4 The Weather 
8S. Weather Burese Ferecast 
Warmer 
(Details Page *) ‘C37 
_ THE PONTIAC PRESME IVER PAE   
Nth YEAR kkk kk UNITED: PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS Re 
  
= 
. 
EP Seal S86 Ae Se ROR RE SEES EE GER A? RRO LEE: 
| $9.992.59-—-That’s 
| Compensation! a ARNOT il et   
A Pontiac Motor Division worker, laid off due to the 
steel strike, walked out of the Michigan Employment 
Security Commission office yesterday nearly $10,000 
richer-—or at least it looked like it on paper. 
LaVern D. Morris, a differential inspector, had in 
his pocket an unemployment compensation check for 
$9,992.59— about $9,906 more than he was supposed io 
draw. 
Morris, 2379 Archdale St., Union Lake, gets $86 
compensation every two weeks for himself, his wife 
and their two children. 
Morris said he didn’t notice the amount listed on 
the check when he received it. Apparently the state clerk 
who issued the payment didn’t check it either. 
It was later yesterday, while standing in the sup- 
plementary unemployment compensation, line at work, 
that Morris first saw the amount on the check. 
° Jf * * * 
He had to return to the MESC’s Oakland avenue ~ 
office, draw a new check—for $86 this time—and return 
to Pontiac Motor to file for his sub-benefits. 
Paul Kimball, branch manager for the MESC, was ¥ 
puzzled over the error briefly. Then it was recalled that 
1 
gy 
2 gaestame 
song 
cae 
sii PES 
RO 
RR 
oes 
% 
the account number agsigned to Pontiac Motor by the «& 
State is 999259. 2 
z This numeral is inserted in the upper right hand = 
corner of checks issued to Pontiac Moter employes. ~ 
In Morris’ case, however, the account number and =} 
the amount of his compensation—$86—were re- F 
x versed, : 
“We write about 1,000 checks a day on our check- © 
writing machines,” said Kimball. “Wé’re bound to make 
an error now and then, but rarely one like this.” > ! we ABS ART: 
Pe ise teen he ete 
& 
  
  
and gyppers eagar to prove that 
there's a sucker born every min- 
ute. 
Every year countless Amer- 
icans are bilked 
*out of millions 
of dollars falling 
for the bait of- 
fered. by un- 
scrupulous 
swindlers. 
In a series of five articles be- 
ginning Monday in The Press, 
many of these rackets will be dis- 
cussed and exposed at length. 
      * 
it 
    eA PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1959—28 PAGES 
= 
g U.S. Note Protests Kid   
| 
for Chevrolet Will Bring Nine Plants | 
to Near Full Strength; 
Chrysler Laying Off 
  {500 more workers Monday 
jand Tuesday to Chevrolet 
»| plants, the company said 
| yesterday. 
Chevrolet already called 
‘back 5,000 of 63,000 work- 
ers in 33 plants idled by 
steel shertages. 
| Chrysler with 23,430 laid off as 
lof yesterday, will shut down its 
|seven assembly plants by Dec. 2, 
idling 15,000 more. 
But Chrysler will start re- 
calling some workers later and 
hopes to resume assembly opera- 
tions around Dec. 9. 
The GM. recall will bring nine 
jmanufacturing plants back to al- 
|nwost full employment, 
*x 
  * * 
manufacturing plants, Saginaw 
transmission and foundry plants, 
Bay City small parts, Toledo and 
Cleveland transmission, Indian- 
apolis stamping and Muncie, Ind. 
transmission and forging. 
  
Captain Terms 
Lakes Trip Worst 
in 40 Years 
SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont., (# 
—A weather beaten Great Lakes 
captain steamed his ice-covered 
tanker tuto port yesterday and 
said his voyage through Lake 
Huron was one of the worst in 
40 rs, 
Capt. Sid Witltarisedn ‘hid tile 
vessel battled 50 mile per hour 
winds on her final trip of the 
year. 
o* * * 
So covered with ice were the 
decks of the Eastern Shell that 
crews had to hose them with 
steam before they could dis- 
charge cargo. The entire super- 
structure also was ice shrouded. 
Coast Guard officials af the 
Michigan Seo said shipping will 
continue through the St. Marys 
river until weather forces a halt. 
  
  This nation is full of schemers, Well ... Not Quite, Chap) 
| SANDBACK. England (UPI)— | The British Railways new $196,- 
| 000 electric “locomotive of to- 
| morrow” had to be towed by an 
| old steam engine to its inaugural:, 
ceremony site yesterday when 
its power failed. 
Takes Post in Germany 
FRANKFURT, Germany ® — 
Career diplomat Walter C. Dowl- 
ing flew in today to take up his 
new post as U.S, ambassador to 
West Germany.   4 ! ve ! 
'GM Calls Back 
| DETROIT (UPI) —Gen-; 
¥ eral Motors will recall 25,-| 
These were the Flint engine and; 7 “ re ae s 
    
COMES IN BY HELICOPTER — Santa Claus paid his first 
visit to the Pontiac area yesterday when he dropped in by modern Santa Claus Arrives in 
       
s 
requests of two “good children.” 
Otsego St., and gave them sweet promise of the big day. Michael 
seems anxious to get in his first licks. Pontiac { 
& oY 
eee rae | | 
a 
i; 
Pontiac Press Phote 
Michae] and Susan Shaw, 2915 
  helicopter at the Miracle Mile Shopping Center. He heard the 
Roberts Thinks It’s ‘Probable’ Solution   
Tecumseh Gi 
Held in Shooting John Barton Grieves 
Over Accidental Death 
of Sentry Companion 
SAN FRANCISCO « — Marine Pyt. John C. Barton, of Tecumseh, 
Mich., was held in custody over 
the weekend while his officers in- vestigate the fatal shooting Friday] of a companion sentry in a 3:30 
a.m. fast-draw contest. i Attention was focused 
  House tax compromisers. 
Reps. Farrell E. Roberts 
(D-Roseville) , Eartier 
Paul D. Bagwell and pronounced| 
acceptable by Gov. Williams, it ° : 
got another boost yesterday from/ gan’s tax depdioct.. . They are the latest legislatots 
te get starting voles under the 
platoon system being deployed 
| The other sdlution, they agreed, 
{R- was the Republican Senate 73'2| 
West Bloomfield) and John T. Bow- million. dollar nuisance tax pack-| were instructed to perfect an ex- 
man cochairmen,'age now in disfavor with many | isting draft of the payroll bill and   
t . Niels ‘Hagerman, 
Dante. ed before he Cheer Up, Folks! a e 5 
. \Five Degrees yard Hospital, the Hunters Point .Naval ship- 
Barton, 19, telephoned immea., Warmer Sunday 
ately for an ambulance after his) 
  ' 
| 
  45 automatic discharged only 2%) It'll be a little warmer Sunday 
feet from Hagerman in the sentry i" the Pontiac area, the weather- 
box where both were on duty. man says. Tonight will be partly 
“I can imrgine how it hap-|Cloudy and colder with the mer) 
pened,"* said Maj. Milton Cooper,|CUry dipping to about 20. 
commander of the Marine detach-- Tomorrow's high is expected to) be 37 ment, . « j 
“The boys were bored with 
nothing te do that time of morn- 
ing. It was stupid, but that’s 
hindsight, and 1 don’t want to 
emphasize that, I don’t want to 
see Barton broken down any 
more. He’s taking it very hard.| Wind velocity at 10 a.m. 
“There seems to be no question, was northerly-at 6 miles per hour. 
that this was accidental, as Bar-| The thermometer registered 32 
ton said,” Cooper continued. latt pm ~ day afternoon. 
  
  
  
eae 
- 
     ; et DR, iia DRE. Chae ic + 
Shorr Fired by WXYZ 
Over Payola; DJ Toll 4 . a 
DETROIT (#—The jobless among Detroit's disc 
jockey fraternity climbed to four in a week yesterday 
with the firing of Mickey Shorr of radio station WXYZ. 
kerk | A favorite of teen-agers, 
'Shorr said he was given the 
A ] 1 F option of quitting or being 
anf’ eed fired. “I refused to resign,” said the 
ipes 3-year-old record spinner. “I 
’ didn’t feel I had done anything 
Gal'sTears |" .. Shorr said he did not receive 
From Our News Wires payola .money or gifts to plug 
NEW YORK — Rock ‘n’ roll] Certalm songs om Bis show, 
disc jockey Alan Freed admitted) The station issued a 13-word 
last night he had received checks statement and declined further 
from record. companies but denied! comment. 
the checks constituted payola. *- © 4&4 
* ot ae “WXYZ today (Thursday) exer- 
Freed made the admission after cised its right to terminate the 
a wildly sentimental final perfor-/employment of Mickey Shorr,” 
mance of his teen-age “Big Beat” said the statement issued by Hal 
television show. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) 
It was the final personal per-| - 
formance because his TV contract) st 
was terminated ‘“‘by mutual agree-/P W M k 
ment” this week shortly after sl 5 ’ anna a e 
was fired from his radio job. 
The show was put on tape and'@ Fast Buck, Buddy? 
will be repeated today. ; 
While Freed was bowing out” 
yesterday the district attorney's 
office issued a subpena for 
Freed’s books and records at 
WNEW.TV. 
More than 100 teen-agers, some 
carrying signs reading ‘‘Alan Is 
Tops” and ‘‘King Alan,’ gathered} 
outside the television station an} 
hour before Freed appared. 
“] LOVE ALAN” 
One girl, wearing a hat in- 
scribed, ‘I Love Alan,” broke 
down and wept hysterically during 
the show, Freéd embraced her and 
wiped away the tears, ® 
At one point Freed, who is 38 
years old, told his audience: 
“I'll be’ back on the air soon. 
I've done nothing wrong. The peo-| 
ple I dig the most are you. We 
know we are more adult than; 
adults.”” 
In another development, 
Anthony, singer and record man. | 
ufacturer, says he gave ell 
Atty, Frank §, Hogan two can- 
celed checks as evidence he dis- 
tributed payéla to disc jockeys. 
Anthony, 31, questioned Friday 
at Hogan's office, said later he 
paid about $5,000 to out-of-town | 
disc jockeys to plug his records 
four years ago. . 
He said he had not made any | 
payoffs in New York. 
Also questioned was Scott Muni, | 
a disc jockey for radio station 
WMCA and first vice president of 
the Dise Jockéy Assn., Inc., which 
claims 200 members. 
Upon leaving Hogan's office, 
Muni. told newsmen he never had 
taken pyaments to plug records 
over WMCA, “In New York I've 
never been offered money,” Muni 
said, 
Si RIS Sei Stith Ri ABER S588 SAR PE 
  ee J 
In Today's Press 
Church News .....+.... 10-11 
Comics ....... Sovwrcvacg SPY 
Editorials ....... eceunbees iy 4 : 
Home Section. .....--+-. 15-18 
eetita n,n caves papaceten | 
a ere ee ee 2 
Sports .. 20-21 * 
erty r 
TV & Radio Program ...... ba 
Wilson, Karl ...... Lsiesecw 
Women’s Pages paceece 8.9 
f 4 ; oe 
WEAR YOUR RUBBERS — This morning's early snow teft 
its ‘mark of city. streets. Or rather, the footprints of pedestrians _ street. : Here This Morning, Gone . . es — 
‘ be * lye ee NOE hc ee berm, SONY oe vy c Ps rt . aie 7 eg: of 
avs eek, © 2 > . ae Fy ‘ t J - ; 5 “Sager 
é - x a ‘ i y: ee nw eee * . 
~ he 4 This Evening? Pot eapetee ® ‘ts “ s ; 
    
