ees ae “ ; ee i ‘ : i 5 The Weather, VED DPApre. row. Se (Détalls Page 2) . 116th YEAR TED PRESS - PONTIAG MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1958 —44 PAGES owned"? AL Night Parley Fails toTieUp Loose Ends UAW Boss Hopes for Speedy Return to GM; Deadline Tomorrow INTERNATIONAL £ Se & . : Se = Se SS aa SS : a < ~. SS ~ Takes Oath of Office ERR ORR FRC Supply Convoys Break Through fo Quemoy Hard - Pressed Island. Gets Precious Relief Under -Red Shells 3 Litle Rock Gets 7 Pledge ofNew = Plan for Schools === . But Source Close to Faubus Says, ‘We Are’ at End of the Line’ ing End for Opener * aa By CHARLES C. CAIN DETROIT (=~ United ‘Auto Workers President ‘Walter Reuther today again turned his personal atten- ition to labor negotiations lat Chrysler Corp. where he ‘has been rebuffed twice in -the last eight days in at- “tempts to get a clear cut contract settlement. Reuther left Chrysler talks early yesterday saying he felt he was no longer ‘TAIPEI, Formosa |?) — Two more Nationalist sup-, ply convoys have reached Quemoy despite the heav- jest Communist bombard- ment in more than a week, the Defense Ministry said. today. | In addition to the sea’ ‘convoys both Monday and ‘Tuesday, supplies were, parachuted to the be- isieged offshore island both LITTLE ROCK, Ark,. | (URI)—Dr. T. J. Raney, president of the Little Rock Private School Corp., announced today that the corporation will ase pri- vate buildings for segre- gated classes if the gov- ernment won't let it use the closed high schools. a seaeesiipiaibisiaios Se peEVETELEDPS?PURODODREDE { * Wi Service Pentiac Press Phote 4 b cre From Our Wie | Zowston wears a proud NEW MAYOR — Mayor Philip E. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. —| ‘ sala smile as he repeats his oath of office this morning before City company bargainer, attended the owl-hour discussions. _ | Reuther moved into the GM 4; talks Tuesday hours after failing >~ to settle at Chrysler. j At the time he expressed conic i (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) B But can they down those once proud and mighty New York Yankees again? The official oddsmakers say they can't do it, and so did 39 of the 68 baseball writers polled by United Press International. islands if a cease-fire can be ar- ranged ed ‘WISHFUL THINKING’ “Mr, Dulles must know.” Chaing said in an interview, “that it is only wishful thinking to ask the iChinese Communists for a cease _T. J. Raney, head of the rk Ada R. Evans in the city commission's city hall chambers. | Dr se J R. J: . ; 1 Cler 2 ans City days, the ministry an- : ‘ , d d d th t ti | , Little Rock Private Scisool, nounced ys * ( needed an at a meeting ! Corp., promised a new plan, ° oe oe | 3 of minds had been | today for the city’s four eW ontiac ayor | The Communists fired 13.169) cp owe achieved. a . 7 ! - } ephote - | high schools, closed nearly jshells at the pagenaaee hi Ties | BIG MITTS — Yanks’ and Braves’ catchers, by extending gloves toward camera today as they ie hie came Back aed five weeks because of in- of Laie pent week: and in he Frat Yogi Berra (left) and Del Crandall (right) make _ pose at pre-World Series workout. - erap thie up in a long tegration strife. p O S ra ition jsix hours of today stepped up to catchers’ mitts look out of proportion to real size eeaniced which ended in. the Others, however, cast F ne SEE rin a . wee hours this morning. doubt on any private school - By PETE LOCHBILER [lense Mumsity an : r . . “IT hope to tie up the loose ends Wi t the end of tan! ‘ oe Washington, the United Odds Fay or Y ankees in Series here quickly and get back to Gen- plan. “We are at. Pontiac's new mayor is carrying on a family tradition. ; cal binean” Reha? ual oa he he line,” said source Wi : : States is expected to put heavy a ms me the line, sac a Mayor Phillip E. Rowston’s maternal grandfather, pressure on National China 9 entered the talks. close to Gov. Orval E. Fau- winiam Brewster, served as mayor here around the to pull back forces from the a n ra ve S 1 Nn ain cs The union has a 10 a.m. to- bus. 5 offshore islands near Commu. | morrew strike deadline at Gen- The private group sought to open turn of the century. : ae ; fist territory — if it can get | eral Motors. Reuther has been the schools Tuesday. They did not Before he became mayor, Brewster was 3 Pontiac: the Reds to accept a. cease- MILWAUKEE (UPI) — The Braves or By game time, temperatures are ex- | trying te enter last ditch bar- do so after receiving court orders alderman, an office which has long since disappeared.. fire in the Formosa area. the Yankees? pected to be in the low 50's. Skies were | er ane Fs = but ame suality ig = lease of ston prop- *When he quit as mayor in| But on Formosa Chiang Kai- That's the baseball question of the day bright and sunny caver plat ore eemmeert erties by the corpor 1900, Brewster’ took over shek voiced disbelief that Dulles as the 1958 World Series opens in this home The hot dogvand coffee vendors should | provisions for salaried-empieyes. Meanwhile, State Education : : jhad said it would mot be “wise o¢ the defending champions—the Milwau- do well at the stadium today but there prob- : ; Ome agemeas Sis od | Van If Vanier a ie ae ee ee kee Brav ably won't be much market for this city’s Neither Reuther, nor Chrysler's vealed his department has cut | y ,Vr ty Sheriff for two years. [to maintain a large force on the ae eicat fainioee oroduct—cold beer. Vice President John D. Leary, chiet ‘ Veet api 2 oft state aid to the Little Rock | | | » = Nn aaa ‘ar talent for public life. j The United States Justice De 1es 0 n juries . « ¢« F partment and the National Associ- : After three years representing = ation for the Advancement of Col- R bi Wj St k ‘District + as ibe os Get Po obin ittan ruc : -= ; ese ored People appeared content to sit back and sce if the people of youngest member, attorney Row- The grandson has shown a simi- ; — : The Milwaukee Braves are picking themselves today to win in five games. First baseman Frank Torre put it this way: “Most of us think well win it in five much stronger ball ciub The answer could be seven games 3 Little Rock grow tired enough of Running Into Passing ston, 39, was sworn in as mayor fire’ away. They meet today in the first of because were a ; . osed | hools to.demand they A jthis morning to replace Wilham) the games which will tell the story and than we were last year.” C f A t T . die ~ Car in Keego IW. Donaldson who resigned to de- The Chinese leader said his € + | oin S Wo > . : na g b: h : | be opened : the managers of the two clubs led wit “y an say that gain,” piped u { ‘ iG BOXED IN vote more time to family and busi-| government would be under no their lefehanded pliching best ou can say, pe : pip p : GETTING BON |W six-year-old Sylvan Lake girl ness. : obligation to heed an American bees ia) Les shortstop Johnny Logah, dressing in the to Hospital Board 7 Piles vance twee Me naee died Tuesday afternoon after TUM. gefore his term expiries in efit ages og ag Quemoy For the Braves it was Warren Spahn next locker, “And you can put me down 7, : d that although i Was no . - an e e ands. ri ra , , rd A * a 4 estimating the number of ning into @ passing car on Belahd 1960, Rowston will be called on “en and for the Yankees it was Whitey Ford for five games, too.” Torre let Logan Te oirerneanineay aeanciest onthe i maneuvers jeft in Faubus’ bag of St, in Keego Harbor to lead about 80 weekly commis- + wo They are about as good as they come. have his say and then continued: PantiserGeneraltiospital Board of ; aah per a - was geting Z | sion meetings, which is his main | he line taken by Secretary of Milwaukee shivered through its coldest Ts einwed acl } - 'Trustees were : : : " ’ legal ac KK Ns a at | * . is , job as maver, and asked to lend State Dulles at a news conference ; , F 72 vears today ; I've never played with a club that has Rous ces were filled by City Com ‘ pretty weil boxed in yer. - , first day of October in 72 years today as 5 ace fi vs as this one” he said (Missioners last night. Robin MW tan.) his support and presence to in- | Tuesday strongly indicated that the B d New York Y k ve red so muc confidence as this on le bas Appointed “2 Robert A e Braves an ew xo! ankees preparec “They're real loose and relaxed. Were not Appointed were Robert A. Arme- President Eisenhower today shter r . the Eisenhower administration in- : an daughter of Mr; pumerable caterpriecs and | ae eetee ang ‘© open their play at County Stadium. strong. 67. of 179 Cherokee Rd., and Oakland cocky or anything like that. but we fee! “ called on all Americans to com- : : iac’ jtends to exert mu reater and sg: : ly with the Supreme Court's | | High dt and Mrs. William ¢vents as Pontiac’s official ! ds et much BI er an we : Lynn D. Allen Jr., 33, of 934 Ar- < gid aa —_ ; ignway| . Wit af 1910, Spokesman. {more restrictive influence on the The temperature dropped to 32 de- were the boss this time. not the Yankees ale SS : school integration rulings lest Toll .~ ye a | Tr: Ais ion wationalists than before | rees early this morning, tying the “Took around this clubhouse. Do you armstrong = (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Warwick Blvd.) Traditionally the commission | &rees 3 » ty Is Cs Se. Armstrong. who retired last \ear as executive vice president of member who has made the final OFFERS DEAL - | record for an Oct. 1 set in 1886. seg one guy with a worried look?” in ’58 -- = ——————— the Michigan Seamless Tube Co. died at St. Joseph: ® ‘Cc ’ Merce Hospital al motion for adjournment every; Essentially Dulles held out to ; 4 Witnessed Shooting, 70 1 oO in Spit jweek, Rowston aims to conduct his Red China. and the Soviet Union) . ; in South Lyon, once was general : ee meetings with efficiency and dis- which supports it, the prospects : . ° {parts and service manager at Pon- : et ig Tr) iat Sul . ‘ Area Man Re rts mis ean eer patch, of a deal to pacify the rome PUrsued by Police ( al, New Airport Opens tiac Motor Division. - po . ¢ s Dasaine car| IMPOSING RE ivea_ The first U.S. requirement DETROIT ‘UPI) — The new Allen, a Pontiac optometrist. is, ‘ ran into the side of a passing car IMPOSING FIGURE Detroit Metropolitan Airport the son of the late county clerk and was voted “Man of the Year” this spring by the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce Armstrong fills the term left va- and then slipped ander the vehicle As Pontiac's top elective official. : A Commerce township sales- The car was being driven by he makes an imposing figure, hes q man this morning told Prosecutor Joseph A. Grimshaw, 62, of 3025/6-foot, four-inch stature standing Frederick C. Ziem that he wit-)Moss St, Keego Harbor. lott in any crowd. - nessed the fata] shooting last De-, ae ; comet) of, exes ieanester |Gecre According to officer Arthur Kean by ah Ecorse ex-convict, De- ; mitrios Tsermengas. ‘Holmes, the girl was running from Ziem said that the witness, Don- ; Roosevelt School to her mother ald C. Chandler, 38. said the shoot-, Who was waiting across the street, ing took place in his home, 1872/t0 Pick ber up. The accident oc-| Point Dr. during an argument neces at the noon hour. which Tsermengas’ .45 caliber pis-| Police said Grimshaw was only tol went off as he struck Kean inj traveling at approximately 12 to the face with it. '15 miles an hour. He was not held. Chandler, who voluntarily turned] up at the Pontiac State Police Post! with his story last right. backed up No, No, Not the Saw! Tsermengas’ claim that the shoot-) ~ opened today, American Airlines and Allegheny Airlines “ere the first to move from, Willow Run Airport to Metropol hae 1imuiles | closer to downtown Detroit Cant by the resignation of, Harold | Other airlines are expected to B. Ealer. new hospital director. It follow — suit American's first expires June 30, 1959. Allen's term 33, of flight was a 7 a.m plane to Chi expires June 30, 1960. The post was : | cago. Alleghens scheduled a 7:30 left vacant when Edward P. Bar- am. flight to Erie and Scranton, retf moved out of the city and be- Pa. came ineligible to hold it. ee : would be d to the Sent | 7 7 woud te an cog tom eee" Woman Kills Pedestrian on the island of Quemoy. ~ | &S Officials were hopeful that his’ . -%, - . . . emphasis on possible major policy; A Pontiac Woman driver being pursued by police You ean recognize Phil Row- changes to bring peace to the re- struck and killed an elderly pedestrian in downtown De- ton sain ae the tall fellow gion would win greater support for 4 i¢ early this morning in the con@ervative dark suit, the government's Formosa policy . . : (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) at home and abroad. | Detroit police are holding Wanda De Potty. a ~ 1077 Durant Ave, for*—————_ Pontiacs Here Wednesday wine of fetontous 34 Dear ces; Frost . . | aes | . . On Display Downtown — .:"ssssserzcss 9 Chil Area longi Democrats’ Dinner _ ° 2 to Be Thursday Night | A $10-a-plate dinner to raise campaign funds for all | Oakland County Democratic candidates will be held to- ; morrow night at the Pontiac Elks Temple. 114 Orchard 4 ‘ward for running a red light at, Bureau, some scattered frost is Grand River when her auto hit) jekely in the area tonight, ’ : when Pontiac residents will view the new 1959 Pontiacs a William Young, 72, of 185 Geneva, the temperature drops to near 34 ing Was an ase ad Rigid CLEVELAND (UPI) — Four- day ahead of the rest of the nation. ‘Highland Park: The accident oc-.in the suburban sections. Thirty- him as saying Immediately after) | 3 : yA A ; Pe ‘urred at 2:10 ee : cece, Cary jects Ce ae, | year-old Edward Sokolowski had | With the cooperation of Pontiac ivision e currec 2 p.m. eight is the forecast for Pontiac the: fatal “shot” “TE did mean te lac Motor Division. Une | Witnesses told police that Young; In an extended forecast, tem- kill him. I just wanted to knock| 4 few bad moments yesterday | Downtown Merchants Assn. of the Pontiac Aréa Chamber of . j : started to cross to the east side peratures will average about eight him out.” > when police and firemen, unabl@™ Commerce plans to display 50 of the new cars throughout of Woodward on the green signal, degrees below the normal bigh of Tsermengas, 39, has been held} to remove a pair of handcuffs he | the downtown area four days, beginning next Wednesday (but that the light changed before 67 and normal low of 48. Precipi- here for investigation of Teel had snapped to his ankles, took afternoon. ihe reached the other side. 7 tation will average under one-tenth ae big ces cnpgacatin him to a fire station for a bigger The cars are not scheduled to be unveiled officially in | u x ke inch as showers about Saturday Lake Ave. y was i ‘ cow . i e ; Miss De Potty te lice the Sunday af ‘ shifty grave near Alpena. The mur-| hacksaw. “He thought they were ; bide wns sorponatign of Pontiac Motor Division, the lthe W ae ey ieee Ue {hat le tet recording preceding Featured speaker for the 7 p.m. gathering in the Elks der did not come to. light unti) a! going to cut off his legs,” said | SealTTt @ owl Wn” upbl next Buursdsy | green when she started'to enter the & a.m. in. downtown Pontiac was ballroom will be Pennsylvania Sen. Joseph S. Clark, who, recent tip to Texas authorities led his mother, Mrs. Arlene Soko- | e City Commission last night stamped its approval On intersection and that ‘she did not 38 degrees. Tha reading atl Pm phefore his election to the to the discovery of the grave. 