The Weather ©.8; Weather Burtau Forecast Light rain or snew. (etait Wage 2 * r 4 THE PONTIAC PR A%gi¢6 WER PABE ts7th YEAR- PETE PONTIAC. ‘MICHIGAN. SATURD. AY. NOVEMBER 2 PRESS INTERNATION 4L NAssootaT ED PRRs , 1959—28 PAGES MOURNS FRIEND — A bereaved Harlow H. Curtice leaves the First Presbyte Ann Arbor with his wife after attending funeral service for Harry W. Anderson, rian Church in ecutiv.. Curtice Pbdoniin GM ex- Anne's Island Wednesday during a duck hunting trip on Ste. wn ba Ss Aiea Can Expect! Snow or Rain The some Pontiac area can light snow or day night, the rain by Sun- weatherman said, Skies will be partly cloudy night and tomorrow, with the tem- ‘perature dipping to 25 tonight. A rhigh of 38 has been forecast for ) Sunday to- Variable winds will become 8-12 m.p.h, southeasterly. tomor- row, The five-day forecast calls for only minor day by day changes im temperatures, Precipitation will total about one-tenth of an inch in a light rain or snow tomorrow ;and again about Tuesday. x * * Temperatures rose to 36 yester- iday and the wind velocity at 10 'a.m, teday was westerly at 18 m.p.h. At 1 p.m. the thermometer stood AP Wirephote at 38. Arraign Detroit accidentally shot Anderson last Harry Anderson Free Fallout Shelter Manin Arson Is Laid fo Rest Can Be Yours---If Harlow Curtice Among 700 Mourners Filling Church in Ann Arbor ANN ARBOR \—A small, quiet country cemetery—half-hidden a pine and oak grove—became the final resting place yesterday of Harry W. Anderson, 67, retired General Motors vice president who died tragically in a hunting acci- dent Wednesday * * * Among the mourners was retired GM President Harlow H. Curtice, who accidentally shet Anderson as the two-long time auto industry associates hunted ducks on an e© clusive reserve on Ste. Anne's Island between the United States) and Canadian borders. | Nearly 706 persons, including | many of the top executives of | the automotive industry, treed | ness, labor and civic affairs, paid their final respects to An- derson during the modest Mor- men burial service. Rites were held in the First Presbyterian Church in order to accommodate the huge gathering. * * * Anderson's wife, Veda, 40, though visibily dazed by the sud- den death of her husband, miin- tained her composure throughout the two-holr ceremony. She was accompanied by a ‘brother, Rulon Satterfield of Salt Lake City, and) Dr. A. C. Kerlikowske, direetor of the University of Michigan Medical Center and a close personal friend of the family. * * 7 Anderson was eulogized by Mor- man Minister Karl Richards of Detroit as having given “new stature to labor statesmanship”’ during his long and brilliant. career with General Motors, Richards, a close personal ‘friend of the det ceased, told the church gathering that Anderson had won the 2 in respect of botir his -“fetlow axeci- 1 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) ' build free prototype fallout shelters Is Charged in Plot. to, Burn Pontiac Furniture! Store Last Saturday Want to have a free fallout shelter in your basement? ~ Civil defense authorities are prepared to make such a gift to some Pontiac fami willing to do a favor in the name of civil defense. Pontiac is one of four M $3,000,000 national campaign to encourage construc- shelters, tion of fallout Robert A. Stierer, assistant city manager, explained to- day. -The Office of Civi] Defense and Mobilization «OCDM) plans in selected cities across the na- ito with special. funds from Con- gress, It plans to build -elght big | school-hospital type shelters, % | medium-sized 100-person shelters and 100 of the small, family- sized shelters. In Michigan, it wants to build family - size shelters in Detroit, Grand Rapids and Saginaw, as well as in Pontiac * * * ‘**Fallout. shelters are a major facet of tle national civil defense program,” Stierer said. Having decided on types it fig. ures will do the job, the OCDM is now setting out on the job of selling householders on in- stalling shelters in their base- ments, he explained. Stierer, assistant director of the Pontiac ‘Office of Civil Defense, wants to find a Pontiac family that will volunteer for one of the square $500 concrete-block shelters which the OCDM recommends i FITS IN CORNER This ig designed for one corner of a basement. It is 10 feet wide, 10 feet long and 7% feet high and fs constructed of four-inch thick | block. . eri with bunks, emer- y Supplies of food, water ” *Continued on Page 2, Col. » It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas Downtown It's getting Christmasy in ae Pontiac. Going up are the first corte what the Down-| town Merchants Assn. promises w brightest display ever. Evergreen festoons were wrapped around utility poles | labout half of its steel, on downtown Saginaw and Huron streets yesterday. less difficulty than its competi- They were to be followed by*— new, illuminated Christmas) tree cutouts. Later this month the association plans to unveil a $1,400 life-size) nativity scene on the Courthouse). grounds. } Next month, a 60-foot Christ- mais tree wil] be put up at Sag- | inaw street and Oakland avenue, decorated with over 1,509 colored lights. There won't be any colored lights hung across Saginaw this season, said.George Richman, association president. x ke ®, It is believed such lights are a traffic danger, easily confused with | } traffic signals, he explained. The new decorations are being | purchased through funds which in past years would have gone into the annual Christmas pa- | rade. Ede ew : |} “We believe most people prefer having a beautiful downtown area Jy be the biggest and | throughout the Christmas season, |rather than a single parade lasting, only a matter of an hour or so, he said. SWITCHED LAST YEAR The association made the switch, | from parades to decorations last terday for smashing a shop win- year. The Parks & Recreation De- | partment added seg tigg . dowtitown yesterday, too, | bexed trees — an elm aa a locust — were sét next to the courthouse. Donald E. Nagle, forestry super visor, said they would.stay there all winter on an experimental bn sis. * * * The merchants associ been asked to consider boxed trees like these throughout! the downtown area. i Rithman said the association 5 ] ] | } { tion. hag welcomed the of t city in the effort to beautify down- town. : Signs of Activity “= might resume production again.’ -\tors in keeping its plants in op- ing! A Detroit man was arraigned today in Pontiac Municipal Court on charges of being the arsonist! in a plot to burn the Lord’s Fur- ly if. the family, in turn, is ichigan cities selected’in ajMiture & Appliance Co., Inc., last Saturday. Leonard Schultz, 42, of 18677, Meyers Rd., Detroft demanded ex- amination this morning before Mu-| nicipal Judge Maurice E. Finne- GM Showing gan Examination was set for Dec.’ 3. He was freed under a $5,000! The two owners of the furni- ture store have admitted their —_— part in the arson attempt. They But Local Plarits Can't) are sidney Cohn, 41, of 21180 Predict Date Workers Kipling St., and Irving Aaron, Will Be Called: Bock | matezz Gare om « They were arraigned Monday {80-day injunction period will . ne te , with 220,-/before Judge Finnegan, together|'ealized.” je ime etree Honor All-County Goldberg said g Nov. 17 order | General Motors Corp., 000 workers laid off because of with Nathan the steel strike, was showing signs Northlawn St., Detroit, whom they! of increased activity today. said furnished the arsonist. Wolfe’ Chevrolet and Buick divisions has denied any knowledge of the reealied 3,733 employes for work! blaze. Examination for, the three) next week. also will be held Dec. However, spokesmen for the cor- x * * poration’s three plants in Pontiac, The iwo ‘owners said Schultz Pontiac Motor, ‘Truck and Ceach picked up a freezer, washing ma-' and Fisher Body, could not pre-|chine and living room set the day} dict a date when laid off workers before the fire was set. Pontiac! would be called back. police learned the truck had been The Truck and Coach Division ‘rented by Schultz, owner of a| official ‘sald none of the & x lrestaurant at the Alamo Motel, imately 1,000 employes ow |2700 Woodward, from a truck rent- some three weeks ago due to jal firm in Detroit the steel strike have been called |_ The two owners have identified Schultz through Detroit -Police (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Wolfe, 45, of 18651) back to work, ‘‘However,’ he said, ‘we still are producing heavy duty joks on trucks and coaches. We didn't have to stop production as many of. the other plants iad to do. We have received no word when we could! expect to recall them." cot * * The Pontiac Motor Division spokesman said, “We have . not) lealled anybody back We can't} |gauge or approximate when we| Close to 8,000 Pontiac Motor j workers were laid off when pro- duction ceased as a result of the | steel shortage. The Division has retained its- maintenance and service people, however. Close to 2,500 have been laid) off at Fisher Body in Pontiac. Meanwhile, , Chrysler Corp. re- ported 2,650 new layoffs and the lcompany was expected to make further cutbacks next week. Ford Motor Co., which makes has had eration. ‘Window an Intruder? LONDON (UPID—-A young brewery worker, fined one pound | ($2.80) in Old Street Court yes- | dow, was asked why he did it. | “The window mirrored my re- flection,”’ he » explained, “and I | didn’t like it.’ | PREP POIERRE ES LIED BR RRR EGE OS, SOS ' In Today's. Press | BS SRS algae ke aial Church News 79 Comics ... . MeL Editorials... prece 8S Home Section . 15-19 Master Your . Tensions 3 Obituaries .. | Sports 20-21 | | Theaters ‘ ¥ 12-13 TV. & Radio Programs. 27 County Service Center._George Wilson,) Earl ....:. cove ae Women’s Pages - Wd « ithe steel strike is likely to miles an hour for about three min- ‘resume in tate January. day to Secretary Frederick H. quisitions such as steel. | days. ' were forced back to work by a ‘kept him comfortable | orders for steel and makes 00 | ahout four feet high. and it was | civilian production.”’ UP SHE GOES — There’re plenty of sidewalk superintendents these days among Oakland County officials and residents watching the progress on the new courthouse going up in Telegraph road supervisor, said work, which began the second week in October, is about three weeks behind schedule due to the cpid weather. A US. Warned ’Chutist Scared? ALAMOGORDO, N.M. \?—Fiery-haired Joe Kittinger says his t5-mile parachute jump didn’t scare him—he was too busy to worry. Kittinger, a jet jockey turned space-age experimenter — with himself as a guinea pig — stepped out of a bucket-like balloon gondola ; at 76,400 feet over White WASHINGTON (®—The sands missile range this Steelworkers Union has told yee, the government it bette: * * * get busy stockpiling steel Protected for defense needs because cold, he plummeted at nearly 450 Likely to Restart Government Urged by Union -to Stockpile for Defense Needs from 104-below-zero utes. Then, sti} - 12,000 -feet- high, a parachute automatically opened, : and he drifted the rest of the way union counsel, said the to the desert in six more minutes. union wants to make it x & * “ . : It was another part'in His con- per fect) y plain that: tinuing effort to help develop should the Strike resume, equipment ty bring men back any peril to the national] alive from emergencies on the safety will not be charge- “4#* °! space. able t ite a “I didn’t have time te worry,” oO the Unit aq Steel the well-knit, 155-pounder said. workers of America. “I iad seo many ‘things to do. * * . -This was a.research job. I Goldberg sent his warning Fri- wasn't just sffting there think. { Con | Ing abeut the jump. I was try- M a wie: sd ing to get data we didn't .have ueller, whose de already.” partment handles government ac- Mueller The Air Force captain said he is currently visiting Poland and kept track of the time and altitude \there was no word on when a re- “and physiological reactions’ on ply to Goldberg might be expect- which he did not elaborate ed. * * * The union struck most of the COMFORTABLE SUIT nation’s steel plants for 116 He said his pressure — suit, Early this month they equipped with an oxygen system, “going up Arthur _ J. Goldberg, court order under .the Taft- and coming down.” | Hartley law. After 80 days they | is he in good shape after his tree ra sue iy if ® big leap? Well, he flew an Alr ai Force T33 jet trainer from his Goldberg wrote, ‘“‘While I have new station af Wright Air not abandoned hope that a settle-| Development Center in Ohio to ‘ment in steel will be reached be-| Helloman Air -Ferce Base, just fore the 80-day injunction expires.