‘ : Pontiac Press Photo 
did. This was the scene on Huron street just west of Saginaw 
\ | 
|leader of a bomb plot—stood grim 
| 
t   Payroll Levy in Spotlight on the|said it leoked,-at the moment, senators. who pledged their support'ing with the 
payroll. tax.today as like one of two possible solutions.) before finding out in detail what it) dragged into the consulate grounds, 
‘nursed new hopes of getting Mich- i 
Bowman called the 1 per cen 
payroll lévy “less objectionablé’ napin Marine Held 
in India Garage ~ 
by Red Chinese Sergeant Later Freed; 
State Department Says 
Case Is Puzzling 
WASHINGTON?) — The 
United States protested to- 
day against the kidnaping 
of a U. S. Marine sergeant 
by Chinese Communists in 
Bombay, India. 
The action came while 
State Department officials 
sought more information 
on the case. 
* * * 
The Marine, Sgt. Robert Arm- 
strong, 31, Martinez, Calif-, was 
held for about six hours yesterday 
in the garage of the Chinese Com- 
munist consulate in Bombay, In- 
dia. He was released after Bom- 
“| bay police intervened to obtain his 
freedom. . 
A State Department spokesman 
said full information is being 
sought on the puzzling case 
which also involves a Chinese 
Communist defector whe did not 
defect. 
{ —in-New-Dethi, the United-States~ accused the Chinese Communists 
of “‘highhanded violation of per- 
sonal rights.’ 
SENDS PROTEST NOTE 
The U.S. Embassy handed a note 
to the Indian government ‘‘strong- 
ly protesting against. the illegal 
.nd_improper actions of repre-~ 
entatives of the Communist Chi- 
pnese ‘In Bombay,” an embassy 
spokesman said. 
* * * 
The U.S. consulate general 
charged Armstrong was pulled 
from a taxi in which he was rid- - 
citizen, 
| bound and beaten. 
{|} The Free Press Journal sald 
"| te tax! driver told police he wit- 
in the struggie to break Michi- |and Roberts a ‘more probable”) nessed a scuffle between Arm- 
solution. They said the income tax) strong and his Chinese captors in _ 
|not discussed. 
have it ready for possible intro 
duction Tuesday, 
Board Bomber ae ree 
Given 3 Years Also Assessed $500 | | 
on His Conviction in. 
Little Rock Incident | 
- | } 
Northerly winds 8 to 15 miles LITTLE ROCK, Ark (B= A 
per hour today will become light | segregationist leader charged with| better than 2,500,000 taxpayers, 
ang variable tonight and west bombing the Little Rock School| assuming the rate of 1 per cent 
southwest at 10 to 18 miles Sun- | Board office was convicted early| and exemption of the first $35 
today and his punishment set at} a week of earned income. 
Temperatures rose to 34 Friday.|‘hree years in prison and a aed A newsman recalled Sen, Frank) | 
ine. 
| se" | | E. A. Lauderdale, a stocky, 43-| 
lyear-old lumber dealer—named by| 
others charged jn the Case as ring- 
faced as the verdict was’ read, - 
* * * 
Then he sat down and noncha- 
lantly leaned back in his chair as 
the courtroom crowd of aout 200 
remained -silent. 
In the crowd were several 
prominent segregationists. who | 
earlier had heard Lauderdale’s 
attorney picture him as “the 
symbol and representative of 
those who believe in segrega- 
tion.”* 
men and three women deliberated 
an hour and a half. The Circuit Court jury of nine | of the GOP House caucus opposed 
the tax ‘‘because it, in effect, is 
“an income tax.” 
Besides wage earners, the tax 
would hit farmers, doctors, law- 
yers, unincorporated merchants 
and other self-employed persons. 
Some strong opposition was-cer- 
tain to develop from this quarter. 
To produce the estimated reve- 
nue yield of 108 million dollars 
a year it would have to fall on 
D. Beadle of St. Clair, Senate ma- 
‘jority leader, said last Tuesday 
night the GOP caucus had turned! 
thumbs down on the payroll tax.| 
‘DOOR OPEN’ 
But Bowman said: 
“The door is open, I don’t think 
the Senate leadership has closed 
the door. I certainly hope not."’ 
At the same time, he admitted 
“the Senate caucus has been -the 
stumbling block to all solutions 
lies in the Senate.”’ 
They displayed a rare — af 
least for the Legislature of late— 
compromising spirit when they met 
to plan for a Monday session of 
4n eight-member bipartisan négo- 
tiating committee. 
“There's not a hardhead on the 
  LABOR DAY BLASTS 
Besides the school board, the 
business office of Mayor Werner 
Knopp and a station wagon at the 
were dynamited. 
The blasts eccurred within | 
minutes of each other shortly. be- 
fore midnight on Labor Day. 
Judge William. J, Kirby allowed) 
Lauderdale's attorneys 30. days in| 
defendant*remained free in $50,000 
bond. 
* * * 
The attorneys did not say im-} 
for another trial. 
* * * E j 
Lauderdale was the third man} 
39, a car salesman, drew three- 
year sentences. Another man, J. D. 
  got five years. ' 
— <= - (Continued on Page ?, Col. 5) 
Goodfellows Sell   
home of Fire Chief Gann Nalley\/ PTESS for Needy 
in Rochester Revenue Department experts land corporation profits levies were| the consulate grounds. 
U.S, Consul William Turner de- 
jclined further comment on the case 
jand kept Armstrong away from 
reporters, 
\CHANGES MIND 
Armstrong had been given 
charge of the Communist citizen, 
jwho, the Americans said, wanted 
|U..S. asylum but later changed his 
|mind and returned to the Red Chi- 
jmnese consulate general. 
The U. 8S. protest said ‘the ac- 
tions of the Communist Chinese 
constitute a highhanded violation 
of the personal rights of a United 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) . 
Relatives 
Stunned by 
$5 Million   
  
  DETROIT  — A treasure of stocks and bonds has been uncov- 
ered by investigators probing the 
estate of an elderly bachelor: 
They said the holdings may be 
|worth five million Qollars. 
| No will was with the effects 
lin Peter Patterson’s apartment 
|when he died at 90 last week. 
* * *¥ 
Deputy treasurer Peter Posato 
right along, and the key prot bly |204 a court-appointed administr:- 
itor, Harry M. Prevo, opened Pat- 
terson’s safety deposit vault yes- 
terday. They found two wills plus: ; 
| 1. Government and municipal 
| bonds worth $2,581,000. 
| 2 Life insurance 
$30,000. 
3. A total of 38,376 shares of valued at 
committee," said Bowman, who | stock in 32 companies. 
Patterson owned a mortgage 
‘company and a construction firm. 
He also was founder of an in- 
surance company : 
* * 
The wills the vault were 
dated 1932 and 1951. One awarded 
a little money to local people and 
charities, Prevo said. He said Pat- in 
The Rochester Goodfellows today)terson's closest relatives were nine 
| are selling their special editions of 
The Pontiac Press. 
Proceeds will help pay for Yule- 
which to seek a new trial, and the tide baskets of food and other gifts’ suburb, to. be distributed among needy fam- 
ilies. 
“6 © £ nephews and nieces in Ohio. 
* * * y 
In Parma, Ohio, a Cleveland 
two residents last night 
said they are among the relatives 
of Patterson. They are Raymond 
\J. Patterson, 63, and Mrs. Jo!   Some of the funds also will fo) J. Sete. 
Schoo}, District. mediately whether they would ask| toward. Christmas parties for chil- 
: ~ ‘dren in the Rochester Community| Patterson said he knew about the discevery, but Mrs. Satwo 
The Gearing house for see said she was stunned, 
convicted in the bombings. Two) family requests°is the Rochester 
others, Jesse Raymond, 24, a truck! Police-station. Persons with names 
\driver, and John Taylor Coggins,|t© Submit Have been. asked to con- “I don't know too mitch about 
it yet,” said Patterson. “t-quess . 
I will eventually but I don’t worry 
  tact Police Chief Samuel Howlett.'too much about things. You might 
x* * * 
Rochester and Auburn roads. say we're a relaxed family. 
Sims, a truck driver, pleaded guilty; Goodfellow editions are available} The other seven nephews 
to the school board bombing and/in the heart of the village and at/nieces live in Wellsville and 
lanee, Ohio.    
  