1 lowski. : ‘see the pedestrian. Iwas 52. : ; . United States Senate in | the plan. an onl 5 eS. - ‘Old Pro’ ata Loss: , % | 1958. was the first Dejo- A icratic mayor of Philadel- | Twenty-Five Years of World Series, Now What? esi Bo Carlos G. Richardson, fshairman 'of the Oakland County Democratic ; Committee, said he expected some By BOB CONSIDINE were dwindling, the apple sellers MILWAUKEE — Not than any-/going back to work. Happy days body asked, but I began covering were here again. World Series games just 25 years ~~ « & ago. The Washington Senators. against the New York Giants ,. .. Hubbell, Terry, Ott, Fitzsimmons, Blondy Ryan , . . Whitehill, Gos- of an earthquake. If anybody had asked Judge Landis how much he got for the television rights to that The only news from Japan was' lin, Rice, Cronin, Crowder. Good men. : r * * * FDR’ was fresh in his White, House. A German With a- funny) little mustache, named Hitler or something like that, seemed to bey taking over in that country. Mus- solini, greatly admired in the U. S. for. making Italian trains run’ on time, wrote pieces for our Sunday papei's. The breadlines * growled and chased him. What's television? Mae West was big in Holly- wood and most of the blue stories of the day were variations of her “Why Don't You.Come Up and See Me Sometime?” Oh, we were pretty fast, what with pub- Jong the rage, and Sir Hubert series, the old jedge would have,® lie drinking just coming in, Mah- | |Berra eight dnd Hank Aaron. hadn't been bérn yet. Jack Benny | was 39, the same age as Country ee Slaughter. = i f | * * * In Today Ss Press Khrushchev had a minor party, ; oes _ job in the Ukraine. Ike was a} ‘ : a major, doing a public relations job under the ice to the North Pole. Whitey Ford was five years old. Comics De po heyuresneeee rene 37 (for Chief of Staff Douglas Mac- County News ..... : ... 28 | Arthur, part of which was to take Editorials deeeecies eeamerale 6 the hats and coats of congressmen Markets ....... Fivwsniewinimye o 8 ., $8 calling on the chief. Obituaries ............055- Ww If we were ever going to have Sports 0) 33-36 any transatlantic air travel it + Theaters Sas 30 would be in Zeppelins. Frances ‘TV & Radio Programs .... 43 - | Perkins’ tri-corner hats were be- Wilson, Earl ......2..0055- 43 \ing copied. Westbrook Pegler was Women’s Pages .......- 1i-14 ‘moving out of sports and thinking intention of taking a submarine [eee two, Lew Burdette seven, Yogi. Wilkins talking about some crazy ,Don Larsen three. Mickey Mantle /of calling his column ‘Sweetness clothes. photo- were. and Light... The most graphed kids in the land Buzzie and Sistie Dall. People were saying, “Why not recognize Russia? She'll be good to trade with.” Babe Ruth “cov. ered” the series for Christy '600 to attend the dinner. He said tickets are still available at Demo- eratic headquarters in the Roose- And his brother Paul, who' also won two for the Cardinals in that series, never being able to get . a word in when Dizzy had the velt Hotel; and will also be avail- ear. . ~ able at the door * * * x * * nn hod Combe (aremnihemiccrins Gov. |.G. Mennen Williams will head a long list of Democratic Dizzy was addressing a room full . state and county officials who are | Walsh and, inevitably, caught the vof reporters, half a dozen of them only line drive that came into sitting on a bed. Suddenly, a fel- the press box. low was accidentally pushed off the . ° _ end of the bed. Nobody paid any That's a depressingly long time! attention to him. It was only jago, but the memories of some of pay} the series that followed blunt the, . ‘woe. Dizzy Dean in ‘34, barging ‘into the batting practice of the’ |Detroit Tigers, taking a bat away, ifrom Billy Rogell, and belting out! ‘a couple of line drives--in street, Mickey Cochrane, in '35, gcor- ing the run that won for the Tigers — his hat flying off his head as he streaked for home ‘on (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) expected to attend. This includes Lt. Gov. Philip A. Hart, candidate for the U. S. Senate, and Detroit Sen, John B. Swainson, candidate :for Hart's lientenant governorship. To be honored among the many county candidates at the Pontiac dinner will be Lesli@é H, Hudson, Pontiac's representative in the State House of Representatives ‘and a candidate for the county's h, > JOSEPH S. CLARK seat in the U. S. House of Repre- sentatives, : SEN, TWO Reds Resume Atomic Tests U.S. Calls for 1-Year Suspension if Soviet Will Follow Suit : ' WASHINGTON ~ (AP) The United States, chiding the Soviet Union for resuming nuclear weap- ons tests, says it will go through with plans for a one-year US. test suspension if the Soviets will fol- jow suit. The State Department issued that announcement Tuesday night a short time after the Atomic En- ergy Commission reported the So- viet Union had terminated its much-heralded but short-lived test suspension with at least two new , blasts. The department described the Soviet tests as confirmation of tS. suspicions that the Soviet test Suspension announcement last March 31 was just propaganda. “It was suspected at the time that the Soviet announcement was primarily a propaganda exercise and that there was no real inten- tion to suspend testing,’’ the de- partment said, ‘“‘This now seems to be confirmed by the event.” The AEC announcement of the new Soviet tests backed up re- ports earlier in the day from Tok- yo that blast waves from the direction of the Soviet Union had been detected. “Two detonations were detect- ed,” the AEC said. ‘Both took place north of the Arctic Circle and were of moderate to high sield.”’ In announcing the United States hopes to adhere to its own sus- pension plans, the State Depart- ment noted that talks initiated by this country are scheduled to be- gin in Geneva Oct, 31 on means of reaching agreement on policing a worldwide test suspension, The United States still is con- ducting a series of atomic tests at its Nevada Proving Grounds, but these are expected to end before Oct. 31. The Soviet Union already has agreed to attend the Geneva meet- ing but whether the resumption of Soviet tests signaled a change in policy remained unclear. Audience of Seven Hears Potter's Talk By United Press International Sen. Charles E. Potter (R-Mich) campaigned to an almost empty hall in Benton Harbor last night. Potter spoke to an audience of only seven persons gathered at the Calvin Britain School. The poor turnout was labeled “a disgusting exhibition of voter aupathy’* by Philip Molley, Berrien County GOP chairman. Potter had hoped to speak in a hall belonging to Local 793 of the United Auto Workers but a union official was quoted as saying that unless UAW headquarters sent its man for a joint appearance, a Re- publican was barred. The Cheboygan Republican, who planned to return to Detroit today, took the occasion to attack “union, bosses who try to spoonfeed their members with canned politics.” Potter called himself ‘‘the best friend labor ever had.” . \ { | t i ! | | five years ago. Pct om Se. J * xy : : Pontiac Press Phote NBW HOME ALMOST READY — The Pontiac State Police will have a brand new home by the end of the month, according to latest construction reports. Sgt. Charles Mulick, commander of the Pontiac Post, will move his force inte this new building on Telegraph Rd. just south of U.S. 10 by Nov. 1. He is shown here looking over the grounds of the modern building. Troopers will be moving from their present post at 2905 Dixie Highway, which is a former home converted for police use about THE PONTIAC PRESS, The Day in Birmingham New Clubhouse Seen for Springdale Club — BIRMINGHAM — Increased play at the city-owned Springdale Golf Course brings up the possibility that a new clubhouse may be built in the not-t future. Play has jumped from 18,000 to 98,000 rounds in one season, with profits correspondingly high. The present building used as a course supply and refreshment 25 World Series, So, What Happens? (Continued From Page One) pane Sea 2) Ford May Hatch Small T-Bird : However, These Reports of Stripped-Down Car Are Being Denied Reports were Current in Detroit today that Ford Motor Company late next year will’offer a stripped- down six cylinder Thunderbird as an American-built small economy ear. Ford officials, however, de- nied the reports. * * * e 1960 mode} low-priced Thun- derbird would sell for less than $2,000 and should travel about 20 miles on a gallon of gasoline, ac- cording to reports. oS stand is inadequate and° at one time was condemned by the fire marshal. A complete rewiring has put it back on the approved list, ‘A recent survey by Dale Rolph, manager, and Charles Gale, for- estry and parks superintendent, shows Springdale rates favorably with other area courses according to City Mahager L, R. Gare. ‘All profits are used exclusively to maintain and improve the course, Gare pointed cut. This in- eludes proper fertilization and mowing of greens and fairways and general maintenance of the adjoin- ing park area. A new building would include a ar acres ; It would have a 102-inch wheel- | Goose Goslin's driv * |food concession, pro shop, and. 4 base — two inehes longer than . a es improved sanitary facilities. It will . on 5 . Hubbell, the Man Alene, in the ss . se American Motors’ small Rambler Wauks Giants) cores of Se) oad be located near the present build- American. ing site to provide starter service ‘37, and Dean’s great slow-ball defeat by the Yanks in '38.... and Derringer and Walters and the irrepressible. Buck Newsom in 39 and 40, Mickey Owens’ passed ball in when play warrants it. * * * The first meeting of the Derby PTA at 8 p.m. tomorrow will fea- ture a talk by Dr. Clyde Vroman, The car presiimably would be a two-passenger model, looking much like the Thunderbird of 1955-57. The 1958 T-bird is a four-passenger car, * ert nage RATT HC Fe | ee Rejected French Constitution PARIS (AP) — Another new country took its place on the map today as French sovereignty offi- cially passed into the hands of the Cabinet in Guinea, a west African Negro nation. Guinea became free at the stroke of midnight. But no new flag flies in Conakry, the capital on a coastal islet about halfway Liberia. | * * * The swilt consequences of last) Sunday’s constitutional referen-. dum caught .Guinea. Premier Se-| kou Toure’s regime flatfooted. It doesn't have a flag or an anthem! or any of the other outward sym-| bols of nationhood. t his Cabinet worked to launch on) Sunday the Fifth French Republic! under the constitution approved everywhere in the French Empire except Guinea. De Gaulle had said rejection of the constitution by a French territory would bring it immediate independence. * * * Toure said in Conakry that his new nation did not want to be cast completely adrift. “In every sphere Guinea will) turn first of all to France,” he said. “We want to remain in the) (French) frane zone. It is onty if} we are not accepted that we will turn elsewhere. ~ “We will determine our foreign | and we will try to make our view- peint prevail within the frame-, work of an association with France, But if we do not find al partner (in France), Guinea’ will be obliged to envisage another at- titude,"’ Toure said. * * * The Premier said his govern- ment will ask De Gaulle for a sort of dominion status under Article October Arrives Wearing Top Coat Many Feel a By Thé Associated Press The first day of October felt like |jow 30s were forecast. The mercury, Hie completed law school .and¢= a wintry day across broad areas of the country from east of the Rockies today. A huge-mass of cold air ffom Canada dominated the mid-conti-| nent. Brisk winds spread the chilly air south and eastward and the touch of wintry weather was felt in most areas to the Atlantic Coast kt & & Top coats and blankets were recommended for fans going to the first World Series game in The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau PONTIAC AND VICINITY cloudy and quite cool today, near 55. Westerly winds 12-22 a-22 Report miles t po! Partly highest the lowest marks of the season in between west Africa’s Dakar and _ s In Paris, Premier de Gaulle and: uinea Becomes Independent Nation 88 of the new constitution. Appar: ently drafted with just such a case in mind, the article says a stafe which chooses independence can be associated with France to an extent spelled out in a treaty. * * * Speaking like a politician who knows he has the vote in his pocket, Toure said the Guinea Constituent Assembly, which he called for Thursday, will adopt a democratic constitution. It will include a declaration of hu- man rights and express support feet. Its chief export has been bananas. Now it must readjust its economy to the loss of French fi- nancial aid. Toure is banking on attracting foreign capital to develop rich de- posits of iron ore and bauxite in the mountains, possibly through some sort of French Point Four program. * * * De Gaulle’s Cabinet decided to’ hold elections in late November for the new republic's first Assem- bly. for the U.N. Charter. * * * Guinea has about 2,125,000 peo- ple in an area the size of Oregon, | ranging from wet coastal jungles ‘to inland mountains reaching 6,000 De Gaulle is to make a quick flying. tour to Algeria Thursday. In a public speech in Constantine, he may reveal his policy for end- ing the four-year-old nationalist rebellion in Algeria. New Pontiac Mayor | Upholds Tradition (Continued From Page One) bushy moustache and browg Homburg hat, an item that has become a sort of trademark with him. Born and raised tn Pontiac, Row- ston was graduated from Pontiac Central High School in 1939 as president of his class. Working as a short order cook, he put himself | ’ Farmers’ Market Downtown Area Will Become * *« * ‘41. the inspiration play of Bill director of admissions at the Uni- ~ The luxury .Thunderbirds, which Scakineoeth's Cards fey "42, a remy oo ae Ming ae + sell at between’ $3,000.and $4,000; |and drab nights at an Eighth Air Seal Peroni Hey “H ‘ have a aabatanorn gee Force Airbase in England, listen- rps eearie eee F * |automatic transmission such ing to the ’43 series with a won-| a t luxury features as power seats,/derful boy who was soon to die, DE . H windows, brakes and steering. Maj. Billy Southworth Jr. | Dr. Vroman is serving on several ] The ludicrously bad series of '44,Co™mittees with other state educa- tors to better acquaint high school students and their parents with col- ‘lege. entrance requirements. Following the meeting, Mrs. Frank VanSickle, Mrs. Tom Rut- ledge, Mrs. George Goodwin and Mrs. Thomas Heydon will have charge of the social hour. * *« City Clerk Irene E. Hanley said special voter - registration hours would continue through the dead- line Oct. 6. Her offiee wil be open daily from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. with the exception of Saturday. when hours will be from 9 a.m. to ] p.m. * ® *: and '45. Nine straight pinch-hit- ters struck out in the former, and on the eve of the clash of '45 War- ren Brown uttered his immortal, “7 don't think either side can win.” Then the blur of those Yankee - Dodger weNes. that seemed never to end, just begin | where the other contest ended, another inning instead of an-- other year. That skein almost killed baseball. Reuther Goes Back | to Talks at Chrysler (Continued From Page One) dence of a quick Chrysler settle- ment, but Leary later did not join him in this. “We've run into some diffi- » ow st culty/ gi nee oe | The Milwaukees are the freshest | ground blood that has come into the stag-| The contract drive for Chrys- gering old game since the surge ler's 70,000 workers followed the of the Gas House gang. Bill. Co- union’s agreement with Ford. This)rum had a piece the other day) Beginning Oct. 5, and continuing included a three-year contract with hinting that they may be sold in| through Oct. 19, Catholic churches improved layoff pay, a new PrO-time to the Schlitz people, which of Birmingham will conduct a door- vision for severance pay, and | could prompt the beer company |to-door census of all Catholics in | AP Wirephote KENNETH SCOTT Only Faint Chance Lost Boy, 4, Alive IRON MOUNTAIN, Mich. & — continued cost of living and proto change its slogan to ‘‘The team the area. ductivity wage increases. that made Milwaukee famous.” | Volunteers from the Archdioce- | « * * * *« * lsan Council of Catholic Men and Ford and the UAW reached, Who's going to win? Twenty-|the Holy Name Society will con- agreement Sept. 17, shortly after five years doesn't give a fellow duct the census. |98,000 Ford workers went on strike any such knowledge. It only tends} ; across the country. The settlement to fog up what was a crystal clear} A radio receiver circuit powered was estimated at 24 to 30 cents an/ball in 193% Then I was sure.