ae ee 
— x saa, |         
  
  
Drive Aguinst Vice. 
Unceasing—Straley Pontiac Polite Chief Herbert W. Straley today said 
. has insisted on a strict policy enforcement against 
vice during his seven-year reign as head of the de- 
partment... 
“Straley’s comment came on the heels of a report by   
the head of the vice squad,f- 
Detective Richard Evans, in 
which Evans told Public 
Safety Director George D. 
Eastman, “I am unable to 
explain a policy where there is no. 
policy.” 
Evans’ report charged that vice 
| conditions in the city are “deplor- 
able” and that gambling, narcotics 
and prostitution operations. are 
wide 
». Mtraley said he has often told 
‘efficerf there was tiever to be 2 
letup in vice enforcement. 
“T didn't write out any directives 
on it,” the chief said. “I spoke to 
the officers verbally and time and 
time again stressed that we must 
enforce the law as it should be 
enforced, Written communications 
have a gr of spots shelved.” 
Pichape 4 tack if comnmuntestton|setienal 
existed between uniformed patrol- 
men and vice officers, he said. 
St ee ets 
formed patrolmen have complained Juke Box Probe 
Gets Under Way Senate Rackets Group 
to Investigate Industry 
for Gangland Inroads 
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The 
hearings 
Thureday, the commie 
has spbpoenaed about 
that their observations on vice con-.| tioning 
ditions were reported to superior 
officers, but that.in many instances 
vo action was taken. 
~~ “If this is true,” the chief said, 
“the superior officers have been 
Tax and negligent and should be taken to task.” 
~ Straley denied that he made as- 
signments to the viee squad for 
disciplinary reasons. He said the 
claim was made by “persons trying 
sod horn a — atmos- 
a 
to to talk about it.” 
officer to supply advance informa- 
tion on future vice raids. — 
“There's always that danger in 
Few raids on organized and syn- 
dicated vice operations have been 
conducted, Straley said, because of 
the complicated =e of the op- 
eration, 
* * * 
“There's a lot of work to be 
done in cases of that type,’”’ he 
said.. ‘Commercial vice interests 
try hard to learn when an in- 
vestigation is on, and the walls 
have ears. These people have their 
spies and observers hanging 
around police departments.’ 
He said that many times the 
viee detail has been on the verge 
of cracking: a ring, only to have 
the culprits fold up operations 
and disappear. 
Size of the vice detail was in- 
creased from five to seven, per- 
sons after State Police conducted 
a raid on a horse-bet ring Aug. 29, 
Straley pointed out. 
x * * 
“With the small amount of men 
working on vice, we've kept it pret- 
ty well under control,’ Straley de- 
clared, 
“When vice goes down, the crime 
rate goes down, and that’s what 
happened’ in Pontiac,’’ the chief 
stated, 
Eastman three weeks ago, took 
charge of the vice squad when he 
relieved Straley of command: in 
the department. Py 
is   
He May Run for Mayor 
NEW YORK (#— Rep. Adam 
Clayton Powell (D-NY), top Ne- 
gro political leader in New York 
City, says he is thinking ~- about 
running for mayor. 
Reds to Rest Saturdays 
LONDON @® —-The Soviet   
“SHOPPING 
ie TO 
    “We are endeavoring to discover 
the extent of racketeer infiltra- 
tion into the multibillion dollar 
industry,”’ McClellan said. 'De Gaulle Rules 
France Today 
Without Dispute Reds Blitzed, Routed 
in Election; Leaders of 
4th Republic Ousted 
Charles de Gaulle ruled to- 
day as France’s undisputed 
strong man, swept to a pin- 
nacle of power and prestige 
run off elections yesterday 
powertal, Moscow-controlled: 
French Communist Party, turn- 
ing it into a tiny, impotent greup 
that can no longer sway French 
politics. 
2. Ousted in a mass wave of 
vote for De 
  
You'll Want to Read 
Police Editorial 
Page 6 
koe * 
Teenage Diet 
Page 11 
* bd * 
Berlin Background 
Page 19 
tt 
New Comic—Rivets 
Page 27       PARIS (UPI) — Premier 
by a tidal wave of votes in|. 
1. , ,Bittued and routed the encn| 
4 
stores today. In a wildcat strike MILK FLOW HALTS — Idle trucks at Detroit Creamery testi- fy to the complete halt of milk deliveries to Pontiac homes and day, idling all of Pontiac's mith processing plants. 
over the retail store price of milk,   truck drivers and plant production workers stayed off the job to- s) 
  
NEW YORK ® — Dun & Brad- 
street today predicted continued 
business recovery next year paced 
by a strong upturn in automobile 
production sion will slacken ‘‘somewhat,” the 
agency said. 
Pre-recession peaks will be 
matched during the first six 
months of 1959 and a general busi- 
ness rise then will level out, Dun 
& Bradstreet said. It said nothing 
of boom proportions is in sight. 
The report said much of the in- cichenen will increase’ but). 
crease of the first six mohths of|won’t reach its former peak until 
1959 will follow from a rise in man-|the second half of 1959, according   a Se ee Big Year Forecast for Auto Industry Consumer buying, the report 
sald, wil] be spurred. by record 
levels of personal income. It said 
this trend will be of particular 
benefit to manufacturers of home 
ica" furniture and cars. 
* ® 
ufacturers’ new orders. It said |to the prediction. The forecast said 
these in turn will reflect a “slow|that unemployment will continue 
but steady improvement” in capi-|higber than it was before the re- 
tal spending and consumer buying.| cession. 
  
ee ee 
17 More Inches 
of Snow Keeps: 
Petoskey Busy 
PETOSKEY (@ — New snow 
totaling 17 inches since Friday kept 
Emmet County road crews on con- 
tinuous operating basis today. They 
reported success in the battle to 
keep school bus routes open. 
Steady operations resulted in a 
breakdown of two of the county’s 
four snowplows last night. Petos- 
key’s only snow-removal machine 
also went out of commission last 
night. 
Maintenance men expected to 
have the equipment repaired later 
today, anticipating more action 
with the light, fluffy snow if winds 
increase. Drifts up to six feet 
plugged some county side roads 
Sat : 
Some rural mail carriers report- 
ed they were unable to complete 
their routes. 
School officials in neighboring 
> }Charlevoix and Cheboygan Coun- 
ties reported bus routes open de- 
spite an estimated 14 inches of 
new snow since last Friday.       
U.S, Reacts to Reports Russia Flying One   
funds they need to put in the 
such a plane. 
Soviets are flying the world’s 
powered aircraft, a huge 
* * 
they could say for sure. 
vance. 
the end of this year. . 
States. 
  powered airplane, a feat which one report 
says Russia already has achieved. 
Chairman Dennis Ciaver (D-NM) 
of the senate military appropriations 
subcommittee, declared yesterday that 
Congress would give President Eisen- 
hower all the money he wanted to build 
He made the pledge shortly after Avia- 
tion Week magazine reported that the 
bomber, and may be planning to fly it sev 
eral times around the world non-stop. 
* 
Some Defense Department officials said 
there appeared to be “some element of 
truth” in the story. But they added they 
would have to study it thoroughly before 
However, a top Pentagon official may 
already have paved the way for an official 
announcement of the reported Soviet ad- 
Maj. Gen. Donald J. Keirn, chief of 
the U.S. Atomic Plane Project, said Nov. 
20 that he would not be surprised if Rus- | 
sia had a nuclear plane airborne before 
| Aviation Week'said the Russian success 
gives them a four-year lead over the United 
The magazine said the Soviet bomber - two months. 
air an atom- 
by observers 
added. 
first nuclear- 
experimental 
Such an 
| Nearly 
jet engine. :Atom Plane Gets Push .From Our News Wires 
WASHINGTON — A-key senator has 
promised that U.S. scientists will get all the was completed six months ago and has 
been flying in the Moscow area for at least 
SAW TEST FLIGHT 
Its test flights there have been watched 
from both Communist and 
non-Communist: ‘countries, the magazine 
The nuclefr~ powered plane is a 
military prototype, not just a conven- 
tional plane fitted with an experimental 
nuclear power plant for test -purposes, 
the report said. 
The nuclear power plant was described 
as the simplest kind of an atomic engine, 
a direct air éycle design similar to that be- 
ing developed by this country. 
Ck . 
engine is like the ordinary 
turbojet engine except that a nuclear re- 
actor replaces the combustion clamber to 
provide the heat which furnishes the power. 
three. years ago, inf January 
"1956, this country first used a nuclear reactor to provide the heat for a turbo- 
The Atomic Energy Commission said 
~~ tests of the laboratory model at its eastern 
Idaho testing station demonstrated the 
feasibility of 
General Electric So. at Evendale, Ohio. ‘the engine, designed by the 
_ No airplane has yet been built to go 
studies have 
> with the engine, although work on design 
been under way for several 
years at Convair’s Fort Worth, Tex., plant 
and at Lockheed's facilities at Marietta, Ga. 3Die,2 injured as Car Hits Tree Troy Mother, 2 Children 
Killed on Way Home 
From Church 
children were killed Sunday return- 
ing from church as their auto 
tree. 
Two other children in the auto 
were critically injured. 
Dead are: Mrs. Marion R. Mach, 
30, of 5570 John R Rd.; her son 
Eric, 7; and daughter Claudia, 3. 
_Also injured were Janet, 10, 
and Karen, 8. St. Joseph Mercy 
Hospital listed Janet in “poor’’ 
condition and Karen in “critical” 
condition this morning. 
Troy Police said Mrs. Mach was 
driving north on John R. just south 
  
There were no 
85 witnesses to the 
a accident but skid 
marks showed the 
Mach auto skidded sideways off 
the road and struck a tree to the 
right. 
The mother and son were pro- 
nounced dead at the scene by 
Oakland County Deputy Coroner 
Dr. J. Donald Green, of Bir- 
mingham, Claudia was dead on 
arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- 
pital at 1:45 p.m.       
Angel Church, in Clawson. 
  
Packers Pick Duncan 
PHILADELPHIA 
Dame’s fullback, 
sante. 
PRS 
In Today's P Press 
    ee CO eae 
    A Troy mother and two of her): 
skidded out of control and hit a 
of 17 Mile Rd. 
akla when her auto ap- 
a ae parently went out; 
4 Y | of control on the 
Toll +} slippery pave- 
in °58 | ment. 
The woman's husband, Floyd, < 
was at home with a younger son. |~ 
— The © 
Green Bay Packers made Iowa’s | | 
quarterback Randy Duncan the |: 
No, 1 choice in the annual Na. |~ 
tional Football League’s player | © 
draft today. 
The Detroit Lions took Notre 
Nick Pietro- Celebrates 84th 
Birthday at Home 
LONDON (AP) — Sir Winston 
Charchill celebrated hig 84th 
birthday Sunday with a huge 
eake and his children and grand- 
children around to help him cut 
it. 
* * * 
Churchill and his famity spent 
the day at Chartwell, his country 
home south of London. Hundreds 
of congratulatory tele grams 
poured in, including messages 
from Queen Elizabeth II and 
President Eisenhower. 
In a statement to the press, 
the old man said the flood of 
messages had given him and his 
family great pleasure. 
x * * 
“There is such a large num- 
ber,” he continued, “that I can- 
not, unfortunately, acknowledge 
each one. But I should like to 
express my warm thanks to all 
who have so kindly thought of 
me,’”" 
  
3 Die in Congo Violence 
POINTE NOIRE, Middle Congo 
(® — Three persons were killed 
and two seriously injured today 
in violence which broke out here 
as a result of a decision to trans- 
fer the capital of this French 
African territory to Brazzaville. 
  
|Famed Explorer Dies 
FRAMINGHAM, Mass, (2 — 
Sir Hubert Wilkins, famed ex- 
plorer of thea@North and South 
poles, was found dead today in 
his hotel room. He was 70. 
The five were returning home | yx 
from attending mass at Guardian || 
The stack of letters 
to The Pontiac Press for 
Pole is growing daily, as 
on to him by special rei 
and he is working hard 
few weeks. 
from time to time. 
Raymond Lidell 
Pat 
Jeffrey Browning 
Tommy Browning 
Marianne Lidehl 
Michael Anthony 
Eric Anthony, 
Billy Mark Armstrong 
Byron West 
           ROR Winston Ch urchill 
Santa called long distance the other day to 
say that he had received the letters we've mailed 
The jolly old gentleman asked us to remind 
kiddies in the Pontiac area to hang their stockings 
with care, and mind their behavior for the next 
The Press will continue to forward letters to 
Santa and will publish the names of the writers 
Letters have been received from: Mercury to Drop 
to 15 Tonight, 
Snow Expected 
November's closing Sunday left 
its mark on Pontiac residents by 
dropping to four degrees above 
zero, the coldest temperature on 
record since last winter, when on   4 
ys 
Wildcat Strikes 
Intended fo Hike 
Store Prices Dairy Workers, Drivers 
Fail to Show Up .for Work This Morning 
By PETE LOCHBILER. . 
‘Milk déliveries to homes 
and stores were halted in 
the Pontiac area today by 
a work-stoppage by dairy 
workers and drivers. | 
Wildeat strikes, .appar- 
‘ently aimed at« forcing the 
retail store price ‘of milk 
into line with the delivered 
price, hit dairies from De- 
troit north to Bay City and 
Saginaw. 
There was no immediate indica- 
tion of how long the strikes would 
last. 
Milk ceased to flow here as proc- 
ess workers failed to show up at’ 
the city’s major and minor proc- 
essing plants at midnight. 
Borden’s and Detroit Creamery, 
home 
  Feb, 18 the thermometer regis- 
tered a low of two above, 
the low will be near ‘15. 
degree range. 
Tuesday will be arty cloudy 
and cold with a high of 22 ex- 
pected, 
This morning ‘the Automobile 
Club of Michigan reported the ma- 
jor roads in the southern half of the 
state are clear but side roads re- 
main slippery and snow covered. 
In an extended forecast the .U.S. 
Weather Bureau predicts tempera- 
tures will average near the nor- 
mal 34-38 high and 20-27 low for 
the next five days with a gradual 
warming trend to be noted. Light 
snow or snow flurries are possible. 
In downtown Pontiac the lowest 
temperature recorded preceding 8 
a.m. was 15. At 1 p.m, the temper- 
ature downtown was 27. 
Lost in North Woods, 
Woman, 57, Found 
ROSCOMMON (UPI) — A 57- 
year-old woman who became lost 
while deer-hunting in the heavily 
wooded area near Higgins Lake, 
was found by searchers early this 
morning. 
Mrs. Rose Nill, of Grayling, was 
suffering from exposure and shock, 
but otherwise appeared all right. 
She was taken to Mercy Hospital 
in Roscommon for treatment. 
* * * 
Mrs. Nill was found by four men 
of a group of 40 police and volun- 
teers who searched for her through 
the night after she failed to return 
to the American Legion Camp on 
U.S. 27 where she and her hus- 
band, Lee, were staying while on 
the hunting trip.   
        
