By DAVID ey Heads OFC J. WILKIE ~ NEW YORK ® — There is tango eyidence: ‘that! : consumer confidence is reviving, Genetal Motors’ top chief. executive officer said today. —- -»In an-address prepared for delivery at a salon of 560 top business leaders, Frederic G. Donner, GM board _ chairman, said that as confidence increases there will - be further Bao in _ activity. Sd It_will also bring, he > bait empjoymeatt and tcauateiat # x * “a year of substantially in- - creased volume” for the automobile industry. - ~The meeting was one of a series preceding the open-|_ oe ee a . GM Has Reached No Decision Yet on Smaller Car NEW YORK w® — John F. Gor- don, president of General Motors Corp., said today that GM has not yet definitely decided to pro- ‘duce a smaller car in its U. 5. factories. Gordon made the assertion in welcoming newsmen and others to the first press conference the new top management team of GM has held. It was a preliminary to the opening later this week of the Gen- eral Motors Motorama. Along with Frederie D. Donner, board chairman and chief execu- tive officer of the corporation, he - explained some of the. objectives * of the corporation’s small car stud- ies, “] know you would like me to tell you which way the cat is going to jump—or even when,” Gorden said in anticipating % question about the small car. “I'm sorry that is impossible to say as yet.” “All I can say is that we have not yet reached the point of no return.’ General Motors, along with Ford Kierdorf Motion Denied by Doty Rules Teamster Leader Must Stand Trial on Silencer Charge A motion to release Herman Kierdorf from standing trial for possession of a pistol silencer to day was denied by Oakland County Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty. Judge Doty said he was “of the opinion that this case raises ques- tions of fact that a jury should decide.” ‘Trial of Kierdorf is ex- pected to begin Thursday. : * * * The attorney for the 67-year-old) former Teamsters boss, William F. Dohany, argued that Kierdorf should be freed from the charge, claiming a pistol and silencer be- longing to Kierdorf were seized illegally by Madison Heights Police | Chiet Robert E. Riehardson a said no warrent had been issued and that Richardson was out of uniform. A briefcase containing a .38 cali-| ber revolver and a homemade, silencer, were taken from a neigh- bor’s home when Richardson sought Kierdorf to inform him that his nephew, Frank, was,near death in a Pontiac hospital. . * *® * Jerome K. Barry Jr., prosecutor for the county, contend- ed confiscation of the briefcase and its contents was legal in that the néighbor’s daughter voluntarily turned them over from property in which Kierdorf had no interest. Kierdorf is at liberty on $15,000 bond. Warm and Fair Weather Outlook -for Several Days “October's bright blue weather’’ will be with us for the next few days. Fair is the forecast for to- night, tomorrow and, Thursday by the U.S, Weather Bureau. Temperatures for the next five days will average three to six de- above the normal high of 62 of 44.. Tonight's tomorrow's high 70, and the low tomorrow grees and norma] low low will be near 55; night 52. Fifty-one was 7 mometer read 80 at 2 p.m. Asks Nearly $37 Million ANN. ARBOR (UPI)—The Uni- versity ot Michigan has made an “absolute minimum” budget re- qhest of $36,788,270 for next year: Oakland Needs Democrat “J. P. bawson, Prosecuting Attorney. om se assistant’ the lowest record- ed temperature in downtown Pon- tiac preceding 8 a.m. The ther- ing of the General Motors Motorama here- Thursday. Economic progress, Don- ner said, results from eco- nomic change and “the process of change is the process of risk-taking.” He said he is convinced ‘‘there is need for our government offi- cials to take calculated risks and, in times of doubt about the direc- tion of economic trends, to give the benefit of the doubt to policies which encourage investment.” “Our national well-being may be better served by maintaining conditions favorable to a high rate ot growth than by imposing unwar- ranted restrictions which carry false promises of economic secur- ity," Donner said. * * omy naturally provides.” “Through its power to contrul the supply of money,” he added, price support ‘individual segments, it can impair | the ability of the economy as a woke to canes fe eee Through Coo pein, Fae ageres- : * * * John F. Gordon, GM president and its chief operating officer, de- scribed the auto industry’s annual | model change as exemplifying) constructive change. “Tf it had not been for the annual model change,”’ he said, ‘‘the auto- mobile as we know it today would not be produced in volume and ‘would be so priced that relatively few could afford to own one.”’ He described the recent three- year agreement negotiated between General Motors and sits workers as “reasonable and con- structive from a business stand- point and fair and equitable from an employe standpoint.” Donner and Gordon indicated at a news conference yesterday (Continued on Page 2,. Col. 4) Faces Felony Charge for Hitting Hay Wagon LANSING (UPI) — A felonious |driving warrant has been issued po the driver of a car that rammed into a horse-drawn hay- wagon packed with 36 students, Prosecutor Jack Warren said to- oe driver, Oscar Garcia Rios, 24, Lansing, has been held since the near-disastrous accident Fri- day. Twenty-two Michigan State Uni- versity and East Lansing high school students were injured. +> Preceded Raid Trooper Says Gambling Ring Investigation Was » Started in April ~~ ‘State “police undercover agents were secretly at work in Pontiac 442 months before the Aug. 29 raids that authorities say smashed a $1 million-a-year bookie ring. The undercover activities were disclosed in testimony charged with conspiracy to operate the ring in viola- tion of state gambling laws. . The five being. éxam: before Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum LaRue E. Gullett, 41, and his wife, Gladys, 35, both of 301 Dick Ave.; Basil W. Burke, 59, of 29 Salmer|. Ave., described by state police as the ring leader; Charles D, Apley, erpetea scum) “it can stimulate or retard risk- 44, of the same address; iJames Pruzor, 54, of 4 S. Saginaw ‘St. Det. Stephen Galat of the state ' police rackets squad was the first witness called by George F. Tay- lor, chief assistant prosecutor. - investigate early in April, and began his undercover work here April 14 by putting Burké under secret surveillance. An °ex-convict, Burke served time’in prison after a numbers racket conviction here in 1951, In his initial testimony, Galat said he secretly tailed Burke 10 times during April, gathering the first information on how the -al- leged ring operated, From Gelat’s testimony, it ap- apartment home at 29 Salmer Ave. on weekdays about mid-morning, breakfasted at a Pontiac cafe, lat 2292 Auburn Rd. in Auburn Heights, where police say the book- making activity was carried on. Galat said Burke usually arrived at the Auburn Heights address about noon and. left about five. The detective said he often saw Burke ‘carrying what looked from a distance like a racing form, and on three occasions in April wes able to spot a racing form on the front seat of Burke’s car while Burke was in the restaurant. Taylor said that latter testi- mony in the examination would show how the undercover inves- tigation eventually spread to the other defendents. In testifying, Galat used a 107- page notebook for reference to times and dates. He said that it contained a typewritten record compiled by himself and other state police agents assigned to the Pontiac investigation. — Pickets Step Lively MILWAUKEE (UPI)—Instruc- tors at Arthur Murray’s dance studio displayed something new in union picket lines yesterday. About 20 of the instructors picket- ed in a hip-swinging, foot-kicking conga line to call attention to their-grievances against manage- | ment. today against five persons are former deputy city treasurer’. peared Burke habitually left his then drove to the apartment house} aie z CENTER OF ATTENTION quadruplets born Sunday to Mrs. attraction at Grace Hospital, Detroit, are these extreme right, wife of Chester H. Ullman, of Clawson. Standing behind the incubators, from 4 Girls Believed Identical — A feature left: Dr. Jean Julia Ullman, Stanley who Ullman. DETROIT — The 1%-day-old Ull- man quadruplet girls were doing well today, each in her own incu- bator. At Northwest Grace Hospital, where the girls were born Sunday, night, doctors prepared to deter-| mine whether they are identical. Tests were arranged. “They appear to be identical,” said Dr. dean M. Holdredge, staff pediatrician. The four Helen, Martha, Marion and Catherine, each four pounds at birth — were born to Mrs, Julia Uliman, 40, herself a twin and mother of two other chil- dren, ages 1 and 24. * * * Mrs. Ullman, whose husband! of strikes. Civil Service Post May Go fo Higgins George N. Higgins, former Re-, publican state representative and| senator, is being considered as a, candidate for the State Civil Serv-' ice Commission, a spokesman for Gov, Williams’ office said today. Higgins, former chairman of the Oakland County Republican Com- mittee and 1956 primary candidate for Congress, may get the appoint- ment by the governor after the Nov. 4 election, according to Law- rence L. Farrell, the govetnor’s executive secretary. Higgins is a Ferndale auto dealer. The Pontiac Press stated in an editorial on Sept. 29 that Higgins was angling for a Civil Service appointment from Gov. Williams. Edward Pompeian, 154 Mark St. Huron street VOTER INFORMATION — Two Pontiac Jun- ior Chainber of Commerce. members help Mrs. r information booth. Norman O'Brien (left) explains the njechanics of Pon- tiac’s automatic voting machines while Dr. Don- — . ay at en Rt at the Saginaw- é Jaycees Conduct Election Drive | Neo eae otter ~~ ald McCandliss, chairman of the project, looks on. Club members-will be stationed at the booth through Nov. 4 to supply information about pre- cincts, eligibility to vote and registrations. They - cannot accept voter registrations since the dead- line for these is passed, Dr. McCandliss said. GM Settles at 32 Plants: Strikes End af Chrysler DETROIT ‘?—The auto industry took another step toward normalcy today but there still was a long way, to go because of unsettled General Motors strikes. For the first time since August, Chrysler Corp. €M-|and a half premature, the third ploying 10,000 persons, operated without a strike as a handicap to 1959 new car production. Ford also is free) General Motors reported today local-level agreements “nad been reached with | strikers at 32 of its 126 \UAW- represented plants. |The 32 employ 74,288 of . (GM’s 275,000 UAW mem-| ‘bers. This leaves about 200,- 000 still on strike. There were seven new settle- ments late yesterday and last night. The GM strikers have been out on local issues since the Oct. 2 settlement of the national con- tract with the United Auto Work- ers which provided an estimated. wage increase of 24 to 30 cents spread over three years. Chrysler’s latest settlements of} wildcat walkout put a full force to| work following last week's idle-) ness for 15,000 employes. * nurse Mrs. Mary Piescinski; Dr. William A. AP Wirephote Holdredge, hospital pediatrici Mrs. made the delivery; and Clawson Quads Gaining Chester, 34, is a carpenter, said she wants the girls to have in- dividuality. - That was one reason why she and her husband gave them quite’ unrelated names. “I think I want them to be dressed differently also,” she said.|@ Docters said the babies may be kept in the incubators three to four weeks until they weigh five pounds. Ullman admitted his five-room, would..be ‘‘a little crowded.’ make out all right.” * * * “TI can't tell them apart,” Mrs. | Ullman said. a while.” ” ‘They all had wonderful, healthy} i cries.’ | The babies were born a month! set of quadrudplets in Detroit. But, records show that in one case all quads died soon after birth and in ithe other case two of the quads died. Chances of giving birth to quad- ruplets are about one in 750,000. Had they expected four children? Doctors told Julia and Charles e expect multiple birth after tak- ing X-rays about a month ago. “IT thought maybe twins, perhaps itriplets,” Mrs. Ullman said. “Cer- tainly not four.” Wins Missile Contract WASHINGTON (?—The. Army yesterday announced award of a contract to Chrysler Corp. for $2,092,000 for the Jupiter missile | program. r Chief Straley Blasts Report — one-floor ranch house in Clawson “But we have three bedrooms.” the happy father said, “and we'll | “I'm going to have {to keep the tags on them for quite Charges Police Probe ‘Unfairly Attacks Him and Department Here Pontiac Police Chief Herbert W. Straley last night called the Public Administration Service report on the police department the work of a “28-year-old man with four years} experience out West as a patrol- man."’ Justices Stamp Final Approval on Big Project $5 Million Farmington in 4-4. Decision Michigan Supreme Court justices, splitting. 4-4, have given the OaKland County Department of Public _ |Works another shot in the arm by ruling it can legal- ly proceed with the contest- ed Farmington sewage dis- posal system. The high court “affirmed ‘by equal division” a de- ~ cision of the late Oakland Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick ‘when he denied an injunction to a West Bloomfield attorney which would have upset the $4,- 900,000 project. * The judge ruled matters of health far outweighed the rigid provisions of the 15-mill taxing limitation un- der which townships are bound. Irving 1. Cohn, of 3277 Inter- laken Dr., sued in March as a taxpayer saying, in effect, the 1957 act under which the proj- ect was being created was uncon stitutional. He said West Bloomfield and Farmington Townships, partici- pating communities, would have to tax above the 15 mills to re- imburse the county for construct- 4ng the system. Justice Leland W. Carr, wie wrote the opinion affirming Judge Straley charged, in a speech to lat the Emmanuel Christian Church, | that the report unfairly attacked him and the police department. He told his audience that he had 33 years of police work experience. The six-month study by PAS tecommended a thorough over- haul and ization of the department. It found the local po- lice “characterized by a lack of pride in service, low ‘esprit de corps,’ and little public prestige.” Although the report did not men-| \tion Straley by name, it was highly critica] of his reign as police chief. * * Straley oe that a “small bunch of troublemakers, unfit to) wear the badge, are causing the| trouble in his department.” Many of the PAS report rec- ommendations were his ideas, | Straley said, and had been adopt- ed before publication of the study. The ‘State Civil Service Act under which the department operates was) blasted by Straley, who called for| its reflacement with a locally! drafted act. * * x | He said the atrival of Public) Safety Director George E. East- the Washington Park Civic Assn.| Hartrick’s decision, said there was jno pot that the townships a i their contractural obligations, ai ing into account qther available revenue sources. Justice Eugene F. Black, one of four justices seeking to reverse the ‘lower court decision, said the 15- mill limitation has been “‘bruised, beaten and backed to the brink of sterile and forceless words.” | “I'm gratified,” was the com- ‘ment from Harold K. Schone, di- rector of the county DPW when he learned the green light had. been given to the project. But Schone said he would have to wait to read the full opinion be- fore knowing whether it permitted lother department projects, tied up by the appeal of Cohn’s, to go iahead or not. Start Detroit's DETROIT (UPI) — Detroit's United Fouridation Torch Drive— a 24-day campaign to raise $15,- 700,000 for charity — began last night. ; To OK Polio Fund DETROIT (UPI)—The Detroit Drive x man would be of great help to} Common Council was expected to him in improving the department. give formal approval today to a © “He has the qualifications and ex-| $630,000 anti-polio inoculation pro- perience for the job,’’ Straley said.’ gram. The company and the UAW con- | tinued to negotiate separate con-| tract clauses for 8,000 salaried of- fice workers and engineers. UAW President Walter Reuther Chrysler Vice President John D, Leary headed the bargaining teams, GM reported these settlements over the last 24 hours: (location, plant and number of employes in that order). Detroit, Ternstedt, 3,950; Sag- inaw, Chevrolet Transmission, 1,046; Grand Rapids, Fisher Body, 2,150; Marion, Ind., Fisher Body, 2,100; Bedford, Ind., Fabri- cast Division, 780; Kokomo, Ind., Delco Radio, 3,250; Anderson, Ind., Guide Lamp, 3,400. ‘GM President John F. Gordon said he was ‘‘confident”’ the strikes would be ended by Oct. 20, the date for ratificatior® of the corpora- tion’s new contract with the UAW. AUREUS ceiraidian In T oday’s Ss Press ES Ie GES we Comics . . 19 County News.............05- 15 Editorials >............05.00. 6 Markets .......0..00e0005-: | 20 Sports ...........5..00+6 « 16-17 Theaters .... v.18 TV & Radio Programs tees 2% Wilson, Earl...............- 25 Women’s Pages............ 7-9 and - | tary of State Dulles, gp Boothe Luce and John A. Mec- Cone, director of they Atomic | .| Energy Commission, VATICAN CITY (AP) — Requi em services for Pope Pius XI continued today before a symbolic coffin in St, Peier’s Basilica as lmore cardinals arrived to elect his successor, The late pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church was buried Mn- day in the grottos beneath St. Peter's. An empty coffin was placed in the church for mourning Masses that continue through Suh day. Msgr. Diego Venini, stepped be- fore the coffin in the Chapel of the Chorus and celebrated to- day’s Mass. On Sunday, when the nine-day mourning period ends, the cardi- nals will receive special envuys of foreign governments paying their respects to the late Pope. The U.S. envoys will be Secre- former Ambassador.to Italy Clare About a° dozen cardinals were. expected to arrive today to join |the 28 already in the Vatican. All, ‘but two of the 55 cardinals prob- lably will be here for the conclave | Pope. The two who won't make it ‘lare Alojzije Cardinal Stepinac of Yugoslavia and Josef Cardinal 'Mindszenty of Hungary. f beginning Oct. 25 to elect a new | The Vatican newspaper L’Osse¢r- vatore Romano, appealed for re- | straint and caution in discussions ‘of the secret conclave. Current speculation about who might be elected pope is turning the meet- ing into “‘a political electoral as- sembly,’ the paper complained. There is no clear favorite at present, | Only the Sistine Chapel choir,! Symbolic Coffin Is Center of Requiem tor Pope Today members of the Council of the Basilica, and a small number of priests were admitted to the chapel for the Mass. * * * Outside the chapel gate, in the main section of the big basilica, were only a few hundred visitors, ‘tn contrast to the millions who had filed through since Saturday (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ete The titular Bishop of Adana, ‘Missile Chief Predicts: Man on Moo Medaris, commanding gen Command in Huntsville, Ala., CHICAGO (AP)—Man will be on the moon in 12 years, predicts Maj. Gen. John B. Medaris, Army missile chief. * * nin 12 Years * eral of the U.S. Army Missile made the prediction at a news conference at the National Electronics Conference. a moon shot of its own. He said chances are about After calling the Air Foxge rocket moon a spectacular success, Madaris said the Army is right on schedule with 50- 50 the Army moon shot will | get into the area of the moon. He added that chances are not good the rocket, using a Jupiter ballistic rocket for moon. j * * the first stage, will orbit the * Medaris said the Army intends to have more ground control over its shot. This ind icated the Army may = able to thake in-flight corrections in direction. Job Gets Green Light — ‘TWO + % Chinese Keeping Island Strength Nationalists Not Ready to Reduce Garrisons Across From Reds TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — Vice President Chen Cheng said today the Nationalists will not reduce the strength of their garrisons on the off-shore islands. Chen told the newspaper Ta Hua (Great China) Evening News the Communist buildup in areas' tacirig the islands was for pur-: ‘money for education and Paul D.| Campaigning for Election: es By The Associated Press - Gov. Williams championed more | Bagwell an improyed economic} t climate for Michigan in campaign: speeches Monday. I Expounding on now familiar themes, Democrét Williams .made. a series of speeches in Detroit and) Republican Bagwell, his rival for: the governorship, did likewise’ in, Bay City. * * * Elsewhere on the out-staté cam- Bagwell Wants Tr m proved Economy: | More School Funds Concern Williams | patieg the budgets of institutions ‘of higher learning. He said the | state. will need a science. and. institute in order for education to keep pace with its requirements and for the state to meet industry's’ needs for its ‘new age. ” “The progress of Michigan to-*, morrow depends on the support of eCucation today.” Williams said. © At Bay City, Bagwell repeated a request to Williams to join with + said that Williams- has - ‘thited to support the State Economic De- velopment Commission in its work with industry although the agency ‘has spent two million doviars in the last 10 years. .Bagwell said Michigan has lost automobile plants to other states, adding, “If the a had taken an interest in these problems six or eight years ago we might have some of the answers now.” Bagwell said that by 1975 the state's. population will have in- THE PONTIAC PRESS. ror. y at GMC Here 12-Day Strike Officially! Ends’ With 9-1 Vote to Rate Pr Vilog Men ‘him in setting up an impartial|creased by one mittion in Aas s ‘gn trail Republican Sen. Charles: q . tional G tract and lo- pares a ser EO te as ae i Patier chacied et Harry ‘Tru: committee for the study of theiorder to accommodate. 5 DOW |) wage pots arama aa h could not be cut man the day after the former eee ee in Michigan. industry must be brought in and | which negotiators settled on early —e ee | £9, An inst r in tach of | Phets will meet. Thursday > t amid Democratic president made his "We Republican standard bearer present industry expanded. _| yesterday. GEORGE K. ZIMMERMAN these sports, as well as swim. /AlPha Theta we) Christian Chen's statement came Nichi -visit. : = ming } hand alt | at reports from Washington that the ncrigan — Signing of contracts meant Game. wit be. ce he f at au , 41 N. Glenburst Rd., United States would press Na- Potter, denouncing Demecratic Eastern Pu i ils ; that about 5,000 workers would : m, Highlight of the tionalist President Chiang -Kai- . administrations. as a cause of Pp Fy ted 10 OK be back on the job by tomorrow, ivic Leac et The family swim program at| meeting will be a silent auction in shek to reduce the off-shore | higher prices, said in a talk at To Wi ~ when full production is expected | et begin High School-..pool| which members will do bidding in island garrisons. . Petoskey that “if any one man 4 OD nners Se : to-get underway. Some em- gin Nov, 6, Sessions are! writing. can be called the architect of AN. ployes-were to report for work for Thursday from| Mrs, Max Tunnicliffe, national The sopnesil oe will the high éost of tiving” tt would 172 F' ord Contest $175,000 B d today. production, engi- ‘T to.10 p.m vice pi will report on the not consider any sizable withdraW-! be Truman. on . par les in ospital ab. : . al unless the United States gives) craint Industriatartstudents at Eastern|* *. decd neering “inspection crews . M8 summer bald. last, Sune unequivocal guarantees of imme-), The_ senator. ae : aio Junior High School have won 18) /. Se , | Neto etdored back on regular er 13.to 1T-age = in E diate intervention if the Reds |S seal Against ee ‘A. Hart,@wards in this. year's Ford In- City Commission Aims). = George K. Zimmerman |bave. until. the end of the 1 og attack the weakened outposts. The United States has hot been made comparisons of what he said dustrial Arts contest.The awards will be presented at an sere for July 1 Completion Was Vice President of Girardin said: \Car Hits Tree on M15; willing to do this so far. Washing. |Were the price rises during Demo-| 74 seis, morning’; of Hospital Parking Lot |tory.” ~{: Pontiac Varnish Midland Couple Hurt tedly is to eive|cratic and Republican administra- : < ; ( tong ides tepoe tions. Students at Eastern won more} Earl A. Maxwell, company, per-| ~~ troit Red Wing star, will conduct Chiang’s ferces more firepower | and better weapons so they can * * * awards than any other junior high}- school in the country, taking both Passage of the $175,000 revenue George K. Zimmerman, vice nds with less| Potter said that in the seven|™ bond plan to help finance the Pon- aaa president ‘of Pontiac Varnish Co. tree on M15 north of Clarkston fene he ands ° years Truman was in the White i and nati 4 places in the'tiac General Hospital parking lot —_ end prieey co, and for many. years a leader in| Girardin reminded fencers that) ,-cording to State Police. , “This presumably was urged by|House prices went up 50 per cent. iis classification. is expected tonight. magens and Pitrig Ses ‘community affairs, died at 2 this)/Istvan Danosi, interna * ‘e @ is P ae ei The school also won first and). A pany union Provi-| morning in Pontiac General Hos-|known instructor, is available to U.S. Defense Secretary Neil Mc-|He said they have increased only ., * * sions improved: over the last i Joseph Thatcher, 41, is reported Flroy in twe conferences with the s per cent in the six years of the second in 1955 and since 1950 when City Commissioners are being document wé had.” wan pital. ' He had been ih several instruct a class in ie satisfactory * * ak Deas Nationalist President Monday Republican edininistration: wr cathe Wen ee ee ee asked, in addition, to set aside $50,- ~ * @ *¢ eee. + « ¢€ activities ee ek at the|tiac General He He * =, |000 ih capital improvement: funds : Williams, in one of his Detroit awards than any other junior high.|,,, complete thé usacing Both| No progress was reported. in ne- Mr. Zimmerman, 55, was born in tion Office in the Municipal one petra ee jaw, — L ] ‘Man speeches, said he would “keep{ Of the 18 awards, six are cash |loans are to be paid back through|S°tiations at Fisher Body and Pon-| Marine City to Mr. and Mrs. Fred-| Building Ree ee cae ean avin, OCa pounding” for an institute of sci-| prizes and 12 are place or “gold |meterrevenués from the lot. tiac Motor -divisions, which have|erick Zimmerman. . was treated for minor injuries and ence and technology at the Univer-| pin” awards. aty M en — been idled over local issues since) He attended M City Schools} William T. Schusterbauer, repre-| NOS og : Ist to Beat sity of Michigan which the last Oth . ty anager Walter K. r 1Oct. 2. and was a graduate ap Py Univer-|senting the 11 fatnilies in the “She told police she saw traffic legislature refused him. oe ene Vira Ge Ua) OC | Ged le tot Ge | * kt sity of Michigan. Brookside ‘alley paving district, ahead of The Governor, talking to an the remaining cash prizes were for| tion of the 214-stall lot, located | 4 membership meeting of Fish- * * tk thanked city cueet = reed snag = = Champion audience at the University of De- ae cae sixth, seventh, and nes aun Pct between er Bony tonal 596, UAW, was! A city resident for 28 years, Mr.|Might after they approved a pe- ae! ogre cles ead skidded. A first was recorded in Pontiac froit, charged the Republican- The winning students will be pre-| The city has yet to complete pur- i insu = m. Be ci Zimmerman was a member of the Giiee he eeesl . off the road into the tree, said controlled legislature with having ncoln or High School audi-|poard of directors of Pontiac Fed-|Work will be done in the spring. last night when a 40-year-old Gen-| ed a “dangerous” policy to-|Smted their awards by Richard) chase and clearance of property |torium. Gerald W. Kehoe, local es: _eral Motors Truck & Coach worker ward public education. Fell, head of the vocational de- in that area. eral Savings & Loan Assn. and a : jpresident, said he would ask for|past president of Pontiac Man-| Cohn after rezoning request : became the first player ever to partment of the Pontiac” School) Another ordinance that will come ratification of the national contract mace res me ns acuta plans to build ‘In and Out of Jails’ beat blindfold chess and checkers} He said the legislature short- |System. The assembly is sched- \up for final approval tonight would |at the meeting. . ustrial els dwelling Units ‘ * champion Newell W. Banks during| changed Michigan’s: future by juled for 8:35 a.m. in the school/| sea ela colle we his annual exhibitions here. | auditorium. bring the city’s fire code up to| date, placing restrictions on in- division chairman of Pontiac Area * * |United Fund. He had also served! area. ~ ‘= and Delos A. Dunham, of 272 Cottage P| | { B b flammable materials in new con-| Hare Sa 5 GM Ma as a board member of the Pontiac career as being 20 years sept ot Sanity Hearing Asked Plot fo Bomb sexes 3s Hove Says OM Man Sires ms te al a gm time in many years in a game of downtown area. May ve Broken law Mr, Zimmerman lived at 86 Ot- [had been zoned for single-family| and prison camp since 1938 and checkers with Banks in an exhibi-|; N Slavi n ae De: and wae ot luce ap igirafope ls AS tion held et tie Adal: belly Pranch In \UESETY yl g Synagogues | Two public hearings are sched- the Oakland County Sportsmen’s | Commissioners took no action on lain in the nation. Library. Dunham had played to many draws with Banks in previous matches here, but this was his first victory. Gaining draws with Ranks Mon- day night were Dunham’s father, Robert E., 61, of the same address, and Clair Atwood, 60, of 671 W. LANSING W®—Secretary of State James M. Hare, a Democrat, said today federal law may have been violated in an appeal by a General Motors Division executive for Re- publican campaign contributions. Hare, a ¢andidate for re-election, turned over to the attorney general a purported copy of a letter written Club and Pontiac City Club, He leaves his wife, the former Helen Hutchins; a son, Richard, and a daughter, Joanne, both at. home; and two brothers, Fred of Bloomfield Hills and Milton of Ma-, rine City. uled, one on assessment rolls for combined sewers on both sides of Walton boulevard, Baldwin to the Pontiac, Oxford & Northern Rail- |road; the other on an assessment ‘roll for extension of the Feather- stone road watermain from Kenil- worth to the Jordan road line. A-petition was filed yesterday requesting that Raymond Leo Al- yea, accused killer of a Southfield nursery night watchman, be exam- ined by psychiatrists to determine whether or not he is insane. William R. Beasley, Ferndale at- tarney of Alyea’s, requested Oak- Illinois Temple Blasted; Georgia Anti - Jewish Attack Plan Probed Pontiac Motors x k& * Funeral arrangements will be! From Our Wire Services i land County Circuit Judge Frank} ATLANTA, Ga. — Poli i by J. A. Anderson, eral man- | Stirling Ave., and Dwight Fisher,!1 Doty to call a sanity ipcariea! closed today they. have me ee Ff rth B Gai ager of the A C eat Plug Di- Griffin Funeral Home, the aaiaad NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS 61, of 800 N. Leroy St., Fenton.