|exclusively by radiated energy hour per worker over three years, The Washington Senators would picked up from radio and televi- Oct. 18 was set by the City |Commission as Farm-City Day, on which Oakland County farmers are invited to display produce trom their trucks im the downtown area. * * * The Downtown Merchants Assn. believed the venture would prove attractive to Pontiac shoppers and ‘through Olivet. College, graduating : . . 1 . . . policy in view of our own interests, with a degree in economics and | accounting in 1942. * * * Two days after graduation, he| married a Pontiac girl, LaNetta Ludlow, They live at 532 W. Iro-| quois Rd. and have two daughters, LaNetta, 14. and Elizabeth, 11. After three years in the Army as an enlisted man during World War II, Rowston returned to Pon- tiac and worked in the account- ing department of GMC Truck & | Coach Division. ° In 1948 he decided to work his Bit of Winter | ‘Milwaukee. Temperatures in the | ‘tumbled -morning. this | | fo near freezing The leading edge of cool air the Atlantic Coast states and | northern parts of the Gulf Coast | States during ‘the might | Prec of the ‘northeaatard through northern sections of the Gulf Coast states, Tennessee, into the mid-Atlantic istates and southern sections of New Epgiand. - ko Temperatures dropped below freezing in northern Midwest areas, day. Fair and cool tonight with some most areas. scattered frest, lewest in the city near 38 to near 34 in suburban sections. To- merrow partly cloudy and a lite warm- er, lewest near 45. Winds diminishing to #-12 miles tonight and tomerrow, To- morrew night partly cleudy and warmer lowest near 45. — Teday in Pentiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am™ 38 At 8 pir Wind Direction—Northwest Sun sets Wednesday at 6 M$ p Sun rises,Thursday at 6 30 a.m Moon sets Thursday at 10 49 am | Readings in the 30s were gen- | eral west of Lake Michigan and ‘south as far as Kansas and 40- degree marks were reported froth the eastern Great Lakes to Okla- | homa. Skies were clear. velocity 15 m p bj Generally fair weather prevailed) of the Downtown Kiwanis Club ‘in most areas west of the Rockies | with temperatures in the 50s except |Rowston and Currah. The firm, reached into western sections of | eding, and after the arrival. ta. rain fell from Texas; way through law school. enrolled in the Detroit College of Law and got a job as court clerk for Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick, ADMITTED IN 1953 was admitted to the bar in 1953, joining the Pontiac firm of Beer, later known as Beer and Rowston, jwas dissolved earlier this month iwhen the senior partner, William iJ. Beer, was named to the Oakland feireuit bench, First appointed District 2 com- missioner in July, 1955 to fill a vacancy, Rowston wept on to win elections in 1956 and again this spring. In the fall of 1956 he was an ‘unsuccessful candidate in the Dem- ocratic primary for state repre- sentative from Pontiac. * * * In addition to his City Commis- ‘sion duties, Rowston has served (on the Planning Commisgion since April and the Oakland County Tax Allocation Board since 1956. He is a director of the Pontiac Real Estate Board, a member and on the board of deacons of the Congregational Church, L Moon rises Wednesday a: 818 pm. ‘for higher marks in the far south-/ Downtown Temperatures west region. Le Pores s apes nds 38 lam 60 7am 38 12 7 51 Bam. —..s.. 42 lpm $2 z eee Studebaker to Add lj am 48 Tuesday in Pentiarc (As recorded downlown: Highest temperature .... is Lowest tempereture . .. Mean temperature .... Weather—Rain See « New Smaller Car -SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) — Studebaker Packard Co. today shale wieder «eis 49 rolled out the first of its new - 58 \smaltier series of autos, the “LArk iby Studebaker’ off the assembly line. ae Qne Year Age in Pentiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather—Sunny. Highest aad tovet Temperatures This te ate im 86 Years . . 88 In 1897. 31 in 1947| Company President Harold E. Tussday's coat eon Delia hag a es — Me woud Alpens reuse’ ijoin the firm’s “Silver Hawk” as Baltimore 70 63 Memph 65 §0/J0 ; r Miami a 74 the Studebaker-Packard offering +0 Minmeapol $2 33 for 1959. New Orleans 87 72) The car will be available in two Gmatee . HH $i sedan models, a two-door and a leton 60 40) . . : . | reser $2 ¢9 four-door: a hardtop and a station Pittsbufeh 70 46 wagon. The sedan will feature a B Francisco re Bs 1081,-inch wheelbase. and the sta- 8 Ste Marie 56 inn Ws F A inc ‘| Traycity 60 70 tien wagon nr sa wheelbase. Westington 70 és The price will in the general tl T- 4 amps -—«82.—«a. Neighborhood of $2,000. 4 Professionally, Rowston belongs to Delta Theta Phi, national legal ‘fraternity, and the Oakland, Mich- ‘igan and American bar associa- tions. He is a member of the Elks ‘lodg®, the Amvets and the Pontiac iArea Chamber of Commerce, Garage Yields Group of Battlefield Sketches MADISON, Wis. «® — A Madison garage has yielded a collection of original battlefield sketches and field note books of a once widely- known Civil War artist. Raymond Simplot, whose grandfather, Alex: ander Simplot, sketched war scenes for Harper’s Weekly maga- zine, found the material and turned it over to the Wisconsin Historical Society.. The sketches were’ made be- at the same time help establish downtown.as a shopping area fer more non-city -residertts. The association called the Down- town Festival Days ast month ‘highly successful.” * * * “The merchants were highly pleased and we believe that the enthusiastic response of the shop- pers marks a turning point in downtown history,” said N. L. Pattison, association president. AP Wirephote DR. T. J. RANEY Little Rock Promised New School Plan > (Continued From Page One) there be “grave consequences” to the nation, < Eisenhower sounded the call— to both. public officials and private citizens alike—at a news confer- ence. * * ® Eisenhower also announced to- day that the nuclear submarine Seawolf has been submerged 54 days and is still going strong. He said the previous record for under- water travel was 3] days. He declared today that if the United States could. gét a-cease fire in the Quemoy-Matsu area an Opportunity would be opened up to negotiate in good faith for a For- mosa settlement. Coming home weary from a day’s work, nothing cheers a man like hearing his wife say she was shopping alf day and couldn't find a thirlg to buy ... Some women tween April, 1861, and Jan. 10. the Mississippi River. i grow old before their time trying 1863, of events in the war along,to look young after their time. — Eart Wilson. The average hourly wage for beat the New York Giants four’ sion stations has been developed by auto workers as a whole under old games to one. Well, I had the'L. R. Crump of Silver Spring. contracts was about $2.43. right figures. Only thing wrong'Some versions of his receiver fur- GM Vice President Louis G. |" that the Giants won four nish enough output to drive a per- | Seaton met Reuther Tuesday, |827¢S to one. imanent-magnet loud-speaker. Searchers held only faint hope Wednesday for the survival of 4-year-old Kenneth Scott in the Michigan north woods, \ x & saying, “Wildcat walkouts are : Kenneth, son of Mr. and Mrs. | such that the strike deadline Se | Elmer Scott of Kingsford, van- | again becomes academic.” z : oa —— ished in a bear-infested wilder-| Walkouts idléd up to 45,000 WORLDS FINEST HIGH FIDELITY! - ness near here Sunday. He wandered from a hunting camp being visited by his parents, we & * Temperatures have sharply, heading toward the freezing point. Kenneth wore only a light jacket, jeans and sneakers. GM workers last week and led Seaton to say that a national strike against GM. was already under way. MOVES ORIGINAL DEADLINE The UAW then moved its origi- nal strike deadline of 11 a.m. Tues- day to 10 am. Thursday and moved to get striking GM work- ers back on the job. Union efforts cut GM 18,804. | Walkouts also hit Chrysler with 12,400 idle. : . GM and Chrysler termed the rash of wildcat strikes a master ptan by the international unien designed to bring pressure on Re-¢ gotiations. t Sensational New dropped MIT | “TWIN ENSEMBLE”. stereophonic equipped high-fidelity record-playing system * * * No trace of the boy has been found in the painstaking search | by an army of more than 1,000 | National Guardsmen, police and volunteers. Iron Mountain industries closed to allotw-workers to join in the hunt and high school youths were dismissed from classes to idled to a THRILL TO ZENITH QUALITY DEPTH AND DIMENSION — SO LIFE-LIKE YOU FEEL YOU CAN “TOUCH” THE PERFORMERS! s . ; : : ith st ) help ~ * The union said the strikes result- a OS por en spesker cates ed from local grievances unsettled THS world’s finest High- — THS)| for 3-dimension The Salvation Army and wives of searchers set up food stations. Airplanes, helicopters and blood- hounds also took part in the search. ‘in the four months since the old Fidelity performance. contracts expired. Stereophonic Sound 3 Youngster’s definition of a grand- ‘mother: An old woman who comes| to your house and keeps your imother from hitting you . . . One ;consolation about life and taxes: |When you're through with one, [you're through with the other. — Earl Wilson. * * * Two older brothers said Ken- neth followed them out of the camp and they told him to go back. He vanished in the dense woods. \Nest in Copper F ixturé Wins Bird-Brain a Mate BLUEFIELD, W. Va. (AP)—“Who’s @ bird-brain?” There’s this sparrow, you see, and that’s the question he seems to ask as he gazéS down on the world of people frém his home in a copper light fixture. Remote Spesker System (Model SRS10) Attaches to Model SF125 afor Stereophonic High- Fidelity Sound reproduc-. tion. Has separate 40 watt ak output power ampli- fer. One 12° woofer; one 5’ tweeter. Presence, bass and treble controls. In THE CANTATA (Model SF125) Zenith’ Stereophonic. Equipped High-Fidelity Recd¥d-Playin Instrument. Ma he purchase separately as a High Fidelity in- strument. Fully equipped for Stereophonic Sound reproduction by addition of the companion speaker system illustrated at right. Your choice of colors: grained mahogany, grained wale matching colors. 30” high, x * * nut, or blond oak. 30° high, 2874". 21" wide, 164° The glass of the fixture, hanging on the side of a Blue- iadar i scoop deep. field office building, was smashed some time ago. Start at 199.95 PE ALL SETAE ERT Not long afterward the little’ fellow moved in and set Plays your present records and new stereophonic records up bachelor quarters. It Takes Zenith Quality Features To Get The World's Finest Performance! 2 His doubts about whether to stay single of not were ended when he lost his heart to a cute female sparrow who fluttered by one day. Tenith Stereo Studio New Deloxe Cobro- Lightweight Cobre ; : Sound Control Matic” 4-Speed a The feeling was nuptial, especially after he showed her een rere deeuidase iam Has 4-position Record ' Compen- sator, Loudness, Presence Stereo Balance, separate bass and treble 4 cam 6 grams of pressure on stylus. Scientific design, and positive angle pick-up — records sound better, last around his apartment. : : Automatically plays 334, 45, 78, and 16% RPM records, fourteen 7” rec- She moved in and together they feathered their nest between the top of the fixture and the light bulb. During the day, thei® apartment is heated by solar radia- 1 controls. ords, twelve 10”. longer. tion inducted by the copper roof. When the san goes down, : Z the light goes on and provides warmth all night. u , ab ait al 4 High Fidelity All Records ep : ; hon . Speakers ; ; Sound aa Separate powe ‘oO giant-size 12° i 78 RPM, The light also furnishes electric incubation for Mama amplifier ¥ with wooters with LPs and 1634 ° Sparrow’s eggs, allowing her plenty of time for worm breaks LUC Clay oe envy megnete:| | records ss well as ’ 5 : watt f k 54’; 4° } while her old-fashioned’ girl friends mus¥ eggy-sit. power eatpul, toecter: ee onal ° * * A light rainfall fills the bottom of the fixture with plenty of drinking water while the penthouse apartment ré- mains cozy and dry. When there’s a heavy rain, the bottom serves aS a sunken bathtub for the love birds to splash about in. A sliver of broken glass across the base of the fix- ture makes a fine stn porch, Solar radiation, electric lighting, running water, electric incubation, sunken bathtub and sun porch. “Bird-brain! How many people-brains have it so good?” asks Papa Sparrow.. Come In For A Free Demonstration! Open Monday and Friday ’til 9 P.M. Gallagher Music Co. 18 E. Huron sy FE 4-0566 (Downtown Pontiat) . i * %.F THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1958 HOSPITALITY — When the squirrel-hunting season opened: in Indiana recently, hunters in Knox County, near Vincennes, found this sign at one of their favorite spots. It reads: ‘No hunting. (If you can’t read the sign, don't get sare. Come to the house and have nnd with Us.)” Straits ‘Bridge. News Hits Peak Official Says Publicity Was Major Factor in. 38 Tourist Season GRAND RAPIDS. im — The honeymoon is over. between the) Mackinac Bridge and west Michi-| gan tourist. resort operators. Aurey D. ‘Strohpaul, secretary-| manager of the West Michigan/ Tourist and Resort Assn., states) > bridge was a major factor in iftracting tourists to Michigan this year but added ‘it has ceased to be big news in itself.” Strohpaul spoke at the 4st an-; nua] meeting of the WMTRA. “Never again will there be the steady flow of publicity that the bridge attracted for the four years) of its building and for its first| year of operation,” he declared, | “1 am convinced, however, | that with the proper promotion | the bridge will continue te be | one ef our prime vacation at- tractions,” Strehpaul added, He | emphasized a need tor additional | financial support te carry on promotional activities, Strohpaul noted that Cadillac: had generated a total of $840,000 in business volume for its area| alone through promotion of its! Caberfae ski area. Ear! M. Johnsen, Houghton Lake | resort operator and pdt president | of the American Hotef Assn. was! - scheduled prsncipal speaker at a banquet ending the one-day con vention, : : Ancient Urns Given , to Stanford Museum STANFORD, Calif. (UP — Two incient ceramie urns discovered) in a sunken Roman galleon off Vi-! ipeggio, Italy? have been given to; the Stanford University Museum | The urns were donated by Stan-| key Slotkin, San Francisco | nessmian who financed the 1956 div- ing expedition that recovered the | artifacts we gray earthenware with red-| ish "brown colors were used for) carrying, both liquids and_.grains.| They were strung along the sides | of galleys as an additional bul- wark against arrows and spears | Wake up rarin fo. go without | nagging backache Now! You can get the fast relief you need from nagging backache, headache and muscular aches and pains that often cause restless nights and miserable tired-out feelings. When these discom- forts come on with over-exertion or stress and strain — you want relief — want it fast! Another disturbance may be mild bladder irritation following wrong food and drink — often setting up a restless uncomfortable feeling. . Doan’s Pills. work fast in 3 separate ways: 1. byspeedy ars action , to ease torment o headaches. muscular_aches and pains. 