      
         
         
     
          
       
         
        
    
    to Santa Claus delivered 
forwarding to the North 
Christmas draws nearer. 
indeer messenger service, 
to fill all the orders. 
Nancy Mapley 
Billy Wright 
Mary Stewart 
Betty Williams 
Barbara Williams 
Christine Fox. 
Darlene Fox 
Lee Fox 
Gail Edmunds 
5 Srafsasxsa neomnta BES SaaS     
     
             
             
      
          
city, an tar ap Utien (0 te: eent, 
Birmingham to the south, and 
Walled Lake to the west. 
DELIVER TO HOSPITALS 
Although all home, store and 
school deliveries were halted, milk 
was delivered today to Pontiac 
General Hospital by Nye Dairy and 
to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital by 
Nye, Borden's, Mapleleaf and De- 
troit Creamery. 
x «& 8 
Some Pontiac schools wére ob- 
taining milk by picking it up them- 
selves at the strike-bound dairies. 
Carl F. Burger, spokesman for 
the Detroit Milk Producers Assn., 
said he had been unable to contact 
union officials, 
Burger said the lucers have 
had no labor trouble. He said the 
Association has a no-strike clause 
in its contract with the Milk Driv- 
ers Union Local 83. 
The strike, called unexpectedly 
by union leaders, cut Detroit area 
deliveries. to a trickle. 
Strike leaders said 1,500 of. the 
Detroit area’s 2,000 drivers went 
on strike with the backing of work- 
ers who process milk at dairies. 
A spokesman for United Dairy 
Workers Local 83 said most of the 
rank and file members in the De- 
troit area joined in the work stop- 
page and that members of Team- 
sters Local 155 here were refusing 
to deliver milk. 
Drivers for Twin Pines voted to 
make deliveries. But their deliv- 
eries were delayéd because hooting 
strikers from other dairies ringed 
Twin Pines plants and milk depots. 
Twin Pines is a co-operative 
whose drivers qwn their milk 
;,| routes. 
John H. Stewart, Twin Pines 
president, said the company’s driv- 
[ers support the. principle of the 
||| strike but did not want to go along 
«| with the strikers ‘‘because our men 
| could not see anything to be gained 
<| from striking.” 
The retail price for milk here 
: has been varying 2 to 5 cents per 
© quart between store-sold and 
:|home-delivered milk, 
Deliverymen have béen charg: 
ing customers 24% cents per 
©| quart for the first 30 quarts each 
month, then taking 3 cents off 
: each quart for the rest of the 
x month’s supply. 
Spokesmen for the strikers said 
*|imost dairies pay. deliverymen * eo aor at ey pee 
based on sales of dairy 
‘| tions, They said price 
| stores has cut off most of the com- 
| missions for many drivers, = in 
&- 8. 
into Detroit fre 
  orders | 
Contenedo P D te e Strikers made no effort to halt. 
| bulk milk : 
© |farms but producers said - dal 
firms were canceling r¢      
a 
   
     
           
       
   
      | Sea 
      THE: PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER. j, 1958. 
    
  j   — hd 
' 
Heavy Snow Sends 
~~ Safeguard Sure Death Toll Soaring Reassures West Zone 
as East Sector Hears 
Boltz ‘No Pact’ Talk 
From Oar News Wires — National Holiday deaths 
Traffic 432 
Fires 48 
Miscellaneous 113 
Total 393 
  AUGUSTA, Ga. — Communist.) By The Associated Press 
The nation’s observance of the 
threatened West Berlin has a NeW)jong Thanksgiving. weekend was 
pledge from President Eisenhower! 
that its freedom will be safeguard-| 
.ed by the United States. 
The pledge that the United States 
intends to meet that responsibility, 
shared by Britain and France,, 
was reaffirmed by the President 
J after he and Secretary of State 
Dulles discussed the Berlin situa- 
tion at an hour-long conference 
Sunday. 
They, talked at the Augusta 
National Golf Club as Eisea- 
hewer made plans to end his 
working vacation Tuesday and 
“fly back te Washington. His 
13-day visit started Nov. 20. 
In a brief statement after the 
meeting Dulles said: ‘“‘The Presi- 
dent reiterated our government's 
firm purpose that the United States; 
will not enter into any arrange- 
ment or embark on any course of 
conduct which would have the ef- 
fect of abandoning the responsibil- 
ites which the United States, 
with Great Britain and France, 
has formally assumed for the free- 
dom and security of the people 
of West Berlin.” 
That in effect was a tresh re-| 
jection of the Soviet Union's 
Thanksgiving Day proposal for 
creation of a demilitarized ‘‘free"” 
city of West Berlin. Moscow at 
the same time declared void the 
four-power occupation agreement 
for Berlin which was reached aft- 
er World War II. 
_ In Berlin East German foreign 
minister Lothar Bolz today de- 
nied agreements exist giving 
the .western powers the right to 
travel to isolated Berlin. 
Bolz in a speech to an East 
Berlin: meeting of the national 
counci! of the Corgmunist-run ‘‘Na- 
tienal -Front."’ went far beyond 
previous eastern statements .ques- 
tioning western use of air ahd land 
routes through East Germany in 
six months when the Soviet abro- 
gate ~“anasinl occupation agree- 
ments. 
He said no agreements on use of| 
the lifelines to the West ever were 
made and none exist now:; + 
“Berlin was a of the ways 
part of the. vnc ab sere — Republic,” he said. *; 
West German Chaneellor Kon. 
rad Adenauer today held one of 
his rare meetings with political 
enemy, Socialist Erich Olienhauer, 
to discuss the Berlin situation. 
They met in Bonn while a U.S. 
military train running to West 
Berlin was delayed for an hour by 
what Communist East German of- 
ficials called a broken rail. 
* * * 
The U.S. Army accepted the 
Communist explanation — mindful 
that the incident was similar to 
those used by the Soviet Union be- 
fore imposing the 1948-49 blockade 
of West Berlin. At that time, all 
land routes to the isolated city 
were closed for ‘technical 
reasons.” marred by a heavy death toll in 
vielent accidents, As usual, traffic 
was the No, 1 killer. 
The season's first major snow- 
storm was regarded as a big fac- 
tor in qa number of deaths on the 
highways. The cold weather also 
deaths as a series of destructive 
fires, took the lives of several per- 
sons, including many children. 
_ LANSING @—Eighteen. traffic 
deaths over the long Thanksgiv- 
ing holiday weekend jumped 
Michigan’s Nevember highway 
death toll te 150—highest for the 
mopth in three years. 
There were 134 traffic deaths 
in November a year ago and 145 
in the same month of 1956. The 
November, 1955, toll wag 208. 
Snow-slicked roads were blamed 
for at least six of Michigan’s 18 
traffic deaths over the long 
Thanksgiving holiday weekend. 
But the toll was down, com- 
pared with a similar, but non-hol- 
iday period two weeks ago. 
The Associated Press holiday 
deathcount began at 6 p.m. 
Wednesday and ended at midnight 
Sunday. 
The holiday traffic death tol} was, 
only about half that for a com- 
parable period two weeks ago 
when the Associated Press tallied 
38 traffie deaths. 
It also was under the toll for 
short weekends in November. A 
week ago Michigan had 19 traffic 
deaths between 6 p.m. Friday and 
Sunday nidnight. Twenty-four died 
in traffic over a similar period the 
previous weekend and 22 the week- 
eng before. 
BELOW AVERAGE 
Although the traffic death toll 
for the 102-hour period from 6 p.m. 
(local time) Wednesday to mid- 
night Sunday was high, it appeared 
the total was below the average 
for a comparable period. 
No preholiday estimate of the 
traffic death toll was made by 
the Na Safety Cotuncil put it 
said that 79 deaths on the high- 
could i a 10. 
wouboldiy ade «. this 
time of year. 
The nation’s traffic toll last year 
was 38,500, an average of about 105 
a day. The Associated Press, for 
comparison purposes, made a str- 
vey in a 102-hour non-holiday week-   
  
    ‘lend earlier last month and counted 
394 traffic deaths. - 
FIRE KILLS 32 
Other violent deaths for the pe- 
riod showed 32 in fires and 121 in 
miscellaneous accidents, a total of 
547. 
Blizzard-like weather gripped 
the state over the Thanksgiving 
weekend, making motoring haz- 
ardous throughout the state. Fig- 
uring in the traffic deaths were 
11 single-car accidents, two col- 
lisions involving more than one 
ear and three (rain-car colli-       
Icy Chill Hits Deep in Dixie   
Cold Gripping Northeast) 
The season's coldest weather 
blanketed the Northeast and sent 
an icy chill deep into the South 
today. The Midwest got a brief 
The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Part 
eoludy and colder tonight with Abdel 
tered snow flurries, Tuesday, partly 
cloudy and cold. Northwesterly winds 
at 14 to 24 miles per hour this after- 
noon diminishing tonight and becoming 
mortherly at 1@ to 15 miles per heur| 
Tuesday. Leow tonight 15. High Tuesday | 
~——e   
Today in Pontiac 
— temperature preceding 8 a.m. 
en 8. a.m.: heel «neat 10°m h 
Direction~-South 
Moon sets Tuesday at 11:23 a.m. 
Moon rises Monday | at 10:14 p.m. 
22 Sewers 
pone ceee 
16 
Orse6 Ae ote 
2 
Sunday in Pontiac 
(As demand dewsiewn) 
Highest temperatu 
est tem:   
seme 
Low eeratana pO OSdedenodcanan 4 
Mean temperature .... Eonearbe wi Genny. . 
Year “Age | in Pontiac 
poate ators 
cen awe y cloudy. 
Highest and Lowest wien This 
‘60 in 1923 1886 Sererters by cas 
arquette 3 ‘emnht 
67 
        ae   
Re 
  18 Miami 
16 Mi hi 33. New Orleans 61 48 
78 
19   
  
te   
    > 
pa 
ee 
see Sygessesis 
i 3 Sot 
-«.24.5) 
qi 
4 Cities in Olympic Bid respite from the near-zero cold 
and snow. 
* * * 
The Northeast was hit by the 
frigid blasts in the wake of the 
heavy snowstorm which swept the 
region ever the weekend after 
leaving near record early season 
falls in the Rockies and Midwest. 
Temperatures dropped below 
zero in northern New England 
‘and near zero in parts of New. 
‘York state. One of the lowest 
readings was -14 at Mt. Washing- 
‘ton, N.H.   
| * * * 
| The mercury edged toward the 
}zero mark in areas southward 
| across western Pennsylvania into 
|West Virginia. The freezing line 
extended southward toward the 
mid-Gulf Coast, including *north- 
western Florida. 
Subzero marks were in prospect 
from the eastern Great Lakes to 
ithe mountain regions of eastern 
West Virginia and through the 
interior sections of New England. 
Snow was in prospect during the 
day in the north Atlantic states. 
* * * 
After several days of cold, snow 
and strong winds, a warming 
trend developed throughout most 
of the Mississippi Valley, the east- 
ern Plains and the West Great 
Lakes. 
LAUSANNE, , Swtzerland ® 
— Four ciaies — Brussels, Toky 
Vienna and Detroit, Mich. - — 
) have applied to stage the 1964 
Olympic games, the International 
Olympic Committee said today added to the number of violent)" sions. Twe pedestrians were 
killed, 
The Weather Bureau said low 
temperatures will continue through 
Tuesday but the outlook, for 
Wednesday is a little warmer, 
Over the weekend, below zero 
temperatures were recorded in Up- 
per Michigan-and near-zero in the 
rest of the state. The cold wave 
came after a heavy snowstorm. 
Killed in aaa were: 
Lioyd P. sea i 64, . Loweil. 
olin Roele 22, Port ron, Hu 
Marvin J mith, 25, of Fiint. 
. Collen Kay Hoevemery, of 
onroe. 
Leona Murphy. 68, Detroit. 
Edna Towle, 75, of Detroit. 
Barbara Harbuin, 64, Detroit. 
oo Garbinski, 6, Detroit. 
Secepa Welonrk, 5e Desi OBZ 
Phat m H. pheoce gr ute 4, White 
Pau! Horn, 35, Ypsilanti. - 
wens — — 3, of Troy, 
oe o i. SS ic our children, Bric, 7. 
— T. Evans. 45. of Sumpter Town- 
Lioyd Cc. Densmore. 41, of Jonesville. 
  
Nurses Start New tine 
—Learn to Fight Fires 
ATHOL, Mass, (UPI) — Nurses 
at Athol Memorial Hospital have 
begun a new course of study, un- 
der brand new instructors, 
The girls in white, armed with 
extinguishers, will learn to fight 
fires. Atho] Fire Chief Mervin L. 
Perley and Deputy Fire Chief Ed- 
mond Tetreault of neighboring} 
Greenfield will direct the course’ 
for hospital authorities, 
  
London Sunny at Last 
LONDON® —The sun shone on 
London today — first time in 15 
days. De Gaulle Emerging 
Stronger Than Ever 
(Continued From Page One) | 
De Gaulle in the driver's seat 
backed by a parliamentary ma- 
jerity such as this nation has 
seldom seen. 
The voting began last SaeGay to 
elect 465 deputies in metropolitan 
France and 10 in the overseas de- 
partment. Because only 39 candi- 
dates won the necessary majority, 
run off elections were held yester- 
day with candidates spots only a 
plurality. 
Three days of, voting in Algeria 
to elect 71 candidates was ex- 
pected to swell De Gaulle’s parlia- 
mentary strength. Ten more dele- 
gates were being elected in over- 
seas territories. 
BITTER VOTE 
If the vote was a smashing de- 
feat for the Communists it was a 
bitter vote of no confidence for the 
former deputies who snarled 
French politics from the day the 
Fourth Republic began after World 
War II. 
Only 146 former deputies were 
re-elected; 338 were beaten and 
58 did not run for re-election. 
Among those going down to de- 
feat were two former premiers, a 
dozen cabinet ministers and two of 
un-|the Communist Party’s big guns in 
the old National Assembly. 
Roger Duchet; independent party 
leader and a De Gaulle backer, 
said ‘“‘They were atomized." 
x * * 
Former premier Edgar Faure 
and white goateed Socialist Paul J Moore’ s Group, 
Governor to Talk The Day in Birr 
    
To. Discuss Emergency 
  Plans for Mentally A 
Oakland County Judge Arthur E. 
Moore, seeking emergency steps to 
ease the lack of hospital facilities 
for the mentally ill. 
The meeting is scheduled for 2 
p.m. in the Union Building on the 
Michigan State Unniversity cam- 
pus in East Lansing. 
dudge Moere arranged the 
meeting with the governor after. 
his committée at first received 
a thumbs down from the State 
Mental Health Commission on its 
suggested steps to ease this prob- 
lem, z 
However, the commission de- 
livered the first bit of good news 
to. Judge Moore's committee short- 
ly afterwards when approval was 
given to the use by mental pa- 
tients of excess beds in state tuber- 
culosis sanatoriums, - 
In order for this to take place, 
the Legislature must* approve it, 
according to a letter from the Gov- 
ernor to Judge Moore. “Necessary 
legislation is in the draft stage,” 
promised Williams. 
Encouraged with this assur- 
ance, the con@hittee will discuss 
with Williams and the Commis- 
sion what will be the next step 
in, finding space for some 500 
persons seeking admission to in- 
stitutions in the state, 
Judge Moore will be dened 
Wednesday with a 10-point agenda 
of suggestions from the committee 
on how this could be done. 
Major theme of the recommenda- 
tions hinges around a proposal to 
    Ramadier were defeated yesterday. 
Former premiers Pierre Mendes-| 
premier Edouard Daladier quit 
after the first ballot because his 
    defeat was certain.   
Townships 
MSUO Community A planned university community 
is the goal of a unique program 
being studied by officials of Pon- 
tiac and Avon townships for a 22- 
square mile area surrounding the) 
Michigan State University Oakland | 
campus. 
x * * 
The university community proj- 
ect will be, to a major extent. 
the primary responsibility of local 
citizens, according to D. B. Var- 
ner, MSU vice president in charge} 
of off-campus affairs and chair- 
man of the coordinating commit- 
tee. 
“This 
making an inventory of the pres- 
ent area, analyzing the inven- 
tory in terms of trends and the 
present development of the com- 
munity, and ultimately making 
projections for the future plans 
‘of the community,” he said, 
Serving on the coordinating com- 
‘mittee with Varner are Leroy 
Davis, Pontiac Township super- 
visor; Delos Hamlin, chairman of 
the Oakland County Board of Su- 
pervisors; C. E. Miller, Avon 
A. Fitzgerald, publisher of The 
Pontiac Press. responsibility inciudes | Planning 
To assist in carrying out the pro- 
gram, the help of staff members of 
  a specialist in urban planning from | 
the institute, has beep appointed 
study director by’ the committee. 
In addition’ té the five-man 
steering committee, six working 
conmmnittees composed of 30 citi- 
zens are invelved in the study. 
Each of these comfittees will 
be asking other citizens in the 
university community to assist in 
the study. i 
The university community will 
includes the areas bounded on the 
north by Dutton road, on the east 
by Livernois road, on the south by 
the Grand Trunk railroad and Au- 
|proposed Walter P. Chrysler ex- 
pressway, presently planned to be France and Joseph Lanie]l were) |care 
knocked out a week ago. Former,medical or physical 
the MSU Institute for Community |Rd., 
Development and_ Services has | Mercy Hospital. 
‘been enlisted. Robert H. Hotaling, |@8c™ 
burn road, and on the west by the' ‘return many patients, “whose: pri- 
mary problem is not psychiatric 
but arises through senility, 
niely and 
need of custodial care,’’ to the 
counties for further care. 
  
