The Weather U. 8. Weather Bureay Forecast ‘ Little temperature change r (Details on Page 2) » * t THE PONTIAC PR 117th YEAR ae ee » PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, NOVEMBER A, 1959—82 PAGES ¥ UNITED re % ASSOCIATED PR — Idle Engines Wait fo { a ‘ i ’ | ' ; f tT ; . : ALL IS QUIET — Although the nation's steel ; mills were fired up for the first time since mid- for Works Post Steel Mills that cannot be made until steel mills production gets back to nornial and deliveries start. Some r Bodies Strive for Peak Outp ° ul First Shipments Are in Pipeline as Men Return Thousonds Called Back | but Full Production Not; Possible for Weeks PITTSBURGH (—Major| producers edged the first) small shipments of finished steel into delivery piplines today — two days after an| 80-day Taft-Hartley Injunc-| tion halted the longest) strike in steel industry his-| tory. The early shipments —| gatherings of what was left, behind when the 116-day| strike began — meant little! \to customers already hurt| strikers were called back to work) over the weekend. Thousands} Pick Alexander: GM Officials Watch 7 ss. mene week. Steel firms were reluctant - LU Anxious| NEW YORK (®)—Buying orders | | poured into the stock market today, sending pirces sharply | PAD | higher, in the wake of resump- Gains + Sad vent ; 'Vessel Ravaged; Refinery Threatened Tribute for Two Jaly over the weekend, assembly lines at Pontiac officials were predicting a wait of several weeks, |by shortages. It still will be D Motor Division today remained quiet. The chassis some longer. Some 11,000 local workers have lweeks before newly pro- assembly in the foreground, with its big V-8 been laid off since Oct. 30 because of the 116-day | s : " engine covered for protection against dust, waits strike. \duced steel moves in Sig: | _ ae oe on the now empty final assembly line for a body inificant amounts. _ eS ae nd | Thousands of the half-million AWARD WINNERS — Michigan Amvets chose Oakland County Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore-and Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem for top awards Saturday. Moore was keynote speaker at the state's Annual Fall Conference here and was honored for work with juveniJes. Ziem got his plaque for being named Amvet of the Steel Plants Bustling — = — a County L Par) eaders Be Py SS Od Pontiac Press Pheies year iffthe county. Shown here in the award presentation (I. to r.) are James Cavalier, commander the third district; Moore; Ziem; and Andrew J, Skender, state commander from Mt, Clem- ens. of Amvets Honor Mayor of Oak Park) Aji General Motors officials in Pontiac could do today Was Deputy Director was to keep their eyes peeled on the once-again fired tion of steel production. of around $1 a share were posted Tanker Fire Takes 8th Life to Harold K. Schone up steel mills and hope that steel supplies would soon| cue yea beard vaxe, | be on their way. 25, for details. The Oakland County Board’ of, Spokesmen for the three GMC plants in the city—Pon-|~~~ Public Works today named R. J.\tiac Motor, Truck & Coach and Fisher Body Divisions— to state figures—changes occurred | Alexander, former deputy director,|___ a too fast. | to the post of director of the De-} agreed that when their pro-| Most big companies began heat-| partment of Public Works. . iduction would once again! ing jironmaking blast furnaces’ «Chest Rugs Alexander's —_appointinent return to normal depended /|and steelmaking open hearts 24) entirely upon how soon steel] Can ‘a oo! istarted arriving. tomes effective Dec, 1. hours after .mill gates swung open. | A corporation spokesman in De- Beachgoers At the same time, the seven- member governing bedy ef the DPW accepted with regrets the resignation of acting director Ha- rold K, Schone, who has held the $17,500 post since the creation | NEW YORK (AP) — Men. |fore of the pk col in 1957. ou envy ne oh eo he lover the weekend, in which it said | because ot steel Prsahin iy — Schone rr city manage men who stalk the beaches and|it would be “some time’ before Pressed for seeety Senvesee Schone, former city manager of . IGM plants and those of its sup-| ng ; . = AYS? Oak Park and Birmingham, ten-| Pools’ im. fous 8 . —_ NEW WALKOUT IN 8 DAYS: Some expected to get iron from) Throughout the industry blast furnaces yet today. ltroit referred to the company’s|Was a gigantic effort to get all lthird quarterly report, released be. | facilities producing as quickly as there|Amvets at their Annual Fall Con- steelworkers resumed work| Possible. Customers—many closed! Qakland County Probate Court Moore, Ziem -— HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) The Receive High Awards tanker Amoco Virginia, its plates at Michigan’s Annual buckled and ripped by fire and The fire aboard the 12,000-ton Chandler, 28, apparently stepped | tanker threatened the heart of the|jnto a hole in a submerged por- nation's largest oil refining and tion of the ship petrochemical center for 19-hours iexplosion, Sunday, claimed an/*, * * * Fall Conference Here |; ana Sunday. | eighth victim today when city fire- a ee _ ;man D. H. Chandler drowned The vessel's captain, R. R. | Enyestigators climbed over the Two prominent Oakland County|@board the ship. Twenty-five per- judicial figures »q Sons suffered injury. high awards Saturday by Michigan were presente MSU Officials Rap Fraternity Hazing Stunt EAST LANSING —A [fraternity ference in Pontiac. ¥ * * Judge Arthur E. Moore and Prose cutor Frederick C. Ziem, circuit judge elect, were the recipients jbuckled plates in search of clues Combs, and six of the 40 crew las to the cause of the fire. mombers packbed. Groups probing the degtroyed hulk _ |were the FBI, Coast uard, the | American Oil Co., a Hess Ter- Clouds, Temperature — = oe fo Stay About Same OU Co.'s 12,008-ton tanker was to sail for Albany, N. Y. | four hours before the American } Mostly cloudy with little tem-] The flames feeding on * 135,000 dered his resignation last week to} become city manager of Arcadia. Calif. ; In learning of his appointment, Alexander, 52, said he would resign} his post as mayor of Oak Park be-| Was unveiled any at piu s iil there! ing session of the National Barber} Sh cause he said many felt would be conflicts between the two jobs. He said he would probably |Toss away your turtle-neck hh Worry no more, hairless Joe. Pliers had enough steel to once) proaucers could count on only sweater — they've come up wi chest hair falsies for men. The latest in chest tapestrits =10W. Who wears chest rugs? hd again begin fabricating Most officials were cautious in predicting when production would pick up. Some said several weeks, said longer * * * | The auto industry, however, said lit hopes to obtain sufficient steel to build another 900,000 cars dur- 80-days of operations. If the labor dispute is unsettled when the in-| could renew the strike. The U.S. Supreme Court | figuratively struck the match | that rekindled mill furnaces. The court by an 8-1 vote Satur- , Moore, keynote speaker at the j,7jing stunt in which paint and perature change is the weather|barrels of high test gasoline and conference's opening session Sat- chejjac were dumped on two 18- outlook for the Pontiac area tonight | fuel oi] in the vessel's bunkers, urday aftern°on, received _*® year-old Michigan State University and tomorrow The low will be threatened the heart of the = |junction expires Jan. 26, workers! plaque honoring his work with pjedyes was denounced today by near 32. Tuesday's high .will. bé tion's biggest oil refining and juveniles, faculty and fraternity officials. [near 45. . a oe ag hours The plaque recognized Moore’s| The victims were freshman stu- * * ® peor’ Penn SOME enter “outstanding service to children dents Michael Kukes and Martin! For the next five days tempera- ane and towards combating juvenile B. Schutzer, both of Detroit. They tures will average near the normal, WALL OF FLAMES delinquency.”’ were confined to Olin Memorial’ 49-high and 34 low. Rain is pos-! “{y spread like a prairié fire,” oe ee ace eee Soe ee fel ing the 80 days a. strike-ending, day upheld the injunction that |ogECK FOR CAMP EE SS ee le Birkle) Ncectecte ap Sitid seamen Joseph R. Daley, 37, Alexander's appointment, ex- ws,” answers pretty ana Taft-Hartley injunction remains in| had been stayed-more than two eae inn -siven a check 5 vation Winds were southwesterly _at Seattle. ‘As it spread, a solid wall pected in most circles as Schone Tessier, president of a hair. force against the United Steelwork-| weeks by United Steelworkers ap- = —_ 4 . — 7 The two were grabbed Satur. |'? ™ P h. at 10 this morning. The of flames: 100 feet high swept the hi - making firm. “I never ask my ASr . . va Mrs, Mary Emsley, president of humidity was 75 per cent ship.” y recommended him as his suc- Radie de Cine the 1 ers Union. But this buildup won't peals. (Continued on Page 2. Col. 2) day by six or seven members |" : I : cessor in his letter of resigna. | Cllents why they want mm begin until at least Dec. 1. | . of Zefa Beta Tau fraternity near * x * * * * tion. was by a 6-0 vote of the | figure it's their own business.” | Secretary _of Labor James P. the campus and dumped in a In downtown Pontiac the lowest Board, Member Harry Horton | The preferred shade: Brown Some industry officials said | Mitchell, in a television appear- ar which took them along M78 |temperature recorded preceding! Daley was among the loading ; was the only absentee “The people at the barber show| ‘hey expected even more than /ance, Sunday said it will be up oad d ‘ P sor . "the ( enesee Conaty line. £ a.m. was 21. At 1 p.m. the CTeW When the fire broke out. { - lcame to me and suggested we the 210,000 heurly workers, most | Congress to keep the mills oper- n To ay Ss ress ton rs ned . their nueva etna Kt 17 : : “During fhe time I was lbading Alexander, of 13141 Northfield k nest tal of them General Motors (ating beyond Jan, 26 if a lkabor ape se temeece Ne ea there was a strong odor of gasoline | Blvd.. was Schone’s choice also as/™@k¢ up a chest falsie as a or ; 2 m3 ; ne wl eyes and mouths and their hands —_—___ _ . : : - E : - x stunt.” Miss Hessler said. “But I employes, previously laid off to | agreement still is beyond reach. d terethe ill over the ship, even back to the } deputy director when Schone left"), - ~ yan cee be out of work despite the return |. Mitchell said President Eisen-| . ‘ and legs were taped together. Shak U Bird Men crew's quarters,’ he said i his Birmingham city manager’s|$#!4, ‘stunt? I have many custom- f k of the nation’ Iwork- | how ‘ould fe dy ly sangeet -oeaimaninaaiia ; i] black and iNet i Nine , ; “ : Ww lers using them already.’ They of work of t na 8s steelwork- ower wou rea y prompt y| County News ... ea Then browr ve llow, lack an ; * * * ' job to direct the DP’ . The Gepurt-| semed surprised.” . ers. | with recommendations to the law- Editorials .............-.:- _g ved paint and shellac was poured NEW YORK (UPI) Offic- Daley told Detective A. E. Rock i ment was the first of its kind in|’ i ; ‘ = : | makers if the strike is resumed.| or wer their heads and bodies. They: jals of the National Audoboen aley ton etective / + TLOCK= | Michigan, and was created by spe-| Miss Tessler, whose main byst-| Layoffs in Pontiac due to the (Contioind 2 Col. 2) | Markets ............ fees handoned aloce tt L a tia smbere |Well he reported to a ship officer. ; cial lesisiaticn, Y SP Iness is toupees — or toppers, as|1l6-day strike reached 11,000 Oct.