Let Us Give Thanks .« « That we may then unite*in most
Mts offering eur prayers and sup-
plications to the great Lord and Ruler
of Nations, and béseech Him to par-
don our national and ‘other tran sgres-
sions; to enable ts all, ‘whether in. pub-
lic or. private stations, to perform our
several and ‘elative duties properly
and punctually : to render our National
Government a blessing to all the people
by constantly being a Government of best.” wise, just and constitutional laws; dis- -
creetly and faithfully executed. and
obeyed to protect and guide all sov-
ereigns and nations and to bless them
with. good governments, peace, and
concord; to promote the knowledge and
practice of true religion and virtue,
and the increase of science.among them
and us; and, generally, to grant unto
all ‘mankind such a degree of temporal
prosperity ‘as. He alone knows to be
sh
+3 Peep be =i sha: a 4
+>
bod te, aE ies, Wee, it “Yee 26, 195820 PAGES © ee
*h J eapaicpn We ee
ad
‘Smashing Vietacy at. Polls ee
Pe
Kettering. Dies at Dayton Home of From Our News Wires i]
DAYTON,, Ohio — Tribute. was! paid today td Charles F, Ketter-|
ing, 82, world-famed inventor and|
philanthropist . who . died “at his home near here yesterday of a
cerebral hemorrhage. : died at 2:43 p.m. (Pontiag time).
suffered since Sunday night,
ee
116 Per Gent UF Drive’ old
Triumph for Community This entire community owes an €verlasting ‘débt of grati.
hundred’ . of ‘ spirited and determined workers who handled the Pontiac Area United Fund Drive for 1958. 116 per-cent. of the goal. is an tude to Philip J. Monaghan and the
all-time record here.
This victory is ‘a triumph.
The entire community thrills,
* * *
In the past 12 months, business in local retait and manufacturing cireles could hardly be characterized as “brisk.” All fund officials have been keenly aware of
this as they are part of the business life of the community
themselves. .. Wht
Hence, the 1088 ‘tandtniged was approached with more | actual hope than bonafide confidence. Early returns were discouraging and it look.as though the big drive might be
Socouneny insurmountable obstacles.
: GRR ow ;
‘However, it merely proved to be a double shetiaage
to the workers for they dug in as they tiever have before;
and what happened thereafter falls under the heading
of a modern miracle. It was a community tfiumph with
men and women giving the drive all they bad,
a... =...
Everyone is proud.
Campaign Chairman Philip-J. Monaghan complimented
the huge corps of workers unstintingly, “It was. a.tremen-
cous victory,” said he, “and gives a pig lift to the whole area.”
lving. Foor can have a real Thank
He never regained consciousness
from. the second of two strokes
t ijresearch, electro-therapy, ad.
vanced research in fields that aid-| ‘ “Boss Ket,’" ashe was affec- i Friday in Dayton Criss an 9 tionately known {o thousands, /pal Chureh,. with burial. at Wood-| Up $235,000 Over. ‘58;' la nd Cemetery here.
from 9 a.m: to: 72:30 p.m. Friday
at the, Dayton Engineeting Club
Called the last of thé auto in-
exectitive with a wrench,” the |
General Motors board member |
and former Vice president was
best known for his invention of |
the automobile self. starter.
improve things accounted for more
Related Stories
Pages 2, 3
than 200 . patents,
sion auto.engine, improved auio-|
motive finishes, freon refrigerant,
two-cycle diesel engines.and an)
artificial, fever therapy device.
NOT REAL RETIREMENT
Expressions of grief at the death
of the kindly geniug who began
life as a'chore boy on his father's
farm
from far and wide.
head of General Motors research
laboratories on June 2, 1947 was
announced, most of his friends
stilted knowingly.
“Only deaths will bring retire-
ment to ‘BoSs' Ket,’’ they ‘said.
, find they were right,
” Kettering kept busy — in cancer
other peientife areas, The ‘body willbe on view trom) noon until 9. p.m. tomefrow andj
dustry’s “siahertos feniuses, an
|
Never content... with things as;
they «were, his constant search to
including the:
electrically-operatéd cash register, |
tetraethyl Jead, the high compres- |
ar Loudonville, Ohio, came jo.
When Kettering’s retirement as
ed medical s¢ience and numerous! / Record Budget
of $5,919,250
of $5 Million Seen
| ‘By PETE LOCHBILER
AS ‘tec6rd - operating
‘budget. of $5,919,250 for
1959 Was accepted for study
Jast night. by the City Cém-
mission.
A public hearing was
days before passage of the
1959 budget is due.