27 by soothing effect on bladder irrita- tion. 3. by mild diuretic action tendin to increase output of the 15 miles o kidney tubes. Enjoy a good hight’s sleep and the same happy relief millions have for over 60 years. New, large size saves money. Get Doan’s Pills today! Doan's ‘By.SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)—The music) Stereo is a new starter but its box which has made such a re-|enthusiasts think sales soon will markable comeback since the warjreach the 500,000 sets a year a. has @ fast-growing baby | mark, or about @ tenth of the total r. Siereophonic sound, its fans de-| The latest entry into the home m4. clare, will sweep the country. the mysic : lway high fidelity and the long- |playing records did before ‘What this may do to the already room, instead of just from the box established older forms of the in front of you. With some effort phonographic industry no one is and a bit of cash your present hi quite sure .yet. Some think stereo will follow the cane on stereo, Or you can start same course that hi fi took. Hi fi_retail.sales jumped from 'set outright. ’ 12 alias dollars. in 1950 ‘to-per- haps 260 million dollars this year. phonograph business. field. is the device that makes you think the sound is com- ing from all sides of the living fi equipment can be enlarged to \from scratch and buy a new stereo 4 millions of them—can't give you For records you now have Scent 500 titles from which to choose— or just about. a month's produc- a4 t ‘TWENTY-THREE, \Fans Say Stereo Sound Will Sweep the Country thinks this year’s retail sales of| ‘sotind’ is recorded on one side: af phire needles, Says that needle sets and equipment will total 500'the groove and the other part of/sdles now come to 60 milli million dollars, a good 15 per tion of long-playing records. But! on: over last year. Of this about more stereo records are being rushed to Market by RCA, Celum- bia, Decca, Capitol and others. * * * The oldet monaural records — stereophonic sound and the phono- graph industry wouldn't be too happy to see this investment of: theirs outdated. The oldies can be: played-on a stereo set but they igo on sounding monaural. Hi fi is still booming. The High Fidelity Manufacturers Institute 208 ‘million will be for components for the do-it-yourself enthusiast at home, There are now some 2,500 retailers specializing in hi fi com- ponent sales and services. Stereo calls for new records, new needles and a different cart- ridge, fer two amplifiers and two i speakers. * * * On the standard long:playing | record, sound waves are recorded on one side of the groove. On a stereo record, one part of the the sound on the opposite side./lars a year, with diamond ai The needle picks up both parts|accounting for about half the dol- of the sound and the needle andilar volume, He predicts that dia- cartridge separates them and send | mond point sales will reach 60 mil- them to different a andijion dollars within 10 years. By different speakers. that time he thinks: record sales’ will touch a billion dollars a year. . The stereo needle has to be even. * §% we, smaller than the one used for! Phonogr: aph and record makers’ long-playing records and must be are jaunching a campaign. ‘this jrounded to Keep it from. cutting month to educate people to stereo—_ hol ‘into the record. iwhat it is,and what it-isn’t. If ithey can. find enough Americans Douglas F. Hudson, president of | /with keen ears and musical inter- which est they expect the latest baby tO’ arug counters everywhere. makes diamond, osmium ‘and sap-! = in lots of money—and fast. | ae a Y PILES oma + R RESINOL a! emans Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH “With Little Worry ; a —- noe oo $ ear of insecure false teet ip ref Sage or wobbling. PASTEETH pap lates firmer and more come fortably. This pleasant powder has no ummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. n't cause na Jt s alkaline (non-acid). le (denture breath}. Get PASTEETH at 4 Waa SRO eR gi SOIREE ay SARs Se nagging backache, ~ a eae ame > a A single glance tells you, beyand any question, that these are the newest and most magnificent Cadillac cars ever created. Dazzling in their beauty, enchanting in their grace and elegance, and inspiring in their Fleetwood luxury and appointments—they introduce a new realm of motoring majesty. factwthat these are the finest performing Cadillacs ever produced. With a spectacular new @ And a single journey at the wheel will reveal another unquestionable engine, with a more responsive Hydra- Matic drive, and with improved qualities of ride and handling, they provide a totally new sense of mastery over time and distance. 4 This brilliant new Cadillac beauty and performance are offered in thirteen individual body styles. To see and drive any of them is to recognize a new dimension in automotive quality and goodness. Your Cadillac dealer invites you to do both at your carlicst opportunity. By ofpoutment to the wolis mott discuninaling neotoils THE SIXTY-TWO COUPE P THE FLEETWOOD SIXTY SPECIAL SEDAN THE ELDORADO BIARRITZ VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 280 S.. Saginow St. Pontiac, Mich, TWENTY-FOU S10Vd HAO DA THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1958 0) Deck Officers Quit U.S. Ships Work Stoppage Called Against 20 Firms in Atlantic, Gulf Ports NEW YORK (AP) — Deck offi- cers were ordered by their union; today to quit work on a major part of the ships in the United and dry cargo and Gulf States passenger fleets based in Atlantic Coust ports, The work stoppage was called against 20 large steamship com- nies by the International Organ-| rition of Masters Mates and Pi-| MEETS LOCAL MAN — While touring Pakistan recently. Sec- Dwight W. Bunton, of 1141 Kbout 2.060. s} rs are in volved retary of the Army Wilbur M. Brucker paused to greet a Pantiac Estimates of the number of ships! Soldier stationed there. He is Pfc. affected range irom 300 to 400. j Cherrylawn ‘St: Ships at sea were nut included in| installations in the Far East. Secretary Brucker was on a tour of U. S. Army Democrats Usin ng Directory _ Be 2 ae the stop-work order. The contract between the unjon, and the American Merchant Ma-| Private School Board rine Institute, which represents) SAGINAW W — The Saginaw News has challenged the accuracy of a manufacturers’ directory be- ing uséd by Democrats to counter Republican charges that Michigan shows a net loss in industrial jobs during recent years. The newspaper's challenge deals only with the Saginaw listings in the directory. , x *« * John M. Pickell, president of | the Michigan Manufacturer and Financial Record which pub- lished the directory, called the challenge ‘“‘political.” He said the book was compiled on the basis ef information from ‘‘many sources, including chambers of commerce, bankers and the Michigan Department of Eco- ‘nomic Development.” The 1959 directory lists 1,230 lmore Michigan manufacturing, firms than the 1957 directory. It) |has been used by Democratic poli- | jticians to support their contention | of a gain, against Republican! fclaims that the state lost manu- Saginaw News Doubts. Total of Firms Listed telephone directory; 20 told the News they were not manpfactur- ing but distributing firms, and 12 said they were installers or servicers, not manufacturers. In addition, the News said 37) manufacturers listed in the 1957| directory do not appear in the one for 1959. *x * * | Pickell, contacted in Philadelphia | on a business trip, said ‘We'll |challenge” the newspaper’s figures, ‘adding: ‘They must think you've | isot to make nuts and bolts to be a! jmanufacturer. However, it is diffi-| icult to get on the dot every instance | lin 18,000 listings. We do not: list! dairies and bakeries although they ‘contend they're manufacturers, and, iso far as J] know we don’t show a, jsingle manufacturer's agent, al- though most of them. want to be. listed. You'd never have heard lanything if this hadn't been an. jelection year. | New Soviet Vaccine Passengers Escape . fy. off Caldera, Chile, 450 rallea-north About 14 per Labial abeinhonell béldnet et we Sn alid weet Authorities at Cogitimbo, to the). 200 miles south, eg ing 9g ca sl . Cost but a tg and J gers. and erew D? Scholls fi ino-pads VALPARAISO, Chile (AP)—The newest and largest steamship in the Chilean merchant navy was believed Jost today after a violent fire forced passengers and crew to abandon shipi The 8,679-ton Lebu was sailing navy said its sibs were regi 1 toy the scene. E GAS Sia" Price Includes i Completely. Installed Aa 1. New Gos Fired Forced Air § 5 o 5 00 Furnace. © NO MONEY DOWN 20-Year Factory Guarantee ® Free Estimates ©FHA Terms 10-Gauge Heavy Duty Heat Exchanger with All-New CONVERSIONS Warm-Air Flat Ductwork and Cold-Air Ductwork Connected to Present Registers New Thermostat and Et ™ ot, Nalparlan, wie. swe aes [as New Ship Burs ra ate" ‘coRNS FE &-4132 MI 6-9292 Calls Taken Until 9 P.M. _TEMP-HEAT, INC. Formerly the.%emprite Co. ifaeturing jobs to neighbors over | iIs Declared Ineffective | the last two years. SOAK MONTREAL (AP) — A Soviet vaccin used the campaign slogan “Win | The News said there are 119| 3s ee Laie scicrons ” cy , 5 19 ° By, } | with Willie,” using the nickname (Saginaw firms listed in the 1959 affective but also potentially dan- balgendy which do) not appear N' gerous as a treatment for the dis- Rock Private Schools corporation.| in Arkansas City, Kan. the 1957 directory. | easetlthenantuslimecanc ict ihe ‘They elected as —— a ine Mrs. Oates, who has two chil- } 2 cee ar he Neve et it| multiple Sclerosis Society ot Can- cgotiations on a new contract Corporation tne on of a oe idren, one 15 and the other five, ia aaly pin “ more years ena jada was told today. on sed ¢ 20 n. unti]|cian, an osteopa a olesale} a | e or side were recessed at 1 a.n ; ‘noted for her hats—some bizarre been there 20 or more and 17 for D. L. Inwood, president of ie Controls Gas Piping and Furnace Wiring th Olea expired eal Citizens of Little Rock The union ordered the men not to work without a contract, and | the situation a ‘‘tieup.’’| LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) — On ph EL Casey, presi nt of the Sept. 18, 1958, six Little Rock citi- eroup, alled it a zens got together to form the Little | she has held since her girlhood Ver rece * * Ls - pm. today, ek anda doctor. Personal? but always chic. 10 or more yelirs. society, said the vaccine was an- : Both union and employer spokes- Sreteres 10Now: ‘How about your 15-year-old,”’ jalyzed and tested in various re- 1025 E. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM ¥ men said the contract dispute had x k& asked a newsman, ‘what school] Eighteen of the 119, the News |search centers throughout the | | 7 | Dr. Thomas J. Raney, president! will he go to?” been narrowed from 29 to 7 items. | said are not listed in the Saginaw | world, ; : They declined to disclose the of the corporation, thinks himself | “‘He’s ready for Hall High,” she = = —————————————— —= : > OE os — ‘eins “not SUEny a stranger’ to the isaid. “We're watching and wait-| — ; . : field of education. He points to a: jng.” The Se ee om Fron ne |brother, Alton Raney, a long-time SAS | | \} reported to concern vacé » pe | ‘ioe = stees . , . | sion and welfare benefits. The une ef Tend ou oe moaned of Guway, Dr. Malcolm G. Tay lor, 43, is a = ion has not sought a wage In-| . ses ate aie ct it y baldish Little Rock osteopath who | ih c . use pee G Sih IES a is seriously concerned with “fed- y - x * Iwhich Raney himself was gradu- leral encroachment on our states’, ; li The “United States Lines, antici jated. lrights and southern way of life.” | Ff he* Wied Oiaie as >, a H t . & pating a tieup postponed indefi- | nitely the sailing of its flagship. the United States. The liner had | been scheduled to leave New York for Europe Thursday. SPECIALIZED SERVICE e TAPE RECORDERS e RECORD CHANGERS e P. A. SYSTEMS e RADIOS e OFFICE INTERCOMMS e WEBCOR FACTORY SERVICE RADIO-TV ! University of Arkansas Board of A sister, Mrs. Clarence E. Bell, is wife of the school superin- tendent at Parkin, Ark. Another brother, D. P. Raney, is on the Trustees. Raney, currently Pulaski County (Littke Rock) Health Officer, has} two sons, one a junior high student | and the other a grade schooler. 40, is known around Little Rock as | calls “ “‘a-clitb woman and then. some.” | But Mrs. Oates likes that title and} claims she currently belongs to! : ‘something more than 50 organiza-| tions’’ and ‘‘until just recently, I} was a member of 20 boards of! different clubs.” She is vice president school corporation. “But I've had to ctit down since| of the} Taylor is a former officer in | the Segregationist Capital Citi | zens Council in Little Rock. He currently is on the organization’s board of directors and usually serves as sergeant-at-arms when the group holds meetings. He is | treasurer of the school group. Taylor, a native of Osceola, Ark., eT.V. in the Mississippi River delta cot-; ¢ . . * auc ) Oate jton producing area of Arkansas, e HI FI Irs. Gordon P. lie) Oates, |has a girl 9 and a boy 13 whom he| my concern over possible | integration ef our schools.”’ Ben Isgrig Jr., 34, is secretary \of the corporation. A youthful, Soe ee eePeoane | World War II veteran, Isgrig is | wholesal e florist and a planter. A lifetime resident of Little | Rock, Isgrig calls the private | school plan ‘‘the most civil and | schools.’ “NAME THE COLOR CONTEST” Simply Come in and Choose a Name for Our Paint Colors. ELEGANCE so tous O'BRIEN’S SYMPHONIC MU Mlb BLAKE I was nominated to the legisla-} businesslike way to get the GIVE TOUC H OF mgzy ture,"’ she explained. schools opened. They have got | i . AD to be o pene d — we must have | # Vy * _ Mrs. Oates beat out two men | for the nomination to the post | 3149 W. Huron of state representative from | Isgrig’s personal interest in the’ oon WIN A TV SET } fy FE 4-579] Pulaski County in last summer's |jreopening lies in the fact he is’ resen . ss . . | Democratic primary election. She | married and “has three cilidren: 4 a fh At _ Simply come in and register your name and choice of = T —_ a aia aiain Seen rd} wa - r/ } paint Color Name. You need not purchase anything nor | «ws i 4 <i i present to win. ; SS = ees a ~_ 4 } . : 2a TEEN ER f ; * f . . * HW This year, decorate your rooms with O’Brien i's CAN WIN A HI-FI SET i. | Colors of the Year and be assured of beauty and fashion rightness. AVAILABLE Lovely GEM STONE BRACELETS of Simply pom in and register your mame and choice of Paint Color Name You need not purchase anything, 2 nor be pres sent to win BRAND COUNTRY KITCHEN |=: %- |) % poe ces a new syrup... maple-y flavor at a sweet, low price! Easy on your budget! Wonderfully delicious! More luscious than other syrups, Country Kitchen tastes altogether different. It’s delicious—with rich, heart-of-the-woods maple-y flavor. So good it makes everyone CONTEST EXPIRES OCT. 18th za Brunette to lomele Transform Dark Wood -to Light in 3 Easy Steps A 45 Columbia Long Playing Record of a Popular Piece. 