3 Hurt as Cars Collide 
at Maple, Middlebelt 
Two Detroiters and a Birming- 
ham man were injured in a two- 
‘car collision Sunday morning at 
lw. Maple and Middlebelt roads, 
| West Bloomfield Township, accord- 
ling to Pontiac State Police. 
Both drivers, Al Matthews, 49, 
of 2224 Blaine St., Detroit, and 
Harold Roberts, 46, of 5050 Maple 
were taken to St. Joseph 
Matthews was 
scribed in fair condition with} 
chest injuries today. Roberts was 
treated and released. 
A passenger in Matthews’ auto, 
Robert Peoples, 43, of the same 
address at Matthews, was listed 
in poor condition with head and 
internal injuries. 
Slippery pavement was listed as 
the cause of the collision. BIRMINGHAM. — Bitmesers, 
Roland Regee and Wayne Morti- 
parce! \ 
colved and stamp wid im the Bis. 
a.m, to 6 p.m. Dec, 
22: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 23 and 
24. Sunday hours will be 10 a.m. 
to 4 p.m. 
An annex has been established 
at the southeast corner of Cool- 
idge and E. Maple Rds. It will. 
begin handling parcels and 
stamp sales Dec. 12, Reese sald 
hours would be from 9 &.m, to 
In Bloomfield Hills, Mortimer 
has started the mounted city routes 
with mail delivery at each home 
rather than in sectional clusters 
along main streets. This will now 
be a regular ‘ice. : 
He said an annex for the Christ- 
mas mail is being set up in the 
old Kingsley Inn building, but will 
not be open to the public, 
Mailing and stamp purchases 
will be handled at the main 
post office on West Long Lake 
road near Woodward avenue. 
Both postmasters urge early 
mailings and ask that particular 
attention be made to wrapping par- 
cels and clearly addressing all 
Another Birmingham commis- 
sioner ill or out of town tonight 
will put a quick stop to the sched- 
  or protem, Carl Ingraham and 
William Roberts are attending the 
conference of municipal leaders in 
sioners for tonight's meeting. 
The short agenda includes a 
request from the Colonial Court 
Apartments on Colonial court for 
the construction of an access 
drive for their tenants, 
Police Chief Ralph W. 
to Cranbrook road. 
A request was made sometime 
speed to 35. 
  .m. tomorrow in the Community 
  The Oakland County Lincoln 
Republican Club will meet at Re- 
  Woodward Ave., at.§ p.m. tomeor- 
  
SS 
  Ae 
  | 
  and Lapeer roads. 
bd * * 
resulting from the 
            located in the vicinity of Opdyke) 
Immediate pressing problems, '> 
location of |® 
MSUO and other development © 
‘Township supervisor, and Harold|trends in the area, are those of ie 
land subdivision, sewage disposal, lF 
land traffic circulation.   
Royce jet-powered engines 
VISCOUNTS ONE-STOP NEW YORK CHICAGO - ALSO DIRECT SERVICE TO WASHINGTON + NORFOLK PITTSBURGH + CLEVELAND 
                              as the time limit for applications 
expired. “New customer endorses 
Capital Viscount smoothness 
Even little ones who fly before they walk gurgle their 
appreciation of the Capital Viscount. The four Rolls 
safety-pin drop. Vibration-free and wonderfully smooth, 
this is the most restful way to go anywhere. Call your 
travel agent or Capital Airlines at CEdar 4-2694. are so quiet you can hear a 
La apital AIRLINES      
    
      
Regular 
$4.98 
Value 
lots of fun with pull 
handles. 
98 NORTH 
SAGINAW Every Good BOY Wants a Sled for. ane: 
  ee 
Choice of STEEL or ALUMINUM F 
Sliding Saucers 
+488 
26-inch sliding saucers for spin- 
ning, sliding on snow and ice— - 
rope or 
       
       FLEX-O-PLANE : 
Sleds | 34-Inch Sled $2.98 | 
40-Inch Sled $3.59 | 
— 45-Inch Sled $4.49 
50-Inch Sled $5.49     
TOY DEPT. 
—2nd Floor 
eas es 
  
  
    
  Set includes: 
ers and 1 
~—perfect 
|. 98 North    
   Saginaw 
    ELE LAL 
Buy for Yourself or CHRISTMAS GIFTS 
a. | 
27-Piece PUNCH BOWL SETS Regular $5.95 Seller 
Genuine Anchor Glass in colonial_design. 
12 six oz. punch cups, one 
2-gallon punch bowl, 12 plastic cup hang- 
lastic ladle. Exactly as shawn 
or yourself or gift-giving. 
) 2 Imm 2 er    
     
                     
    
  uled meeting. The mayor and may-|} 
, and Commissioner | & 
AAMT for PHOTOGRAPHY HANS Boston, leaving only four. commis- 
Moxley |g ; 
will recommend continuing the 30/3 
mile per hour speed limit on West |@ : 
Maple avenue until the pavement |# 
is widened from Westchester Way |@ @ 
ago by residents to increase the 
P : House as @ part of its regular/% i, 
imeeting. 
publican Headquarters, 351 3 
            
       
   
‘| . ry 
‘¥ SUPER-WIDE 8x40 BINOCULARS "City, Hills Post. Olfices 
Set for Christmas Rush 
cecalng wise apriedaivs 
five years as a 
of war and, While there, began his § “Polish Rhapsody” : 
which he completed after coming § now famous 
to this country, - 
Surviving are a sistet and neph- 
ew in Paris, France. 
Wildcat Strikes Hit 
City’s Milk Supply . (Continued. From. Page One)-   
ation. 
* ® > :2% 
tail prices, 
for the same purpose. Birmingham Community House. % 
A native of Poland, he served § 
German : 
ing developments in the strike situ-' : 
A similar labor dispute occurred ;. 
in Waterford Township last Satur-|§ 
day when about 150 route salesmen 
demonstrated in a Dixie highway |¥ in 
super market, protesting low. re- | @ 
In Flint last month, drivers |? 
crowded into some supermarkets |§   
  , iipaae Le 
% Dresser Sets 
goos. $ 588) V alue 
: Set has comb, brush, rx ad | 
= powder jar, in attractive g 
y box. $1 holds-in layaway, 
Heart Boxed 
Dresser Sets 
$Q° + $13.95 
Value 
¢- 
    
    HOLDS Any 1 
    Only $1 Holds Your 
FAMOUS 
BRAND     
Temple 94, Pythian Sisters, will/¥ i) 
hold a white elephant sale at 8) 
before you buy any meter. 
  
  athe. yo ing. Viewer anlacecs 8mm film to 
f 2tex2%e-inch size 
  HARDWOOD—Holds 12 Trays 
Storage Chests Holds TDC, rpenlairs 
AIRQUIPT,. eye 
magazines. Case 
ter than one 
Regular $8.95 
24 TRAY Medel 
STORAGE CHEST     787 
Over 25 Different 
   
          
           
   
  Say Pits 
an 
tor 
and 
            the 
Above are. just @ others at proportionate savings. $1 holds in layaway. 
Co cceseccccvecccscosccoosocosoccoscoscoces   
  
ing area—full degree 
yards. Save more than helt 
    
  98 North 
‘Saginaw 
Street 
      FREE LAYAWAY ‘til Christmas 
—TONITE and TUESDAY SPECIALS—_ 
EXPOSURE METERS 
.$9.95 Alpex Meter 
& $16.50 Argus 13 
- for Movies or Slide .... 
$17.50 Argus 144 
Attaches to Carera ... 
$34.50 CE Meter 
With Case 
Check the famous name brands and the famous SIMMS CUT 
$1 holds your choice in layaway 'ti] Christmas. 
our home movies when splic- 
Be 
$3.95 value 
$14.95 PIGSKIN BAG 
Genuine pigskin grain bag 
with straps to hold tripod 
securely. 
Pigskin grain bag with top 
$29.50 TOP COWHIDE 
‘Aipex’ toy 
. gadget 
a few of the many bags you'll find at Simms. 
         
SEMI ascii “Maa Bie hs Mien Me Me: Mis as ea a ns es as ic ee CAMERA ITEM In 
Choice ’Til Christmas 
eee eens 
With Case .......... 
$10.95 CE Mascot 1! 
Direct Reading ....... §87 
$18.50 Weston Dr - 
Case Included ........ 1387 
eC i rc a) 
CUT PRICES 
SCHHSOHSSSOSNSHSHSSSSSHSSHOSSHSSHSSOSESSSSSEOSOSSOOSECE 
Mansfield ‘Foldaway’ 
Movie Editor & ne MOVIE BAR-LITE 
& 4GE Bulbs 
$13.95 ie 
Value 
New compact ufilt 
with handy carry & 
storage box. $1.00 
holds. 
        
200000000000 08H8HO88 
7-Inch Spool—RCA ‘Hi-Fi’ 
Recording Tapes 
$5.50 Value 
1200 Feet 
a | 99 
Professional grade sound recording 
tape for better sound recordings. 
RCA ‘Hi-Fi’ on T-inch spool, 1200 
feet.    
      00000 OOVHHOHEOEOHHHHHHOHHEHHHOHHHHHHSEOHEES 
Styles Now in Stock 
ed GADGET BAGS VINYL PLASTIC BAG 
Brownie style cameras 
d accessories. Regular 
DOUBLE TOP BAG 
meter, bulbs, etc. Camera 
flash fit underneath. 
grain bags are 
‘Cadillacs’ of photo 
bags. 
CASES 
$1.00 
WITH 
BINOCULARS % 
WIDE-ANGLE 35 ke “Negulet $63.80 Value—Now Only 
Coated lenses, te Ledantcigy hey extra view- 
8 feet at 29. 87 | . $46.87 now!‘ 
eee eet 
(C, THERSE    
       
      
             
       
   
           
         ece set includes brush, comb, # mirror, 2 powder jars and mirror # 
box. $1 holds in layaway. 
   
       
       
     
    
          
  
  
      
   
           
    
         
     
        
   
       
       
  
-   
  
    + 
Bag A, yD bar 
The book a conan installment. 
has appro | some of the 
pustanding authorities in 
By RUTH WEST 
Have you tried dieting and 
decided you're the only one in 
the world with your ‘set~-of this 
problems? 
Cheer up. Here vate some 
questions and answers that will 
make you feel better: 
“Am I somehow different?” 
No. The fact is you're an 
American and very much like 
three out of five other Ameri- 
cans — overweight. We're the 
second fattest nation in the 
world, and our fat is our No. 1 
national health problem. 
You May 
Celebrate 
Holiday “Dear Mrs. Post: My hus- 
band died quite suddenly two 
weeks ago and I dread the 
thought of the coming Christ- 
mas season as I know it will 
be a very unhappy time for 
me. However, my children are 
too young to realize the trage- 
  edy of their father’s death and © 
are looking forward eagerly to 
Christmas. For their sakes, I 
would like to make it as gay 
as possible. 5 
“Will you please tell me how 
‘ far I can go without being 
thought heartless by my 
friends? In other words, would 
it be proper to have a 
Christmas tree, exchange pres- 
ents, etc.?” 
  
Answer: Certainly you may 
have a Christmas tree for the 
children and exchange presents 
and make it just as gay as 
you can for them. It would be 
very unfair to them. to spoil 
their Christmas because of 
your own unheppiness, and I 
am sure everyone will under- 
stand why you are doing it. 
You would naturally not give 
any parties for 
friends, 
  
“Dear Mrs. Post:-My son is 
going to be married soon and, 
although he has many friends, 
he wants his fourteen-year-old 
brother to be best man. | think 
he is too young. What is your 
opinion?" 
Answer: Unless the boy looks 
several years older than he is, 
I agree with you he is too 
young. 
“Dear Mrs, Post: A friend 
and I had lunch together the 
other day and we both ordered 
a fresh fruit salad. It was 
served in a dish lined with let- 
tuce. My friend ate hers with 
a spoon while I ate mine with 
a fork, Who was right?” 
Answer: You were. 
St. John Church 
Slates Bazaar, 
Penny Supper 
St. John Lutheran Church 
will hold its annual bazaar 
Thursday. Luncheon will be 
served from 10 a.m, to 1 p.m., 
with a penny supper from 5 to 
7 p.m. Coffee will be served 
all afternoon. 
Chairmen for the affair are 
Mrs, John Fillipi, baked goods, 
and Mrs. Hans Michkelsen, 
kitchen. Mrs. Thomas Casey 
is serving on the kitchen com- 
mittee. 
  4 
a 
2 i. 
ee ee 
ee SiS ss your own 
  Have You Tried This? ~ practically every. 
to -fight. fat.: Sse gee yas ‘soe tne he, 
—_, Mandl aren't overweight . 
now, will be, gooner’ or’ later. 
So, ir 7a Jona Howste Ik it 
now, you're ahead! — 
“TEMES CHANGE 
“Why are we fat?” 
Well, think for a moment 
how living has changed in less 
than a hundred years. From 
horses and buggies to jets. 
* * * 
As machines move faster, 
- you. move less. You spend 
itting at a desk, in the 
library, in classes, watching 
TV. doing homework. Chances 
are you ride, not walk, most 
places you're going. 
But our cookery, our reci- 
pes are still the recipes of 
America’s strenuous early 
  
  worked physically from before 
dawn to dark, only sat down at 
mealtimes and a little while 
before they went to bed. 
We grew up as a nation of ave ee eiiels  wakal,   
  ouaieari on lee pO food. 
You and I are caught in the 
: middle of what the sociologists 
call “a” ‘cultural lag”! Because 
nobody’ has given ‘them new 
patterns, our mothers are still 
  
  calorized soft drink. 
2.. Place a mirror So that you can see yourself eat. Also 
put‘a clock on the table and time your bites. Try chew- 
-ing more slowly and longer. Dr-a-ag a meal out for 
at least 30 to 40 minutes. Fat people eat too fast. 
3. Eating alone? Play records, look at TV, read a book. 
Anything .o slow yourself down. 
4. Eat your soup with a teaspoon. (Takes longer.) 
5. Save your dessert and have it an hour after the meal. 
Tell the child within you that it will taste better a little 
later. It willl - —_ 
FIVE TABLE TRICKS FOR TEENS 
1. An hour before dinner, fill up on your ant paite de- 
    
The annual bazaar will be held at S¢. John “Lutheran Church Thursday, Displaying some of the- 
Dear Abby .   ° “artlelt to be featured are (left to right) Mrs. E. C. Barner, Mrs. Charles H. 
Edwards. following the tecipes and cook- 
ing procedures of their 
mothers. 
However, at clinics, in. hos- 
pitals, and in universities such: 
as Harvard, Cornell and Minne- 
sota, the younger people study- 
ing this subject are changing 
all this. But until cookbooks 
and cookery are updated, 
you're going to have to take 
special measures to pel your- 
self, 
WHOSE FAULT? . 
“Is it my family's fault?’’ 
It’s nobody's “‘fault’’!; But— 
is: your’ mother a wonderful   
Were they? 
If you've answered “‘yes"’ to 
all these questions, it only 
means that your family cireum- 
stances (as well as the country 
you were born in) tend to en-. 
_  egurage habits of overeating. 
cook? Does she love to fix: you. 
special sweet treats? Did she - 
used to get upset when you 
didn’t clean your plate, finish 
your milk? 
Are one or both of your 
parents overweight? Then prob- 
ably their parents were, too. 
Pentiae Press Phote 
Hawn and Mrs. W. VW. 
Voices Buzz Like Angry Bees 
Over Sack, Chemise, Trapeze By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN 
“DEAR ABBY: Thank heav- 
ens somebody had the nerve to 
say something about the ridic- 
ulous new styles we women 
are being 
forced into 
buying. I 
bought a new 
outfit and 
when [ put it 
on to go out 
my husband 
took one look 
at me and 
said I looked 
like Cinderel- 
la’s stepsister ABBY 
with my rococo buckles, point- 
ed shoes and balloon skirted- 
dress. (He was right, too!) 
“He told me if I didn't take 
it off and put on something 
sensible he wouldn't take me 
out. But what are we women 
supposed to do when we want 
ERS AES   
  
_Use Yellow Cake Mix 
for Holiday Loaves 
By JANET ODELL. 
Pontiac Press Home Editor 
We found the following fruit 
cake recipe in our letter file. 
Mrs. Maude S. Martin of 
Metamora had sent it to us 
almost a year ago, too late for 
the 1957 holiday season, Here 
it is, in time for the 1958 
festivities. 
* * * 
Mrs. Martin uses packaged 
yellow cake mix as the basis 
for her fruit cake. She says it 
keeps several months if toil- 
wrapped and refrigerated; ¢ 
several weeks on the pantry 
shelf in an air-tight box. 
GOLDEN FRUIT CAKE 
ey Mrs. Maude S. Martin 
1) cup flour 
1 pound wae candied fruit 
% pound fal 
% cups nuts, an coarasty broken 
1 cup dates. cut in large pieces 
Y% pound candied = cut 
in halves 
    1 tablespoon grated lemon rind 
1 tablespoorm grated orange rind 
1 package yellow cake mix 
1, cup milk, 
% cup orange juice 
3 eggs 
Coat fruit and nuts with 
flour in large bowl. Add 
grated rinds. Prepare cake 
mix, using 4% cup milk, % 
cup orange juice and the eggs 
for the liqttid. Blend one min- 
ute; beat 4 minutes. Pour 
batter into fruit. Mix well. 
Turn into two 9x5 pans 
which have been well 
greased and lined with 
waxed paper. Set pan of hot 
water on bottom rack of 
even. Bake cakes oa rack 
above at 325 degrees for 70- 
80 minutes. 
Cakes are. done when wood- 
en. pick inserted in center 
comes out clean, Cool thor- 
oughI¥*~ remove - from pans. 
Wrap tightly to keep moist., 
  
sige a new outfit that LOOKS 
new?” 
STUMPED 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: Our Wom- 
en's Club met last week and 
there were about 100 women 
there. I counted only four wom- 
en in the chemise, trapeze and 
sack dresses. Three were preg- 
nant. and the other one I am 
not sure about. [ don’t think 
the American women are fall- 
ing for those silly. fashions.” 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: What kind of 
a stunt do you think the fash- 
ion experts are trying to pull 
on the American women? I 
went into one of the. most ex- 
clusive dress shops in town to 
buy a new dress. *The sales- 
   
BILLIE J. WILLIS 
Announcing the engagement 
of their daughter, Billie Jean 
Willis, to Larry Bradford are 
Mr. and. Mrs. Luke Willis of 
Devondale~ street, Parents” of 
the bridegroomi-elect are Mr. 
and Mrs. Lawrence Bradford 
of North Squirrel road. Miss 
Willis attends Henry Ford Hos- 
pital School of Nursing. A 
March wedding jis planned. 
  lady showed me one borrible 
shapeless dress after the other, 
* put she herself was wearing 
a stunning tight-fitting sheath. 
Naturally, I bought nothing, 
but went home ard got out 
last year’s dress.” 
NO FOOL 
* x * 
“DEAR ABBY: I work for a 
large concern which employs 
many females. Most girls who 
wear the sack type dresses look 
positively terrible and the few 
who look good in them would 
look much better in something 
else.’ 
ONE MAN'S OPINION 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: When my 
chum and I feel like we could 
use a good laugh we go into a 
store and try on the latest 
dresses. We never buy any- 
thing, but. boy, do We have a 
good time!” 
ESTHER 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: Since you 
had the courage to come out 
and declare yourself anti-new 
styles, why don't you organize 
a club for al] the women who 
fee] the same way? There's 
strength in numbers and may- be we can get the fashion dic- 
tators to wake up and put 
something an the market that 
will make us look like women 
again. We could call it the 
WWF.S. (WON'T WEAR 
FREAKISH STYLES) and sim- 
ply refuse to buy any thing that 
is not beedming to us. How 
about it, Abby?” 
RUTH A. 
DEAR RUTH: Wonder- 
ful idea! Any woman wishing 
to protest the new styles is el- 
igible to join Abby's W.W.F-S. 
posteard with youf name (or 
initials) and you automatically 
become a member. 
* * * 
CONFIDBNTIAL TO 
“PLEASINGLY PLUMP’: 
Men like chemises like child- 
hoed diseases 
* * * 
For a personal reply, write 
to ABBY in care of this paper. 
Enclose a self-addressed, 
stamped envelope. 
Sa-Shay Quadrille Club met 
Friday evening at Elks Tem- 
ple. Burnell) McAllister was 
master of ceremonies. 
  when 
SeeShayiGinbivecrs| 
  
