- Communications Commission- 
  
  
  
Doms to Present Adlai 
With Birth Certificate 
  
training program 
for jet pilots oo ae Eon ground school in a) 20-day period; 
12 hours of cockpit fasedberttion; 
10, hours “fi\ training. High year the movement was 26,123,949)   
Death Notices 
BLACK WOOD, SEPT. 28, 1958, 
pik ‘oni uins Se tee   
        
    
    
    hotrs ot route flying. 
- 
@ i ca