The Weather U.6, Weather Bureas Forecast Rain or drizzle. ; (Details Page 2) THE PONTIAC PREWA IVERPAGES - 117th YEAR kkk K* PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1959-44 PAGES | UNITED INTERNATIONAL ‘ ASROCIATED PRESS 8c v e . zy 4 |= HER FIRST HALLOWEEN—Little Tina Marie Stowe, who weighed only one pound, four otinces birth last Halloween at Pontiac at Hospital, is big enough now to the traditional Halloween symbols, the pumpkin and black cat. Now a plump She's a Big Girl Now Financial Plans for City Schools Given to Board Five-Year Measures Are Based on Salary Needs, Building Costs Administrators last night | in executive session submit-| |ted alternative financial; plans for support of the) Pontiac school system! through 1965 to the Board of Education. The measures, based primarily} on salary and building costs needs, | will be studied by Board members and brought up in open meeting for discussion in about one month. | Exactly what proposals to meet future budget requirements were submitted to the Board were not disclosed. Superintendent of Schools Dana’ iP. Whitmer said he expects the | ly om ™, the ‘Board will arrive at a modifica-| . jtion of the alternatives. _ : Pentiac Press Phete Marie stil] resembles the curly haired ‘doll who left nurses misty eyed at the hospital last year. | She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael | Stowe of 4410 White Lake Rd, Township. General be curious about _* * * A commitment on whether a White Lake /tax hike is planned will not be made until the Board and admin-; LAB WRECKED — A reporter looks over the scene of an explosion and flash fire in a Mich- igan State University chemical laboratory. Three blast while cond ments. Three 17 pounds, Tina 200,000 GM Men Net Earnings Double '58 Goblins Out sores DETROIT (#—The steel Motors out of the ear-building business next week. | The world’s largest manufacturing company has run out of steel. Most of its auto assembly lines are ¢losed Motorists: Be Caretul, istrators reach a satisfactory solu- tion from their studies. graduate students were critically burned in the necessary, a vote may be asked | Two Students in Critical Condition next spring, officials said. | ldled; | | If a millage increase is deemed Assistant Superintendent of, |Schools Otto C. Hufziger said Pon- | tiac is no different from other; Keep a close lookout for smalJ- and is faced with mounting finan- 7 fry witches and goblins tonight and ‘ial pressures strike will put huge General tomorrow evening. ENROLLMENT RISES EAST LANSING the five (UPI}\—Two of Michigan State graduat« officials at St tal as serious. Benson Jr Lawrence Hospl students injured in an explosion Ernest P %. of New or will be by tonight. An* estimated 200,000 GM em- sre eave iaee ™ "GOP Starting ployes will be idled. next week as the remaining as sembly plants at Flint and Willow a ra ooo State to Solution land. Calif. run out of parts. How long the shutdowns last depends on when fresh supplies of steel become available. In- dustry sources say it will take at least three and possibly up to five weeks after steel pro- duction begins before sufficient | parts can be made to bring as- sembly lines into operation again. 7 Normally. automakers consume, 15 to 20 per cent of all steel out- That was the message issued, Enrollment increases by approx- oes , today by Oakland County Jaw en-‘imately 400 students each year, and fire in a chemistry laborator) aa ks a. and James L = forcement authorities as the kids according to Dr. Philip J. Proud, !ast night remained in critical con si East Lansing were treated for ‘| prepared for Halloween. _assistant, superintendent of schools. dition today minor burns and cuts and re- — | Enrollment in 1958 was 19.415. | + + * leased. Both Pontiac and Oakland py 1964 it is expected to climb A third student was listed as i : County Sheriff's Dept. urged jo 22.185. \serious as a result of the blast and VF area to drive ‘carefully 'fire that caused “several thousand MSU Chemistry Department, said Q It costs the school system $390 dollars”’ a@ year per student. With