|The judge today had not as yet ied a suspect's statement that al u er usiness ain ‘vision, to an unidentified super- | / x * appointed the doctors ‘or set the bomb plot against the Atlanta Jew- {visory employe. Last night represented the fourth year in which the elder Dunham and Fisher had played to, draws, while it was the sécond year for Atwood. date for the hearing. Alyea, 35, is in the eounty. jait awaiting trial for the July 31 firat-| degree “murder of Anthony J. Ja-| Officers have the names of the sinski, 51, whose body was found! five men who attended the meet- Banks came out the winner in|beaten and stabbed to death in jng. 15 chess games he played and/|the nursery. | won another nipe checkers con-). | tests. The exhibifion was sponsored | ' by the Pontiac Chess and Checkers | Award Goes to O'Connor ish Temple was hatched at a meet- ing of an anti-Semitic underground) organization held last May 5 Anderson was not immediately available for comment. His office said he was attending a funeral and planned afterwards to leave Flint. for New York. At Kalamazoo, Lawrence B. Lindemer, Republican state chair- man, said “I think the Democrat bureaucrat is grasping at straws.” LOCAL 653, U.A.W. There will be a meeting of Skilled Trades Wednesday, October 15th, at 2:00 P.M. at the Local 653 Seen by GM Heads (Continued From Page One) that the recession is definitely on | the way out, Empty Coffin Center of Requiem for Pope "(Continued From Page One) | to see the pontiff’s body and to: attend the funeral services. Most of those today were groups of pil-, Authorities appeared to be on the verge of cracking wide open a terrer attack on Jewish syna- The conference, a prelutie to, the Motorama, was the first full- iscale meeting with the press for Club. NEW YORK Basil O'Con- | gogues and me in the South. the o on management team. . grims or tourists from abroad. Union Hall at 386 Kennett Road — nor was named today as the | toca aumbories. woes Bend ee ‘ion: - Dena ni id. vhen Girls Roundup Beetles DIPLOMATS RECEIVED | Aj , ‘Moon Rocket Failed’ first layman to receive one of |in hand with the FBI, were con- St nn cx ener said when | to ratify the National Contract | the country’s foremost medical |fident they were on the right track a _ y M had revived the’ PAINESVILLE, Ohio (UPI) — Later in the morning the entire) MOSCOW «m— Pravda wrote | prizes, the Albert Lasker Award. |f a solution. huge show at a time of recession:|When Japanese beetles threat./ diplomatic corps accredited to | only. There will be a meeting for Production at the Local 653 Union Hall, Thursday, October 16th, at 2:00 P. M. for the ratification of the National Contract only. A crude bomb hurled at the an-|. 48 We take a look at variops nex of a Jewish temple in Peoria, "dices they all seem to be point- Ill, early today fell into an out-/!"8 UP. I think the Motorama tim- side stairwell, exploded. and shat-/'"& WaS Pretty good.” Erickson, also 12, Elaine launched tered several windows in the! xs & a “Save Dad's Vineyard” drive. three-story structure. | Donner said he agreed with other|In two days the girls collected Damage to the rear annex of Car makers who have predicted!1,222 of the beetles and put them the Anshai Emeth Temple was|1959 sales of approximately 514!out of commission. termed ‘‘very small’’ by Rabbi Jo-| million cars. ‘‘You can include in 3 seph Ginsberg, who serves the|that figure or drop out expected 700-member congregation. No one Sales of foreign-made cars,” he was in the temple or annex at the|Said. He gave no estimate of: im- time, and there were no injuries.| Ported car sales, but other industry “Nothing like this has ever experts have put the figure as high Holy See was received by the Con-. gregation of Cardinals in the Vat- ican’s Consistory Hall. { The diplemats were formal | uniforms with black imourning bands. Their acting dean, Austri- | an Ambassador Joseph Kripp, ‘expressed the mourning of the | entire colony and the sympathy | of their governments. cena Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, dean 6 M.C. Truck and Coach Employees ALL 2nd and 3rd SHIFT MAINTENANCE EMPLOYEES Should Report to Work | off Pioneer today under a head- line which read ‘The American” moon rocket has failed.” It was for his work in spearhead- ing the drive to conquer infantile paralysis. ened her father’s vineyard, Elaine Hakola, 12, lost no time. With the aid of a neighborhood pal, Syivia > Rio Grande Threatens Texas 91 Degrees in Los Angeles By United Press International , Elsewhere, most of the nation More showers were ees eae fair, mild weather, al- Tuesday for the Rio Grande Valley|though a pocket of cold air in the where three: weeks of heavy rains northeast dropped readings into the; happened here before,” said eigen rine dan ses GM have sent the rampaging river 20s in northern New England and) Rabbi Ginsberg. ‘The local situ- er Sane thi a s toward a new flood crest. near or below freezing in northern ation with regard to our relations Donner said car pri Pee oat : Workmen toiled around the clock New York State early Tuesday. | with the community has always nave to be readjusted betause "of to open a relief channel which’ k & _ been very good.” the agreement with the United would divert the floodwaters into, Work began Monday digging a_ Police said the bomb Was fash- Auto Workers. - ‘Fre terms of the the Gulf of Mexico before they mile long, four-foot deep trench|ioned from a two-inch pipe sev- agreement, he added, were not reached Brownsville, Tex., len the Rio Grande to an unused eral inches long with a two-foot inflationary. caused major flooding. floodway to divert the river water/fuse attached. The stairwell where scimenticalliwave tonmenGull: it landed leads into the annex C- ° bivnkewe eee Man | Some _ flooding occurred in basement. Police reported the) Corp oration Counsel nd heavy smog added to the | Brownsville Monday in the wake bombing had occurred about 12:30) Suffers Heart Attack drive Risconatori of residents in Los lof a four-inch downpour while Har-/a.m. ake r of the other car, Angeles. lingen, Tex., was soaked with a Robert Briscoe, former Jewiati Harry J. Merritt, corporati feasere a Or nel Feral a two-inch rainfall. lord. mayor of Dublin, will address Counsel for Oakland Ne since | luninjured, said poli = The Weather © a gathering at the Agudas Achim 1939, last night underwent an op-| some Synagogue in.Peoria tonight, but eration filliam Beaumont Hos. | velit) @. Westuer areac Reset |Rabbi Ginsberg said he for transplanting a ruptured! ‘Gls Qut of Lebanon —— : CHARLES BEACH, Pres. é 3 Area Residents Hurt in Two-Car Crackup A two-car accident on U.S. 10 at Sashabaw Rd., Waterford Town- ship, Monday afternoon injured three; area residents, according to! Staté@ Troopers. | x * * | One of the drivers, Mrs. Norma Allen, 37, of 1403 Woodléw St.,| Waterford Township, her daughter. | | Linda, 17, and Carol Bennett, 15,’ of 2276 Oakdale St., Drayton Plains, | were treated at Pontiac General ‘Hospital and released. In Los Angeles, the mercury I< - shot te 91.,degrees Monday in | the area’s second early autumn | PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Generally’), jnot see any connection en|aorta artery in his heart, , ss . q heat wave. The normal tempera- th ‘aertee ca asight tl eich Warerces ture in the city for this time of | ithe Briscoe arpes ce and the! A member ef his family said a BEIRUT (UPI) ~ The last 70. Increasing southwesterly winds 12-18 bombing. = |was “holding his own’ today. He| American soldier will pull out of year is 77 degrees, Another hot | miles tonight and northwesterly 16 - 35) oy was predicted for Tuesday. | mf temerrow. *Tomerrew night fair, | low 52. The temple, built in 1898, is five'was stricken at his home at 1914 __ locks from Peoria's downtown|Northwood Blvd., Royal Oak, Mon- Today in Pontiac © | A warming trend occurred dur- section, The annex was construct-|lay evening and ordered to the! | mpeeetcie prececiee| = 5 = |ing the night fromthe upper and| ied in the 1920s, Rabbi Ginsberg/hospital for X-rays when the rup- i Ba. gtd Wind velocity 10-18 mph |middle Mississippi Valley east into’ said. ture was discovered, eee rae dey ot 653 01 |the Great Lakes ‘region, the Ohio > Sun rises Wednesday at 6 we Oop ‘Valley and parts of the middle ‘Atlantic coast. * at Their Renal Starting Time ALL FIRST SHIFT MAINTENANCE, ALL TOOL DIVISION, MATERIAL HANDLING and PARTS and WAREHOUSING EMPLOYEES Moon sets Tuesday at 7 19 Moon rises Wednesday at 56 am Cagelings Flee Tiffany’s; Broadway Goes Wild West ? = t os er rie ae a The henvic st ‘ain anne i t Should Report. ‘on Their Regulas Shift oe 1p. a night oc urred in th th (Bi ds d. B I M k B id t F ay He oy TPs dam coma oor ee Birds and Bull Make Bid for Free om | TUESDAY. OCTOBER 14th co and into western Texas and the / Monday in Pontlac fas recorded downtown! Highest temperature .......... Lowest temperature .. Mean temperature Weather Sunay One Year “Age tt in Eestise Highest temperature ... Lowest temperature ........+. Mean temperature .... we Weather—Clear, warmer NEW YORK (AP)—Animal J tics had ' New Yorkers asking about the birds and the bull Monday. . First, eight tropical birds being un- ~ loaded for window display at Tiffany’s jewelry store in midtown fluttered from their cages in a kaleidoscopic splash of ing canyons of steel and concrete on iis | hattan’s West Side. Pedestrians went thisaway = ee away in a hurry. eo eee Rodeo rider Dan Taylor, Dublin, te, | lower Rio Grande Valley. * Some drizzle and fog were re- ported in the northern Great Lakes and light showers spattered parts of Pennsylvania and Maryland, Weathermen predicted fair skies opt eeee a eet e seen _ALL OTHER EMPLOYEES | Including: PRODUCT ION, ENGINEERING. and INSPECTION ci eee oe mI cor ; over most of the country Tuesday.! bellitant colon peace 7 ens ia on ea ‘ La est and Lowest Temperatures : _, and arme a ve oS in ay Ne Dee Tete es ; The birds escaped to a freedom that finally roped the-bull near er cagge : Should Report at the Beginning of Monday's Temperature Chart Officers Are Renamed will probably prove fatal if the frosty Oc- -FLYING HIGH se » 4 ~ Their Regular Shifts on : 4 itn HS HEMa tS by Pontioc City Club ber climate of the elt. asec ite, sil os Mote. te = fot pee e sh uaa pana saeess | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15th. Buttalo $240 Key Orleans 19 #2) Present officers of the Pontiac Monday night, a Brahma bull which tail plumes; a pair of paradise whydahs Gileseo tk mk Oana tt oe eu Qub have been re-elected for had just participated in the rodeo at Madi- — also from Africa; two~Napoleon weavers; Ceveang 8 7 fue UE Beard of tor eo by the club's” son Square Garden went into a 1,00-pound _—and a couple of fire finches, from Australia. Brie Bites fe [Board of Directors, act of his own They came from the private aviary of si ED G.M.C. UCK and COACH OY. Or mapide op ta O.Bte Marie af 3! They are David E. Edstrom, a * es . _ Edward Marshall oe and atlas of . Houghton 30 4% Trav City, $2 48 president: Stuart E. Whitfield, s he was being herded with other Washington’s-Crossing, NJ. The birds were | _ GENERAL. MOTORS CORP. . Kansas City 81 64 Seattle 83 49/vice president, and~ Thomas J.| bulls into a, basement pen, he loped through to be on exhibit in Tiffany’s to brighten a | Mecsne iis oe “Whitfield, secretary and treasurer.' @ side door and romped into the gray yawn- ~ ‘display of Boehm’s céramic sculptures. . 4 ‘4 4 i WO Stmeter We Ash: You to. ae = Know and Compare « «5 WY You: exe: sncueaide: ibbox' eb cost of @ funeral service;.or the iacilities we provide, we ask you to find out ~to know. The display room, and. all prices are gpen for your inspec: °*. : RE OE Bee, ne Canalo Funeral’ Home. The need sor funeral service is ‘ine eee . @vitable, ‘and you. should rng ee these things. We will do everything > possible to help you to. know ail: the details and to sereity = a the future, ee next month or early. Decem- ‘ber, The highest debt recorded to idate “was eaeamstae at the ¢\yeat—to 230 billions and then to Officials have indicated the a dase will have to-raise an- other three billion dollars in- cash by early December. DOES MORE THAN JUST “SHRINK” PILE TissUES! No Surgery Needed To Stop Pain Of Swolien Pile Tissues While They Heal! To stop nageing discomfort of Steinless Pazo combines the most awollen minutes, thou- effective ingredients known for : piles. Thus works 9 ways at once: (1) stops pain, itching in minutes; (2) shrinks tissue swelling, con- gestion: (3) promotes healing of raw tissues. You get immediate new comfort while Nature's own healing magic goes to work! Don't suffer needlessly. Get Stainless Pazo Su tories -or Ointment at druggists. Get relief without surgery or money back! ore n at once, promotes hea ing o ‘phased tissues too— all without surgery! Preparations that just act to “shrink” piles can't offer complete symptomatic relief. For real comfort, fast, = more complete medication. — n doctors’ tests, patients hed causenes relief. That's because aes All this borrowing is necessary because of the Ir billion dolar deficit. forecast for the fiscal year which began July 1. income is down, because of the recession, and spending is at a record peacetime tevel. ? pres sok of the Treasury Robert . Anderson has told Congress he store the débt to exceed 287, billion doilars by next June. The government is barred. by law from borrowing more than 288 ‘Hillions. This ceiling will dfop to 285 billions automatically next July 1 unless Congress decides. ot wise. : able—chores on Capitol Hill. The highest wartinee figyre. i acheny Repossenieiid 5 the: E wipuesoav oa 3: 10 PM. “REMINGTON | by Incidentally, ! the current: debt is subject to the “eéiling. Some: borrowing m=" sooner, it almost certainly willbe, ae Sea Sane Dee cad bere: r-\uranium—wastes of the atomic expects Pe ‘debt to drop to 283 billions by| SYDNEY, Sarees Or _ peo ube there is a good chance he'll have to ask Congress before then to raise the debt ceiling Tt was raised twice this * * * 288 billions. Boosting the debt limit is ene of the most ar—but unavoid- reiling has been rejiggered five times in the past five years. , During World War fl, the limit was 300 billion dollars. The gov- ernment never used all this bor- rowing aithority however, and— the -present debt exceeds the States continues * * *. —<—* is excluded from this. ‘congressional control. The —total — {debt subject to the limit was just under 279 billions~last- Wednesday, the latest day for which Seurer age available. Electric Shaver “—While ¥ou ving. £ ‘$a 50 24 creased the treasury’s-cash balance E to yung corey from in billions § Se day before. . j= e@ OFLED . @ ADJUSTED @ STERILIZED F Reds Claim Radiation Neutralizes Grain Pests | | ONDON (UPI) — Moscow radio ‘states that Russian scientists have ‘found a way. of making ~grain- destroying insects harmless through use of radiation. The broadcast said the most eco- incmical ‘and technically feasible imethod is to sterilize the insects with radiation. The best source of radiation for the purpose. the radio said, is fragments of the fission of NEW SERVICE—Remington facto representative will be im our sto r every SIMMS... ‘industry. NEW-CAR bank rates are lower! If you think you've caught the bug— don’t be alarmed. Once you've made your new car deal, it takes little more than a stop at Pontiac State Bank to get it rolling for you — at lower bank rates, What’s more, with an auto loan from Pontiac State Bank, you get free life insurance coverage for your family’s protection! - and an easy repayment plan that’s actually tailored to your budget. Pick the Plan That Suits Your Needs and Budget! YOU NEED MONTHLY PAYMENTS 24 Mos. 18 MOS, 1S MOS. 12 Mos. ~ 500 23.00 30.00 35.00 44.00 . 1,000 46.00 60.00 71.00 87.50 1,200 55.00 . 72.00 85.00 105.00 1,500 , 69.00 90.00 106.00 131.00 1,800 82.00 107.00. 127.00 157.00 2,000 92.00 119.00 142,00 175.00 So, when you’ve made your deal, stop by or call Pontihe State Bank ... you're sure to agree it’s just what the doctor ordered! oa2, ie es es wore aft ep ert tt IMPORTANT: Auto liability and preperty damage insurance can be included in your payments. Ask about it! - . Every depositor insured to $10,000 by — : - rises once 5 Convenient Offices Wednesday of every week. = Electric Shavers —Main Floor American authority. on Bigs Ria said today. that the majority of Americans may be living under|—E ge previbhion agqey by 106 9x10, : Dr. Andrew C. Ivy, president of the International Commission for E the Prevention of Alcoholism, said — that, will happen if a present trend teward prohibition inthe United unchanged. He predicted prohibition niall iene wei be voted y state hens RECONDITIONED | ry re _islatures, saliak ant i: Con dei Ivy said alcoholism is a major 1 ‘|health problem in the United| it : ‘ee ie ee coun- tries, then added, “But_when one! ¢ pbb nora ak gatos : ae at worthwhile: wing. Cotten Plisse or’ Cotten Bioadeteth Ladies’ UNFORS "989" Washable plisse or broadcloth in whites. Your choice of either im smart styles. Rlisses with 5 button to waist. Broadcloths with full button €— fronts All Sizes 10 te 20 142 te 2212 “Soft-as-Cashmere” 100% ORLON. $3 Quality $4 Quality 1” 89 2” Easy to launder, dries extra fast priced. Sizes 34 i Panty S ciaebe styles 3 in white.or, “ph Washable, live elastic for ot fit andcomfort. Get yours Ladies’ Sweaters | PULLOVERS CARDIGANS Choice ef 2 popular cones Sensationally under-* SIMMS $8 N. Saginaw—CLOTHING—Main Floor won't stretch, sag, etc. 300 feet. 8-FOOT ‘ull Limit 2 2.98 Value ~ EVERYDAY LOW PRICES * Bath Mats *® Room-Size Rugs SAVE UP to 50” LOT LOT 1—Only 300 of These to $2.79 8 , NOW-- 24 x 36-inch throw rugs in bound carpeting, many colors r— #so 27 to 34- inch hi-lo squares. Washable, rubberized back¢ Also for 4-foot rugs. Cosceseasocesoocooosecs LOT 2— 2—Over 250 in Low Non- sles backs Non-slip Backs es eeseebe dt LOT 3—Biggest Assortment to $7.50 2 cs Extra heavy ‘cut piles, hi-lo loops and bound carpeting. Great color selection. Rubberized backs, washable. 54 to 60-in ~ 00000000 0F80OOOCHHO OOOO EEEEEES “LOT 4— 4—4ll 4 x 6 Ft. Rugs & to $12.50 % 5° Deep pile in hi-lo loop designs, bound edges. Several colors. Washable. Rubberized @n-slip backs. * Cut-Pile Rugs * All Color-Fast * Carpet Squares Values oe, Values to $4 Now.--- Values Worth $9 ROOM-SIZE RUCS 6x9 FOOT Values to $16.95 Thiqk cotton loop, méstly hi-los, Bound edges. Non-slip back. 9x12 FOOT Values to $19.95 Limited stock. Solid colors. Fringed edges. Cotton loop. SIMMS SALE. of Greatest Selection and Biggest Bargains in Our History xc n Chenilles * Throw Rugs * All Washable * Hi-Lo Loops * Runner Rugs * Non-Slip Backs * Plain and Tweeds $ 8” 4s Domestica Bargain Basement | | | eeu aoe $2.50 Gallon cational eT $2 Junior ¢ Scrabble. . tire strength pee ee ee ee ‘AERO WAX’ R WAX 1” For all floors—no rubbing. Gives shiny lustre finish. Ideal for lino- leum, asphalt, tile, etc. eaeesegecnscesseesess ‘Tiger Lily’ “plastic costed line to clean with. damp cloth. Limit SHSKCeCeeoereoeeseoce Finished HARDWOOD Clothesline Prop 79c Value EACH Sturdy prop with metal line clip and || tapered ground end. FP 8-foot length. Popular Word-Building SCRABBEE Game $2.98 Value fu Complete set. Popular Buy & Sell ‘cone _-MONOPOLY $3.98 Value 2® Old favorite game for en- eeeeeeeseoeseseseeees SWING-A-WAY Wall Can Opener T 88 Wall style opener that swings agaifst wall when not in use. Complete with bracket. Limit |. eeovdeceeosecesoseosees Youngsters and adults, for edu- Lar family fun. Up to 10 players. seeccesscescesesccese Sturdy Long Handle Round Point Shovel $2.95 Value 17 Light w eight with great and ” Values _ to $2.49 ‘Choice of 12 x Cushions entire sink. + Genuine RUBBERMAID Sink Liner Mat 1” 14cinch er 13. x_ 16-inch mats. Assorted colors. simms 8 N. Saginaw 2nd Floor wf + perfect balance. FOUR. _ ae a ee PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTO! After Trip Behind Bamboo Curtain, Strohm Finds: | Bee Chinese Resent ‘American Aggression’. ont worker packed want rec and, Coane: Yoedandion!>: id bn shouted, “Get outt Get oul!” — | thought contre, *, ~ BUNERAL HOME. . “160. W. Huron St.» FE 29171. ‘PARKING ON PREMISES bvvnsesronoensungnecnesneereeneet Id a afte nc Spt ee | What iy 1s Wrong ‘ an uj 2 tel 4 reer pee : 4 = ; : seed i atiat aaa er een ee claimed he once had seen US.) jor of the Chinese 1 met—even! te beet “US, wolves.” When ra er ails? soldiers rape girls in -Peiping. i eaizat Gu kamen aleieoie oth padens . ‘ Sdsenuceuee 4 In Shanghai, I was conducted/ the propaganda — were most help-| “But. what .makes you . think through a street memorable as the|ful to me personally. They were| America has any idea of stack scene where a “drunken GI al-|courteous and far less evasive than|i"& Chi I wou | A. strange son dre etd | ~_|legedly killed a pedicab driver. [the Russians on my visits to the|Wwld come back with Chiang'siknown as- the “voice e many to perform’ amasing feats. Z - U.S.S.R. ‘ 4 statements. that he would lead his) Worlds, ‘e-offering. tree pertorm amazing feats, This is net happy time for . army back to the mainland and|to the publie, mae Tid a a Uh you te be here,” was the under- a ihe International Tourist Buresu |quote American admirals as boast-[10., oe bso great ol ‘ . | __{ statement of a factory manager a government agency tha’ handles S!ing that the U.S. was towar @ he anewer te : how ~} fo Nanking. {all foreign — visitors, made’ every] ine For one poem say UPltion. ‘The search for clues led to | My interpreter, who had tang-|Chransement T requested. took me: srentest pawer in lated a-hundred lectures to me : “The American are : Many of the impromptu conver- — {upon the entire subject .o «back to | i. He ac- | and must have been as tired 88| cations which resulted ‘became| "aid that the Communists want!" ins new light, even the Well : : I of the propaganda -monotone,|ivited give and take. I pulled| government consoled in these words: Bt on the rest of the world," I argued. ms no punches in refuting ctiarges ‘Ridiculous recog Senet Sen dou, et Oe Party Chairman Mad has said| nut be exported” The free booklet these think.” that China is the only nation that! a3.) nag pS bsagrseten se : What is it like to be an Ameri-\ean afford a_war: “We can l08e! nich once was so endearing. Once |Prayer.” experience the can ip a hostile land at a time|300 million Chinese and still Wave! i, protesting that I did did not be-| “The Voice of ‘Two Worlds." 9 the : like the Quemoy crisis? One|300 million left.” lieve there would be a war or 1|Well known ang him, moves in a constant bath of viru; 4 giplomat has reported a grim would not be traveling in China, |Pher. tells of a remarkable of ames. lent propaganda, from the official) conversation with Mae in which |} pulled out a photograph of my|iievable re ath of oe Rag ong Sy radio to the irate ladies: in the) the party lender said: “Weel |wife and six children. mind, of-_ brilliant PM obether wish old folks home. War I set Up socialism im Russia. | “Ohoh.” smiled a factory man-|business and professional success regarding this is To those who seem to possess, World War I set up socialism im | ager, “so you area sputnik fa-|204 Dew Others tell of address the AMAZEMENT AND CURIOSITY freeze the as they watch Strohm — the first American they (some power to reason, you keep! gh, peopies’ democracies of Eu- | ther. poerensng serene, si ntalphysics, 213 = faces of these Red Chinese youngsters in Canton have ever seen > record expressions on film. up a stiff center matter | of P@&| rope and China. Worlg War Ill Sputnik is the (ieee lable ev. ee y, wwredound —_ = tient argumen mettnde in ancient Angeles, is By JOHN STROM of their stec? plants, their farms) -In a few spots the searing blast a i ose gohan orca ot aecallan me en to anyone who overtulllis the ia the Tt ite ct Telahns wad ( none pon penal ehh an, Ao | and their militia. f hatred tinually directed to-} - But when day i the production _ » |philosophies the world origi-jobligation, - are to NEW YORK — What of the Red = SS eo is exhausted ang the spirit flags, | 2Found the world.” (Next: Remaking a Nation by 2204. aso ae aa pg Re Chinese attitude toward John, Curlosi¢y, too. I was a crowd. ward. our ‘country licked at me| even though you know one man | How des one evaluate such| Death and Re-education.) He discloses how he learned rare|number of ) Figg Cie as coe Strohm, the only American corre-| St0PPer Waerever I went. I must personally. A cartoon of protest) cannot expect to offset massive | statements as these? I only know Copgright 1968, NEA Service, Inc.|wisdom and long hidden practices, |been printed. | say that my ege dropped when }was drawn of me and placed in : spondent with both U.S. and Chi-| 7 found out that one group of |my hired automobile. > nese permission to travel in China?| school children who stood up and | Once while I was being shown . Amazement, first. For here was| clapped their hands when I en- |through:- a farm implement repair the mortal enemy they were rant-| tered the clagsroom thought I shop by the vice-director of one ing about, calmly taking pictures | wag’a Russian! of the pew communes, a belliger- e Introducing - ‘59 power for your brand-new car... > fabric coats oval! chemise! trapeze! on sale Wednesday Only! 1959 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF VISTA The New Cor Gasoline “Come see, our wonderful . | wools and cashmeres, plus Zibelines, even color -looped OO mohair wools! And you must see how they’re finished: Gives you high energy performance — yet you can « Keeps that new car thrill alive In any make of car you drive! # taped at the armholes, piped at the buttonholes, lined in” gleamy rayon satin. Full milium linings in all styles. New lines? Of course! See oval, straightened or coats swinging trapeze-style in every harvest tone imagin- able. Sizes 8’ to 18. Many petite sizes, too. SHOP PENNEY’S.. . you'll live better, you'll save! Ve A>4. i ve eseeclesecs heoveceeoce save up to 2¢ per gallon! Planning to buy a new"1959 car? Remember—you can keep that new car thrill alive with 59 Mobilgas Special. It’s The New Car Gasoline—created by Mobil research to fill the power needs of the ’59 cars. With ,’59 Mobilgas Special you get true high energy * performance . . . instant starts and fast warm-up— — smooth idling—full, quiet power and acceleration— yes, top miles per gallon, too! Yet it can save you up a to 2. cents per gallon over many super premiums! Try Loe : es ra it in your new or late model car—~59 Mobilgas . Tune in “TRACKDOWN” every Friday night, CBS-TV. ~ vee At your friendly Mobil deater’s now. soceny MOBIL OIL COMPANY, INC. For new car power and economy — You" re Miles Ahead with Mobit UNCOLN MERCURY OLDSMOBILE f. 4 tt HM ai ee eseeeeee eee eee seteease eevee eee eee eae oe ee epeeeeeeeweeeneeee#é@#eeeeeee#e Erololstelctelelelsislcleteletstel cts « o6. 2s : ¥ oe Se Ge ay is m * ; Ss 4 ; : f x de = age ; $5, : : ‘ a ~ . ) : : : ; q a = p Z cou Pisce sere AEE THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1958 ie oe “ore cea catsasingics | ae y ee AU e 1 Or st of Can ol comings might replace tin sand release of lar eer. Cer Nee prc ~~ jential of the Shake, River er, will be - Deaths in Poa a : Pe pac [Pt : Tiat-on M |protective coating tain artificial dyestuffs, exposed| With ing Temowm to ther Clete as “Big “AL WASHINGTON —‘ Agriculture steed cing des ot en ats the sun, use about 25 per cent| POCATELLO, Idaho @ — The The|Chlet Maleum River Work Like MRS. JOSEPH C. FRECHETTE jw Department 1 * repget|'® CFenPing Jot'the radiation to form new chem: |Pocatello Chiets adopted the presi-|"72"-" Burmeister of Peaacol, Fn they have ‘found that can coatings ical. compounds. Inthe dark the |dent of Idaho Power Co..into their ‘The Rosary will be said at 8 dese sunt, vibe Wiehe of Fess lads of oma that can coatings! solar Energy Is Stored process is reversed, causing the|civie group and gave him a ngw| Berlin's largest public library- tonight from the Donelson-Johns tiac, Cid Weayer ef. Almont and mas kdkoe walt to tn, black| BONN —A West German firm is| release of the previously absorbed|name, T..E. Roach, whose com-jover 100,000 volumes — is the Home for Mrs. Joseph. C brothers 3 caver of adh cet Shen: They ay the Sng ohn cael seeaeloer ~ lpany is harnassing the power po-|American “Memorial Library. ( ) Frechette, 84, died surviving are tight —_— ~- - - ———— —_ Saturday at the home of her daugh ee org : ; : : Ca ee ee Reve Dorion, Gr, 5 Ways to Shop at Waite’s , @ 30-Day Charge The. funeral service will be at 10 a.m, Wednesday in St. Vincent de Paul Church with, burial in Mt. ots Held Hope Cemetery: fc ; Fj f f di { @ Easy Terms MRS. SARL a. sere: Or in | or. @ CCC Charge Mrs, Earl A. (Winifred F.) Hem _ orien perth @ Layawey street, 66, died early this morning| ATTICA — Mrs Lila Bell Farn-| ‘Mike’ i 1 arrest Ot, died early thie morniog| etn 57, of 2083 Rowers Bd, died] Mike’ (Gorman, Guried: © Me Money Sewn Pay Vs of her daughter, Mrr Rosemary Su%day in Lapeer County General! in Saginaw After! Neng of 12 Stowell St. She had’ ee was sent yesterday Requiem “Mass nk aia domed from Baird Funeral-Home in La-| = = ee ra was a spember, peer.to the Hankey-Funeral Home) FLINT -#—Funeral- services. for! = S itnesses. jin New Kensington; Pa. Service| Michael (Mike) Gorman, editor of i | Surviving are three sons and| and burial will take place in New the Flint Journal, were held today Terr ‘fic Toy Buy! ‘Huge Batter y Oper rated . ' five daughters, Wayne of oe Kensington. §. ~~ _}aat Flint’s St. Matthew Roman Cath-|_ Se ee ees ~101-Pc. MILITARY TROOP TRANSPORT SET Mrs, Florence Peel and Mrs. Fell. ‘ : ; f Wolle and award Miller, both ot] Bishop Joseph Albers of Lansing cus features the first unbreakable poly train and track set! Open an Account Today! my with whom she made her! Lakeville: Mrs. Kenneth Pahel home, all of Pontiac; 18 grand-|Hazel. Park; Mrs. Paul. Geere ; = fie eke Stier ca Birmingham and Mrs. Albert Ro-|Cemetery in Saginaw. _Alex DeShano of Holly and Mrs.