       
    
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1959   
  
  Two accidents within five min-) 
and Pontiac at Telegraph i: our Hurt in 5-Car Crash 
Laurie, 54, of 
Lack, 67, ers, Robert C. 
Dearborn, Edward A. London Rebuilds 
Little by Little roads last. night sent four! ef Detroit, and Lock's wife, Na- | But Architects Shudder 
= to Pontiac General Hos-| 
ital. talie, M4. 
The Locks were reported in sat- 
Pontiac State Police said the | listactory condition today. Laurie 
pileup, which eventually involved |was treated and released, Driver 
fwe cars and tied up traffic for @/\o¢ the third car, Alex T. Lundquist, 
ntile along Telegraph in Waterford. 57 of Detroit, was uninjured troop- 
  Tdwnship, began at 7 p.m. with 2) 
three-car collision. 
Injured were two of the driv- 
LL S. Protests Red 
Kidnaping of Marine 
(Continued From Page One) 
States citizen in a friendly coun- 
= cey5   ie i] 
The Chinese Communists have; 
~ not made public their version of to avoid smashing into the wrecked 
the case but were said to have 
given a preliminary account to the | 
Indian government Friday, 
* * * 
“The Bombay state government | 
was reported to have submitted a: 
preliminary report of its own to] 
new Delhi 
The central government ad- 
Vised state authorities to refrain 
from issuing any statements uatil 
the Red Chinese version is re- 
ceived. 
- In Las Angeles, Armstrong's fa- 
ther said “they must have really 
ganged up” on his son, 
~ ‘COULD LICK 10’ . 
Lewis S. Armstrong said Friday 
“that his Marine son usually would 
| be able,‘‘to lick any 10 of them.” 
~ “I am surprised ‘the Chinese 
w were able. to hold on to him,” the 
™ father. said. 
= ‘The tather described his son as 
“a Marine from the ground up” 
: = and said he has a chestful of rib- ; 
The elder Armstrong, an apprais- 
= er for the Federal Smal? Business 
» Administration, said his son has 
a been in the Marines since 1944, 
except for a period when he attend- 
“ed the University of California. 
ti g F er when he lost control just ers sald. 
| * * * 
While an unidentified man was 
reportedly directing traffic with a 
flare moments later. a car driven 
by “Gerald L. Sonnenberg, 19, of| 
234 Dicie Ave. smashed into the 
}Laurie car driving it into a north- 
bound auto driven by Linda L 
Dorris, 17, of 2669 Silvercrest St, 
Pontiac. 
* * * 
Sonnenberg was treated for mi- 
nor injuries and released 
He told troopers he didn't see   the accident ahead of him in time 
| auto, 
  
Avon Car Rolls 
130 Feet During 
Chase by Police 
An Avon Township man escaped 
serious injury early this morning 
when his car rolled some 130 feet 
as he attempted to outrun a Troy 
Police car, according to Oakland 
County sheriff's deputies. 
Donald F. Ketterer, 31, of 1845 
Auburn Rd., was being chased 
north on John R road, in Avon 
Township, by police for a speeding 
north of South boulevard, skidded 
130 feet on icy pavement and rolled 
another 132 feet, deputies said. 
Ketterer was in satisfactory con- 
dition today at St. Joseph Mercy 
Hospital with head cuts and. mul- 
tiple bruises. He was ticketed for 
reckless driving. 
Ship Carrying 10 
Tips Over in Gulf 
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)—A Coast 
Guard cutter raced through the 
Gulf of Mexico today toward an 
overturned ship believed to carry 
a 10-man crew. 
* * * 
The vessel, thought to be the 
National Pride, carried 460 tons 
lof live ammunition to be dumped 
into the gulf. 
A Coast Guard plane spotted the 
black hull of the—ship—about—60. 
miles southeast of Galveston, Tex.   
  6 
RM 
be. 
Armstrong 
trying to recover the 
Re be be li +O 
UW 
Oa 
CO 
he 
tt 
= 
  ey 
*N-Reactor Reacting 
= ~SALUGGIA, Italy (AP) 
“Italy's first privately owned nv- 
“clear reactor began operating to about his 
.|Reds Eye Quick Summit at 4:07 p. m. Friday. The pilot at Buildings Replacing 
War Rubble 
LONDON (UPD) — The Germans 
bombed London in a haphazard, 
piecemeal way. 
| Planes, buzz bombs and V-2 
jrockets indiscriminately peppered 
the sprawling city with destruction 
London is being rebuilt in the 
|same way—haphazardly and piece} 
by piece 
| Architects shudder at many of | 
ithe new buildings. Civic planners 
f meee appalled. Buildings are 
springing up with no overall plan 
and in architectural styles that 
defy description. 
The rate of construction in 
London today is greater than at 
any time since the war. And the 
job is far from finished. 
London's ordeal began Sept. 7, 
1940. On that Saturday the Ger- 
man Luftwaffe set ‘out to destroy 
what was then the biggest city in 
the world. The attacks came al- 
most daily until May 11, 1941. 
Later in the war, pilotless V-1 and 
V-2 weapons renewed the destruc- 
tion,   
| 
* * * 
London, but the damage was tre- 
mendous 
Fire took a greater toll than 
high explosives. Qne incendiary 
attack started a fire which gutted 
an area a quarter of a mile square 
in the heart of London. Firefighters 
often had no choice but to let 
fires burn themselves out. 
* * * 
on for 15 years, but even today 
ruins can be found in almost every 
section of the metropolis. Bomb- 
sites gape in the busiest of busi- 
ness sections. Yet, the amount of 
rebuilding has been staggering. 
In all of Britain, 3,245,676 new 
houses and apartments have been 
built since the war, and a big 
chunk of them are in London. 
New office buildings have risen, 
too, in every part of the city, 
Nearly all the new buildings are 
variations of the box. Critics de- 
plore their lack of originality, of 
experiment, of esthetic solutions 
to architectural problems. 
Diverse building codes, tradi- 
tional British conservatism, the 
materials and money — all these 
need for haste, the scarcity of 
have contributed to an architec- 
cient modern” and other ‘‘con- 
servative contemporary.” 
  saw no sign of survivors. 
* * * 
R. T. Lober, of Houston, said 
. crew list filed with the Coast 
Guard. indicates ;there. were 10 
men aboard the ship. He repre- 
sents the National Boat Corp., of 
Houston, owners of the vessel,   
PARIS (UPI) — Soviet Ambassa- 
dor Sergei Vinogradov said last 
night Russia was ready for an 
East-West summit meeting at any 
time — before or after Premier 
Nikita Khrushchev's visit to France 
March 15. 
  
The average depth of the earth's 
  me day near this north Italian town. oceans is 12,451 feet. 
  
tn . a 
=Bishops Ask for‘ Prayers   
“California Needs Rain 
By The Associated Press 
= San. Franciscoans prayed. for 
~ rain..Saturday, 
“ Their prayers were but one fac- 
‘et of a gravely awry weather pic- 
ture in the nation. There was a 
, rare appearance of snow in east 
. Texas and Alabama temperatures 
» Friday night of 60 in Boston and 
»63 in Philadelphia, and lashing 
-The Weather 
~ Full U. S&S. Weather Bureaa Repert 
PONTEAC AND VICINITY — Mestly 
cloudy, eccasiena!l light snew or snew 
«flerries this merning. High teday 34. 
«Winds nertherly & te 15 miles. Partly 
cleudy and colder tonight. Lew 
Winds becoming light and variable te 
night. A little warmer Sunday. (High 
= 37. Winds gentile and variable becoming 
west te southweit 10-18 miles Sunday 
* afternoon. -      
   
           
    
    
        
       
     
       
    
  Teday in Pentiae 
Lowest temperature preceding 8 am 
At 8 a.m Wind velocity 4 mph 
Direction: Northerly. 
“Won sets today at 502 pm '¢ Sun rises Sunday at 739 am 
Moon sets today at 4:08 pm 
Moon rises Sunday at 6:29 a m. 
Dewntown Temperatures o. {July 1. There has been-little or no civic 
planning. The concept of residen- 
neglected. 
  
50 Below in Japan 
ASAHIKAWA, Hokkaido (UPI) 
— The temperature inthis town 
in northern Hokkaido, northern- 
most of the Japanese islands, 
dropped to 50 degrees’ below 
zero today. The drop was at- 
tributed to a cold front {rom 
Siberia. 
  They Even Have an Ump 
CHICAGO uw» — J. Raymond 
O’Brien, 50, still hopes that one 
day he'll be the father of a baby 
girl. But Mrs. O’Brien may be 
satisfied with things the way they 
are. Mrs. O’Brien, 40, presented 
O'Brien Friday with another son 
—their 10th. 
  
  wind and rain in the Tampa, Fla., 
area. * 
* * * ; 
Ffiday marked the 70th day 
without rain in San _ Francisco 
Roman Catholic Archbishop John 
J. Mitty instructed pastors in 243 
northern California parishes to 
lead prayers for rain 
x * * 
James A. Pike, Episcopal bishop 
of California, asked all his pari- 
shes to do the same 
Los Angeles, too, was exper- 
jiencing unusually dry weather. 
Only twice in 8&2 years has there 
been so little rain in the Southern 
California city for the period since 
This year’s rainfall for 
the period was 08 inch. In 1937 
there was 01 inch and in 1938 
02 inch. The normal rainfall is 
1.82 inches. 
* * * 
Elsewhere, cold hung over wide 
portions of the country, the lowest 
temperatures were about 5 below 
zero registered in eastern North 
Dakota and northwest Minnesota. 
A band of 20-degree weather 
iced the region from lower Michi- 
gan through the Mississippi Valley 
    6am ocQO SE DR Me cies 30 
~~» 74am 2B 13 B.. ..cccccces. 31 
» tam 28 1 P.M. .ccccnsece 32 
9am 28 
ochin dl fee 
    
    
       
    
    
   
    