| outside Alamogordo, Friday. [I must advise you in all candor) The Air Force missile develop- The Air Force said this not only to steel companies to give pri- |was the highest parachute jump. ority to defense steel was com- jon record but was the highest man’ pletely inadequate. The order, jever rode in an open balloon gon-| he said, merely covers curreat (dola. The sides of the bucket were Grid Team Today Oakland County's All-Star high school football players are hon- ored in the sports pages of to- day’s Press. provision to ensure that essef- aiout 41, feet in diameter, There tial steel “not currently needed | was a gap in the wall for Kittinger| but -required in the reasonably [to take that first. bi a g step. ® * * foreseeable future for defense | « *« * The All-County team, alon vill not® be used for | . : “ purposes, w or | ‘Kittinger, who has a German} with the all-star teams in the born wife, Pauline, and two boys,| * * * Joe III, 7 and Mark, 4. at home If nd steps are taken, Goldberg. in Dayton, Ohio, is attached to! added, defense steel ‘‘will be per-|the escape section of Wright Air mitted to slip through the hands. Development Center. He more or! of the steel industry into the hands|less commutes by jet fighter be-| of private, nonedefense consurh-|tween Wright and Holloman for’ ers.” xtest’ work. various * classes with feature highlights and statistics, can be | found on pages 20-21. . * * * The All-County teams were chosen by the prep coaches of Oakland County and members of The Press sports department. Work Progressing on New Courthouse ey eR, te ew ie x = % "ab + xm AY me, °° ee a Mevmpees, ry 7 CU p00 ee, 6 agp LB 4: Pontiac Press Photo March 15, 1961 completion date has been set. In this photograph buikting.. Kimber said“walls are about seven-eighths completed up to ground level. When it reaches grade, the size of the building will stretch farther north and south than shown in this picture ' ‘ 4 ‘ F.-Kimber,—county—engineering you're looking east from West boulevard into the basement of the | se ee . ‘ Soviets Sign skal a | New Agreement by Sunday Night Cteal Strike YL Was Too Busy’ \ncludes Joint Atomic Projects. - Sets Up Discussion for Direct Air Routes; Provides TV Swap _ By A. L. GOLDBERG MOSCOW (#—The Unit- ed States and the Soviet Union signed a’ new, two- year cultural exchange ;agreement today that in- Lcludes joint projects in | peaceful uses of atomic en- | ergy. It also sets up discussions i\for direct Moscow-New York air links, provides for ‘radio and TV program ex- | changes, and paves the way ‘for the ultimate sending of | the Red army chorus to the | United States in view of the U.S. Marine Band playing | here. The Marines are expected to “be here during President Eisen- it was indicated. , The agreement, second of its | kind prevides for aaa | | thousands of Americans | Russians te exchange visits in | 1960 and 1961 in art, agriculture, industry and science fields. Ambassador Llewellyn Thomp- son signed for the United States vin a ceremony at the headquar- liters of the Soviet State Commit- jtee for Cultural Relations with | Foreign Countries, Georgi Zhukov, 'chairman - of the committee, isigned for the Soviet Union. | *« 8 hower's visit, " Both said the agreement of the that at the present writing no center at Holloman is where |Past two years worked out well settiement is in prospect. pay stati i. until “he nove and the new pact is expected to | vw ito Wright several months ago. ~ ie hopes of bettering relations lees “Surety rere of this eal Holloman and the missile center, CAPT. KITLINGER jbetween the two countries. iat Hopes for a settlement’ in the| "© o White Sands missile range. i ae Se ee ee be! x * * kov sald he is fying to London t and later to Paris to talk | / | Both sides made the point that ‘the signed agreement — actually |negotiated for the United States |by a State Department team head- jed by Frederick Merrill—makes | prov isions for continuing negotia- tions and adding plays, films, ra- idio and other specific in at least 115 categories. corer Try to Snare ‘Capsule Tonight : | VANDENBERG AIR FORGE BASE, Calif, (AP)—Air Forte crews make another stab today at man’s first midair catch of an object from space—a_ capsule ihurled from a satellite. | On their success—now or later '—hinges the first American ven- |} ture of a human being beyond the _\earth’s atmosphere. The 300-pound capeule will be | ejected from the satellite Discov- erer VIII which rocketed into er- | bit from this West Ceast base | Friday. Planes are poised for q snag attempt as the capsule parachutes over the Pacific Ocean. Ejection is set for the satellite’s 17th orbit- Bal pass (between 7 and 8 p.fit. EST) Frustrated on four earlier at- tempts, Air Force officials said they will keep trying until they | clear this hurdle. Once a catch ‘is made, the next logical step would be to send a monkey up in a satellite, then try to bring him back alive Bloody Scene All Too Real for Stage Actor PETOSKEY (?\—The script in | a Little Theater production here | called for a tight, |\, Tom Paxton Sr. tangled with | Lex Potter, a former Golden | Gloves . boxer. Potter was sup- posed to swing at Paxten with | the butt of a revolver, just miss: | ing Pxxton’s head. | Potter swung, | miss, | Paxton. collapsed on the stage, | blood spurting from a cut. The but didn’t | audience wad a bit baffled by the ‘ L —_ = = J , a e * | fhe’ — a Se Pe pee, | ee, ee ee es ee, ae <> ie el ae -_ hh 5 a 4 = ails ; , -e e . ff «* bd ¢ ~~, . > ) . i *: au / 3 4 = : 4 te e . ® ~ gs Pea ’ . + ow \ val , ety ' % bd “< . © ‘ r * __THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21,1959 | Oil Firms Hit : The Day in Birmingham , City Commission Studies by Castrolaw |Water Authority Proposal Must Start Working) sirmincHAM — The City Com-|Burial will take place in Acacia ; mission will consider a request to|Park Cemetery. Cuban Claims or Face A wae amet aia aid, Loss of Property the’ Southeastern Oakland OSunty|Mr. Chapman was a member of , Water Authority in case of emer-|the Detroit Athletic Club, past HAVANA (AP)—The Cuban gov-|8®"¢% ~ agora Hd P omg ernment today aimed another : blow at foreign businesd interests No decision was reached seév-|coauthor of a text book on com- by passing a stiff law that wil}/¢T4! months ago when the author-|mercia!l arithmetic. ; 3 force oil exploration and exploita-|ity first submitted the proposal) He is survived by a daughter, tion companies to work their|@ue to difficulty in determining/Mrs. David J. Dugan of Birming ~ a method of measuring flow ofj/ham: a sister, Mrs. Carie Taylor, Likely After Christmas WASHINGTON (AP) — Parcel'give the public at least a 60 - day post rates will go up soon, but notice. most likely after the consumes * * * mailing rush. is over. The increases will vary accord- x * . |irg to the size of the package and *~ An 88-million-dollar-a-year in-|th® distance it has to go. Small crease was approved by the In-|items going a short way will terstate Commerce Commission | shoulder the biggest hoosts. And Friday. This averages to a 17.1|there will be reductions for some! Ret cent boost over current rates.|Of the biggest packages heading! * for long trips. claims or lose them. - ~The post Office Department Under the law. the postmaster The legislation, which follows a|Water under such an arrange- — a — H. H. Chapman, "ssid it Would announce next week |Seneral has to ask for an increase tough new minerals law, also sets ment. ; th in Florida. then the new rates go into effect.|!" Parcel post rates whenever that {Production quotas for petroleum! (ity Manager L. fies eports were that officials would 48Pect of the postal business is! _” refineries. Affected primarily will] been notified, however, . the / : ee _________ in the red = - basin ed + be three big foreign operations—| water authority hag installed a } * * * HAPPY GATHERING — Gov. G. Mennen Wil- AP Wirephote the American-owned Standard Oil| new type of meter at the 14 }and Texaco companies and the! nijie-Eten read connection be- ternational affairs. Humphrey called them a bunch of old fogies. All three were featured /|British-owned Shell, Ltd. speakers at the National Young Democratic x * * liams and Minnesgta’s Sen. Hubert: Humphrey enjoy a chuckle with former President Harry S. Truman after the two active party leaders blast- ed the GOP for standing pat in domestic and in- Postmaster General Arthur E Free Fallout Shelter © snot i tot Can Be Yours—If | were coming to 88 million dollars (Continued From Page One) a year. The last parcel post rate in- and other necessities, such a shelter could offer a family pro- tween the authority and Birming- LJ r= we aw Rites Monday Club's conference in Toledo. ‘During a seven-hour session, ; ania Prime Minister Fidel Castro's Pate Mig te tee tee : ) “Ratified a ban on the immigra-|i the Municipal Building that it] Bloomfield Hills Man crease, averaging 36 per cent, was| Migm Kidnaped Tot Home : fava approved in June 1953 Summer. : pee Ps Chinese and non curately the flow of water which Was Board Member field put them into effect more siatics. > ° ime it takes |("2" three months later. 6 e ; . . 9| Created a new tourist institute of Square D Firm nae take ta a ie eater et! DAaACR in Fontiac to Stay sere os ~ |to let users find out about the new . o 6 Gare said he will to| Service will be held 11 am. = = eee /rates and to distribute new parcel a }deemed necessary for tourist de- the Commission that a stand-by|Monday ‘at Kirk in the Hills for The family that gets the free'post tables to he pos offices, Mrs. Marilyn Vickers and son released last year from the Wom-| After-working hours, she sta req| VC lopment. charge not be levied. Charles G..Welch, a retired Bloom- , , * * * — field Hill ho died a = * = jare home to stay. en's Federal Reformatory at Al- at the restaurant. “By the elimination of a stand- ———— * and a basement door leading} Congress controls the rates for| The 19-vear-ol om meine 2 ‘ Approved a decree giving pros- Thursday of a heart attack. . : : ‘ year-old mother arrived , | a fer . core. I couldn't go back to my room, ‘ charge,” manager directly outdoors, Stierer said. most postal activities. But, under|in Pontiac yesterday with her four - inhaled vere: Meat Tee, I didn't want to be alone. ecutors in military tribunal trials a ria ilo = be under Burial will be in the Forest | .% x * * the law, the ICC handles parcelmonthold son, James, who had. ii oo aa 1 the right to appeal the decisions. ebligation to the authority and (me Cemetery, “Milwaukee, Wis. This latter qualification reflects|post rates. Its approval is needed been kidnaped by“his baby sitter, “!