| mane of Utica; two sons ater Anes Sess ioming Seeman me rn $9.98 $ 9 y, Mrs. Hemstreet’s body was taken | Clayton of Beaver, Pa.; a brother,|senhower, Vice President Richard hae i. A, ill e, Value _ today from the Donelson-Johns Fu- Samuel Erb of Detroit, 26 grand-|Nixon and former President Her- ~ ~~ ? vs ‘neral Home. to the Livingston Fu- | children and 15 great-grandchil-! bert Hoover. poets "yee og Sear gl | dren. Press Secretary James Hagerty, : , v E- ; Wh 7 G t: ice at 2 p.m. Thursday, Burial will whe sent the message of tribute|4 . Lg var | + u e be in the Luther Cemetery. | MRS. JAMES OFFNER for the President, safd in his state- | : oj - . Here’ s oe EDWARD H. MARKS | * ames. (Lite) Peg on — tus at the ~ stan a, A : @ Locomotive e Anti Averett Edward H. Marks, 66, of 178|Dodge St., will be held at 2 p.m.| were deeply shocked te learn the (> ) | pang A a. Me ek @ Coal Tender an Perkins St. died suddenly yester-'tomorrow at Roth’s Home for* news of the tragic and ms. - ¥ ‘6 , sh LM . @ Rocket day morning in St. Joseph Mercy|Funerals, Romeo, with burial in| geath of Michael A. Gorman, edi- |% ~] | 4 - “he . 7 ; 39 © Freight Cor Launcher Hospital. ‘the White Lake Cemetery. | tor of the Flint Journal “9 ' ’ - Se % a @ Caboose He had been an employe of Gen. Mrs. Oftner died yesterday after | President had known Mike Gor- |7 ” “> Mae SF bc os © Rocket es peters: Truex & Coack ae a short illness. man for many years and looked | Gece be / ' ' "an @2 Weapons e Plenty of and a member of St. Vincent de Surviving are three daughters,” upon him not only as a good per- (7 _——— + “ he a a 4 : Paul Church. ‘Mrs. Gladys Reed of Detroit, Mrs.| sonal friend but as one Se aft * ZL. ' a Trucks Ammo . Surviving are his wife, Minnie; ;Milfred Cronin of Center Line and) outstanding newspapermen | ' @ 1 Mobile @ Extra Tires two sons, Earl K. and Lloyd E.|Mrs. Hazel Galster of Southfield) aation.” i . Marks, both of Pontiac; six grand-| Township; three sons, Clarence | Nixon said Gorman’s death was Trailer . Engine s ors ebistren: | thee) (nisders) (are fw = Ralph, both of Detroit, and|--, great loss not only to his fam- @ Cannon @ 31 Soldiers rothers arry of Warren; 19 grandchildren | ‘ily and the newspaper world but e The Rosity wil bel rechod a:|and © igreatqreneenaren 1b eat the eee aed eer 10-Pcs. Unbreakable Track | | Never — no never has this mammoth fighting 4 outfit sold at this new slashed price! Thanks to + an opportune slow-season purchase, you reap » the savings! Entirely unbreakable, it features 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Pursley| Ot ibutes Funeral Home. Service will be at, ae thee WER YES ee eacine ag 10 a.m. Thursday from St. Vincent! MARLETTE — Service was held | jeral Arthur Summerfield; Army de Paul Church with burial follow-/Sunday at Bethel Church for Mrs. Secretary Wilber Brueker; Thomas! # ing in White Chapel Memorial James (Laura) Weaver, 80, who Dewey, and FBI Chief J. Edgar! § Remetezy- bes Mens aay Aris Paina Hoover. 3 a 4-car battery operated forward-reverse train MRS. ALLEN STRATTON Marlette Cemet Gorman had served as Flint i... 2 weapons trucks with removable cannons pc areal |Journal editor since 1978 after a rocket launcher trailer and soldiers Service for Mrs. Allen (Flora) Surviving are her husband; two starting his newspaper career at/ # Jeann@) Stratton, 39, of 290 N.j|daughters, Mrs. Olive Richardson the age of 18 on the old Saginaw) | Paddock St. will be at 11 a.m.'of Auburn Heights and Mrs. Nina/Courier Herald. < . ] hr. L S e Ready to Varnish, Paint or Stain _\‘uasor * Lee wana’ Bit ae st You save twice on this fine Ponderosa Pine } hel is furniture ... First, by buying at Waite’s sale ‘ . prices — Second, you save the cost of finished furniture by doing it yourself! fos pay for pm tne, , long lerm Ree. *] 9” i galore — 3} inall! Truck has take-apart engine . . . train runs off the track, too — on rugs, linoleum! Comes with plenty of ammo! Save & Waite’s Downstairs Toyland % 2 Pi + rege se ? SPS Se ia oe ee, Tiny air cells mean warmth with no bulk! THERMAL UNDERWEAR | $3.98 En. / QO kuch Kalues/ Piece e Won't shrink or stretch out of shape! ‘@ Machine washable, soft, comfortable! / ; Vny air cells are the secret of the insulation — “keeps body heat in, cold out! This fine combed f cotton underwear is perfect for deer hunting, out- door workers, ice fishermen . . . thermal under- wear absorbs perspiration, is watm whether mov- ing or sitting still! Sizes S, M, L, XL: Save! cr ve id 4 All clear pine chests . . . fully sanded Waite’s ... Street Floor ae and ready to finish! Large size, 34” high, : eee net 41" wide, 15” deep. Save almost $10.00 #— eo ee ee eee er. dear Lelia sa REPEAT OF A SELLOUT! Remington Portable SLIDING DOOR —st—ész ROOM DIVIDER ‘QUIET -RITER’ Reg. ] 5” - List $133.95 $19.99 Me} This fine ponderosa pine room divider : 5" } has double sliding doors on each side, a © } planter box on Oe ah nae in’ any = oe , * ... like heart disease, leukemia, cancer. Covers serious accidents, too—the kind that could put your room! 1144 by 4142" by 35 budget in the red for years. ; . Nationwide’s MAJOR MEDICAL‘is a NO MON EY DOWN ' dramatic, new health insurance...at a PAY V3 MONTHLY! © Nationwide’s traditiorially low rates, MAJOR ¥ : / MEDICAL takes over when your regular hospitalization MORE TERRIF ] C BU YS: olicy runs out... helps defray the expense of prolonged ee , ” = Now is your chance to buy this famous Remington P thee or serious eden. Your we aes aaike Sliding Door: Record Cabinet—21'x341/2"'x151/2""— - Quiet-Riter portable for only $79! Quiet-Riter is the can’t buy better peace of mind. Reg. $19.95 6600 ee $15.97 © only portable with Miracle Tab, Larger-Sized Cylinder, ree this informative brochure 6-Drawer Chest—141/2'x23/4'’x42"’—Reg. $24.95..... $19.95 Be imei ied Reon Changer and full 44-key keyboard ie Youth Chair for the In-Be-Tween Ages—Reg. $6.98... $ 2.88 with Finger-Speed keys. Phone FE 4-2511 and save! “MAJOR MEDICAL ~ask the Nationwide an | & . ; representative in your community MEDIAL Waite’s Housewares Department... Fifth Floor Waite's Stationery . . . Street Floor sBRv,, ; for your free copy. : 2 . : “ Save $2.00 on this world famous Rone MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY home office; Columbus, Ohio ; @ Lifetime gvasenteedt’ 4 2 ' . @ Sharpens knives better than new! ® 7H peo? . @ Scientifically angled sharpeners! vormerie $ 97 - @ Nothing to plug in, no motor to burn $4.98 William F. Picl , out! 16525 James Couzens Hwy., Detroit, Mich. @ Fine grain stone slots — steel cone slot for super sharpéning! Phone: UR versity 1-9380 © Choose yellow or turquoise! - Charge Yours of . Waite's ... Fifth Floor | Soe , + Rvese_t Bassert, THE PONTIAC PRESS HAROLD A. FITZGERALD President and Publisher Editorial Page Owned and Published Locally TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1958 MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ? aan tema Michael A. Gorman The death of MicHaEL A. GoRMAN, editor of the Flint Journal, who en- joyed the title of Flint’s No. 1 good will ambassador, was sudden - and, as always, untimely. *- tt -* “Mike,” as they all called him, had earned the.respect and ad- miration of not only those with whom he worked intimately, but of thousands of Flint citizens who knew his soft, sincere voice. x * * His energy was endless when it came to working for the things he loved—best. - Flint was Mike’s life. He spent untold hours working for civic betterment. In recent years practically all his time had been spent helping to establish the College and Cultural Development center, which is near completion. In 1955 he” pérsonally gave $25,000 to the project, but be- cause of his modesty did not men- tion it. \ * * * In the newspaper field ‘the name Mike Gorman was respected and stood for a driving force. * * * He will be missed by his fellow colleagues in the newspaper business, but most of all by the citizenry of Flint, where he worked so energeti- tically over the last 30 years for a better way of life. County Neglect Evident on Strip of Opdyke Road Opdyke Road from St. Hugo of the Hills church to Hickory Grove Road is in about the worst state of repair of any road in Oakland County. * * * This particular road is not only the cutoff from Woodward Avenue north to M-24, but it serves all the traffic from both St. Hugo’s school and church. It seems utterly ridiculous . that Oakland County taxpayers are forced to use this extremely bumpy piece of road. * * * Most. gravel or dirt roads throughout the County are in far better condition than this strip of washboard highway. x **«* * If the County Road Commission is responsible for the maintenance of our highways, it is certainly neglecting the taxpayers that, by HS must travel this road. De Gaulle Proposes New Plan for Algeria Supported by his great victory in the recent confidence vote, France’s Premier pE GAULLE has turned his attention to settlement of the. Al- gerian war. Leaders of the rebels were not successful in persuading fellow Moslems to boycott the refer- endum. The French army protect- ed voters in the secret balloting, 76.8 per cent favoring de Gaulle’s five-year plan for “political, eco- nomic, social and cultural trans- formation” in Algeria. x* * * J & The Algerians are promised a boost | in wages to the French level, 400,000 more jobs including civil service in France itself, 625,000 more acres of land for Moslem farmers and better. housing and schools for all Algerian children. Algeria is to have more Self THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by THe Pontiac Parss Company 48 W Huron st Pontiac, Michigan Trade Mark Daily Except Sunday Jomx A. Rieryv, Assistant Advertising Executive Vice President Manager and Advertising Director Gowsan A. Frrzcraatp m1, Vice President and ‘Business Manager Eset M T®Rapwet., Circulation Magee G Manswatt Jorvan, Local Advertising Manager : tern W. PrirrGeaatp Gecretary and Editor Greorece C_ imma Classified Manaser Roeert B Tare, Managing Editor The Aggbciated Press ts entitied exciusively- to the ase for republication of ai] local news printed tn thts _ newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches The Powrtac Parss is delivered oy cartier for 40 cents @ week; where cafrier service ts not @rallable by mat) fn Oakland, Genesee, Livingston. Macomb, Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties ft ts $12.00 a year; elsewhere tn \-hiean and al} other places fn the United States 00 a year. All maf! subscriptions payable, th alivance. Entered as second cigss matter at Pontiac t ABC, Phone Pontiac FE 2-3181. “of Rochester; government and De GauLLE made clear that neither the French army nor the French settlers would decide Algeria’s. future, only the Algerian voter could do that. An army shakeup has put officers in Algeria who will take ' orders from De GavuLie and the generals who led last May’s re- volt are being transferred, says, U.S. News & World Report. x * * Within two months Moslems and Europeans will vote on an equal basis with two-thirds of the repre- sentation going to the Moslems. There are more than a million ~ French in Algeria as opposed to eight or nine million Moslems. An Algerian Assembly was created in 1947 but the seats were equally divided between the European minor- ity and the Moslem majority, with voting carried on in separate elec- toral colleges. promises Moslems that they will vote in a single electoral college-with European residents. x * * If De GauLLe doesn’t get an Qp- portunity. to carry out his reform proposals, the result will be a con- tinuation of the struggle and even greater chaos and bloodshed. The favorable vote in the referendum could mean that the Algerian rebels’ fight for independence from France does not have the support of the bulk . of the population. The Man About Town Big Busting Bees The Boy Scouts Are on a Real Large Wrecking Job Capital punishment: When the government taxes you to get capital in order to go into business in competition with you, and then taxes the profits on your business to pay its losses. , Clinton Valley Council of the ‘Bay Scouts is planning a real wrecking job on the 18 buildings on Kennett Road, just. east of Oakland Ave, which it received as a gift from the county. Most of them are residences that had been condemned, but three are practically. new. : Two Scouter “busting beés” are sched- uled, one on next Saturday and the ether a week later, between the hours of 8 and 5 o’clock (or any part possible) in. which old and young scouts will assist in: their razing and removal to Camp Agawarh at Tommy's Lake, about ‘etght miles north- . ~ east of. their present location. Eight of the buildings will .be moved intact by a Detroit concern, being donated’ by them and others. -T lumber in the rest will be used for~ provements at Camp Agawam, pigking a total capital gain there of AY least $20,000. fi Airbound to - New Orleayts today , is RC: Cummings, where he represents the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority at the annual meeting of the National Parks and Boulevards Association. ve One of the, ae area's last expo- nents of, the’ horse and buggy days, \ fe / Charles Price of iiford, worked at his trade as hgfnessmaker until a few days before his recent death at the age of 84. Although the leaves are rapid- ly falling, the foliage display in this section still is worth your observation. An acquaintance of around a half century causes me to add my felicitations to the many others extended Mrs. T. W. Jackson on her completion of. 25 years in the insurance business in Pontiac. Marion's a wonderful girl. Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Durrant of 128 Oneida Rees; 60th wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gallagher of 249 Anderson.; 55th wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stottlemyer of 311 Dover Road: golden wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Schihl 65th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Zept of Walled Lake; 55th wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vrbensky of Fenton; 5ist wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Sanford E. Mack of Durand; golden wedding De GAULLE now: the - cost An American Tragedy David Lawrence Says: Kremlin Behind Atlanta Bombing E WASHINGTON — The bombing of a- Jewish temple in Atlanta has all the earmarks of a Communist plot. It follows the pattern of simi- lar bombings of Jewish places of worship in Flor- _ ida at Miami and Jacksonville, in Alabama at Birmingham, and in North Carolina at Charlotte and Gastonia. When Mayor . William B. LAWRENCE Hartsfjeld of Atlanta calls it an “‘in tional conspiracy,” he puts +his the fact that only by a ‘concetted action and money: from ia source could stooges int try be employed to carry out, the | -bornb- plots. It: is significant | that, - “in ‘connection: with ‘almost every -dne of the ‘bombings, there -are- always anonyridus ‘telephone. calls and there ‘is’ every. time a wey éncefo.a ‘Confetlerate Un -ground:”’ The werd “und “is all too familiar inthe C ail nist world, and it sounds Ag, individuals who did the’ # job trained carefully to” dé: “exactly what they had been’ pold in every instance. They do“not have versa- tility of mind ‘sufficient to vary even the teleptosie calls. °. *® ' The ph fori crusade” has money/“g6d .is worldwide in its scope. The Communists Jike to fish in, led waters and they tie up iy ‘members of all the crackpot (peeanizations théy can find -and Ygse them for their own diabolical Ae ends. It has always been a mystery . where these organizations and their publications get the morey to carry on paigns of yillification. Bat most surprising of all is _ that governmental detective agencies seem never to have uncovered the international con- nections of these loca) organiza- tions. One reason perhaps is that gradually the processes of de- tection where Communists. are concerned have been weakened | in this country through Supreme Court decisions and the pooh- poohing tactics of the comes “liberals.” One phase of the anthConsnvonist. battle in the United States is that too many misguided “liberals’”’ seem to think the individual rights of Communists to preach treason and to plot against the state tran- scend the rights of all the people to be .defended against: such at- tacks. When congressional commit- ‘tees try to get witnesses to help their “own government by telling. _ the names .of Communists. they: have known, any refusal to divulge such friendships is protected by the Supreme Court as freedom ef: association.” : * * : The men charged with detecting _ conspiracy and crime in America are discouraged by these ‘technical obstructions. Yet it is well know The say Parson an when men get a four-day week they'll be willing to spend one hour of the remain- ing three days at church.” “I wonder if their persistent cam-— that bombing is a Communist tech- nique, and a good deal of practice in that sort of business has been obtained by terrorists in the Middle East. To import a few who can enlist a handful of American crim- inals to assist them is nota diffi- cult job for trained Communists to handle. They have the money and the criminals at their beck and call. r * * * The Communist purpose, course, is to make propaga The objective, for example, o: bombings of synagogues is to up antagonisms inside the Uni in the South who are allied with oe ostensibly intergéted in agitation of racial issues: (Copyright, 1958)“ -_ THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Then bear $ from heaven, and gious freedom. Testi rig . t ica . congressional committees hds dis- not so, thou hast no portion of His eatin ieaias ia kmatt a , = — hton. x a arene Lae — We know the real answer to sew a . ‘Trust God, Reuther, what?_Dad’s socks and sonny's me DE Win Brady Says: . Sue _- Unions to Win’ : + et “For God so loved the world that a writer. Not by hubby, xercise | sser LIC]. “tie save tis coly begotten Son that Sey bet wae 7 whosoever believeth in Him shall, oe ok oe 5 Ward. Off Heart ‘Attack ot perth but have everlasting Sotne-people cam count on thet ee ge ae ‘fingers the real true friends they ee * can count on. 3 As eaty as. 1 can Wears, are. _ Any phy sician- can diagnose a Fr his sanity, so He has alee | At. least a cae summer” “teur 6r professional athletes are Ro Kecleacleroaia by simply feeling” of given us Walter Rewdther and ‘will cut 5 the ~ at ie ponte wie meee oe jhe arteries. But a diagnosis of - our unions so that whoscever be- + careless. drivers: who put the get pepeticalty no | : * “atherosis - is rarely made except ” — perish wreck..in recreation. - Saerciae lat) all. post-mortem: Atherosis is an im- - ~ but have minimise fy engrdow - te #- a The term “ath. ‘pressive word in a medical essay. © frée from slavery shd from - —_ Youngsters don’t seem to under- lete’s heart,” Jike I, doibt though that the: medical poverty. é a” « stand the expression, “A place for the familiar ——— _writer who uses the word or. the . od; Walter Reathé Po everything @ and ‘everything ‘in. its “athlete's foot,” gobbledegock version of it knows. - Trust G pelt ginal raga lace.” | rere | is insignificant. ‘what he’s talking’ about. ; J our unions siete whe ee, . ri ed e A popular. mt 7 oa ee tS Ae Unemployed Autp Worker erga hg nay lay Dor . ed . : on E le eerily com en ARSE tetra S a mare te toe at; gry” Swann st toe ts toate presumably ‘in oo ie, Brgtene tot ais. the writer. This information will be. - - ee Ste, died guideniy Seber By, Malia ate, 2 SM ee lace Lat ust“ By Bow most bachelors have tak op Gd suddenly pac ogltor hing omg Comer Hg _ be-under, 209 words paves be! eat ail en a Vacation and most married and the first news DR. ‘BRADY af yright 1968) 5 ee righ men have been Pe report ascribed the death = “ath- + ee ees : va taken = lete’s heart.” The coroner ’s examination, how- ‘ever, showed that the man had tefies, the arteries which supply- blood (oxygen and nourishment) te the heart muscle. Athletic activity does not predispose to disease. of the coronary arteries. Sedentary persons are more © likely to develop atherosclerosis or arteriesclerosis of the coro- nary arteries than are persons who work or play hard. A year ago I reported here ob-« servation of physicians who had reviewed histories of a thousand cases of coronary occlusion or cor- onary thrombosis. In most_ cases - the heart aftack had occurred when, the victims were at rest. This. is just(one -more reason .to believe that™ people with heart : troiible of any kind need a reason- ablé amount of general exercise daity, rather than sitting around with weak heart or walking on eggs. - In my. pookiet CVD, “about: heart - and artery troubles, (35 ‘cents and stamped, self-addressed. envelope) I. explain ‘why daily exercise in ‘gradually increasing doses, ig es- ‘sential in. the successful treatment of heart-trouble, be it valvular or myocardial (heart muscle) insuf- ficiency. The “doctor who'lets such : - patients drift along without -grad- uated exercise is incompetent. Atherosclerosis is a’ misnomer. . The proper name ‘for soffening of ‘the arteries is atherosis (from Tom Hutehinson, - ~ and Mrs. Curtis Patton: — in the kitchen. ,Presiding ’ a the refreshment: table were Mrs. Joseph Panter and Mrs. Frank Anderson. Mrs. Charles Crawford was program chairman: * * a Mrs. Howard O. Powers will - open her home on Cherokee — ’ road fer the group’s next meet- — on Jan. 12, 1959. All I Saints PTA - See Health Film The health and general well- being of the pre-school . child was discussed and a film was shown by Louise Billings, regis- tered nurse with the Oakland County Health Department, when the parent-teacher meet- ing of All Saints Cooperative , - Nursery School was held Mon- day night in Stevens Hall. Chairman Mrs. John Burn- ham announced that the group’s revised constitution . had been accepted. Hostesses ° for the coffee hour weve Mrs. Howard Dell and Mrs. Lowell Stuckman. ? THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1958 ool Is a First for Fall below may be ordered sep- arately. Yo order, send 35 cents each for patterns No. 8155, No. 8227 and No. 8228, and $1 for F-18, ta Sue Bar- nett, The Pontiac Press, 1150 . Avenue of the Americas, New York 36, New York. > . 8155 Pattern No. 8155. yoke neckline and simply cut bodice. 34 bust, 34 sleeve: 5 yards of 35-inch, 34 yard of bright contrast. Pattern No. F-18. The popular trapeze with a Size 8 to 18. Size 10, 31 Price 35 cents. contrasting waist and matching jacket. Dress, 334 yards of 35-inch; waist, 11 yards; jacket, 214 A slim sheath with an bust: yards. Price si: eee Session. on Crafts A -ereative -eratts workshop for all Blue Bird and Camp Fire leaders will be held at _ 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. in the Community Services Building. _ Demonstrating uses of var- ious materials will be Mrs. Al- bert Krueger, Mrs. Jack Pel- ton, Mrs. Charles Cupp Jr., - Mrs. Harry Hawes and Mrs. Paul “Bruce. a The workshop stresses the idea of having each girl think and ‘use her imagination and _creative ‘ability when making ‘a craft item. The Pontiac Council of Camp Fire Girls is a member agency of the Pontiac Area United Fund. ; - Pattern No. 8228. A classic shirtwaister with a roll collar, Sizes J2 to 20. Size 14, Dear Abby . oe % with a blouse. yards of 35-inch; jacket, 153 yards. 8227. A two-piece ensemble; slim skirt and box jacket. skirt, 17. yards of 33-inch> jacket, 21% Price 35 cents. to 20. Size 12, 32-bust; yards; blouse, 1*'3_ yards. Brother Is Doing OK, So Live and Let Live! By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN “DEAR ABBY: The “tollow- ing, concerning my sister-in- law, may sound absurd but it ‘is true. My brother earns over $8,000 a the way my sister - in-law hangs on to every nickel, you'd think they were on the kids take a bath she ABBY throws in socks and towels to News of Personal Interest in Area Mr, and Mrs. Joseph C. Walker of West Iroquois road have returned home from a two-week trip to Salt Lake City where they visited Mr. Walk- er’s mother, Mrs. Rufus Walk- er, and two sisters. x * * Returned home Sunday to Milwaukee, Wis., were Mr. and Mrs. Max Heins. They spent 4 week with Mr. Heins’ sister, Mrs, Nellie LaFortune of Cher- .rylawn drive. * * * A freshman at Marygrove College, ~ Detroit, is Pa- tricia Foster, daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. Jack Foster of Or- chard Lake. x * * Joan Giroux, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry. Giroux of Or- chard Lake, is among nine co- eds at Ferris Institute chosen by men’s organizations of the college as candidates for Home- — Queen, Miss Giroux is a sophomore in commerce. Five area students at Deni- son University, Granville, Ohio, have been pledged to. national — sororities. Freshmen are Ellen Guest, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A. Guest Jr., of Birmingham, Delta Delta Del- ta; Elizabeth Kieffer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George V. Kieffer of Birmingham, Alpha Phi; Barbara Hedrick, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Hedrick of Bloomfield Hills, and Gretchen Raeder, daugh- ter of Mr, and Mrs. F. W. Raeder of Bloomfield Hills, both Kappa Kappa Gamma. ‘Junior student Julie Stubbs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Har- ‘old B. Stubbs of Birmingham, has pledged Delta Gamma. » * * * Attending the Fall confef- ~ ence of Michigan Youth Ad- Council Oct. 18-19 at Kellogg Center, East Lansing, will be Carl Code of Dexter road, He is a member of the * Michigan Congress of PTA, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Robert Kerr (née Frances Durkee) of Coleman street announce the birth of a daughter, Charlene Elleg.,born Sept. 10 at Pontiac General Hospital. Grandparents are Mr, and Mrs. Frank Durkee of Winth- rop road and Mr. and Mrs. Wil- - liam Kerr of Lakeview avenue. x * * Announcing the birth of a daughter, Marjorie Ann, born Sept. 28 at St. Joseph Mercy | Hospital, are former Pontiac residents Mr, and Mrs. John DeMund (nee Nancy Harger) of Big Spring, Texas. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Harger of Long Lake road and Mr. and Mrs. Fred DeMund of Morgantown, W. Va., formerly of Pontiac. * Mrs, DeMund is now staying with her parents and will leave * in several weeks to join her husband in Big Spring, year, but -by welfare. When - be washed along with the kids, to take full advantage of the soap suds. “You could break your neck in her é because she is too cheap [6 keep a light burn- ing anywhre excepting where they are sitting. She uses a hard sweeper because it costs money to plug in the vacuum. I could go on and on. I told my brother he should talk to her, but he says to mind my own business as he’s the one who has to_ live with her.” TOLD OFF DEAR TOLD: When you can get such sterling advice from your brother, you don’t need me. x * * “DEAR ABBY: What is a husband supposed to do when his own wife sides with their two teenage boys against him? We have been eating either hamburgers or hot dogs for Sunday supper every Sunday for three years. Why? Because the boys like them. “T travel and eat home only two nights a week. They will not eat steaks or chops or chicken, although I pay the bills and never said anything was too high. But my wife ‘won't fix it. When I complain they say, ‘‘Let’s take a vote” and I’m outvoted three to one. Can you solve, this?’’ OUTVOTED DEAR OUT: You are out of luck unless you cart home a single steak and fix it yourself. If you hadn't given an inch at ‘a time, you'd stil be the rul- er,” * k& * “DEAR ABBY: There is no sense in telling a girl who is in love with a married man to have a talk with her clergyman, a psychologist or —_— else., A person who is in oe ig stricken with a disease and nothing can cure her except — time. I ought to know. J spent =22 years of my life on a mar- ried man. ] wish someone would have given me a good swift kick in the pants. It wasn't worth it.” SORRY DEAR SORRY: TIME does not cure all diseases, but when the ‘‘sickness’”’ is an emotional one (and love is) the only an- swer is to find a doctor who will help you to understand your emotions. You could have saved yourself 22 years and a kick in the pants. * * * “DEAR ABBY: Please don't laugh at my problem as it is very hard to figure out. For me at least. My girl friend sent me her picture. She wrote across the bottom, “Yours, till eternity, Love, Doris.’ Only she spelled ‘‘eternity’ “‘iter- nuty.”’ A few people have no- ticed this and I am embar- rassed. Should I send it back to her and ask her to correct it? Should I try to correct it. myself or should I ditch the picture?” EMBARRASSED DEAR EMBARRASSED: If you can’t correct it quietly yourself, send it back to her and ask her to correct it. She'd feel worse if she found out you ditched the picture. (P.S: — Buy her a dictionary for Christ- mas.) * * * CONFIDENTIAL TO MISS SHUGA;: A man who will step out on his wife (to whom he has given his sacred vow to love and cherish until death) certainly would not hesitate to lie to you. Get- wise!. * * & For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of this pa- . per, Enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Empire spencer jacket, can double as a jumper uhen worn separately Sizes 9 to 18. Size 11, 31145 -‘nch bust: Dress, 35% Price 35 cents. Pattern No. Sizes 10 Durrants Mark 60 Years Wed The 60th wedding anniver- sary-of the Charles Durrant ‘family was celebrated Sunday with four generations present. Their’ daughter, Mrs. Jose- phine McLintock and her son and -daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. McLintock all attended services Sunday at . First Presbyterian Church when - the. Durrants' great- grandson, Michael Douglas Mc- Lintock was baptized. Here’s Good Idea Save all those washing in: struction tags that come with the garments you buy and post them on a bulletin board near your washing machine. Or staple the string to an index card and file them in a recipe box. St. Joseph Hospital Auxiliary Plans Tea Plans for the annual mem- bership tea were discussed when members of St. Joseph ‘Mercy Héspital Auxiliary met Monday at the McAuley School of Practical Nursing. The tea will be held Oct. 28 between 3 and 5 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ralph Polk in Bloomfield Hills. Nearly 460 auxiliary members and friends have been invited. TUREL TO PLAY Concert pianist Severin Tur- el will present musical selec- tions. Chairmen of the affair are Mrs. Forrest Rorabaugh, Mrs. €lifford Diek and Mrs C. D. Wright. * * * Mrs. E. G. Rockwell is mem bership chairman. Her com- mittee includes Mrs, R. P. Sauer, Mrs. Floyd Schoonover, Mrs. Peter Davidson and Mrs. O. L, Burke. 