      Weather—Gnow flurries 
- One Year Age in Pentiae 
  eriaasilia (Peatiac |plateau area of the southern 
ra pn A ey | Rocky Mountains, Midland, Tex., 
Highest temperature Pee | , j , y Wistoe! isumeeiai. 7 | had an overnight low of 26, 
E Mean Cempermtare . .... .ccccrccas 30.5 | 
Former U. S. Senator and into western Texas and the 
  A century-long experiment in 
England has shown that chemical | 
_[tertiers neither kill earthworms|his car hit an embankment near|#ction on whatever 
r bother soil bacteria. Reconstruction has been going|.   
A RACE THROUGH FIRE 
fire lap at the railroad track as 
near Paris, Tex., Pacific train hurries unharmed through an area 
hard hit by pasture fires — Tongues of _ 
this Texas and _ Friday. 
Texas area. The Day in Birmingham   
18 New Buses Are Ready 
for Introduction A ere 
Mrs. Clara H. Locy 
  V4 diesel type engine, according     AP Wirephete 
Wind-whipped fires burned some 3,000 
acres of pasture and farmlapd a East 
  
way felt the pinch today between 
the threat of winter ice and the 
scheduled Monday closing of the 
Seaway by Canadian authorities. 
Many vessels were lured into 
late trips to the upper lakes area 
by warm weather but now are 
trying to break aj] records to clear 
the Seaway locks. 
A driving snowstorr: threat- 
ened to tie up ships racing 
through the Seaway before the 
new 475-million dollar waterway 
Detective Says: 
Mass Poisoning: Find Arsenic Mixed   The, Germans failed to crush| DETROIT (UPI) —Foreign; closes down for the winter Mon- 
shippers in the St. Lawrence Sea-| day night. 
| The weather office here forecast | 
continuous ‘snow for the St. Law- 
rence Valley. with winds up to 25 
miles per hour and freezing tem- 
peratures. 
BLIZZARD COMING 
The blizzard, expected to be 
more “vigorous”? than the sterm 
which stalled ships in the Seaway 
| Friday, will be follewed by colder 
weather tomorrow. 
The wintry weather forecast fol- 
lowed reports that the transport 
minister, George Hees, would per- 
mit the Seaway, opened last June, 
to stay open beyond the Nov. 30 
deadline to allow ocean ships to 
escape winter-long immobilization 
in the Great Lakes. 
Friday there were more than 
70 ocean-going vessels still cruis- 
ing the Great Lakes. At the 
locks at Sault Ste. Marie, Coast 
  Civic Workers’ Coffee 
at Seattle 
SEATTLE; Wash (UPI) — Chief} 
detective Vic Kramer said today 
that arsenic found mixed in coffee 
at the| 
county.city building was a “cold- 
blooded attempt at mass poison- 
ing.”’ 
The arsenic was found after eight   tia} areas integrated with shopping |staff members of the Gity Planning | 
centers and playgrounds has been|Commission became. ill last Mon- leene caught in the ice at Montreal. 
day. The results of police labora+| Hees‘ said these ships were freed! 
tory tests revealed they had drunk 
coffee laced with thé poison. 
A search of the/junchroom on 
the eighth floor of the building 
disclosed arsenic in a two-pound 
tin of drip-grind coffee and more | 
arsenic in a jar of instant cof- 
fee. 
“This was no accident,”” Kramer 
said. “It was deliberate.” 
The room is used by employes 
for coffee breaks: and during the 
noon hour for those who pack 
lunches. Planning commission and 
engineering department staff mem- 
bers are the chief users, but other 
employes also have access to the 
room. 
  
  Actor in Car Crash 
HOLLYWOOD w—Actor Anthony 
|Franciosa suffered a nose fracture | 
and a cut over his left eye when!     Pacific Coast Highway Friday. 
  
. 
  Slaten iene, ‘23 Dies in Oregon at 82 “Mean temperature ; .235 
= Weather —Cold—snow_ EUGENE, Ore. ® — Former 
Bighest sna Lawest Temperatures U.S. Sen. Rufus C. Holman of 
ani ae Oregon, flamboyant congressional |. 61 Jn 1905 8 in 1988], , ) 
2 Friday's Temperature fare tsolationist . before and during aiven } r 2 Memmi " — er II, dide here Friday. 
altimore ‘ jam\ B ai 74 s e 
neal a no en gers ar ow ns #\a ome of a stepson, - Ernes 
= ne, Ph _ % 1|Lundeen. where he had spent the 
12 Pellston 32 Thanksgiving holiday m 2 Pittepureh as “| Holman served in_ the Senate 
eg ary 3 from 1939 through 1944, when he 
ib 8. S. Marie 30 20, was defeated in a bid for the Re- 
is Wochngtee s 4 i renomination by: Sen. 
28 Seattle 51 41|\Wayne L. Morse, now a Demo- f Tampa % 
7 crat. . 
* 
3 », \   SOUTH LYON MAN INJURED — A South Lyon man and his 
wife were injured in Lebanon, Ohio, yesterday, when their car 
crashed info a loaded |ufnber truck at an ifitersection-Shown here, 
Donald Sayre, 72, of 60448 Nine Mile Rd., 
the scene by ambulance attendants. 
to lists the conditions of Sayre and his wile as ‘‘serious.” AP Wirephote 
is being removed fronr 
The hospital they were taken Guard Commander Elmer J. 
Bodenlos reported ore carriers 
were doing business ‘‘as if it 
were still summer.” 
When foreign ships are trapped 
by ice within the Seaway system, 
ship owners must transport crews 
|back-to home ports by other means. 
the services of the); 
ice-bound vessel which otherwise! 
could continue to operate in the 
open seas. 
* * * 
and escorted to open water after 
two months of hard and expensive 
effort. 
He declared Canada would not 
be ‘‘caught in that trap again.” 
State Payroll Levy 
‘Probable’ Solution 
(Continued From Page One) 
called Roberts ‘‘a nice guy to 
work with.” 
Roberts, chairman of the com- 
mittee, promised the eight mem- 
bers would try to “trigger an 
answer éven, if we have our 
heads bleodied.”’ 
Roberts, who represents Oak- 
jland’ s third district, and Bowman 
see their immediate need as one 
of paving the way for quick House 
the Senate 
passes. 
They also see a need to set a 
compromising tone to muffle vitu- 
peration from both parties in the 
econ impasse, 
* = 2= 
~The big question was in the Sen- 
ate, where Republicans are bound 
by caucus order to try for pas- 
sage of a 73-million-dollar package 
of ‘‘nuisance’’ taxes. But the cau- 
cus has changed directions be- 
fore: 
ble for tax discussions next 
in Highland Township recreation 
area in order to be available. 
Senate Republican loaders 
have indicated the payroll tax 
may be the only plan that could 
get enough votes from both par- 
ties for passage. 
The tax has yet to be intro 
duced, although bills have been 
drafted. 
  
Crushed by Bulldozer 
HILLSDALE (#—Floyd H. Kipp, 
52, of nearby Waldron, was killed 
yesterday while trying to relocate 
a bulldozer on a trailer-truck. The 
bulldozer toppled off the trailer 
and crushed him. 
Sorry State of: Affairs 
DETROIT (UPI)—Employes at 
the Federal Reserve Bank here 
broke into, tears yesterday, but 
it wasn't because they were sad. 
A.guard brushed against a tear 
gas gun resting in a rack and   
| it exploded a pellet. 
-A recent survey by the National) 
shows|   
Industrial Conference Roard 
_|that 58 per cent of all non-farm 
families in the United States own 
their own homes, compared with 
  Last year, 13 foreign freighterst 
Williams said he would be avail-' 
week. He called off a threeday' 
annual staff meeting at Haven Hill! Ships Plowing Ahead Stee! Union Man 
but Ice Is Threatening Wants Publicity Says Sessions Should 
Be Wide Open so Public 
Can Know Issues | 
| 
CHICAGO (UPI) — Steel nego- 
tiating sessions should be wide 
open ‘‘so the press and public may 
learn what the strike it all about,”’ 
a United Steel Workers Union of- 
ficial said 
* * * 
“We have. nothing to hide,’ Jo-   \District 31 in the Chicago-Gary 
larea, said. ‘‘We have no desire to 
negotiate behind closed doors.” 
Germano ‘sald the negotiations 
deadiock stemmed partially from 
public ignerance of the issues. _ 
and magazines,” he said. 
The current stalmate threatens 
a resumption of the strike when 
the 80-day Taft-Hartley injunction 
expires, he said. 
Tempo Increasing 
in Holiday Deaths   
  Traffic <ss.5<60¢0. 221 
Fires ....... cewes 22 
Miscellaneous ..... 59 
Total .....; . 302 
ing holiday Saturday. 
The toll of national deaths which 
initially was about four deaths~an 
hour fell off to less than three 
during the hours early Friday. 
Then late Friday and early Satur- 
day the grim count regained the 
four-an-hour mark, 
Heavier road traffic and iced 
highways in wide areas from the 
Appalachian Mountains to the 
Rockies were possible causes of 
the increased rate of — 
_——- 
  
Governor's Receptionist 
Mrs. Doxsie Dies at 43 
office of Gov. 
night at a Lansing hospital. 
She 
nearly two years. 
first term in office. 
Grand Ledge. 
  \seph Germano, head of the Union's |: 
“Much has been written but 
little has been understood eithe i ] i a eee teas 'ee| Wind and Rain readers of the many newspapers | 
A quickened pace of highway 
traffic deaths marked the halfway 
point of the four-day Thanksgiv- 
LANSING ® — Mrs. Charlotte 
Dorothy Doxsie, 43, of Mulliken, 
popular chief receptionist in the 
Williams, died last! 
had been ill with cancer 
Known as “‘Lottie’’ to thousands 
‘of Capitel_ealers_Mrs.-Doxsie had 
been with Gov. Williams since his 
Funéral service will be at 10 
a.m, Monday at St. Michael Cath- 
olic Church, Grand Ledge. Burial, Alaska is so isolated that a vol- 
will be at Oakwood Cemetery,|cano can erupt there without any-| tration and prevent pessitie over- lefficient and. quieter than” ‘those | 
now in use, he said. 
* * ®e 
Col Herbert F. Layle, a member, 
of State Headquarters and Head- 
quarters Detachment, was honored 
on his retirement from the Michi- 
gan National Guard by fellow of- 
ficers at a dinner at the Roosevelt 
Hotel in Lansing. 
The more than 45 officers pre- 
sented Layle -with a retirement 
gift. 
| A veteran of close to 29 years 
|military service, Layle, 18129 Riv- 
erside Dr.,.had served as the Quar- 
termaster General of Michigan 
from April, 1948, to October, 1957. 
Maj. Gen. Ronald D. McDon- 
ald, the Adjutant Genera) of 
Michigan, praised Layle for "his 
past service. 
“Many of the things we now 
enjoy are the products of his im- 
agination, efforts and sincere de- 
sire to get things done,’ McDon- 
ald said.   
    The vehicles are a by the) 
to Glen G. Crawford, a supervisor | 
for Great Lakes, they are more|at 11 a.m. Monday at the Manley Service for Mrs. Clara H, Locy, 
78, 272 Oakland Ave., will be held 
Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will 
|be at Grand Lawh. Cemetery, De- 
| toit. 
Mrs, Losey died Thursday at her 
‘home after a long.illness. She is 
survived by three children, \ Mrs. 
Charles Cherry of Birmingham and 
Frank W. and John L., both\ of 
The United Church Women have 
been invited to attend the 10 a.m. 
meeting on Dec. 4 at the First 
Presbyterian Chapel. 
Mrs. Eari Triplett, president, 
will preside. A devotional talk will 
be given by Mrs, James Moore of 
the Congregational Church. 
WXYZ Fires Shorr 
Over Payola Issue 
(Continued From Page One) 
Neal Jr., vice president in charge   
  Dedication service will be at 4 
jp.m. Sunday for the Birmingham 
Unitarian Church, Woodward ave- 
nue at Lone Pone road. 
The Rev. Lewis Mondale will 
also be installed as minister. He 
is the author of many books on 
liberal religion. 
  Boston, the Rev. Harold Marley of Dr. Dana McLean Greeley of of radio. ; 
* * * 
Three DJs departed radio sta- 
tion WJBK and WJBK-TV since 
last Saturday night. They were 
Tom Clay, Dale Young and Don 
McLeod. Clay said he had taken 
about $6,000 in payola. 
SHORR TALKS 
Shorr said he told WXYZ last 
week he was part-owner of Aussie 
Records, Inc. But he said this was 
      
Force Hikers 
| to Call Quits 
FORT DEVENS, Mass. (AP)— 
Battered by strong winds and pelt- 
  x * * 
| Lt. Wayne B. Nicoll, 26, the Ar- 
|my’s champion hiker, and several in ella Mags an Army 
infantry group today gave up an 
attempt to et a record for a 110 
mile hike. 
      of his men who went along for 
company, quit after 23 hours at 
the 72-mile mark. 
The hikers boarded an ambu-| 
the trip back to this base. 
x* * 
Mike Desmond of the British 
Royal Air Force claims the world 
record of 110 miles in 30 hours.   
Farmington Felon 
Is Plain Shook Up 
A Farmington yester- 
with a case of nerves. 
  