    FLUFF-DRY SERVICE 
  Make Mondays Sunny-days 
What a reliet to send all your family wash to Pontiac 
Laundry! Oceuns of gentle suds and many rinsings make 
it oh-so briaht! Clothes and towels are fluity dried and 
folded Then when Carelul Dun returns them theres almos! 
nothina let! to do Wouldn't vou like this service? 
7 Free Plastic Bag with Dry Cleaning | ee LAA AR RRA 
PONTIAC’ 
Launds i 
  DRY CLEANERS   
7-Hour Service at Our 
Locations 
$40 S. Telegraph Rd. 
2682 West 12 Mile—Berkley 933 S. Hunter—Birmingham   | { a en 7 
“Is there a clue in my past?” 
Almost certainly. Try to 
look at your life, your family’s 
life, your own attitudes, as 
objectively as though you were 
a -psychologists. The first 
thing you'd do would,be to try 
to discover any special emo- 
tional 
behind overweight. 
* ; te x  * : 
’ What irks you? At school . . 
in your relationship to your 
brothers aad sisters . .. in 
your relationship te the par- 
ents? Watch for the occasions 
you go on eating actors that, might lie 
  New Trend in U. S. 
_ Switching of Homes 
Creates Problems 
Have you noticed? 
* We, the great American con- 
sumers, are demonstrating the 
most insatiable desire to boost 
our living standards that per- 
haps has ever been seen. 
Strongest of all perhaps is 
the current desire to &pgrade 
our dwellings. This is posing 
a sticky problem for mortgage 
men, builders -and realtors 
alike. They call it the trade- 
in house problem and the cur- 
rent higher mortgage rates 
have little to do with the situ- 
ation, 
* * * . 
Contrary to tradition, an in- 
cfeasing number of families 
are becoming home-switching 
minded. There are several rea- 
sons for this. The trek to sub- 
urbia, exurbia or back into the 
city is a factor. There is a 
definite trend toward larger 
families, Finally, the most fre- 
quent reason for home switch- 
ing. is to upgrade. 
Ten years ago the returning 
veteran had little to choose 
from in the way of a home. He 
was lucky to find a $20,000 
house. He got an $18,000 mort- 
gage. He settled for any neigh- 
borhood. 
CAN AFFORD CHANGE * 
Today, he can afford a $35,- 
000 house in a locale of his 
choice. He has knocked $5,000 
off his origina] mortgage and 
discovered his $20,000 house is 
now worth $25,000. 
A check with the Internal 
Revenue Service assures him 
that if he buys another house 
within a year, tagged at $25,- 
000 or more, he has no capital 
gains tax to pay on his $5,000 
profit. What’s stopping him 
from buying the new home? 
x * *& .; 
What is stopping him is the 
~ $12,000 equity on his old dwell- 
ing that he needs in order to 
swing the new purchase—$12,- 
000 he can't put his hands on 
until he sells his old house. 
To a certain extent he can 
be aided by his banker. Banks, 
active in the mortgage field, 
report that in such instances 
they have sometimes upped a 
client's mortgage on his old 
house back to the original fig- 
ure in order to help him ac- 
.cumulate sufficient-cash to buy 
another-hote before selling his 
first house. 
* * * 
In some instances the FHA 
has tried to help. If a builder 
or realtor will buy a client's 
old house, the FHA might al- 
low that builder or realtor 
more liberal mortgage terms 
than usual, provided the build- — 
er or realtor can satisfy the 
government agency of his reli- 
ability and his program for   in, Fine — 
~ you a@ cle to. the kind of. 
» Delafield. 
  
{ { 
| 
| 
SER ‘make the 
    i ila Drayton ea 3-3541. 
| 
  BEAUTY 
CHECK 
Rowena Wilson by 
Perhaps it’s timé that you made 
| a check of your own beauty 
care. If your appearance leaves 
+ gomething to be 
desired, why not 
im- 
provements now? 
With the festive Hy 
holiday season 
coming along, 
youll want to 
look your very 
best for each and * 
every occasion. 
Time will be short then and 
you might neglect. the essen- 
  tials Take time for beauty 
today. + 
A good start on the road 
beauty is a new permanent. 
This foundation will provide all 
the body your hair requires to 
keep it well-groomed. Make an 
|} appointment now at Rowena’s 
Beauty Salons, 4831 Dixie High- 
8. Main, Clarkston, MA, 
5-1000. 1216 Baldwin, Pontiac, 
FE 5-3735. to | 
  
    
  exploration is a therapy in it- 
self—a step toward a cure. 
. most to lick overweight? ‘‘The 
- same qualities that are of most ¥ seg." ws at ’ 
“benders” (like exam. time, ‘or 
when you and your. best friend 
quarrel) and see if they give 
specific’ “intolerable” ene 
that sets you off 
> * *. 
Doctors ‘say ‘that a. ~ young 
person will usually give far 
more ‘honest. and intelligent 
answers thar) an adult to the 
question,“ “Why do you over- 
eat?” And *this.important self- 
What qualities* will help you 
help to an adult,” says Ann 
“A good healthy 
vanity and a high IQ.” 
bee de from ‘The Té ° 
copyright 1958, 
Ruth West, pankined by sullen 
Messner, Inc.) 
* * * 
Tomorrow: How to start.. 
renovating the older dwelling. © 
Such arrangements, however, 
have not been frequent. 
2-HOME NIGHTMARE 
Not by a long shot have 
these assists obliterated the 
nightmare of simultaneously 
owning two houses. A friend 
‘recently confessed that after 
upping the mortgage on his 
old house, he lost heart and 
spent his cash remodeling rath- 
er than risking the prospect of 
ewning two homes. 
* * 
Countless realtors and build- 
ers are convinced they have 
lost sales because clients are 
unwilling to gamble on selling 
their old abodes. They are hard 
at work on possible solutions. 
Older homes, like popular 
priced apparel and the stripped 
mode] car, are hard to sell. To- 
day’s buyer is discerning. He 
wants .what he wants and 
though he may fret over price, 
he usually pays. She watched her diet. 
You can watch yours, too. 
Follow this series begin- © 
ning in today’s Foruas 
Press. beg 
Institute: 
Reports 
Busy Year . 
Robert T. Hatt, director of 
Cranbrook Institute of Science 
reports the institute had an 
especially active year this year 
with an increased load of com- 
Employed part time as cur- 
ator of education to meet the 
new demand was James A. 
Fowler. - - 
Robert C, McMath replaced 
  
“The dream of every girl. Ghristmas 
Gitt 
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_all weather with rubber sole . 
white tassle. 
95 infants sizes $ 
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Quality, Authentic 
Inlaid Leather 
COWBOY BOOTS 
For every buckeroo. Leather 
with trim. Flat heel for tots, 
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$ A? 
Sizes 81/2 B-3 D—$7.95 infants 
sizes 41/8 
fan or black 
  
SPECIAL GUN AND HOLSTER ~ SET or SPUR SET WITH 
COWBOY BOOTS 
sizes 12//2-3, B-D $6 
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COWBOY 
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for the bigger boys 
and girls thru 
teens. 
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In rich western saddle 
leather tones, 
Juvenile Bootery 
28 €. Lawrence St. (Open pit & aso to 8 
Family Shoe Store 
928 W. Huron at Tele 
(Open Pri. — see ® ee Sd on 
          
   
      i 
e 
a 
    
    .         
        
     
       ‘to Whistle. | MEXICO crry (AP)=N baa 
"for derisive whistles to greet U.S. . This           
   
       
        pe, Kets A 
‘fing here, 
‘Tig Ai fod helr experiences} 
with « Hollywood, suh, ave go for tat, jax, Not pai 
“sirene”’ named 
  “Raintree County."” 
They were goed out of town, 
along /came Wayne 
  BR with Aheir wire wait with. thelr own food. And |he mighty. Clift called Shedim 
had moved. into Natchez to make 
  unserene ’ tochalenl: saint of. spay, 90 
ES ‘John’ Fost on beet 8 es Seuabeeh Taylor, ahd "high nigenius director John ord, to dis ; 
Dulles on his a val for the in- “Kt ” . toi 
ion of Adolt M cove bee, a conta 
ng Moxign’s ts sr all over again.” 
Dulles arrived Sendzy ‘at the! - 
head of a 16-member delegation. 
Among the others are President 
Eisenhower's brother Milton and). 
Gen, Curtis LeMay, deputy chief 
of staff of the U.S. Air Force. 
‘The Communists had asked ‘al? 
Mexicans to whistle—an expres- 
sion of derision “in Mexico—when- 
ever Dulles appeared. But the 
only whistlers at the heavily 
guarded airport were a-group of 
youngsters on top of a building. 
cheered as t his mili- 
‘tary air —- la 
* 
iitton Sinko said he 
brought special messages from his 
brother to Lopez Mateos and dut- 
: going President Adolfo Ruiz Cor- 
tittes.. President’ Eisenhower, «he 
said, “desires fuller, more sincere 
and closer relations with Mexico.” 
  
A sturgeon grows approximately 
one pound a year. One recently 
- ea@iaght in Ontario, weighed 170)» 
. pounds. Its age was estimated at 
bajween 125 and 19 eee ; : A a 
  
  MISTY GOLDEN GATE — All but the towers _ Sy ee ree ot Fan teh ee 
  - AP Wirephote 
blinding fog which engulfed the Bay Area recent- Then a-sort of miracle ewaned. 
This large, lumbering gent name 
John (Duke) Wayne — the only 
man, out of Hollywood who can 
cuddle a horse as lesser men cud- 
dle girls — began signing auto- 
graphs. All the tykes.in town loved 
ihim, he'd get caught stepping out 
of a car, and he’d use the roof of 
the car as a writing table, for end- 
less signatures —— accompanied by 
big grins — for the ‘kids. — 
it x -* 
At one autographing session, in 
which dozens clammored outside 
his room at the Belle Mont Motel, 
a more blase ~hollywood aide 
snarled, “This is getting stic_y. 
You'd think these kids’ have some- 
thing better to do.” 
Duke withered him. “It's better 
than slicing tires, bud,” he said. 
Despite his gruff manner and 
exalted status (Hell, I've been a 
star for 30 years’') Wayne has a 
soft streak, It runs down the mid- 
dle where it doesn’t show often. 
Just sneaks out from under the 
quips and bluster when he’s tired.    
   
       mga nape er ro ‘How 
plains that to professional ¢ 
ette-bummers, this is a : 
Equipped ‘with caffeine and nico- 
tine, he settles down to discussing 
wearily how he feels about movies. 
wy eo 
‘The greatest are the westerns. 
This, being a Civil “War movie, is |——— 
a western in blue uniforms. But 
you know the reason *re the 
greatest? Becaus¢ above all movies 
need action, and the greatest me- 
dium for action is a horse. 
“A train gives you a feeling | 
of power, A A plané gives you a- 
‘feeling of speed. But a horse is 
pure action.” 
“There’s another thing. In a 
western there’s\no phoniness. Cow 
boys — and soldiers —- have simple 
basic reactions. They look at some- 
body they love like they loved ‘em, 
and somebody they hate like they 
hate ’em, and people with normal 
healthy reactions’ can feel that. 
“They’re honest. You can’t fool 
around with ‘em. Can't kid ‘em. 
The public s subconsciously knows 
if you do, and feels cheated. It’s   
       
        oe 2 as 
about a friendship stick?” He ex-|-- = 5   
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Conary eer ee i 
              
      like kidding your mother ‘and 
father, and you don't like it.” 
           
  
1 Mg Terrorize 
Tj Windsor Family 2 Hooded Men Beat 
Up Father of 4, Take 
$6,300 From Home 
WINDSOR, Ont, (®?—Two seul 
and hooded robbers terrorized a 
Windsor family in stealing $6,300 
in a weekend holdup. 
Nicholas Stumpilich, 39, father of   
    
  
Does ‘BLADDER 
RRITATION     
    —— four children, was beaten with a 
rong |plackjack after he had seized a 
‘ tations result | shotgun from one of the men. 
The two robbers, wearing hoods 
Wet'v7 combating calming re |with eye-slits, entered the home 
; tele. Safe for ing, analgesic ail while the family was celebrating 
. Peco Srfestermoneyback. ‘the 17th wedding enniversary of of the Golden Gate bridge were hidden by thick, 
  7 
Stumpilich, a sausage factory own- 
er, and his wife, Helene. 
Stumpilich said the shotgun dis- 
charged as he wrestled for it. No 
one was harmed by the shot. 
He got the gun away, ‘Stumpilich 
said, but then was beaten on the 
head by the other man with the 
blackjack and forced to give up 
two money bags. 
# Stumpilich needed 14 stitches for 
his head wounds, 
  
‘Race-Betting Tax Up 
NEW YORK — A record $216,- 
700,000 in taxes was collected in 
1957 off horse,race-betting opera- 
tions in. 23 states, nearly 5 percent 
higher than the year before, the 
‘National Association of State Rac- 
ing Commissioners reports. About 
1% percent of all State tax reve- 
nue in 195 came from horse-race 
of jlevies.   ly, providing this scenic shot of the big span. 
Husband Being Held 
in Fatal Stabbing DETROIT  — A husband was 
held for murder and his wife as a, 
‘material witness today in the week- | 
end slaying of a seaman in their 
apartment home. 
Detective Paul Montgomery of 
the Police Homicide Department 
said Melvin E. Collins, 28, ad- 
mitted stabbing Clarence Swykert, 
31, to death upon finding Swykert 
with Mrs, Jenny Collins, 22, early 
yesterday. Swykert had no perm- | 
anent address. 
x *& & 
Collins, employed as a meat cut-| 
ter in a market, said he found the | 
two together in the apartment and | 
that a fight resulted. Swykert was 
stabbed several times in the che 
with a boning knife. 
      
    
      } 
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ment with a 278 total for 72 holes. 
Fla., and Dick Mayer, St, Peters. | 
burg, Fla., 283 each ($702.50): 
Bob Toski, Miami, Fla., 284 ($530) 
-, and Jim Ferree, Winton-Salem,   
  TIGHT QUARTERS — San F 
(14) scores in the Ist quarter on a AP Wirephoto 
rancisco quarterback Y. A. Tittle 
sneak against Baltimore early in 
Sunday's big battle won by the host Colis. Colts shown are Bob. 
St. Clair (79), Ted Connolly (64), Walt Yowarsky (54) and Bruce 
Bosley (77). Colts are ex-Lion Ray Krouse (78) and Gino Mar- 
chetti (89).   
teelers Bomb Bear 
ed by Tracy, Layne By BRUNO KEARNS 
Pontiac Press Sports Editor 
PITTSBURGH — Literally speak- 
ing, the Chicago Bears ‘‘got 
bombed" in Pitt Stadium yester-' 
day afternoon. It was Detroit 
Lions’ castoff Tom “The Bomb” 
Tracy, the pride of Birmingham 
who warmed the hearts of 22,000 
fans sitting in 11 degree temper- 
atures by leading the Steelers to 
a 2410 victory. 
Another former Lion, quarter- 
back Bobby Layne, played an 
equally important role with his 
pin point passing. Tracy and Layne 
combined for a total of 358 of 
the Steelers total of 396 net yards. | 
“It was Layne’s best game,” said 
Fourteen Teams | 
Finish Unbeaten ' 
By The Associated Press 
Fourteen colleges ended the 1958 
footbal] season unbeaten and un- 
tied.   
* * * 
The last of the group completed | 
its season Thanksgiving when Miss- 
issippi Southern defeated Chatta-! 
nooga 20-13 for its ninth victory. 
All of the others previously had/| 
completed their schedules. 
* * * 
Louisiana State, which wound 
up its regular season campaign 
last Saturday by downing Tulane, 
is the only major school on tie 
list, 
TEN GAMES 
Lsv_. con 
St Benedict's os 
Ariz. St. Ag Noell former Lions coach Buddy Park- 
er,-“he is still pro football's great- 
est quarterback.”- Tracy raced 30 
and 18 yards for touchdowns and 
lin the first half he picked up 
131 of the 158 yards rushing in- 
cluding a beautiful 64 yard dash 
which set up a first period field 
goal, 
Pittsburgh's defensive line held 
the vaunted Chicago offense to 
a Mere 25 yards in the first half. 
Pittsburgh held a 10-0 lead going 
to former Michigan State end Bob 
‘Jewett for a TD to make it 10-7 
with George Blanda’s point. Blanda 
then tied it a moment later with a 
field goal. - 
* * * 
Layne then teamed with Jimmy | 
Orr for a 48 yard Scoring play) 
to put the Steelers in the lead. 
The final TD came when Tracy 
bounced off three tacklers into the 
end zone for an 18 yard scoring 
play, 
It was the first time in 14 years 
the Steelers had beaten the giants 
ern Division honors as the Balti- 
we Colts sewed up the divisional] | 
title 
4 Over Par, Ace 
All on 1 Hole 
DALLAS «® — Ray Barker 
slammed his first ball into a 
creek on the par 3 fifth hole yes- 
térday. 
Then he knocked his second tee 
shot into the creek. Laboring un- 
der a four-stroke penalty, he   
        E GAMES 
x2 31|Quarter-Midget Champ 
  Van Pelt Top St i Star 
in Grey Cup Victory 
VANCOUVER (AP) — Jimmy 
Van Pelt, the 23-year old rookie 
quarterback of the Winnipeg Blue 122 
Bombers, was still the hottest, 
topic of conversation here today | 
after his spectacular show in lead- 
ing his team to the Grey Cup|? 
championship last Saturday. 
* * * 
The former University of Michi-   | way to the green and it went in 
| bogey all] at once. banged his next tee shot all the 
for a hole in one and a double 
  
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)—Marit 
Meadows, 11, of Portland, Ore., 
won the trophy dash for A-Gas 
class quarter-midget cars today in 
the concluding round of the Grand 
National Race of Champions at} 
the Hacienda Hotel track. 
  