4 Robert M. Glenn, yearbook. Gail Barber’ -tendantg were honored at a N atural for Liz to Get Own Way But Liz doten't mind. She likes men almost as much as men like her. And that, alove all, (What néxt tor the figures in- hohe in Hollywood's most explo- sive triangle in years—Elizabeth Taylor, Eddie Pisher atid Debbie + Sagem How will it affect their careers, their personal is the reason for the greatest lives? This is the first of three ‘ : dispatches probing their — joys — and tragedies — in her alities with an eye to the future.) life. By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Once upon a time, theré was a beau- tiful little girl named Elizabeth Taylor. She had lots of money, no problems, --and--everybedy— - said she would be the biggest movie star in the world some — legend that she has a “father complex"’—a legend which is exploded by.a careful look at the ages of the men she has dated. : ‘Just show ‘Liz a man over day. . 4, and she flips,” a friend ‘ She didn’t’ need any Prince once said. Charmings to come and take ~ kz. *« + her away from it all because But Eddie Fisher, who an- she had it all. But they came anyway—in droves. * * * When she was graduated from high school at the ageiof ~~ 17, only one beau, Nicky Hilton, son of hotel magnate Conrad Hilton, was permitted to attend the ceremony. PLENTY OF BEAUX | “None of her other boy friends could come,” said her , te Heaynolta flor Gating Lis is only 30—four years older than the raven-haired beauty. Arthur Loew Jr., whom she also dated since the death of her husband, Mike Todd, in a plane crash tent, epting. is @ young man. TODD WAS OLDER True, Todd and her second husband, Mike Wilding (43 to mother. “We didn't have ~- her 23 when he her), enough invitations.”’*.: - fitted the “father” There still But Hilton was only 24 when aren't enough. a: he became her first mate. And football hero Glenn Davis and William Pawley Jr., son of a former ambassador to Brazil, were in their 20's when they courted her. : x * * A statistician could go on and on pointing out that Stan- ley Donen, Howard Hughes and others were far older than she When they dated her. But the only thing that stands out in gny figuring is that there is no figuring Liz when jt comes to men. She simply likes them all when they appeal to her. “And what is ‘wrong with that? That's what I want to know,”’ said entertainer George Jessel, who spoke the eulogy over Todd's grave. “The father complex busi- Appoint Group Leaders » Committees were announced when the Pontiac Branch of the Womans National Farm and Garden Association met Monday at the Casa del Rey. Social chairman was Mrs. Benjamin Jerome Jr., assisted by Mrs. C. R. Gatley, Mrs. D. R. Wilson, Mrs. G. R. ness is nonsense. Most of our Williams, Mrs. Bertil Larson, experts are too apt to get Mrs. Charles Hayner, Mrs. mixed up with Freud. What's Robert Castell and Mrs. Rob- wrong with a normal, healthy ert Isgrigg. instinct?”’ HEAD COMMITTEES ° siothine, . sal anvbod Newly “appointed committee othing, in general ¥ chairmen assisting Mrs. Wal- would agree, But in pert: ulae ter K. Willman, president, are Mrs. Arthur Selden, eonserva- tion; Mrs. John Windiate, ed- ucation; -Mrs. Barney W. Ha- bel, extension; Mrs..W. Ross Thompson, flower show: Mrs. J. Standish Sibley, horticultur- al therapy; Mrs. C. R. Gat- ley, international cooperation, plush upbringing in Engl and Hollywood — has manag to get herself involved with men who sometimes were otherwise involved at the time. _ USED TO ‘EVERYTHING’ “Ft’s nothing intentional or and Mrs. W. F. ° Mayhury, mischfevous on her part.” says ; marketing. a close friend. -‘‘It's just that _* x * ‘ she’s so used to having every- ‘Others dre Mrs. Robert B. thing she wants that she never Oliver, membership; Mrs. Ed- considers the fact that she mund Rogers, notification: can't have something. And with Mrs. O. H. Lundbeck; philan- thropy; Mrs. H. A. Fitzgerald, photography; Mrs. Robert S. Nelson. program: Mrs. John H. Patterson, publicity: Mrs. Arthur R. Young, revisions; her beauty, nobody else stands a chance.” . Until now, the men in Liz’ life have not slowed her’‘ascent as a star. And it's doubtful. if even ‘her alleged involvement’ Mrs. Russell Galbraith, scrap- with Fisher at the time of his book; Mrs. Edward Barrett, marriage to Debbie will hurt social; Mrs. Gelston V. Poole, her. ways and means: and Mrs. x & “Liz is a motion picture ac- » a er es - tress and should be judged as The program on international that alone,”” said Jessel. cooperation was given by ex- As a performer, she is in change student Ray Howard greater demand than _ evet. Only days after the Eddie- Debbie breakup, she signed a contract to make ‘‘Two for the Farm Youth Exchange pro- Seesaw’ for $500,000 and 10 gram. The speaker was intro- per cent of the gross. duced by Mrs. Gatley. - * * . , She has come a long way from the girl who was awarded a trophy by the Harvard Lam- poor for ‘‘so gallantly persist- ing in her career despite her - total inability to act.” lf, as the bright boys say. there. is no such thing as bad publicity, then the Widow Todd is a genius. Continued success luncheon Saturday at the Par-. . seems a certainty in her future kinson road home of Mrs. Kurt > —almost as certain as-the men Bemman. who will help her enjoy it. Guests were Mrs. Wilson H. (Next: Has Eddie's Hale Barber, Mrs. Milton Hathaway, Slipped?) Sue Ann Hathaway and Beth Tenney. The couple will be married Saturday at First Congregation- al Church, ~ of, Remus who was delegate to Honduras, one of 43 to par- ticipate in the International Shower Fetes Gail Barber, bride-elect. of Lee Hathaway, and her at- Be Active in Politics, Club Urged Sixty-three members and guests of Junior Pontiac Wom- an’s Club attended the dinner meeting held Monday evening at Hotel Waldron. Mrs. Russel] C. Auten, presi- Mrs. Rorabaugh, Mrs. Da- vidson, Mrs. Dick, Mrs dent, presided during the busi- Wright, Mrs. James Hubbard, R€8S_ session. Mrs, Ronald W. Mrs. H. M. Bacon and Mrs. Hodge introduced speaker, Mrs. Hope Gorman, whose topic was “Women’s Place in Politics.” * * James Goudie will preside at the tea table. t ok ‘f Also pouring will be Mrs. Mrs. Gorman stated that R. C. Tricker, Mrs. Schoon- women, who are obasically over, Mrs. Harold Brady, Mrs. homemakers, must become in- John Reid, Mrs. Fred Picker- terested in political affairs as ing, Mrs. H. Guy Moats and nothing is closer to our homes Mrs. Charles Wagner. than government, She also : urged women to get out and OFFICERS NAMED vote to retain women’s free- Mrs. Walter Williams is pres- doms and rights. ident of the auxiliary.. Vice s ke presidents are Mrs. C. B. Wil- In charge of arrangements son, Mrs. R. L. Polk, Mrs. were Mrs. Donald McCandless, Charles O'Conner, Mrs. John Mrs. Kenneth White. Mrs. Wood, Mrs. Davidson, Mrs. . Bradley L. Scott, Mrs. E. C. John R. Davis and Mrs. Brady. Mrs. Reid is treasurer of the group. Other officers include Mrs. Moats, recording secre- tary and Mrs. Bacon, corre- sponding secretary. * Wiley, Mrs. J. T. Engle, Mrs. Bert Griffin, Mrs. Lawrence Rutledge, Mrs. Phillip Long, Mrs, Max G. Morey, Mrs. George Watters and Mrs. Bradley D, Scott, eo cepacia seh emer ume a _ EIGHT \ Your Winter | Coat... © | $6 9 5 , & Tailored elegance in = The Women’s, Auxiliary’ to Pontiac ian tweeds and Hospital will put on its annual Hi-Fever Follies . Nov. 5-6 at Pontiae Central High School. Atentbing the kickoff party for the follies, held Monday asa Bride-to-Be Announces Attendants. ‘Bride-elect Janice Johnson an- Other Coats $69.99 te $239 nounced attendants for her Oct. 25 marriage to Keith Mittledorf at a| © ~. shower ‘given Friday by Marlene; . Doolin. The affair was held at the DeSota place home of Mrs.. Robert Dunn. Maid of honor will be Miss Doo- lin, and bridesmaids will be Joann Kissock and, Mrs.* Hazen Jones: Robert Pike’ will be best man. Guests attending included Mrs. Wendell Doolin, Mrs. Dell Beat- | ler, Marjorié Skaggs, Joan John- 9 . son, Judi Yeager, Margaret Bate- man, Doris Stauffer, Arlene Bruske, Carolyn Spurlock and | Mrs. Et Doolin. Also present were Joyce Mapley, Mrs. David Chambers, Mrs. Wil- liam. Mitchell, Mrs.. Dale McCar- solids. Regulars and petites. HURON ot TELEGRAPH "evening were (lel # right _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1958 _ Revi iewing sce for the Hi-Fever Follies at the kickoff party Monday = ~ “ Sg Pontiac F ede Sevings and Loan Building, were (left to right) Mr. and Mrs, P. Eugene Miller « and Bis and Mr. Harold - ~G. King. ) Mrs. La- Von Ryden, Norman Leger and Mrs. Lloyd Clancy. g “WsT AR i RIVED! : Pentiac Press Phoeies A | imported | Bulbs = | Tasker’ 's Seeds fe Madonna Lily and |FE 2-5812 Per Person vo" _ ALL_YOU CAN EAT - 5:30 to 9:30 MANNY’S Huron at Elizabeth Loke Rd. TRIFARI Sallan 8 N. I dle, Mrs. Joseph Nouse, Eunice Collins, *Mrs. Paul Ardelean, Mrs. -|Dunn, Miss ‘Kisock, Sharon Pike, Mon., Thurs. and Fri. Tues., Wed. and Sat. Parents of the couple are Mr. Sunday 2 to 5. ~ Mrs.’ Mittledorf and Mrs. Johnson | attended the shower, By RUTH MILLETT - man writes; “In a recent column. you said that women ought to pay|. more attention .to how they look when they aré around home, buy- ‘ing their ‘groceries at the super- Mrs, Jones, Janice Mize, Barbara | iat en se ates Pe Heaven’ S. Sake! and Mrs. Fred Mittledorf of Liber- Wh Ne ty street and Mr. and Mrs. James) t OK eat. Johnson of East Beverly avenue.) y O .O \ ai flapping . over rumpled shorts|you hold him. A girl who hasn't yet got her) ‘er to tight jeans. A blouse and skirt are just as comfortable, just as -inexpensive, | public with curiers in her hair. Any woman ought to have too | much pride to run around in ROSANN’S SEAUTY PARLOR where BEAUTY SALON 1481 Daidwte (6 Doors of Waiton) FE 2-6376 (Night) OR 3-T167 Looking your best may not as \yet have captured you a husband. But when you get one, looking as 'well as you can will certainly help } ' A wool coat, suit or dress will lose its ‘wear wrinkles” if allowed to rest for 24 hours after each wearing. GETTING MARRIED? jj]. 00 spectators te & mal -Wear ” Rentals, you are assured thet the Groom ené tis men wtil te correctly dressed ané cus-* tem fitted tm the finest quality carments, HARWOOD CUSTOM market, and-around town? “But I keep asking myself, is it | -|so important? Do the details of dress matier so very much? . “It seems to me that the people live, do something with the abili-| ties. within them, are not the ones | who care about the way they look every minute of the day and night. + They are too. busy getting things done, looking after someone else’s: interests, learning to get along| making someone happy. “You've got to be pretty self. centered to always stop td con- | sider if everything matches, is 4 perfectly becoming, exactly suit- on just right, ‘Maybe I’m wrong, but I think | ao you'll find the correctly dressed, | neatly arranged, spick and span’ the married ones. “You see, I'm the kind’ who can't go out to the garbage can) without being sure that every hair lis in place. But being careful to always look ‘just so’ hasn't got me a husband.” I thoroughly agree that the woman who is nothing but a clothes horse isn’t likely to get much fun out of life, have a lot of friends, or to be especially attractive te men, But a woman doesn’t have to be, a clothes horse or self-consciously | | | A Bowl of Soup for Mrs. Jones! ~ Of course, not everybody is going to observe Sweetest Day by taking a bowl of hot soup to a neighbor who’s confined to the house or alone and ill—but it’s typical of the sort of thoughtfulness we mean when we speak of the spirit of Sweetest Day. Your particular way of observing Sweetest Day nay be a long ° postponed letter to a friend or relative, a visit that you “just couldn’t - get around to,” or an unexpected gift—in fact, any special act of thought- fulness is an appropriate Sweetest Day gesture. Go out of your way to make someone else happy and Sweetest Day will be a day of happiness for you too. concerned.*with how she looks ‘ev- ery minute of the day to look neat and appropriately dressed for whatever she happens to be doing. For the life of me I can’t see any excuse for a woman to run around a shopping center with her hair in pin curls and with shirt- DODD toh MARY KING SALON : ORA. OBRECHT | GOOD-THINGS-TO-EAT Specializing SINCE 1875 in Hair Styling and Permanents Complete Beauty Service 152 N. Perry FE 2-3053 { SWEETEST DAY 1S SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18th who are really alive, know how to|f- with and understanding people,.} - able, hair at its best and-face _ gals among the old maids — not |}. and just as ‘quick to ‘get into. The most luxurious “Battlefield” in the neighborhood “WILSON” by A note t soldiers: “Wilson, Park Right at the Front Door harassed mothers of playtime your home into the show- place of the neighborhood with the *.a ribbed texture carpet of 100% Acrilan. Watch it bouncé back fresh, neat and attractive bare minutes after heavy “military” traffic takes its ‘toll. Spot cleans easily, effortlessly, is resistant to soiling and moisture. Yet, Molls 1666 South Telegraph Made of New 100% ACRILAN’ *Acrylic Fibre by Chemstrand Corp. * despite its luxurious “Wilson” is made to last and last. Has superior twist retention, eye-appealing depth and Juxury of pile. Feel the soft- texture, choose from many decorator inspired colors today. Bae tg SQ Budget prices °Q _ square yard beauty, the Draperies Floor Coverings Bedspreads FE 4-0516 eo ; : : . ‘ . # ; aw, r . a J ’ < bad eS pitt Ml “| THE PONTIAC PRESS. TURSDAY, OCTOBER 14,1958. oe a = : : ~ S . < - ° at : ; i Us - 4 : las Its Rules (Legion Women Meet as Its Rules [egion Women Mee Be ie eae a f | ‘Bwenty-three members attended) convention. Mrs. Joseph Phillips : a thant to whie them|the ‘meeting of American Legion| is Americanism chairman for ~ ee cane nariaaie |Auxiliary, Chief Pontiac Post No.| the anit. - apie : ; 377, held Saturday evening at the DR. B. R. BERMAN .. AVOID FRANENESS 8 ptt National: and state citations for * Optometrist 2 a sea pe Post Hall. Hostesses were. Mrs. ons ived byl : _, 8. Don't tel Yeoman te oa West and Mrs. Joseph — p alto were rece 1) Nt ‘Seginew re 47071 , i HOUSECLEANING 2 ae . ] sive = St ot Semel sacgyn Chane sera & - telling her that the-coler of the (°° 47™8. you : bee wants of others. Don’t: wait- untit/i# Lansing, Oct. 17-19. i , ® -—their “feeds hit us on the -head.| . Guests at the meeting were Mrs. NEED | F This being fully aware-and| Elmer Hall and Mrs. Willard Bir- te, t BI, > eieee all alive instead of only|chett. Mrs. Earl Collier was intro- THESE =| about us. Many folks would be} Chief Pontiac Auxiliary was BASIG thoughtful if.they were? really, awardedthe Eva Spalding tro- wide awake, Ge tar Aicteesioiens ok ie ciate “TOOLS" Just these five simple rules will : coveted prize of popularity, If you} Ma ic Beaut leaflet "Popelarity” a ppedics| me No discomfort! Y ] Cleaning experts (like you) have discovered One-Wipe self-addressed envelope with your || lifting and peel. Cosmetic and | Dust Cloth belongs in every home. It’s basic. One-Wipe request for leaflet No. 58. Address|| beauty adviser to Hollywood is specially treated—brings a bright clean sparkle to Josephine Lowman in care of ace ter © yeas furniture as it picks up dust and “locks” it in the cloth. | i» this newspaper. Stockhelm Gred. Specicliel Furniture stays cleszer longer. One-Wipe is lintlese— dress! Step-in classic : designed| work may call Mrs. Stowell. First on Josephine Lowman'’s list of. personality = * rain a R CAROLYN NILSON ) gronee{oee—odorione—oald for any surface. It's a “must ey te fatter the larger! : : 3 rules: Give the other person your whole attention | certain Aree Can Reduce] ‘Saion 772 E. Maple, B’ham or cleanin figure; smart in all three sleeve Lucky Thirteen Club ee kine en Ae et By ty | os = MI 6-1573, Mail Orders. | Te — THE ONLY TREATED BUST CLOTH aS ee — . ——=| (One-Wipe} wasuanie as orrenas 20 tts sid | a | _eee==-2-1 6 St Dr. Stanley W. Black |] paowuse Lucky Thirteen Club met at the - ‘lhome ef Mrs. Ralph Deem of stin JUNe Group Meets February - December jling avepue Monday evening and to Elect Officers ‘Unit Elects Officers | , Mother 1 part. Easier, accurate. fue the birth Mrs ; One wreckage ORES | neds — nee & ie Sr tis sire a Officers elected when the June The February-December Group! —OPTOMETRIST— ca oie = . add 10 cents for each were won by Mrs. Steven|Group of First Presbyterian of First Presbyterian Church Now Located at = peppy time only! 5 pattern if you wish Ist-class mail.|. 0410 Mrs Mary B ister 3: _ | aoe Send to Anne Adams, care of The “Rhurch met in the Bloomfield Hills|elected officers when the group 3513 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. || '“-------~~ | : and Mrs, Nettie Buss. Guest was, - 1 | ‘Pontiac Press, 137 Paftern Dept., jhome of Mrs. Charlies Gallaway|met Friday at the home of Mrs.; 1 Bloch West of M-59 ‘M3 West 17th St, New, York 11,|MF8. Sarah Mitchell. i fa tee | MEATY ' cs : ‘are Mrs. Duncan McVean, chair- Willis Brewer for luncheon. Mrs.; . TES. Prigt piaiaty tame, address! h h Di Se 'man; Mrs. Hugh Archer, vice Roy Fosbender was named chair-| Cosmas of Coss) Sake Read. Pontice oe Wire ss dee sale ot mes : severe: with zone, size and style number. |C urcn Vinner t csirmoee Sarees een mea) Wha erewer, vicell chaz OVER MAC’S DRUG STORE Seding: ardwore and variety stores in- ' ° ge Dre , | cluding: 9 | 7 . : | Mrs. Cecil T. Reynard is chair-|cording secretary; Mrs. Mallory,™an; Mrs. Edward Mann, secre-| To Entertain Patients man of @ social dinner sponsored Coleen, treasurer, and Mrs, E. tary; and: Mrs. B. B. Kimball,| Formerly of Rochester : ani INT NT KROGER STORES sf rage SUPER MKTS. ' Macomb County Citi Com-|by Pontiac. members of the|M. Orr, corresponding secretary. | urer. ; NATIONAL FOOD STORES militee will uaa aboot <3 pa- Seventh Day Adventist Church to acing the hostess were Mrs.| Cohostesses were Mrs. Clarence EVENINGS BY APPO N ME SHOP-RITE MKTS. HOMADE FOOD SHOP tientts of Pontiac State Hospital at be held at Avon Park Pavilion|William Donaldson, Mrs. John M.|Senger, Mrs. James Coon and Mrs. pao. ge 9.9369 Closed Wednesday S. S. KRESGE NEISNER STORES 1:30 Thursday evening in the Chap-|Oct. 18. Mrs. Peter E. Johnston is Markley and Mrs. J. C. Suther-|Don Breen. Mrs. L. H._ Comes} al Auditorium of the hospital. ‘assisting the chairman. land. Mrs. J. W. Regan was guest.’ was guest. 3 HEAR Dr. George W. Crane Dr. Crane is the writer of the daily feature on the Editorial Page of The Pontiae Press . . . “Case Records of a Psychologist.” He is one of - America’s most demanded public speakers, being in constant demand to address educational, medical, dental as well as advertising and sales conventions. His appearances on public lecture courses, Town Halls, Forums, always enthrall his audiences. He brings so much inspiration, knowledge and down-to-earth council to everyone. You are invited to hear him in his... PERSONAL APPEARANCE ecture — and Question and Answer Period | PONTIAC CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM. aos ~ "Tuesday, October 21, 1958-8 P.M. ~ Public Invited | ; Free Admission | | oe 7 | Dr. Crane’s Appearance in Pontiac Is Sponsored by THE PONTIAC PRESS | | : ty ess and she bit her lip. *® * ‘TEN ae : e ee = : * 4, i g 2 oa a Vee Widow Plans to Appeal , Mother Sentenced to tor Poisoning Daughter MACON, Ga. (AP) — Plump, blonde, Anjette Donovan Lyles, convicted and sentenced to die for poisoning her daughter, awaited word from her attorneys today on’ chances for a new trial. A Bibb County Superior Court! jury convicted the 33-year-old wid. | ow of murdér Monday night. Her! attorneys immediately filed notice | of appeal, and this automatically stayed the date of execution, | which had been set fer Dec. 5, | Mrs. Lyles is also accused by the state of poisoning twe hus-; bands and a mother-in-law with arsenic. She was tried only in the, death of her~9-year-old daughter’ Marcia Elaine Lyles. The former restaurant owner accepted the death verdict calm-' ly. The only visible reaction was) when her alabaster skin reddened) | & Judge Qscar Long set a prece- dent when he told Mrs. Lyles she might remain seatec while sen- tence was pronounced. The courtroom was jammed as it had been every day- of the trial. Long set a hearing on the mo- tion for a new trial for Dec. 12. If the buxom widow loses her appeal, she will be the first white woman to die in Georgia's elec- tric chair. Only one woman, a Ne- gro, has been electrocuted in this poison—]I did not kill my child,” Die | being tried, that of Marcia, main- tained there was no motive. She said. she received only $1,750 from insurance while her expenses, including hospital bills, specia] nurses and burial, amount- ed to $5,000. “1 did not give my child any she said. £= The state charged she murdered for hate and greed. She a “nowledged an abnormal interest in “root-dectors, spiritual advisers and fortune tellers.” * * * She said she burned seven-day cand. —green for luck and mon- ey, white for peace, and red for life and once burned a black can- dle in attempting to break up a romance between her boy friend, airline pilot Bob Franks, and an- other girl. 5th Bomb Explodes in African Chapel ACCRA, Ghana (AP)—A home- made bomb exploded today in the private chapel of the Roman Cath- olic Bishop of Kumasi, It was the fifth such attack on the chapel. © Bishop Andrew Van Dep Bronk IFind Lost Tot Alive | in Kentucky Hills . | MUNFORDVILLE, Ky. {AP)—A search party. found 2-year-old Har- old Wayne Amos unharmed about midnight, some 12 hours after he wandered into rugged cave- potked hill country in south cen- tral Kentucky. Several hundred volunteers joined state and loca] officers in the search that ended when a six- man group found the boy nestled in head-high weeds aboyt 1% miles from his home. He told them, ‘I’ve been sleep- ing.” _ ‘ He was thinly clad against tem- peratures that dropped into the 40s, but apparently suffered no injuries except scratches. The boy wandered away from the home of a sick neighbor near Bonnieville. His parents, Mr.-and Mrs. Bud Amos, had gone to help the neighbor. British Military Patrol Kills Greek Cypriot NICOSIA, Cyprus’ (AP)—A Brit- ish military patrol killed a Greek Cypriot who failed to halt when challenged Monday night, authori- ties announced. The shooting 9c- curred in Limnatis village -near Limassol. . . A bomb was thrown at a mili- tary patrol in Nicosia teday but exploded harmlessly. Bombs _'THE PONTIAC PRESS, Pog i, NEW YORK. — The “average of one delightful, but dangerous, trait. pore She won't allow her mind to yr 3 dwell on trouble. She has been}. 3. 7, taught, by characters like Scarlett O'Hara and her.easy-going hus- band, to put off till tomorrow the worries she could be breoding on today. ge Thanks to this blithe outiook, life-among the push-buttens is somewhat pleasanter than it was” afraid to open the windows on the unhealthy aight air, afraid te. answer. the telephone on a rainy day, afraid not to. worry | about tomorrow. Life-is also, as Dr. John Hender-|_ son points outy more in question. As a result:of the “casual - out- look,” year. there were 4,228,000 serious ‘tones.)-And- what she does know is| "8 spiced with myth and superstitiop, This is -national. “Emergencies Can't Wait”, Week. In honor_of the occasion, Dr. Henderson—official first aid authority for the event— suggests that housewivestuck the following rules into the forefront of their crania, for easy access when -accidents happen: — —_—_~__ 1. Never carry an injured per- son from ‘the scene of an injury. housewives ‘have only a) vague idea of what-toe do in case; ~ of a household accident. (and last ~ ied ‘TUESDAY, OCT LONDON (AP)—A- willowy, 18 ith- 35-23-36 Lin Yu-Tang in Formosa: BOILERS & COMMERCUL state. lives less than 10 yards from the a ‘ : pe Coe from 2 Ya uen und ae . The case was given to the jury|point of explosion but was unhurt.,(Drown at 8 three-vehicle arMy| “This causes hundreds of tra- jcontestants Monday night. She radiptsima ng Cpinene on ry gehen mane se . : 5 convoy in the Larnaca district also) gedies. Recently a little girl fell was a favorite all the way with ' Trained Men is at 8:27 p.m. The verdict was an-|The blast ripped and scorched a failed to do any harm = th . y 14 years. The famous Chinese 0 0100 nounced at 10:08 p.m.—an hour carpet in front of the altar and a asta some a ing ony 2 the crowd. writer and his wife were mobbed Coll R 3- . and 41 minutes after the jury be-|damaged the bishop's pew. =. ; | Nd. = Rryrss rere rad Along with .the title Penny won by admirers at Taipei's, Pine Hill ~ gan its deliberations. The 55-year-old bishop said the| One suburban dweller complains} #nd carr . ne ta® 500 pours ($1,400), a beige sports Airport. They said they would stay JIM LONIE: s «* bombs were set off in an attempt bitterly his cellar is so damp that had injured the child ® spine. car and contracts for personal ap-| W&re in Formosa for about three weeks, ‘ __Jn-—en- unsworn.. statement —al-to—frighten him —away.. from_ his his _mouse ffaps are catching fish, Picking her up killed her.” “| pearance . Ss | Riga P Archer. Oak Park ae Mer 1702 Alme St. lowed under Georgia- law, Mrs.|posf. He blamed a group in Ku-7~. ~~ dn™ surest sign}? Make~sure-an-aceident victim}~‘Phe —American —entry, —Naney}- sma Sells; hex Lyles made a blanket denial of)masi who think the post should be |that a man has finally met the|is breathing; this is the first con-|Anne Corcoran, New York City,! Driving privileges-of William M. all the state’s charges and in thejheld by an African, Bishop Van) woman he loves is when he|sideration, taking precedence even|was among the 14 girls who didn’t Nitz, Royal Oak, and Thomas J.) specific case under which she was'Den Bronk is a Dutchman. divorces his wife. —Earl Wilson..lover bleeding. “‘Even trained first make the final round. Scribner, 33 Allison St., -were taken |’ = ; - ® * ¢ COMING FRIDAY. | \ * Ford brings Thunderbird elegance to the low-price field with HE WORLD'S MOST ULEY . &, ie a AWARDED THE GOLD MEDAL for beautiful proportions— by the Comité Francais de [Elegance . at the Brussels World's Fair = The new Fords.for 1959 Have a casual \eind-of elegance—the fresh crisp- ness of design that distinguishes the Thunderbird. They are beautifully ~ different from all-othet cars~and from all other Fords. This new beauty was recognized at the Brussels World's Fair where the 59 Fords, ata special preview, received the Gold Medal of the Comite Francais de |'k legance for. ‘, beautiful proportions! They have a straight-through appearance .. . a clean-cut look thatis € very open and airy, becaise the entire glass area has been designed to give you the modern picture-window feeling of indoor-outdoor living. The new thin-line roof is actually a sensational engineering achievement—to give G . > & . ' the ” - PROPORTIONS EXCERTIONNELLES ET LA LIGNE - te fe Bs ra ay -you even greater ‘safety. Yet it has an almost delicate look, a gracefulness ' and openness that-will make siding in any other car seem “old hat", 40 you. —- “And this easy elegance is traceable to the sporting heritage of the beau: tiful Ford Thunderbird. These Fords are altogether new. “+8, But the most beautiful difference of all.is m ney in your pocket. The ‘SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED FORD. DEALER * 59 Fords are the stand-olit buy jn‘ the low-price held. They are superbly . designed to give you all the supreme beauty, comfort, power and perform: - ance that only Ford's ¢reative engineering can bring you. And Friday— , you'l] be able to get that New Ford Feeling in the World’s Most Beautifully ~ Proportioned Cars—but only at your_triendly Ford Dealer's. ~ & { + - © cS 1 Now you can - bring your 2 tT. TY itt testes 2 wonderhal : ¥Vimprovement in Old . Fashioneds? Change your _ “ formula? No. Your bourbon? Yes. oe - - Chainge to Old Taylor 86— the same'in quality 4s our. 100 -proof ‘bonded bourbon, -:; - im lighter 86 proof. =. — hy So, mild and gentle as ‘it is, it gives you the rich flavor. and deep satisfaction of hon- . full-flayored bourbon you ree $ 99 ae 1. 1s ae ake QUART ore aes ' Codé.No, 940 - G "Fry Old ‘Taylor 86—lightest | Old Fashioneds upto date. ve . Old ’ ve bs . Da a ® r = i . - ey ao - rf ‘| : P * “ ae of = Bee b, P , ~ . = re, i ‘ = : i . i ee mm . * e ” J 4 iJ g thy * & Ld « «i *% . ' 8 « a“? sages . 5 < & Naturally, it costs a little more— but this r Straight from Kentucky—a truly Ame . os ¥ 2 ° nacanan ontcen CO toe a tanen aoe o ' s is rican whiskey KEPTUGKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKIES « 06 PROOF » 100 PROOF ~ THE OLD tarROR pistmLtNT @6., FRANUFORT & LOUISVILLE, KY, « DISTRIDUTED BY NATIONAL HISTHLLERS PRoDUCTS C8, * THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, ‘OCTOBER 14, 1058. pare Gea the Usiversity of of distillation of eek agg : ‘ vieewe new, mobility in OLDSmobility for ‘SO! ——e 4@ commercial vessel, | toward missing—especial- ly-in a cance in the Pacific, ee reversing a postwar/ference by the ‘ = cess] ke (trike Halts ns ang at cae pu me af Japan has enjoyed bumper rice'army has su European! crops for four years. This year|settlers who domipate political LONDON uP) A “wildeat| the second highest harvest.in his- lifé there with their opposition to strike at’ London~Airpert spread! tory is expected + Algerian independence. today to 4,000 engineers and main- &® «* Fe The Premier's order appeared|tenance men of British Overseas eeks te After the war, the once short-|aimed at thwarting hopes of Euro-|Airways Corp., halting the air- VO! legged nation began to: produce|pean _ extremists enlisting|line’s services parts of the = = gains in years. ~ long-limbed beauties and boys and| army help in the for |world, _ Led by? a popular. governor, |giris taller and outweighing their|the elections-next month, ‘The ex- x & * signs egg trend, the} Schoolgirls of 10 grew more|to put up pliable Moslems asjed, Other airlines were asked to Democrats have hopes. They|than an inch taller than their sis-|candidates. ~o take some of the 1,000 stranded , , - out to win a U. S. Senate seat, | ters of the same age group before|’ Ii ipregenting a program to im-|passengers, - * ° least swverel ot six congrés-the wer, and:qne. pound Reavier.