In submitting the budget, City
Manager Walter K, Willman said
that it amounts to $235,000* more
tha Ye. 1958 budget.
tt ‘48 designed to maintain the
are tax rate of $13.27 for
rh $1,000 assessed valuation
ding the city’s assessed val-
Beconed a oni ~ ence against @ background of re-|wrestie first-hand with technical|intervals he worked on a ; ee
ports trom Gort, that tee ER pretions ayes ‘became strong ewoucr wi BOrKlay Student Says = ree Western v . m : veloped a plan for firm common} , He was never content with |aliow him to retum to his studies. | dete: a
atone prevent Weir USE| insatiable desire to improve upon | In 1906 af the age af 88, Ketter. |p Killed Roommate *
— o everything was his gre ing received the degree of ‘
The Berlin reports, un-| Saeet, patented OM es tee (Continued From Page One) named diplomatic did} Gangling Boss Ket was as much’ sity. Legend says be threw away | favorite food and volt drink es: hood
tow far they would go ih meeinglot a car as be was tn. s Dish] Consider his education completed. | Gale gndeate nn? ame The diploma may have been! Neitling’s body, face down on a
tion to turn over its occupation|smeared with dirt and grease as|merely lost but no one could deny|blood-soaked bed, was found
<
ies there East Germanihe launched a personal assault on|that Kettering’s education was/Farl Sehi, owner of the College
eae . » peta 3 still incomplete. Tavern. Sehi went to rouse the
The United States has repeated-| A kindly but intense man, Ketter- Roe 8 boys for an 8 a.m. class when he
| ly declared during the past two Although the list of honorary] didn’t see them earlier, : weeks that it intends to stand "degrees, medals, awards, citations.) notective Set, John Ware. said firm on its ‘AS an oCcUpE- 1 certificates and honorary and life|mamiery told this story:
tion power in West Betis, © poscICAUICN S@FVICES [memberships "he Tater” receiveg|Fiantery told this wary: tion“ shared with Britain and)" Lis almost five pages, they do Dotlt have a job mopping floors: in the France. led begin to symbolize the lmowledge | ostaurant and. when t-came home : x * * : U Kettering gained and distributed! tung other boys the job of their to the world after his graduation, |” “7 doing al | But there have been widespread 4 Instead of going through -the evidences of among; (Continued From Page One) | ‘went{if, the Soviet
the Western governments, inelis-| tundy tap refugnes and other im igh an upstairs window, | Tom many, over the tactics to be fol- pevertehed gremrs
Catholies are asked to contribute
10 million pounds of “good used| th
clothing” to be shipped overseas, Vs
iy Hi ii Mi E
scribed by qualified officials as| Protestants will give to “Share
ready if necessary to deal with|OQur Surplus” program which pro- East German ae at| vides for the distribution costs of
traffic control . This wie farm commodities given
be done on the that
as agents of the. Soviets. ; x* * *
Allied officials reportedly will be celery, |escaped with dollars worth agreed on a secret plan to coun- bread andiof quarters. ter any East German attempt ) 0 to help f- prisoners GORDON MUTCH exercise Por = : 9 epital)”: of mince Service for Gi Mutch, 58, Sources say tp theese Waeevn ) ' : Germany. which) ; : ) Emmons &t., will be held Germany to replace the Soviet Use| ne , exgoutive of], the la a wiaael th 2 Pam Bety’ gh the Manley ion in the four-power Allied air| . The Waterford Township High |then privately Delco, that| , “I get wp and sat dows at my Then win| Seley Funeral Home, Burial will safety center in West Berlin,| Seheel 4 Cappella Choir will sing | Kettering the Tat clan] Re, wee Minking Set ta of chic-| 02,12 el Cemetery, Troy which controls ajp tattle in and] $f Ge 30 om. service Trenks: trical starting, ond tguition) OE mr chest og eee the hasettal bende , Monday at St ae es Cauren, Wallace Turser, @ mom, credited with @ large part in) “1 don't know why, but I picked! ew yore (UPD—Murray L. | Pervice Ph Posie Bn soni ped The West would simply run the] <0" Gamoordla Seninery: tn (1 re cae "land started’ beating, him vets akg Setnleder drew a $5 fine. tor * scl wee todava| eat of ome Gall Oe nk at . : started beating him with the §
eee yen Under Ketioriug's guidance, Del-| “The Butt end smashed and then| fe, Memes ge reneuate HV | Oo the water Gapertmeal, —— en ae Be | would be given cleapance to fly| The Rev. Ralph C. Claus, pastor, seteeda he emer of. the sad ith the ‘barrel Ted ewer have been going too fast be- |°Perate on their own revenues. the oe ).