WEEKEND FIGHTS 
URE Moi t Calif —Manuel Quijano 
Mexico anes Willie Parker, “Pittsburgh 10. | BUENOS AIRES—Isaac Logart. 145'4 f 
jCuba knocked out Jorge Fernandez. 1454, | 
a 
ISMARK. N.D.—Del Flanagan.       | 1298 
127, 
14914 | 
. Paul. Minn.. outpointed Al Andrews. 
54, asain Wis. 10. 
NEW ILFORD, Conn. —Chico Vejar, 
160, actene Conn., 
Jones, 162, Washington. 
FORT WAYN 
162%, Chicago, 
160, Las Vegas, ae, out Henry 
Bobby Boyd. 
Neal Rivers,   E, Ind. 
Gutpointed into the fourth quarter when the| 
Bears came to life ‘and tied the} 
score. Ed Brown passed 13 yards' 35-27, fo Grab 
(Division Honor 
jclub that‘had much hope of catch- 
jof the Midway and the joss knocked | 
; Chicago out of contention for West- ‘title and will play the Cleveland Trample (ers, 
Erase 20-Point Deficit 
in 2nd Half; Cleveland 
Improves East Lead 
United Press International 
The Colts, Baltimore's biggest 
sports find since Babe Ruth, have 
won their first pro football division 
Browns or Néw York Giants for 
the National League championship 
Dec. 2 : 
The Colts proved their class Sun-| 
day by scoring 28 points in the 
second half to erase a 27-7 San 
Francisco Forty-Niner lead and 
clinch the western division title 
with 4 35-27 triumph, Each N, F. L. 
club has two more games and no, 
team has won the Western race so 
easily since the league assumed’ 
its current setup in 1950 with the; 
Browns, Forty-Niners and Colts       conference. 
Such | stars as John Unitas, 
Lenny Moore and Alan Ameche 
probably could be elected mayor 
of Baltimore this week but the 
Colts and their rabid rooters also 
owe a vote of thanks to the 
league’s hottest current club, the 
Pittsburgh Steelers, 
The Steelers, playing in 11-de- 
gree Weather at Pitt Stadium, were 
as het as a blast furnace while 
whipping the Chicago Bears—only 
ing the Colts, 24-10. The victory, 
the first the Steelers ever scored 
against the Bears in 14 tries, 
enabled the Colts to boost their 
margin to three games with only 
two to play. 
Cleveland put basketball shoes on 
quarterback Milt Plum in the final 
period and maintained its one-game 
margin over New York in the 
the receiving of Ray Renfro and 
Lew Carpenter’s running, enabled 
the Browns to rally and defeat the 
the Giants defeated the Phila- 
delphia Eagles, 24-10. 
Billy Wade’s two touchdown 
passes to Leon Clarke in the last 
Rams a 20-14 victory over the 
Chicago Cardinals in the other 
game. The Detroit Lions scored 
a 24-14 victory over the Green Eastern race. Plim's-passes, plus! 
|Washington Redskins, 21-14, while|: 
20 minutes gave the Los Angeles | — 
    
  
12 NFL Teams Take 48 Collegians From Grab Bag   
Packers Open Player D PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The! 
National Football League held its 
‘player draft today. 
The 12 pro clubs drafted a total 
of 48 players from the 1958 college 
grab bag after Comissioner Bert 
Bell gavelled the annual session 
into order at 9:30 a.m, EST. 
Green Bay, last in the league| 
with a 1-8-1 record, selected first 
under the system whereby thé 
teams draft according to their 
standings after  yesterday’s 
games, last to first. 
* * * 
The Packers were expected to 
entering from the All-America grab a quarterback for their first 
‘choice, Top consideration was ex- 
‘pected to be given to Randy Dun- 
    Bay Packers Thursday and those 
        two clubs did not play Sunday. 
Ruth went on from Baltimore to 
| become baseball’s greatest slugger 
| but it's doubtful if even the mighty 
Babe ever caused as much sports 
‘excitement in the Maryland city 
|as the frisky Colts. Things looked 
black Sunday when Y. A. Tittle, the 
  can, Iowa; Lee Grosscup, Utah, 
and Tommy Greene, Holy Cross. 
Following Green Bay the order 
was a tossup between Philadelphia 
and the Chicago Cardinals, who 
are tied; Washington, San Fran- 
cisco, Detroit, then a three-way 
tie among Pittsburgh, Los Angeles 
and the Chicago Bears; New York, 
Cleveland and Baltimore. 
In the event of ties in the stand- 
ings, a toss or draw determined 
which team selected first with the 
tied clubs. then ao in suc- 
ceeding rounds, 
* x * 
There was no bonus choice this 
year, Congress told Bell the bonus 
— an out-of-hat draw entitling the 
winner to draft rights to any one 
player of its choice before the reg-         
  CELEBRATE CLINCHER — Jubilant Balti- 
more Colt fans held a long celebration following 
their team’s amazing comeback victory over 
San Francisco which clinched the Western Divi- 
sion championship yesterday. Ray Berry, a star ance TD pass 
triumph, ular draft began — bordered on a 
lottery. So the owners voted it 
out at their annual meeting last 
winter. 
Following the draft the owners 
Scheduled an executive session at 
which Bell was expected to dis- 
cuss with them the ever increds- 
ing cost of operating a pro fran- 
chise. The commissioner has ex- 
pressed great concern over this 
facet of the business. There also 
may be a discussion of the latest 
threat by the players association 
to take “extreme measures’’ if 
their demands are not given 
prompt consideration. 
* * * 
Also slated for the day-long ses- 
sions were arrangements for pos- 
sible playoffs in the Eastern Con-       
AP Wirephoto, 
offensive end all season, is shown being carried” 
‘eff the field shortly after he caught the insur- 
from Johnny Unitas in the 35-27 
  
NFL Standings NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE 
EASTERN CONFERENCE 
bald-headed quarterback who once’ Gleveland oo... 4 3 $ Lf ina ‘th feo '¢ SOOO 5 played for the Colts, scored twice) eee 423 2 
to spark the Forty-Niners to a 21-1| washington awunes 3°70 300 180 254 
halftime lead. But coach Weeb/Prinface” °°} 7} 33 Be 2 
|Ewbank’s Colts reacted like thor-| WESTERN CONFERENCE 
le } ‘ i | W LT Pct. Pts. OP oughbreds in the last 30 minutes. ‘xBaitimore 3 ; ° 06 at = 
Passes by Unitas set up two ‘Loe Angeles = ‘0 0 2m 220 
one-yard scoring blasts by isan Fi Francisco. 4 6 0 .400 188 291 Ameche and cut the Forty-Niner ‘Green Bay 1 8 1 111 152 300 
lead to 27-21. Then the sellout 
crowd of 57,557 in Baitimore’s 
Memorial Stadium got its big 
chance to cheer. Moore raced 
73 yards to score. The dazed 
Forty-Niners appeared to have 
him trapped at least four times 
as he galloped down the sideline, 
then cut back to midfield 
en route to the fourth period 
touchdown that climaxed the 
rally. Steve Myhra's conversion 
made it 27-27. Unitas followed 
with a short pass to Ray Berry 
for Baltimore's last touchdown. 
Washington held Jim Brown, 
Cleveland's record-busting rusher, 
|to a season low of 12 yards on 11 
tries and took a 14-7 lead into the 
final period after Eddie LeBaron’s 
third-period touchdown toss to Sid 
Watson.   
  x—Clinched Western Conference 
SUNDAY’S RESULTS 
at 35, San Francisco 27 
21, Washington 14 
Los petted 20, Chicago Cards 14 
Pittsburgh 24, Chicago Bears 10 
New York 24, Philadel iphia 10 
THIS WEEK'S K'S SCHEDULE e 
SATURDAY 
Baltimore at a oe 
i Cards a Cuicaee Bears 
\Gteve and at Philadelphia 
Green Bay at San Francisco 
New York at Detroit 
Pittsburgh at Washington 
Baker Bows in Mexico 
JUAREZ, Mexico (AP)—Young 
Alfredo Zuany of El Paso, Tex., 
gained a unanimous decision over 
Bob Baker, Pittsburgh, in a 10-/§ 
round heavyweight battle before 
5,000 fans in Monumental Bull 
Ring Sunday, Zuany weighed 198, 
Baker 217. title. 
  Kentucky, Tulane, Tulsa in °59   
3 New Grid DETROIT 
Tulane and Tulsa have been added 
to the University of Detroit’s 1959 
| football schedule, the Titans -an- 
200 nounced today in revealing their 
nine-game schedule, 
Kentucky will be one of Detroit’s 
three home night game opponents 
and it will be the first meeting of 
the two schools in football. De- 
troit will play Tulane and Tulsa 
away, 
Holdovers f rom 
schedule are “George Washing- 
ton, Marquette, Xavier, Boston 
College, Dayton and Villanova. 
Detroit vice president John R 
Mulroy said it hasn't been de- 
_cided yet whether or not the Nov. 
20 Villanova) game will be played 
at night or in the “afternoon, Titan 
20,000 for three night games this| 
season while three day games 
less. 
      1921. (UPI) — Kentucky, | 
attendance averaged better than 
Detroit last played Tulane in| Foes for U-D Green Wave will be played Oct. 
§ in New Orleans at night: The 
last meeting ‘with Tulsa was in 
1956. 
The complete schedule: 
Sept. 
night; Oct. 9 at Tulane, night; 
Xavier; Oct. 24 at Tulsa; Oct. 30 Boe 
ton College, night; Nov. 7 at Dayton; 
Nov. 14 open; Nov. 20 Villanova. | Donnell, 
18 George Washington. night;! ra He 
ference in the event of a tie for 
first place between New York or 
Cleveland, Here too, a toss or 
draw determines. sites for the 
playoffs, The league title game is 
scheduled for Dec. 28 in the home 
of the Eastern champion, - 
k kee 
The big item én the agenda was 
the draft. Who, in the eyes of the 
pros, were the top 1958 college 
football players? While some of 
the potential All-Americas were 
sure to be picked, so too, ‘were so- 
called ‘sleepers’ from lesser 
known institutions, Also available 
were some players with college 
original class had graduated mak- 
ing them eligible also for the pro 
draft, The latter are known as 
“pedshirts’’ and are taken for fu- 
ture delivery, 
* * * 
Each team is entitled to four 
choices, But previous trades 
whereby veterans were dealt for 
future draft choices have created 
a situation where Los Angeles gets 
nine picks, -Detroit seven and 
Cleveland five in today’s meeting. 
Pittsburgh, on the other hand, will 
step aside on each of its four 
draft picks.in favor of the teams 
to which it traded them. The bal- 
ance of the annual 30-round draft 
will be held at the league’s annual 
winter meeting in eae? 
ween asburn’ ene Gene y 
linois; Art .Gob, Pitt; Jim Wood, 
homs State; Buddy Dial, Rice; Bryant, Texas; Dick Wallen, UCLA, and 
Schleicher, Penn. State. 
Syracuse; Fran State; Ken Beck, Texas Angies; John Wooten, 
Benecic'! Colorado; *Al ik, Syracuse; Charles 
Horton, wnincile and _ Marciniak. 
CENTERS Pa a de 
BACKS: Lay clark. ot Ohio State; Larry * 
      State, al 
  
    nal’ eligibility femaining, but whose!- 
Kreitling, 2 the 
(Of    
    
> * 
x * 
breaking time of 20 minutes, 55.6 
seconds for the four-mile distance. 
Emporia State Teachers won the 
team cham with 67 points, 
Central Michigan was fourth. 
* * * 
Art Eversole of Western Michigan 
third Ito i Bob, der. a er ge 
| ee thar bangs anny, Roet tke ok oF * [North Carola; | Nub Beamer, mer, Oregon | _A. cut in: dates for thoroughbred to ee eee ng and an increase for harness 
° ” next year aré proposed by All-Am erica 11 \Sameos. James, Inglis, state racing com- 
  
  Gets N 
lAiring Bi 
NEW YORK (# — The .All- 
American football team selected 
by the Américan Football 
Coaches Assn. was introduced on 
a national television show last 
ton; guards—George Diederich,     ‘Dawkins Named 
to All-East 11 NEW YORK (# — Pete Dawkins 
of Royal Oak, Mich., was named © 
bells sl cong sgl tga 
* gee * 
Dawkins was one of three mem- 
bers of the Army team picked by 
the selection board. One of the 
others was Bob Anderson, his half- 
back running mate. 
* * « Sept. 26 at Marquette; Oct. 3 Kentucky,/ 
Oct.\17) 
  The board said “neither could be 
given a distinct margin over the   
  Pontiac Central, Pontiac Northern and St. Frederick will all 
be in action for tomorrow night as another hoop season begins | 
for city schools. 
Gentral will debut at Edsel Ford while Northern ‘teareis 
to Lake Orion to meet its Ist opponent in any sport. St. Fred-; City Teams Open Tuesday} the 1958 | other and both outclassed virtually 
every other halfback in the East.” 
Dawkins, a senior, was Army's 
leading om ore scorer, 
Among players receiving honor- 
able mention from the selection. 
board were Frank Finney of Royal 
|Oak, a star back at Brown Univer- 
lsity, and guard Don Chomicz of 
‘Detroit who plays for Navy.     
erick will be the only team at home as the Rams meet Detroit 
nomeo and Troy ana wittora U° OF M. Sailors Win St. Elizabeth. 
Cranbrook at Walled Lake, 
at Rochester headline the remaining games scheduled Tues- 
averaged four to five * housand| day. Royal Oak St. Mary meets Madison and Country Day goes 
'to Oak Park in others. 
Brighton, Imlay City, Berkley, Millington and South Lyon 
The 1959 game with the are also swinging into play tomorrow. Frostbite Regatfa - 
CHICAGO (UPI) — University 
of Michigan skippers sailed to 
seven victories in 13 races yester-   gan star passed, ran and kicked 
the Bombers to a stunning 35-28 
win over the defending champion 
Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the playoff 
for Canada's pro football title. 
* * * 
Van Pelt scored two touchdowns 
kicked a pair of field goals and 
four conversions for 22 points, 
best individual effort in Grey Cup 
history. . 
  
Billy Casper 
Takes Havana 
Golf Tourney 
HAVANA (AP) — Billy Casper 
of Apple Valley, Calif, Sunday 
won the top prize of $2,400 in the 
Havana Invitational Golf Tourna- 
* * * 
Casper shot a 4-under-par 68 in 
the final round to finish two 
strokes ahead of Bo Winninger of 
Odessa, Tex. Doug Sanders of Mi- 
ami nase was = with 281. 
* 
Poem the sedition were Tony 
Lema of San Leandro, Calif. with 
282 ($900): Wes Ellis Jr., Alde- 
cress, N. J., Mike Fetchick, Yon- 
kers, N, Y., Doug-Ford, Paradise, 
and Ernie Vossler, Midland, Tex. 
  N, C., 285 ($455 each), &   CONTRAST IN PASSES — There was plenty 
of contrast on these two pass plays in the Na- 
tional Football League games yesterday. At left, from Steeler Ra * defensive, back Erich Barnd 
unsuccessfully to take a Bobby Layne flip away of the Bears tries 
y Mathews in the game won by 
| Del Shofner (29) oft the L. A. Rams is all by»himself waiting with open 
arms for a pass throyn by Bill Wade. It was ; 
Pittsburgh. At right; 
{ in’ pacing the   Wirephotes 
one of three flipsson which oS pair ‘collaborated 
Rams to their list touchdown 
against the Chicago Cardinals, day to overcome an early Wiscon- 
- jsin lead and capture the 12th 
~tannual Frostbite Dinghy Champion- 
ship in Chicago's Belmont Harbor, 
* * * 
Michigan, led by skippers Otto 
Sherer and Dexter Thede, was also 
second in two races to amass 187 
points to 161 for Wisconsin, 
Brown, winner of the meet’s 
Timme Angsten trophy for the last 
three years, finished-third with 155 
points and Indiana was fourth with 
1131 points. 
x * * 
Others in the order of finish and 
point totals were: Purdue 119, Mar- 
quette 115, Northwestern 110, Cin- 
cinnati 104%, Detroit 102 and Ohio 
State 97. 
  