|prove._ Algeria cnaesically, Del’ Seals fica puck Norge New locket Ih rites L races, five other major|credited the. oecupationintroduced Gaulle. promised Oct. 3. to make t to . per fie me ov freamtel imrel wetayt Srremerang eS tia cocina y ma erg aan tear tle Marcas Hye hay sg pal amas . “ y ~ possibly houses of the =e: Algeria's 66 seats..in the new/|if the strike is still on. Now ; :: more power and new thrift 3 - Gussiidet Actioa! But this may well be wishtull,, But the iis say said Tal gor cane at te Alomtan ‘papuin-[apociel aap e_ourcy 12d pecsle at gre aaalis tr eres ee dlls cde a thinking inc state stil hcetnaity (that since 1956 cases of vitamin tion is Moslem. ‘ — |to New. York, you need it. But this is combined with end power wader you direct . regarded "ae Republican aE ot Bi deficiency have increased. * * * * * * an easy-breathin easy-on-the-gas conneet in - 4-borrel - | maple! The lower house of gus|,,t¢_ mad 22 out of every 109] The Promuler sald in a letter to) The strike started Monday night system of manifolding and valving — ‘or met on Nea ih ond Sop Legisinture hes been ender GOP persons suffering from mainutri-|\Gen. Raoul Salan, French com-|after BOAC employes had staged plus an exclusive new 2-stage auto- a8 Super’ ° trol since the 1870s. tion last year. This. was 3.3 per-|mander in Algeria, that the best/a slowdown all day ih support of matic choke—for improved economy $8 Climobty mode The confident - talking Demo- |" more than in 1956, interests of France demand anja wage demand, The line threat- during warm-up! cents exw talel atutenst te Gake|_ election with “absolute freedom ened to fire five men who had re- Bat ul she expleining inthe wesld Econ-orway Savings! bite for governor and U. S. sen- Red China and — that lists ny fused. to — 300 » ean’t-match a iat drive in the sree grocer Jae : a\0t- Republican candidatcs eay|UP_15-Million in a Year |say all tendencies — be allowed |diately walked out, and the others rb sia Lmtd this improved two-borrel ECON they “geared,” a feoneu ~and-equally-to-solieit | joined inthe strike today, 7 ae me ote! } = O-war-. Carburetor, standard pp A, fem ready/ TOKYO (UPI) — Communist|the suffrage of the eléctotate.” - Sge:.. viet your Clde dealer now! . . equipment on Dynamic 88m vilgeecionm el apn a a which already has one-| The worst danger, he added,| Tammany Hall has. been the} : nnn Gol Riblectt fe the man on| cut, % the world’s. population, |-would he the formation of lsts}ruling organization of New York| . , ao : | or Rm The ao wats oe . whom the Democrats are pinning|crease last year. was "Suite by the efticlal Cy _ ponies most of the time scoven me avo ° > OLDSMOBILE-~- ‘So spear .. % a ‘nits att “te sme Premier's instructions ‘were . : av vour Locat AUTHORIZED QUALITY DEALER'S pig i io present sharp contrast to army conduet | eg Cur years ago, Ribicoff defeat-| population on the Chinese mainiand|in the referendum last month on| PRESCRIPTIONS a Geis ee eo agree Od opal | oad ergs oe Pz , "JEROME MOTOR SALES co. xceed French pu e arm ; . « eng Le pss a a, WaS/ million. The radio welcomed the|barred all campaigning ae ficep 280 Se. Saginaw Streqe : Pontiac, —_* «FE 4-3566 Tedky, he is eae of pane increase, saying, “In our case, the |the constitution while*working suc-| ® eréd. to be running jacvaiaae er ager the number of people, the cessfully to turn out a large vote] | PERRY DRUGS | - my ° eS tig Republican opponent, State greater the. productive forces.” for eee 2 Bivd., Cor. Perry FE 2-0859 f) " rune iE IN THE “NEW OLDS SHOW," STARRING parm PAGE © EVERY WEEK ON ABC-TV! €omptrolier Fred R. Zeller. = = + - | Zeller is a 50-year-old Stoning- e@ . _ ° . : ‘ - 8 ton businessman unknown to many _ - | . | ° Me ie od eb LO OO . ; Si ser - _ GET SATISF ered as strong as he, and a con-| | ee0e gressiona] candidate better known : outside the state than he. - _ w® ©. * idly second. race for .the U.S. Senate . Dodd is trying to displace Sen William “A. Purtell, Republican who is rumning for Congress in . ae . : . - » pcom a com is . . , Horace -Brown r.@44 v | frait farmer seeking his sixth fla "FI frm and ping He tention “No at filtered-out avor! ‘Two colorful minor candidate ” “are running again, One is Miss a —_— No dry “smoked-out’ taste! - Vivien Kellems, Stonington cable oy oe oe 8. - “| A grip manufacturer, who is waging 7 5 -_ ; a f ; another write-in campaign for U.S. : ; ) . : ! senator, The other is %-year-old é ; ' | Jasper McLevy, who is running a ‘% ye the Socialist party candidate. +. “i = - Marriage License ee Applications _ omit ‘Seges a & mci fh Sg ~ N 4 fant PRES , f- > # { —«-Biphard & Br H. Bradjey, Ortonville . 2 es ated Meme vane , ear CIGARETTES part Foe r, Northville » eone Lyon pare” tenes Barvare ‘6. by: tin oad So Saimet | A L. Cohat, 2215 N. Hammond “ree ©. Olson, Madison Heights bainty "4. rot Jr. Milford ae ee a elf koeyneee ities, 4, comet (3, Maroy ; p med con 3: Rosner. Berkley You can light ; Bava", SS Pin either end! William Siaurakas, 87% Cher: . Ellen C. Cadwallader, 171 W rere ei: Pet Mechanic ey ee Ppa vers Ronald &, Benoit. 48 Eulery : Eng en, 2 ee Orcas Fukor 101 Mary Dey Donald H. Genereuz, 175 Beach Christine EB. Zaffins. Henry Clay ‘William R. Davis, Auburn Heights “Nancy A. Harlyvetch, Rovhester Ricory’ L, Ablin, 279 Fernbarry “ a M. Sahgui, 474 Midway : " 2 . t PHILLIPS || { See how Pall Malls | ot greater length of fine | . tobaccos filters the _ Outstanding smoke and makes it ..and they are mild —but does not : : Mild! filter out th t FOR FLAVOR AND MILONSSG, FINES TOBACCO FILTERS BEST Z a | . : 4 : , | You get greater length of the y Pall Moll’s greater length Filters it dver, under, around ond satisfying flavor! finest toboccos money con buy filters the smoke naturolly.. (J through Pall Moll’s fine toboccos! : Protect of He Meprisem Tobcose Company" Sobeatr te oer witile nome” ~ | : : : : te ‘16 West Huron St. Waterford Dems to Hear i gatos, aap leone State Attorney General (cP Activities Gane eats State Attorney General Paul] The public has been invited tole Adams will be guest speaker atlattend, and refreshments will be the regular meeting of the Water-'served. 1847 ROGERS BROS. | America’s Finest Silverplate... - 1. - PRICES” REDUCED! . 52-Piece Service for 8 _ Now only $79 75 Choice of 5 lovely patterns in America’s Finest Silvere plate that grows lovelier the more you use it! 16 Teaspoons ‘‘ 8 Salad-Forks 1 Sugar Spoon 8 Forks & Soup Spoons 1 Tablespoon 8 Knives 1 Butter Knife With chest, $89.75) 1 Pierced Tablespoon Length, 21 in Silver Celebration Bonus SERVICE PLATTER $ °° EXTRA (plus 10¢ fed. tax) All in lustrous silverplate for convenience when you entertain... one of the most useful holloware pieces you could ever own. Well & Tree section holds main course, two end compartments for vegetables. Regular $17.50... yours for $1 EXTRA when you buy 52- piece service for 8. Silver Celebration Bonus For Limited Time Only! BUY FOR CHRISTMAS NOW AND © USE OUR LAYAWAY! JEWELERS . |Stratosphere last week ran.a high =| flight last Wednesday. “100,000 < feet and stay there- 244 _|for. t Sis «Nice Girls Love a Sailor’ in a . | passer-by. FE 2-0294 . Runs High Fees in AF Balloon Surgean Reveals Pilot in 99,600-Ft. Climb The young pilot who rode the Air Force Man High balloon to the temperature for hours. * * * b¥ remote control frém the ground: says Lt. Clifton McClure never be- came delirious and responded to: directions properly all through the McClure, 25, sotight to rise to. hours to relay. observations back to scientists on the ground. He reached 99,600 feet, but his sealed metal cockpit capsyle overheated, and he had to return to earth 12 hours short of the time he aimed : * * * Lt. Col, R, R. Hessberg, chief of the aeromedical field laboratory at the Air Force Missile Develop- ment Center, where the flight took place, said McClure’s tempera- ture, electronically meconted, registeréd 106 at itsbj0,i Hessberg emphasized that it wads corrected to 104 after error in the electronic system was taken into consideration, The doctor said McCluke’s tem- perature began to rise, with the heating of the metal cockpit cap- suie, about 1:30 p.m. and reached a. peak about 5 p.m. while he was * McClure Fawn at 6:45 p.m.,|D and the doctor said his tempera- ture was ‘‘way back down by the time he got to a hospital, about 7 p.m.—down about 100 then and normal in a matter of hours.” . Never ‘Was Delirious!’ ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (AP): + But a surgeon who supervised DENNIS BROWN — Top Press Carrier Has Many Interests Boating, water skiing’ and pho- tography are favorite activities of Pontiac Press carrier. Dennis other carriers for excellence in citizenspip, salesmanship and courtesy. Dennis is a 16-year-old 11th grade student at West. Bloomfield High School. Ice hockey and football are his favorite sports. He has been a Pontiac Press newspaperboy in the Straits Lakes area since November 1952. After graduation, he would like to attend college. nnis is the son of Mr. and Mrs. —— E. Brown of 5605 Shore , Orchard Lake. “Tthat“the Pattersons were “wanted Brenikman was tound> Mai morning by Logan Bachar, opera ; Brown, recently honored with nine: veteran who worked as. a handy- man at the Calyptus nudist camp 25 miles. northeast of nere The sheriff's office said an all- pojnts bulletin had been issued | 4 for invesfigation of murder.” * ict ina am cabin to f railway worker and World War 'I|- Bachar said noone else was’at| ~~ + «= ithe camp, Others are not admit- ? fete camp ee on. Scicsd Ul [ ae g 3 wfgee 1 ith ne $40 to $50 of Brenkman's own arg tor of the ‘camp. autopsy | showed he died jof a. fracttired Skull caused by two_ blows from some heavy metal instrument. ‘Sheriff's Sergeants «Leo Clapp and Joseph Quick said Seckar gave them this account: The Pattersons showed up at the camp Oct, 2 to visit Brenkman, whom they reputedly had met on a bus trip from Ogden, “Jtah, last month, When they failed to locate friends they said lived in Fresno, they registered at the camp as nudists and moved into Brenk- man’s cottage with him. wo mee . Last Thursday night the three visited with Bachar in his cottage. Bachar said the Pattersons seemed “nice and refined.” He didn’t know where they came from. not to be seen and Brenkman’s More Cairele = Jeserich of Ann Arbor, a member of the board of trustees of the American. Dental Association, will represent two. midwestern states at the ADA’s. 99th annual meeting ‘om : in Dallas Nov, 10-13, Dr. Jeserich's Friday morning the (hrée Were/district includes 6(300° dentists: in Michigan arid Wisconsin. the wholesale produce mafket-were | asked to leave. and the area was blocked off pending an inspection of the roof on the 36-year-old build- ing. To Attend Dental Meet CHICAGO. w — Dr. Paul H. They’ re ‘bright: kids: Many “tap aft forcing teachers to leave the campus for g It's no! ture. Something. must be done to change it before it’s _ too late. Help the collegeof are “your choice today. The fe-~~ + wards will be greater than are expected to double. On _ you think. : of them are q fora eollege education. Unfortu- some of them may be ‘turned aay: y? - Many of our r eolleges are “overcrowded today. B . when these youngsters ¢ reagy to enter, applications ae : Filled on pe service tn oopertion with The Adserinng — Advertising Be a _ and the Newspaper se cieuiaecat irs = too many gifted a etary hele bright pic- THE PONTIAC PRESS. ee eee eee 12 NO. SAGINAW ST. CREDIT WEAR KINDY GLASSES ooo FIFTY YEARS OF — ‘DEPENDABLE SERVICE? 9:30-5:30 daily a 9.30-12:30 Wed. 9:30-8 OO Fri Roisterous Bird Shakes Sédate Neighborhood LONDON (AP) — The «upper crust folk of Esher Park Avenue are demanding a legal muzzle for the Cockney cage bird that wolf whistles girls and sings like a drunken sailor.’ * * * The bird is an Indian mynah, one of the more articulate mem- bers of the starling family. It lives in a superheated aviary at one of the biggest houses on the respectable, tree-lined avenue. Its raucous repertoire—rendered largely in: Cockney accertts picked up from a friendly garbage man — sends outraged shudders through the sedate, suburban neighborhood. Wolf whistling seems to bore the mynah fairly quickly, But then it launches into the song “All the voice like‘ that of a matelot lurch- ing from the grog shop.’ * * * When this alls, give a passable imitation of sud- denly . screeching car _ brakes, throwing scares ino many a The Mynah’s owner, John Lutt- mer, was summoned to court Monday, accused of keeping a pet that causes “a serious nuisance.” Businessman ~ Clifford Black- more complained that he can hear If you are unable te MICHIGAN CREDIT © ments, debts or bills when due, see obUNSELL Lone and arrange for payments you can afford regardless ef how much er hew many you owe, NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY Member American .Asseciation ef Credit Counsellors “Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assisi You” Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by App't. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 718 Pentiae State Bank Bldg. 8-0456 the bird over his garden hedge from dawn till dusk, On summer evenings he has trouble getting the children to sleep and finds it unbearable to sit out in his gar- den. * * * Luttmore, a 49-year-old potato importer, stoutly maintained that. his pet is “pretty and. amusing.” The case was adjourned for the | weekend. US. Flier Will Try WILL... if you can't! FE 4-2541 15 W. Lewrence, Pontiac FE ry PONTIAC ANSWERING SERVICE for Distance Record TOKYO (AP) — Chartes Banfe, 39-year-old commercial airline ipilot from Palo Alto, Calif., ar- ‘rived in Tokyo “today to attempt |a new nonstop distance record in ‘a single engine aircraft, a 7,022- mile flight from, Tokyo to Miami. | * * * Banfe flew in from Okinawa in |his Mark 20A monoplane, which jhe is trying to fly around the world. | He said_he plans to rest for 48 jhours and to leave Thursday aft- jernoon on-his record-breaking at- ‘tempt, He hopes to reach Miami jin 50 hours, erasing the distance ‘record of 6,979 miles set by Mar- ito Pendleton, Ore., Aug. 1. * * * | Banfe started out Sept. 10 from New York City on what he planned as an eight-day flight around the world. Plagued by en- gine trouble, he had to make stops ‘in Corsica, Rome, Athens, Beirut, \Sharjah, Karachi, Calcutta, Bang- |kok and Hong Kong. Israel Guns Go to U.S. | TEL AVIV TAP) < Israel has jexported locally invented and manufactured Uzi submachine- jguns to security organizations in ithe United States, an official ‘spokesman said today. He gave the bird can jion Boling in a flight’ from .Manila- , = no further details. Pedestrian, 82, Killed ‘Daudry, 82, of Brunswick, was struck and killed by a car Monday BRUNSWICK (# — Mrs. Matilda; - ‘on M20 in Brunswick, DETROIT 26. 2 MICHIGAN: 3 ee “Ae The Siroh Brewery Cay, Detroit 26, Michigan ! be eS ne: No other American beer tastes like Strot’s cause no. ther American heer i is ironed tke sts ey c V and Radio) vis + Saturd ay Afternoon Hockey (Bhannel 2). oN 1: hed Wing Hooke s- F ire-br ewe d to give you satisfying | refreshment | ue oO AMERICA’S ONLY FIRE-BREWED BEER ' “(Fire-Brewed at 2000°) * Stroh’s beer is lighter, smoother, more refreshing because: it’s America’s only fire-brewed beer... fire-brewed at 2000 - degrees. - You'll. discover satisfying ‘refreshment i in your very first glass. oe . : and i in every ime every time. ~ THIRTEEN © 44° Parent Replaces Only Teacher in Tiny School . ELKHORN, Colo. (AP)—Classes! are to resume Wednesday for the first time in nearly two weeks at} tiny Elkhorn School in northern| Mrs. Esther Murphy, 58, is out} as the school’s only teacher. Mrs. | Florence Collins of Guermsey, Wyo. ; is in. | * * * - | Mrs. Collins, mother of four and | ~ wile “of a ~ construction ~-worker7/- was hired Monday by the Jeffer-| son County School Board to take} f ot age: ‘over the one-room: school and 14) : iors pupils, including her own children. | iene Elkhorn School became a cen- ter of controversy Oct. 3 when eight parents with 10 children .en- rolled here withdrew them from class ON DISPLAY THURSDAY — Chevrolet again offers its pop- ular Bel Air series in 1959. Shown above is the Air 4door ,sedan. The cars have increased passenger room additional visibility through new windshields and Jarger rear windows. Shown és. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 in lower picture is the Impala sport sedan, top-flight member of the Impala series. Additional models include the convertible, sport coupe and a four-door sedan, New Chevrolet models will be displayed here by Matthews-Hargreaves, Inc., 34 Mill St. 4, 1958 a To Fingerprint / Gorillas, Try \This Recipe {do you fingerprint a/gorilla? lem in the % Big Man, a 2 -old gorilla at the Kansas 200, As soon as put his paws in the black ink; he jumped up and ran. ; So they adopted another ap- mel candy around. While Big Man was shéveling it in with one hand, they made-prints of the other.’ ‘Thé prints are in case Big Man, worth $5,000 to $6,500, ever de- cides to stray. “Japan is now welding ‘rails on quiet, and not so much clickety- clack disturbing happens en their older rail lines s. KANSAS CITY, Mo./(AP)--How lof a hpusehold refrigerator, It is its railway tracks, They want) high rhythm which get 100 Switches in Missile here have designed a tiny switch that weighs only 1-28th of an ounce but has a 5S-ampere rating—more than enough to operate the motor — meant for use where weight and space are important factors, such as in the average guided missile, - which requires more than 100 switches. ae ge ez . ‘Expert Advocates , a Single Tax Return ~ DETROIT @— A single tax re- turn and a single tax collection and distribution agency were called| - for yesterday .by former Federal Budget Director Percival F. Brun- dage. Brundage told a meeting of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants that this na- tien’s tax structure should-be over- hauled and.some of its taxes re- flowers sent your He criticized the overlapping of federal, state and local taxes and called for a single tax return as well as a single agency to collect jand distribute tax revenues at all |governmental] levels. ; Brundage also said “I do not think there is any good justifica- ition to continue indefinitely a cor- They protested that Mrs, Mur- Completely New Styling ‘Mrs, Murphy resigned or was fired. * * * n,m Potter Gets Support ROCKFORD ™ — The newly formed Taxcut Party of Michigan has endorsed Sen. Charles Potter (R-Mich) for re-election. Terming Revealed by Chevrolet By DAVID J. WILKIE Kingswood line faces the rear and DETROIT uw — Completely new} can be folded into the Boor. styling, emphasized by an unusua!, Chevrolet has reduced height of The ‘School Board sided with Mrs. Murphy. She remained at the | | school during class hours, but | without students. | The standoff fasted five days. | | Mrs. Murphy resigned last Friday without disclosing her future plans. houette, flatter tops, more glass two inches. Station wagons are, | ‘and © sculptured frontal area like the sedans, 5% inches in height. Price Fixing Banned ) | Arx the 1959 Chevrolet cars. {Front tread of. tbe cans Tet tore - OSLO—Norway has put into ef-/€T Showing Oct. 16. | fect a ban on price fixing by pri- * “* vate suppliers. Formerly many; At the rear, horizontal wings) *” asia “manufacturers ‘and importers! spread out from the center of the ScTibed as providing up to 10 per "sought to regulate wholesale andi deck. Glass extends higher into C¢Mt more fuel mileage, has been | fetail prices through -collective roofs and curves farther inward added. It gives Chevrolet nine _ agteements. Individual suppliers|at corners of the’ body super-| ©™#M¢S- | may still indicate or suggest a re-| structure. s »~ «& tail price provided they make it ; _ Styling advance; aside from the "clear that the dealers are free to, _ Fer 1959 Chevrolet has dropped | unusual rear deck treatment, in- sell at a lower price. | the Delray series and added 2 (clude: |< 5 = | Rew four-door sedan and four- wis) beadinmpe door nerwet to = Impala series. bachen aaa Se ne me cn The Bel Air series has two afid. tremities of the grille. 'four door sedans and the Biscayne) _ | will offer two and four door sedans| Air intakes, coupled with park- and a utility sedan. It takes over 8 and turn lamps inside an ano- the lowest price place formerly |p cadiaenpe border, are above ier ; | 1 ‘e wv to ne Lae series. | The bumper is ig x, Tallis Thus promotes freer breathing, simus : : are located under spre In the station wagon group the of the rear quarter panels. They ° drainage and sounder sleep Get Labo- are of tear-drop design. + | inches. tAdvertisement) = EASTHMA Childres ag weil os aduita now escape much severe wheezing. coughing and < during recurring at- | | faecks ja) Asthma and Bron- -chitie with New ved MENDACO Quickly helps combet eliergy. relax | ubes, wits sticky mucus. Gtfficult breath: Br tatory Approved MENDACO at druggists, third seat in the nine passenger | (Advertisement) : - (Advertisement) Chevrolet also has restyled its ‘ e (Corvette model. Its hood and rear Stops Constipation = s.s'scr: w= womanenes Due to “Aging Colon” © jand five V8 engines ranging from 230 to 290 horsepower are avail- New laxative discovery re-creates 3 essentials * for normal regularity.. able. Fuel injection also continues as an option. Also optional is a . four-speed transmigsion. As you grow older, the internal mus- m (1) Cotonaip moisturizes dry, | | > ¢les of r colon wall also age, lose ardened waste for easy passage with- | 5 ers ". the strength that propels waste from out pain or strain. (2) Covonam's Detroit Building Off | the body. Stagnant bewel contents be- unequalled rebulking action helps re- <-> come sd dry and shrunken that they tone flabby colon muscles. (3) And DETROIT «® — Contracts for "fail to stimulate the urge’to purge. ~ COLONarD acts geritly, on the nerve future construction of residential Relief, ‘doctors say, lies in 9 new’ reflexes that stimulate the vital “mass ‘building in metropolitan Detroit laxative principle-Old-style ory ce gine of your lower Keer -were down only a fraction of one moisteners may create gas, take 3 or LONAID telieves eveh chronic | ono F 4 days for relief. Uld-style salts and “constipation overnight; is so gentle it ed ee Lara dge on pet oes drugs cramp and gripe the entire was-hospital proved safe even for ex- 8 ee d hy . = a system. Of all laxatives, only new pectant mothers. And CoLonaip won't | However, non-residential con CoLonaip gives you its special 3-way _ interfere with absorption of vitamins Were down 53 per cent. Total build- ing contracts for the first eight -|months of 1958 were 24 per cent below a year ago, rear end treatment, a lower sil-|the sedans one inch; sports models The cars are scheduled for deal- increased 1% inches; the rear | tread 14 inch. Wheelbase is 119 A new six-cylinder engine, de-| itself an organization of conserva- \porate tax of over 50 per cent on | individual taxes at the present high| tives, the party opposes foreign aid|jevels, particularly in the top and admission of cheap foreign |brackets. j goods and demands severe cuts} “So long as we continue high in government spending. F. J. Too-|tax collections, we are going to hey of Rockford, state chairman, |have high government speriding.”’ said the Taxcut Party has 18,600| Brundage was budget” director supporters and hopes to win a/for four years in the Eisenhower Two Locations ; 46 Williams St. FE 2-584} Pontiac FUNERAL “Thoughtful Service” Color Floral Pictures We take a picture of each piece of loved one. After the service, a COLORED print of each floral offering is presented to the famliy as a permanent record. HOME to Serve You: 3530 Auburn Road Auburn Heights FE 4-1579 } Would you like to be a salesman? place on the 1960 election ballot.!administration, representative (left), and L. G. Smallegan, plant manage. ‘Dr. Omar Javeland, chemist in Standard’s laboratories at Whiting, Indiana. Would you like to be a scientist? Do you enjoy the thrill of selling against strong competition? Would you ° like to be-in a field where opportunities are limitless? Many of America’s most successful executives started as salesmen. They rose tatheir present heights because the bedrock of American business is competition and the bedrock of competition is selling. At Standard Oil, salesmen are given a sound background. They weeks as salaried sales trainees, learn- ing the methods of su ing. ™~ relief that works only on the lower. or other. food nutrients. Get COLONAID colon (area of constipation). today! Introductory size 43¢. $595 - ©NO MONEY. DOWN © Free Estimates ©FHA Terms Price Includes .. New Gas Fired Forced Air Furnace. - -20-Yeor Factory Guarantee 3;; 10-Gauge Heavy Duty Heot Exchanger with All-New _*\ Warm-Air Flot: Ductwork — ~ - atid Cold-Air Ductwork = ___ Registers - pihacdalia ike 4. sney [remota and. FE 82-4132 “* Controls” . oa | 5. Gas Piping and Furnace | MI 6.9292 ma.) «CUWiring. — Calls Taken Until 9 P. M. _TEMP-HEAT, INC. eae Formerly the Temprite Co. ) : 1025 E. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM ) aye te Nugent T. Brasher (left) and Dearal W. Beddo, geologists for Pan American Petroleum Corporation, a Standard affiliate. Sau INI ae a ACN Would you like to be an explorer? The search for oil is one that never ends. And with the world depending _ more and more on oil, the search goes on at an ever-increasing tempo on land and sea with complicated and costly equipment. Work such as ‘this makes for exciting, adventurous careers at Standard Oil and its affiliated companies. And it is-work that provides an extra measure of satisfaction, for it is of utmost importance to the future of our country. If you had your choice now, WHAT KIND OF CAREER WOULD YOU Li Here is a field of constantly increasing importance, offering endless oppor- tunities. In the last 10 years alone, Standard Oil Company and affiliates have added or rebuilt 20 laboratories. And the number of scientists has been more than doubled. Standard scientists are widely known for inven- tions and discoveries that have benefited car owners, industry and national oil conservatiqn. Fhey often help on scientific projects of high- est importance to national security, such as atomic research. KE? L. Van Paris Jr., Standard Oil dealer at South Bend, Indiang. Would you like to be in business for yourself? ; sa? ; Do you like the idea of being an independent businessman? If you do, the service station business offers great opportunities. Many Standard Oil dealers, for example, not only are successful businessmen, but are civie leaders, too, serving as mayors, city councilmen and in other capacities. They will tell you that being in business for yourself provides personal satisfaction and financial rewards seldom equalled in other endeavors. What makes a company a good citizen? One measure is a company’s progressiveness, its ability to change and grow, to adapt itself to new and better methods. The result is better service and better prdducts for customers. And -in such a- growing,. progressive company, there is opportunity for employees to advance. We at Standard Oil are proud of the fact that most of our officers and directors, since this company started, have come up through the ranks. STANDARD OIL COMPANY ” . THE SIGN OF PROGRESS... THROUGH RESEARCH 3 FOURTEEN - op Geneva Parley May Bear Fruif Some Agreement 6een'p Although Reds Not Keen for Disarmament By WARREN ROGERS JR, WASHINGTON (AP) — If there were a pari-mutuel window at the State Department, the odds would be 50-50 that some agreement will be reached at the Oct, 31 Geneva meeting on halting nuclear -tests. * * * This is pretty good, considering there is no certainty that the meeting will even be held. The Soviet Union: lately has “beer: grumbling about not shooting off as many nuclear test bombs as ‘the United States and Britain. The Soviets started some catch-up shots a couple of weeks ago, Nevertheless,, all concerned ex- pect the Soviet Union to show up Oct, 31. The real target of the grumbling, knowledgeable _ offi- cials .areé convinced, is a string attached by the United States to its offer to stop tests for at least a year, * * This string is the proviso that) some progress must be made dur- | ing the year in’cutting back troop strength and reducing the quan- tity of guns, tanks, ships and planes. If no progress is made, testing could be resumed. The Soviet Union from the start has been eager to ‘‘ban the bomb” on an everybody-trust-everybody basis. But it never has been anx- ious even to discuss reducing mil- itary manpower or limiting con- ventional weapons. * * * The reason is simple. The So- viet Union lags behind the United States in atomic and hydrogen weaponry. It«has far more men under arms and. far more non- atomic weapons power. Ban the bomb and, instead of an East- West military stahdoff, you have Soviet superiority, Belmonte, dean of the Sacred Col-| ‘lege, old man lingered as long as he did Bob Considine Says: oe ude 2 on Pius XI Wag Chosen Po} : a » ROME - — Pius XII was " chosen, pope on the third ballot of the 1939 conclave. 