along the three air corridors link-| will_spead on “Give Us This Day! guided missile, during World War woke up, but he made a wort of cause “I was holding on to the | The sewage budget was estimat- a ae ing West Germany with Berlin. |Our Daily Bread” at the 10 a.m./r ang conducted research which led| sound.” wheel with only one hand and I jed at $315,528 and the water bud-| Also on the evening menu will | . ~ * * Thursday in St. Trinity Lutheran'tg development of tetraethy! lead, | ° was playing the harmonica with |get at $559,460, beth figures about|be pickles, bread, butter, coffee, 3 Within range of the corridors| Church. . ¢ the anti-knock substance which 4 since, by his daughter’s report, | Choirs will sing “The Prayer of * « surprise. or whe pe remain November 30 | he inadvertently dunked an un- | Thanksgiving’ at 10 a.m. Thursday Irons offered these suggestions wary ot éecedil traffie is : . ; i
clasped four-in-hand necktie he |in Orchard Lake Community to drivers seuare red » to ap- 4:00 P M i was wearing in a plate of soup |Church, Presbyterian. The Rev. First, make sure your car is in Coan very intersection, every . * |
several years ago. Edward D. Auchard, pastor will top mechanical condition so it will pny bicyclist, or traffic me preach on “Forget Not All His not fail you in anemergency. | SM BE eget 7 Benefits.” _ ap gf Aan: hee bg te pega tte = act wey ay - a
The Weather At 6:30, 7:30 and 8:30 tomor- travel with the prevailing tective driving,” bs : row morning, Mass will be said flow. Don't. averdrive of under- cluded. : Full U. §. Weather Buresa Report in St. Hugo of the Hills, Bloom- drive. When possible, keep to sec- | powriec AND ‘VICINITY—Temper- field Hills. ondary - roads for . B atures will —- Regd —<—. Poe sd 2 . Alw: ays é
tonight 77 podiree cold through Fri-| A family service is scheduled will stop
day. for 9:30 tomorrow morning in St. mum stopping dis i Teday in Pontiac Andrew's Episcopal Church, Wa- you and the car ahead. on temperature preceding § 4.m. terford Township, This ‘af a }
At @ a.m: Wind velocity $0 m.p.b.| “The Open Hand of God” is the y hour Direction—West. : length for each 10 miles per sets’ Wednesday at 6:03 p.m. theme of the sermon. by the Rev. of your car’ speed This allows aun rises Thursday at ico. Arvid E. Anderson at 10 a.m. for Mesa. distance’ Steen toes Wetnens as ot Ot pe Thanksgiving Day in Christ Luth- con te aad tie to you and } benutoun Sopewsiarss eran Church. Four choirs of the the driver behind you if he should \ $ om....---0.. 3 item deaieienieee 3¢| congregation will sing the tradi- 5 his ing : PemecccccM Barc Bi)tional Netherlands folk melody, ieee cee en Plan to Attend ee 28 “The Song of Thanksgiving.” 16 bik scc ces; 29 : nant at this time of the year when ' Tuesday in Pontiac Holy Communion will be cele- road conditions begin to worsen ° (As peear eed downtown) brated at 8 a.m, in All Saints The road or highway with just The Annual Union i
Lowest. temperature ...05....405.,39_ | Episcopal Church. The Thanksgiv- occasional patches. of ice is far ean lempereture tereccgaceeesee...3@.5/ing Festival service is scheduled more dangerous than a completely Th + -/ e "Weather—Rain, for 10 a.m. with the Rev, David weed tas ank giving rvice me i One Year Ace in Pontiac K. Mills speaking.
Uoeest temperature 0 | On Thanksgiving morning, Dr. ’ OD ceveceeess
| Mean temperatur CM | Harold C, DeWindt, minister, wil agp gah ee 10 A. M. ; 4 a preach at 9:30 on “The At ' eal , io a ; ii. name Bot tO Teace TO of Gratitude.” tn the Kirk in the Sy cake St ee bate ewe oer Central Methodist Church et __ Fesstay's Temperotere Chart |The Rev. B. J. Jarzembowski, romans: vi ty 10k Wiles HURON at NORTH PERRY ry pastor, will preach on “Rendering teiek 0 : . : Thanks at the 1 am. Mass to san poner psa THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27th.