¢4Pine. | _ “All kinds of thoughts—the worst| The Cabinet recently _re-estab-| © fi oe ee wn determi | His body is at the Bell Chapel of ' the fact that the OCDM wants the/for any change Mrs. Diane Varner, 27, from a “J have no hard feelings toward *” : lished Army tribunals, to combat) ¢ aaa the William R. Hamilton Funeral ; , pooh 8 a her,” said Mrs. Vickers. “There 'aginable — went through. my growing opposition to the revolu-| @ation of how much water to give public to be able to view the * &« * Chicago hotel room Wednesday "PF. Said Airs. — mind. Was my baby hungry?/® ing and whee it Home. Welter. . | Big weers ‘of parcel post—mail/ night. must be something wrong with Weashdd uloe: ee: ordi te teat* S'Y*|tionary government. When the| them, & was re | Welch, 78. of 1225 Vaughn Rd., & i _ ! her.” | 5 o im. tribunals were active during the! quired. was a former board member of order housés and = department! The blond, blue-eyed baby was a@helter for a one-or two-year |%tores—strongly opposed the new(|found in a Gary, Ind., hotel room “Jeriod, during which time it increases. But a big competitor the next day by FBI agents. Mrs “plans te open the basement to of parcel post, the Railway Ex-| Varner was arrested in a nearby wo, Tee OCDM wants to lease the first six months of Castro's re-| His statement was an endorse- the Square D Electrical Manufac- /fime, 505 persons were sent tO\ ment of the recommendation of turing Co. and was president of death before firing squads. | Assistant City Manager R. S. Ken-|the Industrial Control Co. until the ning. : | She was at the restaurant All day Thursday Mrs. Vickers | \ stayed at the restaurant where | “hen Chicago police called to she worked. Early in the meorn- | tell her the happy news. . “T knew that I'd return to Pon- public inspection about four hours | Press Agency, told the ICC that,bar and charged with kidnaping.| ing she toured Skid Row saloons | . ; _ _|two companies merged. évery week the rates should be increased. The kidnaper took the baby while, with deteetives, then went to tiac if my baby was safe,” Mrs. Publisher Will Revive In his report, Kenning stated:| Bor in Oak Park;--Hi., Mr. . . Mrs. Vickers was at work. work. We should sell the water at/wejch had been a resident of ithe current rate being charged US| Bloomfield Hills for 23 years. He by the authority and not use aN/had retired from his position at NEW YORK (UPD—A magazine annual stand-by charge to the au- Square D in 1949. pos publisher said Friday he would’ thority revive the Brooklyn Eagle, the 114| “The control of our water usage In the lease arrangement, it is anenieat cith the’ aretes ‘ee Harry W. Anderson Ss Arsenic Ailments Baffling *¥ \Vickers said. ‘I'm here for good.” on’. |Old Brooklyn Eagle Mrs. Vickers, separated from her husband James, had moved ; to Chicago seven Weeks ago. She _— Pee eee was supporting herself and the FAMILY TO LIVE INSIDE He was a member of the : The Weather Mourned at Funeral (Continued From Page Onc) tives and those across from him at the bargaining tabie.* As one of Curtice's top aides, Anderson made labor relations history as vice president in charge of personne! and chief negotiator of union ccntracts. He negotiated pacts that gave the UAW cost-of-living increases and annual wage hikes geared to increased production. Anderson .died when he was . struck in the bead with @ blast from Curtice’s 12 gauge shotgun Eleanor Powell Granted jas the pair took aim trom their blind on a flight of incom- $40,000 Yearly Alimony | ing ducks, Curtice suid Andessm SANT. __|from some unexplained reason Eieegor Powell wil roe .|Stood up and appeared to stumble) 000 a year for six years and idirectly into the line of Curtice’s $30,000 a year for the rest of her . Anderson died instantly. lifefrom actor Glenn Ford after -__*# ™ During these periods, it plans to have a volunteer family live in the shelter under simulated civil! defense conditions. | -_ But there won't be any actual radio activity in the experiment, Stierer emphasized, and the peo- ple who own the house won't be _Eisked to take any active part. More details about the shelter offer are available at City Hall, Stierer said. baby. “I Jeft~home because I didn't want to depend on anyone for my 'support;”’-Mrs:--Vickers explained. + She wilt live with her mother \Mrs. Martha Dietrich, 85 Henry Clay St., a murse at Pontiac Oste- opathic Hospital. The first thing she plans to do Monday morning is go job hunt- ing. ‘But there will be no more ba- by sitters,” she declared. ‘‘Mother What's Poisoning Family? xsictorees Robert W. Farrell, who had been in an emergency would be great- er because we would not be under obligation to share it with the Bloomfield Hills Country Club, the Detroit City Club and the Mountain Brook Club in Birming- MONDAY? JOB HUNTING IBen Holt, himedif hes more ay| COVINA, Calif. (AP) — The ing to kill somebody, they'd be family of six has investigators Five of the six have become ill investigation after the family’s in the last few months. The sixth, plight was made public Friday. The Health Department checked senic than normal in his system.|the family’s pots and pans with- * * * }Out success. - bed * * * But, ask puzzled health and po- . lice agents, where is the poison| Authorities recalled the arsenic coming from? wil] watch my child for me.” Mrs. Vickers called her moth- er the minute she ijearned the baby was safe. Mrs. Dietrich then drove to Chicago for her grandson and daughter. They did an immediate about- face and headed back to Pontiac. By 11 a.m. yesterday Mrs. Vick- ers and James were home. “I was never so happy and re- Mary Holt, 27, started suffering |!taly three years ago. The arsenic stomach cramps, leg pains and a/W&s traced to paint on her bed- high temperature—the symptoms|r0om ceiling, of arsenic poisoning — last May,| A Physician said Mrs. Holt and five months after they bought the the children are not in any im- house. After three weeks in a hos-|Mediate danger from the poison- pital she came home cured. ing. Now, she's ailing again. w& * One "by one, the children have| Sheriff's officers said they have come down with the same thing, /0 reason to suspect foul play but sheriff's officers say. They are 4re not ruling out the possibility. Ben Jr., 10;, Mary Darlene, 7; Holt said he knows of no enemiesi }a columnist for the Eagle, said he mysterious. arsenic poisoning of a/out-here with-both feet.’ |had purchased the newspaper's The County Health Department /name, good will and files for $25,- baffled. jand sheriff announced a full-scale | g99 ” Farrell said he expected to be- gin operations next year. The Eagle ceased publication during a long strike by editorial employes, members of the New York Newspaper Guild, Its former publisher, Frank D. Schroth, re- poisoning of Clare Boothe Luce in/cently settled back pay and sever- ance claims clearing the way for Farrell to purchase the newspa- per’s assets. . theis.divorce, her lawyer said Fri-| The Earhart Cemetery in which day uiled to receive half the community |than 110 years old. . ie . +property and adequate support for * * * ‘the child at Gary's Methodist|'#" 30 milligrams of arsenic. C ty A P| ; their son Peter, 14. _ Among the mourners at yester- Hospital. Speer with 300 milligrams in In | rson of *s funeral were George Rom-| 4, 9% . body. . , relent of American Motors Prt tly ure ewer * oe + (Continued From Page One) ’ Northwest Gets Corp., John S. Bugas, Ford Motor} m cadina. iercia sible: cara “It's awfully strange,’’ Holt said, | Dept. files as the arsonist, accord- : Co. vice president. and L. L. Col- wih tin = “especially when we can't get the|ing to police. Schultz has a long : Dunked for bert, head of Chrysler Corp ; . focky and bh Health Department or sheriff's of-| police record, they say. . = Pallbearers included Louis S.| “I was very lucky and have a fice to really check. If I was try- d the Fifth Day Seaton, who succeeded Anderson|great deal to be thankful for,"’ - a voluntarily surrendered as GM’s vice president in charge|Mrs. Vickers said. au ce yesterday afternoon at bh By The Associated Press of personnel, Ear! Bramblett,| ‘Of course I didn't know it then, N D ] Oakland County Prosecutor's * Rain drenched the Pacific GM's labor relations director and|but that was the second time that avy eve Ops Office. Northwest for the fifth straight|four other executives {rom the GM) day today. personnel staff. * * * . -Civil Defense units began evac-| wating Pain families from lowland Head-On Crash "areas northeast of Seattle where| ‘the Homish River roiled five fet O1. Auburn Hurts | ‘above flood stage. - on families were moved 10/4 Early Today ‘high land in the Arlington. Wash..| area, north of Seattle, when the! Four persons were injured in a Stilaguamish River spilled over a|two-car head-on collision early this dike. Flooding also was reported|morning on Auburn road just west Tn lowlands in western Washing-|of Willit street. im Avon Township, |on Woodward avenue between Lin- ton. according to sheriff's deputies. Authorities counted one death in * * * a rock slide touched off by the) One of the drivers, James H. downpours. |Symington, 64, of 107 W. Tennyson * * * St., and his wife, Emily, 51, were Elsewhere in the nation, ajreported in fair condition at Pon- patchwork of weather ruled. And/tiac General Hospital this morning «there was a general warming |with rib and wrist fractures. trend The other driver, Harold F. Kalbfieisch, 24, of 4831 Fiddle | St., and his passenger Elia M. Billings, 42, of Madison Heights, « Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report were treated and released, PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly ; cleudy ’. h 38. Light vaertabdle ; as Deputies said the Symington car by = are} nies ok peel fr a went out of control on icy pave- _ Mette Nght rain or snow by tomorrow ment and skidded across the cen- 2%. Migh temerrew 38. ter line into the path ofthe other bocesning vomtmeasteri ‘auto shortly before 3 a. m: - # Johnnie Ray Jailed ‘** in Detroit Morals Case DETROIT, Mich. (AP)—Johnnie Verianie” —— eday tn Pentise “at 8 am. Wind velocity 5 mph Direction South. southwest jun sets today at 5°06 p@ un rises Sundey at 7.31 a.m Moon sets Sunday at 12:37 pm. Moon rises today at 10:40 pm. tiday in Pen ’ tine As recorded downtown) tem perature bar on a morals charge Friday night and jailed for an appear- ance today in Recorder's (crimi- nal) Court. * * * Plainclothes Patrolman Eugene Caviston of the vice squad said after he. had struck up a casual Highest Lowest temperature .. Mean temperature .~ Weather—Partly cloudy. -—— One Year Age in Pentise gent temperature 1722.0 [conversation with ay, a visitor eae temperature .......... eeapeert 37 |at the showbar, the singer made eather—Cloudy. an indecent proposal to him. -Ray,|. Highest and Lowest T teres This!32, was booked on a misdemeanor]. empera Date in 86 Years “eo in 1912 3 im 1890/Charge of accosting and soliciting. Friday's Temperatare Chart 36 28 Marg A 2 Baltimore 47 23 Memphis’ 4 37/100 Late Now, Tom Bismarck 38 (21 a fami B 78 69) NEW YORK (UPI)—Thomas New Orleans 66 457 ipini 9 ; t 1c Pceast) be 09 Met Ten Settipini, 19, admitted in city Cleveland 43 37 Omaha 49 2», Court yesterday that he ignored ord 4 33. 