other | variables static, the school sys- because of the trick-and treacers, | who will be out om city streets | tonight and in other county areas | tomorrow. damage tg,the lab in the MSU Kedzie Chemeal Building tem needs an additional $160,000 In worst condition was Harlow | each year. |; M. Mork, 24, of Trenton, who Parents were advised to accoim-| . . | was operated on this morning. | pany children across busy inter- Ten years fem now. when the Phillip A. Shreiner, 25, of Lans- sane } : |Pontiac schools will have realized | : . Williams, Dems Watch sections. |a 20 per cent, or 4,000 student in-! dale, sind ined maa penal tan ° e -»_| ‘The vision of children will be! crease the figure would be an ad- emergeuey Surgery oe From Sidelines While cut down by their masks and ‘heir! gitional $1.600.000 was also in critical condition. . | : : : . oo Bot ff re b First Steps Taken | costumes will make it hard for Proud points out that these fig- an suffered severe burns and eee ° spot them,” said ures are not realistic. It is obvious . req ees | Police Capt. Donny Ashley, patrol to everyone that conditions are not’ Mork was transferred this morn L-crlcanhie a Majority Re- bureau commander. static, he says ing from the” Lansing hospital (oa , oe on . tly gripped the; Sheriff Frank Irons warned that. “Prices are not stable,’ Proud where he was kept overnight to iia = ia e Legislature cau- vandals would be taken into cus- says University Hospital at Ann Arbor jtously sized up the hard task of tody and prosecuted _ for "specialty work on his eyes.’ putting cash-poor Michigan back . Ind High School Initially OK'd Waterford Board Backs Basic Plans Covering $2'2 Million Project Watrrfi ird Towhs! ips of Education Board approved “Costs are rising. The cost of last night 3 Looks Over MSU Blast Scene Windows were b] MSU Blast Injures see | AP Wirephote icting 4 ition experi other stude were injured own out of ng rooms The fire was confined to the lab Five caused) thie eX iS Me what on “We know they were working with compounds in q distilling experiment,’ he said. “‘We have to ge back today and check through the debris to try to piece Dr. Lawrence Quill, head of the| together an explanation.” uj] said windows in joining rooms in the building were blown out, but fire several] ad- chemistry Mexico Storm Death Toll Now 1,000. Hundreds More May Be Victims of Wind, Floods Hungry Survivors Being Bitten by Thousands of Deadly Scorpions COLIMA, Mexico i? —- With 1,000 or more believed dead from a sneak hurri- cane and widespread floods, the dazed people of this smallest of Mexico's 23 states today struggled against privation and SWarms of poisonous score pions The disaster Mexico $ worst in recent history — covered an area on the Pa- cilic Coast slightly larger than New Jersey with a population of about 100,000. * * * S » that roared t t Manzanillo i Vit | that fol. sands from es n ed ver communicae Ww) dines a overran highways, hindering s effort The dead may include three U.S. women who were aboard a small coastal freighter apparent- ly lost at sea. ma State Gov. Rodolfo Cha. Carnilo estimated that about 8”) persons were killed in Mina. a farming village of about 1900 located 24 miles rthwest Colima, HUNDREDS MISSING Other preliminary fatal fic- ures included: Manzanillo. 74. Te- coman 16: QMbhuatlan ad join- ing Jalisco state. 14: Coahuayama in Michoacan state, 7 * * * The federal government official- ead at 438 but hundreds ly put the down « conceded that m any damage was confined to the one lab “ere Missing room He estimated that damage could be as “low as $2.000 or as ? He said Shreiner was ‘‘prob- ably doing a routine distillation experiment when the blast oc- curred.” Four of the students managed to run from the room, but Shreiner was trapped high as $10.000."’ The navy announced that 21 of 38 persons who had been aboard the 1,800-ton freighter Sina'%a Were missing. The navy report did not say whether the rescued included the three American women passengers — Lucille Pette, 55, Laguna Beach. Calif.: and Margaret Gower, 43. and her mother, Viva Whaley Harris 9 de ‘ jon its financial feet. | They felt their way slowly while put. It takes about two tons of minority Democrats and Gov. Wil- steel to build a car \liams fidgeted on the sidelines: | General Motors issued its third- Williams declined to blueprint a quarter financial report Thursday night, showing net earnings of 135 _million dollars for the July-Sep- tember period and 725. million for the first nine months. * * * Board Chairman Frederic G. Donner and President John F. Gor- don, commenting on the steel sit- uation, said the’ shortages didn't bother third-quarter operations be- cause the company’s supplies of steel were as large as it was possible to acctimulate * * * GM's profits, equal to $2.55 per share for the first nine months and 47 cents a share for the third quarter, compared with 339 mil- lion dollars for the first nine months of last year and 65 million for the third quarter of 1958. Thor Squadrons Being Cut fo Four WASHINGTON (UPI)—The De- fense Department. today cancelled out one of the 1,500-mile Thor mis- sile squadrons scheduled to be de- ployed abroad. Four squadrons rather than five will now be sent overseas. * * * The Pentagon announcement also said “‘productiot of the missile by the Douglas Aircraft Co. is being phased down immediately” at Santa Monica, Calif. _ - The announcement said that “since special requirements by the defense department and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration still exist, limited of the Thor will con- tinue until these needs are met.” | living increases annually by 2.3 Why, Mrs. Smith! | eon Sees: ~ ; a “We'll need more teachers to LONDON (UPI) — Mrs. Asa meet the growing enrollment. Sal- Clayton Smith, 78, was ejected lars by March 1, } |Grarid Ledge, son of a former Re- aries must go up. We will need solution in a special message to more buildings to accommodate from a meeting of the ¢anine |the Legislature yesterday. ' defense league last night for growing enrollment The governor said only that | kicking a male member during , ‘Building costs are going up. Fa- | taxwriters must bow to the “bry. 2 debate. ' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) j tal pressure of necessity” and >» lead “ - Rj ; J iti | Gaate™ or immetiate and ade’ Bishop Performs Rite at New Novitiate | First, the GOP majority resolved |to meet continuously except ‘uti. “araen art" COnSecrate Chapel at St. Basil's | hopefully before Nov. 15. Then, a! 12-man, interhouse steering com-| mittee was given the task of meas-| The main altar in the chapel,yesterday by Bishop Henry E uring imperative tax dollar needs. ‘of the new St. Basil's novitiate in Donnelly, D.D., auxiliary bishop «ee ¢& |Pontiac Township was consecrated of Detroit. Presumably, the steering group) will recommend policy jater on} wringing cash from the veterans trust fund, and on. specific new! or increased taxes required to! supply revenue needs. From the governor came assur- ance he would swalolw any leg- islative proposals coming to his desk, however “repugnant’’ un- less they were “obviously un- constitutional or grossly inequit- able,” A $10, one-shot tax on car and} jtruck drivers has zoomed high on; ithe list of emergency levies put! |\forward. Backers said it might! produce as much as 35 million dol-| ; "od Zon” Vip | Sen. John W. Fitzgerald of publican governor, broached anew an idea that fell flat last Febru- ary when suggested by Sen. Harry Litowich (R-Benton Harbor). This time it caught on. Fitzgerald said he is having a bill drafted. Ih Today's Press a a eR a | The reduction, which.may save $100,000,000 in the billion-dollar! Air Force Thor program, pre-| sumably was because many Eu-' ropean countries refused to receive the missiles, %Oer Gasoline Prices Are Octane Regular, one of the finest, and oer Ethy}-100+. a finer Gasoline Guarantering J.8. Farmer Ges & Oil Co. Down—S more miles at less cost.) a Comics aS ODORS SOOKE 35 County News ........... o. © Editorials ........- 6.2.6... 