Wert South boulevard at Bagley | _ NS PF°7C"'y and in Plenty of time] © Guest Speaker: i ae DIXON, Jr. ‘ Mas on : 6 re _ Retioe, Press Phote atop by. n PRESIDENT, PONTIAC PASTOR ASSOCIATION brated at 6:45, 8 and 9 am. in 40B WELL DONE -- More than 125 Pontiac (center), campaign chairman, are William i Sl ys Bm 3 : i iB. Band ne and st 7:15.) area United Fund workers ‘yesterday received Hartman (left), immediate past president of ‘the Keep a frequent check: eis one of these Indian “oscars” for exceeding their UF, and Leonard’ T. Lewis, president of the traffic by glancing in service . quotas in the 1958 UF drive during a victory United Fund. Monaghan received his trophy for | view mirror. wa be 22 apg “luncheon at the Pontiac Elks Temple. Here, ad- leading thé current campaign over the top, with Above all, never take another anbrook. miring the one ave to Philip J. Monaghan 116.5 per cent of the —— / | saaheciaty tekamiione tox qviaben Sponsored by the Pontiac. Pastor Association’
THE OFFE! ING st aE ; Di Le
| 4 \ af} "EA; ait "|
. 7
= ae oe é ae ele ee y : jos :
Be
é Ses I : ; ‘
S, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1958
a ‘
Thanksgiving services
church of their choice to again fi a quartet will pre participate,
FOUR TOWNS
A special] 11 a.m. service will be
held tomorrow at the Marantha
Baptist Church, 1520 Petrolia.
x* « *
“God’s Blessing to Us” will be
the title of Pastor S. A. Munroe’s
A’ Union Thankagiving service
will be held at 8 p.m. tonight at
the First Congregational Church.
The Rev. Hays Wiltshire of the
First Baptist Church, will deliver
A special service will also be
held tonight at 8 at the St. Paul's
Lutheran Church,
ROCHESTER
The Thanksgiving service at
Gethsemane Lutheran Church on
Auburn road near Dequindre road
will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow,
J. Douglas Parker, minister of
St. Paul’s Methodist Church, will
be the speaker for the annual
United Thanksgiving Service to be
held tonight at St. Agapciy Epis-
copal Church.
ae x =
The Protestant churches have
combined their efforts to hold a
united service for Thanksgiving.
The Rev. Edgar Lucas will be the
host pastor.
St. Phillip’s Chancel Choir will
provide the music.
Treasurer Oming
Examination Hits
Another Snag
MOUNT CLEMENS — The ex-
amination of ousted base gr
Township
Reason given by the Macomb
County prosecuting attorney’s of-
fice for the second adjournment
was to allow a Detroit firm to com-
plete its audit of township books.
The examination was to be held
at 11 a.m. today in Macomb Coun-
ty Justice Court, Mount Clemens.
Clarkston Gets State OK
on $1 Million for School
CLARKSTON — The Clarkston
Community School District plans
to borrow a one-million dollar gen-
eral obligation bond issue, part of
a mye of $2,500,000 authorization,
* for construction of a new high
school,
Approval by the state municipal
finance commission was given yes-
terday,
2 Jat birth. However, within the last
another toe has grown gust
noon wedding. was held at
Christ Lutheran Church,
Waterford, *
Jailed Brothers
Admit Thetts
in Romeo Area
ROMEO — Twin brothers from
Detroit now serving time in Ma-
thefts of gasoline in the Romeo
area, State Police reported today.
sheriff's deputies and then sen-
itenced last week. One of the
thefts with which they were
charged occurred at the Romeo
Community Schools bus garage.
Latest crimes admitted by the
Hoseclaw brothers all happened
within the last three weeks, but
none of them had been reported.
Most of the gas was taken from
cars, police said.
The two were accompanied by
a younger Detroit boy on their gas
stealing spree. He was turned
over to juvenile authorities.
Suet Box on Stove
Sets Fire to House
ROMEO — A box of suet placed
on an oil stove blazed up yester-
day, and set fire to the house
owned by George Baher at 1700
N. Rochester Rd., eight miles west
of here.
* * *
The fire damaged the wall, ceil-
ing, floor and two chairs and cov-
ered the interior with a greasy
smoke film. The Romeo fire de-
partment extinguished the blaze.
Frank Frith, who rents the
house, told Romeo State Police his
brother Don had taken the five
pounds of suet inside and then
left for work.
* * *
He said he was working in the
yard when a neighbor called him
to tell him his house was on fire.
No damage estimate has been
made yet.
\Arbiters Ready
comb County Jail for larceny yes-|'
terday admitted seven additional |*-
‘Ann Arbor, Jackson, Bay City, in Paper Strike No New Negotiations
Scheduled on 8-City
News Shutdown:
DETROIT (#—Federal and state
mediators stood by today for pos-
sible aid in Michigan’s newspaper
strike in eight cities,
However, no new negotiations
were on schedule,
* * *
The nine papers—two in Grand
Rapids—faced a second day of no
publication in the walkout of the
International Typographical Union.
The ITU began its strike Mon-
day night in a contract. dispute
with Booth Newspapers, —Inc.,
which represents the nine daily
newspapers,
* * *
The strike has cut off the cir-
culation of half a million papers
in a wide area of Southern Mich-
igan. Detroit is not affected.