3 reba { i : ® NEW BETTER Exterior MASONRY _ PAINT RIUMPH OVER Paint Peeling! eli eee ee ee Ae | se eR ee ad net me ee en eee aire agty -” want seconds! ; ‘ Try some on pancakes, waffles | essere? CE i or biscuits this very week. ¢ i ; You'll love it-~and marvel that - Gallon A — ver C6ct 4 © 8 4 ' it costs so little! | BIC Se : i Hi | SUN - oe | FREE! | ~ GLASSES Gallon $meso . . i ¥ | Regular $1.98 Vatue... Free with ’ 7 ‘=: Made by the makers of Log Cabin— | the purchase of one gallon of "75" Calton : 1 America’s favorite maple-blended syrup. | ¢ ok HOUSE of COLOR | Bt Product of General Foods |P/ y’ S o | 3139 West Huron St, “FE 8-0428 . Parking Galore . ... at Our Front Door “ Boy : __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1958 TUESDAY vray. INDIANAPOLIS—Frans Sauaine a Rr pce Ready to Run UAREZ, Mexico ~ Al F mn dg 198, Ezzard 199, eae Cincinnati, 10, LONDON, eo London, 207, ler, Pasirac, 189% Mieant” Beach, MSU 3rd in Total Offense : hey Oklahoma, Army Set Pace| \ ‘By The Associated Press 2 Army wens. To the suprise of no one, par:| 1 weneteyfiie” f z Bit ticularly West Virginia ond South a A are Ser: it ais ie t x * * * + * FT arolina, Oklahoma ArMY| § Ars: st.” 804 25 artan Backs : he cari | ' aga 5 - ° r insurance ranked 12 today in total offense| # Bex. Coit. “2 1B fae dep p , Wolverine Backs Bigger, Linemen Slower according to National Collegiate RUSHING ~ =A. Arata — athletic bureau statistics. Z Okahoe Ves. Ars. : The Sooners, No. 1 in this} } Sqm": f % io das 1 7 , eo 2 week's Associated Press poll,| 3 Army» owes dS ON OSS ay mad ef swamped West Virginia 47-14 last| 5 w'westen = ..:..1 75 a6 3288 ee | Nn ee Saturday, running up 559 yards|§ Petr °Site "2 157 Gen su40 overall, The Cadets, with ~ the 2 Ariana Sisie” 63 38 zih { Are Fast ; “bazooka offense” humbled South) 12, Clameon is fa as u ANN ARBOR —Michigan coach; ich (183) averages out at 176 Spartan backs is capable of break- Carolina 46-8 with 529 yards. FORWARD tates ae Bennie Oosterbaan says he would| pounds. ing away. * Third in overall offense is Mich-| 1 ox - OL S56 64 284.0 igan State, with 502 yards in their) 3 Wash. &- 4 2 zt it Bi Opposing Lines Have a, : re, _ . = z- contrast, Michigan's starting Tat Sarton) and eee Caltornia, cauwy mu i Besicn ser a : a3 a iss Some Beet srl per 5 0 sore agames Biche: * an * weight. Michigan State’s for- 7] The leaders: opvense 7 Mich. st. BSR? ls Factor gan State Saturday. Right halfback Fred Julian, the} ward wall averages 218 pounds, . wee G Plays Yas Avs. RY Oregon cue. 8 ¥ 4 ps pes Oosterbaan, preparing his under- lightest Wolverine runner, weighs} four more than Michigan's. . ———_- dog Wolverines for the annual'1g4 a:pound more than Bercich, It's up front where Oosterbaan This Insurance Exchange at the Auto Club EAST LANSING ® — The ponies backyard clash with the S$ : partans, , A incr | will try to outrun the horses in says his rival Dufty Daugherty has the Spartans’ heaviest starting the Michigan-Michigan State foot- : Rack. ball game here Saturday. = a oe in the MSU/ Michigan must clutch out its a good, little man if each have Michigan State’s starting back- sod aia _ |yardage in short bursts with Ju-| equa) talents,” he said. “The big field averages out at 177 pounds} Daugherty’s contingent of Mike jlian, Bob Ptacek (206), Brad)jineman who's aggressive and gets per man. The 1958 Spartans al-| Panitch (169), Dean Look (175), |Myers (196) and John Herrnstein|, fast charge will push the little ready are being compared to the! Art Johnson (178) and Bob Ber- | (215) lugging the ball. Any of the| one around. “ * like Billy Wells and Leroy Mare pe ton years, ago. ee ane ppotgeadigger, should Michigan, with fullback John) Yukj : 1 4 poor Seren sc hopes ieaieen. av Viking Has 32 Points in 2 Games big one despite the difference In erages an even 200 pounds in the weight.’ ad @ starting backfield. Fink le q q C ount Scorin It’s likely Denenery 9 ats quarterb: his defenses to stop Herrnste oar cone 169 sumds oe bil S y ( Michigan's most productive and 1 stocky, 67 frame. Halfbacks probably fastest runner. io sen Wane | nye. amaon | ew 0 mat rm, ec anit Ser Cl Bob Bercich weighs 187. Walled Lake’s Frank Fink is off] ning as well as ever this season (51a Myers is the Wolverine’s As in the game against Southern to a fast start in the 1958 Oakland for the Rams but has been held only other running threat. California, Herrnstien is the big|County scoring race with 32 points) to two TDS, both last Sunday. wey man in the Michigan backfield] (0 Bis swt mor bettback “ Dave Stokes of Troy is the} Michigan's Gerry Marciniak exists now, and has for three decades, only to please, ‘protect and serve. It has done these things so well for so long, there is no question that it is the first choice among Michigan car owners, Indeed, it is so popular that more people of Michigan insure their car here as Auto Club members than all the rest of the people of Michigan insure with any other insurance organization. It is the car insurance more people like best. It just has to be outstanding to be so dominant. *You will, too. would like the weight advantage. “A good, big man is better than Detroit Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange — at Autemobile Club of Michigan Bob Ptacek weighs 206 and haltf- backs Brad Myers and Fred Julian scale in at 196 and 184. points in pacing the Vikings to a pair. of victories, He is given a| ‘with his 215 pounds. Quarterback The fleet senior halfback has tal-| = 215 po | Med five touchdowns and two ‘extra | iclosest competitor to Fink with 25) | (236) and Don Deskins (239) on the points while Ed Bush of Birming- ham, Tom Bell of West Bloomfield jand BOB Holbrook of Royal: Oak interior and Gary Prahst (222) and Walt Johnson (214) on the ends VISIT OR PHONE YOUR NEAREST OFFICE A. J. BOCUE, Mgr. 76 Williams St —FE 5-4151 may not be quick enough to stop, s the Spartan race horses. | | Fink, Lyon’s teammate Tom De-| ptacek, Michigan’s starting quar- AS good chance of replacing St. Fred i imball fallow with 24. : P ace Jack Lyon as thie local offen-| The MSU average will up a little _ H. Burns, FE 8-2133 C. R. Wilsen, FE 8-0205 . M. MeNally, OL 2-7741 E. & Tynan, FE i-2991 if Don Arend, at 203, starts at full- sive ace this fall. : jrocher, John Schoff of Lake Orion i\terback, returned to action yester- _ L. Taft, FE 2-8919 Virgil Keener back. But the second string half-| Lyon, who won out over Jim | and Doug Meadows of Royal Oak day his gashed left hand suffi- . A. Warken, FE 2-6240 (Helly) MEirose 7-7451 ‘backs are built afong the same| Drake of Lake Orion a year ago Dondero each has had a three-|-jentiy healed to handle the ball. ©. “Check” Conn. GR 4-6254 touchdown game. Ptacek’s alternate, Stan Noskin, See first page of local phone books for offices in state cities Derocher and Ray Kovachevich| yas out of action with a axe of Oak Park are the only meM-| groat. bers of the top 25 who finished | ee | among the leading point-getters in| LS TRE CEARH Don Donar of St. Benedict hea | taken over for departed Raven. V, We've Put the Hatchet to Tire Prices “| to Bring You the BIGGEST-VALUES EVE’ line of speed rather than weight. Al Laplow, the new sophomore star from Saginaw, weighs 130 |Larry Gacki as the county area | leader with 30 points for two out, lings. Doug Graham and Ron Irish, Brown City’s veteran 1-2 punch, follow with 24 and 20, respectively. OAKLAND COUNTY sCORING ry 3 3 4 [ese Bgl oe Lake Bto Troy sep Birmingham | Bell. W. Bloomfield Holbrook, RO Kimball Chapman, Farmington Steinhelper, St. Mike Schoff. Lake Orion Douglas, Pontiac |Derocher, 8t Fred \Lucadam, W Bloomfield Morey. Ferndsie /‘Gunten, Madison Meadows, RO Dondero Kovachevich, Oak Park 33 (Dupree, RD St. Mary Douglas, Avondale Tasteful way for any man to flavor his Autumn wardrobe with a subtle touch of rich- ness. See Tobacco Brown—a new color at its _ Florsheim best in-# well-chosen collection of "up-to-the-minute Fall styles. and his running mate’ im, the re- serve backfield, Roger Danna- (236) are the heavyweights of the Michigan forward wall. Facing | FI ORSHEIM ., them for State will be Palmer Pyle &\ \ | WS) ox were carried out in practice at Obacco Ha [RE Ser Ts eA) Herb Adderly, 197-pound soph- 2, . Sof omore. left half from Phila- | Bob Hren, 190-pound sophomore from Duluth, was put tn at left half for the third team after his protective walls of the secret prac- jpoceee oS tice field adjacent to Macklin Sta- By JOE WILMAN |i. Madison ‘dium despite an on-again off-again} Now we have reached the top of }iCrr cts Grenmue . hoo, scales 182. a full measure of pleasure Im |B: seams seve tet tines, Do ~ Deskins (239) and Jerry Marciniak | (240) and Ellisson Kelly (231). Shifts indicated earlier this week delphia, was shifted to fullback | © = and wag running third. ae shift from right. ee oe The squad worked out behind the! + <P TODD’S SHOE STORE |“: Ppepetg ering j The field, which can be entered the third step with the. right foot. | only through the fieldhouse, pro-'The bail, at this point, should not, au bd 82-03 0 83 9g 0) 00 0 b2 O29 bo 0 09 BS 9g B29 00 Oa OS ee ee a et ee ee =——PHegooooaceH-NeacognhW - oe xCQUNTY AREA SCORING “Shoes for Entire Family” vided a little more privacy than'be more than shoulder height. Donat, Bt Benedict | 25 "6 ‘e NYI ON ' the open actice field protected ; t common mis- 7° . Brown Cit 20 W. Huron FE 2-3821 only by canvas that had een used oo ot ace mince js letting Galante oe Rite 3 3 A is so far this season. this backswing get away from him ateeaniloneer’ iment 2 3 3 i$ — aaa — ~~» __—iat this point. In trying for extra een nesta ao : : Cf) speed many bowlers will bring the w heey netterite) ict 2 2 i 13 @ ball back higher than we show in os e today’s drawing. The extra speed t d lihey” gain is more than offset, how- Local Trotter Loses tres is US arrive ever, by the damage done to their, * PLUS TAX AND timing. The speed itself may be JACKSON — Steady rain and a SECAPPAMLE CASING from Hiram Walker; ~ lbad, too, as it may prevent a normal hooking action. I am not against a fast ball, but it should muddy layout did not stop 2,110 harness fans turned out to wager $53,098 at the Jackson Raceway, (TUBE wre BLACKWALL) BLACK AND | BIG SAVINGS ALL SIZES ween be obtained by allowing the back-| ast night. swing to come back above shoulder | Emily Ann Spencer triumphed in ight. | the featured Adrian trot by just ee Lubanski has a style very beating Chiz Hanover owned by WHITEWALLS F and M Stables of Pontiac. * this autumn-mellow | arnllee te he ove vies : ‘ Hanover took the lead and had a M good bowl ve straight bourbon whiskey | 2.ai*iSolcs. "sitesi h are still on the ee a eenen and hips face “aS disqualified and placed third. * ‘ (Ga . forward. The shoulders will stay ; : rot : square to the target as he delivers For a Better Buy AL — the ball. See “Cy” Everything is set for the bowler “CY” OWENS Inc 9 i] to bring his right arm and his left Do neif Oe Ache leg forward for the final. step apd onfiacs Only Authorize delivery of the ball. FORD DEALER cum (Copyright 1958, John F. Dille co.) LAS ba 147 S. Saginaw §&t. EARLY BIRD SPECIAL! FULL SIX €} YEARS OY \ °©0@ ~<@ Go Permanent Type ANTI- FREEZE BRAND NEW ALL NEW DESIGN 14” TUBELESS = ut VALUE RESERVATION SPECIAL on either of these new 1. New Winter Tires, tubeless or tube 2. Winter Treads on Your Sound Casings or on Guaranteed Casings EVERY TIRE GENERAL $-T- ms Other Sizes Down-Priced eau ORDER NOW AND SAVE type. Black or White Sidewall. We Furnish. LITTLE BROWN J UG CO © & Bie Qe « cms HIRAM WALK (3 2 * $25” | V} A rut reconoirionen TRAIGHT BOURB a 6.70x15 it vAL } : +39 AND , : tO BY HIRAM WALKER & SONS | 9 For $99 ~ Ply Tax and Treedoble Tice + s) USED TIRES ade ieikee awartasts Fey teclding}@) wan EASY 1 1 , temas PAY 24NOV 44 DEC 14 JAN Code No. 914 THIS OFFER GOOD. THRU OCT. 20 oo $470 | Early American in character 4’ | FD WILLI y : ohe ua Don R. MacDonald Co. | : 7 7 STE Se eS mua OD INC. 1 a8 ’ °., a je. rennin GC) - 370 S. Saginaw St. re 5-6136 #8) 491 S. Saginaw FE 2-8303 (fa SIE ALLL ELLE ODL ELIE 2 « es 4 SHvd AO DWA THIRTY-FIGHT —__ _ ; ie. “NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING n is hereby given of a scheduled Fireman Saves Pooch as THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1958 pubite. ring to be held by the Pon- lise “TowMabip Zoning Board at the by Artificial Respiration : wecsands er. ae mT se ae 8 1:30 ednesday. ber 22nd, 58, 3} pm to consider tM {following applica MILWAUKEE W-— Spotty, a es tion fer rezoning: Be o i i To change from R-6 tO>G2: mongrel dog, can thank fireman Dric eee 83 ie ot South ca of 565/ Gordon Rotta’s knowledge of arti-| Go |, 6150 or t. ay it “te aera ft of Lot No, 2 Omi OR ene — me way e Farms Subdivision eat, 1 ing a hire a ho : ; , fighting a fire in a ho Entire Line Revamped, found Spott ious under a t scour 60 ft. of North 103 ft. of south! OURC : potty unconscio' e North’ 103 fof Gouth, 308 ir gest! Ded. Fe.carried the pooch outside| : | : ‘ May Replace Mercury 190 ft of No. 2 of Galloway Lake and applied artificial respiration. | o M d li t Mod ] Farms Subdivision in Section 14 Pretty soon Spotty moved his head, | eadgiis e Persons interested are requested to be 5 : Breath piesent A copy of the soning map mith rolled his eyes and-kegan breath- ce tke Tonsship Clerk and may! ing naturally. > . ' The following are top prices|p 4s By DAVID J. WILKIE be examined by Sess interes | “By the time we had our~hoses | in | | ed in covering sales of locally grown IXeS a ef DETROIT W—Ford Motor Co,’s Chairmen Zoning Boara TOlled up, Spotty was up and produce brought to the Farmer's ltdsel line of cars will be in a new F GRE “Pownanty Clerk |B vtta a in pretty good shape,” | Market by growers and sold by lower price field in 1959. Oct 1, 15 cotta Sat : them in wholesale package lots. “os This was disclosed at a national —— ae aa CHICAGO \ — Grain futures EW Ww— The stock ARKUAL STATEMENT | acalings oS es naka of ade Quotations are furnished by the! ™ ae Rtas sighed cee press preview yesterday of the SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF PONTIAC MICHIGAN aay Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Wakie tude company's M-E-L division, which seipit and Disbursements July 1 1967 through June 30, 1658 *y. Tuesday. . 2 handles all Ford-built cars except- Coan Receipic and Dumumetgeneral Fund Demand was very small in all Leading stocks showed gains and ing the Ford division outpug. Ru- Cash en Hand July 1, 10957 : $ 458,538.84 pits and price changes held within vaUrre , -| losses of fractions to about a point. "eee ok age cena Revenue Receipts narrow ranges early in the session Apples, McIntosh. fancy, bu .... §2.75 * +--+ mor has company Revenue trom General Property fax Wheat storied frectionally lower|Cestsiwepe. (Du vse scsocs 309] 7 planned to drop the two top priced Dalinauene dex Clilerians Th 248 88 neat farts ‘i, ae "Ga y ew. se Grapes, Concord bskt pk. ...... 128| Profit-taking again was evident Edsels. Instead the entire line has Tiiteresd fon (Delinquent! exe 5 083 98 OnE Scattered sel ine) COMRICTC Peteves Hele Hares 2s -... 400! after the market's two-day surge been revamped and will be priced yee ae demand was small and there were{Rears. Bartlett. bu... alt rd peaks. The ticker ta j Tow: 2, $5,781,287 3 ; hcl saean, Stn a ee . 2.75|to record peaks. « ‘ape just above the top of the low Mivercoltica Grane no signs of expected export busi-/ Watermelon, bu. ........:.:+..++-. 200/was late for a period of seven Ipriced models of Chevrolet, Ford State Primary Fuy.d Sboo= so borqone 603 694 80 jness, — minctes atithe opening ' is : 5 VEGETABLES : 7 and mouth. tisha pare : bcs oe “ : oe nase The corn market too was rather|peans, Was, bu. ..........- tase 216] tern was lt lar in Ply Vocational 28 354.69 dull with the major amount of sell-|Beets, topped. bu 22200052200...) 10] The pa Stange aia bad ‘The price schedule for the 1959 Other Grants ‘Inacio Se Education! Or ae jing by a large elevator house. ueee Rec dos. vevecoceedsess 2.28 most major sections. Rails and Edsel series was not disclosed, Tuition +Handicappec ildreni . 2 duos souueodoE es s ttle Other Rivenue Revel ipts (Rentals, Interest oe ame > Scattered demand kept losses to Cauliflower, Good Segoe eeneeee a8 rubbers showed little change but Ben D. Mills, division gen- Income etc} ese fractions early in the session. Gorn, sweet, § doz. ................ 100, Royal Dutch was active and up eral manager, said that when it Tota! Revenue Receipts 8.638.47438| In the soybean pit, local traders |Sugumbers. Pickle size, bu. .....-.. 55° about a point in an otherwise. ° | is announced it “will make auto Non-R. Rec t ' . oo fee COCRE.) GOB. cere eens wieiae aa , ; Sele of Property on? evenue Receipts arin ese ce ‘were on the selling side and there Eseplant. igi Sas spe nulna Saleiieteurs 1.50 ragged oil group. industry history for is Revelving Vunda, (Caleieriae “AtSietice: ele) 2 Sc were light hedging sales also. Buy-|Kontrabi.tchs ) dor en 22s... 128) x * of The Edsel line for 1959 has been er Or e 1 c 1S a 3.9 : 7 . es . < * . 