17 traffic tickets. He said he HH did it at the urging of a girl. _§4| The judge set sentencing for Dec. FS 8 despite Settipini’s plea that he 49| is now going around with a girl 65 ‘ ; 33| Who is a better influence, , ¥ ; : Anderson was buried. Jocated only ers exclaimed when asked how she Attorney Robert A. Neeb Jr. said two mies from his ‘home on the felt when she learned her young: the former dancer is also sched-|Huron River north of here, is more ster had been found. Lowest temperature preceding 8 a. ee ieee aol —_ K S Name Means Trouble Heved im all-my- tiie.” Mrs. -Vick-lcyrehia 'S, and Constance, 4. * * a Holt, 31, ig a_ baker, The mother was reunited with Said his system was fo’ had kidnaped a baby.” : ° ee ae ne sciaes she was Vaccine Against Eye Scourge Royal Oak Girl WASHINGTON (AP)—The Navy Killed by Truck has developed a vaccine that could A 12-year-old Royal Oak girl| scourge in Asia, the Middle East and the Mediterranean area. owes Arraign Detroiter He admitted picking up the items from the store But said he paid the owners. He denies any knowl- edge of the fire. * * * om, on anna, tnd en K QQer Manager before it went out of control. They =" ine Cr quin President DON SHAW * * * The vaccine was developed on’ Formosa, the Navy announced | Friday, and preliminary tests) have shown it ‘has no major bad. lead to wiping out trachoma, a widespread eye disease that is a was fatally injured yesterday when she was struck by a panel truck jcoln and Concord roads, Hunting- Sheriff Warns To Head Miracle Mile Area Residents. | Association in 1960; ton Woods. “a. “ann\Clects on humans. How effective| ary Af" it is in preventing trachoma is | Oakland ina — still under study. || Highway eed cody ‘| The trachoma virus had been | Toll in ’59 ne tg isolated previously. But Navy Su Ol In Beaumont Hos- : geon General Bartholomew W. Ho- 67 pital two hoursiran said the Formosa vaccine is es _ the first known to have had some river © success in controlli ad Lest _Yeor truck, Robertiof the. disease, me ae te Date: 78 | Todd. 18, of 924 x ke W. Marshall Rd.,| Americar and Chinese doctors was not held. | worked for more than a year iso- 7 ~ * * lating different strains of the vi- Witnesses told police the girl/rus knd then developing vaccines jhad dashed into the street. by working on monkeys. Her body is at the William &| The highly contagious disease Son Funeral Home, Royal Oak. ‘often causes total blindness. In Any Language TOKYO (AP)—How do you spell Khrushchev? Depends a good deal on where you live, the magazine Shukan Asahi discovered. . * x * It came up with thése spellings: Kroutchevy (France), Chruschtschow (Germany), Chroestjew (Netherlands), Krushuiey (Italy), Kruschev (Spain), Khrushtsey (Israel), Khrusjtsjov © (Norway), Krustjev (Sweden), Hrushishey (Finland), -Chrussczow (Poland), Chruseov (Czechosloyakia) and Hruscov (Yugo- slavia). oN wee In Japanese it’s Hu-Ru-Shi-Cho-Hu, in six phoentic signs. ; The Chinese Communists write his name “Brilliant Rus- sian Daybreak Man” in four ideographic characters and to Stay Off Ice Other Officers Chosen “We are now, entering the most} Don Shaw of the Kroger, Co. has dangerous 30-day period on ¢ounty!been named president of the Pon- lakes,” Oakland County Sheriff oe area's Michigan Miracle Mile Frank W. I ’ siness Assn. en ee tedey. | The election of officers for 1960 Irons appealed to area residents| 7” - ores ' : to “stay off the ice until it is > thick enough to hold a human be-| Al! are store managers or own- ing. This may take a ful’ month or |°"- only a few weeks, depending on) Shaw, 2915 Otsego St., has the weather, he said. been with Kroger since 1941 and manager of the Miracle Mile Parents have been urged to keep their children away from Kroger Store since October 1967. the lakes just beginning te freeze | Last year he was named 1958 over around the shordine. Irons said, “low temperatures firm. at night do not mean fast ice formation if the thermometer goes sociation was ‘Ralph Eastridge, _— the 30’s and 40’s during the/ manager of the J. C. Penney Co. y. x *® Last winter the lakes were frozen Walter McCauley, manager of over by Christmas, but this is not! associates Loan Co. is the new the case every year, he said. Probably Jet Boom j . Beck State Police and Oakland County of the Poe es Pe Terry Pontiac reported by many residents in the/ware, Gene Schweiss of i cl 9 Z 5 pe Fay xr * * proneunce it Four-Lo-Hsiae-Fu. . - . x * * j Different spellings result from efforts te approximate the pronunciation of the name as written in the: Russian alphabet. / Incidentally, the Russians, when writing the name in- jas far-north as Almont. Police cars’ s' Two. sharp claps were heard atland boys’ wear; and Darelen Gold 3 about 5:50_in an area from Utica berg, manager of Robinson's dress hop. the Latin alphabet, use Khrushchov, A calls into their switchboard, J ‘ i ’ | > bd Explosion’ in County 23%, = : i i in many. communities were sent oe 2 ¢ 4 out looking for a possible explosion.| The officers and members of the! x &* executive committee were in- ‘Roméo State Police reported 23jstalled at a general meeting pe ham, Ala. = — Mr. Welch is survived by his JOHN A. REUTER wife, Anne, a son, Charles G. Jr., The Manresa Laymens Retreat/of Hudson, Ohio, two daughters, will recite the Rosary 8 p.m. to-|Mrs. Knut Onsager, Easton, Md., day at the William Vasu Funeral/and Mrs. Prince DeBardeleben Jr. Home, Royal Oak, for John A./of Birmingham, Ala. Reuter, 77, of 3827 Oakhills Dr. Mr. Reuter died Thursday in Wil-} ? ° liam Beaumont Hospital following McGr egors Will a brief illness. Another Rosary will be said «Includes $25,000 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Solemn High Mass will be cele fOF Area Church brated at 11 a.m. Monday at the : Holy Name Catholic Church. Burial; St. Philips Episcopal Church in will take place in Holy Sepulchre| Rochester is listed for a $25,000 Cemetery. bequest in the will of the late Mr. Reuter was a prominent|Howard L. McGregor, Rochester wholesale food dealer in Detroit) area industrialist who died Nov. 7. for more than 350 years until his) McGregor, 72, was board chair- retirement in 1951. man of National Twist Drill and He began his career as a teen-| Tool Co. near Rochesterand owned ager and later organized and was Great Oaks Farm in nearby Avon a partner in the firm of Grosberg | Township. His will was filed yes- = oa — in Probate Court. irm organ e Packers) Supermarket sand Mr. Reuter be-| my bulk of = aT a came its president. In 1951, the! to a sen, Howard je : - “gp ».| Gregor. The farm and its Aber- en amenmntet with Wrigley’s , eae left-to aa Robert W. Williams, whe man- Surviving are his wife, Irene; a) son, J. Warren of New Baltimore; | *S¢¢ the farm for McGregor for two daughters, Mrs. Rogert J.| ™*"y years. Viasic of Grosse Pointe Shores; Four lesser bequests of $25,000 and Mrs. Frank J. MacDonell of|apiece went to close friends and Birmiingham; two brothers, Ed-|a granddaughter, Helen McGregor. adjacent area.’ ward and Arthur; sister, Mrs. x «© * ‘ |Matthew Boehmer; five grand-| McGregor’s son is president of sons. National Twist Drill and Tool Co. Ivan E. Chapman Pretty Good Reason “™ Service will be held at 3 p.m. Monday at the St. James Epis- copal Church for Ivan E. Chap- man, 79, of Detroit, who died yes- terday in William Beaumont Hos- pital after a long illness. The body is at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. | COOLEY VIENNA (UPI) — Czechoslova- kian newspapers ‘admitted yes- terday the nine-week delay in Czech shoe repairing might be explained’ by the fact that all repairs require the shoes to be sent back to the shoe factories. regenerates by the actual amount of water used |! @ Fiberglas Brine Tank—- Can't Rust * — While You @ You Have Nothing to Do @ 10-Year Guarantee @ No Money Down . @ Free Installation Low, Low Payments { i 4 COOLEY SOFT WATER CO. _ 3261 Elizabeth Lake Road — FE 2-5827 —_—*FE 4-4404 WE RENT AUTOMATIC WATER SOFTENERS _ YOU HAVE ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO! \ SO THE PONTIAC PRESS, ak e Tat HAL eet | ——e ‘ esophy which has enjoyed: tre- mendous popularity in this country since it was published in 1937. - ee os repack oir Cet aah, seein eh ; conversion. Only the Rev Davidiat the age of 627 St Stephen Read, minister of the church, and} ‘Dr, Lin answers in a brief but . a few others were aware that the/ moving spirftual autobiography in isenonens ores new member was the distinguished/the current issue of Presbyterian » Guy B. Smith, Pastor @ Chinese philosopher, Dr. Lin|fife magazine | © Sunday School ... 9:15 A.M. @Yutang. , " Church Service ... 10:30 A.M. @ HUMANISM INADEQUATE = Although Dr. Lin has many i other claims to fame, he is best ’ known to Americans as_ the 4 author of “The imperfance = St. Trinity * Auburn at Jessie IChinese Philosopher Tells} Why He Turned to Christ ~—Fhroughout most of his adult! life, he recalls, “‘My only religion) was” humanism: the belief in hu-| (East Side: Ralph C. Claus, Pastor ¥ Sunday School ....9:45 A.M. | First Service ......8:30 A.M. Second Service ..11:00 A.M. St. Paul Joslyn at Third (North Side) : George Mahder, Poster to PILGRIM ‘HOLINESS - ee) CHURCH Bloomfield TOWNSHIP Baldwin at Fairmount Wm. C. Grate, Pastor di .10:00 A.M. & | Church Service ... REV. MELVIN STRAIGHT Sunday School 11:00 A.M. # ; Pastor ; St. Ma rk. Preaching-Both Services pe ' % Wm. C. Grate, Pastor Hi Sunday School . .10 A. M. Sunday School .... 9:45 A.M. @ Church Service .» 1:18 AM. Worship ines DAM. Cedar Crest | Youth Hour ...6:15 P. M. Farnsworth off Union Lk. Rd. § (ext to Dublin School) Md Howard E. Claycombe, Pastor © ° Services at 8:30AM. § Evening and 11 AM, Preaching. ....7 P. M. oS Uultimately Dr. Lin arrived at ‘the conviction that “ humanity is not, and. never has been, sufficient unto—itself, and that—‘“‘mankind cannot survive without religion.” The next question he faced was: “Is there a satisfying religion for |the modern, educated man?” [TURNED TO CHRIST | He first examined the great |Oriental religions, and found their answers inadequate. Then he turned to a study of “the awe- tes simplicity and beauty of the teachings of Jesus.” “I found that no one ever | Spoke like Jesus. He spoke of Ged the Father as one who knew Him and was identified with Him ine fullness of knowledge and e. play and sing at the Light and Shelly Library. Recently they gave, a program at the Christian Temple. Members of the group include (from left) Larry Scher- man of 666 Squirrel Rd., Mrs. John Pearson of 754 Squirrel Rd., Mrs. Russell Scherman of 666 Squirrel Rd., Debra and DeAnn Pearson, daughters of Mrs. Pearson. Mrs. Scherman, mother of SATURDAY, | NOVEMBER 21, 1959 GOSPEL BELL RINGERS PLAY AND SING — The Gospel Bell Ringers are scheduled.to present a program Dec. 3. They will Life Men's, banquet in the Ada nium, accordion, piano and organ. Cincinnati, Ohio last year, Larry e making shop at her home. They Methodist Church. Larry and Mrs. Pearson sings with her granddaughters. Larry and | Mrs. Pearson play the Pakistan Saucer Bells, the trombone, eupho- ministry. Mrs. Pearson composes music and runs a gift and drets- Youth Celebrating Brigade Week Here ’ § This is Christian Service Brigade Week for many youth groups in Pontiac area churches. The battalions and stockades are taking part in many church serv- ices, and special recognition is be- ing given to outstanding members. * ** * Among the area churches with organizations are First Baptist Churches in Pontiac, Walled Lake, Drayton Plains and Rochester, Ma- rimont Baptist Church, Silvercrest, Sunnyvale, Christian Missionary Al- liance and the Oakland Avenue United Eremylerian Chureh. Must Give to Others WASHINGTON W—‘'Charity be- gins, at home, but it doesn't end there,”’ says the Rev. James L. Vazzard, director of the National Catholic Rural Life Conference. Writing in the Catholic monthly, Ave Maria, he adds: ‘As the most prosperous nation in the world, we cannot ignore } less favored people." Pontiac Press Photo A student at the Bible School in Says to Cherish Church Liberty Talk Less and Do More to Preserve It, Urges ‘Department Director Declaring that today’s pressures and threats to religious liberty in this country must be constantly resisted, Dr. Claud D. Nelson has “It was astounding to learn that God, as Jesus revealed Him, is |so different from what men had FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HURON AT WAYNE Poster.... REV. WRUIAM H, MARBACH, D.D. Associate Pastor. REV, GALEN E. HERSHEY, 8.0. WORSHIP SERVICES . . . 