| {Continued on Page 2, Col. 2 SMa ecient SE EEE BURR SE ER) Oey Ai Se Se i _—, ‘ ithey say in the trade « 4o ; | add Vd GIA Long-Awaited Steel Moving to Industry | | (Continued From’ Page Onc} |He refused to hint what the rec emimendations might b« | DEADLOCK UNBROKEN There was. no indication that either the industry or the union was in a mood to make major concessions. No negotiations were scheduled The union continued to press fot wages and fringe bencfits that stee] executives said would be in-| flationary. Workers were earning | an average @f $5.11 an hour when the strike started The companies held on to de- | mands for contract changes that} high give management more say over working conditions in the| imills. The union has fought this} HOWARD L. McGREGOR i praposal since it was first made. | Joseph F. Finnegan, director of { the Federal Mediation Service, | said he soon would contact both | sides regarding new negotiations. The injunction specifies collec- tive bargaining must be con- tinued. Area Drill Firm Head Dies at l Probably the biggest delay in| Howard McGregor Wa |ion would be damaged equip- Active in Promoting |ment. Brick linings in some furn- aces easily could have cracked Av =“ ae Ps . ‘. 4 Bt. ° - > . * Hospitals, Research | during the long shutdown. It would} © THE PONTIAC PRESS. MonDxyY, NOVEMBER 9, 1959 | Howard L. McGregor, 72, chair- man of the board of National Twist Drill and Tool Co. near Rochester died Saturday at Crittenton Gen- eral Hospital, Detroit. He had been ill for 10 days. Mr. McGregor was born April 59, 1887, in Detroit and attended Central High School there. Imme- diately after his graduation from the University of Michigan in 1910, | take time to make repairs Most steel companies expect to be at least six weeks getting mills up to pre-strike production meters For the miners and railroaders among the °50,000 furloughed workers in allied industries, the work resumption was good news. BATTLE FLAMES - the tanker Amoco Virginia fi early Sunday morning in the-H nel. Firemen on shore and the Smoke billowed up from x a fourth time ouston ship chan- crew of the firé- killed the capta were injured. They almost are assured of being) recalled quickly. Many already) have returned But for thousands of others—in he went to work at National Twist|the auto and appliance industries Drill and Tool Co. then located|and others—the wait for recalls ng AP Wirephete boat Captain Crotty fought to control the flames. A series of explosions Saturday trapped and in and six crewmen.- Twenty-five FairandCool_ |Fire Ravaged Tanker Is the Word in in Detroit. Much of Country |will be a long one. Many may not) Claims Its Eighth Life The Day in Birmingham | Seek Area Committee to Aid Senior Citizens _ BIRMINGHAM — The City | Mrs. Harold E. Hayward mission at tonight's meeting will) Service for Mrs. Harold E. Ha ° . y- bé asked to consider the forma- ward, 59, of 577 N. Woodward, will tion of a committee to assist Sen-|pe held at 1 p.m. tomorrow at the ior citizens in recreation, income) pej) Chapel of the William R. Ham- maintenance, and acquiring cultur-|jjton Funeral Home, Birmingham. a! opportunities an dhousirig, | Burial will follow at Acacia Park In a letter to Mayor Carl F.\Cemetery. Ingraham, the” chairman of the Mrs. Hayward died Saturday aft- State’s Commission on Aging,\er a brief illness. James E. Brophy, states that many| | che is survived by her husband. Michigan communities are taking s 4 Mrs. Margaret M. Maloney the initiative to form local com- mittees to help older persons. ' A Requiem Mass for Mrs. Mar- id that bef 1961 garet Mans Maloney, 55, of 414 ae wi have 11 vvegional |Atlington Rd., Birmingham, will conferences and a state confer. |e Said at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at Holy Name Catholic Church. Burial ence to study and rt the |: : ome’ a ele meonie (a cacee will follow in Holy Sepulchre Ceme- tery. ~ gan and arrive at recommenda- —_ . ; tions to solve some of their prob: |. A Rosary will, be said at 8:30 cma p.m:>today at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Funeral Brophy said the commissi0n| Home. could contact Miss Emilé Sargeant,} Mrs, Maloney died Friday at Wil- regional committee chairman, for| ifurther inform&tion in forming the committee locallv. * * * Oakland County's participation in the Southeastern Michigan Com- jmunity Research Organization will |be discussed by Dr. Walter Blu- liam Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, after a long illness. Surviving are a daughter in Dub- lin, N. H., a son at Tarazana, Calif. and a grandson. Mrs. Albert Simmons Service for Mrs. Albert Simmons, Vit executive director of the or-|0, of 735 Purdy St. will be held ganization at the Altrusa Club of |@t 2 p.m. tomorrow at the DeWitt iGreater Birmingham Tuesday at te Davis Funeral Home. Burial will '6:30 P.M. at the Community follow in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Simmons died Saturday in | House. The . organization is ‘studying St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a | means of combining the facilities | long illness. of St. Clair, Macomb, “Oakland,| She was a member of the First Williams to Take Tax Issue to Public LANSING @—Gov, Williams will make an air tour of the state this week to “let the people know the truth’? about the pos- sible impact ef the new Repub- lican emergency tax program. Williams said he and Lynn M. Bartlett, state superintendent of public instruction, will hit 10 cities from Detroit to Marquette on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. : “If the Republican legislative ec sticks to its plan to re- P the 110 million dollar use tax with only ‘76 million dollars in new taxes, education will take the rap,” the governor said. “The schools will get about $20 less per child than they have been promised in the schépl aid law and all new construction at state colleges and universities will have to be postponed.” — On Wednesday, the governor and Bartlett will visit Kalama- zoo, Ann Arbor, Bay City and Flint, on Thursday Grand Rap- ids, Lansing and Detroit and on Friday Alpena, Traverse City and Marquette. The Legislature returns to- night with a solution te the state’s fiscal wees apparently still far off. The Democrats con- tend the state needs 110 million dollars in new taxes this fiscal year, but the Republicans con- tend 70 million dollars would be enough. The Democrats have also re- fused to sign for introduction a batch of so-called nuisance taxes, although they say they will support them. The Republi- |Wayne and Monroe counties. | Baptist Church of Pontiac. | The study is concerned with) Surviving besides her husband problems of water supply, sewage 4re three daughters, Mrs. James ‘disposal, drainage, traffic routing|Hendricks and Mrs. Billy Ramsey, land other public services on the|both of Royal Oak, and Marlene, county level. * * at home; three grandchildren; and ja sister, Mrs. Hardy Golden of i Troy. cans say this is a breach of faith in sharing responsibility. ‘Here’s to the Boys HALESOWEN, England (UPI) — Freda Hill, 20, and Corliss Ba- ome tills. — er ‘oil storage tanks lining the north Mr. Leo G. O'Campb ker 19, said they would cele- shore scant yards away. Service for Leo G. O’Camb, 65,) brate their engagements bv Five explosions did rock the 540-\of 1867 Holland Ave. will be at} The U.S. death rate was at its) hiring a hall, ordering a band (Continued From Page’ One) gas, buf they kept on loading and | He worked his way up to the jget back to their jobs during the} 4 , The Associated “presidency in 1926, and was alect- me period. | By The Asteciated Freee in fact. is The steel shortage . ain , . : ed chairman of the board 1 PSisaiees It was fair and a little cool in kept on and kept en. yeare i, . ° ‘ili tea to get worse before new! 1 o6t of the nation today,’ with the 300 foot tanker docked at the Hess'3 p.m. tomorrow at the Bell Chapel |lowest ever in 1954—9.2 per 1,000; to play “Thanks for the Mem- J . P uction gets rolling That e ay, More than firemen who Terminal In suburban Galena| of the William R. Hamilton Fu-| population. In 1958, the rate was ory,” and inviting all their for- \weather pattern showing only mi-|came from as far away as Lake Park. The first came about 12:30|\neral Home. Burial will be at the|9.5 per 1,000. | mer boy friends. b Mr. McGregor continued active-| would mean idleness for some who} ly as president and board chair-jhave been fortunate enough to |Charles, La., battled the blaze. A'a.m., only minutes after the fire|Qakland Hills Cemetery. nor changes from Sunday. man until 1951 when his son, Ho-|stay on the payfol! throughout the Pe blizzard of foamite finally} broke out me f je : —— . 5 : * * “aug Mr. O’Camb died Friday in the ward L. Jr., became president.| strike smothered a main fire in the tank- x * FI : ie Comme Ti TONITE d ‘ : ai Light rain sprinkled scattered er’s forwar - = ; jorence Crittenden General Hos- an E $ He was still chairman of the er’s forward bunkers—which h id Wikies inwercd sock than + pital, Detroit, after a long illness SDAY SAL PECIALS sections of the Atlantic Coast andjheld 90,000 barrels of aviation snow flurries flecked the Dakotas &4soline. and western Great Lakes region. | tidustrialist, Mr. McGregor was a motor vehicle and traffic 1:eguia-|Generally clear skies were the jmember of the American Aberdeen |tions. ‘rule elsewhere. Angus Assn. He raised a breeding |—————"—" ; — Series Shows How feet high. Black, oily smoke mush-| He was a tool and die engineer eet eran over the vessel and cast a|and ns for the Tishken Prod-| ? soe : ‘ear Pall over this Gulf Coast city ofjucts Co. \ ea enbnadic cnentuer© aia more than 900,000 He belonged to the Reorganizef a pier alongside. The blackened The final blast almost 12 hours Church of Jesus Christ of the lat-| hulk’s deck plates buckled and its ‘ater shot flames skyward just as|ter Day Saints, Royal Oak Congre- | | seams ripped. | firemen appeared to have it under| gation, the Bloomfield Hills Cam-| j ‘control. It pushed heat waves era Club. FIND BODIES ‘around the storage tanks on; Surviving are his wife, Dorothy, Firemen found the body of Cap- shore containing more than a mil-|H., a daughter in Flint, a son,’ at the time of his death. State police in a few of the : * * * | states are jimited in their author- . In addition to being a prominent |ity to the enforcement only of the PAINT SUPPLIES | gus cattle on his farm, Great Oaks, west of Rochester. He also established a profes. sorship in the College of Medi- tain R. R. Combs of Kill Devil lion gallons of highly explosive|Douglas E. O’Camb of eerie) a aa ” cine at Wayne State University |Hill, N.C., at the foot of a ladder fuels lham, and three grandchildren. —_ ber : ee or and a research find for treat- leading to his quarters. The bodies) eT — Quality at A LOW PRICE of four crewmen were found in| *® ment and development in the |their quarters. Two others were ft C T | field. of arthritis at Harper Hos- q _ pital, Detroit. (Continued From Page One) found on deck. . Memories of the 1947 Texas City * Mr. McGregor was one of the|nificance of a catastrophe is that earlier in the lives of these gisaster that. killed more than 500 founders of William Beaumont Hos-| people the loss of a few dollars actually did amount to disaster. persons prompted civil defense of-|§ atal, Royal Oak, and alse active * * * ficials to alert the Texas State; VY2-Price PAINT SALE | Ready Mixed BUNGALOW PAINTS Our $5.95 Value 99 e SEMI-GLOSS WHITE P ER e GLOSS WHITE GAL. This must be good +-we've sold thousands of gallons (with a MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE) and we haven't had any complaints yet! Exclusive in Pontiac