* * *
Stuart Kelly of the U. S, Labor
Conciliation Service and Leonard
Bennett of the State Labor Media-
tion Board kept in touch with both
management and the union.
Wage and fringe benefits were
reported included in the points of
di between Booth
Newspapers and the ITU.
* * *
The ITU also is on strike at three
other Michigan papers in Ypsilanti,
Irori* Mountain and Escanaba. All
three have continued to publish,
however,
x *« *
Booth management said that in
nearly every struck plant yester-
day other mechanical unions did
not cross the ITU’s picket lines.
Editorial and business office
employes were kept at work ex-
cept at the Grand Rapids Her-
old. The American Newspaper
Guild local at the Herald respect-
ed picket lines.
* x. *
The papers — in Grand Rapids,
Flint, Kalamazoo, Muskegon and
Saginaw—employ a total of about
1,900 persons. Between 600 and 700 John Walker of West Bloomfield | each of its four feet, and mother al. hs sie dal oo ba Stk Mrs. Walker explained. } Helly who was born on Christ-
Sees
own. ‘ Spankie’s grandmother, a pure-
bred Persian, had six toes on
Pontiac Press Phote
EIGHT-TOED CAT — ‘petal has the best understanding of
any cat in the feline world, according to his owners, Mr .and Mrs.
Township. The pet has recently
sprouted another toe on his right front foot, making a total of 25
toes on four feet. Normal cats have five toes on each paw.
Goodfellows
ROCHESTER — The Rochester,
Brooklands Goodfellows have set a
$2,500 goal to aid the needy chil-
dren in this area, The groups will
sell newspapers Friday and Sat-
urday and 2,000 special Rochester
editions of the Pontiac Press will
be included in the sale.
The Ben Jones Goodfellow Paper
sale is a tradition organized by the
late Ben Jones and carried on for
thirty years by himself and some
volunteers from church groups.
The annual children’s Christmas
party and baskets for needy fami-
lies are made possible each year
from the paper sale,.
The Metropolitan Club made
up of firemen, police, postal’ +m-
ployes and volunteers has carried
on the work for a number of
years and this year’s sale will
provide the annual party for 300
underprivileged children.
Fire Chief George Ross and
John Albertson are cochairmen of
the paper sale with Brooklands
_|Fire Chief Harold Graves assist-
ing. The annual Christmas dinner
will be held December 20 at 1:30
p.m. in the Rochester Junior High
School cafeteria.
Santa Claus will arrive in Roch-
ITU members are on strike, ester for the Lions Club Christmas Paper Sales
Will Help Needy Children: parade on Dec. 6 and take up his
headquarters in the former War-
field Paint Co. store at 325 Main
St.
: x & &
Chief Ross has announced that
headquarters for the Goodfellow
salesmen will be at the Rochester
Fire Hall and Brooklands Fire Sta-
tion on East Auburn road. Police
Chief Sam Howlett will take names
of needy families in the area.
Teachers of the Rochester Commu-
nity Schools will select the chil-
dren who will attend the annual
dinner,
Two Pontiac Women
Flag Down Wrong Car
Two Pontiac women in search
of male companionship last night
flagged down the-wrong car,
In the auto were Pontiac Pub-
‘He Safety Director George D.
mas has seven toes on her front
paws.
Ever since the arrival. of the
Walker family — and mother cat —
moved to the Twin Beach sub-
SPECIALS Week Ending Dec. 6
SPORT SHIRTS
54¢
CURTAINS
99¢wp
“Tm net
Eman
CLEANERS
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Open Fri., Sat, ‘til 9 SHIRTS—5 for $1.19 undered,
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822 NORTH PERRY ST.
AT EAST BOULEVARD
has acquired a reputation of being
full of seven-toed cats.
“Everybody wants one of Holly's
kittens — and she has them by the
dozen,"" Mrs. Walker said,
So far; the cat has had more
than 50 kittens in-her three years
of existence, and about 40 have
been born with seven toes on the
two front feet.
Holly has taught her son
Spankie how to take advantage
of his big paw by pulling the
lower cupboard door open, where
One time, Holly brought home a
baby rabbit and reared the young
one to maturity. This demonstrated
her powerful mother instinct early
in life.
Just how long Spankie’s mother
will continue to produce many-
toed offspring is anybody's guess.
One thing is certain. By next
spring Spankie will have a new lit-
ter of brothers and sisters with at
least 24 toes each, ‘‘and this is no
cat-tale,"” Mrs. Walker concluded.