'The voting tdok less than a day: There have been conclaves in the past which con- sumed nearly a year. The, ete pope's bind uncte’ reste) Badges od 103 yearetp-earth and had the|er the good t In their excellent: book on the late and lamented Eugenio Pacelli which they call “Crown of Glory” biographers Alden Hatch and Sea- mus Walshe state that Cardinal Pacelli received 35 of the 62 votes| on the first. ballot. He himself is believed to have voted for. Cardi- nal Vernier. On the next ballot he had more than 40 supporters. He had voted for Cardinal Dalla Coast of Florence. The Sacred Colleges thes de- clared a recess for luncheon and mediation, even as do less anointed electors.. During that period gpa ie ger paced the- guarded courtyard of the area | te which he and the r prhices of the church were confined in splendor. He appeared under great stress. As he came back into the Sistine Chapel for what would surely be the decisjve ballot in his favor he was so lost in troubled thought that he stumbled and fell on the marble steps, shaking himself up ; da es a ‘Republic quite badly. The final vote was believed to be 61 for Pacelli and one—Pacel-| ters. 5 li's ballot—for Cardinal Granito di eed be The decision was no tt came in the framework © mier de Gaulle’s far-reaching emancipation plan for the. vast French colonial empire. . rs was the second change in rance’s overseas possessions since de Gaulle loosened the bonds of empire. Guinea, on the ‘west coast of Africa, voted overwhe. ‘‘Miserere mei!” Pacelli kept whispering. The late pope battled gamely for his life after being hit with two strokes, heart and lung failure, gastrititis, urinary blockage and racking hiccups. That the 82-year- cial, educational and cultural mat-|- was a marvel. But not to those who know the tensile strength of the Pacelli strain. His grandfather, founder of the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano,” lived to be 102 in an era before the word miracle was ever used in connection with drugs. ingly against the new French stitution and became an indepeng ent state, Although Madagascar did no’ j that far, the proclamation of Me republic was regarded as az mentous first step toward e al complete independence — ce eae Beat winter weather, é ‘Awith this BIG, PRES es E REGULARLY $199.95* ; *DISTRIBUTOR'S SUGGESTED . RETAK, [o ONLY $2.10 A WEEK! - 1 Reel in that summer clothes line . . . you won’t need it any more! Just in time to start your winter’ weather jeder. dryj g——here’ 3s a brand new 1959 Hi-S; “Speed Dryer that’s priced so very, gs Vary ars on po oa to resist it. . Nod mew, Basan setlist el aris one like this at a near the Price. : : va / sate ctesennoeenmne erent gl ron pewireeesstenscneeintasslig Look at all these thoughtfally automatic features : 4 Heat woe a | Automatic “Fluffing”’ Special / 7 @ PoRcELAIN. Ciorues Basxet— : . fs found only on more expen- ‘ th . : Mera Jor tie Conch teedinntis”” Tein ene s/ v-“ Wonderful way to fiuff pillows, e Removasie Lint Trap—lo- : : bedspreads or quilts. . cated on the door sill right wince _ . . you can reach it— oO ; : jon) Pree the starter button Clothes are sanitized while = away lint in a twinkling. + : : es your dtyer takes over. they dry. Tests show there’ “3 3 pry Aged batons rec Pog ail c Severe aged Switcn—you + {Delos fast! Dries safely! with dried in our new Hi-Speed Dryer beck wlahpanelblorete ties : : ng system, ’ ef -taay * ; family cottons in less than 35 . wonderfully white and soft baby's nda dint ae 7. FREE SERVICE minutes, synthetiée in leas than 8 — Yiercrs corge Gut, Nice thine, toe ier dor wit the dre a E on parts and labor : GF movnpearerigenms, Yor copuramee th ver fot tary potion sgcint meddle "by our own > air flow through tumbling clothes per week than you'd probably —_some little hands. d highly trained : —drying them quickly, naturally. BAY {oF diaper service: That's rea- Wo special wiring necessary. _ technicians > : Clothes are never baked against a oe it? yom tees yours You can operate this G-E D : c , : hot clothes basket or exposed to tof alt on either a 115-volt household or : / ~ : poe here — sh as fasting . FOReatarn CASiET Torp— a standard mee whe circuit. (Dry- : . f : wash comes vely, look at, long-wearing, times are lon he > : out so soft and fluffy. raised edge makes it easy to eal nis volta). aes Se a ton eorie - A FRAYER REFRIGERATION SALES & SERVI Ec. urba CTR | iGERATION : 589 Orchard Lake Avenue—FE 4-0526 ° Sub > Dealers: -scdatvol msc ar co. HUFF ner Center | ‘ : . TOM’S ELECTRIC Auburn Heights<-FE 4-3573 Highland—MU 4.5865 THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 32430 Northwestern Hwy.—Farmington _ 361 South Saginaw Street—FE29151 eels na 6-256 : OXFORD RADIO & TV COMPANY. j y je—Wal od Lake * 10N. Washington Street / HAMPTON’ ELECTRIC MA & ee , 825 West Huron—FE 4-2526 ; ma rd i en ee se ; PEER APPLIAN ROCHE! EFRIGERA “THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC 8161 Commerce Herp Road i a Mere al ; - _, 51 West Huron—FE 4/1555 Orchard Lake—EM 3-41 }4 Rochester--Ot 2-4061 GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, MICHIGAN DISTRICT * 6501 &. NEVADA » DETROIT a4 TW 276000 | 4 a ; bh . . ri rs ~ American Way of living oom World Audience (Editor's Note: is the first rags ag “Pontiac om “puniness manager, on "bia ob aE lg wes po ie the Brussels Pair.) * By HOWARD. u - Projecting by physical as well as visual means, the aise and. — “scope of the United States, its land, its regources'and its people, ' taxes the imagination. However, after some 35 to 40 million — visitors to the Brussels 1958 Universal and International Ex- hibition tour our Pavilion, they will have a better and more concise understanding of us as a nation. ‘Fhe U. 8. section covers.7.4 acres. The: Pavilion proper is the largest circular building of | TUESDAY, OCTOBER. 1s, Hast of _@ two-part FITZGERALD if this type in modern times and . is the equivalent in size tothe Colosseum in Rome. It is-383 s in diameter and 70-feet high. A-150-foot circular pool | forms. a = hub. for the structure. The roof and ertical walls are wade. of translucent and fireproof plastic material. Nat-+ ural light: floods Pavilion through the walls and roof. The building is air condi- -tioned, making it oneof the most comfortable at the Fair. - Of the more than 200 guides, escorts and demonstrators at the The various states and sponsor- ing oi] companies pay the guides’ round trip transportation, hodsihg afid subsistence while in. Brussels. The U.S. Government pays each guide $150 a month for a total Surrounding the Pavilian are three buildings: a 1,200-seat the- a huge restaurant This voyage includes a ride through the peaceful countryside of New England, a visit to historic) Williamsburg, stops at an automo- tive factory an@ a huge shopping center in Detroit, a moment at a large stee] mill in Pittsburgh, a ride through the great plains and a View of giant reapers harvesting wheat, and a cattle roundup, © Next the trip includes Glacier National Park for a visit to the, high Rockies, an airplane flight over the Golden Gate and a short cable car ride through-San Fran- cisco’s China Town, then back for an airplane ride over Grand Can-| _yen and return to New. York. Circarama was an idea of Walt : Disney. His production people, in conjunction with numerous elec- tronic and camera -companies, spent one year perfecting it. It . was then featured at Disneyland. When the State Department started its preparations for the} Fair, Disney was asked to make a picture depicting America, its size its people and its way of life, "aging Cirearama. Unfortunately, bfaiget cutbacks necessitated drop- ping Circarama, but Ford Motor Company came to the rescue and furnished necessary funds. One year and more than 100,000 feet of film were needed to produce an 800-foot; 18-minute picture. In order to film the se- «quences, 11 16 mm. cameras were mounted in a circle. Each camera covered 323, degtees of the total circumference. Projec- tion is accomplished in a circu- lar theater with 11, synchronized projectors which are set between - nine foot high screetts. It is al- ternately narrated in French and English. While the U. S.. Fair officials knew they had a hit, they never in their wildest dreams envisioned the throngs which gather daily. in order to handle the crowds as smoothly as possible, aisles Holding 500 people were built, which matched..the viewing ca- pacity of the theater. The impres- sion the film made was so great, people stood in line for two hours or more, sometimes in the rain: This enthusiasm, when viewed against the amount of material to be seen at the Fair and the short time to see it, was phenom- enal, . : * * * Playing to capacity crowds seven days a week, it.is estimated by Howard S. Cullman, U.S. commis- sioner general to the Fair, that this miracle will be viewed by some-2% million people. . Despite its fantastic success, it's. extremely unlikely that we will see it here, due to technical difficulHes of projections and the tremendous cost of constructing a theater. It is possible that one of our World Fairs will feature Clecarama. I hope so. ‘ly ‘my opinion, the American ex. hibit. was tasteful, subtle and fol- « lowed the formula laiqg down by the committee which suggested that each nation choose its own means of portraying national cul- ture as well as scjentific develop- ment and. technology. jwas devoted_to automation in the service of mankind. There was a — greed computor which : minutes complicated ee which once required months of hard work by many}. To demonstrate physically the practicality of automation, Cin- cinnati Milling Machine Company sent an automatic mill, With the pre-set control board, this ma- «4 AE SA erecta ea LA AIT Se elt Sn arrncacn TO U. 8.. PAVILION — af pool 2 or ‘Wuni- nated water fountains is situated directly in front of the-United States Pavilion. = 6 ee See ereting PONTIAC, “MICHIGAN, = sas a ee en cool approach to the building. Flags of all nations form a coldtful display which surrounds’the entire pavilioh. Circarama is situated Se ee os > Gy a, Soath Proceeds chine turned out work faster and imore accurately than has been possible in the past. Foreign vis-| itors were fascinated with the ma-| iquite a few tons of steel blanks) housing}had been used up already. There was a model of ap auto mated oi] refinery with its con- trol board operated by a single oll can be ped ore ipegregeergyond| ie for a time before another batch of crude eil could be processed. LB.M. loaned its RAMAC to, which the visitor could address ibetween 4 B.C. and 1958 A. D 2/10 of a second the ayo answer into either English, Dutch. vision camera mounted over the! printer with six viewing screens in the room so everybody could watch if; — : America's system of free elec- tions. Mr. Khrushchev -heard abeut them and wished to see a demonstration. socal otra roll ranged and after Color TV. This was piog and developed here and , shown to Europe during’ ‘the Ec broadcast from a Aully equipped studio. The studig’ area was such that some’ 400 “people were able to view the gétual equipment and procedures Jised. ad * * A spe¢ial music room was estab- lisheg‘on the ground floor of the Payition, not only as an exhibit ofthe latest high fidelity and bi- fhaural sound equipment, but as a recrektional and rest area as weil. Here visitors may request the playing of the best in classical as well as jazz.. “Streetscape” . 140 feet of a typical American mainstreet. it had everything from a con- crete street to the traffic Tights. A department store window, & hardware store, a book shop, & specialty shop, a drug store serv- ing sddas, hot dogs, etc. (and feature this), parking meters, | street signs, and even waste- baskets. ’ On the cultural side we had a Performing Arts Program in the Auditorium. Such films as ‘High Noon,” ‘The Best Years, of Our Lives,” “Hallelujah,” and ‘‘Life of An American Fireman’ were shown. Such artists as Yehudi Menuhin, Blanche Thebom, Jose Iturbi, Eleanor Steber, and Harry Belafonte gave concerts. Broadway gate “Carousel” and ‘‘Wonderful Town.” The Philadelphia Or- chestra and Juilliard Orchestra performed. Also the U. S. Marine — ‘The Pilgrim ¢ Club will meet at 8 ents! 'Decker, Guetzs|DeDecker and Associates of Bir- Schentel will show an educational! ‘tim. imingham, regarding two types of | lpridges which could be constructed Priday at to..extend East Fifth street, across |, evening at chine and the demonstrator said a Aimont e sale bax ithe Pord showroom. sbury Schoo! » “te vt rum bats Priday and ie 7. ” on turday at the former County Calendar Oxford 3:30 = Washington “street, Metaineré home of Mrs. F scorllans leader Mrs. ‘ Alment Rebekah Lodge will beginning~ at noon ‘hold the Richard Spies fund. 8 Almost Priendly * * * " Imiay. = The New Era Clud will — tomorrow eyening st the Community program will be on hbomemakin, Spanish, -Ifalian, Russian, Portu. | Thursday evening meeting guese, Swedish or interlingua with- steak roast of the Methodist Men's! out hesitating. There was a tele-| Club at Avon Park Paviljon. The Acspaghetti' dinner will be served) front foot to property owners. Rev. Douglas Parker will lead the! at midnight, group in men’s outdoof songs, and/dane! a Conservation Department fin on hunting will bé shown: ~/” x $$ his- torical questions covering period To Speak at. ‘Steak Roast ROCHESTER _|sorted through the years, Selected athletic director at 4 pocorn H the correct one and translated the) coinooi will be the hele, = Cadillac: fron oy Proceeds will go into! —- will a at) _—— The | speaker at the and ' wome: ~and Most origi7a representing Spatilding- { | Elizabeth street. ‘Report on Bridge Plans ROCHESTER — The Rochester Will go inte the school's Storery Village Council last night heard 4 ‘report from engineer Frank De- [Rochester Council H ears” 2) ¢.| | jthe Mill Pond development 16) ecuncil as most econoinical aj up- keep by the village. ~ Costi.of the /oridige paningies will be. paid. fy’ the developers. 8 of traffic 4nd provide for yalks on 4ither: side. oj * * A one-span. type. rather thgav Al in other’ business, Village Presi- show (chivert type, was viewed bs ‘the fa Sydney Q. Ennis and Council- Ae Plan Halloween’ Beitty .at Center in Dublin i a ar meyClarence Burr and James Hill . |were ‘named as a committee to meet. with a group of planners | representing Michigan State Uni- ‘versity Oakland, Avon. arti-Oakland |townships on possibility, of setting WHITE JAKE . TOW SHIP — ‘up a combined planning commis- {Oct 25. - igh! Prizes will, fo given, to the men, ving ‘the best and | The council also approved a spe- vestumes, according ;cial assessment role and plans and| Flare Night program. He'll be as- entertainment! specifications for the Helen street, ito’ Lo i chair, Fi gster, ing and refreshments through- ae afe chateaele and there will be ‘The Dublj Coraniunity’ Center is, “sion. ‘making for.a.Hafloween mas-| Jay ° Eldred, | Tad Party at Spm. ‘Saturday, | brekers had recommended re- { establishing such a commission. | asphalt curbing at $1 per each \Chamber of Commerceé to hold al out the -evening. Members and| | Pumpkin and cider sale in the, ‘village Oct. 24 and 25. There ‘were regular programs) 2 eae Bry CURTAIN CALL THEATER IN REHEARSAL — Polishing up their roles this week for their Corps Band gave concerts. The only disappointing fact of the Pavilion was the Modern Art. Isaw both Russian and Czech) works in this fielg and would classify them superior to our 5s. After watching our art exhibit for some 20 minutes, the ‘visitors had either’ one of .two reactions: namely, utter bafffement. or 4 state. bordering on complete hys- teria: When the Fair closes the latter part of the month, the visitors will have a far more accurate estimate fof our way of life. This is as it auditorium of Auburn Heights presents ' hree-act comedy, “The Roar: e Sk & Written by Edward Trigger, the| local’ production is: being directed} Wheaton, Jon Frutier, and Cheryl by- Robert Bender, who also has a iced whe ta Ge slay: Isanhart. Makeup is being handled should be. He'll be supported by « cast i a production of ‘‘The Roaring Twenties” are mem- bers of the Auburn Heights Curtain Cali Theater group. From left: Cheryl Isanhart of 278 Drey of the Pontiac the play. Curtain Call Theater Group ~ to Play ‘Roaring Twenties’ AUBURN HEIGHTS — The fab-) of Ana Lou Grahma, Pat Crowe, | iulous twenties will oN life! jagain the evenings of Oct Doug Everhart, Correen Phillips, | 16 and Jim Gurd and ‘Jane Levigne. All ‘and thé Depression when most of 18 on the stage of the Avondale performed in the Easter produc. | Junior- High School when the. Curtain. Call Theater, by the group last spring. | grou its ing Twenties.” tion, “The Betrayal,” presented Newcomers taking part in Roaring Twenties” are Dale Paes, | tyacqui Kendall,, Loraine Stewart, Audrey Gurd, Jolin Frutier, Gloria, by Phyliss Angus. The play is a witty, comical de- SCRE IL ED Rd.; John Frutier of 3157 Waukegan St.; Wheaton of 3118 Lincolnshire St.; Bender, manager of the Auburn Heights Branch “The “proceeds of its productions to LET PON PER Ress 4 : ae inh, as accepted by the » fall for a bridge %4 feet ». which would carty two” . Area baliders and real estate (disaster aid, and sends a boy to} Flare Night Slated ‘by Brooklands Club “BROOKLANDS—Final plans are “| being made by the Brooklands Ex- change Club for its anhial Flare Night demonstration of community spirit. It will take place Oct. 31. Signaled by the Brooklands fire siren, residents = light up at 7 p-m. Beginning this Friday and con- tinuing through the weekend, a house-to-house canvass will be made by Exchange Club members, projects. They . will Brooklands and Auburnshire areas, club president.’ nuts for children each Halloween, ‘candy at Chrisfmas, emergency Permission was given the Junior | Boys State at Lansing each sum- mer. sisted by Roy Plauman. | \ ] } te i 4-H Awards Program to Be Held in Lapeer LAPEER — The Fall Achieve- |ment Awards program for Lapeer County 4H clubs will be held | Thursday evening at the Center) "| Building in Lapeer. <4 |tHes. Potluck .dinner will be served at 7:30 p.m. The Rotary and Kiw anis A. clube of Lapeer will furnish cof-! +. fee, milk and ice cream. More than 120 awards -will be | presented during the evening for) outstanding 4H work and activi- (Farm Bureau - assisted by Boy Scouts, for funds, to be used by the club in its civic cover the according © to Michael Giancotti, The club provides cider and do- Jack Fetterly is in-charge of the russels Foir +> of Oakland Will Meet Wednesday |The annual dinner meeting of the Oakland County Farm Bureau will be held at 7:30 tomorrow eve- ning at the Pontiac Federal Sav- ings and Loan Assn. office at 761 W. Huron ra = Postion. Jeanne on a Bloomfield 4H Club member, will do two pan- tomime skits, providing the after- dinner entertainment. There will be an election of three members to the Board of Direc- tors, and several resolutions will be-adopted to be sent to the an- nual meeting a state farm bu- reaus.. - ; a Delegat@s. also will. be named a ‘{for the state meeting,~aecording to Jim Wilson ‘of Lake Orion, chair- ‘man of the social committee. - A turkey. dinner will be served by Howarth . Methodist Church WSCS. Tickets may. be purchased froni members of the Board of Directors or- &t the door. Water Meter Rules Adopted ‘Hears Report on. Youth Summer Program ROMEO — The Romeo Village Council last night adopted new regulations governing proper in- stallation of water meters in new homes, and -corrected conditions of meters in existing buildings. * * * Village Attorney J. Gerald Mc- Lean was authorized to draft a resolution incorporating recommendations, which were presented by the Department of Public Works. x, * * Royal A. Holt, executive direc- tor of the Romeo Community Youth and Civic Center, presented a comprehensive report of the summer recreation program spon-| sored jointly by aS center anc the village. ~ ‘The report stated : that there. were 214.registrations and a to- | tal ef 341 class enrollments in ‘the sports and crafts programs | we duly 7 through Aug. 13. A complete financial report ac- companied the summary of ac- tivities. The entire report drew favor- jable comment from councilmen} and congratulations for Holt by! Village President Joseph Rymill for a ‘‘job well done.” * * * The trustees then voted to pur-| chase a new American flag for the | |village and authorized local veter-| ans of World War I to hold tag |days Nev. 7 and 8 on village streets. _jmonies will be the Rev. J. Delaney, pastor of Our Lady of | : * ; * St Romeo Village Council these Bishop to Bless Parochial School Dedication | Ceremonies Set for St. in White Lake “WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — The Most Rev. Alexander Zaleski, D.. D., auxiliary bishop of the De- troit Archdiocese, will bless St. Patrick’s School at dedication cer- emonies 4:30. Sunday afternoon, the Rev. Lewis M. Ellis, pastor, announced : The school, which opened last year, is located at the Union Lake and Hutchins roads.” Present at the blessing. will be uniformed students of the school, their parents, parish members and guests. : * * * rament in the church will conclude the ceremonies. Delivering the ser- mon will be the Rev. Louis A. Prohaska of the Sacred Heart Seminary, Detroit, former pastor of St. Patrick’s Parish. ° * * * Others participating in the cere- Frederick the Lakes Parish. Waterford; the Rev. Thomas A. Edison, pastor of Leonard’s Church, East De- troit, and former pastor of St. Patrick’s. * * * Deacon for Benediction will be the Rev. Michael J. O'Reilly, pas- tor of St. Michael's Church in Pon- tiac. The Rev. Richard W. Thom- ‘as, pastor of St. Benedict’s Church, Pontiac, will be sub-deacon. : * x * The Rev. Thomas Gumbleton, ./secretary to Bishop Zaleski, and the Rev. Raymond Jones, pastor of St. Williams Church, Walled Lake, will be master of cere- monies. ~ The school’s present five grades are taught by four Dominican sis- ters of the Order of St. Rose and lay teacher Mrs. Louise Hensel of Oxbow Lake. Principal is Sister Mary Rose, O. P. A new grade will be added each iyear for the next three years. (Dublin School PTA Will Meet Thursday | WHITE,.LAKE TOWNSHIP ‘The secorid monthly meeting of the ‘Dublin Schoel PTA will be held at |8 p.m. Thursday at the school. Superintendent William Vander- ie will describe an actual Nike” firing he witnessed on a trip to the ‘Southwest last Spring. Gail _ Richmond, daughter of ‘School Board president, Carlton |Richmond will tell of her experi- ences while living in Germany last summer, Eighth grade room mothers will be in charge gf refreshments, Brazil, became an independent nation Sept, 7, 1822 Pontiac Press Photo Gloria and Robert State Bank. Bender is directing piction of the fads and foibles of that period between World War I the nation went on a grand spree. Formed five years ago, Curtain | iCall Theater group donates the { various community activities and civic grpups. Money from this play jwill go toward the purchase of a curtain for the Avondale Junior High auditorium, "Tickets may be purchased at the OPERATORS ON DUTY 24 HOURS EVERY DAY door, Each evening's performance No Money Down ayataiae BUILDING { SERVICE CONSTRU JCTION C0 FOR © GREATER AUTO \. PROTECTION, Sant 3 BEAUTY — and ECONOMY pascal AS LOW AS a MORTGAGE LOANS. Available. Up to 11 Years 6% a Se , will begin ‘at 8:15. Patrick's Benediction of the Blessed Sac- : ee ae ee me ~ FLEISCHMAN) IS THE BUY _jgame, 24-17, on an inferception in > cs be E # # i * SIXTEEN OSU Coach Says Officials Allow Dirty Football’ Buckeye Mentor Sends Complaints in _ Letter to Big Ten COLUMBUS, Ohio ux = Ohio; State Coach Woody Hayes, who! has an uncanny knack for stirring, up a controversy, Monday leveled| charges against grid officials for, Purdue,” permitting ‘dirty football.” Hayes, speaking at a press luncheon, gaid “I’ve blasted the pros for dirty football. Now I say) it's time we do something about) our own game.” ‘The Buckeye mentor charged | that college defenses around the x * * Wolverines’ Noskin May Miss Northwe kk * THE PONTIAC hag 8 rs MSU Eyes ' stern Game af a $8, TUESDAY, country “are getting away with a lot of dirty football” while game officials are ‘‘officiating the offense right out of exis- tence.” He said he put his complaints in writing in a letter to Big Ten Commissoner Tug Wilson Monday morning. EAST LANSING Up~Some peo-jof the 3146 Purdue defeat by Wis-, ning three of the last five games , about some performances in the ple call it the evil eye, others the| consin «- | | played, : 7 Pittsburgh game despite the whammy or the jinx, x * * " triumph. : — Whatever you call] it, Purdue| “The statistics just didn’t read sire eak in 1953, won again All but the top 16 men, those} football teams always have had it/that way,” he said. “Purdue was alin 19% - 'g first year —|Who saw the most action, were} . aad Michigan State is concerned. | i-tim of-circumstances. Fumbles|and last year was.the only team| thrown into’a scrimmage’ on both ” Purdue is’ the first Spartan (and pass interceptions gave Wis-|to beat Michigan State, _ the offense and defense, away game after a three-week |consin chances it wouldn’t have * * * ~~~. | Art Johnson, MSU’s best ground- _ home stand. It will be played |had otherwise.” “We've been w ever since) gainer this season, reported for) . Saturday at Lafayette, Ind, The series with Purdue now |t0 Play Purdue,” said Daugherty. |duty despite a broken nose. John- “We've always had trouble with! stands at six victories for the | We're looking forward to another| son was running slowly and #p- observed coach Duffy Boilermakers, five for MSU and crack. at ghem.” -jpeared more troubled by numer-/" as “We! ‘ pi ase rs : : st “and body bruises than by a Daugherty. “We're expecting the} one tie, Purdue has a better rec- | Coaches sent the squad through ous leg inj : ERA ‘ bandon iad of a ates | cra sesiyec MOC. en ony os | 2 Seat AM eee ae Be FR "| worlg champion New York Yah + Daughe iscoun : re ; . weren't too ieee Ae ' —— - ANN ARBOR @® — First Michi-| kees is the American League. . its best passer is ailing.. time in his career with a 1958 é Stan Noskin said) season average of 2.01. Stu Mil- he injured a bone in-his left] ler of the San Francisco Giants . hip in last week’s Navy game. is the National League ERA | / “fiback John Herrnstein was carried| winner with 2.47. . — #\trom the field with torn ligaments y in his left knee in the same con- x test; AF 11 Seeking saan my sine wt FOMley Places * * Hayes, who by his own admis- y sion says “I know I’m already looked upon as’ a_ controversial character,” added “I figuye this will stir up a hornet’s ngst, but I can't help it.” : The 1957 Coach ef the Year stressed he was not referring only to penalties which have dogged his squad in three narrow victories this season. The blast was stirred, Hayes said, after seeing “15 or 20 films” of 1958 gamés involving | teams from around the country. | “Every time the ball is snapped.} the offense is suspect. There are five officials and they're ail watching the offense. It's “not! right,’’ Hayes said. . kok He particularly decried three il- legal phases of defense which, he said, have been almost completely ignored because officials. are Tilt With Navy Has Game With Army, but Wants Home Tests’ Against USN, Cadets DENVER (AP)—The Associated are among the cream of the na- tion’s football talent, but don’t try to sell the idea to the Air Force Academy and Sen. Gordon Allott (R-Colo). The senator wonders if the Cadets and Middies are afraid to play the Air Force Academy on the latter’s battleground. Auott interceded for the Falcons in a letter to Defense Secretary ‘McElroy; asking his aid in ar- ranging a home-and-home football schedule for the Air Force with its sister academies. The Falcons, unbeaten and sur- prisingly strong in their first year of senior grid competition, so far have arranged only to nteet Army “over-officiating’’ the offense. He listed them as: 1. Piling on. 2. Driving a ball carrier back |..iq to be opposing games with, and back, after the whistle ‘has blown. i 3. Indiscriminate use of ‘the arms and elbows as a flail. Hayes said he -particularly de- tests the tackle which is made five yards inside the end zone after a touchdown is made,, or a tackle “two yards out of bounds.” ’ * * * And the Buckeye coach quickly came up with an antidote. “Just let the officials warn the guilty team once, then drop a red flag on the next pile-on violation. That. would stop it in a hurry.” ’ Detraiter Is Loser TAMPA, Fla. @ — Claude Wil- liams, heavy hitting Tampa middleweight, softened. Detroit's Leo Bailey with body punches, then pounded out a TKO in the sevepth round of their scheduled at West Point Oct. 31, 1959. Nego- jtiations with the Midshipmen so far have been unsuccessful. | And both Army and Navy are ‘the Air Force aa EE, Coach Declares 49ers Weren't ‘Hungry Enough’ CHICAGO — Coach Frank Al- bert of the San Francisco 49ers Monday blasted his football play- ers for ‘‘not- being hungry enough” and said this also could apply to collegians as well as pros in Cali- |fornia. | Albert's. rare public appraisal came-in a talk before the Chicago American Quarterback Club and followed his reading of the riot act in the 49er dressing room after his club lost to the Chicago Bears 28-46 | Sunday. San Francisco President Victor Marabito also gave the team a tongue lashing in the dressing room episode. anywhere in Colo- 0 pnoot “enpen wriskt &) Pbrcded aud Solbl 90 PROOF is ANN'S rt. Code Ng. 261 Ceeenennenniamnemmenenmmedl Only Fieischmann’s has more Proof—90 Proof—as compared: with all other leading blends. They are. only 86 Proof. - _ Fleischmann’s 90 Proo! means more flavor—more enjoyment _ "—more satisfaction. And—Fieischmann’s surprising mild- - ” ness and exceptional smoot the highest quality in every bottle. That's why Fleischmann's _ offers you so. much more BLENDED WHISKEY » 80 PROOF hness-tell you that you're getting than any whiskey in’ America » 63® GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS THE FLEISCHMANN DISTILLING CORPORATION, NEW YORK CITY Press poll says Army and Navy} ° | the improvement in the running — ‘ing — more than doubling — 13 ‘Bengals Purchase I, ‘|Lou Skizas and pitcher Bob Bruce ‘Charleston on outright assignment. ‘pitchers George... up> quickly and finished off his : AP Wirephote NINE, TEN, OUT! — Youthful Bobby Scanlon, San Francisco's lightweight hope, stares glassy-eyed as he is counted out by: ref- eree Matt Zidich in the 3rd round of his bout with New York’s Paolo Rossi last night at San Francisco's Céw Palace. Scanion was flattened. im the ring after first decking Rossi, who bounced opponent. |the entire quarterbacking burden ‘|against Navy after he relieved the ‘\tal bed, still is waiting word on this year and went home defeated “4 |Oosterbaan said, OCTOBER. to heal, “He won't be able to practice much even if he ‘can play,” said coach Bennie Oosterbaan. ‘It was more serious than we first thoughit. Loss of Noskin again would place No. 1 Heavy Contender Battles Britain’s Henry Cooper Tonight. on Bob “Ptacek, who was sensa- tional. in the tie with Michigan. State. . * * * Oosterbaan sent junior Tony Rio into the starting lineup in Herrh- stein’s place, Rio, a 185-pounger from Chicago, scored a touchdown "LONDON (AP)—Arizona’s Zora |Folley stakes his ranking as No. 1 ‘American contender for Floyd Patterson's world heavyweight crown on the line tonight in a 10 round bout with British heavy- weight Henry Cooper. z a : poten ina Guan ‘vauktings John Walker, 2 200°) 7 misgivings han epens Geek ~ former All-Stater at 5 Cooper ha$S a good chance to ele- Walled Lake High School, will | vate -himéelf. back ep Bis, . They point to two other Ameri- Herrnstein, confined to a hospi-'can fighters who came to Europe whether he must undergo surgery.| Willie Pastrano, beaten by ee, See . \British heavyweight. champion “We just have to assume he'll be- Brian London, and Eddie Machen, out for the rest of the‘ season,” defeated by European champion - Ingemar Johansson. {a player ever received as much jus even if he didn’t score, la fe td it f the outstanding p. ba fr vard “ ng” C his days at Oblo State from 195456, hardly pe publicity ‘and very few. little red-head from Columbus, Ohio. <= He won the Heisman Award and the Maxwell Trophy as the nation’s ow ing eae gridder, He was unanimous selection of .the wire services “Athlete of the Year” honor which covered the greatest. names in all sports. i He led OSU to two Big Ten titles, the Rose Bowl vic- tory in 1955. He was a! tlie East-West team and the All-Star team and finished his career as a runner. in college with 2,466 yards and 34 —— eae “tt .