only at SIMMS. Your choice of the above TONITE and TUESDAY SPECIALS Just see what your small change buys at Simms-Famous Brands at low prices. Right reserved to limit quantities. cy ae many other civic church and Se : u ; : Some people are literally terrorized by a scowl, a harsh) Guard and order evacuation of the ® Philanthro anizations rr ee ee ly = Detroit sai Rechenie “sling word or reprimand from a supervisor, husband or wife because immediate area. is e LATEX WHITE aren. te * | *— «FLAT WHITE Pe e WHITE HOUSE PAINT lit brings back—without one’s being aware of it—the terror of . severe discipline in childhood. Grown men with no cause what- Fire fighters ashore and aboard); ; ~~/a Jone fire boat applied water inj)» ever to be worried about their jobs are known to suffer panic .a11, stages before chemical ex- when they get the message that “the boss wants to see you.” |tinguishers arrived. There would Often it may take deep psychoanalytic probing to spot the cue|;have been no hope for them if |the ship had exploded with force 4 jenough to touch off dozens of big * * * . ~~. Service was to be held at 3 p.m. doday at Bell Chapel of the Wil- Yiam R. Hamilton Co,, Birming- ham, with burial in Woodlawn emetery, Detroit. * He was a member of the Bloom- held Hills Country Club, the De-|CAUSES PHYSICAL ILLS troit Athletic Club, Recess Club Tenseness may actually cause _ ee, 20 Pkg. ‘Doll House’ BUBBLE BATH ‘Hazel Bishop’ Deep ACTION. CLEANSER $1.00 39¢ 3 tor $1.00 33¢ ‘| Value $1.00 Value COTSSSOHOSSSSSHSHSSSSSSSHSHHSSSSSSSHSSESSOEE type of paint in white only. P & G Aerosol SSeS 2S SS SS SS SSS SS SS SS aS Se eee ee eee DRENE SHAMPOO SE 4 |to anti-threat reaction. Proctor & Gamble's WINTERSET HAIR SPRAY to become} a person and Old Club. | : ‘ | Physically ill. Complete Line WHITE and COLORS erent eatin Knlborion ae When the body mobilizes internally for emergency action| ontiac C of C. Reg. 39 3 for Reg. 39% s pos { “ an McGregor. in preperation for anger and attack, the blood preessrs rises. Flocks to MSUO Anes er evack eine eracacapeseunveces’ 4. Super KEM-TONE Subject a person to repeated threats which provoke anger ‘and you have the beginning of a case of “psychosomatic” high Simms is Pontiac’s Headquarters for America’s Famous ‘Mr. Fresh’ LEADING LATEX PAINT. SPRAY DEODORANT for Open House SCHICK SHAMPOO Easy to apply, fully ne i 1 TE Plastic Bottle ail - : | 5 L = = ° ‘blood pressure Air Ra ; : Ree. 4 for Res. 4 ter i: washable, long lasting latex. White and decora- id Siren The Pontiac Area Chamber of a 29+ $1,00- Se 29 $1.00 JE for colors. ) ai mm 44 SBS RRB SSSR SS SB BS SSS See eS Se eee Instead of demobilizing after each anger-provoking Commerce showed a lively interest : l= COSSSSSSHSSSSSSSHSSHSHSSHSSHHSSHEHOSSSHSSESSSS Large 10-Ounce Pressure Can situation, the body tends to remain on a “stand-by” alert, day Michi tate Uni-| | poe ey eee ae ee Does YOUR BASEMENT LEAK? Get Famous Just Irritation | t C life “ and the mobilization, including the heightened blood pres- | versity Oakland. iF ¢ ' 0 ULalrornmlians sure, tends to be triggered off with little cause. The time More than 1,200 persons—triple | * KRANKS SHAVE ‘ BOMB Reg. > mn : Cement the number expected—attended a = 79% a Sealer may come when the heightened blood pressure fails to sub- side even when threat is no lortger present. SOOHHSOHOHSSHSSSHSSHSSHHSHSHSHSOSEHHOOOOEE Famous PEPSODENT or IPANA special open house arranged for, ° LONG BEACH, Calif, (AP) —| |chamber members, their families |* Natural Sealer For: 10-Lb. Can £ivil Defense officials are wonder- ving. Again, the threat may not actually be a current one. It\and guests : 2 s sts. 1% : ce \ * * imay be a situation in the present that carries an ugly Te-| a0... were tours of the new |) 63c TOOTHPASTE s1.06 39* q Coment Blocks \ Air raid sirens wailed for 45'minder, consciously or unconsciously, of an anger-provoking ° ~~ : : * Cinder Blocks minutes Sunday because of wiring threat , mee , campus, orientation talks by |" eeeeceeseeeeeeeeeSeS SSS SOSSSSoeeeesSeesase * Asbestos Shingles defect reat of the past ne feast. Gis! university officials and bus rides Famous ‘Lanolin Plus’ *Lenolin Plus’ Popular *® Stucco, Brick Hundreds of irate callers com- Since so many bodily organs, in addition to e heart, p acd around the Meadow Brook Farm BABY OIL MEDICATED LIQUID *% Poured Concrete plained to authorities : ja part in this mobilization against psychological threat, they're, estate on which the sthool is 3 New. 3 for Reg 3 bes : likely to be affected too. Millions of cases of psychosomatic) located. $1.00 3o¢ $1.00 $1.25 39¢ $1.00 $16 50 Valu 50 ib Can $13 99 x~ * “But not a one of them.” said |84Stric ulcers, ulcerated colitis, constipation, urinary disorders, | rheumatoid; Lowell “Eklund and Loren Pope Chancellor D. B. Varner, Dr. SOHOHSHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSHSSESSSSEES Transforms dingy wet ‘Roberta Owens’ ‘Roberta Owens’ a Civil Defense official, “thought|Skin allergies, asthma, migraine headaches, for a moment that there was an arthritis, hyper-thyroidism and others can be traced back to ieee ihe hare “ the univer- SKIN FRESHNER SKIN LOTION a =— air raid going on.” |phychosomatic causes. | sity and the role it will play in the Reg. 4 for Reg. 4 tor a oe tet /P {future of Pontiac and Oakland, $1.00 29 $1.00 $1.00 29¢ 1.00 pechtlt wotic Sirti | on “Master Your Tensions and Enjoy Living Again.” by rg gg a and Harry Milt; Copyright, 1959, by Prentice- The Weather | George 8. Stevenson, M.D. a COOOSSSSSSSHSSSSHSSSSSSSSHSSSOSSHSSSSESEOEESE White and colors. ‘Wrisleys’ Popular “Woodbury's’ 11'2-oz. 4-SEASONS LOTION SHAMPOO |County. eee ee ee ee eee : Pall U.S. Weather Bureau Report H F Idin TUB ENCLOSURE Full 9x 12 Foot Size s ale PONTIAC 7 Reg. 3 fo Reg. 2 f : anise Scns State Amvets honor olding ‘$0 BOE so | sb SBE sc PLASTIC DROP-CLOTH | Tee gg ll . lastall It Yourself as COOSSSSOSSOSHOSOHSSHSHHHHHSHHSSOHOLESOOESE :| — Reg. $1.00 ' THINNER and diminishing tonights Judge Moore, Liem In Minutes! ; ve oo, Pack of 10 Double Edge P &| My ¢ - ORR, Reg. 35 y in Pontiac Reg. dl eo nies wii Fine + 4 | (Gmgtiqued From Page One j'wcvracrs 4 GILLETTE BLUE BLADES "x 36°} 69° G55. | pir 6 s.m:: Wind velocity 10 mpd. he third district auxiliary, to be! MT ALL STANDARD SCOSOHHOSEHSSSESSOOHEHSOHSEHSOHOOH OHO SOEH OOS i a . gun lay Toes a 1 used for Camp. Oakland. re flegty m ebl R : ) rarure agen } Limit 2 Quarts | Moon rises Monday at 2 35 spe NAIL POLISH REMOVER 330 re) Moore in his speech urged Am- vets throughout the state to keep ececececeseseceeseoseereesseeosesseoeseeeeeeee : $ rie ¢ Bi, 22< (|r working for eect jovenlie de: Rands Permanetie Wrisleys Superbe c merce ae waded oa eros HOME PERMANENT BATH FRESHENER 9x10-Inch Sheets: { - a * Me Reg. 3 for Reg. 3 for { qittardsy in Pomting | hr ts mre ——- = i= $1.50 39¢ $1.00 $1.00 39¢ $1.00 SAN DPAPER iii epee, TNOTO) 9g | Catertohen. Exactly As PPT TIT t fe ER siscesvssongees sah Ziem was presented a plaque Sugulet Popular ‘Tinjette’ Proctor & Gamble's 50c ¢ Weather—sunn __ honoring him as the county's top 19.95 HAIR COLOR POMADE DRENE SHAMPOO Valun H Sunday in Pontiac Amvet. Value Reg. 5 for Reg. 3 for 5 Fighest i oo semeneee?. 37 * * * New—New $1.00 22: $1.00 60c 39¢ $1.00 Pack of 15° sheets in assorted ' Ma NPCT ALTO, vvnes pase 900-2 38.5| The plaque read: “To Frederick 0a Eee PYYTTTITI TTT) grits——mediun, fine or coarse. i Weather Cloudy C. Ziem, named as_ outstanding Max Factor's ‘Harel Bishop’ Popular Limit 2 packs with coupon. j Bienes, OU Near Age im Pomtioe =, | Amvet ra pe ee are ae HAND & BODY LOTION FORMULA 77 CREAM “Wiitl dia) Pe est LemperasUre .. oes. 4+ ser ree County by istrict mvets. R 3 fo Res. ‘ Lowest temperature .....ceesseesess +38 cei eg. ir eg. 3 for Jiran, semperature st rneneees 4 OS He is a charter member of the 1.50 39¢ $1.00 1.00 39¢ $1.00 a} norte 2S 9 tiac. SOCKS LOSES SSSOS HOLES EO ESOLOEEOESOEESEEEOEE : ie Michest and Lowent Temperatures Jimmy Dey Post 12, in Pontiac wieis } 66 in 1949 rps =r yin 1913; Other guests at the head table Spray Bomb-Scented 1) a were hilip E. Rowston and ¥ Alpena 85 g Fee Chaser eae of Oakland ROOM DEODORANTS i) Baltimore Beseh $2 70| Wnty Veterans Affairs SOSH SOSSH SHO SESSSOS SESE SOOEEESEOLOOSEOOCE | Bismarck co ~ . ae Large Royal 16-Ounce’ Size . Cw S14 Valve Hi Brownsville 28| After the opening session, “ble Now you can have a shower door at % the cost of a glass. door! Flexible ; ¢ 4 97 ¢ sf * parliamenta proced publi viny] plastic, pre-pleated to hang and-fold eesily. Opens all the way—no shless SH VE REA fo gE 1 2 retatigna suerabership spevien cal eS ae ee ee ee See with hardware an thatructions | Bru r oral A C M , 59 My 5 . 9 5 ¢ 4 pope * | welfare work were held> | pet . re es 1 a) | 74 A dinner at the Roosevelt Hotel,|[E 98 North ‘ %@ Se\conference headquarters, and ae Seginew 5, Saginaw {{@ PAINTS ; % Bivriet parade took place in the! Street . 3 ' —Second ' $$ F'downtown area Saturday night. | a BROTHERS . vies | © to , * ‘ rt ne November Notorious for Killer Storms Ore Carriers Ready-for Fearful Trips — By The Associated Press 1950 emused the greatest dollayfleet and some operators have said Freed by the Taft-Hartley injune-|damage in Great Lakes higtory,jthey hope to have tfieir first ‘af ~ wt ee, & lity at Low Price Quality at Low Prices At Waite’s you get quality plus low prices, plus credit... | and many other services! Use our new FLEXIBLE CCC CHARGE ... your payments go down as your balance goes down. Phone FE 4-2511 | . ; of savage gales that. lash the ha Tad ae ic m.te? mid-July steel strike hit steel- treacherous lakes in November. workers union crew members, willl yappnrnnrrp~nn~~~~~htdr ARRAN UA ARAVA : 3 fated Carl D. Bradley, battling) . VAS POAPPPALAPIAIPPISAS PAAPAANAS PAPPAALALALAS ® oats tet ayia nny Lake a ane 1 comp fe ip hop Ti asnion re LAKES. gan gale from Gary, Ind., tole iveries. Shop Till 9 ° tion that sent striking steelworkers| Seventy Jives were lost in Nevem4selg moving within two days. Al back to the mills, the Great Lakesii.. 1949 when four ships .wentlexpeet to be back in service in ore fleet readied to resume inter- ; E ; rupted deliveries today in the face down. qwe¢k. Some, loaded with ore when cold polar winds clashing with Roger City ripped apart and sank. | = * warm moist air from the south- Thirty-three of her 35 crewmen| Tee Army Corp of Engineers, west roi] the waters. eae Ae hi¢h controls the locks at Sault . “ wi iia an beeing) eee . - Bie} Marie, said that if traffic Monday, Friday and 36) WIDE PRINTED CORDURGE 1. their wheelhouses and galiies | But the w orm of all hit Warrants, the Great Lakes shipping} ~/ Washable, colorfast, ‘ Reg. ¢Y separated by tons of rock—are Wie —_ on Nov. bg 1913. jseason will be extended beyond the limited quantity 1.39 9 a. ; r rs 5 j j : ° ra ely by a wa | Mon, arg, ter 16 ers Feral De, ecnng odie” 1 $ SATURDAY NIGHTS ; of water that pour over the decks and hammer steel hulls. more, at least 11 ships were | C. A. Aune, ‘area engineer for Any bp > b> Op bp be be by bn bn bn bn bo bo bo be bn tn a te be bp bn bp by bn bh bo bh he hh hh ho i i ~wweeeverewewvwewee;wTvT",* VV VV VY sunk. Twenty-six others were ithe corps, said, however, he doubts All hr N be ’ 45” SOLI D, NOVELTY SHAGBARK oo is a savage month ™| if ore boats will operate after t u ovem r. 100% cotton, famous e es. Jan. 1. ‘ Reg. ; Id November 1968, 97 ships were AAPAAA —AAAADRAPADAAPRPDAPRPP PDD AOAAS PAPPPPAADRAAY Burlington quality. Color- 97* Yd. lost or ripped apart in a four-day, DEN. Humphrey : fast, nubby textured. 