X-Way Accident Fatal
DETROIT #™ — William Bar-
ringer, 60, of suburban Grosse
Pointe Farms, died last night of
car crash on the Edsel Ford Ex-
pressway. te Eastman; Capt. Oliver H. Le-
meaux, head of the Uniform Pa-
trol Bureau; Detective Richard
Evans, vice squad head; and Lt.
Donny Ashley and Sgt, Raymond
E, Meggitt, both former mem-
bers of the vice squad,
Both women were arrested on
a charge-of accosting,
Brennan Sets Sights
on: Township Post
FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP —
Joseph T. Brennan, Farmington
Township attorney, announced to-
day that he wil] be a candidate
for township supervisor in the com-
ing spring elections.
Brennan,. who lives at 29549
Eastfield Ave. with his wife and
two daughters, will be running on
the Republican ticket.
x * *
The candidate is a practicing a“
torney and a graduate of the Uni-
versity of Detroit Law School. He
has been a township resident for
three years. .
The primary election for this and
other supervisory posts will
be held Feb. 16. Deadline for nom- inating petitions is Dec. 29.
NEXT
THE BUSINESS INSTITUTE WINTER TERM
STARTS :
Day, Half-Day and Evening Sessions
VETERAN APPROVED
Business Administration
Junior and Higher Accounting :
Gregg Shorthand English
Speedwriting Shorthand
Business Psychology Dictaphone
Typewriting § ~Comptometef
Other Subjects Are Available
“Call at School — HOURS: —
7 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac finial ype"
or Phone |< ‘ ‘oon aa Pe
PE 23551 * WEEK
: Monday and Thureday
pes
$
S
n
c in 87 A good host shows his true colors
when he serves
a liven byes
in the
use”
lands
} eae’ Ne. 1410
#370
; Sar No, 1413
WMPORTED IN BOTTLE FROM CARADA BY HIRAM WALKER IMPORTERS, it.. DETROIT, MICH. BLENDED CANADIAN ¥ * 4 Pit ? eS Tee injuries suffered Friday in a two-|
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ask themselves:
And to the happy family it means the sharing of worship,
too. Nothing brings a family closer than going to church
~ together. It’s a wonderful, complete experience .
to share, not only at se ae but forever. At this joyous yet solemn time of the year, people may
“What/makes a family?” A wise man
once replied: “The sharing of a lifetime of experience.”
_ And no one can question the truth of his statement.
A family is the many, many things you share toggther:
holidays and birthdays, laughter and tears, vacations and
picnics and parties and family-legends.
* . one a
: § Being Available
| } When Needed,
We Will Be
| Open Thursday, t “ 4 -
If there were only three women
left in the world, two would be off
somewhere talking about the third
. .. A Man has reached middie
age when he knows that the pain
he feels in his back isn't merely
in his mind. ~Eart Wilson.
In Line With Our
Policy of Always
| November 27...
THANKSGIVING DAY
as Well as All Holidays from
RESCRIPTIONS
IFESSTON ALLY : RC : P its
R
ROPERLY
RICED
PERRY DRUGS FE 2-050 East Bivd., Cer. Perry ee 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.
PRESCRIPTIONS
t stop on: Squant s* %
Amenice wos the island of ‘Moahe- | %
in off Eth _coast.of: ‘Maine: =F a
return: to:
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Hal Boyle Says:
NEW YORK (AP)—Panning tel-
‘evision is a popular indoor sport
jteday—-among critics at, the type-
iwriter ag well as critics on the
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There is no doubt that televi-
sion has been a disappointmnt in
several ways.
It hasn't cured the common
cold. It hasn't solved the problem
of unemployment. It hasn't made
ithe masses wealthy, or been a
notable influence in increasing the
span of human life. It is even
‘questionable whether it has made
|most people drink more beer or
brush their teeth oftener,
| * *
These facts naust be faced fairly
jin any honest assessment of tele-
ivision’s role in creating the bet-
ter way of life and a more cul-
tured race. Alas, it is all too true.
Perfection has not come out of
jthat one-eyed Pandora's box in
the living room.
On the other hand, in its own
imperfect way television has done
430 Orchard Lake jconsiderable good. And while in
FE $6159" our. housé every member of the
family has considered throwing)
out our set, at one time or an-
SPECIALIZED SERVICE other, we never have quite got
around to doing it.
eT. V. * * * e HIFI = penne We are even hcerage
ing buying a new set—that is,
e TAPE RECORDERS we can sell the one we have to a
# RECORD CHANGERS useum as an antique,
e P. A. SYSTEMS oe have changed consider-
e RADIOS ably since that far day, 10 years
ago, when a TV set was a novelty
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‘were higher in October. The trans-
‘portation group was
ad Britain's H-Test Site
' visit Christmas Island — Britain's
|H-bomb island in the Pacific—on
ihis Far East tour next year, Buck-
jingham Palace said today.
jing will be going on,’
jace spokesman,
/3 and 4.”
italks on a general suspension of
ian announcement of a new blast to jthose earnings‘ fell
son was shorter working hours
ibelow the September record high. Critics of television complain
against it not so much for what
it is, as for what they feel it could
be.