Ah, Sweet Relief 
MONROE (UPI) *— Taxpayers 
théy got their school tax bills. 
Taxes were lowered by 1.39 mills. 
  
    | Katmai 
jone hearing or seeing it. lance, sent along as an escort, for, 
day was forced to hand over his 
money and some pills to @ bandit 
The owner, Harold Johns, 52, of task 
28316 Kendallwod, told police the) the 
nervous bandit wajked in, demand- 
ed money and helped himself at 
smiled a little yesterday when 
National Monument in| er his enly connection outside of his 
[ae Peay ee ee ee ee 
| “It’s payola in reverse,” said 
, Shorr. “We pay record companies 
for the Australian rights of their 
records.”* - 
Shorr said WXYZ official made 
no comment to him about an offer 
to dispose of his holdings in the 
record company. 
“I'm not going to attempt to 
stay in this business,”’ said Shorr. 
“I think it’s lost all opportunities 
to create personalities.” 
* * * 
The. payola controversy also 
caused the of Jac Le- 
' |Goft by WJBK-TV, where he had 
been a newscaster... The--station 
said LeGoff was fired for making 
editorial comments on payola. 
Pope to Missionaries: 
‘Help New Nations’ VATICAN CITY (UPI) —   
* 
SiGe Ao aaek ak, bt rik: Seadidl. ding: wena saliva 
. Ther e priests to stay aloof from “un- pills,” said Johns, “by brand) tortunate excesses” which often name. accompany the independence of 
new nations 
  
Sen. Chavez Speaks Up 
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Chair- 
Chavez (D-NM) of 
safeguards over military pur- 
| Chasing to eliminate poor adminis-   charges. .%   
Steals Show at Hearing   
  LOS ANGELES (AP)—E 
George Liberace had to play 
to Mickey Cohen Friday. 
the Rondelli Cafe in 
Oaks. The Mick: 
than 5@ times. 
charge it was a farce. 
  Si per cent 10 years ago. ing room. x & & 
The peppery ex-gambler stole the show 
at.a police commission hearing on an ap- 
plication for an entertainment license for 
suburban Sherman 
Vented His forensic fury on policemen. 
Invoked the Fifth Amendment more 
Interrupted the heating several times to 
Mh be was part ewer of tha ele 
tioned in a derogatory manner,” 
After an angry exchange with Lt. Mark 
Smith, chief investigator for the commis- 
sion, Cohen was escorted out of the hear- Mickey Cohen Dislikes Bums In the hallway, another’ officer told him ven violinist 
second fiddle to be quiet.   
“Don’t get near me,” Cohen warned. 
After a n “You look like a bum to me.” 
x * * | 
oon recess, Cohen took the 
witness stand and refused to answer doz- 
ens of questions. 
. “IT want a jury trial,” he declared. “I'll 
bet anyone in the room 10*1 that the de- 
cision in this thing is already th,” 
_ Cohen - trom the “I got no piece of that restaurant. 1 “ friends: “Let’s get out of here, this is 
we a ae 3 frame.” 
rene Violinist Liberace was a character wit- 
KEEPS.NAME CLEAR __ jress for the cafe's proprietors, James and 
Wien another witness was asked about © Hazel Rondelli The brother of Pianist 
Cohen’s polite record; Cohen shouted: Liberace drew laughs when he said: ye | 
“I object. I don’t want my mame men- think they are fine people and ought to 
tcTHE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY,    NOVEMBER 28, 1959 _   
Practiced It 100 Times, ‘Then Did It Wrong _ v |   
‘Goofed Up’ His Parachute Jump Tonite ..: DAYTON, Ohio w#— Capt. Joe|he lose consciousness or even 
Kittinger said Friday he “goofed|gray out’—that is, come close to 
plexioned redhead said here Fri-|step in the bal- unconsciousness. 
- He was able to bring his 
descent under control by posi- 
tioning his feet in various ways 
familiar te veteran jumpers like 
himself, (The recerd-breaker 
was Capt. Kittinger’s 4ist jump). 
How did he fee) when the first 
carefully-planned 
descent failed? 
“I can say I was apprehensive,” 
small door, and suddenly I found|the soft-spoken 3lyear-old jet pilot 
my body outside with my arms said. 
still inside. 
the timing off.” 
spinning through spa 
tee soon. 
“It should have opened 1] sec- 
onds after I bailed out,” Capt. 
“Instead, it opened Kittinger said. I had to go back in to, * * . 
bring my arm out, and that threw “I felt dismayed that I had} 
great enough, and I practiced the 
  
Talks on Aging at MSU 
DETROIT W—A three-day con- 
ference on problems of the aging after only 2% seconds and my|_. 
velocity at that point wasn't enough eal ~~ eat tre a Uni- 
to keep it from fouling.”   will be conducted by Sen, Patrick 
With the drag-chute useless,| M-Namara (D-Mich), chairman of goofed up. We knew the drag chute | : : 
hs a ac ie: cuie~ |wouldn’t work if my velocity was for Pontiac State Hospital. 
a device to keep the jumper from bail-out aes 190° times ac-' 
tually and 1,000 times fn my mind. | 
At that moment, I knew it was 
going to be a long way down, but 
[ still thought I could make it.” 
  
State Hospital 
Citizens Group 
Meets Tuesday | } 
Morris Bruck, chief psychologist} 
of Pontiac State Hospital. will be 
the key speaker at 8:15 p.m. Tues- 
iday before a meeting of the QOak-’ 
land County Citizen's Committee   
His topic will be ‘“‘What Is a 
——|Psychologist—What Does He Do?”’ 
Proposed changes will be con- 
sidered in a revision to the bylaws 
during the business meeting. 
The committee is donating $50 
in cash prizes to be given to win-| 
ners at a patients’ bingo session) 
7:30 p.m. Thursday. | 
Volunteers are needed to help pa-| 
tients play the game and to give @ SIMMS GUARANTEES EVERY ITEM IN THIS ABY: 
Money Saving caoar Sedsiols” 
For Coupon-Clipping Customers 
You are certain of saving extra money if you clip these cou- 
pons and bring, them with you when you shop at SIMMS 
Tonight ‘til 10 p.m. or Monday 9 a.m, to 10 p.m. Prices 
slashed on wanted items — for gifts, for home, for the family 
_. . Shop the store with more — SIMMS, 100, 000 items at 
99, 999 cut prices! 
CLIP OUT THE ITEMS YOU WANT-or Better Yet, Bring This Adv. With You!. 
  Capt. Kittinger 
is estimated at 80 revolutions per 
minute. 
DIDN’T GRAY OUT 
He said that .on no occasion 
during the 76,400- foot descent did   
Goals Commission | 
Chairmen Selected 
WASHINGTON (®—Administra- 
tion sources said Friday two men, 
have been selected to head Pres- 
ident Eisenhower’s proposed Na- 
tional Goals Commission, but offi- 
cial announcement is being with- 
held pending adequate pledges for 
private financing. 
Arthur F. Burns, former chair-— 
man of Eisenhower's Council of 
now head of the National Bureau 
Economic Advisers (1953-56) and © 
of Economic Research in New 
York, is said to have been tabbed | 
as commission chairman, 
Frank Pace Jr., former budget 
director and secretary of the Ar- 
my in thé Truman administration 
and now president of General Dy- 
namics Corp. of New York, is re- 
ported willing to take the vice 
chairmanship. 
Eisenhower announced plans oe 
the commission in a message to 
Congress last January. Me said he 
would name experts in many walks, 
of life to chart long-term goals) 
for the nation. y 
|   
Army Reports 
Machine That: 
Sees in Dark 
FORT DEVENS, Mass. #—Th: 
Army Friday reported successful 
testing this week of ——— 
that can see in the dark. 
In the demonstration the Army 
parked a three-quarter ‘ton GI 
truck on the range area of this) 
post about 600 yards from the 
electronic equipment. 
* * * 
The Army reported that although: 
total darkness prevailed, the equip-, 
ment was able to ‘‘see”’ the truck, | 
as well as other terrain features. ' 
* * * found himself jthe Senate subcommittee on _ prob- 
whirling violently through space. lems of the aged and aging, 
He isn’t sure yet how fast but it ;——HHHH—H§_—_   should meet in the lobby. out the money prizes. Workers 
  
  
  