1.39 hurricane. The storm of November | . Prominent Orchardist pik ibeetiir vet nail Flings Challenge bf Benzie County Dies Great Lakes seamen,: distinct at Sen. Kennedy FRANKFORT (P—A. J. Ragen from the ocean sailor, have over| _ rominent Benzie County orchard- the years adjusted their methods oan siimbieey rans on t and a leader in state and na-4 to meet as best they can the char- |), nged Sah John Kennedy to a fonal agricultural activities, died acter of the lakes—Superior, the|n nocratic presidential primary f Tiday at Paul Oliver Memorial] coldest and deepest; Michigan, 8\test in Wisconsin if both decide to Hosptal in Frankfort. 36" PAMPERED COTTON PRINTS Fine da?®*cottons in pais- leys, geometrics, florals. Reg. 57¢ Yd. 98c Drip-dry. tunnel of heaving seas, and Erie,| 34. the nomination. x *« * " INT shallow and easily aroused to The Minnesotan said the Wiscon.' He was 74 and had been ill sev- 45 RAYON CHALLIS TYPE PR Ss titanic — — sin primary would be his first test¢ral months. Hand washable, wrinkle- Rig - and Kennedy should join him for Rogers was instrumental in 132 resistant. Many small . 5 7¢ Yd. Striving to beat a mid-December!) fair show of strength. in organizing the Michigan Che 98c freeze, just about everything that — vinds. will float will be pressed into serv-| Questioned at a news confer- fr lesend a of Linge sl p ice to get ore deliveries moving| ence, Humphrey disagreed with P'¢ S€rved as presi om SK) Retr eee: Teamsters President James eral manager of the processing There are 241 ore carriers in the| Hoffa that a liberal cannot be firm 28 years. elected president. He said ne- * * * bedy but a liberal can be elected. ji. aiso was a past president 45” HOLIDAY, FORMAL FABRICS Metallics, brocades, jac- quards, moirre faille, Reg. 87* Asked about his feeling towardof the Michigan Horticultural So- i 1.29 Laud Plan to Use Hoffa, Humphrey said: ciety; the Michigan Farm Bureau; paou-de-scie. Parkin Lots “One does not condemn a faithMichigan Canners Assn.; National] g because of one Judas. I am proudiisen, of Promen road a 54” PRINTED MATTE JERSEY of the support other Teamsters&nd Natonal rry Institute cy oa for Play Areas have given me even if Hoffa doesand was eo eee of thel Three Beautiful Patterns by Prolon! Acetate and nice blend. , NEW YORK (® — The origina. |"0t SUPPOF! me. - plicnigan Conners Se Hand washable. Florals, “a: $197 Yd. 45-Piece Service for Eight... . ——MELMAC: DN tor of a plan to use supermarket geometrics. parking lots as youth play areas during off-shopping periods said teday-he-is getting an enthusiastic j -_ soabeua from sapermarkot own- Would You tike to Waite's ... Fourth Floor ers. + 2 9 ma'am | 4) gomeenneeteyertoors | DINNERWARE : te vice present ot Food| (1) $50.00 Cash—te go to your Favorite ‘ who conceived the idea to curb | Charity—thurch, Club, etc. as conkers (1) $25.00 Mei Coupon Book : ot the ‘reset’ Coa on | (5) $10.00 Mesl; Coupon Books 39.95 $ 66 Shop & Compare! ane alii (10) $5.00 Mea Coupon Books Value Use Your Charge! woe oe ! (20) Luncheon @ Dinner Tickets. Dr. Shane MacCarthy, execu- | i the “il, ‘ready "har conmadea ais | 37 AWARDS [ACH MONDAY suggestion and sald “Successful | Anyone over 16 may entr any day from 11 a.m. to Each pattern is on sturdy Melmac Melamine, guaran- teed two years against breakage, safe in a dishwasher. Service includes 8 each: decorated dinner plates, sauc- execution of the idea will pay | t thes daice 9 p.m. Contestants may @ter as often as they des rich dividends of good will to all | —and may win more th@ once. Not necessary to be ers, B GB plates; 8 cups and cereal bowls; | decorated these enterprises which make | present. Winners will benotified and names posted platter, serving bowl, creamer, 2-piece sugar bowl. recreational spaces available and | each Monday at 1 p.m. Purchase Necessary will identify «them among come, ar 2 = — rvise Join in this novel Popu ‘oods Contest. Details a m — bd r | entry blanks available dify—with 2 tickets issued on aife’s Ching ... Fifth Floor } Monday’s and Tuesday’#and every afternoon (ex- Washable . . . Colorfast . . . Mothproof Rayon Blend Blankets Reg. $5.99 Each 2 For ‘3 j Brucker Hints U.S. cept Sunday) from 2 tel p.m. Test your skill! fo Resume N-Tests WASHINGTON (UPI) — Army| _Secretary Wilber M. Brucker has hinted the United States may have | to resume nuclear tests unless an| international pact is reached ban-| ning such explosions. * * * i } SUBURBAN RESTAURANT “ Birmingham ve {1} © Multi-coler FAMOUS SPRINGMAID CANDYCALE SHEETS @ Pink Gold He said the military had a “‘nec- | e essity from time to time to know} @ Blue @ Green more about this field of nuclear) . . eee WOVEN PASTEL STRIPES ON PERCALE weapons.” j GREENFIELD’S SUMRBAN RESTAURANT @ Red @ Turquoise ; salt ; —Hunter Blvd. So far, the Russians have Just North of 14 Mile Rod on Weedwerd—Hy Waite’s exclusive blanket of rayon Springmaid Candycales are pure white combed percale “i Soa $ ake at eee ate eros in- aE ————___——- and Acrilan that gives maximum sheets with woven stripes in delightful pastel shades. bet spection procedures against such - —< warmth for your money! 6’ ace- Wonderful for yourself and for gifts . . . the fitted ms . testing. However, negotiations are still going on at Geneva. Mef&nwhile, the U.S., Britain and Russia have a temporary ban on nuclear tests until Jan. 1. * * * Brucker also said there is no tate satin binding, 72 by 90" size styles have bias-cut Springfit corners that take the hard 81 by 108 or double fitted 4.39 for single or double bed. Save now! work out of bed-making. 42 by 3812 pillow cases. 1.99 pr . i e Waite's ... Fourth Floor Waite's ... Fourth Floor Charge Your Watch Repair with a Waite’s Fexible CCC Charge! | doubt that Russia is ahead of! - America inthe space race but| 4 in over-all defense, including mis- siles, the U.S. leads. Soapy, 3 Other Hopefuls | to Address Young Dems — WASHINGTON w — Michigan's} SCIENTIFICALLY TESTED Gov. Williams, two other governors | and one senator who have been| a* mentioned for a place on the 1960 We a a : Democratic National ticket will be ee = al TiC among speakers for the Young || ae ee ¢ Democratic National Corivention in ' oe TICK Toledo Nov. 19-21. age * * * | An announcement today said) por 1,500 Young Democrats from 46 | states are expected to attend the! onda Trt uu biennial meeting. Speakefs in addition to Williams | include Govs. Michael V. DiSalje| HIKE A DOCTOR’S of Ohio and Robert B. Meyner of} Humphrey of Minnesota. con *% Waite’s features: 5 a ache been mentioned for the | .‘ certs Timex Watch Lal orate! oF vice presides) FPeQimous timex Watches Biggest Lakes Vessel | — Needs Finishing Touches. Great TIMEX Features; DETROIT ®—The “largest ship | * Shock Resistont ever built for Great Lakes service | was latinched Saturday but finish- | ing touches will not be completed | before the 1959 navigation season | ends, The 730-foot, ore-carrying Arthur B. Homer was launched at the Great, Lakes Engineering Works % a ss SN XY eH. Fine Quality BED PILLOWS B. F. GOODRICH | 100% DACRON LUXURY Super-Thick B. F. Goodrich Ventifoam FOAM PILLOWS BED PILLOWS GOOSEDOWN Plump Size 21” by 27” Plump Firm—10% Air Cooled Geonedown Mattress Toppers *4.99 *4.99 $5.99 *ran'sce— SB QU | ter 55:99 | eee, 85:99 | sac. 57.99 King $6.99 These quality pillows are 100% G.D. $8 99 ” ” : Size completely filled with ft 50 by 70 Full Size ec eer rec ece ater . $10.99 100% dacron. Washable So @ Air conditioned texfoam . . . cushiony 1" thick! Soft, comfortable foam | and fast drying, allergy- | Filled with the finest of @ Restores old mattresses, protects new ones! rubber pillows with zip- | free, dust-proof, moth- | imported white goose- , ed le tick. Wash- | P'0°Of, sanitized to be | down and goosefeathers. @ Free passage of air allows cool sleeping comfort! oie “atndliond acairat germ-free forever. Print- | Covered with printed ed percale tick with long | downproof ticks with A . Unbreakable Mainspring “ * Unbreakable Crystal * Slim-looking styling From They look like a fortune Bethlehem Steel Corp., after whom ‘ but they don’ @ May be cut into other shapes for other uses! : the ship was named, expressed $6.95 -* 4 viaied Ser lestine fs : aphagg Consists of one wearing corded edges. corded. edges for longer et that the ‘freighter couldn't Fe cost a fortune @ san " lasting hygienic freshness! solid piece of foam latex. ' Outfit your beds now! wear, ‘ join the Great Lakes fleet in re- : plenishing ore supplies of stee} Waite’s Watch Recir .. . Street Floor Waite's ... Fourth Floor . Waite's .. . Fourth Floor > , 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS i Ww @ . MAKE VED BAnce “MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1959 SEVENTEEN _ Southfieid Council Prescribes PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Money Remedy = Farmers’ Notebook: | Expects Another Food Price Dip From Our News Wires of a year ago. @Most redyt¢tions WASHINGTON — Retail food will be due to lower prices for pork prices are expected to drop again | head to about $2.80 a head, | averaging about 60 cents. ‘ The department said more care-! in 1960, for the second year in a Observers here believe President ful handling could have prevented| Area Schools Set Open House) Education Week to Be Observed in Romeo, Calls Monthly Check Sessions Meeting on Saturday Shows McNutt Not at row Eisenhower will put off making a much of the loss, resulting from) Oxford Districts The Agricultures Department major farm policy speech until: meat that. must be trimmed away} made the forecast yesterday 'N sometime after Congress returns/and the d&wngrading of carcasses.| National Educational Week will} ee in January |be observed in the Oxford area| fuods, especially meat, will be very x | The Agriculture Department nas , — - large next year. | se bought $1,756,000 worth of lard,|@4 Romeo Community school dis-| ~*~ * * Bie Je ain ren je ground beef and ground lamb for|tricts this week with open houses | e national addres: : amilies | ; The two-year decline in national ty, farm problem conrestretin donation to needy families, 0n-| tonight and tomorrow night in both. milk production also may be a is ceed ior & - wheat pre | Profit institutions and school lunch) The first of a series in the Ox-| ‘ : ford area wil] be tonight at Clear} halted or even reversed in 1960,| Gram rooms ; government experts said. ° | The department said lard and|Lake Elementary and the high| However, announcement of his (ground beef purchases will Con-| school. ® ii milk prices are likely | plans to make an extensive over. (tinue next week but there will be! | be : | Open house will be at Daniel | te as high as they were this | nas trip may mean his schedule (no further purchases of ground) pea se Ww e at Da year, thus slowing the reduction | win be too tight fer the remain. (lamb | Axford School tomorrow night, in dairy herds. In addition, milk | at Lakeville Elementary on Nov : ing two months. — mae q Nov. production per, cow is expected The Japanese beetle has become 16 and at the junior high school | te go up te another record high lickin ae oe she ten “ much more destructive in the; e@ Nov. 19. , uls € | ake speec ‘ ~. | v5 in the coming year. before Congress returned, thus United States than in Japan, its! Similar events at Thomas and native jand |Leonard Elementary schools will) ibe arranged later, school officials | said. * ™ * giving the administration's cam-, Dairy and broiler chicken sup-|paign for a new wheat program an} plies are expected to be about the|early start. same as in 1959 with egg supplies . The Agriculture Department sald that since its discovery in this country near Riverton, N.J., | | * * * j Parents will return to the class- down for the first six or eight) An Agriculture Department ¢ one j : riculture Department’ reported it! LAKE ORION — The theme of| sistant to the superintendent of|$1,075,395. This brings the total he asaticati as 1960 | the program for Thursday night's | schools. lsince July 1 to $15,157,011. as more applications for th Refreshments will be served at! In addition, Harold R. P, , Fy ? - € ¥Y ' conservation reserve than it can|meeting of the Webber School I TA 2.49 p.m. by kindergarten moth. |department finance expert, A ballerina-length gown of chan- tilly lace was worn by the bride. Brown, of seed pearls, and she carried a accept will be “Problems in Learning.”