4 ‘ ——_— ing was mainly on resting orders: ies de ibe) Web 159 Reynolds Tobacco continued to} redesigned but it retains some of Total Non-Revenue Receipts _ 76491091 ear the end of the first hour] Parsley Root, (ens. doz, .......... 100, decline, dropping about a point the styling characteristics with rand) Tetsl of Creneral Pena mectwrs $8.638.474.58 wheat was unchanged to \ lower, Fear Ginaeye: BE esaaceee: 09) while Warner-Lambert steadied in iwhich it was introduced a year Tota! of General Pund Receipts and Balance | December $1.935; corn ts to 4] pid Lopbsl Fed. ameet, bu, se spoons a3 25! further reaction to merger discus- ago. Juby 1. 1957 oe $9,361.924.13 lower, new style December $1.13%4; | pumpkin u. a 125, sions. : cada: General Fund Disbursements \ i De-|R Aas 5, eri Pen =F Y details W isciosec “atl . a -|Radishes, red (ochs.', dow ,....... \ a Rarity a UA oeriecendent anal Amsiaents 15,750.06 jens a or lie te" hig ee “| Radishes, white, (behs.) doz ’ 90| ‘The opening in Lukens Steel when the Mercury, Edsel, Lincoln Salaries of Business Administrators bee 24,965.00 ice ane Neha i Se cen \Bgeson Deeicus, hee = - ve was delayed more than a half and Continental cars are intro- Clerical Salarics coe 50.803 23 | lower, December $1.30; and soy- | Tomatoes. e Monn 6 175 hour as exchange officials duced during the next four or five Adminitretive ‘Supplice a runntee can aeeae ‘i ‘beans %@ higher to ‘4 lower, No-|Turnips, topped. Du. - 250 matched sell orders with buyers weeks. ensus an tt oe : 22, 47 ; -@9 197 5 a dive Silene 1 388 32 vember $2.177s. | GREENS following yesterday's late news The division's plans are under- — Grain Pri lenin be : 7 $8, that the company had declared ‘stood to call for discontinuance of Total Administration Disbursements .. . $ 151,647 18 rain rrices Simei a eae c "138 @ 25 cent dividend compared ithe Mercury Medalist model. Its liustruction | h _esocen Corer scat enees Ne 6 25 Salaries of Supervisors... . ..-....-... . $ 46,786.53 OPENING GRAIN Serra bu. “iso, With 50 cents previously. ‘place in the medium price field Pangea ier er oS - 4.003,606.75 i a ad I 8 aaa core ay ie Lukens finally opened at 74% probably will be taken by the new Jauonoee 402, grain: tes chard. - 150) Clerical Salartes come docedge 08 159,110.73 Wheat Oats ff 4% : | Edsel series. ; 7 t m 5,400 shares. AP Wirepacto Teaching Supphes and Expense” Bygone ise erase 138,804.77 Dec 194 Dec - 64% SALAD GREENS ‘oO ~ oO - 70,914.01 Me Mi : — | Other cars in the Mercury line ee y weuise = o 1.08% ates ve uewsas $8 sors eanuars! (deal 156) New Yo k Stocks TAFT MEMORIAL LIGHTED The Robert A. Taft Memo- | are paral oa segs ry nig Other Instruction Expense 25,742 63 gts assoc Rye 7 | Endive, ‘bleached. be. -.. 2 00! w r rial, located on Capitol Hill in Washington, was lighted last night % Sole Los and a Tota! Instruction Disbursements ....... ; corn (ole) fy 13s |Lettuce, head, (erate) 3 ‘dos. . 400) (Late Morning Quotations) . at a celebration for the construction force which built it. The upper | ePcury _ ae # Barraiten tet Schooll Plant = sees 13010 ; Romaine, 1.25! Prgures after decimal point are eighth of the | iiding ~s a ‘carille The memorial to the late | inches is 4'2 inches longer. By Beet a uitiee : ies ete ca oe >| | admiral Jones & L ... $8.4 oe Genasar ta’ echaduied ts be Gedicated year. U.S. Capitol ‘lengthening the wheelbase engi- u talitt 280. ¢ lairiRedue |... oe 3 hext year. U. 5. Operating Supplies and Expense . 33,321.67 10 31B-40A) Poultry and Eggs Peeps on ee 6s wal 4 Tyas in the a jneers have been able to position Other Operating Expense ..-.- -.-- 0. ++. 0s 1,391.21 45 seca I eevuore POULTEY Alied Sirs... S81 Kroger |... 98. 8 show : background bove picture. | the engine farther ahead and lower Be oy Allis Chal ,... 28. hn & PF . : | Total Operation Disbursements ............ 1,100,802 92 | May ... 10 10B-20A | DETROIT (AP) — Prices paid per Alum Ltd ..... 2 yoy Glass .. 99 jit. This permits a @ per cent re- Maintenatice of Schoo! Plant < aiden Seen. 10:10B-204 ,ound, PO.B. Detroit, for No. 1 quality Alece |... $7 Tih Meal... 11-8 \duction in the size of the channel Maintenance 0 rounds : ~ =2- 768 27 = —AS . | Fe oultry ae je Sac Maintenance of Buildings sees. 372,389 82 Heavy type hens 18-18; light type hens AMCan ...... 494 Lockh Aire .. 835 Car Owners, Take Note through the car floor that provides. Maintenance of Furniture and Equipment .. 71.4479 11-12; heavy type broilera or fryers (3- Am Cyan $2.1 WB... wee 20.6 | space for engine and transmission. Other Maintenance Expense s 14,581 07 ’ { ' |3%_ lbs) whites 18; barred rocks 18-19, Am M & Pdy .. <; Lone 8 Cem .. 36.7 t ne ——_—__- e 5 out a caponettes (5'2-6 lbs) 20-21; heavy type Am Motors ae Lorillard ... @4 * ° : ° ° Total Maintenance Disbursements 486,033.93 [eres hens, 27, heavy type turkeys. Neat te Le Ram CW INIS 1mi1na es ® ® Pine guranee $ 84,147 08 Sa {Am Tel & Tet 1914 Mesniag RS) N n Br ef ngurance pocsuh UdoSa a6 ( ; — oe 9731 Other Pixed Charges .. a 864 89 _, Plans i in Bloomfield | DETROIT EGGS [paaconte — Ce Martin co 305 ews | | 3 ~ —_ | DETROIT (AP)—Po.b Detroit, in Armour & Co. 183 May ars: “ ax O Or ears Total Fixed Charges Disbursements Sond jease lots, federal-state grades Atehison | 955 oa ° 1 ‘ awn Sr pe Auxillary Services Ww : t h “434 . fe. hy Ue ee eo Ce WEST BLOOMFIELD — Carl iarge Si; laree 49°60, etd. ave. oe Beth sel. ee toot Cepecendy uecu inks Beaty’ s er portation Expense ...... --..--. 1,329 82 -40, wt 1 28.) ing Air . : . ; aces RevoWwing Pund Deficits... --..--+. «= 19.000 00 eee director of the West: 3°‘ 7 ane Binrgs 46- 47, Bond Btrs .... 215 Stes (Ch 7as By DAVID J. WILKIE | 1959 plans, said recently: “We ‘Market, 1079 S. Lapeer Rd., Ox- pea ee eetson Agtixitics ce YE 7 Bloomfield Boy's Club, announced wtd ay ‘ we. Browns: pone rare Briecs Mr... 87 Mont Ward .. 395 AP Automotive Editor are going to earry fuel injection ‘ford Township, through a window OS Ss Bapense 1Hew”s Trattic me femep os (er (8 GU a stacks: ie. weds ave 3 . Brun Balke’... 336 Mueller Br 0. DETROIT — Every year brings, Just as bullishly as we have im jast night and escaped with cight Guards)... or seo ns00t 853/06 [es hich will b qd) Commercially raded: run Balkel 2 : . ; 12 es Youth Day” which will be hel nites; Grade A jumbo 48; extra Budd Co ...-. 17 Nit Gite 3::: 43) something new to the auto in-| the past because we think and bags of potatoes valued at $11 2 Total Auxiliary Service Disbursements ....... 126,359.37 ‘this Friday and Saturday. hare 44-45; large 4244-44%; medium 35 errousne 37) Nat Dairy .... 46) dustry. | sincerely believe fuel injection according to Oakiand County ae small 27-28%. Browns rade = : Nat G a. £35 . * Total Current (Operating: Expense .... . . s708871640 ‘Youth Day” activities, such as jumbo 48% extra large 44; large 24%% Geno seep + nat Lena | At least one major advance and is the right way to do this thing.”” Sheriff's Deputies Capital Outlay ‘ |selling a newspaper published by, medium 39; small 26-27 iCan Dry "18.2 No Am Av... 33.7/ ‘numerous smaller refinements. Also to be widely proc laimed for’ a 4 Grounds ye a5 wieesateesceseeseees @ 8,982.56 f the club, ll hel \Cdn ‘Pac 999 Nor Pac .. 0.7) Rebert A. “Garrison, 22, of 77 Bulldings bce seco snc cee i [the members of the club, wi elp| Livestock [carries Cp... 98 Obie Ol + $0.8) are scheduled for 1959. The major! 1959 will be refinements in trans-' W. Brooklyn St, and Robert A. a aeeeenaten ever oe ctnentondesneacienn 22,331.80 \taise money for the support of the ieee #1 ---=- 24) Geena Tet = 73.6, innovation will be anew high missions, drive shaft and axle/piinam 23, of 24 W. Brooklyn, Other Capital Outlay : 2.197 56 jclub, Misfeldt said. DETROIT LIVESTOCK |Cen In Lt Pr. 984 Pac G & Bl .. §73\ luster exterior finish that wilh ratios. These refinements in the) pleaded ty today to a charge | Other activities will include the| DETROIT, Sept. 30 (AP)—Livestock— (Ches & Oh ... 902 pia) Gi ad eliminate waxing and polishingfor!car‘s power train, the experts ?,° guilty y B Total Capital Outlay Disbursements ......... 133,414.43 a r = x all aR Hegs—Salable 700 market not estab- Cuvee ABpe Hi 4 gen a LGtlap to three years . a po : oe YF simple larceny before Munic ipal = rida night footba ame - lished, cattle salable 700 trade on 200 9 say. combine to increase ue! Tota) General Fund Disbursements $7,222, 130.83 ay Ww e Bl field ond” Mil. | Si@ughter steers and heifers slow, prices piaes ®vyc .... 68.2 parse "se 108.4 . os f _ Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. They Supplemental Disbursements |i ween West bioomie steady on average standard an dbetter, Clark Equip .. 533 aney. ‘e7, And, contrary to industry tra- | /econ my. ‘were each fined $15 and $10 costs. Transfers to Buliding and Site aisha or Dev $ sie0e? ford High School teams, and the lower ences ciaee i eieere and nellers| crest es ats Pepa au es 4 a , al pelea advance | | + . ‘ Retirement Fund .. : . 000772 siow, not full esta ed, cows active DU . mes tion, | . = Revolving Pund Disbursements .. ........ 1999067 83 assigning of club members to take) stesa ta] stone bulls steady, early eles apt irurs ue “=; Paice Dos bos ‘ without extra cost to the car | Original eqtipment tres may William Lastig, of 6425 Williams San OD DOaOO ms 71.427 86 1 J tablished, cows active, stea o strong, Brice i See t ~ 7 fo Other Supplemental Disbursements ee : + over administrative duties in the eevee sendy Te sae at d verace iP Gon Edie : 20.8 Fei ls 386 buyer. Industry experts call the not necessarily be. any cheaper Lake Rd., reported to Water! aa Total Supplemental Disbursements ....... $1,180,503 41 township and Kéego Harbor muni- nigh) epoles 1 ee asapary opel choice So m Edis .... 82 Broct £0 $o7) mew enamel the greatest ad- in the high volume 1959 model, Township Police yesterday that SS ic wol oads © | §1 RCA ... ..... 7 } ; = Tee on f aulie GRAND TOTAL—GENERAL FUND cipal offices. land prime 1,040-1,080 lb. steers 28.0 bee oea Repub’ stl... si8 vance since the industry learned lines. However, there are tndica- | someone had stolen a hydr ulic DISBURSEMENTS $8,402,634 24) most good to average choice steers 25. 00. ont Bak 447 Rex Drug .. 257) how to finish a paint job in hours tions they will be bett jack and an electric drill from his Total Generel Fund Balances on June 30, 1958 959, kote 89! 2725 few average standard to low g004\ Cont Can =-s«s52—és«éRReym Met .... 62.5" i | selocked : He's Hard-Biffen Thiet 0 isteo cere. ce nentcrme aces Cet COP & 812 Rey Tob B #52, instead of weeks. | A Chevrolet sponsore cd test, in'ialocked garage. and 890 eifers scattering f00C Cont Mot .... 10.2 7.2) x Sae ‘30.1958 ee $9. 361,924.13 to low ioe. eters 24-50-25. She argh carer or Ba. eer “Bt. 33 5 x + ft elgtn ps ried page oS mak Thieves broke into a restaurant . , . cows - canners and cutte over ng i ers, has resu in the develop-! , ; Building and Site Pund Taian Bt ore mectipt ° $ 285,935. 1 WATERTOO ices CUED — A /18.00-18.80; utitity bulls up to 26.00. ‘artis bub |. 134 Seorill Me 2 | A normal wash job with no sub ene of a new kind of cord It at 600 Orchard (Uskey Aves es Investments Le eisws << §0.006.7 police stakeout team investigat- Vealers 200 market not established. aS b.. 26 Bears Rot "33.3! sequent waxing and polishing. the een ene ae ee t night and stole some eoered beck —_ ; an Becca oie OSE) Matert IEEE DS . —! ing reports doughnuts were be- | Sheep 600 market not established. Det Edis . 30.5 gShe’ lexperts say. restores the car’s imilk and bread, and- three cases Recamte Uae bance propery Tex Rees F238.42.44 TTP stolen regularly from an out- | Hogs 700 butchers 28 lower sows steady Doug gist’ <i! sinclair «0... €2. original luster. [Bon etbe terri [Ciel ac erase iy te of rent! drinks. Delinguent Tax ve % 16.808 74 | door grocery display sald’ they 15° asarn ecco sea pound tutchers 1950 Dow ,Chem -.. 45 Socony 8 | lexperts say that tires Reated by Interest on Delinquent Taxes ~ - S508 | identified the culprit but couldn’t |te 1975. few mixed number one and’ East Air L 3 Seu sp 2. | Fuel economy also has received| jong periods of operation will not. Rotary Club Rummage Sale. : pri a itwos 20.00 no early sales on straight Fast Kod 1268 Sperry Rd 1 extra engineering attention in the|/qeyelop flat spots when left et “Crippled Children Society. Building and Site Pund ober y Tax SO _16,891.98'. catch him. A squirrel climbed |lots of number one mixed number twos/ Eaton Mfg ... 566 sid Brand ... 565 . 9 | P po e e & Sat. 8 am. to 6 pm. Oct. Sale of District Bonds 2,715,799 86 d t . te bbled land threes 240 to 300 pound butchers EF] Auto L 361 sta O11 Cal 584 development of the 1959 cars. In| standing for hours in parking Sy & 4th next to Bill's Grocery. ee ee seni 3,2%.00, down from a tree. goobied @ jig ts to 19.25 mixed grades 160 to 180 El & Mus... $7 seq oil Ind .. 48 |Some instances devices automatic-, ; Bette ts old Kincsice Transfers from General Fund or Debt Re- | doughnut, and scurried away, |pounds 19.00 to 1925 mixed grades of Emer Rad... 87 fa ou ee = tel places. Bloomfield Center in old Kingsley tirement Fund oo eee eocere 910.007 72 : sows 300 to 400 pounds 17.75 to 18.50 Al Fetal . Ve Std Ol Oh |. 57 | ally enrich the fuel . mixture ues ‘nn Bidg. Many clothing articles Other Receipts So wemugs enucuhasq) eachoande 28,296.93) es Ce ae and) 37400 © Pir atone 105.2 Stevens. JP .. 255/starting and uphill movement. ike new. Adv. Tota) Building and Site Fund Receipts ... .- $3 674.272 49 2 49 Coals to Newcastle Vealers 150 trade steady choice and | Ford een ae Swift & Co . 36 Several car makers will an- Rummage Sale Stevens Hall. 10 prime vealers 33 to 39 standard afd Present sul 922 Sylv El Pd 46 . : {ur Friday Adv Total Building and Site Fund Receipts and Balances | good 25 to 33 cull and utility 16 to 25.|Pryeh Tra 164 Texas Co 7¢6/nounce engine developments per-| ito 11:30, ay July 1, 1957... .. . = * $4,010,214 93 CARO (UPI) — Talk about heep and lambs 800 trade on slaugh- [Gardner | Den 446 Tex G sul 216| mitting wider use of regular ade ; Rummage sale. aL Paul Luther- : Bullding and Site Fund Disbursements = ¢: : l Newcastl ter classes and feeder lambs steady few Gen Bak 12.4 Textron 15. C 8 gra an Church the Parish Hall. Joslyn Capital Outlay | carrying coals to Newcastle. choice to prime slaughter lambs 25.02) pbs Dvnam 594 Thomp Pd... 562 gasoline. | . at Fourth. Oct. 4th from 9 am. to Grounds : seeg micas aaximersararamea® $ 148.361 44 : Mrs. Edna Taylor, who grows 5.00 good and choice lots 22.00 to Gen Elec 66 TimK R Bear 442 ve * i9 Adv Buildings seo weg xe vesenes 3,520.214 34 ' Boe : 24.00 one lot of shorn choice to prime Gen Fis 66 Tran W Air .. 142 i p.m. , Furniture and Equipment ...... tecoees, 170,613 68 | and sells African violets, today |number one pelts lambs 24.00 cull to Gen Mills 834 tTransamer :. 264) Engine designers say motorists) : 3 oe aes i Natal. South |cholce slaughter sheep 5.80 to 1075 most Gen Store -- 476 twenty Cen .. 331) 2-58 signers say : filled an order from Natal, Sou ial fee Gen Shoe ..... 26.7 y _ . . Total Capital Outlay Disbursements .....7.. $3,839, 189 46. “Vidor Feria" of to 225. 15 pound feeder Gan Tel ..... 522 Pocerss :. 19 | With fautly driving habits waste Fines Own Wife $5 Other Building and Site Disbursements ........ 29.906 ss ui : Gen Tir eee 265 is Carbide a more gasoline than can be saved Consumer Spending Up, Total Buflding and Site Fund Disbursements '$3,869.095.61 Goebel Br 31 Unit Air Lin 296 with devices for reducing mix- INCINNATI (UPI) — One of wu 0. 1888 oe ee Je?) k A ts ad , Goodyear : 34 ait Pratt : $8 31 ture richness. They blame fast Unemployment Dow n the Anat offenders to come be- ie | 5 e $ $ ’ Tir) Sen eo ore One Le b e Appoints Quesada GUNo Ry. 481 Us cine”... 