  The instrument is described. as! 
using highly - sensitive electronic! 
vision equipment, somewlHat sirhi- 
lar to television transmitting and 
receiving equipment, 
Why Accent 
Less For 
Your Money 
NOT 
3% | 
NOT |   
  
am 
    32% | 
BUT | 
4% CURRENT RATE 
on ALL SAVINGS 
Capitol Savings 
& Loan Assoc. 75 W. Huron FE 4-0561 
Established 1890. FREE PARKING IN. 
REAR OF BUILDING - 
a 
2 
    YOU Can Turn These 
Words Into 
| MONEY 
Sell Them with a 
Want Ad 
in The Pontiac Press 
NAILS ~ 
NETS 
NEEDLE WORK 
NECKTIES . 
NECKERCHIEFS 
NECKLACE 
NANNY GOAT 
NEON LAMPS 
Sell Them with 
PONTIAC PRESS 
Want Ads 
FE 2-8181   
  2 
      
            leh] VALUABLE COUPON BALL E LLL VALUABLE COUPON Bidad! ae ss a 
— 6 or 12 Volts — Sealed Beam “5 Hours of Fun for Entire Family & a 
: _/ MORO! oy G : = AUTO HEADLIGHT #: POLY GAME a a @ a 
« Ree a8 Regular $4.00 a 
= $2.50 ] O08 .s 38 : 
. Each a8 a @ a @ : rd 
a a & / > fs ; “a 
7 ‘ic a8 The warns 304 sot gy rn aled against dirt and moisture. gap ing ame, Ol time ~ 
a #5040 or #5400 bulbs. Limit 2. so Pp ~ 
& AUTOMOTIVE — 2nd Floor a TOYS—2nd Floor » 
F gE BICOUPON GOOD NOV. 28 6 30mmmmmel femme BCOUPON COOD NOV. 28 6 30: me mEEe 
edd VALUABLE COUPON Iebebet-S tale VALUABLE COUPON babar a . 
. Stars Cars With Dead Battery ] = American Made — Leather Soles 1 
a 
ri CKS } : Battery Booster Cable :: SLIPPER SOCKS : a ¢ me $2935.Value - . 
bad Boys’ & Girls’ s x * 
= T 5 9 —s Reg. $2.50 y00 = 
® a8 . 
e a8 a 
» a & - 
= For 6 or 12 volt cars 8- a « 100° woo! knits Fancy de- | 
a. foot. spring clamps. Must gg @ signs. Colors. Boys’ & girls’ 
| ae Naas ia 7 ots a 7-8-9. Adult size 10-11- ~ 
- ase reer 2 OB $2.95 Adult Size ..1.29 m 
Fae aCOUPON coo NOV. 28 & TTT TT TL Tum mmm m COUPON COOD NOV. 28 &G 30: g Sees 
Lilet) VALUABLE COUPON [ete 
Choice of Mr. or Mrs. Character 
Potatohead Toys 
68° As shown — Mr. or 
Mrs. Potatohead with 
car, boat and trailer. 
     Reg. 
$1.00 
TOYS — 2nd Floor 
@ BB ICOUPON COOD NOY. 28 G 308 BEEBE 
btete| VALUABLE COUPON [fit 
Molded “MELAMINE” — As Shown 
BOWL PLANTERS 
69 Planter sets fn 
wrought gees rack— 
adds beauty to any 
room in the house. 
—ind Floor 
Tle sm mw COUPON GOOD NOV. 28 G 30:m meee 
= VALUABLE COUPON [ees 
. 12x18 Inches — Washable 
CARPET SQUARES Regular 49c Sellers 
879° Cut pile cotton or tweed loops 
tm variety of colors. Non-skid 
backing w ‘em together to 
make your own throw rugs. 
DOMESTICS — Basement 
EBB ICOUPON-COOD NOV. 28 & 30mumeenl 
           
   % Use indoors or outdoors — 
ont stretch or sag. Limit 
+ 200 feet 
nd 2 
} peta i HARDW ARE—2nd Floor 
muapp court coop NOV. 28 & 30g BEBEe 
suun VALUABLE COUPON jalan 
Giant Economy Size Tube of 
ee or Gleem 
Toothpaste 
rs 44° : 
j hated VALUABLE COUPON bhatt | 
Strong Wire Center — Jumbo . 
Plastre Clothesline = ro] Full. 100.Fr, 
ae 
M1 $1.95 T9° | ' Value — 
= 
a 
= 
a 
= 
hd 
at this price. Limit 3. 
DRUGS—Main Floor 
‘SBE E.COUPON COOD NOV. 28 & 308 BEES 
VALUABLE COUPON 
GILLETTE 
Biue-Blades Regular 98c 
6 Pack ‘2M double edge 
~~ ‘i Geto “a safety 
  eal 2 We Cash Pay Checks FREE “No Purchase Necessary, DRUGS — Main Floor — 
. IIMM: 98 North Saginaw — Only Fe nt Soe biti VALUABLE COUPON [it 
Toy Department Super Special 
AMT BINGO GAME 
38 $2.00 
Retail 
Cards. wood markers and 
new call boxv—turn crank & 
out pops printed ball calling 
letter & number. As shown. 
  TOYS — 2nd Floor 
B&B ew COUPON COOD NOV. 286 30g mu EeEe 
sitet VALUABLE COUPON fait 
   
     
    
      
     a 
“BEACON” 100% Cotton — Bound ~ 
a 
SHEET BLANKETS : aa: s 70x90 Inches a NUT ERAS ean a 
* a 
ae $1.99 T 39 : 
SMe Seder ey \\aN MANN eite - 
, ao Attractive stripe design 5 
, green only. Acetate 
CZs satin binding. Limit 2. - 
DOMESTICS — Basement . 
@B&& we COUPON COOD NOV. 28 G 30\ neues 
mad VALUABLE COUPON same 
20-Inch Width by 216-Inch Length 
GIFT WRAPPING PAPER 
Reg. 59c Roll 
39° Ss “s 
Choice of assorted colors, 
designs. Paper in  cutter- 
edge box. Limit 2? rolls. 
— Main Floor 
  ww BCOUPON GOOD NOV. 28 & s05 a eEn 
belated VALUABLE COUPON lens 
~- Full 9x 10-Inch Sheets — Pack 
SANDPAPER-15 SHEETS 
Regular 50c 
18° Pack of 16 sheets of 
sandpaper Assorted grits 
—fine, medium & coarse. 
Limit 2 packs 
— 2nd Floor 
@ wwe COUPON COOD NOV. 28 & 0nseeeel 
slate VALUABLE COUPON bia 
  In Window Gift Box — Famous 
shins in Paris Perfume 
Regular 
$1.00 
Bourjois ‘Evening In Paris’ scent 
perfume. Ideal for gift-giving or 
your personal use. 
COSMETICS — Main Floor 49 He 
    mm mEECOUPON GOOD NOV. 286 30mmmmmn! Um 
  ROTHERS    ¢ YOU Must Bring These Coupons 
to Buy at These Prices 
 Telalals VALUABLE COUPON auwey 
         
  s 
- Hi-Fi Plastic Base —7-Inch Reel s 
- aot Recording cg H Ld * ‘ \ . 
- y . a 
s ff . ¢ «a BX yh i, . a ° ee 
Hh nageatis *Jo |} a 3° Réguiar $3.95 value—- 
. Saag — hes e 
= aX ; splices, Limit 3. ae 
. me CAMERA — Main Floor . 
Damme COUPON GOOD NOV. 28 & 30g mmmee 
tbat VALUABLE COUPON fata 
~ As Advertised on delevision — 
a a 
. Slene T TE Razor Set 5 
. : 
| ae» 635 ~ $1.00 ~ 
a a 
~ j Choice of razors for light, ~ medium and heavy beards. . 
With pack of 6 blades. 5 
a 
— Main Floor ] 
2 a 
Entire” Stock of Popular Brands 
3 CHEWING GUMS ~ Carton 20 Packs 
we 52S Wrigley's, Dentyne, 
man’s, Chiclets,. etc. nee 
your favorite. (Limit 1.) $1.00 
7 CANDY — Main Floor 
BeBe mw ICOUPON COOD NOV. 28 6 30 BEERS 
—_—_ VALUABLE COUPON ba- 
Angora and Nylon Blend 
* Ladies’ Gloves All First Quality 
59° 50% Angora and 50° Nylon 
blend. American made. Small 
and medium size in white only. 
— Main Floor 
Tm BBB ECOUPON GOOD NOV. 28 & 30s ee Eee     
  Reg. 
$1.29 
Pair 
SSGR Geese eee eeeeee 
paccunnececacnaces® = = . = w 
5 - 
Cc 
D 
wo - 
rT 
a 
°o 
Cc 
v0 
ie] 
4 
= = 
: Choice of Entire Stock 
Men’s and Ladies’ 
1” Billfolds:: All Genuine LEATHERS 
| 
Gift boxed ge: in Bie aye of 
styles — Some some 
plain. 10% tax 
SUNDRIES — ide Floor 
COUPON COOD NOV. 28 & 300 EERE 
bd] VALUABLE COUPON [etal 
12°* 3 Styles 
O’Nite Case. Bermuda green 
Value te $35 
LUGGAGE — Basement 
Made by TONT— Advertised on, TH 
In Pressure Can 
soft and manageable, 
B&B PCOUPON GOOD NOV. 28 & 300mm First . Quality — Nationally Famous 
Values 
Choice of Train Case. Per- - 
or London Grey djscontinued 
PULL LMAN ong 
mm BCOUPON GOOD NOV. 28 G 30g me eeeE 
. ‘Regular 
New kind of hair y 
Limit 2 
ws VEE7.:30 Bidelti te), | ‘ Y our 
  Samsonite Luggage 
to $19.95 
sonal O'Nite of Regular 
colors. (Fed tax) 
WARDROBE CASE 13" 
blab VALUABLE COUPON bbetent 
99: $1.50 
— invisible, leaves hair 
Cosmetics—Main Floot    —paseeeeuseensenseee TTT 
TLIC 
—~ Main Floor 
       ~JalksonGod | Says There Is a Creator 
: in Speech Noting 100th | 
, Darwin Year ~ | ee 
CHICAGO (AP) — A priest-) ‘Scientst-Priest | 
    THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1959 d ¢ rd 
     
       
    \St. Louis Pastor to Visit 
‘Refugees on Christmas 
NEW YORK uw — The Rev. Dr. 
Edwin T. Dahlberg of St. ‘Louis, 
president of the National Council) 
of Churches, will spend the | 
Christmas season with the armed 
services in the Far Pacific. | 
After Christmas Dr; ~Dahlberg | 
will visit refugee centers in Asia] 
andthe Middle East in a month. | 
long journey by air which will 
take him around the world. ~He} | 
| 
| 
| 
| 
| 
OF NATIONALLY AQUVERTISED » 
TOYS |;     
   
            
   
   
             
         a told scholars today that} 
od is the creator of man — and! 
the creator of the elements of 
évolution as well. 
+ The Rev, J. Franklin Ewing, 
énthropologist from Fordham Uni- 
ersity took for granted the scien- 
ific validity of the theory of evo-|    will visit church-supported refugee | 
centers in Hong Kong, India, } 
Pakistan and Jordan. 
Dr. Dahlberg will spend Christ. | 
mas Day in Okinawa and will 
preach at a special service which 
will broadcast throughout the Far 
    30/502 OFF .f t 
: - * * * Pacific via the armed forces r eres “FOE os ss ad 
‘God is the creator of man network. ; . . — ea —? — ae o ‘ Wh ~ | The council head spent Christ : body and sou ether he used |mas 1958 with the armed services| the method of evolution for prep- | 
aration of the human body or 
éreated it from unorganized mat- 
¢ is not of primary importance. 
either case, he is the Creator,” 
be added. jin Spain and North Africa and} 
|Christmas 1957 in Alaska. The 
council is composed of 33 Protes- 
tant and Orthodox denominations.       
           