|... guring the half-hour period in|ported school districts have bor-|a center corsage of sweetheart * ~* * Guest speaker will be Mrs. Vena) nich parents may visit with-the rowed more than 21 million dollars ‘roses. Nearly 103,000 farmers have of-|Kirkpatrick, in anticipation of taxes and some| t * * administrative S-|) ..chers fered to put 9,600,000 acres of land eachers. into the long-range phase of the soil bank program. $7,600,000 against primary interest AVON TOWNSHIP — Wednesday |™"4 ——, - « ‘night’s meeting of the Brooklands- was Patricia Robinson of Milford. |Her veil was fastened to a crown re-|bouquet of white carnations with The bridegroom's sister, Bever- ly was maid of honor. Bridesmaid ort nit or oes eee YOUNG DEMS iAvon Schools PTA Will feature an of 5,100,000 acres. | (open house from 7 to 8 p.m. The schools currently are owed : Duties as best man were per-, . turned some 30 million dollars in state formed by the bride's brother in. Bazaar in Rochester a aid, Brown reported. law, Larry Baker of Pontiac.| County Couple Resides Army Post PROULX MRS. DONALD V. for the north woods. Arthritis? ‘‘Never had a sick Fault Alone for Woes SOUTHFIELD — A dis- pute among City Council members over municipal fi- nances that goes back to 1958 reached a possible so- lution Saturday. The Council voted unan- imously to meet once a month to check the pre- vious month’s financial statement. The meeting had been called to |give City Administrator Robert J. McNutt a chance to explain his un- authorized spending of city funds. McNutt was charged by Coun- cil President C. Hugh Dohany of “aggressive spending”’ in that the city’s first-quarter audit revealed many budgeted “accounts had been overdrawn. Dohany had asserted McNutt was making expenditures never author- jized by the Council. tee, oi es | * * * “ The meeting indicated that |Southfield’s financial problems Ponting Brews Fuels ere not the fault of McNutt alon cone 4 = iw a Mc? e, her gear all set to leave Sunday jut cdiald a Gal ak he doce ot Mayor Donald L. Swanson, City Clerk Patrick Flannery, Treasurer Clara Lane and other Council members responsible for regulat- ,ing expenditures, according to Do- | hany. | He said Flannery had been au- thorizing Miss Lane te make out checks knowing that they had not been approved by the Council. . . McNutt was ordered by the Coun- as tae Sala ——, cil to prepare a transfer affidavit ° ; lto take care of una riated and pprop: | For 12 years the little woman! overdrawn items. |has walked several miles daily,|. . . stubbornly refusing to give in to, WUERFEL RESIGNS "' said Mrs. Puckett. getting —set—for—her! —Ever—since~the day that Mrs; the theory that—stiffenmg —joints}The Council_has _agreed_to meet every third Monday of the month are a part of old age : Pe * A to check over finances and expendi- ; tures. . “I've never had a sick day in imy lite—and I've never had_to! Councilman Robert J. Wuerfel ihave the attentions of a doctor,”| tendered his resignation, effec- |Nora said as she continued to| tive at ence. A Council member |polish her hunting boots. | seven years, he gave ill health Early in Nora’s married tite, | “* MS renee. | her husband taught her how te | His resignation is being held in use a gun. The.two would target abeyance. practice in the field wear their | Dohany said “there are a few home, and soon Nora became | Matters that Wuerfel with other a crack shot. }councilmen had been working on and it is felt by the Council that he About cent middle of summer for! s.ou1d be called on in an advisory the last 12 years, Mrs. Puckett capacity until these issues are would begin to concentrate on that wrapped up.” exciting date—Nov. 15, when she, | Dohany wouldn't say what the with her son Lloyd's family join the| matters were trek of hunters headed upstate. She! : has been a widow for 25 years. ~ Enidber soon Radio Network Nora has no time for culinary Just for Doctors the cabin near Atlanta. Her com- Pilqnned by NBC efforts once she gets settled in panions respect her wishes — with neereee. | NEW YORK (UPI) — The x *e& * | National Broadcasting Co. an- Only once did Nora “act like a Prouncet yesterday it ts setting chicken,” she said. As she was | up a special radie network to returning to her original destina- | carry medical news, soothing tion she eame face to face with | musie and pharmaceutical com- a huge black bear. Both froze in | mercials to docters’ offices. their tracks — Nora affraid to NBC said the service will start shoot and only wound the animal, | out running 12 hours daily on _— GAR Auxiliary Plans the bear cautiously eyeing her. | GM frequencies in 16 cities, and After 10 minutes, the woman = tony of al ‘ etties raged slowly began to ease away, and nation. when she was at a safe distance, ke & and ran as fast as _ she; The department said it will be H | M Teachers will be in their re- | {Ushers were Charles Sofko of Or-! ble t tracts slightly | al C amald spective classrooms to greet ° . chard Lake and Jerry Piatowski Se ee eel ke 4 parents and talk about their Plan Lingerie Party lof Union Lake. more than its original goa! but it still will have to turn many farm- ers down. * * * A priority system will be used} in awarding contracts with first) call going to farmers who offer the most productivity at the lowest! neTROIT uw — Sen. Patrick V.; FOUR TOWNS — A panel dis. rate ; McNamara (D-Mich) was given|cussion on ‘Let's Help Johnny” There also will be a special prior-), standing ovation by Michigan's will be the highlight of the Four ity for farmers who were turned) young Democrats Saturday night/Towns School PTA meeting Thurs- down on the 1959 conservation Telfer his voting record was de-|day at 8 p.m serve signup because the depart: tended by an official of the United} Mrs. A. Ronconie; school nurse, ment didn’t have enough funds tO auto Workers. \Mrs. Beatrice Arnold. principal, accept all comers. x *& * \Charles Bryan, teacher, and par- UAW Vice President Leonardjents Mrs. Jay Bendall and Raiph Woodcock told young Democrats|Allen will participate in the dis- that McNamara helped take out/cussion. : what he termed ‘‘the 15 most| From 7:30 to 8 p.m. parents will A reception was held in Dublin Community Center. . . | children's work. | UAW Vice President, The business session will Defends His Voting for iow in the multi-purpose room. Labor R f Bill Fifth grade room mothers will, P apor Ketorm Di serve refreshments. Hall, Naylor and Cooley Lake 35 pounds of prime porterhouse jroads. The public is invited. |steaks. UNION LAKE — The Ladies’ tol-! Auxiliary of the Union Lake Fire ‘Dept. will hold a Lingerie Party Dow Vice President W. H. Schuette Dies vicious and repressive antilabor|/meet with teachers MIDLAND (UPI) — William H.|clauses”” in the labor reform bill| = Schuette, 47, Dow Chemical Co./passed by Congress. Woodcock! TROY — National Book Week made his remarks in introducing|provides the theme for the Morse vice president and manager of the McNamara as a guest at the ban-|School PTA meeting Wednesday Midland Division, died at Mid- land Hospital last night of an ap-quet. tevening rel ck. . SSS . E & . aan Sf got oye veneral man-| Earlier last week, McNamara Teachers taking part in the Re hes : a) eo “ot e was attacked by Teamsters | program will be Mrs. Rudaulph ; yee , 5 ager of the Midland Division since! 1955, a director of the cmbiiay President James R. Hoffa at a Smith, Mrs. Olavi Koskinen, since 1957 and was elected a Dow} Teamsters conference here. | Miss Margaret Williams, Mrs. vide president test year. | Hoffa said the Teamsters will | Mark Katiszerski and Mrs, Ed- : | oppose MeNamara for re-election | ward Aspinwall. | in 1960 because he voted for the | Others will be Mrs. Joseph Bry- Senator Green, at 92, | Dil’s final passage. ant, Mrs. Vernon Wass, Mrs, Rob- ° - * * ert Curtis and Mrs. Keller Doyle. to Have Eye Operation Woodcock said, ‘I am sure that} Refreshments will be served by PROVIDENCE, .R.1. @ — Sen. McNamara and others were con-|fifth grade room mothers. Theodore Francis Green (D-RI) teft/cerned with taking out that which ——- FETE 3% YEARS WED — A surprise open house party held for Mr. and Mrs. Grant Mapley of 89 Washington St., Oxford, Sat- for Philadelphia today to enter was put in... to destroy the} CLARSTON — The Clarkston Lankenau aoe for an opera. labor movement.” | Woodeock'Elementary School PTA will spon- urday at their home to mark their golden wedding anniversary. tion on his richt eve. exlicd the new law “an irritant!sor a supper for parents at 6:15) Springing the party on their parents were Mrs. Howard Beacom, Tip Qherar old genctar Wade “od a nui onc’ but he declared p.m. Thursday at.the school. | Mrs. Frank Graham, Burl, Thomas, all of Pontiac, and Sherry and ee aes on ab age otion og hic ‘he frad> union movement can | Following the suppér, teachers Charles, both of Oxford. Residents of Oakland County for the past Pi ese a rr eo. Me epeeis to ‘ive (na fishbowl, then it bas will talk on children’s classwork!| 45 years, the honored couple also have 17 grandchildren and eight Le hosphahzed te, 10 days jn right to existence.” activities " j great- ichildren. , a ~ 7’ the ‘ . © ‘the Republic, are completing plans | For hunting togs, Mrs. Puckett ROCHESTER—Members of the iRochester Women’s Relief Corps, ‘auxiliary to the Grand Army of ifor their annual bazaar and har- 'vest supper to be held Friday at |Pine streets. ' * * *& Among-features will be an apron booth and a miscellaneous booth w Christmas presents wil) be sold. The women will start serving the cafeteria-style supper at 5 * * * Proceeds from the two-fold event will be used for relief of needy families or those whose homes have burned and also to help war .veterans. Some money alsd is allocated to purchase flags for presentation to local organizations, churches and schools. Mrs. Mae Axford is general ichairman of the supper. Construction Set in Month at Oak Park School OAK PARK — Construction of an addition to Clinton Elementary School will get under way next month now that the Board of Edu- cation has sold $1 million in gen- eral obligation bonds. Low bidder on the bonds was First of Michigan, Inc., with a 4.05 per cent interest rate. Voters approved the bond issue last June, but sale was held up three months waiting approval of the State Municipal Finance Com- mission. This was given 30 days ago. p.m. Jt is open to the public. | Looking back, she saw the big ‘bear still standing there. ‘He had a bewildered look on his face,’’ she recalled, * * slips a heavy union suit On over her regular underclothes, then at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Fire, A 1,000-pound steer yields about/Avon Township Hall, Fourth and) .omes the wool shirts, breeches gloves and cap. Two pairs of wool socks go on before her oversized shoes, then comes