3o7|sarts and sudden stops for low) in Final Quarter | fore Mayor, George Geisen of oteb Building an ite Fun isbursements S Grevhound 15 -miles er: . a a ; plus ‘Balances June 30. 1958 « : $4,010,214. a5 Gulf O11 ug 3 us Ha me pap ~ per gallon *; erages. ; supuran Greenhills, after he or Debt Retirement Fund Receipts R tl d { ~ n a t Sta co US Tob |.... 262} Contrary to earlier suggestions’ dered a crackdown on traffic A ily 57 pe Holland FP .. 114 oleic A : 5 ‘SON ) Debt Retirement Fund Belenccs on uy se (S: ire e er O OSS Homestk _3a5 Van Raal .... 282/the industry has not abandoned By SAM DAWSON violators, was his wife. He fined oo i = Wndad Rey ae ward Bk Pf 90 | fuel injection. The system. still AP Business News Analyst | his wife, $i and costs for im- Total Balances pn Juty 1.1957) ........., $ 194 418.06. - Ra rest F 4 : : eae . IEW Y _ j s en- Revenue from General Property ‘Tax Civilian Aviation Boar d Ing Rand... #84 West Un Tel 253/ig priced out of the reach of most|, NEW YORK uM — Business n proper parking and admitted Gurmentaxy Collection: sree sven: = -81, 14130828 nspir Con ... 356 Westg El : 681) motorists. But a great deal of| ‘ers today what is widely expected jater “Things are pretty sticky Delinquent Tax Collections . ong en 10.178 99 Interlak Ir Pre 25.4 White Mot $2.4 : : . to be the best quarter of the year. d th Ae . Interest on Delinquent Taxes 181.12 Int Bus Mch 4064 Wilson & Co. 266\effort is being directed at reduc- : : aes around the house Total Revenue from Debt Retirement Prope | WASHINGTON W — Elwood R. Int Harv ,.. 37.3 Woolworth . 48.6) ing production costs Confidence has been growing with erty Tax coos $1.131.665.40 > Ne : Int Nick 846 Yele & Tow .. 29.5 , the vigor of the recovery from last '. t 35 «pe ; : Other Revenue Receipts 43125 (Pete) Quesada, a retired three int Reser 2103 Youns cht te Edward N. Cole, Chevrolet | aprii’s low point. | Only about 35 per centof Ive- ; ee ey “4 f ike Yngs 10.4 2 Neen 2 4 “~ Total Debt Retirement Receipts .... - si iszopees Star Air Force general who likes Int Tel Tel 475 Zenith Rad 1212) General Manager, discussing Consumer. spending is up a bit. £ a s adults are m: STASI — ibig game hunting, was picked yes- terday as the nation’s first civilian laviation boss. Tota} Debt Retirement Receipts and Debt Re- tirement Cash Balances on July 1, 1957 $1348 514.71 * Ermcipallen Deus Maal mae Cre Ts | President Eisenhower named pia. de Indust Rails Util Stocks Interest on Debts. togexonsactocen CECE I Quesada, now his special assistant Week ago GAGs 1333 oa 193.9 Other Debt Retirement Disbursem ents oper ree eeee esis 1,456 62 jon aviation problems, to head the cpg ee vase. eH Ha is as Total Det Retirement Disbursements .<...... $1 185.873.35 new Federal Aviation Agency 1988 High vee 2880 193.8 847 198.3 Debt Retirement Balances on June 30, 1958 ‘ sy eee SE 0.9 29 1866 Geanionudicccsie es eee. & 141,383 85 which Congress set up to help im 1937 high ._..... 2800 1347 775 1888 Investments . _ 19,287 5 prove air safety and deal with the 1957 low 226.0 782 66.2 150.9) aPAtaliDent Retirement Balences/onigune i lll needs of the jet aan DETROIT STOCKS 30, 1958 ne 180 641 3 * ° ae: om . * . (C. J. Nephier Co.) Total Deb: Retirement = ind Disbursements and The all-powerful agency will Figures after decimal points arg eighths _ Balances on June 30, 1958 $1. 48.5146. make and enforce safety rules for Alien Elec. & Equip. Co* “21 #22 i = = . * Statistical Data 1955-56 1956-87 1955-58 military, commercial and private Re eee oe = ee Estimated* Value of Schoo! Property ' ; flying. It will absorb the Civil G. L. Oi] & Chem. Co°.. 14 16 Bites . ..§ 1 COC 000 An $ 1 200 000 OD $ 1 400.909 00 Loe Seog es d th Howell Elec Mtr. Co. ., 6 6.1 Buildings _ 16,080,000 00 20.600. 000 08 32. a00.000 09 Acronautics Administration’ an e Peninsular M. Prod. Co.* . 9 101 Equipmept 1.250.000 00 1506 000'00 1 700.000 00 Airways Modernization Board, as The Prophet cee . o 92 *Based on Insurance Values = Rudy Manf. Co. : -. 62 83 83 Nimberi of) Hulidings . 28 0 33 well as some of the functions of — Zoledo Edison Co. ......146 M6 146 Number of Classrooms 545 ent 635 | aa ‘ ‘ Ne- (Wayne 8S. Prod. Co* . 32 15 Number of Teachers a (rin 720 maa ee Civil ACRE a Board. nies uy *No sale; bid and asked, Teacher Salaries . sada now heads the Airways ! : Bachelor's Degree srnizati ar Q ° Minimum . oe aie nee $ 7.990 00 4 4 200 00 $ 4 350 00 ernization Board ° _ Minimum “os ass v8 panne 8 420000 438000 * * * rmy Puts Chill we senasceee 800 00 5,2 330. . F sictigrai Degree seme ““ ©2008 Eisenhower gave him a recess > Minimum 6. eesevsecvse OER) 0 Ase} 0 Aes astath effective Nov. 1. Since” EL WOOD R. curios on German Hello aximunm . ve Pe v +o Median ; ceotem’o™ 5400.00 5,850 00 Te job is mubiect 4 Senate rae or vis @ Membership ‘as of 4th riday in September irmation, a formal nomination . : 2 f El Pres] y . . - * J eee er — 1) gre 12475 Will go to Congress when it recon- bi eee ae him to serve 3S Non-resident pia atitin aoono None None None venes in January. | 7 & y BREMERHAVEN Secondary Puplls ° rm * * * | i ’ Germany epee a . Aone 6 550 6s28 Quesada will get a $t.500 a year ,/ (AP) — Five hundred screaming Non resident — . co wane None increase in salary. to $22,500 Under the act setting up the youngsters turned out today to otal . eae one WA BK 17831 003 | : » 4 5 i i 2 Ratio of pupils to classroom teachers 0 30 39 In a statement announcing the agency, it cannot begin operations | preet Elvis Presley — but. the ‘appointment Eisenhower deplored program with adequate | na . - ahi physical facilities so, Provision in the law which is except for [forcing Quesada to resign his com- . Continuous effort is made to provide superior teachers and more and better | lmission as a lieutenant general on {netructiona] materials. to evaluate and upgrade the various areas of learning, the retited list of the regular Air and te eliminate substandard classroom facilities “lans for the coming year include such things as greater emphasis upon in- | Force before he takes over Nov. 1. * * * struction in mathematics and selence, more challenge for academically abie| Eisenhower said Quesada’s im- puptis, s comprehensive six period day for all senior high school students, and | onsolidefion of pupli personne! services The Pontiac Publier Schools plan to extend various services for which fed-| ri ; “« eral funds dre ayeilabie in keeping With new national educ ational Eocene 'pending resignation represents a i bullding program this year con templates a new € room elementary school Sacrifice which I feel reflects his ear uare Lake, a 4 classroom andi stage addition to ane Bagley school, a 460+ " pupll addition té the Madison Junior High school wok 250 pupli addition to aed i) pubic cae isd resident Sab e hop e née General Statement of Condition The Pontiac Public Schools provide a good ai icational instructioiist materials, quality teaching, and sufficient that each student has the oppertunity to attend classes full time, occasional unavoidable and temporary situations until 60 days after the appointment of the administration. Quesada will get a $20,500-a-vear deputy who must be a civilian without regular military backgreund. A man with regular military background may hold the post only when the ad- ministrator has no such history. Congress passed the bill settiny| up the agency in a burst of speed. Eisenhower asked for its Creation ilast June 13 after a series of air- the Washington Junior High schoo) : VERNON L. SCHILLER ‘ MILLER Congress will pass legumation re Plane collisions brought. an outcry i, ‘sa. ‘Storing Quesada’s military status ‘from the government to halt them. STOCK AVERAGES — icomptied by Pie Aeeor sted er Press) | Army kept them well separated, * * Presley, an Army aclvele was one of 1,300 soldiers arriving on the troopship General Randall. * * * Military cops were all over ‘the Place and the German police were around to help out. The ,kids were out before dawn, waiting in héavy-mist for the ship to arrive. Most were girls about ELECTED — Robert L. Garri- son, a vice president of Mac- Manus, John & Adams, Inc., Bloomfield Hills Advertising Agency has been elected a mem- ber of the advertising agency's board of directors. Garrison is director of the agency’s Consum- er Prodycts Division and a mem- ber of the Administrative Com- mittee. He joined MacManus, John & Adams in 1952 as a copy- writer and is a graduate of Michigan State University. He. And spending by federal’ state and, into the total of the jobless. * * * men. But most consumers have been spending gust about all they had left after taxcs. True, the rate of savings has been up as the cau- tious watched the course of the re- cession, but that rate is still a very small part of total income. What has held many consumers back from buying the things they want but can wait for is that they had taken on all the debt they could handle. Now they are thought to have paid off enough of it to be in position to buy more. Appliance dealers, for one group, say that is the case. And the .auto makers Hervently hope it- fs so. ~*~ * * York, warns today against expect- ing too much from the consumer or too big a jump in his spending. It says: ‘‘Consumer markets, while basically strong, ate far from ex- uberant. People are still buying carefully and are reported to be extremely price conscious. Like- wise, looking to the future, most estimates today are that sales of the 1959 autos may run to 5% million—a good year, but far from a. banner one.” . And the revival of business resides at. 32960 Franklin Court, Franklin. 12 or 13 years old. # spending for new plant and equip-| ment could still be some way off. local .governments is increasing” Inroads are at last being made! If consumer spending continues, to creep hjgher, factories can step! up production and rehire laid-off, But Chase Manhattan Bank, Newt | " i * \ + Now...a single policy \. gives home-loving :ouples fire-theft-liability protection. Security, convenience and thrift are three big advan- tages of our 1-policy home protection plan. You may save as much as 20% of what separate policies for fire, theft and liability would cost ... or get more protection than they’d pro- vide. Call us for details, | THATCHER PATTERSON — & WERNET 71+) COMMUNITY” NATIONAL §, BANK BLDG. PH. FE;2-9224 att A i, AR nineteen tit PON TIAC.) MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1,2 1958 W ‘Lends Works.’ to Russians - a mouse, He grabbed the ‘mouse | from the cat's jaws, The mouse bit the —2 Kent received a tetan- us shot, The rodent, LOS ANGELES (AP) Romaine Fielding's plan to show off a U.S. cat polished off the oimdry at a Moscow fair went down the drain. But he cleaned up ON NOTICE FOR GEN-|in the Soviet. Union anyway. wey Movember 4 oh Fielding, a 38-year-old dealer in preccere, Cowntg” of Oskiens, laundry equipment, flew home to ven that in eon-/Los Angeles to await arrival of jenn, eeu? $30,137. Where's the money special elec or p from? The Russians. © ceive for registration tee na me an f we * 7 ip said Township, City cr bee an zn eee “It all started as a potential tax- that f ean (tree junket to Russia,” Fielding receive no anes “for registration pe med id ** F the time intervening between the Thir- said. A I heard there was to be: an Ueth day before any regular, special or|/ American trade fair there official primary election and the: day of such elect: Notice is hereby given that registra- tions will be taken at Waterford Town- ehip Clerk's office any day during regu- coming bar Gilles (Roure—sise st Te aires (oem put everything eboard a ship| Sekou Toure, a former French = : 3048 Elizabeth au fet, from bound for Helsinki, Finland.” ‘trading company junior clerk’ anday, ber througs , Detnen 6, sia irom the hours Mt 42 Fielding’s laundry was still on whose ancestors helped found the | strange words. poet tir. tid on eepting Sunday thie high seas when he got news 13th century African Mali Empire, | 6, 1958, last. day the lett’ dap pre.(the Moscow fair had been calledjhad told his followers to vote | ceding said. election on veoriaet Pf, Ore,| alt. He went on anyway and made “No.” ‘ eel 496, Act No, From 6 0 Bore apts . & o'clock Pi on ei purpose Sak o the registration and ject. ing such of the qualified said <i * * To — City onvullage as shall prop- er iy spely stor. a deal to demonstrate his equip-| person but an actual at th resident of tas © tame of modern type American laun-| Constivutsen Sta ac resid nt dries, " heal said, nah to vote at next | oy semen y ¢ a entered in the registration lores (3 JS mg it Elector wants to a sheqter who is unable to Us serene ioe gogistre- | chev and his Cabinet visited our ie Fownshup, 6 ee ” vii exhibit. They all marveled at the residence is lo- erica cated miay be rb mk prior to the speed with which our Am ri close of registration before any election machines worked, especially the or-primary election by securing from the; i = ant *? Clerk of Township, City or Village in shirt-pressing equipment. which is located his legal ——— * . * Gupiicate registration cards exet . . ——o a the reerenee aft. | Fielding’s laundry had been davit before a notary ic or other j olficer legally authorized to administe: cranking away for about two ecaths and returning such ae. oot € when a Moscow city Soviet carda to the Clerk of the Tewnship. Cily' weeks when a er Village before the close of often official approached him and hours on the Jast day of registration me 7 ph prior to any election primary elec- asked what he'd take for the lion. The motary. public or other officer works. He named his price and acministering the cath shall sign his hame on the line for the signature of that was it Everyone was happy excep 4 registration officer and designate’ is titie - ei led to Mrs. Fielding While her ot te > ‘ad = r Sec. 401. The inspectors of election at Gazzied the Soviets with Yanker any election or primary election in this! washing machines, ship City er Village thereof, shall not/ personal laundry by hand. receive the vete oi Log | person whose, name is get the registfa- Precinct in which he offers to — (As 5 ] eati Me provided under Act 116 :* = Union [ in Transier of registration, Unregistered persons pot entit she did their State, or in any District, County, Town-) = in tion book ef ate ey Ward or time ec, $0¢. Any registered ¢lector may upen ch. ss [So reset — = Township, or Village istration tebe “tranaferred to. tis oem Ls v t ri a) = =< adtrene ee attesting "bic presses o4-| HASTINGS uw — Paul D. Bag dress, the dste "be moved thereta, and well says labor union members the address Bp which = was last reg- istered, oF applying ip person fer a are treating transfer Tae, Clerk shall strike through h address, ward e goes and precinct number and “The efforts of self-styled poli- him just fine wherever record the hee pee | ward and precinct number on the o ins] and duplicate registration soot tical bosses in the labor unions to —— place the Basis am registrecion ‘build a wall between union mem- not = vmade within the bers and election transfers 6! the oe ae next preeeding any unless Republican holiday ¥ event registration © be sacigend i= the next tui working audience last night Gay). previ t mo 6 tran i ae 3 irene shall permit any person to vote im aay “4 “The rankani workers Township, City or Village in which he Michigan are beholden to no one had not residtd (30) days next preceding & ; any election or primary election when it comes to voting a ef registration on electiom poindreds of them have assured me of has removed :from one election. pre- il 1 cinct of a Township. City or Village to al wi another election precinct of the samt gai Township. City or Village shail have the right te make spplicstion to pave’ his registration transferred on 4fy i, election or primary election day by ex- ecuting a request over his or her hyena Tone s, get their