6 oe orgie ere i Pontiac Press Phote Obituaries oh. Stas pig ete. 10 PARTICIPATE IN CEREMONY — Taking part festerday in Bee etre eoses., S84 the consecration of the altar at the new St. Basil's Novitiate Theaters ..... sespevesrg 9§:29 | in Pontiac Township were (from left) Bishop Henry E. Donnelly, TV & Radio Programs i ag auxiliary Bishop of Detroit, the Rev. George B. Flahiff, C. S. B. Wilson, Earl |. ........05. by | of Toronto, superior general of the Basilian Fathers, and the Rev. | Women’s Pages ..... .. 22 | Bernard M. Regan of St. Basil's, , —_— ) STANDING AT COUNTERS All the injured suffered the most basic plans for a new $2.500.000 burns from the waist up because senior high school on a o0-acre «ite they were standing at counters at the end of Bender street nea when the blast occurred Hatchery road . : . * * * Fillmore Freeman, 23. of Chi- | ; F Sad The project is part of a 5 mill cago, suffered first and third de- doll hool build -Aollar Now 1 wer ‘ gree burns over 26 to 30 per cent a cP Ett : sete wii Pr = " : the townsh I ‘ of his body. He was described by under wavy in the township ! i — were approved by voters in a 5jé cial election last M rch | The second senior high school will accommodate some 1.10 students. It will be designed | along the same lines as John D. Pierce Junior high school. ac cording to George D. Mason Immediately following the con- Architects, that building's de secration ceremony, the Rev.’ signers, George B. Flahiff. C.S.B of ‘Toronto superior general of the ie sion pan eee school includes a_ football fie Basilian Fathers. offered | Holy _— and track on the west side of ‘he Mass upon the newly-consecrated —— ; . _ altar with a number of Pontiac Penperiye tm ine moEnwte area clergy, priests and mon- on the no side baseball dia signori in attendance n the north side a . mond and tennis courts ib » 1 r ’ he former Basilian Fathers CIRCULAR DRIVE novitiate was lecated in Roch- ester, N.Y., but with the great | A landscaped circular diive will increase in vocations to the com- Wind across the eastern section munity in the past five years, {There will be parking for mor the new novitiate became a neces- than 450 automobiles on a blivk sity, according to the Rev. F. topped lot to the south J. Grescoviak, (.S.B., superior The driveway will connect to and novice master, Van Zandt street and Williams Situated on the erest of a hil] Lake road on the north, with an- at the corner of Giddings and Lake other drive from the building Angelus roads the three-winged to Hatchery read in the southerly building overlooks the city of Pon. section. lac, some six miles away, The Special emphasis is being worked site covers 80 acres on one of the into the science rooms of the new highest hills of the county. feared * * * * * * Modern in design. the chapel is) There will be a transformer and unique for its triangular motif— qark room. with 15. two-studen chapel, altar, tabernacle, windows work tables in the center of the and candlesticks. Even the mis- labratory. A greenhouse and work sal stand and the Holy Water fonts room will complete? this section follow the triangular pattern. Charles D. Hannan, A.1.A., of Farmington, was the architect, and the general contractor was the Shurrer Construction Co. of Pontiac. Reading tables, an audio vis- ual room and informal reading | corners have been included in | the library plan. The home economics department will have a washer. drver, all The solid marble altar, imported kitchen equipment. movable sew- from Naples, Italy, is unusual in ing tables and a child care unit. that it is shaped like a huge chal- ice, and the French imported win- MINOR CHANGES dows are similar to those in only Several details and minor three other churches in the United changes will be worked out be States tween the board members and * * ® architect# before construction bids Father Grescowiak said an open will-be asked, according to Super house is planned_for next May. intendent William Shunck. Rast Lansing Fire Department beth of Acapulco and formerly ef Lt Arnold Gordon. whe said he yan Bernardino, Calif. was guided into the blackened lab Emergency apy. f food orators by shreiner s ( es clothing and medici nued