feather, sheep- skin-lined moccasins and boots. “It-doesn't matter how cold it is or how deep the snow, I never get a cold,” Nora related. * * So, about-5 a.m. Sunday, Nora Puckett will have selected hér deer trail, set to get her buck, or just watch the bears go by. Victor McLaglen fo Be Buried Tuesday | HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Victor McLaglen’s funeral will be held Tuesday The big, bull-voiced actor died Saturday of congestive heart fail- [ure—ending along and—-colorfu! career which was almost as ad- venturous off-screen as on. - * * veteran of more than 35 years on stage, silent screen .and modern films. Before that he was a soldier in-the Boer War and World War I and was a prizefighfer in Canada. * * * His films included ‘The Inform- er,” for which hé won an Aca- demy Award; “What Price Glory,” and the more recent ‘The Quiet Man,” for which he re- ceived an Academy Award nom- ination. ; He was 72 when he died and al Henry T. Sjogren, project manager, said the new system would aid doctors whe do not have the time te keep up with medical news. He said the | music, between medical bulle- , tins and commercials, would be of a sort designed to put patients at ease. A doctor will receive a mualti- plex receiver, speakers and a a year, NBC said. The network will be guided by a board of doctors, and will be called the medical radie system. City Fire Officer Faces Court Today A veteran of 13 years on the Pontiac Fire Department was scheduled to appear before Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Stan- aback today on a charge of feloni- ous assault. Lt. Raymond R, Fay, 35, was arrested Friday night after he allegedly went to the home of William | H. Whitmire, 19, of 3715 Grafton St., Orion Township, armed with a 12-gauge shotgun. Whitmire was cleared last week of guilt in the knife slaying ot a Pontiac man, Louis Vanit- velt, 26, im an Auburn Heights brawl Oct. 25, A coroner’s jury called the knif- ing justifiable homicide, saying Whitmire acted in self defense. Fay is a friend of the Vanitvelt family. Deputies picked up Fay when he lost control of his. pickup truck near the Whitmire house and ran ‘loaded, officers said, maintenance guarantee for $120 - into a ditch. The shotgun Was TWENTY- 79d WIA0 DW THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1959 Too apy Aap Evi ul they're |domestic crisis — have a good cry, out on a ore they turn|threaten to sue for divorce, or | deve wage of ‘deg i cline et Wee wil attl ed Ne et work s Bid © Probers Fond Adi robers fon 1euj] _ OUR LARGEST ARRAY {i Pp the business institute . . | meters OF AA7/0WALLY ADVERTISED» ,. ail. % . . : pa | _ of pontiac television quiz investigation opened| Plied ne. ee ee ee ee | ite I ct with the toppl ¢; FCC, which handles allocation — a : : its last act wi e toppling of) CBS television network — and | lan idol and dropped the curtain|f television channels and radio! ; mean everything.” five days later on a shaken in-|frequencies, and FTC with juris- od . nae ; Certainly for a tinie the tele.| Offering Courses In dustry. oo» ¢ |diction over advertising mis-rep-| vision viewer will get “programs, ' = | What's eoming next? For the |e tations, can expect to hear|painstakingly scrubbed of any | general business industry, tougher laws, providing| ‘from the subcommitte it is re-|semblance of deceit. And he will jail for skulduggery on the air, if/ port. And perhaps the legisigtive iget no big giveaway shows on the} secretarial studies the House legislative oversight | fecommendations will suggest |Old pattern. subcommitte has its way. im ore power for them. With ultimate benefit he will . | “The conduct and morality of|derive from television's terrible! accounting | Its pg on possible further |the entire television industry have|five. days may depend on how . . | regulations to — = lee |been challenged,” chairman Oren/hard the industry works to remove office machines s i — — a, Sires |Harris (D-Ark) said. the bad taste now in the public rmed. The fall of Charles Van Doren, mouth — and perhaps on what \ The probers, having blasted big| quiz st here of hereca, was leads the investigators further @ B. J. CHAPIN, Director money quiz shows perhaps beyond} only the loudest crash among digging may give the industry. i 5 00 any future revival, now are map-| many careers shattered by the | ‘Lionel Trains from 10 4. Pla Cro uet Set a _. ‘ping a broader investigation of| dlaclosures. At Bomb D I 7 W. Lawrence FEderal 2-3551 itelevision and radio practices. - , th om bom eveloper rT $ 50 $ ‘How broad, they will discuss Dec.| Television’s own internal house- : . 26 Bi k 28 R t P| _ 54” __ 9 when they return here. jcleaning goes on, as National) Enters Hospital Again I e Ju Uk emo € ane . Broadcasting Co. President Robert! ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP)—Dr. Ar-| s 8 WHAT ABOUT FCC, FTC? |E. Kintner, among others, told|thur H. f ; Trike Dt : $488 eee) . | thur Compton, one of the de- | =» « 8 Soar | The staff, among other things, the subcommittee. | velopers of the atomic bomb, is| s RAMMLER- 1) con enplaned tor toe. second tine - Play Badminton . “1 Pocket Radio 54° é s s > promote particular music. | What's ahead or television ess 2 5 laaeck? | The: physicist was admitted to! il k t Pr c $400 RA IN AND SEE THE NEW DODGE! | Witness after wiiertt on | Perh |Barnes Hospital Sunday for what) 0 er a es . , wae y "ses = ws 8 asked whether the Federal Com- | erhaps a hint comes in the ja hespital spokesman termed a| Dodge, Simca, Chrysler, Imperial, Dodge Truck | munications Commission or Fed- | statement, by Dr. Frank Stan- |checkup. The spokesman said | Pia Badminton Set . i w1001 MAIN ST. __ ROCHESTER OL 2-9111 | re Trade Commission bed tak- | ton, president ball the Octambia Compton was in good condition. 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Limit Two 1 ' Limit One i 1 Limit One _i = U GE HOT DOGS j * 1 LB. ONLY 39¢ ty $1.00 i $1.99 ROLLS SKINLESS c Limit Twe 1 ! Limit One _3 i Limit sail : - ee couPONe | _ SCHICK All Steel LEAF RAKE Good Taste || Young Fresh - | Phillip’s ry Powershave SALTINES || BEEF LIVER. i.|| TOMATOES |) =~ —--: crenn 16k. QS|[tean pacon squares... =|) TO] sc Mon., Thurs., Fri., Sat. ‘til 9 P.M. W. Huron Store a Super Bargain Center| | All, Food Town Markets Open Sunday 9 A. M. te 6 P. M. : 2 FOOD TOWN) PEOPLE’S SUPER MARKETS FOOD MARKETS Eee one ss 2135 Dixie HIGHWAY HIGHLAND RD. 1200 BALDWIN AVE. 3 263 AUBURN 465 £. PIKE ST. 700 AUBURN ST. WEST SIDE EAST SIDE DOWN TOWN | 2 TREGRAPH 8D. "Il v.90 ot WAUAMS LAKE £0. ot COUMarA _ pepe GPmN 7 SAYS A WERK 1052 W. HURON 529 N. PERRY 142 WAYNE ST. OPEN SUNDAY 9 to 6 9 AM. til 10 PLM. MARKETS~OPEN SUNDAY 9 AM. to 6 P.M West of Telegraph Glenwood next to Wrigley Black of County Bidg. Waterford Topic! MARKETS |Market Booms Will Be Land gests ct som Market by growers and sold by : them in wholesale package lots. Board Also Planning onctations are furnished ‘by the to Discuss Three Other Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Projects This Evening *""* Defroit Produce FRUITS Action on several items of ma-; jor importance is expected at to- on Steel News |} NEW YORK w—The stock mar- [ket surged upward in heavy trad- ing early today as steelworkers re- = Nixon Sees Nomination Battle; Yes Battle Pole, (Editor's Note: How does Vice Pres- ident Richard M. Nixon view the 1960 residentia) race and his chances in the first of three ches on Nixon by the Press Interna- . tonal Senate staff who has travele extensively with the vice president.) By WILLIAM THEIS WASHINGTON (UPI) — Vice; President Richard M. Nixon and his advisers now expect Gov. Nel- son A. Rockefeller te seek the GOP presidential nomination in 1960. And they’re convinced it’s the New Yorker's own idea—not that of In Favor of High-Tone Contest: 2ser.m. on six months."” Again, Nixon's eye is on the election. Besides, what happens in the primaries is somewhat up Rockefeller. As the man who must‘paign over a long period.” come from behind, he’ll have to make his move, the Nixon leaders feller remain cordial, with contend. Most political observers agree : that Nixon need not strain at {Second place on the other's this stage. An expert on pacing But both appear to have a himself for a campaign, the vice [interest in avoiding a president underscored his reluc- (Shattering fight. Free Hostage, Flee ia country club caretaker hostage ability to handle a public office is shot it out with 75 policemen early seriously circumscribed,” he said.'today and then escaped. We added that “it is generally be-| toJieved difficult to sustain a cam-|jocked herself in the clubhouse of- The caretaker’s wife, who had ifice, kept an open telephone line Nixon’s relations with Rocke-|to police throughout the gun battle. appar-| Officers swapped shots with the ent mutual respect. Each man has'gang until one fled using the care- made it clear he wouldn't consider taker, John McDonald as a shield. ticket. At first. light, police rushed the genuine |club but found the other gunmen party-|had slipped away. They believed there were three or four in the jturned to the mills after a 116- lday walkout. Key stocks advanced from frac-| |tions to more than a point while, o Some volatile issues rose as much/ | SEN. WILLIAM LANGER i 'ss W ‘ord. Township Bourd Apples, Delicious, bu... syeuee $3.5 : night's Waterf rd,To a . P i : |Apples, Greenings, bu. .. 235;4s half a dozen points. meeting, according to Supervisor | apples. Jonathon, PE cscceeccsscs 2 90 ‘ mn : | >} | Apples. ciIntosh. bu paearielew ora) aaa Rimer Jonnson. laopaes Memo 135 The market was strong from 0 OF UJ enator ect Ee | es, now, u - e One of four projects postponed | 5b ies. cider 4¢-gal. case ...... wcace 2 081 the openi with the ti ia t from previous meetings, the an-|Pears’ Kiefer, bu. .....ss--seesses 2.75 e opening e ticker tape | nexation of part of Waterford Qunte, *O%° > Township to the City of Pontiac will be considered. eeoksanrre Beets, ore: bu : sinstielele site _ ed to the news with vigorous gains. | Pontiac has requested land pees °o 1, dos. COR, 2200 --anke 3 ; b : cate ge, bu ie coe: «| ae — , = _ ems. bounded by Telegraph road, Cabbage, Curly, bu. ...........00.6- 1.75) lhe advance spread to most sec William Langer Fought Woot ria A a the G ‘ [Cabbage Red, bu. .......sse--62 1.78 tions of the list. Big blocks were | est boulevard and the Grand (Cabbage Sprouts bu. ......... v-+ 2 28'traded in the key industrials and| Man Battles; O posed y id | Trunk Railroad for the new (éerrots. topped. pu. -.--.. senses ar sails county building. Cauliflower, doz sisi: alee ais + 3.00 | . a * * Ike, Benson |Celery, pascal, 2', dos. .... . 3.50 | . * * * Celerv —_ it 2.09) Gains of better than a point were nel, 4 is . ae a : “ = we - ma The Board also will discuss re-|Gourds. pbk. .--... ol... 1.28 scored by U.S. Steel, Republic | WASHINGTON (AP) —_ Sen. zoning four acres on Elizabeth Horseradish, pk o..:+--+ss-seer+- 180 Steel, Jones & Laughlin and William (Wild Bill) Langer (R- Lake road west of the Clinton/Leeks. doz bchs ecient 1.78 Youngstown Sheet ND), a colorful political maverick | River bridge for a shopping cen-|Onions. Sry S0-Ib. bag.... se..-... 130, Similar gains were made by such both as governor and as senator, ter Parsley Root doz. bu. ..........-. 1.58 rails as Erie, Illinois Central and is dead at 73. i |Parsley, curly, doz. bchs. .......... 