3 Titles at Stake 
jin Bridge Contest 
DETROIT \# — Bridge players 
compete for three individual cham- 
| |pionships today at the fall national 
contract bridge championships. 
_ The titles at stake are the life 
masters, senior masters and open 
individual. 
  — 
NBA AT A GLANCE SATURDAY'S RESULTS 
ies York’ 110, Philadelphia, 103 iw Yor e 
eapolis 108, Syracuse 105 
M dots 98, Cinetnnati ati 96 
a aT 
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AP Wirephets | 
THOR CHECKOUT IN ENGLAND — An American-built Thor | 
intermediate range ballistic missile rests on launching pad near 
Feltwell, England, as newsmen watch final checks by civilian 
contractors on launching emplacement. This missile does not yet 
contain a nuclear warhead. Military check will follow civilian | 
checks, but the Air Ministry declines to say just when the Thor 
will reach the operational stage. Under U. S.-British agreement, 
any decision to launch the IBM must be a joint one. 
Mercy Aircraft   
  
(Advertisement) (Advertisement) 
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   ‘Crashes, 6 Die Canadian Air Force|’ 
Helicopter Carrying 2 loan Ratifies Pac to Hospital Is Lost 
WINNIPEG, Man. (AP)—A Ca- on Atom Proposal 
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TOKYO (AP)—Japanese ratifi- 
       
    
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crashed and burned Sunday as it 
was bringing a badly burned In- 
dian woman and her 2-year-old 
daughter to a hospital. All six 
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* * * 
The 14-passenger Sikorsky H34 
crashed in snow and poor visi- eation of atomic agreements with 
the United States and Britain be-, 
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    The bel house of es Diet ak! 
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. |bility on a frozen lake 96 miles|vides that the lower ‘house’s’ ap- 
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Three air force rescuers who if the upper house does not act in 
parachuted to the scene could not 30 days. 
determine the cause of the crash | * * * 
 aamnetasety | Under the agreement with the 
* * |United States, Japan. will obtain! 
  0 miles from Winnipeg to the|clear research reactions. The 
Vein Indian reservation tojagreement with Britain clears the 
pick up Mrs. Jacob Crate and her|way for Japan to buy a power 
baby. ‘They were badly burned! reactor. .    
    
        
   
   
    
     
    
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| 47 Main Street: < i 
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WITH ANY AMOUNT 
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the Postman, the Paper Boy and the Milkman!            
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CLOSED SUNDAYS: 
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at Williams Lake Rd. ‘Open Weekdays 
9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. 
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1200 Baldwin | 
at Columbia Open Weekdays 
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  hy|cafe,”" 
-.|the men finish their jobs: for the| day, they drop by for a drink or| 
  
             They'll float 
your heart away 
on waves 
of love and 
    MARTHA HYER 
\ HARRY GUARDINO 
Thursday   
Doris Day — Richard Widmark 
fm “TUNNEL OF LOVE” ‘ficannot stand American women 
  
“{\stated positively. “When he comes 
  TREES WHICH GROW | | sare 
  in Latin: Athetion, we have |’ 
Lamas declared; ‘When 
some coffee. They talk against 
their employers and their wives -" Yuletide Story . 
         
   
             
  mV gr are rEN pears Beater e is ee TAS 
       » IT WA Uke AMY ote 
me $1    
   
  OP { “ | ee le 
q 
  
RAF Fighter Geta: 
Wants Rattlesnake LONDON (UPI)—An RAF fig 
snake—live or stuffed. 
Fighter squadron 66 at 
  Flying officer K. W. Hayr said 
the squadron wanted one for its 
Americans’ in rattlesna 
tory could take this as a hint. The 
Londen Zoo has a rattler but won't 
give it up. Pet shops in London do a 
  and get it out of their systems. 
Then they go home happy. 
“In this country, men have lit- 
tle opportunity for fellowship with 
each other. They go directly home 
to their wives. Because of this, 
they are in danger of lésing their 
masculinity,” 
* * * 
Lest the ladies leave our discus- 
sion in a huff, let me hastily add 
that Fernando is all for the 
American woman. He has demon- 
strated by marrying one, a gor- 
geous redhead named Arlene 
Dahl. : 
“Many foreigners tell me they By DICK SAUNDERS armed man holed up in a house, 
Lawmen of the Old West knew/°r in the event of chasing him in 
a fast draw was a necessity, but|@ Car at more than 50 yards range, 
they also knew that with a six-|buckshot would bounce off his au- 
shooter, no matter how fast on the/|to,” Bauman said. 
draw, you just ‘‘never mess around “The canbinanllare fall assent 
with a man with a rifle. weapons. From leng range we 
This rule still holds true with |.can pick our targets and call 
modern lawmen, and due to re- | our shots with increased firepow- 
cent events, the phrase could be | er and accuracy. 
ee wens aan dank _,_Shotguns are excellent for sev- County sheriff's deputy.” types of situations, t they 
generally are looked on as riot 
The Sheriff's Department arsenal | guns.’ 
has been swelled by the addition ahasate & Se calier cax Bauman added that no deputy because they are too bossy,” he 
remarked, ‘I think such men are 
cowards. They prefer foreign 
women because they are willing 
Ie be subservient. To me, those   women are toe docile. After cen- 
turies of trying, they have given 
up trying to reach equality with 
men. Living With them might be   County Sheriff's Department 
Well Armed With New Rifles would be without a revoiver in 
any case, but that the new car- 
bines would “‘outdistance and out- 
shoot any type of gun already in 
the arsenal, with — of the 
.45 caliber 
* x * 
“The new rifles are also ex- 
tremely flexible, being small, corn- 
pact and easy to handle,”” Bauman 
pointed out. “One clip holds 15 
rounds, which is considerably bet- 
ter than the half-dozen rounds fired 
by our shotguns before reloading.” 
Just how well one can call his 
shots is decided by a deputy’s   jeasier for men, but it would also 
become a_ bore. 
* * * 
“I like American women be- 
cause they know how to fight.” 
Some American males, he 
lamented, aren't willing to fight 
back. And so they wind up being 
assistant housewives, w 
dishes, changing diapers and 
wearing aprons as badge of their 
defeat. 
“A man shouldn’t enter the 
kitchen_unless he really likes to 
cook as a hobby,’ Fernando bines, issued to the department by 
the Michigan Civil Defense through 
its Oakland County Department. 
*« * * 
The new rifles are a welcome 
addition to deputies who have been 
limited mainly to the use of re- 
volvers and sawed off shotguns. 
Although the new guns presently 
are slated for emergencies only, it 
is expected they'll be standard 
equipment by the end of this year. 
As soon as deputies have been 
thoroughly trained in the use of 
the new firearms, the rifles will 
replace shotguns in patrol cars.   
WASHINGTON (® — The fate of 
government machinery to control 
farm production is hanging in the 
balance. 
Whether to junk this machinery, 
used on and off for many crops home after being away for 10 
hours at work and on the highway, 
  
About 93 per cent of. Sweden's 
farms are privately owned. iff Frank W. Irons says. 
tos id signs that vari “Although our arsenal was by re are solid signs various   
          
  
i ino means ‘weak,’ it now contains 
guns which are specialized in their 
uses and gives us a better choice     Doors Open 10:45 A. M.   
st Wilikil 
  
  
  
      
At 11 - 1:05 - 3:05 - 5:10 - 7:20-9:30 |   
  
Starting Thursday 
“ MAN OF THE WEST’   
    
     
         
    
      
    
    Ringer of Carillon 
Runs Hot ‘n’ Cold 
OKLAHOMA CITY (# — It’s hard 
enough to play a 42-bell carillon 
what with whacking pegs with 
fists and stamping on pedals. 
But the one 11 stories high in a 
tower of St. Luke’s Methodist 
Church here has other drawbacks. 
The small room where the church 
minister of music, Cecil Lapo, 
plays the imported instrument is 
about 10 by 10 feet with one win-,| 
dow. It is torrid in summer and, 
freezing in winter. During’ the, of weapons with which to handle 
inearly any conceivable situation.” 
The department's official keeper- 
of-the-guns, Sgt. Marion Bauman, 
said, ‘‘We have a dozen .12-gauge 
sawed-off shotguns used primarily 
for riot control due to their wide   
‘ “In the event we were hunting 
‘a suspect or escaped convict in 
an outlying area, a shotgun would 
past our. firepower and range.” 
| This would also be true of an 
instance where we might have an) 
  
  
  
  | apvep CARTOON — SPORT 
  |Douglas Tests 
New Jetliner 
in California 
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, VA FE summer Lapo strips to the waist; 
in the winter he wears an overcoat.     
           
       
     eg 0% ~~) 
  
  Hunters Bagged 
on Parkway by 
Police Officer 
NEW YORK (UPI) — Three New| 
Yorkers returning from a Cana- 
dian hunting trip in New Bruns- 
wick were bagged by a motorcycle 
policeman yesterday. 
Patrolman Ralph Egstrom spot- 
ted their car on a crowded park- 
way with a 300-pound black bear, 
rom cub and a 180-pound 
deer lashed to the roof. 
Egstrom cited the driver, Ed- 
ward Torres, for driving with an carrying 135 passengers 
and cargo at speeds up to 585 
miles an hour made’ a 55-minute 
jtest flight over the weekend. 
| The large white, blue-and-red- 
{trimmed jet described by Douglas 
officials as the most powerful and 
fastest jet transport ever flown 
took off at Long Beach Municipal 
Airport Saturday, circled out over 
the Pacific Ocean and landed here 
nearly an hour later. 
Test Pilot A. G. Heimerdinger, 
who tested the DC8 on its initial 
flight last May, flew the swept- 
    Kill Farm Control, 
Urges Sec. 
/market demand, the prospect of not stock them 
Ofticial Regrets 
Short-Sighted 
Skunk Policy . | 
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (UPD —! 
Marin County, overpopulated this 
year with pesky varmints, offered 
a $1 bounty for tails of skunks 
and raccoons. 
Some 38 tails later, County agri-) 
cultural Commissioner Thomas W. | 
Peryam wasn't sure it had all   
knowledge of his gun, according 
to Bauman. Picking-off an armed 
criminal through a second story 
window would not pose a very 
rigorous test for the carbines. They 
are that accurate. squadron has appealed for a rattle- | : 
aan the eae 
very own. Live will do. Or stuffed. 1} 
_-terri- | 
TUES, WED., THURS. 
“THE BARBARIAN 
AND THE GEISHA”    
           
          
    
    
      
        
   
    
   
     
    
    
        
      
COMING SOON: 
       | “Defiant Ones” “Reluctant Debutante” 
“The Big Country” 
  
When asked about hitting a crim-|been worth it.   
    inal escaping while holding another} Twice claimants walked into his   
office with’ skunk tails and both 
times he was unable to use the of- 
fice for the rest of the day. . person in front of him for cover, 
Bauman put it this way: 
“You've got to know your   
gun. — exactly hew it fires. 
oe he et oe datos (Denver Members 
of Legion Forced 
to Eat Crow 
SHREVEPORT, La. (UPID—Fif- 
teen American Leagion officials 
from Denver, Colo., will eat crow | 
here Friday to pay off a lost bet. 
Shreveport won a contest be- 
tween the two cities for the larg- 
est chapter in the nation. “But I have a rifle of ‘my own. 
I know it and its peculiarities like 
a personal friend. And I know 
I can light matches with it.” 
Sheriff's deputies won't be using 
their newly-aquired firearms for 
lighting matches — that’s for sure. 
But before long they'll be com- 
  Benson agricultural forces are lining up 
for a battle. 
Controls were put on te bolster 
Yarm income but, says Secretary 
of Agriculture Benson, they do 
not work. Abandon them and free houldn’t b “These rifles will in : es e required to do seus ae pasa ieare since the early Roosevelt New Deal! the tarmers to produce as they 
than it is easy to imagine,” Sher- slays—may well- become a major) wish, he urges. Lower farm price 
issue in Congress. supports to allow farm preducts 
to become fully competitive in 
domestic and foreign markets, 
he advises. 
surpluses. 
Benson has the support of the 
influential American Farm Bureau 
Federation. 
Certainly big surpluses have ac- 
cumulated despite use of controls 
and payment of subsidies to farm- 
ers holding 1 land = oe a ia 
Critics ae eee measures oot 
an important assist when growers, 
voted overwhelmingly in a refer- 
'endum last Tuesday to end acre- 
age restrictions on corn, the na- 
tion's largest single crop. 
But the National Grange—gen- 
erally regarded as a moderate in 
farm issues—raised a challeng- 
ing hand at its recent convention 
at Grand Rapids, Mich. 
-in an obvious reply to Benson, 
the Grange said in resolutions that 
“unless effective ways are devised 
to adjust production to effective         
the future is that total available 
supplies will consistently exceed ef- 
fective demand under normal con- 
ditions, even at lower prices.” 
x * * 
This farm organization went on 
to say that past experience and ac- 
cepted economic laws run counter 
to Benson's contention that mar- 
kets can be expanded sufficiently 
—even at lower prices—to absorb 
          external object on the car. 
  | Iwing craft. 
    
Why? 
- 
  What? 
Where? 
When? — | Role Fatal for Actor 
| LONDON (AP) — Gareth Jones, 
35, played the part of a man with 
a weak heart in a television play 
Sunday night. Midway through the 
| perioemanes he collapsed with a 
|heart attack and died in his dress- 
ing room.   
        A 7 
—<t 
4 
Readying Royal Coach 6% Interest Rate roKyO WET sectipat ) — Japan Nationa 
Repayable 12 Yea rs |Railways has begun remodeling a | . irailway coach for the special use 
Open End Benefits lof Crown Prince Akihito and his commoner fiancee, Michiko Shoda, 
‘it was disclosed today. 
  
  To Consolidate Bills 'No Cream or Sugar? 
  ] Tea and Java are the names of mprove Your Home Tes a eee ‘full farm production. 
The Nationa] Farmers Union | 
likewise is not ready to give up 
the idea of trying to adjust pro- 
duction to markets. 
Proposals have been advanced in 
the past that production and mar- 
keting limitations be placed on a 
pound, bushel or ton basis rather 
than on an acre planting basis. 
This would eliminate the possibil- 
ity of offsetting acreage reductions 
by expanding output on individual 
acres. 
Mother Has 3rd Child 
Born on Same Date 
PACIFIC BEACH, Calif. (UPI) 
—Nov. 29th is a memorable date 
for the Frank Willey family.   
      The first two children, daughters] . 
date and Saturday the same date 
their third child, a son, was born.   
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Open ‘til 8:00 P. M. DINNERS 
© Businessmen’s Lunches Served Daily . @ 
Open 11 A. M. to 2 A. M. aged 5 and 3, were born on : 
1 
| in 
relaxation, 
  please the 
   The secretary argues that under 
such conditions farmers would be 
able to sell products that now pile 
up in government warehouses as 
sleeping and damaged a second 
house with four persons in it, 
‘Equal Sign Treatment pletely equipped to offer the com- 
munity even better protection than 
in the past. 
Takes Letter 31 Years While the second-place Denver of- 
  
cholson and former Gov. Dan 
Thornton, dine on roast crow, their 
Shreveport hosts will be dining on 
roast beef.   ficials, including Mayor W. F, Ni-' 
    
  
  
to Reach 60 Miles 
LINCOLN, Neb.  — It took.31/ 
years for a letter mailed in Omaha 
      WALLED LAKE MA 4-2151 
  
to reach Lincoln, 60 miles away. 
When first mailed, the letter 
needed only two cents postage. By 
the time it was delivered, the rate 
had climbed to four cents. i 
The letter from James M. John-| 
son, majled in 1927, was addressed 
to George G, Zellers, then an em- 
ploye of the Nebraska Supreme 
forwarded to Zellers at Columbus, 
Neb., where he now is a district 
court reporter.       Sat. & Sun, Mat. 4c ‘til 6:00 
    
  
3 Boys Joyride 
on Bulldozer, 
House Smashed 
| NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) 
Three boys who “learned from an. 
old Navy Seabee manual how to 
start a bulldozer, but didn't read a aC 
~~ ecmmneoma CF 
"4 Oth we 
OPEN 6:00 ic 6 RONTIAC as DRIVE-IN § _ RAE 54500 ThHEat .ae, 
LMT Thy Loong 
    SHOW STARTS 6:30 P.M. 
      
far enough to find out how to 
stop it, were held on charges of 
grand larceny and malicious de-    
    
struction of ees ae 
Police = a joy-riding youths | 
leaped - from 
bulldozer smashed through one 
house in which six persons were |   
Officers said the boys used a 
hacksaw to cut through a steel 
band padiocked around the start-| er of the bulldozer. 
No one in the two houses was 
hurt. Names of the youths were 
withheld pending a hearing. ~— 
College Officials Seek |   
WINNER 
oF 8 
ACADEMY 
ETERNITY fue BRONXVILLE, N.Y. (UPI) —. 
There are signs on Westchester 
parkways pointing out directions to 
a trotting track, a shopping center, 
a cemetery and many other places. Yr ary 
Therefore, county officials were i © nye Ae BE at 
asked by an official of Sarah Law- XC “; Ds Ae 
rence College, why aren't there 
any telling 
Lawrence? 
Begin Light Bulb Study 
NEW YORK (UPI) — Why does | 
ene light bulb last so much longer: how to get to Sarah hy ‘starring 
CAT -WOIVE DEDORAT KERR FAA SHMATLA een Ub 
NO   Raw Win in EDEN}: _ COLOR ee 
If You are 65 Years Old 
or Older—Join 
GOLDEN AGE CLUB CLUB BENEFITS 
ADMISSION - HALF PRICE 
  
than another which seems to be; 
identical? Bendix electronic com- 
puters have been put to work to 
find out, ffs. IN-caR HEATERS That 
Really Heat         
    
   
    
    >_* NOW SHOWING x € 
4 
4 
4 
4 
4 
4 
4 Trev YT 
  
  
  