ragged the injured) student out. throughout most of 1 fisaster aus Nitness describe 1 the con area despite ‘round P ~ Ip- aD explosion. al soot ply drops by all vailable planes and helicopters SCORP ; > It’s One Way to Save mA IONS EVERYW mt RF There were urgent tis Tor vac ST PAUL linn «UPI City cine against the dead stinz of i ed children cco pions—driven from ft nest4 te Halloween tonight in flood-crumbled adobe a] row The said Thousands of persons hace ed ive $1000 In bh ) stung and need ‘ wv to wground em ( Chae Gan ae Nearly Complete ‘59 UF ose » Drive Totals Announced Nearly complete campaign figures for the three fund- there will be a softball field and raising divisions of the 1959 Pontiac Area United drive were announced today by Robert R. Eldred, general campaign chairman. The report of the Industrial Division. headed by r , on™. Thomas F. Wiethorn. shows that employes of the nine plants which are members ——— —+ Halloween Spooks Better Dress Warmly Ghosts and goblins will have to don warm jackets under them cos tumes tonight as the temperature sul continue cool with a low of 144 degrees : * * * A light drizzle 1s possible A little rain or drizzle is pre- dicted for Saturday's football games. The high will be 56. For the next five days temper atures will average about fow degrees above the normal high of “4 and normal low * * * Precipitation will total about half inch in rain Saturday o1 day of 38 ne sun Lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding & a.m. was 38 degrees. Easterly winds at 10:15 a.m, were gently blowing at two miles an hour, At 1 p.m. the thermometer read Te of the Pontiac Manufacturers Assn. contributed 279, 651.43. or 42 per cent of the entire campaign goal, $647, 698 Plant corporate gifts added an additional $134.77! 12. or 208 per cent of tft campaicn goal The Industmal Division contributed a lotal of $414.425.55. or 62. 4 per cent of the goal. according to Wiethorn, Additional industrial monies are still coming in from 65 smaller industrial plants. At present, Wiethorn said, this group’s contribdtion stands at $3,000. The tentative total of $417,125.55 is the largest amount of mone" contributed by the Industrial Divi sion in the history of the Pontiac Area United Fund Fisher Body Division, with 2.600 contributing employes giving an ywerage of $13.38 each, contributed $34,779.64 Close hehind were the 8 4% con- tributing employes ef General Motors Truck and Coach Division and the 10.074 contributing em- ploves of the Pontiac Motor Divi- ® Wayne H. Conner. 28, 79 Parkdale Enforcement of the mjunction Mrs. Williams, a resident of Roy- , a ee tAve., were arrested for question- has been delayed by the union's ap- al Oak, has long been active in| na ; Sun rises Saturday at 7.04 ing Tuesday night peal » the - Senn ae clvie and political affairs. She is| | 000: Likel More Moon sets a eye. “ |The appeal is expected to be filed an invitational member of the °? ’ bs) Ute) Hee LABS CRSA SE They were the two “unidenti- ‘today or Saturday. Grantors : fi ~ - ; ; peakers Research Committee for ae ee re lag el ok aan: | “I don’t think we'd ever accept the United Nations | (Continued From Page One) ee ] cha . + - | Ps 7 @.M .eceee 3912 4s ae ke mig Msg ides 7 the Kaiser Steel Corp. union con-) She is also a member of the|ported. ‘Scorpions are every- (see OC . ate, police sald. ‘tract."’ Arthur Homer, president advisory council of the Oakland |where.” l0 am. ....... 44 “Both men said the brawl start- of Bethlehem Steel Corp., said chapter of the American Assn. for He reported that 100 bodies al- “ Tharsday in Pontiac ed when Vanitvelt and his com-|Thursday. | United Nations. ready had been buried in Minat- (As reeorde panions tried to take away beer * * * : d downtoxn? Highest temperature . : q _ Lowest temperature .. Mean temperature Weather—Partiy cloudy. from them that they had just pur-| Homer's comments were made 3@5 chased,’ said UndershéNff Don- at a news conference following is- —_— ald M. Francis. isuance of a third-quarter operat- Higeest besipuecne im Pontine ; “They admitted slashing at their/ing report which disclosed two re- , Lowest temperature ........ ..... 42 ‘attackers in self defense and then|cords. One was a record loss for sgl ena ‘onl aa 5 running from the scene,” he added.|any quarter and the other was a ‘Conner submitted to a lie detectorjrecord backlog. Highest and Lowest Temperatares This test results of which indicated he Sesenr unk Ode auatved wa Date in 8 Years 79 im 1033 24 in 1873\ was telling the truth. — inflationary, bu i __ Thursday's Temperature Chart | Both were released from custody wis it we — a se ion which hopefully may have ; } Id mean in terms of Algens “s “1 Marquette 41 38 yesterday. Also slashed in the| sail (Continued F Pa ) found refuge on a hill and sur- Bimaret 96 90 Minuit Bch. oe 42, brawl were Robert Leach, 21, and| prices. ; ‘ rom Page One vived,” B $332 Mileaukee 4¢ 38/Richard Cooper, 21, both of Orion’ “Our whole objective,” Homer cilities and supplies continue to be-} In Manzanillo, the governo Crteage $0 ‘0 aew Ornate +H $4/ Township. Cooper was released said, ‘‘is to get a settlement which|Come more and more expensive.”’ ported, ‘the people are slondia Cyetnnae os es Ree | York : 37/ from the hospital Tuesday and/will not force a steel pricé in-| x~ *& lby their dead in the garden of the Denver 45 30 Peliston “7 39 | Leach on Wednesday. crease.” | At the same time, Proud says, ;muni¢ipal palace and in the $i 38 Phoenix 76 $2) Ronnie Shane, 21, and Clarence x~ *& * ‘the equalized valuation of the/streets, There’s a continuing file| Ft. Worth 73 64 St. Louls 63 5§ Reed, 21, both of Lake Orion, were) The company reported a net loss school district goes down by $15'toward the cemetery. Some a + een © 3g the remaining members in the of $38,926,943 for the three months | million each year. This is a loss | “Everywhere they are sending Jacksonville 80 71 Trav. City « 38) Vanitvelt party. Both were re-ended Sept. 30, Homer said, ‘This!of $275,000 to the school system. |messages for food. Already we've pom a —_~s 2 foo $$ 3, leased by deputies after being is the only big loss we've ever had| The present tax rate is 18.75 dropped relief supplies from a is #7 73) questioned earlier this week. lfor a quarter.” mills, \planes but mach is still needed.” All members of the Youth De- partment are invited to attend, ac- cording to Robert Wisdom, direc- tor of the youth program. Young GOP fo Get ‘Blueprint for Peace’ Mrs. Max Williams, widely known speaker and civic leader, wil present a “Blueprint for The regular quarterly div-|* Directed by Fred Poole, the Com. | major steel firms in the idend of 60 cents a share was de-: mercial Division continues to try to reach 100 per cent of its quota. Of the unit's quota of $179,371, } ° 100 rie | MILES Papi:

mln en Cae Care bea was” fee oe end oe bo a be a v3 vs waits ax ax a ac | dd | hed ww a bo -— All Famous Brands 5° Candy Bars $1.20 97' BOX 24 fer eee: Seas fi | Wv “A | TOT-POP Suckers so 39 { 50c Val. ef 60 Tot-Pop suckers. As- | 60 for Pull ba, i 1 bag i] sorted $8 N. Saginaw —Main a Nervous? Tense? Well, Relax with a Massage Electric Vibrators ot Simms Cut-Prices MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Choice 2 $ WAHL Electric Vibrator Value to $10.75 6” . Jum’ A J Seu eneneaaeweee WAHL ‘SUPERSAGE’ | Hand Pe ee Te aan a hae teat Peer ee eel ed Castro Throws Away High Hopes for Cuba _ Most Americans ‘earnestly hoped that Cuba’s Premier Five. Castro would succeed in establishing his publicly stated ideals of political democracy and economic reform.’ - But in the 10 months since ' the s : tion he has done more than hiss 8 to injure Cuba’x"e . The all: important sugar industry has ‘been thrown into by» land seizure, | invest- ment.has droped to.a quarter of its previous rate and tourism has all but disappeared. , Pe ee Castro says that he needs and hopes for foreign investment to diversify Cuba’s economy and that he welcomes the tourist business. He has suggested that the U.S. extend $30 million in aid! However, American and other property has been expro- priated and payment offered is ridicu- lously low. A-mild protest from our Government brought a savage five hour television attack on the US. even while international tourist agents were meeting in Havana. x * * In Cuba itself the revolution seems to be devouring its own chfidren. Some revolutionary heroes see danger in Castro’s hate filled speeches and rabid nationalism and have said so. They are now termed “traitors” and are under arrest. Some,may have been executed. Irrational attacks on the U. S., a country anxious to help, are dc iying the economic and politi- cal stability Cuba sorely needs. The premier is dissipating the good will he has had in all free nations. Calling a general strike to prove his popularity ig nothing but demagoguery. Whether Communist controlled or not Cuba appears. to be headed for complete economic disaster and more needless bloodshed. Hoover Tells Parents to Take Child to Church J. Encar Hoover, Director of the F.B.1., insists in a few well chosen words that church and Sunday School can do much to combat our increasing juvenile delinquency prob- lems. Since we wholeheartedly agree and have had numerous requests for a copy of Director Hoover’s statement we are reprinting it: “Shall I make my child go to Sun- day School and church? Yes! And with no further discussion about the matter. > * * * “Startled? Why? How do you answer Junior when he comes. to breakfast on Monday morning and announces to you t he is not going to school any more? You know! Junior goes.q wa “Verbal Orchids to- “How do you answer when Junior - x * * comes in very much besmudged and says. ‘I’m not going to take a bath.’ Junior bathes, doesn’t he? “Why all this timidity then in the realm of his spiritual guidance and growth? Going to let him wait and decide what church he’ll go to when he’s old enough? Quit your kidding! ae, wee “You don’t wait until he’s old enough to» decide whether he wants to go to school or not, to _ start his tion. Do you wait until he’s enough to decide if he wants to take his medicine when he’s sick? Do you? x * * “What shall we say when Junior announces he doesn’t like to go to Sunday School and church? That's pasy. Just be consistent. Tell hin, ‘Junior, in our house we all go to ‘ PRESS - At ee Bi ~- Ore eh church and Sunday School, and that Kit: * “Your firmness and example will furnish a bridge over which "Youthful rebellion may trayel into rich and satisfying experiences in * personal religious~living. ta" *- 8. “The parents of America can strike a telling blow against the forces which contribute to our juvenile de- linquency if our mothers and fathers - Will take their children to Sunday .ehool and church regularly.” _» <—J. Epcar Hoover, Director of the F-B.I. be “Ir you would use a lion as a ‘watchdog’ you wouldn’t have to worry about burglars,” says an ani- mal trainer. You probably wouldn’t have to worry about becoming old and feeble, either. The Man About Town The Wary Birds * They Give Hunters the Run Around in Many Ways Trick or treat: What savors too much of a threat. A pair of hen pheasants ran into the home of a “Mr. and Mrs. Basil Savage of Waterford the other day, and hid un- der a bed. The garage at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Burnaby in White Lake Township is the refuge of several cock pheasants. After fighting all summer with the roosters in his poultry yard, Peter Roswell of Lake Orion reports that the cock pheas- ants now are very docile, in order to use the haven. The Marlette area again isthe prize bird hunting ground, acco Eliier G. Wilson who writes glowing reports of the kill. In renewing his subscription to The Pontiac Press, he says: “Here goes for the 47th year. Do not know where you get more for your money, and where you are kep: so up to'date.” Mad all over hig 240 pounds is Herbert Pliny of Pontiat Lake. He Killed a large cock pheasant with his car, and the driver be- hind him picked it cp. Many reports of blossoming Easter lilies are being ved, topped by : Mrs. Grant Harison of Rochester, who has one with eight blossoms. ee For the first week in Novembéf in this area, The Old Farmer’s Almanac says: “With a huff and a puff, nature