* * x
They feel it should take more
positive stands on vital issues; and
be a more powerful cultural force.
Frankly, we can't go along with
them on this. We feel that in our
house there already are too many
powerful cultural forces operating,
and certainly al] the powerful,
stands on vita] issues we need.
We are not certain at all that
we want to convert our living,
room either into a permanent lec-! ture hall or a public forum. There
are many evenings in which we
prefer to be entertained, rather
than be big-brothered by some
pundit who is sure he knows the
only true answer to the future.
* * * .
Nor do we care too often to
have our young daughter reply,
when a neighbor kid knocks on
the door while the TV set is show-
ing a brain operation, “Come
back later, Joe. We're in sur- gery.”
As entertainment goes, - however,
we find TV's present. bill-of-fare
pretty satisfying, By and large, there's something
for everybody.
* * *
My wife likes a good drama, I
like the children’s programs, our
daughter likes the gory Westerns,
and our eat cries real tears over
“Lassie.” We no longer have to
trudge through the winter snow
to see a second-rate movie. On a
recent weekend 23 films were
scheduled on TV channels in the
New York area,
I was able only to watch 12 my-
self, and two of them weren’t half
bed. You can take that any way
you want to. -}that serious-minded
absorbing have a cultural impact
in our home, too. All I have to do
to cure my Sunday afternoon in-
somnia is to tune in on some such
topic as, “Whither the Hydrogen
Bomb," or ‘“‘Fear Versus Freud,”
and stretch -out on the couch.
Morpheus and peace arrive mo-
ments later, and I rise refreshed.
As that fellow in the cereal com-
mercial says, “‘When you've got a
good thing, let it alone.”
LS SSSI S-
A Ms: OUTLETN 257 Saginaw St. We Give Gold Bell Stamps FE 27755 [f
ee ag
TTT i? yi
Those vital discussion programs |
people find so
x*- *- *
What's wrong with television?
Let's not improve it to death.
Cost of Living
Stays Same Figures During October
Are Unchanged From
August, September
WASHINGTON (AP) — Living
costs as measured by the govern-|
ment ‘remained unchanged in
October,
The Labor Department reporied
yesterday its consumer price index
held steady at 123.7 per cent of
the 1947-49 average, This is the
same as in August and September.
The peak was 123.9 in July.
In October, food prices aver-
aged '% to 1 per cent lower than
in Sectamber but prices of most}
other goods and services aver-
aged higher,
* * *
Because of the relatively steady
living cost level the last three
months, there will be no adjust-
ment in pay rates for nearly one
million workers in the auto and
related industries whose labor
contracts call for quarterly ud-
justments based on the govern-
ment index,
Spendable earnings of factory
workers and the buying power of
in October
from a September peak, The rea- due to labor strikes in the auto,
fabricated metals and machinery
industries.
After federal tax deductions the
take-home pay of the factory
worker with three dependents was
$76.58 a week in October; that of
the single worker $69.14,
Each figure is about 85 cents
Consumer costs for transporta-
tion, medical care and appare:
intluenced
primarily by a 4.2 per cent in-
crease in the cost of new cars as
higher price tags on 1959 models
outweighed slight declines in deal-
er prices for new 1958 models.
* * *
In the food group eggs, pork,
poultry and apples were all lower
but beef was higher,
Prince Philip to Visit
LONDON \®—Prince Philip will
“We do not know whether test-
’ said a pal-
“but the prince
|will certainly inspect installations
lon the island. He is due there April
No test has been scheduled re-
cently, partly due to East-West
inuclear testing. But Britain is
under no obligation not to test and
coincide with the prince's visit WASHINGTON (UPI)—An envoy
of President George Washington
told the Seneca Indians in 1794 that
“as long as the moon rises, the
grass is green, the river flows and
the sun shines this land is yours
until you choose to sell it."’
The moon still rises, the grass
is still green and the sun still
shines. But the U.S. Court of
Appeals told the Indians today that
Congress wants to build a dam
across thé river. So they must give
up their land.
* * *
The court ruled the government
can go ahead with a dam that
would flood most of a Seneca
reservation on the Allegheny
River despite a 1794 treaty in
| which the United States promised
“never to claim” their lands,
The flood control dam _ near
Kinzua, Pa., is designed to protect
Pittsburgh. The reservation i
about 12 miles upstream in New
York State and much of it would
be flooded by the resulting lake.