  $§ Reserves the MOST 
Advanced Electric 
Razor in The World!   
* * * 
‘-The Jesuit priest said that, 
even if God used a body that al- 
*feady had been formed, hé raised 
that body to the human level and/| 
« gave it a soul.               
       
                AP Wirephote 
after the latter's Met debut in a special perform- 
ance of Strauss’ “Gypsy Baron’ Thursday night. 
Slezak had the role of Szupan. a SLEZAK AT MET — Rudolph Bing, left, gen- 
eral manager of the Metropolitan Opera House in 
‘God is cohtinually creating his) New York City, looks over some of the medals 
creatures,” he said. “If he were) on the costume of Broadway star Walter Slezak tp withdraw his creative power BE | semen aes __ _ 
a second from you and me and 
the worm and the elephant, all 
ould. disappear into nothingness. \First Time in Four Years i'Hearst’s Wales Castle 
‘This means that God created not| to Be a Plush Resort Gnly all beings: but also all niet 
jalities for evolution.” | q @ f a IC 0) se CARDIFF, Wales (UPI)—Cardiff 
. + * * financier Julian Hodge has an- 
8 iV 
gee" silitng "or scientists “212 det nounced plans to turn an llth 
scholars observing the 100th anni- LANSING (— Michigan has Century castle once owned by the 
Versary of the Publication of| lost the battle to cut its traffic | under 100 between now and the |late American publisher William 
Letice Darwin's “Origin of the, fatality tol) for a fourth straight | end of the year but we won't | Randolph Hearst into a plush vaca- 
ies’ — a theory of the grad-| FUEL OW     
      
      
    
      
    
   
      
     
          
          
   
       
         REMINGTON 
“Princess” Beauty Shaver   
FIRST AND ONLY ELECTRIC SHAVER THAT 
ADJUSTS TO ANY 
BEARD OR SKIN 
    
  OAKLAND FUEL 
Call FE 5-6159 
  ' we'd have to keep traffic deaths 
  
  i 
in 1959, a state police |come up with that figure,” he 
       
         
          year ti 
val development or.evolution of| statistician indicated today. | added. “ earn x OPEN 7 A.M. TO 9 P.M. , ADJUST Plants and creatures. | ‘The state’s road d.ath toll was | Lucas attributed the un- Hodge bought the fabulous St Monday thru Saturday NEW |/ ABLE} ; 2,004 in 1955. An all-out traffic | welcome reversal in the road i KUHN AUTO WASH Donat’s Castle, near the town of | 
Liantwit Major, for $840,000. Hearst, 
spent-nearly $800,000 to restore it! 
several years ago. | safety campaign pushed the death trend to “‘more cars, more 
figure doWn to 1,747 in 1956. The drivers and more mileage.” He 
| 
i 
i   4 Holds in Layaway 
ee 
6 TUBE TABLE 
MODEL RADIO Across from Firestene 
“ ‘uren 
    
     
     count dropped jo 1,537 in 1957 | noted that an October traffic . 
Beer Hunting Fatals é and to 1,375 last year, y indicated total mil 
in State Now Seven eee ee re aoe Be mies | I ; - But, with five weeks of dan- was running five per cent ahead 
: REMINGTON’ ROLL:AMATIC   
  
  By The Associated Press gerous driving conditions re- | 1958 
Thomas Kettunen, 35, of Trout the provisional death | 
toll for 1959 is 1,274.   
maining, 
k, ‘was wounded. fatally Fri- 
  
  
        ' L 
en san | “a: (Christmas Mail ber of Michigan deer hunters shot) 4) a oe ee ora ary | | J, 
death ‘since the season opened) the average deat toll for | : RISK IT! e «£& © December alone in the past M G b A 
: five years is 170. q . 0 if The ancient who squeezed a red i State Police said Kettunen was 7 i ‘ * | y y stained his fingers, fined his life Ay aa Gives ig Floor 
SS et Vater te) ser | rece ee a nae $1988 by his brother William, 42, ‘There's mo question in my | ° . A sailor e 1 
told officer$ he had himed| mind that we will go over the CAB Proposing Half) —— West; mek deen te - m of . oe coal 
1958 total,” said O. M. Lucas, | Rate but Railroads ee sail under polar ice. he risked his life to Se a a deer. The accident occurred 
is gon County about eight miles 
Creek in the vindicate his contention. Boys look into the 
eyes of 
me?” ose girls risk poverty and h 
love and happiness against that 
risk, " slip a ring on their fingers. state police traffic safety sta- 
tistician. ‘‘We've still got De- 
cember ahead of us and that is 
normally one of the worst months 
  SCHICK BUTANE Objecting | 
WASHINGTON (AP) — Ordinary ; 
mail would go by air during the MOVE CONTROL PANEL TO ADJUST ROLLER COMBS 
TO SOLVE EVERY SHAVING PROBLEM IN THE WORLD! 
      
       
    7 « &° 2? & for traffic accidents.”’ 3) | oT. « wy Christmas rush under a Civil) Risk is inherent to progress. Someone .. Ya“ W4year-old Ann ‘Arbor . boy To stay even with last year, |; sonautics Board proposal. risked capital to build the house next door: LEFT TO LOWER Roller Combs as - also was a victim of a fata) hunt- commercial air lines risk Tuptcy to save r beard gets tougher, or grows The Post Office Department us time, crossed rivers. plains and looeus onl oa ta sideburns.   digg accident Friday. Orie Curtiss 7 ; was‘shot while H-game hunt- (Christmas Tree wants to do this, but the railroads agg cipital to. gine ade i RIGHT TO RAISE Roller Combs whea 
          
       
  
    idg ‘about two miles north of Ann} ee ‘pacreaed) (periies| cities with schools and ; risk and your skin feels more tender 
r. Business Rolling mi Dec. 3 to {ile Botice of ob America are synonymous. UNLIMITED SETTINGS ‘Washtenaw County sheriff's pape v9 fe a + dae in between for every man's 
er — — struck Int High Gear en CAB proposed a rate about! i ” i caaving eer POCKET SIZE the head when his cousin, . Exclusive Roller Combs roll skin jena, comb whiskers up 
A. Haas, 12, of Ann Arbor,| LANSING Uf — Michigan's five-|halt of that paid the airlines for} ==) VOORHEIS-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME to shave the Hidden Beard: whisker bases below ordinary TRANSISTOR RADIO atcidentally fired a double-barre]| million-dollar Christmas tree busi- mie or about 19 cents a ton | 264 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8387 | shaving level. Shaves last hours longer! 6 diamond-honed cut- 
shotgun while loading it. iness is rolling into high gear, the|"" i; +- «* ters in the man-sized head — largest live shaving area of all. With $ 88 
a |State Agriculture Department said) The airlines had agreed to this a Over 40% mere men now bey Remington then the second ranking clectric shaver Earphone : 
    
   
  today. 
Early shipments are moving to 
market, the department said, put- 
ting state and coynty law enforce- 
  rate for December, but indicated 
they would want a higher rate. if 
| they continue to carry ordinary 
|first-class mail. Watch for KAREN Big CHRISTMAS    
    ment men on the lookout for vio-| 
ators, ee ee Carpet Sale in * * * e Post fice agreed, saying P ti Pr ‘ \ ¢ 
P= Spray soot away it wants to establish a permanent ontiac Fress _ 6 \eCsl § 
     
    the White Plame || To-discourage theft of trees from The Post Office 
    rate in hearings, 
:             
         R ver! Economical | public _ ag = sale ed in had told the CAB the Christmas Monday, 
: accompany trees being moved IN |ioad would be heavier than ever coon ste ** T quantities of more than six. The | and it wanted to utilize unused Nov. 30th Model 657 . _ $1 Holds Trade }    
   =e St hardware stores. 
: \department’s Plant Industries Divi- in Layaway sion supervises enforcement, with 
help from the State Conservation 
Department, state police and sher-/ nit tg Due in Budapest 
a es ‘for Hungarian Congress WA TERFORD CLOTHIERS ¥* * * .. 
jthe original owner must contain | BUDAPEST, Hungary ® — Nik-| OPEN SUNDA y A special bill of sale given by) 
legal description of the property| ita §. Khrushchev will come to Bu-| ‘EER Reg. lcargo space of airlines for first- 
class mail.       
    
  774 WOODWARD AVE. 
       
  
   r— STUDENTS— Rental plan on musical $4 00 
instruments, per week .. 1    FULL SIZE 5° X 9 
2-PIECE   ‘Trampets—Clarinets—Cornets, Others || Where trees were cut. Forms are/dapest for the Hungarian Commu-| 
jaene! Rnstecmnente, Sugytios, Parte jobtainable at department offices,| nist Party Congress, the first since one Reg. $8 STRUCTO $4 PARKER BROS. PING PONG ‘EDWARD’ S 18 S. Seginaw ithe Conservation Department,|the 1956 uprising, the Soviet Em-| TABLE lcounty agricultural agents, The Congress) 
|police posts and sheriff's offices. state} bassy here said. 
opens Monday. 
The spokesman gave no indi-| 
cation’ when the much traveled) 
Soviet premier will arrive but. in- 
formed sources said he is expected 
to fly in Sunday afternoon.   
    