@ number one choice.in 1956. In just afew short months out of college ranks, the name of Cassady became almost obscure in pro- fessional ranks. His rookie year with the Lions in 1956 was hardly as sensational, even though he was the team’s best ground gainer. But he hasn’t scored one touchdown. , +This the questions floating. “What’s wrong. with C. y?” “Was this college phenom a pro flop?” x *« * . Buddy Parker; coach atthe time, was first to back Hoppy. “There’s pothing wrong with a 4.3 average carrying the ball,” said Parker, “he did a great job for future.” The big obstacle for Hoppy in the pro ranks was his inexperience as a pass receiver, something he never had to de in the ground corps at Ohio State. But, no one really knew for sure whether Hop couldn’t catch passes and after a jittle work and help, — the Lions finally put him to the test in 1957. k- & *&* He finished second best on the team in that depart- | ment with 25 caught for 325 yards and three touch- downs, You would say this was coming through with flying colors. : Yet, strangely enough, after the 4th game against menue oe Coes Stadium in which he took six passes for 113 yards and two TD’s includjng a tre- mendous catch for thé winning tally, Hoppy sud- denly became just an occasional target. . Even in the first two games this season, Cassady car- ‘ried the ball only once, and ran downfield more as a de- - and you watch him in the . ~ But sometimes knee injuries ] day for the first time since he un derwent a knee operation less than’ six. weeks ago. i When Byers was burt, he* also season, deserve it or not, the Detroit ‘Lions had an extra day off this week, ’ ; Coach George Wilson, disap- pointed with another defeat but the usual ‘Monday holiday. “They tried hard,” he said, “and we looked good in spots. We looked bad in others, sure, and we weren't consistent. But I ean see where we have im- convinded his squad deserved, something for near-victory, gave) them Tuesday off in addition to} _~ |to be devising a defense to stop DETROIT, w — Whether they/in 7. Rookie Ken Webb picked lup 14 yards in 3 carries. In addition to his running, Cassady gained 76 yards on $ | pass receptions and old reliable Jim Doran gained 102 on four catches. The main thing this week seems Baltimore’s ace passer, - John Unitas. In three meetings against the ‘Lions — two of them won by Baltimore .— Unitas has had a lions Awarded an Extra Day Of Too, the Lions must stop the practice of giving the ball away. They lost it five times Sunday against Los Angeles, twice on tions, and lost the ball six on fumbles. : ; * * * . The Lions cannot expect to break into the win column if they give the ball away very much to a proved and ¥ think we’ improve even nyore.” A comeback that could produce a Western Division title is almost. surely out of the question now. The Lions must, face the Baltimore ‘Colts Sunday — then play two games ‘on the west coast and one in Cleveland — before returnirig home for four straight games. - -_ k& (¢* : ; One hope is for a Baltimore let- down, but there is the. possibility the Colts had just that against’ Green Bay Sunday. They had to come from behind and won. the the last minutes, The ‘bright. spets on the De- troit team are Earl Morrall’s | early success with the club and The Lions gained 230 yards rush- more than the Baltimore and Greeff Bay games produced. ' ke ew we Gene Gedman had ‘one of hi best days since coming into ‘the pro ranks, picking up 61 fards in 20 carries. Howard Cassady had 70 in 10 and rookie Dan Lewis 54 | Recall Three Others’. DETROIT @ — The: Detroit Tigers today bought two’ players and recalled three others from their farm clibs. " * ~ They, purchased pitcher Wynian Carey and veteran shortstop Ron Samford from Charfestorf and re: called outfielders Ken Walters and from Birmingham. "The club -sent six. players to They are outfiéider Bob Hazel; f meer, -Mickey McDermott, ‘Joe Presko, Jim field day each time. ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (UPI) —Pardon the Australians for laugh- ing at the U.S. .claim that it is the world’s No. 1 golfing nation. i A four-man Aussie team had good reason to think otherwise to- Milford Harriers Win Steve Rogers of West Bloornfield was first home at the cross-coun- try meet,-Jdst- weekend with Mit ford, but the Milford high iwon, 22-37, Rogers turned: in time of 10:57. Milford runners oa- éupied the next five. places. Both clubs are entered for the Clarenceville Invitation, on Friday, Aussies World Champs -|strong team such as Baltimore. ! day after beating a similar American team to win the first World Amateur team golf cham- pionship. a The Australians achieved their victory in an 18-hole’ playoff yes- terday when Bruce Devlin and Bob LSteyens sank long putts for birdies on the final green. That gave Aus- tralia the match, 222 strokes to 224, plus the huge silver. Eisen- hower trophy that went with it. SF * * * Paced by Charlie Coe of Okla- three of the four Australian play- ers shot par or sub-par golf on the back nine to. wrap up the title. come around quicker than expect--moment. For reports coming out led. Jim Byers worked out yester-|of his training gym say the Chand- ‘was considered sidelined for the!in& 't fumbles and three times on inter-| 4°. with a 3:2 mark, going into ceptions. In three games, - the | Lions have had seven intercep- | Thursday, at Swartz Creek golf homa City, Okla., the U.S. took a! temporary lead on the 13fh hole but, All of this is hopeful talk, at the coy than ler, Ariz., Negro fighter never looked better. ~ r | Folley, although deliberately tak- | easy, showed enough tech-| nique and skill to be treated with respect, Chief Harriers Trip Waterford, Set Course Mark | Pontiac Central's cross-country squad Monday moved over to the “black” side of the season’s dual- meet book with an 18-30 win over Waterford. This ‘Victory leaves the jthe Saginaw Valley title meet, with a 10:57 time, John Jefferson (11:13), Maurice John- son (11:26) and Jim Nelson, No. 5 (11:30) followed. Skippers’ Gary Eichbrecht was 4th (11:29). Larry Chapman (W), Carl Ad- ‘ams (P), Harris (W), Gary Ded- | ‘man‘ (W) and Fred Brooks (P) | completed the top 10. PCH reserves also won, 27-30, with Waterford's Jim Gibson first (11:59). . Next week will be a busy one:for Chiefs, with Wyandotte here Mon- day, Edsel Ford here on Wednes- day and.the MHSAA regionals: at Farmington on Saturday. ~ , Orioles Buy Infielder BALTIMORE (AP)-—The Balti- more Orioles today announced the purchase of infielder Jim Fihigan from. their Vancouver farm club in the Pacific Coast League. \. NEW YORK (AP) — About the surest way to’move to the top of the weekly Associated Press na- tional. football tanking is for an unbeaten team to knock ‘off a hith- erto, unbeaten Notre Dame team, and that’s just ’what Army did. a8 a ae “spirited Cadets from West Pofft, on the strength of their 14- 2 victory over the Fighting Irish at South Bend last Saturday, were voted into the No, 1, spot today by ‘the sportswriters and sports- casters participating fn the poll. ,, Army displaced Auburn as the current leader, ‘although the . de- fending national champions’ still are unbeaten, The Cadets re- ceived 77. first place votes and a plade votes ahd 1,434 points for Auburfi, so the margin was con- vincing, . -. + * There were other changes in the top 10 this week. Three teams Stump and Chuck Daniel. ©. dropped out of the select list en- Army No. 1 in Poll, MSU Jumps fo Sth tirely, Notre Dame, fourth a week ago, droped to 12th through its defeat by Army; Oklahoma, a good second last week, dropped to |lith as a result of its’ one-point ‘defeat by Texas, and Pittsburgh, No. 10 a week ago fell out of sight through being trounced by Michi- gan State, 2 ee ; * ®& & “Replacing these three in the top 10 are Texas, Navy and Louisiana State. Texas came up to seventh from 16th by defeating Oklahoma. Navy moved from 12th to sixth on its victory over Michigan, - and LSU came up from 11th to 9th by whomping Miami, 41-0. Olio State, victory over Illinois, revi up from fifth to third point total of, 1,611, to’ 54 first) place, and Wisconsin moved from sixth to fourth. “Michigan State also: advanced, jumping from against Pittsburgh. * * * Army and Auburn naturally ninth to fifth through its showing’); hogged most of the first-place \yotes, although a few other teams had their rabid supporters who figured they rafed the top po- sition. Wiseonsin drew 16 top votes, seven more than were gar- nered by the third-place Ohio State Buckeyes. Tenth-place Clem- son had seven voters who thought ‘that team deserved the No. 1 spot. The , based on 10 points for a first place ke 9 for second, oe. (First place vote and season records in parentheses): tL arow C97). 8) 6... ei sss cey.: 1, 2. Auburn Go. G0) we fe ita 3. Ohio State “() (90) ......... vee 3087 @ 4. Wisconsin (16) (3-0). ceeeeee 5, Michigan State (4) (24-1 .., 1) OS) .. cw ciics. ee 1,073 os 38 It took the intended receiver.- . ; an anemic offensive attack in those two games . to give the hard-nosed Buckeye a crack at running the ball Sunday against the Rams, and again you could say Boxing writers reported that Cassady came through with flying colors. He picked up 76 yards in 10 carries for a 7.0 average ‘which is good in any man’s league. He also”, made true believers out of 55,648 fans catch a ball when he took with his finger tips seconds of the first half. Actually, he’s quite small com pro player, but he’s got as on the league and the ‘good things come in small that he can Earl Morrall’s long heave for a 76 yard TD in the final a football heart as any* is can truthfully say, packages, because y is as good as they come, Ford, Stu Miller Capture ~ ERA Crowns NEW YORK (AP)—Southpaw Whitey Ford of the New York Yankees captured the American) League eafned run title in 1958 for the second time in his career. x * * It also marked the fifth time in the past seven seasons that a Yankee pitcher has finished on top of the mark in 1956, allowed 49 runs in 219 innings. erages in the National League, for Majors with a 2.88 ERA. He was touched for 80 earned runs in 25) innings. \Milwaukee’s Lew Burdette was third at 2.91, followed by team- mate Warren Spahn with 3.07, The , Phils’ Robin Roberts arid the Gi- ants’ Johnny Antonelli were tied ‘for fifth with 3.27 apiece.. Reach State Finals: Joe Bonfiglio and Les Rothbarth . of Pontiac will be among 12 bowl- ers competing in the Eastern Mich- igan finals of a state All Star 9 47, The journeyman performer, who also has seen service with St. Louis Cards and Philadetphia| Phils, gave up 50 earned tallies in 182 frames. es : * * A pitcher must work at least | 154 innings tobe eligible for earned run honors, Ford won 14 games and lost seven, but was hampered by a sore arm in the last month of the season, Nevertheless, the sturdy lefty completed 15 of his 29 starts, including seven shutouts} —tops in both leagues. Left-handers have won the crown for the past three seasons with the Yanks’ Bobby Shantz leader in 1957. i * x * Billy Pierce of the Chicago White Sox was runner-up to Ford with 2.68, having yielded 73 un- tainted markers in- 245 innings. Detroit’s Frank Lary. and Balti- more’s Jack Harshman were tied for third with 2.90 each while’ Billy: O'Dell of “Baltimore ranked fifth at 2.97, ae : Miller sported a lackluster 6-9 this weekend. The top two performers in the finals will be eligible for a national event at Buffalo next January. Bonfiglio has averaged 196 for 36 games and Rothbarth just ever 194 in the tourney. Listed as an alternate is local, kegler Dick Carmichael, who averaged an even 194. Joe had the fop six-game total Saturday with 1281. Others in the running for berths in the national meet include four each from Flint and Lansing and one each from Utica and Franken- muth. Jeannette Mihalik of Pontiac al- so competed at Flint and will now advance to women’s finals at De- troit. Cranes Win in Soccer, Lose on Gridiron Cranbrook continued unbeaten in soccer but winless in football Sat- urday as Interstate League play began, ‘ : _ Tito Cortella scored in thé 1st period on a pass from Chris © Dusenbury for, the only soccer goal inthe team’s 5th straight. Kent Strickland was the goalie. The footballers ldst for the. 3rd- time, ¥ Fake ‘ty lee 706 won-lost record, His six victories g Missiasi DF 2) (40) . 2 were. the fewest ever produced by oo me) ae me The 30. ve an rest Mena ECON ¥- e 30-) : ° HL Rotre Dame.) voeccccie. Ba cael om —— we ; - ju earned runs in his las 34, Oregon (1) (21) on. ces ere cee eee $1); . : H, Moores 8) os cclsccece 38|61 innings. , Hy. Rorinwestern (36) . ¥.% & #. ee 18. Florida (2-1) ........ 600 rf Sam Jones of the Cards, the NL 19. Michigan (141) ++. 12 Ls 2. s Chrisflan (31) ...a%...... thi strikeout kingpin, trailed. Miller =, iN ~ s 56-0. Both matches were against Shady Side at Pittsburgh. . a i : “. my Se. to the average ~ Three Local Keglers - tion-tournament at Flint _ ee This-was the spectacular college career of the Lions’ ~ 3 "TUESDAY, ocrOBER i, 1958 - SEVENTEEN es “Choke Up’ Costs Duren $250 NEW YORK {AP)—Ryne. Duren: couldn't keep his temper and the Milwaukee Braves couldn't keep a secret, The result? : Duren ig out $250 ney 22 mem- bers of the Braves are out $30 apiece today as a result of punitive action by Baseball Com- missioner Ford Frick, Frick’s wrath fell on Duren be- cause. the New York Yankee pitch- er made a “‘choke up” gesture at inning of: the- sixth World Series game after Johnny Logan walked. Duren was annoyed-when Berry called ‘the fourth ball on Logan and walked from the mound and said something to the umpire. That didn’t bother Frick, 22 Braves Charged: $50 | Apiece for Loose Talk — his throat, the traditional “choke up” sign in baseball. The count had been 3-2 on. Logan and Durén is accused by Frick of having in- dicated Berry diin’t want to call a strike on Logan before the parti- san. Milwaukee crowd. blocked his view of Duren, so he didn’t see - anything,. Likewise, Charlie Segar, Frick's assistant who was rimning the Series in World Series that almost a “whole team-has been fined, It came about because someone were going to share their Series Berry said catcher Yogi Berra / Frick’s absence, said he saw no-/ Umpire Charlie Berry in the 10th |" first time in the history- of the|— ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, Se Be 2 ba fold out of class how the Braves; <@ 6 County Teams |. iAre Undefeated season is four weeks. old and a) check of Oakland County prep records reveals that only four teams have perfect marks.. Two! other county clubs are undefeated, but ties mar their slate. beaten-untied records are Walled Lake, Bloomfield, all with 4-0 marks, and Royal Oak Shrine, which stands 3-0, Unbeaten but dead- | | locked aré RO Dondero and RO |] .| Kimball, both $01, — {enjoy spotiess slates — Northville, | 4 Brown City and Lapeer, all at 40.9 Another area team, Armada, car- ries three wins and one tie. ‘Monday's Basketball Exhibitions Canadian Pre Football ioneapolis 117,, Detroit 102. onto 37, Hamilton Boston "94 4, Cincinnati 62. ireal 4, Ottawa 1 “The 1958 high school football] { County schools boasting’ un: | ” and West Three Oakland area squads also * *& & Five teams tumbled from the un- But when Duren turned back.to the mound, he placed his hand on|S¥g. This is not-de rigeur. The commi er’s office insists it alone .can make the announce- defeated ranks last weekend. The = : easualties were Pontiac Central, | Almont, Brighton, Clarkston and | AMERICA’ s ment. €ard Tourists Win | HONOLULU \{AP).— An un- earned run in the fifth innin gave the touring St, Louis Cardij, nals a 5-4 victory over the Hawai All. Stars last night, ANXIOUSLY WAITING — Pontiac Northern's new cage court. first basketball coach Dick Hall anxiously watches and awaits the completion of the Set! 8 Pontiac Prete Phote Northern's first varsity team to Highland Park St. Benedict. York, knocked. out. Frankie Anseltn, 156, | BERWIND BRIQUETS CORWIN LUMBER CO. ‘117 S. CASS -FE 2-8385 MONDAY'S FIGHTS SAN. PRANCISCO—Paolo Rosi, 133". knocked = Bobby Scanion, | San Francisco, 3. EW YORK—Jose panes 158%, New! ” Athletic Staff Musters Varsity Candidates Comiraction work is still going LARGEST SELLER « invincible Deluxe 2/15¢ Imperial 6¢ Cigarille.§/20¢ iSchool, and even though the ath- jletic plant is a long way from be-} j ing. completed, Northern’s staff of | coaches isn’t letting the grass grow | under their feet. SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS HARDWARE 458 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 6-877 The varsity football coach, Ed! Heikkinen, has been doing triple! duties as he looks ahead to North-) ern’s first gridiron entry in 1959 which will play a nine game sched-| ule. . * * * Head basketball coach Dick Ha Hi aT EARLY BIRD SPECIAL! IF YOU WILL HELP US BY BUYING YOUR SNOW “TREAD TIRES NOW BEFORE THE BIG RUSH WE'LL Givé YOU GET THIS FAMOUS U.S. ROYAL SNOW TRE AD DESIGN applied to sound casings or your own tires @ ROYAL TREAD ... the Cus- tom Quality Retread ... ask obout our guarantee. 2°29"... 2°29... Plus Tax and Treadoble Tire ALL SIZES ON SALE... fineluding 14”) THIS OFFER GOOD THRU OCT. 20 . MacDonald Co. Inc. lon at Pontiac “ Northern High| ways hoping to eye-a few rangy | mends. already completed. | completed and the football practice; Completion of the gym has_ been | field growth. There ‘will be two grid' Northern cagers will workout at 6 GTS, Permanent-Type 506 Shooting ANTI- FREEZE jon 45 of 89 shots. | Lloyd was ruled out on fouls, | backboard strength. | Pistons, led the scorers Pigs 24) | points. -Elgin Baylor, | pound collegiate star ae Seattle | | Pontiac Northern Sports Facts Shape Up ‘is also watching the Northern hall-| practice fields and three ball dia- | | prospects for his-squad which will! * * * jopen varsity competition December | Other outdoor facilities included 2nd at Lake Orion. ‘in the plans for completion by 1961, Bill Willson, who organized | 4"e outdoor archery, ice rink, a, “Ponting Central’s wrestling team, 'three hole golf layout, and on its s now preparing — mat squad | natural terrain a ski slope. for Northern and he will also | Exit onto the outdoor athletic | handle the school’s golf team. | fields will be made from two sep- | Baseball will have Arnie Wilson | arate wings, one with the baskét- | as head coach, track will be han- | ball gymnasium and locker | dled by Dick Marsh and Ed | rooms and the other with swim- | Dauw is the swiraming coach. | ming pool, handball courts, rifle * * * range and intramural locker All the athletic facilities are lo- Permit cated conveniently together jn the ‘'‘The layout of these Three tennis courts are The track is/ ing. of the gym for the cage squad. grounds, is already showing green) set for mid-November and till then Utah Scrapper ‘Beats 2 Foes | Beats Pistons 72 One Evening | WEST JORDAN, Utah (AP)— Knockout artist Lamar Clark, | L ANSING — The Minneapolis 181 disposed of two opponents last | yr jLakers shot a .506 percentage’ in night in a total of 3 minutes, 27 Hfield goals in defeating the Detroit S¢Conds. | Pistons in a National Basketball | * * * Clark, of Cedar City, eh Assn. exhibition game last night, | floored Ricky Smith 181, 117-102. The Lakers madagood| Alameda, Calif., _ twice, then lcaught him with a a ret hand for 32 | Detroit kept close until the tease in 2:32 of the first | last quarter when center Earl ; Then, taking only a between-| rounds breather. Clark chopped ldown Oscar Talley, ‘Francisco, in 5% seconds of the "The defeat was Detroit's third in | first round. 7 ‘five exhibition games. It was Min: | Both fights had been billed® for |neapolis’ second victory in three ‘four rounds. They were Clark’s | |games. costing the Pistons’ important a “ = Li [tories and his 12th and 13th knock- Phil Jordan, 6-10 center of the | ‘outs, | scored 23 ~ te Lakers ee Merry’ 5 Choice Wins The game drew a crowd of 3,200 Feature at Jackson ‘to the Lansing Civie Center. Detnpit. opens its regular NBA! JACKSON — Merry’s Choice, schedule at Syracuse Sunday. ismartly rated by Clarence Haynes, | = ; ifinished strongly on the rai} at | Jackson Harness Raceway Mon- facilities! north section of the school and are wonderfully convenient,” said) | Hall, who eagerly awaits the open-| 179, of San '13th and .14th professional. vic-|" Madison Junior High when prac- \tice sessions begin. | Big feature on the 16-game~bas-}- ketball schedule is first -varsity contést between Northern and Pon-| ‘tiac Central, February 2nd. It will| ‘be the only. meeting between the| 'Chiefs and the Tribe from the | /north end to be played on the PNH/ court. ' Northern's fi ye t basketball schedule is an afnbitious one with a mixture of A and large B scheols, including Lake Orion, Rochester, Grosse Pointe, Thur- ston, Waterford, Cranbrook, De- trit Catholic Central, Hazel Park plus PCH. Heikkinen, Northern's head grid | coach, still assists Jesse MacLeay |at Pontiac Central, He helps with} the scouting and he also has a 35- man squad of his own, made-up of all sophomores who play a six |game card with other soph teams. |- The Northern sophs practice at | Wisner and Heikkinen himself | gathers up his yearling gridders jand drives them by bus to Wisner. | ‘All our sophomores ‘are pretty jsmall, ‘said Heikkinen, ‘‘but| there's a lot of spirit out there.” Hi¢ Tribe has Melvindale, Wa-| 'terford, Lake Orion, Roseville: Cranbrook, Rochester, Hazel Park, | Berkley and Pontiac Central as its! /1959 schedule. The iplayed on Friday ate when PCH, is on the road or on Saturday ; pee: $500, 000 Awaits PGA Winter Tour Winners | DUNEDIN, Fla. (UPI)—The Pro- | fessional Golfers’ Association today games will be! - enter competition will be the cagers. Completion Philade deiphia, a ; a : 8—Chi J u date for the gym is expected:‘by mid-November. New Mor epee wane, 18 e for Preasant Mloments- and Pricea Micacrately PRICE REDUCED) This is truly the whiskey for Pleasant~ | Atemat Dasetiee Moments. PM is convincingly good} $23 > $3 68 ———" Pint 4/5 Qt. sige Code Ne. 581 Code No. 580 DUCTS COMPANY, NEW YORK F, 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS ;announced a rich 1959 winter tour ‘worth nearly $400,000 in prize mon- éy. Harold Sargent, PGA president, released a tentative schedule which included 13 PGA co-sponsored tour-| naments and nine other events. The winter tour will open with the $35, | 000 Los Angeles Open Invitation, |Tournament, Jan. 2-5, and rtn. through the Masters tournament at’ Augusta, Fa., April 2-5. The richest event on the sched- ule is the $50,000 Bing Crosby 72-' hole Professional-Amateur tourna- ment to be played on three courses. at Del Monte, Calif., Jan. 15-18.) FE 5-6136 " sm 370 S, Saginaw St. is f ast becoming PONTIACS HOME FOR RETIRED FOLKS Folks appreciate our homelike accommodations with the convenience of being right downtown where things are happen- ing. No need to travel for éntertainment. Why don't you stop in our air - conditioned atmos- Olson Meets ‘Unknown’ Iday night to hold off the late close; The opening winter tournament at/| lof Solid Harmony and Zip Abbey) |Los Angeles offers the second larg- in Comeback Contest in the featured Dearborn Pace, _ (St purse to the touring profession- A crowd of 2,531 turned out as/4ls. OAKLAND, Calif, (AP)—For- | | mer middleweight champion Carl'Leon A. Slavin's half-mile trotting | ——— wee Fla.—Claude Williams, 158'% i “Bobo” Olson, trying for a sec-|track opened its third week of ac- |Tampa pa, stopped Leo Bailey, 160%, De:| roit ond comeback as a light heavy, |tion and became the last pari-mu-|"0F OU oexce Ri — Curly Monroe, | irtually | jtuel plant now in operation in Mich-| |Worcester, Mass. outpointed Georgie | $99, 716) Aree Providence, 10 ‘(lightweights). RIS — Bantamweight champion Al-/ signed Monday to fight v unknown Don Grant in an Oct.jigan. The crowd wagered BEATTY’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE 47 N. Parke St LICENSE BUREAU FE 8-6022 COMPLETELY INSTALLED Other ‘57-'58 Models neneerere Transmissions Available ia tienen: DYNAFLOW POWER CLIDE 50 to 52 ; Ss $3 & 54. ore: 55 to ST..ie. NEW EASY FINANCE TERMS! All Work Guaranteed Free Check-up Service HYDRAMATIC 48 to 50.. Ford &G Merc-O-Matic wes 970 52 to 54.......$80 55 & 56......$100 ve se Hal 5 d 28 Oakland Auditorium 10-rounder. oe oe tae ee iy Mrs. ee Bini, 119%, France. 5. inonetitie) | IG Rose Bowlin of Mason, Michigan, | i ered the mile in‘2:07 3-5 to re- m4 Rangers Call Goalie covered the mile in 5 GENUINE FORD turn $7.40, $4.00 and $2.80 at the | windows. The victory was the sixth} of the year for this five- year-old | St. George mare. | From Buffalo Club SPARK PLUGS, NEW YORK (AP)—The New York Rangers Monday called up goalie Marcel Paille of the Buf- falo Bisons 6f the American Hock- ey League to fill in for the in- Rousing Program Set | “Cy” Owens TUNE-UP for MSU-Purdue Fans © Machine-Test Distributor | BRAKE RELINE Let usy us yive YOUR CAR a complete | & _ S65 ‘Physical Check- -up’ $13.95 | = Save $11 — Reg. $24.95 Incl. 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The MSU He played with tle Rangers five} band will stage a downtown pa- FORD O seasons before being traded two} rade in addition to the halftime “= years ago. | ceremonies. — MATIC | | ‘ 4* Reg. | $18.00 : Incl. Labor, Fluid, Gaskets ® LABOR and MATERIAL $a 99 5 | e re Transmission,. Converter just Bands and Linkage e RE-PACK FRONT WHEELS | ean Pan and Screen - © Fill with New Ford-O-Matic Fluid e RE-ADJUST BRAKES * Road Test Car FRONT END $595 "ss Incl. Labor and - Material ® Set Caster, Gamber, Toe-in © Inspect Front Shocks . ® Inspect Fie-Red Ends ® Road Test Car ~ ® Complete Chassis Lube © INSPECT WHEEL CYLINDERS CUEVROLET ‘PLYMOUTH - | MARKET TIRE Co. || i> | 77 W. Huron St. FE 8-0424 [I -no money pown i Up te 274 Months to Pay EASY CREDIT TERMS 147 S. Saginaw Street Service Department Open Daily 7:30 A. M. te 6:30 P. M. Saturday 7:30 A. M, te 1:00 P.M, “CY” OWENS, INC. Pontiac's Only Authorized Ford Dealer © FEderal 5-4101 i! fips i = ‘ RIGHTREN, EE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER: 14, 1958 Rescue 150 Tenants (2% Deven and evet ay Hollywood Headlines through the building. Trapped by Flames 23 than 29 Tener ener] BUT OF Crosby Lokal Out Hid four alarms. Many of the tenants pmADRLa um — abouleny ae en em for’ Suitaple Screen ‘Role "450 tenants were trapped by fire S the street by younger residents. vi9.|No serious were reported. : Ss on upper floors in a West Phila- — : By ri tak wos a delphia four-story apartment Mon- Firemen said the blaze had AP Motion Picture Writer ..|in “Man on Fire,” a serious story of Nouceer Mec? ‘Mee ee agrge day night, The blaze started in| soread through the 72-unit build-| HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Although |about divorce, Bing indicated he’d| pater sche yal fpr eg ping Croshy bat made a movi inc gee evi be makes Would Help at Geneva |gomistion ot Ei Paso, Tex. ses — STARTS — estimate of damage were not de-| ‘. x UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. AP) | : FRIDAY |= . BLUE SKY ‘ Eh ban. Soviet Deputy Valerian Zorin’ ‘told ‘the ponte | THM i? 3 $ $ $ $~ $ > 3 2 | Ld i . > $ 2150 OPDYKE RD. = > FE 4-4611 —- : a ‘film “project -was already. cut} was $ pes Woy. (es tnt Om. BC of YOLIGRAPH ‘ maaan f 3 | , $[ TWO BRAND NEW |B $ FIRST RUNS ‘ oy 3 THE PICTURE THAT BELONGS TO a an ae ® ! $_ ALL IN- COLOR! YOUNG LOVERS OF Tus GENERATION dey cay an as | roster 3 ment that he was offered the Jead t no te ‘during | JORN GAN “ko PULVER | 3 NS ! role in their film version of “‘Lo-|the | slated beget KEENAN Wen 4 lita." Say the young film makers: ' $ ‘Al we have the highest > <«¢. 2 i < VICTOR tons.” ray ; , < & | ‘ - Okay, fight it out, bo soe Jose Ferre: ATURE - GEN _ | ATEEN-AGE A= 2 es * = er sean tne ar hat t Fe i Committee Monday that only a} IRON MEN “It seems|call for an immediate, uncondh| presumptuous that some stars are|tional halt to tests would contrib- m themselves up asjute to success of the Geneva mON \ )_nittier. Sones pesey guardians of the public taste in|negotiations among the United ton senna Ginscieo Sas mores contrast to the foremost literary |States, the Soviet Union and Brit- CLASH In EO BY IRVING RARPER ar i critics in the nation who have ac-/ain. - $ Wis-0n _ || claimed ‘Lolita’ one of the literary tk ow | : ) COMBAT! : PLUS - classies of this generation.” Zorin charged that the West] W/LIGHIT ’ : - . ORITICIZED THEME was trying to shift all arms talksii \& ~ DS | coumeu PTMEs f ee | 2 from the political to the technical] 9g We C(,ODS§) presents ee J i Grant had criticized the theme level and “drown this tter | - F A WARWACE ve i ee i : f the book, which deals with thus =m fael mele! PRODUCTION i ; e . : 8/in endless technical disputes as} ae | . middle-aged man’s fondness for happened in the League of "| eae | THE HIGH cost = RRR roe Dit Gat Ti Fe 4 | a oad oe oreo a ss of the a er Ol meueh als 1c) : H a . > AY, ‘7. for an oe al zg , vec trying t Cie ] nai 4 p “ia . Jf [fs script about'an aging star. “It's| forthcoming conference in Geneva | EXCLUSIVE OAKLAND CO. FIRST RUN Cont mee bee 4 a beautiful part which will prob-|into a new conference for the a ss : ably win the highest awards,” he | el-le | Fe ae sid, “but don't do it.” 6 Se ee = 9 BLUE SKY . Ken cit ano star who a 7 e played a fading actress, allowed “VERTIGO” STARTS AT 7:10 and 9:25 | IN THEA ot to be pi | ! | aes | mice wave eal] NOW! thru THURSDAY = CinemaScope sg selon rin “has created his| ; , TOPPING THe TENSIONS OF “Rear Winnow”! : i ue’ wyn has crea ms pee Se eer tk Lace Oakland _ AND — - destroyed. by fire—on another| : . 4 aie At 1: mr 3:4 — : i a C4 : i stage for ‘‘Porgy and Bess."’