support,”” he announced backing president of UAW Local ture {or-.sweh transfer and presentir g Se ; the same to the election beard in the No. 1 at Berrien Springs precinct tm which he is registered Zagwell said he was ready and pon receiving such request the inspex tor of election in charge of the regts- tration records shall compare the. signa- ture thereon with the signature upon the applicant's registration record and if the signatures correspond oa ae specior shall certify such fact request and the applicant As Mranster shall then be permitted to vote in suc precinct for that election only. /T! . ; application for transfer shall be tied SEOUL with the Township, City or Villake Clerk ,- . who shall transfer sach voter's regis- Korean army trees ini aceordance with the applics-' announced the eager to speak before unien mect- ings af hi permitted i s schedule Intercept Red Spies Korea tAP) - headquarters interception South todas tion mo the name of any street in @ Township. City, or Village has ehanged. it shall be the duty of the one espionage agent was Township, City or Village Clerk to make the change to show the prover oo ce and five others captured..The ac- street in the registration records. oa ft shall not be oer | for the sacar tion took. place Sunday i to change his registration with respect rue anit f ve thereto in ortier to be eligible to ro jwestern coast and south of the JAMES ¥ BEETERLIN, . ‘military demarcation line, the ar- ‘ownship Cle> Z e Sept. 24. Oct. 1, 88 MY said. = .? _ The imported whisky with the flavor more people like Ar Rees eset -, t ? e's ses at a Moscow housing pro 'The white. ballots ¢ Jean Ruserucci, husband Hencefgrth inte -rnational law govern French relationships with ‘customs, pas Party controversial ach 30th day certainly have failed.” the GOP }ond issue for roads in less than oral aK ‘as Saturday. Sunday. or sai governor candidate told a Hastings three months. As an example, Bagwell pointed waste-in-government in from Herb committee of an line to been armed Communist boat and said chief difficulty in eleeting 2 Re- killed publ “ ‘We Don’t Want Independence Against France’ oo nba SES ead of Newly Free PARIS: (AP)—“We wank a free! and dignified marriage and “not divorce,’ said the Pre- mier of newly independent Guinea. * x * “We don't want independence against France, but rather. with her,” the handsome, black-suited Negro leader explained to a re-| porter’ in» hig distant capita] at! Conakry. k ww &* Results of the Sept. 28 French constitutional referendum from and the rain-swept tropical country- signed up for a laundry exhibit. side showed a margin of 40-1 Then I gathered together four ac-| against Gen. ‘counts to supply the machinery | constitution. Tom-toms beat out the word. | (yes) meant) ‘white Frenchmen. Dark purple) ‘ballots (no) meant the black man. “We couldn't put up one of the Purple won. * * * “but we took, So today 36-year-old Toure has search of more prestige. sens. tie an alumi-' to make personal appli- joe Legend eweryeee be bil num and iron erecrich nation on ussian circles except rush- | Africa's west coast. his own little empire, True to his promise to any terri- © | tory which voted down his consti- tution, De Gaulle gave Guinea its sovereignty last midnight. But already, Sekou Toure (pro- nounced Say-coo Tour-ay) is hav- ing .second thoughts about the freedom of his qwn shaping. Toure called off any celebration on independence day * * * A grave-faced French governor, has told him will Guinea Frenchmen postal running Guinea's telegraph, phone and radio services, and French teachers, will decide in two months whether they want to go home or work for Toure French army units will pull out within three months, Je saving in- Mackie Called to Probe Over State Road Bonds LANSING (® Michigan has committed nearly one third of its 1060 million dollar 1 “hee $07. Any registered elector who that no one controls their votes spent by the end of 1959 * + * : The exact figure as reported by Highway Commissiener John C and Mackie y esterday Ls. $31,700 000 He said the remainder will be Mackie, a Democrat. was te appear today before a legislativ: westigatim: headed by Sen. L Harvey Lodge (R-Drayton Plains) interested in the bond other things * * * have assailed the issue aS an extravagancy a bid for publicity. Mackie ed it was sound financing. You can switch Dale fit anv political party Lodge is among ISSuit Hamilton's "The ican Congress this Vear is the Republicans’ . . . A really con- off the ‘servative person is one who wont even bet on which team won the American League pennant LAST vear. —Earl Wilson. i Ha bate 427 < Rena 4 ages tee ae One to Aer sre ties yas ~ oy te te aS = ay ry: > rat Sink bear” ey ae ms. at ot Sg On oe a doky Li cj oct WA Caries ne he Cee So pot yebe — qt aS Hie ) ahass pears Sees ae ae a ge a a OS o aR ues Sha Tanase Imported in bettie from Cenede By = Importers Inc., Detroit, Mich. hase crt Whisky. J. Charles de Gaulle’s uinea Has Doubts: ternal and external security to Guinea, French ‘aid, whieh has totaled more-than 15 billion franes (33 million dollars). in the past 10 years, will be cut off. This leaves Sekou Toure pretty) much alone with his 242 million) the treasury office. He became an avid union organizer. The French administration, not pleased with his restless agitation, tried to transfer him to a post in back- ward Niger. * * * Rather than accept this demo- Fullah’ Malinke and Soussou|tion, Toure left the civil service tribesmen. and went al! out to help the “Even if France wants to aban-/Guinea working man. He read don Guinea, she will remain de- avidly. Marx was one of his fa- spite herself,” Toure said. “Colon-| Vorite authors. ization has its positive things. We x * will keep French culture. We want! Toure traveled to Europe, per- to stay in the franc zone. * |haps visiting Moscow. He attended x * * the Prague Institute for Economic “For the moment we aren't) Studies. He returned and founded ‘even thinking about our own mon-|the Guinea Labor Federation, ey, nor even our own flag.” which adhered to the Communist- For Toure, these seemed to be dominated Internationa] Federa- tion of Labor. Strikes and violence put Toure | in a French jail for a time. In 1954, he was elected to the local Guinea Advisory Parliament, and two years later to the French Parliament. ap In his rise to power, Toure also became mayor of Conakry, then vice premier of the local govern- ment. A month ago, the French Born Jan. 9, 1922, at Faravah in the Guinea interior, of Moslem) | parents, Toure went to local ischoais and learned French. He moved. on to Conakry to become \a junior clerk in the big French |Campagnie du Niger. An” am- | bitious younger, he entered the civil] administration. in 1941, in Six | years later, he got a job in Plum trees can now be freed of; ise the prompt cultiog out and: of three pounds of copper sulfate ithe “black knot” disease that ham-| burning of all infected twigs and|in snow form and six pounds of pers growth and reduces produc-| branches .The trees should also be| hydrated. lime in 50 gallons of pate et disease specialists ad- sprayed with a mixture made up! water, EMENT LONGER-LASTING BEAUTY FOR MASONRY WALLS ONLY Made expressly for block, brick ond poured concrete walls by @ coment manu- facturer with ever 50 yeers experience. A Product Of ROTECT BLOCK, BRICK AND POURED. CONCRETE rT WATER PENETRATION / PE =RLESS BEST FOR BASEMENTS, TOO Because its portiand coment base has a waterproofing agent ground right inte it, Peerless Coment Paint helps keep dempness ovt of your bovement. 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Attendance was down a million. x * * Dizzy Dean's game-of-the-week, once loyally supported minor league ball, empties the ballparks to such a degree that you could fan a shotgun through the stands and hardly hit a soul. * * * So far, the tactic of owners whose clubs are withering at the gate has been to put a deeper and deeper bite on the sponsors of the telecasts. That sort of thing is getting near the breaking point, or perhaps has arrived. The maker of beer, cigarettes, razors and so forth can stand just so much. He can’t sacrifice his use of other media to the cause of presenting for home screens a frequently bad ball club. He can’t go into the baseball business. Which brings it down to pay- TV. I think toll television gets closer every year. If it becomes a question of no baseball TV, or baseball on a pay-as-you-see TV basis, you'll get instand ac- ceptance of the latter. There were predictions in the AP Wirepbete the Trinity Episcopal Cathedral. The church or- ganized classes for seniors who are members of the church. Mrs. James B. Gates, a housewife and velunteer teacher, instructs in Algebra IT. 275,000 Workers Idled by Nationwide GM Strike (Continued From Page One) tor Co. and Chrysler, were turning| out 1959 model cars. . | expired. Woodcock said there were still) GM, like the other auto makers, several major problems to be|had a disappointing sales year for solved in the national agreement, 1958 models and many workers | erating without a Union contract since May 29 when the old pact locomotives, that there are thou- sands of pay scales. The union has insisted that the wage rates of an assembler, for example, should be uniform in GM plants but Seaton declared the types of work are so varied, it would be impossible to adopt a standard rate, The vanguard of an anticipated total of 275,000 General Motors employes walked off their jobs in advance of the strike deadline. | baseball and all other sports. But ‘it did just the opposite. It became ‘a brilliant factor in the evolution of the Golden Age of Sport. Radio is but a tease. It beckons to a listener to see that which is being described. Television is the fruition. It surfeits, If leaves nothing unsaid, unseen, undefined. When its prying eyes have scanned the field of play to the final time, when its Zoomer lenses have explored the last crease in Casey’ Stengel’s last chin, the view- er has no questions, The radio listener, it was dis- covered, came up hungry no mat- ter how much was shoveled at early 1920s that radio would ruin, going out to see the thing in the flesh the next time it hap; , BBE Radio broadcasting of games has undergone many changes of tech- nique over the years, Listening to long ago, Ring Lardner commented to"Grantland Rice, “This is the first World Series double header F’'ve ever covered; the one that McNamee :is des; . cribing and the one I'm looking at.” ? The art got windier than that,. ‘\then was invaded by th ecracker- barrel, corn-pone, real. down-to- earth boys, then the briskly clinical old ballplayers, and the ‘‘You won't believe this, but. . ." school of Gee Whiz journalism. But the voice that accompanies TV is usually only an intrusion, a hollow Greek chorus that feels it must speak ere the bloodless machines with the red eyes devour a game the sports pages of Amer- ican newspapers developed into a national pastime. He would express that hunger by | Orders for Buicks Outstrip Production FLINT (UPI) — Buick officials) ‘said today orders for their 1959) mode] are coming in faster than | they can fill them. Edward T.| Ragsdale, general manager of) Buick division, said 37,429 cars were sold in the first 10 days they were on display. “This is the fastest any new mod- el Buick got off the ground,”’ Rags- dale said. “Our new car orders are running about four to five weeks ahead of production.’’ Rags-| dale estimated Buick lost about 20, per cent of its scheduled produc-; tion since Aug. 18 as a result of, labor difficulties. He said more than one-third of) all orders received by dealers’ were for the four-door, hardtop models with the curved glass rear him in the course of an event. “picture window.” — v negotiations, Among these he listed, had long layoffs or short work short work weeks, vacation pay weeks most of the year. eligibility, representation, pension} x we & eligibility for Korean War veterans} Reuther said both Ford and and a union voice in investment'Chrysler had worked out agree- of pension funds, /ment with the union in recent jyears te curtail the short work’ weeks and short work days insofar) as possible, but he accused GM of poor work scheduling which ac: centuated the problems of work-; GM, which has not had a na- tionwide strike since its workers were idled for 113 days in 1945- 46, offered to settle with the Union on Ford contract terms but Reuther has insisted there were some matters ‘“‘peculiar to GM which demand a GM settle- ment.” a week. xk *« * Seaton was asked if GM had; planned any move in the final He said these problems included! four of bargaining. * com short work weeks and wage dif- ferentials among various plants. | “We see no necessity for a | Seaton said there were more! Bew offer when we've already | than 8,000 local contract issues in| Made one exactly like that of | dispute. But Reuther said these; Ford and Chrysler, which the | could be resolved after a national, union said was good for the agreement was concluded. He said) UAW and good for the nation,” | local negotiating committees at the) he replied. plants where the issues arose were! Seaton said that if the union had already working on the problems | any hopes of forcing additional: x *& | concessions from GM, “‘it is going’ The Union insisted, however, that! to be a rough affair.” local Unions maintain the right} Both GM and the UAW conceded | to strike over these issues, which! that the GM bargaining picture is were mostly minor matters, even) the most complicated in the in- after a national agreement was! dustry because the company has, reached. This is what happened; many more plants and thousands in many cases after Ford reached! more workers than either Ford or | a national agreement with the Un-| Chrysler, other members of the ion | industry's Big Three. GM and) the Union) have been | Seaton said that GM's output is, negotiating on terms of a new | 5° diversified. ranging from auto- contract for almost 6'2 months | moblles to refrigerators to electric’ ‘ers putting in tess than 40 hours'f Reg. $29.95 2? * Adjustable Heights * Heavy Galvanized top quality lawnsweeper! the easy way to “rake” mower! Save! * Big 2-Bushel Pick-Up * Easy Rolling 10’ Wheels Save on this sturdy, heavy duty, no more work than using a lawn- Waite’s Downstairs Store For leaves or grass... Save $7.00 on this heavy duty... GIANT 25-IN. LAWNSWEEPER No Money Down Pay 3 Monthly Catcher This is lawns, and the company has been op- | ms Seeking 2 in Death — of Texas Man Here (Continued From Page One) beries and auto theft) still pend- | ing In Texas. “He owes us 15 | vears down here,’ said the sher- When and if McComb is appre- hended, officials in Michigan were ceedings to return him to stand. trial, * * * | Details of the Kean murder came to light yesterday when a Com- merce Township insulation sales- man told Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem that the fatal shooting took plage “sometime in mid-Decem- Donald E. Chandler, 38, of 1872 | Point Dr., told Ziem how the three men threatened him as they left his home to dispose of Kean’s body. Ziem quoted Chan- dier as saying the men told him snot te tell police “or it will be your life or your wife's.” ~ «Handler, who described himself as “an acquaintance’ of Tsermen- gas, posted a $500 check as bond when Ziem was granted a court order to hold him as a material witness, * * * | Chandler substantiated a storv piven by Tsermengas Tuesday that Kean, Fort Worth hoodlum ‘trying to control the underworld’ there. was shot when Tsermengas, Me- Comb and Smith attempted to dis- arm him ag he slept in a drunken stupor in the Chandler. home. _ The four men stopped there as they were en route from Fort Worth to Sault Ste, Marie to pull | a robbery. | Chandler qusted Tsermengas as saying, “I didn’t mean to kill him. 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