90! to the electric) Parsnips. Cello Pak. doz. |Parsnips, *2 bu . An amendment 225/ Baltimore & Ohio 425) running as much as three min- | utes behind transactions. Steels, rails and motors respond- Succumbs al 23 New York Cen-| He spent 45 turbulent years in '75\tral and Santa Fe added about a politics, the last 19 of them in the tance to jump early when he arrived in California last week. “Once a man is a candidate his Thomas E. Dewey or someone else. Nixon, the clear front-runner, will withhold his own formal an- nouncement as long as possible. That probably means January, the \deadline for entering the first-in- |the-nation New Hampshire presi- dential primary. But the 46-year-old vice presi- dent wants to keep any nomina- tion contest on a high plane. He has instructed his supporters not to attack Rockefeller. Just before leaving for California! last week, he told this reporter: | “While it is too early to make a! \decision on seeking the nomina-| ition, my general philosophy is that) |it is a mistake to run for the nom- | jination and take your eye off the ‘election, * * * | “If you're running for the elec-| ltion, you prove yourself worthy of! } | |the nomination. And I don't be-| Anything could happen. Tomorrow: What Nixon thinks | -P about the 1960 issues.) peo Higbie Co. Sales Ahead of 1958 At the annual stockholders meete ing of Higbie Manufacturing Co., Rochester, Carlton M, Higbie Jr., president announced that sales and earnings are ahead of last years for the same period. * * * Re-elected. to the board of di- rectors were Higbie, Henry More gan, William B. Young, Edwin R. Stroh Jr., Christopher E. Holz- worth, Bert B. Ward, H. Stanley Krusen, and Alfred J. Fisher Jr. ——= gang. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Notice—On or before December 14th, 1959, bids addressed to the Pontiae Township Board, 2060 Opdyke Road, Pon- tiac, Michigan, will be received for fleet insurance for the automotive equip- ment of Pontiac Township. A list of the equipment and coverage desired may be obtained from the Township Clerk. Bids are to be opened at 8 o'clock the night of December l4th at the Town- Cy Owens, Inc., has taken the first step in a move to a new location. Y'nst Sh & T. 127 DOW -JONES 11 AM. AVERAGES be run on kerosene, aviation jet] fuel, marine or automotive diesel | fuels and gasoline. include Rockefeller, whose $100 million personal fortune tops the list, and Sens. John F, Kennedy ordinance requiring that wiring! potatoes. 90 ib. ba cece ese sseee 1.50 : le rag a Ng ag rf call ngage in all commercial buildings be in Pumpkins bu UGeccsucsecsecss 1-10|point each! |Senate lieve in tearing down party op- te Valeri as ail tp metal conduits will be acted upon bocepet a Harpe Mes Pr Sheu io | Langer died in his sleep of heart ponents. Even taking notice of Greta V, Bueck. cure § é . e MS. sees-. | P _ . | Fy ov. 7, 8, |Radishes, red, dor bu... 1.28 Texas Instruments jumped faijure’sunday at his home. He had|them, except in a friendly way, is nna ‘ ~~ -_* eee: ee eee ee | een than 6. Other electronics |been ailing since his wife, Lydia, ;OUut.” STATE OF MICHIGAN—IN THE PRO- Permits for fuel oil tank Lig freon pena ees 1 35 | rose from fractions to around & [Ging of cancer Aug. 4 He recently Fa tukbae 0 ioe ivanded thai Bete. Coert foe Shs County of Oa stallations will be discussed as an Squash, Buttercup. bu - 150/ point. | a : : a pattie & & In the matter of the petition concern- ddition to the township heating Saussh. Butternut. bu. ... - 135 . spent three weeks in a hospital] Rockefeller has already decided ing Gerald Bozik, Minor. Cause No. a 0 Lita A 7S Squash, Delicious, bu. .... ++» 150° Lukens Steel jumped 3's to 90% with pneumonia. to run, one Nixon aide said, “All 16981 code | Squash. Hubbard. bu -» 1.50 ‘ harec . id To Pauline Bozik, mother of said child? ; . Turnips, bu. -: 12§/0n 4,200 shares. Allegheny Lud-| ~ *« * the signs point to it. We have te Petition having been filed in this Cours m-} | Stee 91 ne y - 7 n hi t whereabouts o ogpameige amperage ail GREENS lum Steel spurted 2% to 55 on) Langer steered a safe COUrS€) assume that and we've assumed the mother of said child are unknown ship engineers Johnson & Ander-|o.seage mo 3. ov. ..... seoesseees-0190,2,000 shares. jthrough many a political whirl-) trem the start there would be a and said child has violated a law of the son regarding a new test well for/alard, Ne. Ete. coece Eid Gains of point or better were) wind. In 1834 he easily won nom-| fight for the nemninatien.” placed ‘under the jurladietioa of this uron Gardens property OWMers yustard No. 1, bu. ...---..+.-. 2.00 Made by ugias Aircraft, U.S./ination for re-election as governor . Court will be presented. Four bids were Sorrel bu. -.....-..s+sseesereee-ee 138, Rubber, Anaconda, Kennecott,|of North Dakota although he was Tie ee ae eee Oe Oe agate flpsagl cee cxgholy mh yr submitted to the engineers at last |Spmeen, OS: bu ttt! s@] Eastman Kodak, Union Carbide, | under a federal indictment for gga g esicggat tagar tha Lonel —" th rel gad scone tll a week's meeting. |Turnips, bu ete cee es eee eees 2.0'Thiokol, General Dynamics and|conspiracy. Eventually he was ac-|© “ixons home state o a Gaaters Court) suas Amaoe (19008) Weak A report is ted f Cai | SALAD GREENS | Philco quitted fornia. It was beefed up further, area. la toe City” of Pontiac nd said expected from \An'T |celery Cabbage, dos $2 25| Only last y. ion last week by Rockefeller’s hiring | |County, on the 17th day of November, m Ceeeccceeees ear he won re-election | : A.D. 1968, at ni : in— the fore- Johnson on pretiminary proced- (Endive, bu. ......-.20.csseeseeees 1.38 wiions ein a single cam-|of speech writer Hugh Morrow cha om nae bereey COMA ure for applying to the federal [Becarole, DU. -...cecreeeeessereeeres 2.00! New y, k St k ing ; 8 lf the staff of Sen. Kenneth B LONG TRAIL NEARS — Probably sometime before January [to appear personally at satd hearing. | Lettuce, leaf, bu. ............ or OCKS paign speech—in spite of the op-|!rom Me : oO . Jen cane yt Pe ee It being impractical to make personal House and Homes Finance Co. | ; | position of his own state Republi \Keating (R-NY). Morrow, a for- Vice President Richard Nixon will formally announce his candi- |esrvice hereof. this summons and notice * ° me a : Teak for planning public improve- Poult nd Eaas \Alted Ch’ s..catta mreese, 88 ++ 318 oon organization. mer newsman and magazine writ-| dacy for the GOP nomination for President of the United States. [shell be served by publicdtion of & copy ment. ouliry a gg | Allis Chal’... 36 LOF Otass ll 46! rs ler, worked in the campaign for| Being in the front-running position, he can hardly avoid a battle Pontiac Press, « newspaper printed and | um Geese 2 5 : , . = ° . 5 y. A summary of financial con-| DETROIT POULTRY Alcoa na 190 tie a *: bop In the Senate Langer voted| Keating when he was Rockefeller’s} in the New Hampshire primary. The filing deadline for the elec- witness, the _Henerenle Arthu r x ae = . i — : .. | r pas . i ’ . t ity ditions of the Lorraine Manor) DETROIT. Nov. 6 (AP)—Prices per 4™ Gyn ‘'.: 49° Lockh Aire .. 267 against the Eisenhower adminis-|"unning mate last year. tion is in January. at onkiee te aig County. this bch day and the Coleman Friedman sewer Ii _r —o B. Detroit for No. 1 quality Am Cyan 0.6 poe s ae St oe tration more often than with it.| PUSHES SELF a IS ———*+-+-_ ——————|0f November, A.D. 1058 ‘ilive poultry Am M & Pdy ., 983 Lone 8 Cem ., 32.6 ‘| (Seal) "ARTHUR FE. MOORE, | Heavy type hens 16-17; light type hens - | ; we | system will be discussed. \9 heavy” ype ‘brolers a fryers Sgt epic : ies pon all so He opposed Eisenhower's foreign! The Nixon camp believes even) saber a wets” one Ibs. whites 17-18: Barred Rocks 20-21;, qm N Gas $9.3 Mack Trk ., 484/policy, Anything proposed by Sec-| ore strongly that it is Rocke-| ' ' ® Deputy Probate Register, caponettes over 5 Ibs. 25-26; ducklings am Smelt $1.4 Manning 23.6 retar { Agricult E Taft | — = usiness 0 es | Juvenile Division 22 Climbers Safe (Estee Sava FS ed EE ins $1 eno as ulmoat ewe to beng er Tuber, tan former NewiLOMPAC! CNGINE | ere / : s m To 6 Merr Ch & 8 17.1 fas a sure to ring York Gov Thomas E Dewey or . ——- ———- - ---- —— —— =< ; : 65 i : a. 2 : ae } —}: 9 : e DETROIT EGGS “howe WAC... 4 pith be ke M tape] Langer’s Opposition. IGop tate chairman Judson Mec: - rch 6 Austin, "30, of - 1622) 9 Minh M & M 149.6] state c | ‘Stanley Blvd., Birmingham, has ° bd DETROIT, Nov. 6 (AP)—Bggs f.0.b. Armco Stl - 752 wginn P & L.. 334) Langer was an orator of the old | nouse who is ‘‘pushing”’ the Rocke-| . . y “a 8 , e in Himala an Trek Detroit tn case lots federal-state graded: Armour & Co. am Monsan Ch .. $1 _|gchool. wh phasized his word | : P , been named national market an- y gornitee—Grode A entre large 43: large) Aveo Cor ips Mont Ward .. 52 with “indmill ¢ ; ize ae wo , {feller cause. The Nixon people) VO Ves in red lalysis manager at FAMILY PLAN! j/ 40-41; medium -38; sma : gr Balt & Oh .... 44 Mot Prod .... 54 |Wi windmull gestures a MUCD ibase this on reports of personal DP ; ® |B large 36; browns—Grede A large 39-41;| Retr, gteel . 564 Mot Wheel .. 18.1 : ; _| of the newly formed KATMANDU, Nepal (UPI) — |Peetipte ‘of goverment’ Total weekly Boeing Air :.. 33) Murray Cp .. 28.8 cr ee eee political contacts made by the Plymouth-De Soto- it The Nepal Government an- Oct. 31-Nov. 6 were 11,336 cases poe cl vs “i Goak ms in hi - th “a we i governor in his own behalf. Walled Lake Company Valiant Division of ¥ nounced today that 32 members | Commercially graded: Briggs Mig ... 12 Nat Dairy 5; \/n his mouth. He never lit one.| Nixon's overworked staff looks - "Chrysler Corp | Whites—Grade A jumbo 41',; extra; Brist My .... 467 Nat Gyps .. 587 * * * “6 . nd| Develo S Gas Turbine Af . of a Japanese mountain-climb- |!*"* 36'2; large 3645-39; medium 23's-/ Brun Balke ...117 | Nat Lead .. 112 : .. |with envy on the manpower a Pp With the cor- ing team feared Killed im an jsi,-36, mediuin G3; grace’ are Se Bacco Gns 2 47 NY Central. a2 | Mis sense of humor could be dis money resources available to the) Size of Breadbox [poration since avalanche actually “are safe and ‘ . : Can Ory = 20 aod went . - 9 concerting. e, while -|multi-millionaire governor. | 1955 A ti ill ¥ , cecehiie ta Tok tu sh Cdn Pac ..... 26-2 NO, Pac ’ 45g;Homer Capehart (R-Ind) was 55, Austin w r ly.” News in Brief \Gase ut 27) 3a4 ae =e Se making a Senate speech, Langer} Still ate * = nee Williams’ Research Corp. of head tne study of 4 |Cater Trac ... 321 Onto OF jo ./lounged in a chair in front of him.| (arters, vice presiden Walled Lake today < ced de-|2utomotive = mar- The team membe = - |Ches & Oh ... 69.2 Owens Il] G) 1004, . c y announce ie . ae oe lChrysler .. 627 Pac G& Fl .. 