9:30-11:00 CHURCH SCHOOL . .. « . 9:90-11:00 | thought of Him to be. There is! a totally new order of love and) compassion in Jesus’ prayer from the cross, ‘Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.’ “I saw why men have turned to Jesus, not merely in respect but in adoration. In. Him, the message of love and gentleness and compassion becomes incar- nate.” UNITED GOSPEL SINGING CONVENTION Sunday, November. 22nd, 2:30 * CHURCH P.M. | FIRST SOCIAL BRET 316 Baldwin Ave. Featuring QUARTETS, TRIOS, DUETS and SOLOS Plus CONGREGATIONAL SINGING if You Have Tale, Come and Use It— If You Know Someone With Tglent, Invite Them! EULAS' HOUSTON, Pres. ELSIE GASKIN, Sec’y Release Figures on Adventist Aid Pontiac Churches Give Help Valued at $8,894; State Tab $27,685,730 | | | Lansing headquarters for Mithi- gan Seventh-day Adventist4 today released a report on church wel- fare and disaster aid activities for |the past fiscal year which included FE §-9960 Sn Sad neers cecceeeees 9:45 A. M. Morning Worship « jedan e ewan pak teas veel Me B. T. U. . eoeuwes sens esse. 6:30 P. M. Evening Worship eeditay acired siajate/s cielsjetateiste’s 7:30 P. M. Wednesday Braver Meeting ceccceccecccees 7:30 P. M. Rev. M. PF. Boyd Ir., Pastor Cooperating with Southern Baptist Convention — 9,000,000 Members — work by Pontiac members. Howard D. Burbank, health and welfare director for Adventist work in Michigan, said Adventist churches had dispersed clothing, medical aid, food and cash in ‘Michigan valued at $27,685,734, The Pontiac Adventist Church |last year gave. $8,894 in aid to 734 ‘persons, Director of the local work here is Mrs. Ceci] T. Reynard, 2130 Stout St.. Keego Harbor. The Pontiac health and welfare society is associated with the dis- trict Adventist Health and Wel- fare Federation. Mrs. Allen M. Breakie of Ypsilanti, directs the district work, Lutherans Will Unite 7 “SEARCHING ' SCRIPTURES” with Roosevelt. Wells, Minister CHURCH CALENDAR seo oe |p ~ Sve. hg SOR Bible Study Sa, “COMMON RELIGIOUS ERRORS > NOT ENDORSED BY THE BIBLE” “eeeree sae “ The last two articles which have ap- =. peared in this space haye been on! eter- mel punishment. In those articles I red to present to you evidence Jusivély pfove that PUNISH "18 PACTUAL FICTIONAL, ment. suff : cen that i- ag? fi ra aH “it ine fe a i . z 4 i that the wicked will x3 pert RIGHTROUSLY AND WORLD Titus 2:1 IEVETH THOU THIS? Pe Rete onan. ee i “WELCOME TO THE CHURCH OF CHRIST: 210 Hughes Street, Pontiac, Michigan pn Pe ee ; NYBORG, Denmark (#—Luther- ans in Japan, now divided into 11 separate dencminations, are ex- pected to consummate a union within two years bringing them all into one church, a Lutheran World Federation official reports. FIRST OPEN | BIBLE CHURCH |} 1517 Joslyn 1 Block N. of Walton Blvd. ] Sunday School .. Morning Worship . Youth Service Evangelistic Service ed. Prayer Meeting I \ 1 abe 1 i] Rev. Arthur Maglott FE 2-8497 |The new monthly publications are |high school age, and “Venture,” Serves Vegetarians urged church people to talk less and do more about preserving it. The cirector of the Department of Religious Liberty of the National ‘Goupet of Churches addressed the 16th annaul meeting of the Pitts- burgh, Pa., Council 6f Churches. “The separation of church and state is not clearly defined either ing that be had seen religious liberty slowly slip away in other countries where the church ac- cepts teo much from the state, he called for joint interfaith under- standing of what is at stake. “Any violation of religious liberty jeopardizes all liberty,”” Dr, Nelson declared. ‘‘Conversely, every in- vasion of civil rights threatens the freedom of the church and syna- ” Iwhere. , {by which we reap the fruits of life and labor in this fair land. Let us stand fast by the principles of our republic enunciated in| Text of the Presidential Thanksgiving | Statement Following is the text of President Eisenhower's Thanksgiving Day proclamation: The time of harvest turns our thoughts once again to our national festival of Thanksgiving, and the bounties of nature remind us again of our dependence upon the generous hand of Providence. In this sesquicentennial year of Abraham Lincoln's birth, it is fitting and proper that we should use his words contained in the historic proclamation of 1863, establishing this annual observance, to express anew our gratitude for America's “fruitful fields,” for our national “‘strength and vigor,’’ and for all our hone deliverances and blessings." The present year has been one of progress and heightened promise; for the way of life to which we, the people, and the government of the United States of America, are dedicated. We rejoice in the productivity of farm and factory, but even more so in the prospect of improvement of relations among men and among nations. / * * We earnestly hope that forbearance, understanding, and concilia- tion will hold increasing sway among us and among all peoples every- Christ and Holiday Presbyterian Theme | ber Jesus Christ,” Church. xpects to return to study for the Th ank s Be are members of the First Free To God soc The giver of every good — and perfect gift. YOU ARE WVITED | | To join with us in this service of thanksgiving and proise. LET US BOW IN GRATITUDE “Thanksgiving Day — Remem- will be the theme of the Rev. Theodore R. Allebach Sunday at 10 a.m. in Oak- land Avenue United Presbyterian Sunday Services Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Worship 11:00 A.M. | “TOTAL CHRISTIANITY ° ; Ww. : The adult choir will sing “Let All ae ee ee Things Now Living” and “O God AYF. 6:00 P.M. Beneath Thy Guiding Hand.” uae The Pioneer Encampment will be Evangelistic Youth Service 7:00 P.M. Mr- Victor L. Oliver of London, England, preaching Detrons HYG Guerisl Singing THE ALLIANCE CHURCH held at 7 p.m., when 50 awards will be presented. F Churches Given toans | INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (#—Loans to 228 local churches, amounting} to more than $4,500,000, were made last year by the Board of Church Extension of the Disciples of Christ (Christian Churches), it was) announced at church a here. M-59 and Cass Lake Road C. }. Bersche, Pastor In the enjoyment of our good life, let us not forget the birthright! word and deed by the statesmen, teachers, and prophets to whom we owe our beginnings. Let us be thankful that we have been spared the consequences of human frailty and error in our exercise of power and freedom. As a token of our gratitude for God's gra gift of abundance, let us share generously with those less fortunate than we at home} and abroad. Let us at this season of Thanksgiving perform deeds of} thanksgiving; and, throughout the year, let us fulfill those obligations of citizenship and humanity whieh spring from grateful hearts. @ogue, particularly if religious leaders ignore or. condone violation.” Warning that government sub- sidies may turn out to be ‘‘money to Caesar’s servants,’ Dr. Nelson said that both Roman Catholic and Protestant thinkers are becoming aware of the need for a clearer and more consistent definition of church-state relationships. Mission Church Will Be Host to Gospel Team The service Sunday at 7 p.m. in Stringham United Missionary Church, 4060 Elizabeth Lake Ave., will be sponsored by the Youth Fellowship, of the church. * * ¥* It will presen‘ the Holiness Youth the | Gospel Team from Detroit, includ- ing a girls’ trio and Stan Morse, who will lead the congregational singing and play numbers on his trombone. The director, Paul Shepherd will] be the spe the Magazines Launched NEW YORK (#—New magazines for teen-agers are being launched by the United Presbyterian church. “Hi Way,”’ for youths of the senior a revamped magazine for junior high schoolers. ~x~ * * Central Methodist ney, Daiey 4. yy Nash. MORNING SERVICES 8:30 A. M. and 10:45 A. M. “A POCKET FULL OF THANKS” Dr. Bank Preaching ay i Associate Minister Now, therefore, I, Dwight D. Eisenhower, President of the United | (BROADCAST Over WPON, 11:00 A. M.) » States .of America, in consonance with the. joint resolution of the Congress approved Dec. 26, 1941, 55 Stat. 862 (5 U. S. C. 87B), desig- nating the fourth Thursday of November in each year as Thanks- giving Day, do hereby proclaim Thursday, Nov. 26, 1959, as a day of national thanksgiving. ; On that day let us gather in sanctuaries dedicated to worship and in homes devoted to family sharing and community service, to express our gratitude for the inestimable blessings of God; and let us earnestly pray that He continue to guide and sustain us in the great unfinished task of achieving peace among men and nations. Fund fo Build Chapel Poor to Be Aided by Presbyterians for.Camp Pugsley on Thanksgiving BIG RAPIDS (UPI) — W. C. Taggart, well-knowen Big Rapids aned ereeeee Poste ce ae philanthropist, has donated $30,000 Thanksgiving spirit will center to build an all-faiths chapel atjaround “Others.’ Camp Pugsley, a probationary} At the morning service, the con- camp for youthful offenders, it FRIENDLY GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 131 MT. CLEMENS ST.—YM.CA. BLDG. + @ancay School 0-40 4M. — Morning worship 3) Att Evenine Service 7:00 2 Robert Garner, Pastor Christian Temple, 505 Auburn Ave. Dr. Lola P_ Marion, Pastor Rev. J Luther Sheffield, Assistant A Special Welcome Awaits You oo ita 8 a eae & Worship Gat OF aan 70 ~ Chamberlain FE 4-9053 Corner Edison - Sunday 11 A. M. Wednesday 8:00 P. M. 2 David Williamson “Attitude of Gratitude” Mrs. Diane. Seaman “With Grateful Hearts We Sing”’ gregation will bring foods and cash to fill baskets for the less fortunate, was revealed recently. and the’ Westminister Fellowship! we ee will make an undesignated offering | Gonstruction on the chapel,/The funds will go to its project, which will seat 100 persons, will) SUPPort for Ron Bumstead,” a start soon, Camp Pugsley is lo- cated near Kingsley in Grand Traverse County. Named in honor of Circuit Judge Earl C. Pugsley of Hart, the camp is for offenders! under 22 who do not require im- prisionment. * * * The chapel! will form an integral part of the camp's rehabilitation program, corrections department } the ministry, Dan Proctor is the new director of the youth choir. Here's Guidepost for Younger People “T've been getting a lot of mail | The SALVATION ARMY member of the church studying for'|| S | 29 W. Lawrence Street . —/ Sunday Schl. 9:45 a.m. Young People's Legion 6 p.m. Morning Worship 11] a.m. Evangelistic Mtg. 7:30p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. CAPTAIN AND MRS. J. WILLIAM HEAVER Good Music — Singing — True to the Word Preaching God Meets With Us — You Too, Are Invited WALLA WALLA, Wash. (2 —! |Walla Walla College, operated by, the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, | has opened a new $400,000 vége- tarian’s cafeteria — described as’ the largest vegetarian eating place in the world. SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY "SOUL AND BODY” 7. \organ, Luther Life, he said in-| *\discriminate procreation = | blight, not a blessing. »|Christians, he added, have ‘‘stored| % 2 up unnecessary guilt #7 | about birth control. SUNDAY. 9:45 A.) M. TV. ‘trey Sunaty, Channel 7. 9:30 AM. officials said. \from kids—boys especially—who - ask me if J don't think it’s pretty sissy for them to go to Sunday Fami Planni r School. I want ‘to say right here Y ng U ged ‘and now that it isn't sissy at all. PHILADELPHIA (#—A Lutheran| “The things you learn in ren, clergyman says that planned par-|School will give you strength you'll enthood is ‘‘just good Christian \need against difficulties and temp-| | common sense.’’ Writing in the tations of all kinds when you grow current issue of a church youth up. is “A! you'll always be glad that you did feelings” |" “Both my wife and I have ac Z : our personal Saviour. BETHEL TABERNACLE First Pentecost Church of Pontiac 88...10 am. Worship 11 am Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m. Tues. and Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Rev. and Mrs. E. Crouch 1348 Baldwin Ave. PE 5-8256 ing. our children up under His ‘the Light of the World.’ ”’ —Roy Rogers. Sunday Services and Reading Room Sunday School 2 East Lawrence Street 11:00 A.M. Open Daily Wednesday Evening , LAM to$5 P.M . Service 8 P. M. Friday to 9 P.M. & “FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST © Lawrence and Williams Streets $ HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS = | RADIO STATION CKLW - 800 KC {|} i F EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE 2800 Watkins Lake Rd.. N W Oak. Co Mkt. 1% Mile) Sunday School 10 a.m Classes tor all ages! reaching 1! om RE p.m. Youth at 6:30 p.m © Radio — CKLW> a.m. 800 kc, in, Detroit A, Ad. Baughey, Pos. DeWitt Baughey, Asst. Pas. RE PARR PRL “So go to Sunday School regular-| § se ‘ly, and learn all yot can about) % But many the Bible and Christ's teachings— cepted the Lord Jesus Christ as| # “We love Him, try to follow Him] #. in our daily lives, and are bring-| “To us, Jesus Christ is truly] sg CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP Malta Hall, 82 Perkins Street Evening Service 7:30 p.m. Mathew Connell of St. Clair Shores, speaking No Thanksgiving Day Services FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw Pontiac, Michigan Rev. H. H. Savage, Pastor Rev. W. E. Hakes, Ass't Pastor 9:45 A. M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL Classes tor All Ages 10:00 A. M.—MORNING WORSHIP “Mistaken Friends and Milignant Foes’ = Dr. H. H. Savage, speaker ~ Evening Service—7 :00 P.M. Missionary Christmas Program Dr. Harry Zemmrer & . Addition Addition Behool - es SCHOOL: N dition class rooms. totlete, Loca! | YORK»— Synthetic fibers| accounted for more R to Herrington LAL" a Ww Ts seedy and book stére. ijon; Bast side of Franklin Ayv-: BIDS Klementary, to Franklin Elementary| / ew ad- meeary., addi- library, “toilets, enue. ween Alten and Fildew Streets Both Mine City of Pontiac, Michigan Board of eenention—Schont District, | City of Pontia “Beyster x Associates, Inc ois Woodward Avenue Detroit 2, Michigan aes F PROPOSALS e@ sealed proposais. in duplicate owe pr ere invited for the i. Genera] Trades (Both Schogis) 2. Mechenical Trades (Both Schools) 3. Electrical Trades (Both Schools: ’ DUE DATE & PLACE Board of Education 40 Patterson « Street, Pontiac, Michigan until 2.00 P.M EST on ijuesua December 8, 1960, ollowing ACCESS TO PLA NS Plats and Specifications wil! be on file for i 3. poration & Builders’ chan: ri waive an peterenes at the following Local office of F & Traders TION PLAN and Specifications may be from the Architect on or ucation, for the sum of hot less the amount wired with each pro; HTS RESER ty of Pontiac, te reject any or all bids, informalities therein ACT SECURITY hool District—City than) the proposal, will, lova- Oetice of the Board of Education 2. Office Of the Architect-Engineer | W. Dodge Cor- Ex- se- cured after Novemb r 18. 150, with a deposit cha: se ef $25 a VED BY OWNER: . of Education of the School! reserves the or ton Each successful bidder will be required te furr sh = presentation and Punds for project are on de Tur ‘Tlormance, Labor and Ma- No did may be withdrawn for at feast: thirty (30) days from the time of its opening the construction of © sit in Pontiac this banks ARN OF EDUCATICN SCHOOL DISTRICT— CITY OF PONT OAKLAND COUNTY MICHTG4N WALTER L. GODSELL Secretary Nov. 21, 28. On November 23, 1959, NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE at 12:00 AM at Johnson Motor Sales, Holly, Michigan, Chevrolet, 2 Dr. Serial No ASSF'150471 wil] be sold at Public Auc- tion. Car is and located at above may be imepecied on. 30 rae ov : STATE land. wherein COMPANY a named as or LOAN COMPANY Michigan Company Plaintif! CASE NO. 47681) TO WHOM [T MAY CONCERN: potice that on oe ®, 1959, as issued HENSON and/or £ Lil A for Plaintiff ~ 125 N. aw Street Piaeral 92-0214 Nov, 7, 14, 91, 28, Dee. 5 12, "30 — 2 Hold Dinner of oainnicalasa Tavern Owners Himself, Dies MICHIGAN—In the Cir- cuit nyt for the County of Oakland ASSOCIATES itt and) tries were guests at a M. as Defendants, for the veenl of 45, and that the ald writ was first Thanksgiving. October 19690 returnable Dated: Oct. 8 1958 ROLA if dri 37 CAREFUL DRIVERS Save Ploney ym the AUTO INSURANCE you qualify os a coreful ver, you can sove up to % for the best automo- bile insurance money can buy, and you pay the premium for only 6 months ot a time. You also are assured of fost and fair claims service through- out the United States ond Canada. Stop in or phone us! We con quickly determine if you, as a coreful driver, will Stop In or Phone Us NICHOLIE and HARGER CO. 532 W. Huron St. FE 5-8183 | | VIMT TRUCK & COACH DIVISION — Three of 17 Junior High School student counselors who visited GMC Truck & Coach Divi- sion here under GM's Secondary Schoo] Counselors Comference program watch Larry Crews, 63 N. Ardmore St., in GMC’s apprentice training shop. The counselors met with GMC acquainted with industrial vocations open to hei school and college graduates. From left are Kenneth | officials to become better New Pilgrims PLYMOUTH, Mass. \?—So 300 now —— to America t {rom foreign. | im 1620. The refugees froth 20 coun- m commemorating The Massachusetts Council of Churches, sponsors of the event, | | scheduled an old-fashioned out- door Thanksgiving service, fol- lowed by a dinner featuring bar- becued vension and chicken. Jointly. individually end Serorety. | lands — athe sred here today | | where the first Pilgrims landed | day-long the | were | | Since today also is the anni. | ] | i | ——— FOR LEASE NEW MOBIL SERVICE STATION Clintonville and Walton Rds. Training 2% at Company's Expense Financia! Assistance * Available For Information FE 5-9466 FE 2-3433 After 5 P. M. | | t | ary. a physician at Munising. versary of the signing of the Mayflower Compact, copies of the | document were distributed. The compact set up a government by | ' consent based on just and equal | laws for all. Ford to Step Up Falcon Output | Will Switch Production | to Free Jersey Plant; was dismissed due to insufficient! Comet Due in Spring DETROIT «»—Ford today dis- to Charles Haas, of the — Huntoon Funeral Home. Another) Kean jes and friends invited. Les- closed preliminary plans for in-| Hotel Bar, 125 N. Perry St Adv. creasing production of its com- had been charged with selling to p.m, Monday in the Karr Funeral pact Falcon and for initial pro- an intoxicated person. duction of the new compact Comet, * * \first charge. The second charge |ev idence. The fine is due and ef ifective Nov, 30. * The first step will be to in- Louis Falcons now are built at To- Mo. The Metuchen plant should begin building Falcons by mid-Febru- be. mar.- No Introduction date has been an- | nounced other than it will be Carp rain, Ohie, and Kansas City, The Comet will keted by Mercury dealers. sometime in the spring. and by 40 assembly plant to compact car, | A letter of warning was issued be helg Sunday at 2 pm THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1959 Fine 2 County 2 Selling to Minor Costs west operate a planer educational relations section of the General Motors public relations staff; Crews: William Kolodinsky, guidance director for A. L. Johnson Regional High School, Clark, N. J.; Charles Beyette, counselor at Pontiac's Eastern Junior High School; and Mrs. Lila- McGovern, counselor for Pleasant Valley IN LOVING MEMORY OF JAMES High School, Parma, Ohio. , Lina AA ag spaniel Mal Loving and kind in all his ways. A. Meade, manager of the rs de and kind in heart and mind What a beauwful memory he left Earp’s Nephew, Western Legend ‘Police Deny ar a -_ ee WAR Anan PALM, NOV. 19. 1959. the Melvin A. Schut "Hunere! _Home. 7 SCHAAR, NOV. 19, Kin ston Road, Whi Twp belov husband _ Donelson-Johns Funeral Blessed are they that For they shall Sadly missed by — and just to the end of his Sadly missed by his family — ee | Funera’ Directors 4 Donelson-Johns Death Notices icrkwe oon id THp. . oy ‘mother Charles x, surviv grandehild. terment asi. 8 fosland Ce Cemetery, ew range, — by Donelson-Johns Ande J ome —— R.. 5146 Harvard, PR os 7; beleved husband of Rose dear father of ‘Arthur, and Dean Mi er of Floyd J. Millen. Puneral arrangements will be ennounced later by Sharpe-Goyette Funer- al Home. Clar! ‘an heehee Home in Chel: cae Michigan, 85; dear mother of Joe Narrin. dear sister of and Clare Wolfe: ‘Bunday November 72 at from C. P. erman Home, Ortonville, with Rev. Isaac McPhee officiating. Ortonville Cemetery. Mrs. rin will Me in state e:\ the Sherman Funeral ville wm LEO 8. Roselawn, Pontiac, 55; husband of Dorothy father 0 Ri Peariene, Janice, Harold, Delorese and Gayle Palm; dear brother of e will heve . — | ae wl evening at 8 Lake of Marker ‘Bohasr; Henrietta Schaar; dear mermet of Bernard Schaar and amen Santos: Also survive brothers and §_ sisters. peneres service will be Monday, Nov. 23, 1959 at 1 p.m. from Donelson- Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Bay Port, Michigan Mr Schaar wil) lie in state st the Home. In. M-moriam 2 —— eee IN) MEMORY OF OUR BEILOVFD ad, Henry J, McKnight, lays at rest, 22, who pang hg 8. be comforted. Bernard. Wilma, Richard and Alton + | j | mourn, | | | | nehind FUNERAL pOMe —Decignes ter Funerals * VALLEJO, Calif. (AP)— 0 dgs j Earp, survivor of many an tr shooting scrap, has died} $150; Other Charge fined and at a recent hearing of the gan Liquor Control * * * Eric Cooper, lages to a minor and allowing ‘minor to drink on the premises. won $32,000 answering questions place and that the departnient has -A seven-day suspension Cooper's license was waived due to the mature effective Dec. 14. : ‘ F F f 16 hours a; Edward M. and Edna Kroetsch, could tell me anything about the see ructtine An ex owners of the Golden Rule Tavern, saivei : ' : day eager ie down leads and prowl-| 3162 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego) rng area j Harbor, were charged with im- be whee oo ater | x *« * |proper conduct and allowing in- ‘three men killed—at age 21 | The young mother was kidnaped | toxicated persons to loiter at their| a |and raped the night of Nov. -10 | establishment, . |when she went into the backyard *® * ‘of her home to investigate a noise. They were fined $100 for the Death Notices Hunter Is Mute Kerease Mercury production by 90) per cent at St. per ceht at Wayne. This will free the Metuchen, N_J., for conversion building About Shooting Ex-Oxford Man A deer hunter who police said who died unexpectedly has admitted the accidental fatal day at St 62, shooting of Jack Williams, Mullet Lake, stood mute yesterday Cemetery in Cheboygan Justice Court on charge of involuntary manslaug ter. * x ®* Police said Roy Bauers, 52, Lake iproduction in the first quarter of he ad | 1960. He was Both were hunting ‘in woods grandchildren, one brother and one busiest season in history ends next Army; active in the Michigan Senior Golf- | week ers Assn. and won the champion- ship t twice. 