BLUE SKY 2150 OPDYKE RD. 
FE 4-4611 
TONIT 
  OUR EARLY, EARLY. 
SHOW—IN BY 6:30, 
HOME BY 10:00 
EXCLUSIVE igi RUNS      
   
       
   CINEMASCOPE « - meTeoColor 
Robert“ Cyd ‘Lee J. 
. TAYLOR-CHARISSE: “oie BOX OFFICE 
OPEN 6:00 
IN-A 
CAR 
HEATERS 
PM iting! tg, 
The Dec ks 
. Ran RED 
  
  FOR FREE APPRAISAL Henry’s- Miracle Lounge “eG RELAND. |. (Formerly Henty’s Bloomfield Inn) hanna Um brea noe Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. \ 
i am \ 
i , \ 5 
° Ny pe rene, ge pet) eee ene ee emery ey   
ae 
  
<2 Join—NOW—Join ; 
  
     
i ‘he 6 
‘ > * ca 
. 1958] : i 
f 
anor: 
(Wut Br 
UNWE \ ft : “ . i . = 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 1 
Settlement Near 
in TWA Strike ©   
True Life Adventures | mao = 2 , kr 
  
   
       
      
‘s) 
  = 
         
  a cae ; : ; By The Anssclited Press _ ‘sume today. The machinists! — eh? 4 4 A : 
* Grei : | . . Air travelers had cause for op-| struck TWA.last Nov. 21. 4. - ; E m | Grain Prices a. M ARKETS Burst of Bu in timism today. Quick settlement of a a a? | 
ee g a 10-day-old machinists’ strike) Eastern Air Lines, struck by the rs 
_ ' 
  __? against Trans World Airlines, one| machinists and the Flight Engi- Pa. c- _| The following are top prices cv ol |of two major lines immobilized by neers International Assn. last 
BP. caches Bi leovering sales of locally grown Boosts Stocks labor disputes, was expected. Monday, offered to submit many 
bd ecaren tae produce brought to the Farmer's Whether the optimism would of itg differences with the engi- 
gy meagre 1.87% _|Market by growers and sold by grow or take a sour turn depend- neers to arbitration. The proposal | 
fee. ......., 2.1% i4/them in wholesale package lots |... ed upon developments in Kansas| was rejected. 
Mon (sew guy "1! La1| Quotations are furnished by the NEW YORK UP — An ay burst City and New York City. Representatives of two other 
on 119% Lard (arumsi— “| Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of °f buying sent stock prices whirl- x we & . earriers, American Airlines and 
Mey hacen) 73 caer “ |Wednesday. ing fractionally to about 1 point! 4+ 4 dinner hour recess of ne-/Pan American World Airways, ap- 
higher today. It also helped throw gotiations in Kansas City Sunday! pear in court in New York City 
  
        BOD. =sei-=>» 3.19% Detroit Produce ie Ueker behind floor transac-/riont, Cliff Miller, chairman of| today in labor disputes. C rege A : wae A 
: . : District 142, International Assn. of, American, the nation’s biggest FRUITS ee anise AR ' Ameri 
28 Hunter S Dead Apple, Delicious, Bu. ..<--c:ne000-.89%|,. 0" al ae the! Machinists, said: “It’s not a ques-| airline, is seeking to make perm- 
ald . aoe Ga sro 4 gals. ...... oo ase) (Abe inven ye ale 8 — pare tion of ‘if’ in getting this thing anent a temporary federal injunc- ( Bose: BG. socscc oc csaccos 3.50; There were 10, . ars of Stude- settled any more. It's a question tion against’ a strike by the Air 
Deer Season nds _ baker-Packard up %, 12.000 Amer-| of how soon.” Line Pilots Assn. 
Beets, wes 1.80 st Standard 22 op ed Cees oy bargaining session ended at * ok * . . -  senensetecvegeee |b. ustion gineering up 214 and u,- e i : . “ . . . 
Carrots, topped. bu. ......... ssesse i : : nigh dw n P sric ; seek : : 
By, Te Anointed Pros Sulit cn $48 00 Amour wp % ee re econ ae Spree Ca @lery; dow. stalks ..........ceeeeee 1.35 | . . é . 
A r r hunting sea iN |Pennel, (bch + dos oonos 1.28 * * * | forbidding its employes to refuse 
Favorable news included higher. Michigan has passed into the rec- | Horseradish, No 1 pk. .. Se to.work overtime. The workers, Kohirab: ichs! dos . t : : 
: 175 construction contracts in October, 
    
  
          Lj a 
ord, The 1958 season ended Sun- |teeks inchs» doz : ( t | G 8.000 gr ; ; : ; ; o eS : Pers : : 8, ground and flight service 
day with a tol] of 28 hunter Pplons. dry (beg) 50 Ib _235 reports of climbing automobile apl q rowing employes, are members of ‘the 
deaths. Parenips % ou -ssseeceeeee 175) Sales as dealers get more cars into Reanee Torkere VIni SN Potatoes (bag! $0 ths |... IO ; An Transport Workers Union. 
Radishes, hothouse (behs ) doz. ... | .90 showrooms, a reduction in unem-|¢ < A weeklong strike of 30-odd . Eleven persons were killed by |Radishes, white (pchs.) doz. ...... 1.80 ployment for October and Novem-| n [ n n stewardesses continued against ‘ accidental gunfire in the 15 days | Tomatces. Hothse.. No. 1 8-Ib. Dskt. 2.75. ber and expectations of a pickup he Lake C Airli in. y' Toros oa ke eee ty a in the stecl ; the e Central Airlines. Negotia 
a the — te other 17 died . : ae ling 7 Ae year In the steei operat: d b b h tors failed to reach agreement in 
heart attacks. GREENS ae Godthaab, With 2,000 Indianapolis Sunday. The line 
The last gunfire death was that eco gO crretesssetesseeseee Heed Most aircraft manufacturers . ae [serves Ohio, Indiana, and parts of 
of Mrs. Claudette Allen, 24, of /ksie: % Ue NIESIEIIEIEIEE LED were in heavy demand, General | People Is Biggest City; Pennsyivania, Illinois and Michi- East Lansing. ustard. BU... 1... eee eee eee ees 1.50] Dynamics ran up 2 points, North ; N gan. are Spinach, bu. ..........+.--s----- ss , w Port s * * * ous chard. bu. .. gonecosd. 1.35) American Aviation 1 and Doug- Will Get S Po 2 * * * ‘ 
Mrs. Allen was killed Saturday SALAD GREENS | las ‘2. But United Aircraft lost , ’ .. The snarled airline situation 
north of Cadillac when a gun in |cetery cabbage, doz. ... lin Sse eb Fewer eels jammed trains, buses and planes 
the hands of her husband, David, |E¢ve. bleached. bu. A block of 12.000 shares of Fair-|UV¢_ i" Godthaab, the capital of of operating airlines as the long|       
  Escaroie, bleached bu. 
  ‘child Engineering crossed the eg Ge eee ese 
lat 12's up 58. A 10.000 share block’! 
jof Siegler was up 14% at 2778. 
| Among higher stocks were such 
blue chips as-American Telephone | 
& Telegraph, U.S. Steel, Du Pont, 
Kennecott, Eastman Kodak, Good-| 
ich, Texas Co., and Johns Man- Thanksgiving weekend closed and | 
dinary American housing develop- the back-to-school-or-home move-| 
ment. - ment reached a peak. Yet, with only 2,000 population, 
Godthaab is Greenland's largest 
settlement, and it is experiencing 
a surge of growth after 237 quiet 
years, the National Geographic So- 28, a Michigan State University . 
student, discharged accidental: 
ly. State Police said Allen was 
cleaning snow from the barre] at 
Ortonville Man Shoots WAKENS BEFORE THE 
RETURNING HERD PIGCOVERS HIM. IF NOT, HE WILL 
BE EUMMARILY TRAMPLED INTO THE GROUND. 
Distributed by King Features Syndjate, 121   
Poultry and Eggs 
DETROIT POULTRY 
DETROIT, Nov 28 (APi—Prices 
per pound fob. Detroit, for N 
quality live poultry: 
Heavy type hens 18-20: light   
    dd 
1 
type   pal 
. News in Brief     
  
          
  
      
  
          
    
  
      
    
  
                      
  
  
   
        
     