    MIXER $940 4 HOUR SALE] | == | Open Sundoy 1 P. M. to 5 P. M: - A 
Bonafide Reg. $29.95 CEMENT ¢ 4° ‘MONOPOLY 
19%   
      President to Broadcast 
Yule Greetings Dec. 23         
      
  
  
         
          
  
Reg. 20.00 
67 | 12" 
STORE HOURS: OPEN SUNDAY 10 10.5 
Super BARGAIN Cénters| | WASHINGTON (AP)—Presidént| The Congress, the Party's sev- 3) Value LIONEL TRAINS 
|Eisenhower wil] broadcast Christ-|enth, is expected to last four days. 100% WOOL ’ 
|mas greetings to the nation and|The main item on the agenda is a é COCA-COLA 
the world on Dec. 23 |new five-year plan aimed at in-| : ou lcreasing indasttiel.: production €5 Herringbone, Tweed, Cord, DISPENSER 
| He will read his greetings -at to 70 per cent by 1965. Melions and Cashmere ‘ e 
4:30 p. m. Eastern. Standard Time | ——— == SUB ¢ i 4 
after throwing a switch to light ’ , ' U B NS 
the White House tree and open | 60 RAMBLER | . 
the annual Christmas Pageant of} RADIO $17 4800 , Your Choice, Sunday Only 
‘Peace. HEATER > Tom Thumb * * * Cucose Your Owe Eapipment ‘ 
| This year’s White House tree, BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER $10 Carrom Typewriter a .70-foot silver spruce, is a cift! 6-3900 
from the State of Maine. om = With Cover 
Suppose he goes 
and drives your 
car? 
t if someone ‘under the 
uence” drives your car, has +i 
  PROFESSIONAL RUG CLEANING on the latest “ 
most modern 
equipment.        ‘ 
. 
: 
’ 
‘ 
‘ 
J 
> 
. 
‘ 
‘ , 
    Sunday 
Only 
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT 
Bonafide Reg. $79.95 
100% WOOL imperial Sharkskin 
Worsted—Triple Twist $ 49 
2-PANT SUITS *ox;” 
    &n accident and damag 
  
    
Our cleaning methods.give 
new life to your rugs, bring 
new warmth and beauty to whole-home. You'll, det more 
wear and satisfaction out of all your carpe, rugs and uphol- stered furniture with regular professional care.   
      : Fw ol Corp Ree Revived L mn WEST SIDE ‘EAST SIDE. _ DOWNTOWN 
| AGENCY, INC. NEW WAY WATERFORD CLOTHIERS {f 1052.7; HURON. 526,N PERRY 142 WAYNE ST. RUG AND CARPET CLEANERS 
a “Serving Pontiac For 31 Years” 
* wel 42 Wisner Street ok   5810 Saean'e Beaty =, —~P,- in Waterford 
"i" Faaphene Ol ORionde eso OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. 3s 
# 
2   SS eo ae 3 ee ees 
FE 2-7132 
      
   Ly 
| 
  
    
  P 4 
ooSIOVd WIAD TVW But $70 Million Scheme May Doll It Up   
London Tower Isn't ‘Falling Down’ LONDON w—A 70-million-dollar , 
scheme to. provide a more stately 
setting for the Tower of London, 
one of this capital's most spec- 
tacular attractions, was announced 
today. 
Actually the historic landmark and scariet-robed beefeater per- 
form their ceremonial duties, more 
accessible to tourists, 
overlooking the Thames River jgreater tourist attraction. 
ds a cluster of about a  dezén 
4towers—and one of the proposals 
Js to build still another tower 16 
stories high, ee 
The plan was announced by de- 
signers of two municipal bodies, 
the corporation. of the old city of 
London, in which the tower is sit- 
uated, “and: the London County 
Council. * 
° b * * 
The idea is to make the tower, 
Where the crown jewels are housed   The scheme is 
Wide ramps would prove an easy 
approach to Tower Hil. Terraces 
and gardens would give new back- 
grounds for the tower itself as well 
as for the monuments of Trinity 
Square, the Customs House and 
All Hallows Church. There. is me 
tensive provision for playgrounds, 
    
Matched Wedding Bands 
14 Kt. Geld 2 for $7.95 
Diamond 
. 
STMAS LAYAWAYS 
AN 
    LENWARD’S issourn | | EDW 5 SAGINA high quality office buildings and 
shops. 
* * ae 
_ Sir Isaac Hayward, leader of the 
property will, alone, be about -five 
million pounds (14 million dollars). 
The whole scheme, including pri   
  Sparks -Griffin 
24-Heur Ambulance Bervite ne 
  
            
      Carpet Sale 
Monday, 
Nov. 30th Watch for KAREN’S Big CHRISTMAS — vate investment, would \be in the 
neighborhood of 25 million pounds 
(70 million dollars), he said. 
B. G. Arthur, chairman of a 
city planning committee, said con- 
struction could start in two or 
three years. 
  
Detroit Firm 
to Entertain 
barring automobiles trom, j SCIENCE Group 
Some 40 members of the Oak: 
jand County Science Teachers 
\Assn. Wednesday will be feted 
by the Carbdloy Co. of Detroit, a 
metallurgy division of the General 
| Electric Co. 
The event is the 
third anniversary. 
| The teachers, .represénting sci- 
ence departments in school sys-   association's 
| tems ‘throughout the county, will | 
powder | 
\London County Council, estimated) metallurgy process, use of equip- 
ithe cost for acquiring the necessary} ment and facilities, | wateh the company’s 
| The hosts wil] provide dinner 
|for the visiting teachers. 
prt) “The purpose of our organiza- Ford Calls 200 Back: 
\tion,”’ said Walter Ainsworth, pres- 
* |ident of the association and teach-' 
«@ er at Pontiac Central High School,'Co. today told 200 more workers HEARINGS, INSPECTIONS 
4 “is to keep abreast of progress in,to return to jobs Monday at the) Texas and Celifornia lead the > Cane Sugar 
FUNERAL HOME *} science in industry and research. |company's stamping plant in Bul-| 54.10 a aihovuneni- ol mlerant SS Fine 
“| “Teachers understand their sub-) falo hae te ins on SO — Lb. 1 . g . ' x 
| iacte . labor, but New Jersey, New York ss, ted c Cc 
Pe 7 . Ae = jects better and can augment text and Michigan also are described Sk Lb. Bag 
Thoughtful Service ‘**' books with lectures from their own; Honduras is ‘an important ma- - “heav users.’ SS] Bag ; ; 
@ experiences.” ihogany producer. ig ‘ , ; a 4 —_ berger po 
mm: se | mo The subcommittee’s past sched- | xpires - 4. Lim ‘ 46 Williams St, Phone FB 2-5841 ba ule has included both public WITH COUPON -S ? sey ett e eee se ee 
"|Okay for Santa, Maybe     fe THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1959 
Legislation T M C | 
for Migrants? 
NORTHWOOD MARKETS 
ALWAYS THE BEST FOR LESS Senator Says Officials 
Feel Federal Action Is 
the Answer | 
WASHINGTON. (UPI)—Sen. War 
rison A. Williams (D-NJ) said Fri- 
888 Orchard Lake 
Open Daily ‘Til 9 P.M. 
Open Sunday ‘Til 5 P.M.    
   
     ~ 
  day there is a strong feeling among 
state and local officials that federal 
legislation is needed to solve prob-| 
lems posed by the nation's legions 
of migrant workers. 
* * * 
Williams is chairman of the Sen- 
ate’ subcommittee on migratory 
labor which plans to visit New 
‘Jersey Monday, and New York 
the following 
    ‘ 
ONLY     
AP Wirephote 
WANTS DIVORCE—Mrs. Tina and Pennsylvania PLENTY OF FREE 
PARKING IN-OUR 
LARGE PRIVATE LOT! | Onassis, 29, has filed for divorce ‘week 
| from Greek shipowner Aristotle ' In those states already toured 
(Onassis in New York. She named} by the subcommittee, he said, 
a mysterious ‘Mrs. J.R." as CO | state and local officials were respondent, ‘She did not refer at | «ery much concerned” but ua- all to Maria Callas, with whom | abie te cope with some ef the | 
' her husband has recently been | migrant labor problems. 
linked. ,           
  
    
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT 
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES 
  
Fe Se Oa ee oe oe er OG On a 0 
VALUABLE COUPON : . “Because the migratory workers 
\ are continually moving from state   DOMINO 
    to state, it is difficult for county RS 
‘and state afficials to do very much SS Pure Cane Granulated DOMI NO 
BUFFALO. N. Y. ®—The Ford in certain areas,” Williams said. S; Pure Cane Granulated 
SUGAR 
  
      ! SUGAR = 
oo 
oe 
oe 
oe 
oe 
oe 
ee 
oe 
oe 
oe 
oe 
oe 
oe. Be 
hearings and inspections of mi- | 
grant labor facilities,   
  
Pontiac Press 77 MAYSVILLE, Ky. (AP)—A 
  pull your sled.” 
  Who Wants a Reindeer? 
ment store Santa Claus he wanted a horse for CHristmas. 
| a ra * problems of housing and education 
| “How about a reindeer?” said Santa. 'which have baffled states and loca! 
' * * ri communities for many years. 
“No,” the boy replied. “I.want a horse to do some plowing 
this spring and I never knew 
a MAXWELL HOUSE or 
CHASE & SANBORN 
COFFEE Cc ‘ 
1 Lb. Vacuum Can bh The subcommittee estimates that 
about one million persons are on 
the move in 23 states helping to 
tend and harvest crops. i 
The existence of such a large 5-year-old boy told a depart- | 
|mobile army of workers has posed 
  The group has held hearings and 
conducted inspections in Washing-_ 
j}ton, D.C,; Wisconsin, Michigan and 
' Minnesota, = _._ as 
  a reindeer did anything but   
  
N 
BEA 
  -— oe 
res :™ ee) . —— 
\. PANELED LIVING ROOM 
WITH COSTLY MODERN 
    
    Breast 0° Chicken 
Chunk Style 
. TUNA GZ TUNA 
“VAN CAMP’S 
‘PORK and '.'° 
BEANS 
HYGRADE 
Pure Breakfast IN MILFORD... One of 
Pontiac’s Finest Suburbs . . . 
and Only Minutes Away! BREAST-(): CHICKEN ASO) Ce 
25 - 10°;   
  
     
    acne 
29   
' 
=) One of Detroit's Most PORK 1-Ib. ' 
> Scenic and Desirable Cello 
™) Locations Overlooking SAUSAG Pak 
24 Kensington Stote Park 
  
The only eggs in Mich- 
igam that bear the U. 8, 
pt. of Agriculture seal 
Presh, y Quality. Tom's Finest Quality “Country Queen” 
U.S.D.A. Grade “A” Fresh 
~ MEDIUM EGGS Dez. 29°     
      
  
  
   FAIRLANE 
FROZEN 
|)SPINACH & | 
'|]| Rich-Rex Pure All Vegetable 
SHORTENING 
Ideal For Bar-B-Quing 
LEAN - MEATY 
|SPARE RIBS