142 ia (Ua “Hea o on the Way” FOR INDUSTRY and BUILDING TRADES 115 Branch St. Pontiac FE~4-0586 5 Acres of Storage Facilities . Overhead Crane; . T.R.R. BEAMS—PLATE—RE-RODS—RE-MESH—ANGLES—CHANNEL PIPE={BARS & FLATS—TUBING—SASH—ADJUSTABLE & FIXED COLUMNS—CULVERTS -_ w. * * | Toledo marine terminals said the total may reach 224, but empha- Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, sized that many ships revise their! schedule in order to make a fast! exit from the Great Lakes ahead of the ice Last year, 156 ocean freighters|Sherman Funeral Home for. Mrs. Ten years ago, only|John (Mary) Narrin, 85, who died ndin Chelsea yesterday after a long stopped here. 119 oceangoers called at Toledo, ai five years ago the total was 79. Renault's U.S. Sales Uo 65 Per Cent Over 1958 NEW YORK i —-Renault deal- 7 Ba d Conduct peacefully in his sleep at the age of The owners of two area taverns|the only living offspring of Wyatt! another warned!and his five brothers. Virgil's fa- accused by irate neighbors of not Michi- Commission. owner of the Little of Vallejo. Brown Jug, 2325 Union Lake Rd., | daughter, Commerce Township, was fined) $150 for selling alcoholic ‘bever-| appearance of | the minor, The fine is due —_ | of |2bdout the Wild West. inhec ked out at least 100 sus _ He was asked recently during pects. the uproar over rigged television * * * I quizzes whether he had been) cackett adds that the two men | the back of theithree sons. Southfield Officials Say® praytoo Paine” "En arm Intensive Checks Made’ Virgil was a nephew of famed); After Rape |Western lawman Wyatt Earp and) SOUTHFIELD — Police officials: Voorhees-Siple Ambulance Corvice Piane or Motor SPARKS SRIDAN. CHaF PEL Thoughttul Service FUNERAL HOME PE 2-584! ther was Newton. patroling the area where a young) Virgil died Friday at the home housewife was beaten angi raped lof a niece, Mrs. Frank McKenzie Nov 10, say ‘“‘it just isn’? so.” He is survived by a x * * Mrs. Alice Wright of Acting Chief Milton Sackett said nner 4 LOTS. in Oakland Hills Memorial Gar- 4 LOTS. sonable. FE 2 Cemetery. Lots 3 LLLP CHOICE OF LOCATION MI 4-6561 | evenings. WHITE CHAPEL. REA- ~$847. __ dens Kelseyville, Calif. [that from one to three unmarked PERRY my PARK _ CEMEIERY graves. &@ up. PE 49883 In 1958 he appeared on televi-/cars have been in the McClung} a'sion’s ‘‘The $64,000 Question.” He Road area where the attack took’ coache “d Earp snorted an_ indig- assigned to the case “have so far nant ‘no.’ and = asked, ‘‘Who . “ . MRS. EDITH J. HALL =| ~—s Lodge Calendar Service for Mrs. Edith J. Hall,| Family nigh Apne 87, of 630 E. Beverly Ave., will No. 2 th Sat. Kov. “Dist at 6:30 Pp. mn. 2 in the| Bring dish to pass and utencils. © service will be conducted at 2:30|l!¢ L. Hotchkiss, W. M. . Pontiac Chap- Mon. = igie t.— Special meeti |Home in Onawayz Burial will be/ter No. 228. 0 \in North Alice cemetery near here.|23, 8 p.m. 18% E_ Lawrence Mrs. Hall died Friday. Edith M Coons, Secr. ARTHUR L, HURLEY | ROCHESTER — Service will be ;held at 2 p.m. Monday at the Pixley Funeral Home fer Arthur News in Brief Mrs. Rose Szekerkal, 111 Eliza-| ~y &9 a : L. Hurley, 53, of 710 perl St |beth Lake Rd.. reported to Pon-| early '% \tiac - police yesterday that her | Joseph-Mercy Hospital. . adjustments wil) without it. billfold containing $130 and mis-| cellaneous papers was stolen while | e was shopping. a Supervisor of the Core Room at | 7 Lnidel. = | h-' Pontiac Motor Division, Mr. Hur-| Telbert T. Griggs, 30 Frank St., | ley was a member of the Jack reported to Pontiac police today | of, Burial will be in White Chape) } ._\Mason American. Legion Post. the that someone entered his es 4 of \VFW, the Rochester Lodge No. 5 through an unlocked door and stole admitted firing the F&AM, and the Rochester Chapter! $162. fatal shot Wednesday which struck | 68. Ward's Automotive Reports said the former Oxford Township po-| |13,000 Comets are scheduled for tato grower in { .| Hats Cleaned And Biocked, Agatha: | 498 S. Saginaw Street. James and eight} Rummage sale, Church of God. Brooklands Sub.;>Emmons and Au- burn. Pre. No. 2. Sat. all day. Adv. Surviving are his wife, $1.) Charles. of Rochester: William all The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Al) errors snovlc be re rted immediately The | ress assumes oo tor errore than to cance! the cha for that portion of the insertion of the advertise ment which bas bee dered valueless throu the vour ai ven Closing time ‘for advertise. ments containing trpe sizes ‘ay previous to oubdlical® NOTh’E TO ANUVERTISERS The deadline for cancella Want Ads day CASH WANT. AD RATES Lines t-day }-Days oe 3 61.60 $2.04 al iB Ei $ 38 i os 6 3.00 6.40 4.20 7 3.50 6.30 9.66 R 4.00 71.20 3 “ ® 450 8.10 2.4 0 5 00 0.00 13 0 An additiona: charge oft $. will be made for use of Pontiac Presa box numbers ROX REPLIES At 10 a.m. Today there “were replies at The Press a office tm the following boxes: 5, 6, 14, .15, 25, 35, 58, 63, 68, 69, 7D, 73, 74, 75, 103, 106, 110, 111, 116, 118, 119. * * * | 10 miles west of Cheboygan. sister Ford said the increased Mercury. Police quoted Bauers as saying, A Masonic graveside service will; Rummage sale, 210 Baldwin EUB production will begin as early in he fifed at some moving branches be conducted by the Rochester (Church. Sat.. 9 to 1 Adv December as steel supplies per- while hunting deer Lodge mit. [t added that overall Mercury * * * : a production will climb 15 per cent) He was released on $1,000 bond -spaeatpiea tas Neiman Deaths Elsewhere above current retes which include to await pretrial examination. CLARKSTON — Burley R. Mil- the Metuchen plant, — —_—_—_—— len, 97, of 5146 Harvard Rd., died! LONDON (AP)—Alfonso Lopez, gt . unexpectedly last night at his 74. president of Colombia in 1934. oad ms Port of Toledo Enjoys _ home. wdat idee dics Vad wie Ex-Adrian Official Dies A member of the St. Trinit be , Sed Feey ee Record Seaway Year Sati Church, ‘Mr. Burkes Lopez, who was suffering from’ a| ADRIAN We — Dr. William S ee r. Burley i8S\kidney ailment, had been Colom- McKenzie, 81, former Adrian city TOLEDO, Ohio (P—At least 210 suceiwed By DS weiee Ree three pian ambassador to Britain since health officer. died in Clearwater. ocean ships will have called at sons, Arthur of Lake Orion, Alvin) last June. = Fla.. Thursday. He fornterly was Toledo this year when the ports 9f Pontiac and Dean with the U.S a daughter, Mrs. Sherron| Davis of Clarkston; and a brother, | Floyd of Oxford. Mr. Millen’s (AP) — Ed- president of died Fri- SAN FRANCISCO ward E. Hills, 65, body is at the Hills Bros, Coffee, Inc., day in a hospital. _—_— * CHICAGO (AP)—Roy Egan, 62, attorney for the Chicago White Sox American League baseball club since 1939, died Friday. He suffered a heart attack last Tues- day. MRS. JOHN NARRIN ORTONVILLE — Service will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the C. F.) illness. 1 Burial will be in Ortonville Cem- fetery. ' | Mrs. Narrin is survived by a son, | Joe of Bloomfield Hills; four grand-| children: two brothers, Roy Wolfe. of Ortonville and Clare Wolfe of Lancaster, Calif, ‘All Workers Return to Great Lakes Steel DETROIT (UPI) — The Great Lakes Steel Corp. at hearby Ecorse ers in the United States sold 9, ihas returned to ‘‘normal”’ produc- cfirs in October, 5 per cent more tion with ali 10,200 members on! than in the previous month and Most -of the offshore ‘oil well jts work force back on the job.| 6) per cont more than in October, drifting in the Gulf region: ts tone} - Company spokesmen would not) 1958, Jack Kent, general sales in waters which are. not more lrelease specific figures manager of Renault, Inc., said. on wr jthan 60 feet deep. |duction, perience necessa CAREER OGPPG TORT TY. ove _Help Wanted Male 6 12 MEN | 18 TO 28 Salary $75 per wk. Only those willing to work need apply NO SAL ESMEN CALL PE 8-8103 POR APPT. AGGRESSIVE MEN 21 TO 30 Are you looking for e new excit- ing money making job? Here's the op unity of a lifetime! A career business and we train you at our expense. Barn an hour to start. The ARTHUR, MURRAY STUDIO needs ambi- tious young people for executive ahd oon Know the thrill of an expert dancer and teacher. Don't pass up this. op- rtunity. Apply now 25 E. Pike. 10 p.m. Mr. Jones. No ex- to expansion, « Insurance paid’ tor by toe “pO YOU QUALIFY? $85 PER. WEEK j PERMANENT 1 —eahnecy on SCHOOL Ht EPERABL SOME COL 3—APPEARANCE— NEAT. 4—-PERSONALITY—PLEASANT tt ‘meet these dasic _ EXPERIENCED TELEPH v v Help Wanted Male 6 Bore Ap La NEEDED _Sedsus’ Gal PB 0 Wreat A Ryne mob aR. MAN, e iy. . cent, lent: work, group rance, Body Service, 245 South Bivd. Bast ry 40667. Cc % On OLDER TREMAN TO operate oil fired boiler. Rochester Paper Company, Rochester, Mich- __ tgan, {AN 4 ag A ussp CAR 5 Gales ie. os A ay vd atthe Fat Tt ERFE rienced in Fara] windows and awnings. or OR 30139. ev 8. IN 6 CAREER AS A ig insurance salesman? Becurity ve average income for life Call FE 3-7193 or FE 4-5007 for _ appointment. CAR AN. “EKPERLENCED ON PONTIAC TIACS e: ALL M¥_ 2-287! FOR Russ JOHNSON OPPORTUNITY FOR TRAINING with assured livable income. in first class public .— work. you do not like people do pecs" apply. Pocterabia college, but will accept high a grad Write or oe ol FP 3-106 1696 elegraph, Pont PART- “TIME . s reta your regular job. For iateemation call Mr. Allen, OR 3-0922, 7 9 p.m. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN If you are wasting your time on your present job. here is portunity to in a good organization. eg 4 tL TARE ORION. MY 2-262). REAL ESTATE SALESMEN ‘Old established firm needs 3 men to take over branch office. OR 3-2361. SALESMEN WANT- REAL ed for hall time. Lake gal and custom home sales. 3-0085 for interview apoointment. SALESMAN, EXPERIENCED. Pull time or windows, aw ernization We are best deal in the Pontiac area. Come in and see between 9 and 11. No phone calls. Federal Mod- ernization 2536 Dixie Hwy. “SALESMEN” “BUSINESS OPPOR- TUNITY.” Two franchise deaier- ship open in Pontiac area. Un- usua) er. No inv ent. Be in business for yourself. oe - WANTED SALESM One of Oakland County's oldest dealerships . panding to meet the needs of @ Tent growing community. Beattie Mtr. Sales. Inc. 5806 Dixie Hwv Waterford PHONE OR 3-1281 some exp, in this line. Inquire Jerome Motor a __Warren Ww I ance service man, must be famil- and automatic washers work with top pay for ~ red. Goneameed® . Call Li 23-0048 office or your Eis rein oleh “Employment Agencies 9 BOOKKEEPER , $400 Female full: charge. Pw to @ meat oie” bene typing. state + i . 8 days. bas SH mat 406 Pontiac te Bids. ba 5-9227, Evelyn Edwards GAL FRIDAY $350 To a high level executive. Galm- orous jocal office. Must be sharp and attractive. Good skilis. ae BOOKKEEPER . xoncee: Ware Full charge with mianufacturing experience. ONE GIRL OFFICE ... Insurance experience a must. cellent typing. FIGURE CLERK Accurate typist. perience a help. $375 Ex- *. $300 Dealership ex- RECEPTIONIS 240 Good typing LP figure apuley. NURSE .... ws asseences §17S Companion, live in. DINNER COOK coscess $250 KITCHEN HELP ......-. core $175 SALADS .. sseascese eons $175 BAR WAITRESS ....-s-se00+. $175 Experienced. PRACTICAL NURSE ....... $190 Experienced. FOLLOWUP MAN $425 Purchasing. Aged 24-40. DISPATCHER $425 Must have trucking caperlencs GENERAL OFFICE ......... $275 Typing. FINANCE TRAINEE ........, $325 TREE TRIMMER ........ oo. $250 Experienced, MANAGER Food store experience. Aged ne LOG HAULING ...... . $600 Own truck. DIN COOK | god Mee Morping shift. EVELYN EDWARDS VOCATIONAL COUNSELING VICE 24's EAST HURON SUITE 4 FE 4056 —- FE 41429 OFFICE MANAGER Male aged 28-45 with _— in business adminis ie Rage ome ~ yeatt of 7 5.9227. . a Sect’y A ne for downtown office ust SS take _ aoe _— tiac State Bank Bid bank Bids. PE 5-9277. Work: Wanted Male 11 ee aa a1 f ; te w Pa- =M ee ow re m. % WOMAN WANTS DAY WORK. cir Momo — Sat. open. $1 an r ransportation. FE 4-6839. WASHING AND IRONING, P.CK up and deliver, FE sa YOUNG LADY W D Or. fice Building Service PPL PDLD DIP LPL LED PPP PPP PD 1A ALUM, aw ™ homes —"S00 plans. BUILD ERS EXCHANGE & emer, commana oN contra resting. Al Also, Pope “ron tr AL . it COLORS. Winter prices. Get our bid. OR 3-4438 a A-1_ BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT “work. Also. fireplace. OR 9-9402. FOR CASHIN A HFURPY. sell things throdeh— Classified Ads. Anything gocs! Dial FE 8181. - ihe ee, Aegina werent Ce omragneRnaneRT tine: —— sea egret: po naename em _ Other's throats. ” Says Citizens Bewildered P Sid WIAD WWW a de ye TY | T THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVE! MBER 2 . of 20 patients from the Sun and West Virginia Tames 4 Mental Patients “Indonesia Frets at Soviet China Hare Advocates Agency Drown in Florida for Consumer Protection Tension Builds Up Over | LANSING uw — The cranberry; A group of consumer - minded iecane in a lake near here early dead as Noah Stanley, 15, Charles Trade Ban and Trouble. scare, hunter asphyxiations [rom {citizens from across the state will! today when the boat in which they Griffith, 15, jmeet at Michigan State University were riding capsized. | Dec ‘defective gas heaters and other; similar incidents point up the need | for a Michigan Consumer Protec-} tion Office, Secy. M. Hare said Friday * * * “on Border TOKYO (UPL) — Communist | Gira is at odds with another of! former neutral friends. of State James | Sumer problems as credit, fraudu-. Two other persons in the small Oldest labor union in the U.S. said Friday state police patroling lent advertising and food and drug boat were rescued is said to be that of the cigar the turnpike are carrying extra ' protection. The government fll 000 new businesses were estab-| 1958 and 356,000 were closed. reports that|lished in the United States during ———= SOC oe Or Training Center (for mentally re- ™ to Help With Free Gas tarded) at nearby Gainesville who had -gone on a scouting trip géster- day to nearby Camp Montgomery * * * C. H. Carter, the institution's director, identified , the CHARLESTON, W, Va. (AP) — } motorists who run Virginia From -now on, out of gas on the West Turnpike will get enough free ‘fuel to get them to the nearest service STARKE, . Fla (UPI) —. Fou young mental patients who slipped Dr, way from a Boy Scout outing medical Thomas Elmore, 2], station and James Rewis. 31 * . * = Tupapike Manager W_ W 12 to confer on such con- * * * s Stahl The victims were ‘part of a group makers cans of gasoline Gienp A. Griffin ‘Sparks -Griffin FUNERAL HOME “Thought ful Service” 46 Williams Street Phone FE 2-584! 24-Heur Ambulanee Service aa en eee “Although a number of state agencies are specifically charged Indonesia With certain responsibilities for in- h Vvestigating violations of consum- ‘ers’ interest,’ he said, the average Even the most naive political ob-,P¢Wildered citizen does not’ know “ap servers in the Indonesian capital ;WheTe to turn. for help. igst, it was India. Now, it is Indonesia. “It's no surprise that afd Communist China are at eac saw the big blow-up in Sino-Indo- nesian relations coming weeks— even months—ago. The tension had been building | up.rapidly since last May when the government, in a move to curb the Chinese economic in- “In Detroit and Grand Rapids a victimized housewife can phone the local Better Business Bu- reau, but elsewhere in the -state | there are few organizations to which she can appeal.” Three women legislators this fluence, decided to ban all alien (year introduced a bill to set up a retailers in rural areas. This ban (Consumer protection office, but it gees into effect at the end of the ‘died in committee year. Hare noted” a consumer cotncil iwent into operatign this. year in “It will affect an estimated hall- California, empowered to represent million Chinese, all presumabl¥' consumer interests in coordinating ander the direct control of Peiping existing. governmental agency, beeause Indonesia has ne’ relations | making surveys and publishing in- with Nationalist China formation ‘The big blow-up finally came this * * week. The Indonesian foreign min- [n view of the state’s financial istry charged the Chinese Embassy troubles, groups such as the Michi- in Jakarta with urging Chinese to gan Credit Union League have in- defy the ban. It termed such ac- dicated they would contribute on (‘provocative.”’ funds to: help get a similar pro Indonesia also hinted broadly at gram started in Michigan, Hare the possibility of uncontroHable said anti-Chinese sentiments— ae ing Anti-Chinese sentiment in Indo- ® ® ' nesia, long directed against the FICeS lJ in 49 Nationalists, began to switch to i the Red regime early this year This sentiment began to find its Way into the press eee = we and bie {QF If] Dailies statements more with the Tibetan Situation. It became widespread after Peiping began opposing the Rise Is Brought About ban. It became intense when the b d Chinese began causing trouble r ncrease Costs, along the Indian borde1 Publishers Report NEW YORK (UPIi—The Amer America Grants More ican Newspaper Publishers Assn for Refugee Year reported Thursday that 11] news- GENEVA (APi— The United) Papers ir this country were foreed States announced a new million, ° increase circulation prices dur- flollar grant Friday to the U. N. ing the ent AY wemane Es World Refugee Year. This brought >“* The ANPA said that of the total, 45 increased their single cop, street sale prices * * * were - ifs total contribution to $3,200,000 More than half the new = con- tribution is to go to the relief of refugees who have fled from Red. China to Hong Kong. bringing The total U.S. expenditure for this about by steadily pirpose to $800,000 labor, preduction, employe bene- : fits and other materials and serv- ices, the ANPA said. The néwspapers, in announc ing price increases to readers, usually explained that they had resisted increases as long as pos- sible and that matty improve ments had been made to provide better papers, the report said During the 10 months, iber of papers making single copy street sales at 7 cents increased OPEN 7 A.M. TO 9 P.M. é Monday thre Saturday {from 483 to 502, those being sold at 10 cents increased from 162 to KUHN AUTO WASH 1174, and at 8 cents from five to increases brought Matched Wedding Bands 14 Kt. Gold 2 for $7.95 Diamond Engagement Sets $29.95 Compre as LAF OW) WAYS EDWARD'S" is sour SAGINAW — ; nt ty 7 ae eight. Those being sold at 5 cents, meantime, dropped from 1,000 to . = 969. and 6cent papers decreased from 51 to 48 WHITE FLAME Soot Denies Commitment Destroyer on Panama Zone Spray soot away ‘the White Plame . way! Economica! WASHINGTON — The State and handy spray |, Department denied Friday thit can obtainable at P President Eisenhower's brothe at hardware stores Oakland Chemical Co. 734 WOODWARD AVE. had made any statement commit- ting the United States to a par ticwlar course of action with re- spect to the Panama Canal Zone * * * . The reaction came after a. re- port by Panamanian Finance Min- ister Fernando Eleta that Milton Eisenhower told him the United States would recognize Panam:o- ian sovereignty over the Zone. , ~ Milton Eisenhower made a good- will trip through Central and South America \Department said he jdma in July 1958 * * * Eleta told the Panama Nationa! |Assembly Wednesday night that | Milton Eisenhower told him in an after-dinner talk Sept. 13, 1958 that [the United States- would reconize Panamanian sovereignty over the Canal Zone in a statement issued by Nov. 3. SS ae SPEEDWAY FUEL OL visited Pan- OAKLAND FUEL Call FE 5-6159 rising costs of 4 the num-. Canal = — in mid-1958. The. State! THANKSGIVING The life of the Pilgrims was. hard, gruell- ing, with hazards of wind, rain frost, and sudden death: their, harvest was insurance against want during winter; their air prayer was a fervent. sincere “Thanks” We will tharik God for a bountiful harvest ~ eSeeaes r —the ability to think and act independently, Ss to share in the Rroaperseg of those around us, to give our surplus to those less fortunate, to bi comfort and peace to those next door and across the seas, to enjoy the marvels of ingenious men and the freedomythat comes with independence. We will thank God that we live under a flag with fifty stars everyone of which repre- ° sents dignity of its individuals, who live with- out fear, worship according to their in- dividual concept, cast sectret ballots and abide by the majority's choice. a We thank God that\ we are part of the United States of America ME. SIPLE -+---VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME— 264 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-838? as AR tel 4 :iile @ 1, lehe@el SHOP SEARS SPECIALS MONDAY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 No Phone Orders C.0.D.’s or Deliveries Be Smart, Be Thrifty—Monday and Every Day, You Can Be Sure of Extra Savings at Sears! be), fey) ae), Tm 4. MONDAY ONEV Little Boy's Long Sleeve Polo Shirts Reg. 1.09 OS™ Charge It s ina var:e:y tlerne rite 3 o x SHORT SLEEVE ed SHIRT ‘77 Men’‘s mid-weight Coat Sweaters reg. 4.98 379 Charge It Pock 9 Men's Accessories Dept. bee er ; 5-4? Main Floor er Snack Bar.. Main Floor Charge It ™M eo] fey-) ame), | & 4 . fel, tey-) Ame), 1 & & $ - $ ~seeepraonn. ¢ ie te Ry 7 Cotton Corduroy Tapered Pants 33 : i" “only ] Monday Onty! Soft Deep Reg. 2.98 Washable Shreded — 22 Foam Rubber Snow we style dor aids, 24 Napped Sheet. Blanket reg. 6c =| SOE Bag Assorted solid colors with CHARGE IT check trim, elastic waist Thieuuoreionablercot Heat blake * itt pillow, Matching cotton blouse $1 «aby He Wethable Wordert. reticent \iches en nai down €aey lor use Children's & Infants’ Dept. oo . . eine ll pound bags Main Floor Domestic Dept.. Main Floor Drapery Dept.. Main Floor MONDAY ONLY! n x Gare Pri Vi Low Price on Kenmore 11’/2-in. Electric Frypan With Control © Completely Immersible 88 ‘ ‘Choice . ses 1- Lb. Roaster @ Removable Heat Control ue Priced to Save You $2.10 id H Bast : - Reg. 8.98 a of onor er ess 8 It's extra deep-so you can cook pot roasts, stews and cereal suen Boot ee ‘ewly designed to hold up to 41b. Reg. to 88c other family dishes. Accurate heat control plus cooking ed cut! : on Chiiien 68 n~¥Shop Monday jor saving CE guide on har: dle: All aluminum with cool handles. Jat ne ert er with r e Das fer Varge tube is marked for measu } a. Oe aes rapelien up om iquids In ais vous balittay fae! 54 Frypan complete with cover 11.35 ‘ Shoe Dept.. Main Floor Charge It ~~ Houseweores Dept., Main Basement Electrical Dept.. Basement ? fe}, fey \ 4 ONLY! fe), ie’) Age], | & 4 : “is . Zs . Low Priced Kenmore s , = Harmony House 3-Piece | : ave 5.10 on Craftsman Canister Vacuum Cleaner _ Bedroo Suit a. Sander-Polisher oom suite = Only $5 Down $ @ Regularly $169 $ » ® Monday Only Special @ Regularly 15.98 © O* @ Choice of Limed : , Charge It @ Monday Only Specal Oak or Walnut E Terrific buy! Kenmore cleaner has the power to dig siete ee cveryyaee big ress ho framatic ee suite! Massive & out deep down grit that cuts and ruins your rugs,“car- Sirok@s per tinue 16 produce q@ gidss-smosth sanded eanied Ge ee heer ches tull-size bookcase pets. Get if complete with attachments aad disposable rite a gbiweighe sand wal or aelicg, Hose Mondey vat firttel winlier) are ae: Se SEONG ee See it at Sears. Main Fioor bags during this sale. terrific savings Vacuum Cleaner Dept.. Hardware Dept...Main Basement Salijaclion guaranteed v1 your money back’ FEARS 3-Piece With Panet Bed ‘ fe}, toy.) ae), 1 fe Peggy Kellogs 5-lb. Fruit Cake Regular 3.99 oaves pre-siiceod oF amounts of tempti: Furniture Dept. 154 North % Second Floor North Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 ' ae ~ ALS