624/He began plucking cigars from| office force has had to carry the velopment of a compact, medium-| Ket potential for § ay ported en route to this capital ‘eke tati-the Avalon |S eros G8 sine Air . a Capehart's breast pocket rising work lead that accomp- horsepower gas turbine engine the Plymouth, De me | Someone " r oca Cola 2 - y is Sra city of Nepal with all members : Colg Palm... 365 param Pict 483, The struggle was inequal. Cape-| ames am approaching political ; \Soto and Valiant. Cafe, 39150 Aub Rd., A e ggle was ineq Cape about the size of a breadbox. in goed cendition. eer di mip = Sd Fg . at Parke Ds cee ‘4 hart faltered, lost the thread of; contest. Nixon, despite his * * me A graduate of AUSTIN . = * | eos Se ely | Con N Gas’): 48 pepsi Cole... 33.3/his speech and final] ; t| $45,000 a year in federal pay, is rj - Dartmouth College, Austin served The 32 climbers were reported $25 from cigarette and juke box Cont can 46.1 Driver a ee y Just sa sak a: wey mneal Sam Williams, research engin- dh Aniy coawer tienes missing while trying to scale the (Machines, it was reported to cen eee eS = ib Peele Bh crs 9 1|down. y . eer who heads the company on er / a an War 8 sheer slopes of 23,440-foot Gauri Romeo State Police over the Cont Oil, 487 ri pet. age Pical of Langer's often lonely| His office emphasizes that he\w. Maple road, said the turbine, SUNS Ne Hore , Sankar peak west of Mount Ev. Weekend. \Gorn Pas || $4. Proct & @ ., a6.6/Political stands was one of his accepts no fees for his many public/ysing a heat-exchange principle, ican S Sie jn in the Himal on te | —— Pun ae 13-4 Lash Ol re last Senate votes. He and Sen. | speeches. Any honorariums that! was developed at a cost of a mil-| ne Son ta — ed| " y Someone broke into the Pilgrim! Det ‘rais 43.1 Repud sti... 74 |Wayne Morse (D-Ore) were the|come along in spite of this rule!lion dollars jCo. o uth Lyon has announc Nepal-Tibet border. ; it) pte Sete eens ; : c 4 ion dollars. a h Sveken If they had been buried under | Holiness Church, 19 W. Fairmount elo pose as Review = =. only senators to vote against the|are automatically relayed to some = watahe about nd ithe sppointinent of ean lg an avalanche, as feared, it would \St., it was reported to Pontiac poy cuem a Reyn eMt .... 652 labor reform bill at the last ses-|charity. The most recent have he weighs Sent a poune Le as chief ie - e Ne ’ ° Police urday. Nothi was -| Bast K 064 Rey Tob .... 61.2 gsjon. hs rse power. ams sa S icancy caus y the retirement o reat the y in | ported pra —= “ Eh auto Le 303 Saftway St 304) Bree Weel lee ot a is one-third the weight per horse. |L. E. Robinson Nov. 1. The ap- Y an cover yourself, your tal Bion tal ' 7 ‘ . 2 n> OT} - . ; | . . Be ou can . a a ke wan Himala ' : , Tene ‘cae 134 pa Mic, es oa ton University. pevinr Of ater igen Hiniiee — [polntnert “was snes wid hades wife, your children ... even m the primitive yas. gid eee Wee wana Ex e-O... 3? Shell O1l a xk *« — exchangers. Pa rani a 75- |liam A. McHattie, firm president. future children . . mate } ’ “ ‘ restone MMOns . «- f a : - 7 rsepower p as n “econom -size” Life o ir- im. Stat ea ee Mas By RRR Ns mT St) Row neces tm Beal ov | DW. Maclzan, Orchard Lake) SFU Prietion, J Grain Prices , Sipe lage ; ¥#] Bouth ng = a | mae dis ing . ‘wil h eornking the Detroit River. . lof the supervisor suggestion pro- one, low-cost policy - +. one CHICAGO GRAIN }Gen. Bak B3 ee Rd... 233 fu agen e Ni “The turbine h dint gram section of the Ford Motor) budget-size premium. Great crain prices Nove vapy — Gvenis® Auto Injuries Fatal (Gen glee. $2) Bid Brand Be —. mea tiv “ ee aa st tt ; ary CO was recently elected a vice| ‘ for saving, too. While cash ee eae, “at an Gena tis if fa on tea a | feeling. delen ei eid _— ae avia aA be Pn es one president of the National Associa-| values are Bee ere Dec 2.90" sayy ooo | BATTLE CREEK w—Dr. Burton Gen Motors 339 std O1 NJ 1. 483 Nixon went on television in mid-| applications in addition to the ma- jis) og Suggestion Systems at the} member of the family is pro May ........ 00° Dec .....ee. 13448 C. Brooks, 49,.an osteopathic phy-| Gen ot ee oe ie oe campaign and confirmed that ajrine use,” said Williams, a former eriue's arhvosl, colvention fai S tected. Call me for facts and July a-co-+oe B83 Mar. ....... 131% siniea eeay Selleves. Ged ia a| Sen, Tire ; ¥ Stud Pack .... 272 group of home state businessmen/Chrysler engineer who started his |r ie 4. & Smith of the sugges| "SUTe* ecccccee . evue, | Genesco Sun Ot! 574 ce : . - ° : ate ugg Mar. ._..... 18% oe ie Battle Creek hospital Saturday of | Server sbaieuikos a Ruther Pap .. 321 had chipped in porns “an $16,000 ny research business five years tion plan section of General Mo- DELMONTO May . 119. Nov. ........ 191 | injuries suffered Nov. 2 when his | Gestet pe 426 ean Ger... s26| to help pay his poli.ical expenses|ago. . iara Corp. war ciecie’ trekieeec es San. 2.17": $118 car struck @ treet along MTB in|Goodyear <0 1gs Texaco © ..:! ae] as a senator. etanation that he| M488 PRODUCTION USED He lives in Bloomfield Township. MANGANELLO 7 oe) tela eis -. - ex ME 5.25% ; Fae, CACORE ac a 932 |Eaton County. ot No Ry on 80.6 Texton | ees 25.6 aed! nae ak the money ioe him-| ‘The production cost of small | ea ne St. evhou Bee ™m ear § none : r 5 | ° a ™ Gul ON AISA Trantamer <.. 304) self turned what appeared to be a turbine engines has Heretofore rt a lad Leader Dies a .. 12. Twent Cen 37.1 ° . : lit eir use to military applica- : = : Homestk ~ 4123 ened t ft : ri F > IPy— 3a < a - | Hooker Ch 30.7 a cost ogee- seo Soa ee eee ‘tions. This engine was designed). SAGINAW SS Robert Grube, 3 THE LIFE |Indust Ray 940 3 success. wr 58, president of the Saginaw Board i |Ine Rand pe US Pec 6 Te 939-60. the {Or manufacture by existing mass-|")" 7 aes : INSURANCE COMPANY Intand St) a et oe ee os For the Nixon of 1959-60, the; , akine jt of Education and prominent busi- — > 42 unit atre 2.2) 375) . is ccs il eff |production methods, making it} ae : OF VIRGINIA | Interiak Tr 386 Unit Prutt ... 3s poor man” picture is still e €c-| competitive with medium-priced|nessman and civic leader, died 4: Int Bus Mch 411 JG Lines oy tive ; : | Sunday evening of a heart attack. FORCE teh RaC arene VO rrees Int ft Us Rub 622 . reciprocating engines. . Int Paver 140 4 co. or Nixon backers note that, ex- , ie —__ —— —_—_——_—_— }Int Boe . 3} 4 s . 4 +“ | Int Silver. $4.7 Weat Un Tel 46 | cept for Sen. Hubert H. Hum- - og gas SS Dam 37.8 Test : “Q7 we a f Isl Crk Coal .. 384 Weett “ere.” age phrey (D-Minn), Nixon is the ae tkee acca ae ka | LEAVE YOUR F | C) Yohns Man 494 white ot 07 produ | S nae oe Mot .. 60.7 only presidential contender in praia wy ind ced he the Lo HNY one 4 » | e . Kellogg #E4 Sie a ton as _ either party who is “not a mil- —S or | 4 aati ‘a An established local Ford dealer Saige es po Young S & W 376 LEONARD L. LECLERC lionaire or close to it.” They | Williams said the turbine can -—aat IN A Owens said he was expecting to complete purchase of more than 111,000 square feet of land at 630 30 Inds. 6556.30 up 4 20 Rails 156.06 up | 65 Stocks 21401 up Volume to 11 a.m. 1 47 96 15 Utils 87.25 up 0.19 1.55 030,000 \Press Carrier (Collects Stamps ——E—_-— = Oakland Ave. and hopes to have a new building and used car lt on the property for grand open- ing in May. Owens’ dealership has been at 147 8. Saginaw St. for six years. Two houses and a building which houses Silaybaugh’s Sporting Sporting Goods Store stand on the proposed site. As soon as these structures are vacated, the land will be cleared and a new $200,000 building will be constructed, Owens said. The entire move represents an invest- ment of about $350,000. PLANNED ABOUT YEAR In the planning stages for about CY OWENS partment together will have an estimated 25,000 square feet of floor space. A new used car Iot adjacent to the building will hold some 125 cars as compared to the present 60-car lot. * * * Construction is under contract to cars.” A. N. Hickson. Inc., The showroom and service de-'construction firm. . ‘ {$930,000, Gerber suid earnings for DETROIT STOCKS (C. J. Nephier Ce.) Figures after decimal points are eight!€| (and Coinage) For the past 18 months Leonard High Low Noon! e : = Allen Electric & Equip. Co.* 2.3 2 6|L. LeClerc has been delivering Baldwin Rubber Co.* ....... 27 28 |the Pontiac Press to subscribers Ross Gear Co.* 46 «48 , r . Great Lakes Oil & Chem. Co* 11 1.2/!N Washington, northwest of Pon- Howell Electric Motor Co°* 10.2 16.6| tiac. Peninsular Metal Prod. Co.* -. 84 94 Chances are that when he isn’t The Prophet Co* .. 16 «#417 Toledo Edison Co.* 16 16 16 |jn school or at work on his route, *No sale: bid and asked the 14-year-old carrier is counting his money or his stamps. Gerber’s Reports Sales | t * : The earnings from his route — Up but Profits Down jhave enabled Leonard to buy a FREMONT (UPI)—P re sident/"ike 0nd his own clothing and to {Dan Gerber of Gerber Products | Start saving toward future edu- Ico. today reported sales of $66... |cation. 288.046 for the first six months of} Since he is a stamp collector ithe firm’s fiscal year. by hobby, his earnings have _* kt | hetped expand his collection, He said a dividend of 40 cents| teo, but whether he'd rather a share of common stock was! count money or stamps he won't declared by the directors, pay-| say. ble Dec. to shareholders of ’ peel ae 90. holders Leonard, who lives at 56710 Van Dyke Rd., Washingtori, is a stu- Earnings per share of common stock are $1.73 for the present dent at Romeo Junior High School year as compared to $1.88 per/and plans to go to college. share a year ago. He was one of 10 Pontiac Press Despite sales being up more than|carriers named by the Inland Daily 1000. boys. \ \ (D-Mass), Stuart Symington (D- Mo) and Lyndon B. Johnson (D- Tex), the Senate majority leader. Nixon is known to feel that Ken- |nedy would prefer Rockefeller as ‘his opponent on the theory that this would wash out the “great wealth” handicap for the young senator, ‘CAN’T STAY OUT’ What will the vice president do about the primaries? His friends are telling him he “can’t stay out’’ of the New Hamp- shire contest. Unless local GOP leaders work out some favorite son compromise, it now looks as if a Nixon-Rockefeller showdown is coming March 8. There is a larger problem in- volved for the vice president, though. He feels he must balance his time carefully between any primiary campaigning and atten- tion to legislative business in Washington. “The first six months of 1960 will write the reeord of the Eisenhower administration for the election campaign,” he told a friend recently, * * * “Simply stated,” said Williams, “this turbine employs a new type of heat exchanger which uses ‘the exhaust heat, normally wasted,-by | reintroducing it to make more efficient use of fuel. | In effect, the engine is partially! powered by its own waste. The; ultimate exhaust is cool enough to} touch with the bare hand.” ‘Oakland Teens Hurt in Commerce Smashup Two Oakland County teen-agers were injured in a two-car smash- into the engine _.. NOT A MORTGAGE! Suppose something happened to you. Wouldn't you like to leave your mortgage free? For as little as 1 per cent you can buy Modern Woodmen’s Mortgage Cancellation Plan. For details call or write: ca eieeamesmmenaamniiemiiiineaili iad M.E. DANIELS, District Manager 563 West Huron Street Pontiac, Mich. FE 3-7i11 MODERN WOODMEN OF AMER ERICA : Home Office -—— Rock Island, Il. . Daniels up Sunday night on Benstein road; north of Chasteen street, in Com- merce Township. Oakland County sheriff's depu-| ties identified the girls as Beth J. Schultz, 19, of 3492 Edgewood Dr., Commerce Township, the driv- er, and Marcene Schnitker, 19, of 9831 Crayview St., White Lake Township. Both were treated at Pontiac General Hospital and released. Deputies said their auto smashed His reasoning is that although) ; Press Assn. to receive award cer-'that record does, not affect the Maple Rd.. Wixom. Profitt was’ a Pontiac) the period were down about $303,-|tificates as outstanding newspaper nomination directly, “we could parked in the roadway with no} win or Jose the election in those| j into a\ parked car occupied by Raymond Profitt, 24, of 3048, W. ! RIDE the BEE LINE BUS BETWEEN PONTIAC and ROCHESTER Frequent schedules now available from Pontiac to Rochester with stops along Pontiac Road and along Walton Biyd. Algo, Monday thru Friday. om 0c. MSUO DIRECT TO ADM. BLDG. SPECIAL STUDENT RATES ON THE CAMPUS THE BEE. LINE, Inc. 2140 Beechmont, Keege FE 2-0034 — FE 4-2595 lights on, said deputies. | 5 .