        Aut 4 hens 12: heavy type broilers and fryers S ; | i \ Self in Freak Mishap (3-4 Ibs)—whites 17-18: Barred Rocks! yjjJe ae Says. | Lawrence McLeod, of 210 S. Jes- \ 21-22; caponettes (under 5 Ibs) 20,/ : oe * * isie St reported to Pontiac Police | 
3 . caponettes (over 5 Ibs) 22. | | : i in ; | ° ( An Ortonville man is listed in | A new port is planned. The Sunday that someone had illegally | 
fair condition today at St. Joseph DETROIT EGGS New York Stocks | Danish government recently con-!enteréd his home and had stolen | US | nessmen OO r OU n Mercy Hospital after accidentally pDETROIT. Nov. 28 (AP)—Exgs f. 0.» (Late Morning Quotations) acted with a British firm for $70 from a dresser drawer. / shooting himself with a .22 caliber| Dasei" ‘case lots. federal-state py res after decimal point are eighths |construction of port facilities on an’ . 7 
rifle Saturday night. : Whites—Grade A Jumbo 47: extra Admiral -..... 186 Jones & L... $6.2 island in Godthaab Fjord as a ae ee at the Motor var. i ar ” (wt ay 46): large 42: Air Reduc .. ; «- 40. = i j -l &. Montcalm St., In whi : 
man Ra ny eee fond e ohare medium 33-34 wid. avk. 33), smal] 27-30 Allied Ch . ... 89 Kennecott .... a eae ene base fof irom © \piare escaped with five hate | r e | C e er @] S ed . [ inty|(wtd. avg. 2942); grade B large 39-40 Allied Btzs — 27 Sinner eb from Quebec. ee Ped anes ps i 
Sheriff's Deputies that he had [M‘¢ .2°6..39),,. sah eons Ae Ltd ae OP Glass ||: $e | <a s jvalued at $23 and a tire” valued . : : Bie tee My .. | at ¢ . : ae neal < : ane f come in from hunting and. when he large 40. Checks 30-33 (wtd. avg 30%) Alcoa -..... $74 an Ane a | Godthaab is located in a shel. at $27, was reported by Pontiac’ By SAM DAWSON |consumers. And the Prudential In-!mean plenty of activity in the set the rifle down it accidentally |. Tots! weekly recetpts of government amCan ...... 50.3 Loews .. 20404 anew on Greenland’s _'Police Sunday. _ AP Business News Analyst surance Co. of America says that, months ahead. graded eggs Nov 22-28 were 8.911 cases Am Cyan 313 Lone S Cem 34.3 tered vailey on Greeniand s moun ne ee a ; : ; | : 
discharged. . ; Commercially graded: Am M & Fdy .. 572 Lorillard 83 tainous southwest coast, an area | NEW YORK — Just as June is consumers will spend 16 billion) * * * 
The bullet evidently ricocheted iotygnemibertl jumbo 50; extra large Am Motors... oe cnie ‘37 |much cut up by fjords and islands. ‘the month of brides December is dollars more next year for a rec-| Prudential, economists spread 
off the’ ceiling and a wall and) “Groce a jumbo 49: extra large 42, AmNews 33 Martin Co 312 The small city rests on a scoop’ Royal Oak Attorney the month of those who read tea ord 307 billion dollars. their optimism over more terri- : 
stryck Alien in the beck of the|lrge 30-20%: medium 31-31%. amail Am Te) & Te! 103 May D Bire .. 02.3) tween rocky hills, and it faces a ‘leaves: to foretell the future of * * * ‘tory than almost anyone else. They | 
head said detectives. Aad a pita Lins ja * half-moon harbor. The _ neat, Seeks Dot s Place business. The share that will go for con- ae 146A er increase 
Armour & Co. 221 Merr Ch & 8 . 19.1 square frame houses are dwarfed y And , j is durables — autos, house-|!n employment, 12 milion more : ses ! already the predictions |SUMer aurap , i. ee More than 100,000 automobiles| Livestock lAvco Mig 38 Mpls Hor a ios. by distant peaks. \ are for setics dave vabead _— |hold appliances and the like —,Jobs; 2. A rise in wages although 
are ferried annually across the eureory “iveatoce Bak & Ohio «210 © Monsan Ch 391| “Life is stern in Godthaab, which Maurice A. Merritt, Royal Oak) perhaps because the days be- | Will rise from this year’s 36% bil-| maybe at not quite so fast a rate ] . Mon fa . 7 : seat . by . . . : 6 * “at English channel. DETROIT. Nov. 28 (AP)—cattie: sa eee AE +: 03 Mot Wheel ... 161 has never known the luxury of a attorney, today announced he will) hing weren't notably too good. _— lion dollars to 40 billion dollars) 4s 1n the past: and 3. Gains in 
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE able 400. Trade on limited supply good Briges Mi .... He Motes 53 proper port. Ships anchor in the seek to succeed Judge Frank L.| ; _/next year and 46 billion in 1960,;Cofporate profits although not 
* ydfotice is hereby given by the under-/t strong: lower Uredes ‘slow, “emt Budden oll iga Nat Cash R. 677 harbor. A tiny fleet of schooners Doty on the Oakland County Cir- The Agriculture Department Is) .-cording to the economists of/ Much change in dividend pay- Tes at 9 o'clock eae 'at das00 Wons,| steady: canner and cutter cows steady. Burroughs... 363 Nat Dairy ... $83 and lighters braves any kind of guit Court bench. jout on the limb with a forecast) 4¢Graw-Hill, business publication! ments. wees Meee oaeet sgounty, Ronee isles — eee Saal Bee = Ae ees "11 |weather — fog, storm, ice — to Judge Doty, who because of his hat ee will be. cue se fon Business will nase its ms 
‘ 1085 Ib. yearling steers 2875. few lots Campb Soup .. 471 No Am Ay¥ 40 ; 7 — : = . at he law creek . 1959 except farm income. nis ‘policy of living off inventories an Convertible, bearing serial number}s e. e Ss 50 6 remove passengers and supplies. Age Cé t by law seek re-election ; ys all but) 7662 ge to high ch 07 Can D ... 204 Nor Pac : 5 age Cannot Dy law seen rene 108, : Stee savneca farm, Dun & Bradstreet says all but : : 
ine bigness “esece pellets Cthereot | Steers 28.00: ‘few food “to low choice Gdn Pac 303 Nor Sta Pw  .22 * * * will officially step down from the limb is a bit shaky because farm a handful of 109 corporate execu-! will start adding to them again 
may be made at 22500 Woodward AWE | eecarg ecee’ Coeres ose: Cantar cp. iB Bocas an Gl 35 2 Shipping is the lifeblood of bench Dec “31, 1959 income depends on Many Unngs in t queried expect business to! in 1999: This should’ add 77s billion | a County, Michigan, the) canner and cutter cows 1 00-18 00 "| Case. JI 212 Pac G&EI.. 60 Giseniand for ‘Denmark’s island ee oo but a major one is weather. And i x a‘ qu - x ee h none, dollars to national output, say the 
ASSOCIATES, DISCOUNT CORP.,| Hogs: Salable 200 Butchers strong. to Ga Mil 4 Gee el ee province rust import all its con-| Merritt, 43; of 1721 Bonnie View even Washington isn’t too confi- a at Inet oni out A ‘in, insurance men. They also think 
Ferndale 20. Michigan mixed No 2 and 3180-240 1b butchers /Cluett, Pea Be pep ane oon ise sumer roode Godthaab is a iran aan ete oaith a is bees ident when predicting weather: he ihe ttle “en , ° | business will spend more on plant By J,W. DAVIS, Jr.| quoted 18.50-19 00: one load mostly No. . 2 ala pee 5 : = an nominating petitions in hopes to | | s. ; ; Wi : no | Col Bra_A .... 38.1 Pfizer es 96.6 Q: : | : . . s 5 | ; and equipment, some two billion December 1, 2, ‘34.1, low wielding type 219 Ibs. 1.25: no Colum Gas’\.. 203 Phelps D1. co sit point for outposts all along the! landing a place on the April 6 | ‘ Mest corporate eseemve® pate | F. W. Dodge Corp., which keeps) dollars niore. 
p STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro-|Ibs. quoted 1680-1800: mixed grades Con N Gas... 466 Phill Pet... 464)" Oe Oost | judicial ballot. Petitions must be | holding forth think business will |... tchful eye on construction con- 
Saveaiie: Divison. en OMe Te eres Balable 9. Not enough sold COUUEY. Bg Prot £0... 188) ~* * “returned to the Secretary of | be better — particularly for jt awards, reports that they've| On perhaps surer ground, they In the matter of the petition con-!to make a market. leet Copan 3. guy C8 - =. ‘°-4| Godthaab — ‘Good Hope” — is State’s office in Lansing by Dec. | their own firms. ing th] ords the! Predict that federal government cerning Ronald Gouine, minor. Cause ens ; = leont Seot 19.6 RCA. .....- 41.5) ; is; * sing b) . | been setting monthly records Y 
Ne. isbas. se an able M00, Trade (on limited Com On... 284 Repue Sil .... 68 2ithe oldest Danish settlement in| 29. | They're counting heavily on the!last six months, and that should! SPending will rise by 31 billion 
chia, PEF Goulne, father of sid choice wooied slaughter’ lambs 21.00 COP’ ADF --- 284 Reyn Met" .. 68.4 Greenland. It was founded in 1721 The Candidate has held & tem. dollars, state and local spend- 
——— Ce ee 33 00: teal ta chaare ae “Soto oo, Curtis Lec) Ses Reval Dat. 30.3 DY a beloved missionary, Hans porary position as Royal Oak city! ing, by tour billion deRarn: J = 8 is # Sth : a t - bed “9 i = i as VOW & A Z 
abouts "of! the uae oT ci “minor f00d snd choice feeder lambs quoted Bet ais a3 Safeway Pap ~ Egede. : lattommey and attorney for Royal ” * * : 
c are unknown and said child has “*- : | Dis Seag S ; | : , : 4 : : 2 OF AL ; . ‘ 
violated a law of. the State, and that Dost ere var rupted Bt World War II brought the world oa Township. He presently rep-| F. W. Dodge also reports con- i 
[onl sev onthe goede Verge) bata! al . uPont 198.6 Sheil On .... a4 the doorstep of Godthaab and pesents the township in the 12.) tracts for residential building so ‘ 
of Mick oa hell aioe! Mpotified Metric System Used Past Ko 7 BT ee ss ' Baan huge island) be- Towns drain fight in the courts. far this year are 10 per cent ahead 1] 
that the ering 60 said petition will be Bt eer aes oo 48.5 ne & ase for Se He has been commissioner on . of last year. And the insurance | id at the kiand County Service { R “43° «%Sou Pac 596 planes, radio and radar installa-, Cte ‘ ichig j , ink 5Q «< 4 | Center, Court Heess Auner 12005 West agp hE ces AS Ry Se ana eR hone the State Bar of Michigan and is| . | boys think 1959 should see home | 
Bivd., in the City of Pontiac in said 0 0 Or Fairb Mor 324 capa ne on a2 ons, ana meterological stations. currently chairman of the State buyers shelling out one billion dol- 
Se tk er nee ne tc ne: Firesone |. 118.4 Std Brand ..- 601 Often as many as five ships were Rar Conference Committee of Law- - : lars more this year, with housing a noes and ~ * go rack Ford Mot. 16 Bea Gi ND. 382 being unloaded in the Godthaab d Certified Public A t i by 50,000 to 142 billi d noon, you are commande } } | estar — | : ayers and Certihed rubuc Accoun- starts rising by 50, to 1°2 billion + sonally at said hearing. WASHINGTON — When multi-/Freept Sut 994 sta Oi; On . 56 harbor. Many new buildings were . oe of 
sons impractical te, make, Yer:| plied by 1,000 the meter becomes Gatdner ben 45° Stevens. JP -. 364/eoee Naey modate Danish aa By JACK VANDENBERG | Actually, the supermarket idea| "ys; a4 i notice shall be served by publication “of |the 39,370-inch kilometer, or about |G" Bak. 124 Suther Pap .. 384 as en a | Sot poe EY ae ; g|__ Dut prices of most consumer i a eaak “iocavimasl te Teak tiers | a. =! us . Oo : Gen Dynam 67 al aa, oe ministrative officials. The Ameri-| . _UPI Automotive Editor of selling new cars was proposed cods, the Prudential : | 
fag in The Pontiac Press, a newspaper|* Mile. Divided by 1,000 it is the Geo Flee. $3 Sviy'zi pa’.”: 54.6\can envoy solved the housin b-( ll DETROIT (UPI) — A lan Several years ago. But at that time| S200) Tn Tucen la’ economists : Are ; 'Gen ‘a Sy aac i ‘ , _ : ' sev ’ : : 
ted and-circulated in said County. | millimeter, about 1/25 inch. AndGen Mills ||. 86 Texas Co .... 85. 2 : 6 prow aterpl alr ; ‘ a » new Pian can: difficulties because i say cheerfully, will be restrained ue ne, Honorable Arthur JE so on, simply by moving decimal Goh Motors 1: 486 Tex G Bul... 217 lem by ordering a prefabricated for selling automobiles in a super-!t ran into difficulties because it ¢om rising much during the first oore, sal i. ’ z i . : j hi av : “4 =) = one — oe mle Gen Shoe ae z _Textroa er Lee consulate from a mail-order house, St k FE d market fashion, which may Be Caled for all ues hs nd to = hall of 1550 becauselot “the tem. 
(Seay eet ARTHUR, E. MOORE Today, the onl ior holdouts\Gen. Tie ae, Tran W Air .. 184)in the United States. r1Ke , n Ss jcome a ‘reality in Detroit next) handled by one dollar. {le aul0 porary excess in the labor force, (A a) etmes ee bday, e only sna Or 10 louls Gerber Prod. 613 pole an ¢ Now Godthaab has completely ‘summer, poses a threat to auto|companies were reticent about together with increased productiv- 
ELSIE J, VASCASSENNO, Against the metric system are so iheste po : Un Carbide 018 made the transition from the Sion : ‘dealers but holds promise for auto ‘franchising a dealer who planned! |, — - Sane ; : 
Probate: Register I 1 ae e rom the stone A oe a ity per manhour and an excess in saveniie Dirision| ne United States and the United Goodrich... 724 Un Pac. . . 388/45. to the modern era. Nearly ’ buyers. to handle a competitor’s lines oF plant Gapaeily Dec. 1, '58. Kingdom, with its associates and G7en’Baice ~ 23 Jnit Air Lin . 29.4 * j - Weary 3 r are (60 E apacity. 
spose corres sera een ee : a a. G ue 23> Unit’ Aire 636 everyone wears European dress. 5 < sf ~ . 
STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro-| dependencies. Even so, it is op- Grerhgund iigg Unit Fruit ... 493 : . ae PEORIA. IH. a — Ending a Robert W. Orlick. an enterprising Dealers themselves were not in bate Court for the County of Oakland. tional. | ani Br cain ticie Oi! 84 Un Gas Cp .,. 38 |The town throbs to the sounds of 5 . . 
Juvenile Division. "{Monal, in practice, all’ scientists peer! 38) US Lines <"- 307 engines, electric drills, and ham. SCX? Weck strike. 12.000. United young man who formerly served favor of the idea because it would Meetin Set 
cerning. Kathleen af the patina oom jvc soe Coe a he niet Indust Ray... 22> US Steel |.) aseimers, A young Greenlander jis “U'0 Worker (UAW) union mem- as district manager for three auto have meant fewer dealers would g Cause No. 16345. , ‘| national metric Scale whose Orig-tng Rand ._.. 97 US Tob ...... 253 more at home inva jeep truck or hers returned to work today at the companies and assistant to the vice;be needed and many would be , To Raymond Mercer, father of said’ inal platinum - iridium . measures Inrof Cou... 383 Walereen * oe pulldozer than » kayak Caterpillar Tractor Co.’s East Pe- president of a fourth, has an- forced out of business. to Protest 
Petition haying been filed in this|4re preserved in Paris and copied Int Harv .... 42. Westg A Bk . 283. : oria, Morton and Mossville works. | nounced plans to build an automo-| ; aiial . iInt Nick ..... 871 wres 2 oo: . : | The new variation, which Or- “Court oe the present where-| ejcewhere. itnt Paper ..113 ests Bl ..... 672 They ratified a new wage con- bile supermarket in the world's) T H . cane sie warsere and “the csaid mehild lint Bhoe 0. 36 Wovrocth sie s ‘tract yesterday. Its basic provi- largest “che ai ont ight in! Hee (plata) te sexta Decals ax ike has violated a law of the state and that - sy lint Tel & Terss7 Yale & Tow |. 31 ‘Dod e Strike Talks Bo ee OEBESE SOPBINE Center Heh mm Northland Shopping Center next said child should be, placed amaey the YALE sy [Jacobs ee ves! aa, Ge | sions provide for general wage in-'the motor capital, i summer, will still threaten to § Court. < |Johns Man 493 Zenith Rad .. 152 4! creases rangi - I i ie j 7 < suit, Me, RAMe of the people of the ‘iT. zo ° ne es te ean a ete Miceat| Orlick, who was connected | eliminate some dealers but not | A Public mecting to protest a 
notified that the hearing on said ae ASSESSOR'S | ° = |. | C c U e 0 ay of livin boost “inerens of 6 i previously with General Motors, as many ds the old plan. And (Eruposed hike in Bloomfield tills 
Servet. Genter, Court Hees canes. san 3 Ice ( I stals ‘ land 7 onte ah ‘ ee ti cen's Chryster, American Motors and | Orlick says 13 dealers will open |SChool District taxes has been 
1260B West Blvd. in the City of Pon.|- “© !'07 P} “| Y | DETROIT  — Chrysler Corp Getaher 8 acd 160) ae a !D Kaiser-Frazer, is convinced that | for business when his new auto- | Scheduled for 8 p.m. Friday in 
Decanters Bts8 Gt ene Seis 2 YPSILANT? . * Joofficials and United Auto Worker: creased onal ‘and oe: tion b cho. Present methods of selling auto- | mobile supermarket opens. Bloomfield Township Hall. 
the afternoon, and you are hereby com- 1n Fuel Said ion leaders inc We ie pe eee Pension and vacanon dene-" mobiles “have become antiquat- | oun _,,_.| Avthur J. Picotte, who heads a mended to appear personally at said) NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING aH Jnion leaders meet today in an fits. Wages under the old contract, cdl and cbecicte:” | This would mean these dealers gjtizens committee that opposes the 
hearing. |, Notice is hereby given that a public jeffort to settle a dispute before a which expired in July. ranged from. : would be able fo undersell other school-sponsored extra millage, to- It being impractical to make persona] hearing will be held by the Pontiac 
service hereof, this summons and (City Commission in the Commission, 
tice shall be served by publication of Chamber, City Hall. 35 S. Park Street & copy week previous to said|0" Tuesday, the 16th day of December. 
hearing L ‘Tuesday morning strike deadline 2.0442 to $3.162 an hour. | His plan for an automobile dealers in the area because their day announced the time of the 
at the Dodge assembly plant in. * * * jsupermarket will bring automotive overhead would be lower. Those meeting. He repeated his charge 
suburban Hamtramck. | -Caterpillar and UAW officials | selling back into pace with new who can't meet the competition that the school administration un- : Crash Cause 
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
     
          
    
                
  
  
  ’ im The Pontiac Press, a news- eeditsh 8 p.m. Rartern Standard ame . 
ret uTpOse o on- Gedy Be ey ee , x 1 ' i S ‘ mea! | 5 é 
a eee GHGL OI) Coe Ing Map) of Ordinance Non 944, the ws ANGELES (UPI) — The | Some 8,500 UAW members are also reached agreement yesterday ‘techniques of production, he said.'would be forced out of business. fairly denied his group the use of ' u | eras a Stre ‘e . Pe ss | * { . 2 ‘ bE ~ : ; 
Moore Judge of seid Court. inthe cite [Personal Service the following de) February oe ae t |scheduled to walk off their jobs at/on a new wage contract for the| tk ok Ot | But for the customer it mightja schoolroom for the protest ses- | 
Pontiac in said County, this 24th) Spihel Proper’y. parcel B lying west! ti Pe ese 10 2) tomorrow if no agreement 2,000 workers at Caterpillar's De-; The plan is this: imean a saving of up to $60, al-/sion. day of Rovember, AD. 1908 oe lot tne ahey and Shoot Perel er aes cone er that tiny crystals jhas been reached by that time.,The|catur works. The striking workers) First a large building, capable though Orlick refused to specify Picotte, 4019 os ‘ (A true copy) Judge of Probate ae order ab No: ah Sommiadlon: 0 ice in the fuel system might |dispute involves working condi-! will vote on ratification tomorrow. |of displaying 600 automobiles and what the saving might be. aa Quarton Rd., 
ELSIE J. vacate Retiser,| Dated November 28, 1958, have caused 37 Air Force jets to |tions. About 600 workers are on strike|providing office space for numer-} A Ford Motor C » showed Btcomfleld Township, refused ts Juvenile Division Ue crash during the past two and a | C. Patrick Quinn, president of at the company’s York, Pa., plant|ous dealers insurance companies ‘about $80 of the muah nny as au ey a written application for 
soe 1, 58, half years JAW al 3, sai : ner SA) oe ae ie ent aaa As : use of a room, saying this was a Dec. 1, “58 Main Niles seeoaeiati eee - y Sale Chrysler had and negotiations still are in prog- loan agencies and license plate could be attributed to dealer over- a “delaying as a ae art 
bate Court for the County of Oakland. wee : a cote anlalion: (stepped up production’ schedules) ress there. jagencies, would be constructed. head alone. This figure might be| of i ee Juventle Di : : editor of the Los Angeles Times, and eliminated relief time for’ : | ‘Phen dealers in various [i | _ : of Superintendent of Schools Eu- 5 : ; | : i 5 en dealers in various lines of cut to as low as $20 if several I h 
com she _panaear we price een, yesterday reported that investi- | workers. The company denied Be t-Dit h T ‘cars would be invited to lease | dealers shared the same building gene T. gomnson. aaron . 5 & | eemreones mae <3 * wigs ° = Eee “ ioe IF" = | C oO Ofte oc . - . . 
0 John White, father of said child | Au eee ir Fon or _ eunstt aE Ssonn barRs: as Itc ry ispace in the building to display | Part of this saving might be Johnson has said a written ap- wing been filed in this f - , = . ue Base Gear Rapid City. | Made t A t their cars. Space also would be retained by the dealers, many of plication was the School Board's 
as ot ee en ee x = 2) found ice sin the fuelpurp Waste Not, Want Not O fIVEr leased to the other agencies so all;whom feel their margin of profit|POlicy in this case, since Picotte's are unknown and the said child has c strainer and wing-tip of a Strato- , Oo A t Lit Ti transactions can be completed is too low now. But reduced service 8tOUP Was newly formed and the | Holated 28 ite aa ict sind that jo re! 3 a condtusiom was that the ice | GOGONA, Soloman Islands ulo-Lilte L1eu Pp quickly, costs through the use of a single et eects re did not know Sariedte is Court. ‘ B » Ulc r 5 : ; ; who 
In the. of the people of the aage spt Ae produced a power Joss, causin (UPI) = The village chief uses a DETROIT (UPI) — Negoti A service agency would lease (Service agency for all the dealers elonge to it. 
Se Sere, oe are hereny no- me the plane to crash. 8 Idistinctive pew in the Seventh- planned t t tod mors space in the building and assume |WOuld result in further savings Se nen) a tiene Stole) were # OD. petition ane asp. ; ie P ea to mee ay just three i : which could b s trying to interfere with citizens’ Nill be eld at the” Oarflind ‘County Looking back, Miles said Air |Day Adventist church here. It is/hours before the United Auto Work-| Service responsibilities for all |which could be passed along to) 2118 > i oe for public “West Bivd.. in the City of Pon- CHIPPEWA Force officers reported the ice |the Pilot's seat of an American|ers Union was scheduled to cal]| Ca?S Sold in the center under a /the customer and could bring the ur th said ty, on the 9th day of : il , bomber which crashed on this is- Pa ati, Aaa contract with the dealers .|total saving to the customer to at |PUTPoses. , AD. 196s, at one o'clock in * buildup could explain crashes of land during the war. A family from @ nationwide strike against ‘Auto- : - least $60 William J. Emerson t » at a are hereb - NOTI j includi € : " ite = . : rth . +, county 
Ges ¥6 Sopear personally at sald| Notice le hereby ciece ahat a public Clos! bhp eas Wee ther village is living in th Lite. This would not only make it perintend Ri sencitiell % wax hearing will be held by the, Pontiac City) Bo7, B66, F84-F86, F100 and was “a o oe is living in the body! Bargainers scheduled a last-ditch easier for a person to buy a new) the wae: sk :. cone said 
wthis. summons. and no-|ber. City Hall, 358 Parke treet on Pos trainers, anes meeting for 9 a.m, (EST) in thejcar quickly and compare all vari- Exports Lobster Tails arth Tete ee ap poo a gd le Femecay. the 16th day of Derember, _ Miles said the similarity of | | Tuller Hotel. The UAW set noon ous lines of ears under one roof. : acting legally. 
is e | rai rater a es) . , “i : . a Pontiac = a mewmapellior its cureece af Cattesne te len weight of water and jet fuel ‘Hot Cross Bun to Poor (EST) as a strike deadline for,but it would save the car buyer CANBERRA — Australia export- “The statute is quite specific aes bayer tae Soiaiee ee Ceaaet ae eh oe made the presence of water dif- | a _ |Auto-Lite plants across the toun-|money, Orlick claimed. ‘ed $5,10,000 worth of lobster tails'that the School Board can require 
Moore, | of Rt Court. in the City Commercial 1 the following described) ficult to detect. Once in the cold Hot cross buns. originated mM try, | Because the dealers’ overhead in 1957, an increase of 20 per cent/a reasonable showing from groups 
ot November, AD inset SAY }PrOperty. tthe northerly 310 feet of “if at high altitudes, -however, England. A group of i4th century} Contract negotiations began a costs and service costs would be|the first time the industry's earn-|that want to use school buildings,” by _, ARTHUR ba moons. Lek 5. seacmer a) Lies Re” 7. best | the ice, crystals could stop monks are said to have started the week ago today between companyjredueed under the supermarket|ings have topped the $5,000,000;he said. : : 
PY ears v. Vatisasne Date November 28, 1958. on. | pumps, clog’ fuel lines and cause Icustom, making the rolls them-jrepresentatives and union officials|setup, greater savings could be|mark, Exports totaled 4,950,000 - r erent sister. | p) A Ge | flame outs (loss of power), he iselves and handing them to the | who represent 12,000 workers in passed along to the customer, he! pounds, or 254,000 pounds above! Sweden is about twice the area 
. _» Dee, 1 68.) % c. 1, ’68.| Said, poor on Good Friday morning. {17 bargaining units, isaid. 1956, of Great Britain. 
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