| wis . ALFRED HITCHCDCKS 124-0 :24 : = 4 {iIt's’an impressive sight. One of i? t “ [it’s “shaimet TAO MGTUMC Ie) || the first ate had Sidney Poitier | ‘ . CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF TAYLOR: PAUL NE WMA! S R a girl who ved, in a home ome for unwed mothers! as Porgy returning from jail to | i} | ie find Bess gone, It’s actually one Starring SUSAN wivee LINDA PLOWMAN -BEVERLY LONG - “HOR JN BASSO TOME MOORE CARUA MEREY of the last scenes in the picture. (ete by SAL STULL, Aon Prt ee Pct aoe: Chrected by BERNARD. GRARD te eee i STARTS _TOMORROW. | _ TENSE WITH WOMAN. DRAMA | VIBRANT WITH YOUTHFUL Speaking from inside the 1912) - OF COURSE! WE HAVE THE pare ages Corres Fae faving his legs strapped as the) ——acoLon VERY-FINE. HEATERS! crlepied Porey. His remedy. for A SCOTT BROWN PRODUCTION restoring circulation at an = of | ST 'the day: skipping rope. THEATER * +, ALWAYS FIRST WITH THE FINEST SRE INS ee D Theat the No 4 G4. ‘ OPEN 6:30 P.M. SHOW STAR 7. PM an ‘DI < TO-NIGHT IELD OVER! uc 'S THURSDAY EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING NEVER SUCH ADVENTURE- IN THE JUNGLES OF INDIA! STEWART GRANGER . “Aman needs to feel secure”... Al told the boss , | | . a z viteoe diate also Seat that haved ‘Cross-Blue Shield bane . BARBARA RUSH “ TODAY LAST TIMES “health care os ype t ps make a man ue _ANTHONY STE EL; ine A Riot of Fun & Frivolity more secure both on feet per on That’s why the boss provided Blue Cross-Blue Shield pro- The Adventurous Life Story of tection to in with. And that’s way Blue Cros’ -Blue hae coverse was mech H AR RY B LAC 4 important element in the contracts recently negotia ; between the UAW, AFL-CIO and Ford, Chrysler and General 3 AnD THE TIGER Motors. All of these major contracts include the new ““M-75” _ = _ medical plan which provides more security than ever for ; group members. 5 os . i How about you? Do you have the extra security that Blue Ss Crogs-Blue Shield can offer? vers In James “SHORT CUT fo wec” ALSO %& FIRST. PONTIAC SHOWING The Miracle that happened on Main Street! C.O0D Is suitable for framing, ssh bgrtnd ch te ot Wee alien, Pontion ‘ . ‘ It’s wonderful to feel cared for! MICHIGAN | BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD ® eal ; iN Set hee et Co & | Open All Winter — With Our cox IN-CAR HEATERS cnn BLUE CROSS PAYS YOUR HOSPITAL... BLUE SHIELD PAYS YOUR DOCTOR * ~~. [Moo CORD LPORGEN VER? Ene pa TOR [ TOL DROP A POS HER TICKET LTH © TROUSEIND-DOLAK] | CARD “TO TW’ FORMSES BA! Sm VENT ALET'S: SEE ... YES, SO THEN WONT ORR! METS OHERE 7. OBA GO, WOO! FLIGHT 1! , oe A S Cauitty. Supervisor “Oak r sage Zopt Will Retire Waterford Tax he, rtd et a Ts Asm tog en seem" tr ta pi cw] SHOWS | man in the first row,” ta tae do, Ws “apheeet- aie Over Last Yeor call eels shan inee 9 eee - years as Royal Oak assessor and é LZ © 1958 by HEA Gervies, Ine. TM. Rog. U.S. Pat. OFF. q Pore 7 | [SacKie! CLEANLINESS IS |[ Do You) (CERTAINLY! ire Reval Oak Mayor Howard) Award wil become that C's] eaters wil pay taxes soeenting NEXT TO GODLINESS! }] LIKE TO] | T Love Tor board of Zapf’s retirement effec-\ing city auditor since 1988. Eck-| to $71.72 per $1,000 asseased val- | ; Ni . 3 man announeed his retirement as| ¥2tion, which ts an increase: of director and supervisor recently : “For those that fear our county islot Howard M. Warner. Kalmbach _ going Ao the dogs, they shouldn’t|is acting building forget - we have a veterinarian.” '|Michigan Bell. Telephone Co. x & , Ever since he was a to Doemyboriemapiola val = “Stewart Takes 2s Ponsa Auditors; Dr. Ernest Bauer, to the). Oath of Office seis we 43-Year-Old Obioan |e eran Tarentt: ctv dor Becomes Youngest Man coal are: Harry J. Merritt in Supreme Court —_| Kelley, department of veterans af WASHINGTON’ (AP) — Potter|warden; Rey F, Goodspeed and Stewart, a 43-year-old Ohioan, to-|Roger Oberg, planning commis- day becomes the Supreme Court's | on; Sol D. Lomerson, road com- youngest member in dual ‘oath- mission; and Joe Haas, trustee on : is ‘ . taking: ceremogies. _ the board of the Tuberculosis San- “T-used to have & couch like that, but I never had any trouble 2 ee ~_jexcept moths.” For four years, he has been a judge of the vs 6th oom a Comt BOARDING HOSE | Se eu a pear eee JOVE, THIS BRINGS WHO. BACK "FOND MEMORIES # DOES HE _ exception, he is. the youngest man in modern times to be appointed. Cou OF THE GOOD OLD 6RID- ATHINK'LL, ae DAYS/ REMEMG ER, hse HE SAID HE WOULDN'T REFEREE, GUT HE'S GOING 10 RUN WITH THE ~ BALL / LET HIM TAKE THE. to the Supreme rt. Justice _ William O. Douglas was only #@ | mn . President Franklin D. - Roosevelt appointed him in 1939. Stewart fills the vacancy creat- ed by the retirement of Justice Harold “H. Burten, 70, a fellow Ohioan. , By Leslie Turner NO... WE SAW NO STRANGERS ASHORE. WELL, TWEY SAID IT WAS SMALL..WITHOUT _ Chief Justice Warren , formally BUT TW’ NIGHT SHIFT SAID THAT ALOW LIGHTS... AND HAD ITS MOTOR MOUNTED announced . Burton's _fetirement fairs ENG LAWS SARL) eOEL TH ABOVE TW WING — = _ from the bench Monday, Warren é HEAR, gz DERRICK ABOU =) - HEY, THAT ’ . ‘RODS TO THE ' MUST N said Burton's 13 years on the KID'S CANGER! Lege oun Mes court rounded out a long and dis- WE COULD. GO SCRIBE , INFLATOPLANE! tinguished career of public serv OUT LIKE K THE PLANE ice. ; : . 2 ; ~ & * _ - f/f . “He has been a friend, coun- = “ —~ 2 selor and companion of all of us,” —— ; Warren said. “We shall miss him >= 2 | greatly.” ‘The eight other justices’ sent - Burton a letter extending. ‘‘fondest _ wishes for the health and happi- ness of you and yours.’ . | With Stewart's appointment, | | President Eisenhower now has -mamed five of the court's nine - members. The others are Chief | Justice Warren and Justices Bren- nan, Harlan and Whittaker. Jus- tives Black, Frankfurter and] - _ Douglas were appointed by Presi-| dent Roosevelt, and Justice Clark | _ by President Truman. : * * * A long-time resident of Gincin- nati, Stewart was a prominent at-| 4 : torney there before Eisénhower} — ‘ named him to the Circuit Court CUT CUR way in 1954. Like Justice Burton, a : Republican. v He will be serving under a’ re- : cess appointment, subject to Sen- NANCY . Y TELL LEY, Y Uf Yj $50 PRIZE |/ Whip,. FOR THE. | Ue) -BEST . Y FLASHLIGHT |’, SNAPSHOT 7) Ps LLG Lf NEXT DAY a ae ae + SSTY Ly cd e —iggttypans SS WE ‘ ~ q fg US Pet Ont = a rights Teemeepd BUSAHMLL FFE cerm~ihe Came, 1998 by Unned Fosters Syndicate, tne. STAIRS, ITLL SE FROM GOING MORTY MEEKLE ~ ate confirmation after Congress DOWN THESE _ Petonvenes in January. - STAIRS. =e . "AND WHAT ical SHE COMING?, .. Im Is eae? Rockets May Render sins > , Money Obsolete | SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) —|- | The. advent of missiles, rockets and space travel may require an entirely new means of financing - besides money, the head of a Cali- fornia missile company maid day. Dan A. Kimball, peeaident of| © _ Aerojet-General Corp., told the 38th annual conference of the Cal- {fornia-Nevada-Hawaii District of] f- He fy eo ‘i 2 G yt 9 - 9 By Charles Kuhn © 1958 by NEA Service. ine. TM. Rog. U.S Pat OM. en Ye 3s ’ Kiwanis International: “If a wns = SS new world is being born—and th pote Hide ess eA rte MAO . is just what is happening —. it's ONE Seo LIKEA BILL! H| BLE ALL ATONCEY - going to cost a lot of money. ~ a ; ’ : : i . “Tt may be that some entirely AN new system bésides money may Oy Y | have to be created to sustain and Ne Y. - push ahead all these develop- =), : ments—just as money had to be ome ; - invented when. batter wasn’t ade- HG a | quate for the ‘growing exchange of}: - goods and ‘services many. years ago.” Kimball was secretary of the| | greiner tran tenon _ avy under President ar, j == HALF ACRE CASTLE DONALD DUCK. : a , By Walt Disney tne - Like CANTGET ONO YY [-fano THINK OF wHat WE mino WELL} Se oat | 5 A DREAM, MOTHE: iwreneste aang To BAN2..| | YOULL gave ave GETS] [IFT SEE = YOU EP. SINT if | /HAROL ASK ME Pahiee THE. (A LirTle Bi BEAUTY | ONE HUNDRED FIFTY [THE A MOTOR®)\INSIST! | 7, § wit gh | eal “DANCE / ist a] MILES TO THE GALLON! ea | 3 : i v! Sy Ss H Fs ae ; U , ae ~g i ' ens i J = \ KR see ‘, — i aed ~ sg as u 7S Sy 4 ik fee 4 } Fi “TWENTY __ _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14,1958 >. - Add to Social Security Start Part-Time Job. Club By RAY HENRY . Associated Press Writer Many retired people would like to add to their Social Security by working part-time. But, they can’t or don’t know how to find the work Maybe you're one of them Why not—with some of your retired friends—organize an “Over 65 Club” strictly to find er -time jobs for people like yourself? « * * Doing so would take little money maybe the cost of _some stationery, a few newspaper ads and a phone. To pay these costs, the club could charge a small membership fee * * _* To start the club you should get in touch-with all the older: people you think might be interested. Between 25 and 50 would be a good number atethe beginning After you've got enough interested, ask them to meet. and bring along an outline of thetr qualifications and a list of jobs they might be interested in The first business of the meeting should be to designate a place to meet recularly and to receive calls and mai) about jobs. At the start, this ought to be someone’s-home-to keep . the cost down Later on. the club may want to consider a different arrangement The next step should be to draft a iettes to business- men in your community telling them the purpose of the club and asking them to let you know if they have ‘qny 2 part time work. You may want to include'a resume of ~ the qualificatiens and skills of your members. ~ The letter will probably smoke out some Jobs the’ club members didn’t know existed And, it might start some businessmen to thinking about how they could use some part-time help. You might ask someone from the local employment of- fice to come to your meeting and tell you about the assist- ance his office can give 3. as = clubemnay-aise--went- - ping, gardening, sewing. typing, etc. x * * a ee 4o-consider—setting- ” odd-job services such as furniture repair, baby- sitting, shop- | From the outlines of qualifications and job interests, you'll probably think of other types of services the club may want to offer. In any case, the club could act ‘as the employment agent ‘for all these services. To let people know about it, you could run classified newspaper ads. Why not, for example, organize a “sit and sew” branch of the club? ting and sewing service in the evening for busy house- wives. Many a mother would be happy to pay a little more than regular baby-sitting fees to have someone re-. _ pair the kids clothes, darn dad’s socks or hem the new . curtains. like to work with power tools? power tools in his basement. And, no dqubt there are many things local stores would be willing to buy through your club—built by the men of the ably,you can think of a lot more. One “Over 65 Club” if the right kind of energy and imagination are put into it. ‘ja point. ‘{made hy Woolworth, —Kennecott; | Texas. Market Near Record High NEW YORK ® — The stock market churned near its record high with prices mixed early to- day. Turnover was heavy. ~ Gains and losses of fractions to _about a ‘point were posted for key, stocks. Most changes were small. The ticket -tape was as much as two minutes behind transactions during a 10-minuté’ period of late- - at the start. A succession of unusually ‘ares blocks was traded. Steels were lower. Drugs and electrical equip ments -rose slightly. Motors, rails, utilities, chemicals, oils and air- crafts were irregular. International Nickel was down a point or so as the government decided to divert. to civilian markets all nickel scheduled for: 1959. u } Losses of about a point were ; [Pe delivery to the government in-|)c}it. Seo: preduce boneki to the Farmer's! ‘|Market by growers. and- sold by them in wholesale, package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of — as of Monday. Detroit Produce _ « RUS. .- Beans, Beets, ahs taken by U.S. Steel, Republic Steel Jand Magma Copper. Boeing and Eastman Kodak picked up. around Fractional gains - were General Electric, the latter follow- ‘\ing record third-quarter profits. on 6,000 shares and trading again on 11,300 shares, up ‘s. After the ticker tape cleared once there was an other brief period of lateness. New York Stocks lewt rd, bu. Studebaker-Packard was actively = aes traded, opening unchanged at 10%) eee ete ete- rs eeeeee 1 60 SALAD > GREENS Celery cabbage, dom .. .ss.,cccsee 150 Endive, bleached, bu. ° ceansscceuewe 50 Escarole, bleached, OU. ..+.+0 o-. 2.50 Lettuce, leaf, bu, ...... svesescees-+ 1.50 Romaine, DU. «.ccceees soossoercones 3.50 DETROIT LIVESTOCK lao ls Oct. 14 \Av)—Detroit Live- stoce cule — Salable 800. Slaughter steers leaay Modern Energy Saver TIOGA, N. D. (UPD arch of time was, demon near here when a ‘motorist Daniel Boone bagged a deer = ty DETROIT — Dealer inven-|¢ hitting it with his car. Industrial Supplies Make Us Your. Stockroom’ CUTTING TOOLS _ and SUPPLIES, Inc. |," ——_ ELECTRONIC BURGLAR ALARMS Commercial— Residential Free Demonstration—Call Autoeye Electronic Alarm Oremsw mie SALESMAN ptt JACK COLE’S Auto Super Mart PLYMOUTH - DODGE CHRYSLER DEALER 1000 West Maple MA 4-451! Walied Lake planned home loans. BUY A HOME 15 W. Huron St Pontiac It’s your own! The home.of your dreams! - You have privacy, a place to entertain your friends properly, and a secure financial investment! Let us help you purchase and finance a home of your own—with one of ‘our low-cost, budget- Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. ’ Goines | Holding Steady. CHICAGO u-Demand for grain futures was very small in early today with prices hokling steady to slightly easier. « Wheat’ started as much as a half cent higher on the May delivery) les. Mcintosh, ou ...5 82.75 Apple. claer (easel Pea on Beet) but there: was no follow up and a pe some scattered commission house|odis Gra d (bskt.) pk c.ceve 1.25 Pears, Bartel, © Kn a ore 3.38 Selling caused prices to fall back Wateriaon, his poneereeett 27, {4p] to around previous levels. India rtedly pur- VEGETABLES chased 1,400,000 bushels of white round, DU, os..ccec-. 00 ° % lower, old style Dec. $1.12%; oats % higher to % lower, Dec. 6358; % lower, . $1.31%; changed to Yehigher, Nov. $2.16. _ Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN cua: ‘Oct, 14 (AP) — Opening transactions on the board of trade/"Town Rummage Sale. me 530 JE. Pike. October 210, 30 till 2:30. ‘News in Brief Rummage Sale, Oct. 16th, 9am, | to nae Purst Taureday, Oot at Pisasant. and free ‘parking adv. < ceeepeescveneee 1.50; + ew Toys da) Broccolt. - a) ae cisesecscecses 2.25] COasts overnight, ‘there was no Mnmye oma 1 ‘om 17. 50 a Cecrais topped, bak 2000020 18) indlcation of hedge Hfting Cass. _ i, adv.! Galery. dos, sales 1.0: seseerossoee, 110) the sales by -exporters im the Cucumbers, Glicers, Ws eckccsersce 400 ‘Chicago market. . Ban on Tre ding Stam Begpiant, bu. sareeeeeeeesT 115] The corn market came to a vir- n ps = oreeradien, No. 1 OE serscccccrs: $M@)tual standstill following a lghtfor Liquor Clarified eps. theys) do® | .veceesee :s. 150/mixed ‘trade at the start. There Parsley’ Gosh, sock aoe = cont were a few sales of new type De-| LANSING (AP) — It’s illegal to Parsnips. Y dU. ....es,ceaceze- 1 73|cember corn on resting orders, jgive away trading stamps for ppera, red. sweet, ‘bu Sevecueee ces 3.50 + * * purchases, Atty. Gen. Pal Pen bes os 60 the ...0..60 shes ios i. Ad said tod Radishes, Red (behs.) doz. i....... 110]. The soybean trade, too, was pret- , Radishes, white (behs.) dos. : 1.10/ty much inactive, There was some| The State ° Commission Squash. Delicious, bu. --..--+-+-+++ }-9¢/early buying of November futures|forbids merchants or distributors ps. topped, BU .ieeep. see: :. 2.50/by local traders and commission/licensed to sell liquor. to aa [ae ; houges and a little selling of the|sales through distributice . pn! GREENS A oe eee ee ae x he in an _ en SADUSDSAAAAALASat sneer: : 3 tight. - pte on ct nee ne ee ‘ oe oe m4 ». Lo ouls Bh snxtagr 8 i =e 12} Near the end of the first hour|zano.(D-Wakefield). = =. ere ee een ee ee rra-aieds-le-cene-tee Spinach, bu. ...:csss....esceeeeee, 1.50/Dec. $1.96%; corn unchanged to a issue stamps on non-/ UF Torch Drive | Begins in Addison ADDISON TOWNSHIP Richard #. Del DeWin ba BAKER: é HANSEN _ bain E. Hansen ee FE 2-55 * emai Policies Aeslden Geneiie: Fire Insurance Automobile Insurance. Life Insurance oo Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance ———- Insurance. Bonds — All Types . _ Tenants’ Policies . . Each aseds the ether: Copl Pope Leo xUL 1691 cannot without ai ah ta i om thew You Con Seve ‘Money When ~ You Buy Home Insurance! You Receive. Protection for. Your Home, the Naaier enacted H.W. HUTTENLOGHER Agency fl. W. Hettenlocher . - 306-320 Riker Bldg. -Max 8. Kerns FE 4-1551 pe sae se ane tag at pear ate Moraine Guat) |store uy soe ee ne» Fant Rigs GE United Foundation Torch Drive be ecima) po u ste >. &bo 1our - as ceeee.- i _ The idea would be to offer a combination baby-sit- ~ il averige cuoice BOU-1LU0 ID. steers 31.v0- jee Sores ioe Des: 2). -<0-- 331% gan today in Addison Township. It mira) ....0- 142 Jones & L .. 53 |é1.00, scuteering gooa 10 average choice! July .... 18644 Mar. ....... 131%, will continue through Oct. 24. Air Reduc .... 72.4 Kelsey Hay . 43 |steers 44.78-21.u0; few utility to low) Corn (old)— May ........ 139%) Goal. f the township, includ-! Allied Ch ..... 98 mnecott? .. 1036|go0a steers 24.19-44.i0; two wads mixea|/Dec ........ 112% Lard (loose) — or P, Allied Strs .... 48 Kimb Clk . 63.4) good ana iow cneice Devers around 641/Mar. ....... 1.36 Dec. .... 19.40B-50A | ing industry residential contri- Allis Chal ..... Kresge 8S .. 206 (og. 25.16; utility cows 18.00-l¥.5¢; can-| Corn (new)— Jan 10.25B-35A Alum Ltd . 24 — aaa 03 3147 anu cutcers 14.90-16.00; wuuty Duus Dec. ........ 112% Mer. ++ 4008-108 butions, has been set at $1,122, ac- SE ee een ee oe anes cee nel SE LS SO BERR cording (0, Mre, Melvin Thepmen Am Can os... so Ligg & My .-:78 | nigner, sows 25.cente hughes, most mixed, O8te— id: A—Asked | township chairman. - py eens as tees ce ae tee ae et ee, 7 | Of the quota, the township will : Or, why not set up @ woodcraft branch for men WhO (am Motors ... 243 Lone 8 Com ...37.4/ Ore ee ced mined No. d and Ae D th Fl h keep $250 for its local fund to be [Am Tel & Tel 1193 Lau & Nesh . Mol ala oe: ae re SS €a .) Sew ere used for emergency welfare, dis- Chances are one of the members of your club will ‘have Aa ree Martin Co .. 3a sad) 3 21 In wegsis) site (ot 18.09, buted through Township Fire ARSC co SE Meta cy 8.8 mined Eras sows, Gente “ie, it:| MANHASSET, N.Y.” (AP)=Carl See gp to Go rahe in. arg eerenat fil auras weer ieee Taal 0g acne eg a New Yak TO clu a 0 .. 43.2 Merr -11.2/and prume vealers” 23.00-40-00, standard/and director of the New York Tel- Beth Btee) . 84 Mpls Hop . ..06.4)and good 36.00-33.00, cull and utility t some random ideas for your club Prob=. Boeing Al 48 Minn M&M. ..94.4/ 16.00- : Paeenaeens ‘ Bae a ee a a rm, fe te. firemen Prove Handy . aro oe olce woo slaughter ele ff “ thing for sure: There are real possibilities In aM [Bigg Mi ..> 184 Mor prods ao ere aaiee, sal goose cisupuier|as a field faa Sit sie Pact son. Tee Tere, Pig fecoratll ay Bran Balke . ra Noche “. ms Ll |$0-75 oe teal fou 00-53-86. | yim ephone and Telegraph Co, in San Township, caught fire this morning Ke nne th G G. Burroughs... 403 MuCler = : 57 Francisco. He was horn in Oak-/as he drove to work at 7 a.m.| Sahat HP Nat Blno 20 |. oevmorr rouurar land. Call. ~ Sheriff's deputies in @ car follow- P ST EAD} ; “ sOct (AP) — 4 a , | F ; : . Gan Bry ss 163 Natl (Daley ‘ a per pound, Ue ba Detroit, ‘or Ne 1; DALLAS (AP) — Thomas J. son signa psiggiaphdipe dpsed) _N C | im Pac |... 30.1 Nat Qype ,. quality live poultry Crowley, 64, former’ publisher and mck: | N ew ar nvenfories copied Ait ty Mert @ Wet pl te gunna, mosuiy 11/43, ae typ! broiersione of the founders of the Petro-|ing when it burst into flames. , i INSURANCE re 21.4 Nor Am Av ., 33.3/or fryers (3-4 Ibs.) whites 18,, Barred,) E directly in front of No. 1 Waterford ter Trac .., 87.2 Nor Pac 50.4) Rocks 18-19; cabonettes (over 6 ibs.) 20-;-UM ngineer Publishing Co., Sta owest ince Chee & Ob °. 464 Nor Sie Pw. 213/28 tulder’ Sie) ibs, heavy type|died Monday after.a short iliness.|T°wnship Fire Station. Firemen Sins vaeee ue fae Galo eames) sale toms 23-23; small 1 the Jast few years he had been a with hand Sei h Sage ty ce ee tories of new cars stand at less |Coca Cols Seen Pen Eph a ETROF zoos - ing Coc il bia! than 200,000 units, Automotive [Cols Palm ..+. oe Peram Pict .. dt. punted ala S58 ale _ India Surveys Nepal ‘News estimates. coum cee Penney JC .. 99 -|large 51-56, weighted average 53, laree| NEW YORK (AP) — Raymond) parMaNDU, N pal — The first]. * * feo nas at BS RR oo: 101 ae wid ave. 51 memo 2) ene’ Gileanteau 7 a. former publish- ‘ . of Nepali ‘The trade paper said the count /C°pw pt iiai os. Pfizer 23 jagak, wie: ave at Browne, rade “a‘ing executive, died Sunday. He Papersacaden a otan a= 0 tT was 346,201 with a further cont a .. 48.7 Phelps D 623 lar 49. medium 35, small 28. Checks wag n; med resident of ted is being by ; at. the re- FOR ia on Oct. & .. BS Phileo gos. - 23° | 28-32, wtd. avg. 30 $ na iB t of the Uni of Nepal neighborly ‘decline since then due to Dodie Goat CoP&S” 133 Phil Pet... 452) ‘Commercial grade. Newspapers Magazine Corp, when quest cpa’, ee ; . ion snags. eS at Mot 19 Proct za S 02 rome Large, 48-40%: medium 32-33.it was formed in 1934 to publish act under the Colombo Plan. In- AN . i susie 2| Br arge mediu dian lanes taking “Not since November 1954, and [Gouper fae Bae : = this week magazine, He was born corlal eae fa thi 35,000-sq ie = seldom before then have dealers Curtis Pub “Be ae fA] cee a m deck of playing cards js much 1 New York ‘City. ile Himalayan ia dom _ | INSURANCE fared so well in a cleanup period,” Bet"ypaus HH REY TS U2lve the calendar. The ; face /AUK a . } the paper added Dou’ her : FH Safeway Bt"... 33.7 rd aT SURE Ee ee oe ‘ AGENCY? . irl Sigel oe aly ar crane ad ena conan mmeamiorgc eatin |e ee oe .. 204. vi; “= C] e proc- ‘ East Air L.. 36.7 2. 33. : F cars in stock seater ‘ng sa the ag" Shel Ou’... a24|92 weeks in.'the year, And the |essing concern with si plants in| MEMPHIS—Production, of ie You are... we will . they had 572,634 units. . iz B ides ©, 67 Simmons ssecs ot 42.2)sum of all the cards in the deck}the United States, died, Saturday.|chemicals is the largest manufac- qualify. If you want y ‘ EI Auto 1 -1+1 289 ‘Gosony ...<.. S06 (counting Jack as 11, Queen as'He joined the company in 1907 and|turing industry in ‘Tennessee, The "The- mid-month stockpile,” Au- E™: PE Sou Pac 130!) 878149, friendly and _ courteous as [ere RR 1s See an . King as 13 (plus a Joker) totals became president in 1915. ey was etela cok sigtth nationally te Be ee eee |tomotive News said, “reflects only, EnCell-O 418 Goerry Rd’... 31.6) 363. days. : Eoenl ini SailwnaKes : this respect, treatment, ydu will get it: a 13-day supply at the anticipated |Firestowe 104 Std Brand -... $63 . s au our office. delivery pace for all of October. ‘Ford Now a5 std ou Ind « = é : | « * * Teep Su wd sane upeaters, while pleased to be Gatange Den 491 Stud Pack... Hi Market Delights Bulls and Brokers polishing off a real cleanout after Gen Oynam_ - ae Suinet Pap . 403 BUD NICHOLIE a cold model run, are fearful of;Gen ds .. 68 Seiv BI Pd... 47 ‘showroom shortages in case con-|@o° Mois. 35 Texas Co...22, 81a ViOST it INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE. sumer demand turns up sharply Ger Shoe .. 263 ioe ie Phone FEderal 2-2326 ~ . next week and thereafter.” Gen Tine 24.4 Tromp eet: faa one he cera n Rea) ae t 2 Gerber! Prod. sg Transamer_... 26.5 By SAM. DAWSON - {months of this year turnover ra-|éent of shares then available—and| ) _ 49 Mount Clemens 3 Pontiac, Mich. Gillette ...... 48.5 Twenty Cen 33 : - . Goebel Bro... 3.3 Underwd ......20.3 AP Business News Analyst tio—the volume actually sold as|they numbered a more modest 59,- p Goody or : 3 Uait air Lin 318 NEW YORK (AP) — The bub- against the total’ that could have |579,634, - = : Eh gd GHIA. i! une smart Senate Be ct ony enn of te yas | Headg rte fo 6 Unit Prol t -* n, ar e turnover ra Greyhound 186 Un Gee Gp's., 34(bulls ‘and especially the-brokers.|/005' ea ug r 7 Gog tidy US Lines --s0. 3041The bulls see chances for financial|And it is practically ition © at mene en) Oe re, Average As om pomest ---- 322 US steel :3¢. 854|gain. The brokers’ pocket a pres- compared sprightly 1900 daily trading volume was higher Hi Cent) os $62 U8 Tob .-:+-- 28 4/ent gain—the commissions of the tout tat tad MN gid only in 1955. . inland ais) haa dl, Shad ea cop inns they buy and sell -for trad- ~ stertak Ir 25.7 Westg A Bk .. 26.5 : - , : eo [Int Bus Mch 4424 eck mi! 66 Se . 7 Se Int Hary ..,. 39 we ose "Talk ‘of fat. ene payments to) 2 > ; - BASE EL RES,” Bt brokerage ‘house empkyes at 7 "DRAWING INSTRUMENT SETS int Silver... 376 Yale & Tow ,, 31 Christmastime grows. | = ; : fat crt cles Tel 475 Peale an rts But . for’ all thé , excitement ni a : $475 To $3250 Jacobs o at Zenith Red ...125 |Wall Street, aad aoe : : ; : seem ta ust. leaving eir, oe - 3 if Sealed Is will shares jn a eS box. They may aled proposals will be received by the City RA to lots of Ii ecomondTO® AVERAGES check the newspapers each day to Clerk, City Hall, 35 S. Parke Street, Pontiac, DRAWING BOARDS 4 mpiled by The Associated Press) _ tid Ul 50 : So ogg te? 55° og [see df they have a paper profit or 187x24 $ prev. ages: Must Ralis Gui @tocks| a. paper. loss. For ‘the most part, ‘Michigan up to 4 oclock p.m. EST Monday, | Week, ago oi. 30 diss a8 ig 1 hewever, they are just sitting! October 27, 1958 for the sale of the following Year ace GET at eo 192.0 |tight. houses: French Curves—Triangles Ry BE BL Bt og eat mine vate ore wD 9g Daatag § Architect and Engineer Scot i --2 Story Frame r gineer ocaies $7 low +-226.0 782 66-2. 180.9 professional traders, but if so it’s 94 ou las t. ™ stes } IR LY j $ Noon ‘Tuesday. 2000 °1260° a60 19 6/only”a” small part of the public. | 8 . a in Booms compete Pantographs : : wold ason given is that if they. , 1% Seery F DETROIT STOCKS i s which have increased | ‘ory Frame : 5 ! (©. J. Nephier Co.) in market value this year as the 57 Seminole Ave. a6 x 40 and 29 x 28 , | Figures after decimal oe ase etghthe popular indexes climbed Ad new. . = Frame Gar. gei SLI DE RULES ww oon Allen Elec. & Equip. Co.* 22 23/highs, they would have a capital, B 3 Baldwin “anoer’ Co. 84 astlgain ‘on which to pay taxes. 68 S. Johnson Ave. 2 Story Brg 25 x 52 195 detain "TY "TA Another s that they would ave wit Te x tree Gare $195 To $2,600. Peningular M. Prod Co.* o . cash to be invested elsewhere— momen Bug Mtg Oe ane 8 t a ant bare Fak BE beet they Purchaser agrees to move or r wreck on or before Everything forthe | al 0 nm ’ ; record i Wayne 8. Products he 50 15 price too, ~. i . Decernber 15, 1958. Purchaser agrees to comply with’ oer = Raden, hs : a let Mbp seme — changed | all City regulations and ordinance. Purchase price "A horserace expert is one who change. Thi fiardpbitecog lan | may -be cash or terms, to be arranged. Relocation knows the day- before the race | volume since Dec, 31: when 5,070. | Of. the above houses to be outside - — Renewal 1 which horse must win; | the day!q99 were bought and. sold. _ . | Project: Area, “= after the n 4 patter race he knows exactly} But for all that, the 4,610,000 is , ; - ; ; 'why it didn’t... .“An Afnerican|only a smidgeon’ of the tumber | Dated October 13, 1958 \ E stablighed 1890 . Gee —— jpimaet ‘oh S$ | that could ‘have Paes The ex- | . DA x had co um more porti change lists 4,855,096,764 shares 4-05) the governihent thar to available for tradin : 8 A R EVANS, E Ss | City*Clerk ae ‘his wife’ and chitliren, \4-Earl] The exchange’s magazine points lout today that in the first, eight] a * . HE PONTIAC ‘PRESS, ‘TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1958 Seviie funds cannet be used in segregated emergency schooling at both Charlottesville and Front Royal in Warren County goes in- to effect Wednesday. Charlottesville to accommodate) ™* most of the 1,700 displaced white severely by the ruling, An emer- gency program planned for 1,015/* School had not gone into operation when: Pail’s decision came. Wayne Reports 18 New Cases of Polio “tay Waa Female 7| Work went Fema ul * * * U.S, Judge John Paul's ruling that schoolteachers out of Makeshift programs set up at pupils in that city were jolted “he * ‘ The private school organizations | 4 had a choice of .con- plus any who might wish to be released from their contracts, or closing down operations gether. alto- our rec bereavement he. los» of our bi and Aether, e thanks te Mw Y Rev, Dail Wallace for their fort- ae St. Joseph ‘tod ers tant pe Funeral a 4 “s HOMELIKE aTMOSPHERE™ OATS FUNERAL HOME Plains OR 3-175 Ors: Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME i tor erais” ARES GRIFPIN CHAPEL Betvice FE 2564) ‘| SABYSITTER BY DAY OR HOUR. - 5 Se. Be boving care, FE #1730. and! co! References 4-8380, BABYSITTING OF Lg gg Bapy SITTING Pg On NIGHT Seeteeenneiennmenamnneeael DAWTY Pag or needed th Pomtise and. sub FE 5-7605 oe ag “gf Sandy ae varttime Write 2 Pon- Giving age. expert 7 e FE . Available any art ta Legal or "general be hice, Aegon tiag §=Press FE 23761, ‘a poe broth- ELDERLY HOUSEKEEPER home and some wages. 23 Bitss.| PREE ROOM AND acd tight orn be . Seine FOR BOARD FOR child care Cab FE In Rochester. Call GIRL FOR GENERAL HOUSE- work and troning 2 days « week. |= OL 1-6666 — | MANDSCAPPED ogee FOR IN- teresting: tele’ Bonus & ‘mission Kendales Ww 6 Baginaw. OOM AND ARD Ex- eeping ~ ‘7343 ee WORK. RECENT raduate from Business — 18. 32-0541. Pega ot py deliver. TIZZY | © 1956 by WEA Servins, ine. TM. Reg US Pa On. “We really ought to take more interest in world affairs. had don't we start a Dag Hammarskjgid fan club?” _ by Kate Osann| Wed. Contracts, Mtgs. 32 Rent Apts. Furnished Pee 1s. Unturnished - wee : YOUR 2 &@ 3 RM APT. DOWNTOWN, ; re-| and ty r week Inquire 27 a iw, : Bon § "FHA or GI 286 CLOSE IN. G heat rE eden = * 2&3. PVT, BATH 890 ROB- &. i IP an Jr : 2% RM FIRST FLOOR PVT. : and ent. Newly decorated. ae < welcome Y cingeliville. one c 4 ae ; -. Close to schools, churches 3 aa AND BATH: PVT, EN chi 670 W. mason wince = *°5%9|" Usilities turn. $15 % week. FE| downtown. Save cn cs uote oe j RMS with BATH AND ,, &. CASH ent Basement apt. Child wel-|_ 102 B. Huron, PE ¢820¢. VAILABLE FOR LAND oN Pa ee oe per A papell et TRACTS § AyD OME Ee _&146i1 West side. Pull basement. 460 RT vecary | seein te, domsionn, PE but | CLEAN AST FLOOR 4 _closete,_nr_ downtown, PE 6.149%. JOHNSON jai aers ow Sew cs) Se Me ee . Copenwile Re HUPLEX isT FLOOR. 3 REALTOR | FE 425333 ATTRACTI M and Dath “ail ulllities paid. close Felegrach Rd = =: 3... Se t 106 Center. FE y RMS & BATH. erOvE, RE-| >-2390. gerator, gas tm. For ¢ . CASH 3 bake: bik rm. Until May Ist. a fot ‘water, 3 a 5-162 oF = : +8708. UNLIMITED Rusall “A. Nott, Realtor POR RENT sMALL APARTMEN*. For hag Poo gpewos ew oe. 208-1570 we. unfurnished or oartially furnished. ia all PE 43844 or|3} ROOMS ALL orarriek TAGE Getueetee wd Uvien ake Stes PE 6, ask for Ted Mecul 4 iyem