The Indians cited the treaty
signed by President Washington
which they said pledged the United
States never to disturb the Senecas
in the use of their lands.
* * *
But both sides agreed in recent
court arguments that Congress can
unilaterally break an Indian treaty
and that Indians are subject to
land condemnation with just com-
pensation the same as anyone else.
Judges Henry W. Edgerton,
Wilbur K, Miller and Walter M.
Bastian said the only issue was
whether Congress specifically
n
Expanding Men
Bring Problems
for Acoustics
NEW YORK ®—The experts on
male dimensions claim the expan-
sion is causing some peculiar trou-
bles.
* * *
Trouble, of all things, for people
who build auditoriums.
They have to put in bigger
seats, the seats take up more
floor space, the more floor space
pushes the walls back and what
do you think? That hexes the
acoustics. That's right, acoustics,
All this came to light in planning
for a new center of performing
the auditorium have been bogged
down for months because of the|#!
problem. Seats used to measure|fi
about 18 or 19 inches in width.
Now 22- to 24-inchers are needed,
* x
news today except for the women-
folk. They're sitting out on this dis-
would surprise few here, space than they. used to.
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We Get nid
AT ALL DRUG STORES
U.S. Breaks Indian Treaty
in Order to Construct Dam intended to revoke the treaty in |
authorizing the Kinzua dam.
Congress did not mention the
treaty in so many..words. But the
judges held unanimously that hear-
ings before congressional commit-
tees showed that Congress knew
the Seneca lands were to be
flooded.
They quoted Sen. Irving M. Ives
(R-NY) as saying in Senate de-
legal right to do what is proposed.
But what distresses me is the
moral responsibility we have.”
Edward E. O'Neill, attorney for
the Indians, said he probably would
take the case to the Supreme Court.
“The Seneca council has au-
thorized me to fight this thing to
the end, and the end is the member Seneca nation live on the
reservation.
workers and many are skilled steel-
workers who travel about the
country working on bridges and
high dams,
bate that ‘“‘the government has the| .
will flood most of the usable part
of their reservation, leaving them
only the steep valley hillsides. But
the government told the court that
not all the valley lowlands would
be flooded. It said some would be
under water only once every 100
years during extreme floods. Supreme Court,”’ he said. “If
this stands, no Indian treaty is
worth the paper it’s written on.
They’re all out the window.” ~
About 700 members of the 3,600-
Some are railroad
* * *
The Indians say the Kinzua dam
Truck Breaks Loose
at Bridge in Detroit
DETROIT (AP) — Truck driver
Jack Verdegall parked his big
tractor-trailer at the Detroit end
of the Ambassador Bridge linking!
Detroit and Windsor, Ont., to get
customs clearance.
_* * *
When police and Verdegall re-
turned to the truck, the vehicle
had knocked down a row of mov-
able traffic signs, taken a money
exchange booth from its founda-
tion, ruined a fire plug, smashed
through’ a fence and stopped an
inch short of ramming the side of a
* & *
Police said the Canadian truck
driver apparently forgot to set the
brakes.
Just Can’t Make It
MIDLAND, Tex. (AP)—Kiwanis
Club President Phil Jonsson arose
at an annual banquet to present
awards to members with perfect
attendance records for the year.
The first five members he namied
were absent. =
Escape Hymns
of the prisoners sang ‘‘Power Is
in the Blood’ but not Donald
Smith.
his ears stuffed with cotton, play-
ing cars.
gery charge, had protested his
constitutional rights were being
violated by having to listen to ser-
mons and hymns each Tuesday
~| night.
with the cotton.
the leader of the services.
shouted from his cell.
shouted, “] should have played the
jack,” and retired to a corner
where he held his hands over his
cotton-plugged ears. ‘Prisoner Cannot
TV Good or Bad?--It’s All in the Viewpoint Sor ara =|
NOW!
Thru FRI,
FGI BRIT" .
~ Se PHILIPS
2
2 ~ COLOR by DE LUXE
CINEMAScOoPE
Though He Tries
OROVILLE, Calif. (AP)—Some
He sat in the Butte County jail, STARTS THURSDAY 1:30
CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS
eect tnaisieteepeneaenaiemennneaneememmenaneenemenemmnnenenineetnniinmemenmmmmeneeniammeennenneninenmniaimnaaial
SPECIAL THANKSGIVING MATINEE THURSDAY
NO TIME for
SERGEANTS. | veteran”
* * *
Smith, awaiting trial on a for-
The jailer provided Smith, 25,
It didn’t work.
x« * *
“We can't sing very well,” said
“You can’t sing -at all,” Simth
He finally threw down his cards,
arts here. Seating specifications for |}
And that's the news behind the|f i
cussion — and in somewhat less | ce
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