gets rough.” . Raising both rabbits anti carrots, George Hunter of Clarkston reports that the former now refuse a steady-diet of the latter. They de- mand variety. The material for a half barrel of sauer kraut came from @ single cabbage, raised by hile Roscee Pillar . of Keego Harbor. It weighed 42 pounds. ee Mrs. Bertha Hyatt of 308 Oakland Ave.; 88th birthday. Earl Conklin of 163 West Lawrence St.; 85th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Hooper of 322 Prospect St.; Slst wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs. George L. Smith of Detroit; formerly of Pontiac; 57th wed- ding anniversary. Mrs. Orpha Alleman of Keego Harbor; 85th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer H. Garmond of Waterford; 54th wedding anniversary. Osmond. Bellmonth of Bloomfield Hills; 80th birthday. . Mr. and Mrs. J, B. Hadden of Lake Orion; 59th wedding anniversary. “* George B. Tunstead of Oxfetd; 86th birthday. ~ Almond Orrison of Birmingham; 83rd_ birthday. Mrs. Nora Belifiour of Rochester; 8ist birthday. Mrs. Isabel Stackhouse of Walled Lake; 85th birthday. } 7. road ,, we fry — er? 57 > Speaking of Dragging One’s Feet David Lawrence Says: Heavy Steel Losses Only Part of It WASHINGTON — U. & Steel Corp. lost $31 million in the third quarter of this year. Bethlehem Steel Conp., the next largest, lost $38 million in the third ducer reported a loss of $16 million. Inland Steel re-. ported a net loss $7.5 million. Wheeling - Steel reported a net loss of $4,263,000. Lukens Stee! re- ported a net loss of $3 million. peg Those are the LAWRENCE figures just an- nounced and they add up to about $100 million—but they do not tell the whole story. For the government of the United States Jost taxes equal to these amounts and foregoes as well the taxes on profits that would have been at least $200 million. Also, the Treasury lost far more in tax receipts usually. col- lected from the miany industties indirectly affected by the steel strike. But the losses in wages to the workers are even larger than the deficits of the corporations in- volved in the strike. This, too, means a loss of taxes. MORE TAXES So the American people must continue to pay more taxes fT meet these deficiencies and thus the hoped for day of a reduction in tax rates is postponed. Nobody gains by a strike and yet struggles arise periodically that are eventually ended by ‘‘negotia- tion” after which euphemistic statements are issued about ‘‘vic- tories’’ won. The truth is that every big strike is due to the failure of the processes of reason and a break- down in the communication sys- tem between adversaries. Sometimes union politics keeps a leader from making an agreement that he fears will make him un- popular with his constituency. Sometimes management hesitates to make a concession for fear that next year it will face a strike again as advantage is taken by the union to press later for further conces- sions. Collective ‘‘bargaining’’ no w- adays means that anything granted in a previous year is permanent and not subject to change. * * * So far as the public is con- cerned, it can hardly bring its in- fluence to bear except through government and this, too, leads to “settlements” of strikes that are likely in the long run to do more harm than good. , im fact, today’s strike in steel is largely the result of the mis- handling of labor-management relations in the past with too much government pressure of the political sort that forced un- sound settlements in order to get , - q “I like to see a fellow more concerned about his behavior than what people think of his behavior.” A a resumption of production at almost any cost. Today’s impasse between the steel companies and the unions will not be solved overnight, The Taft-Hartley Act injunction when imiposed will not necessarily bring a ‘cooling off’ period or even a disposition toward conciliatory moves on either side. LACK CONFIDENCE The fact is that no machinery for settlement exists today in which both sides can have confidence. The spokesmen talk vaguely to each other but they know all along what are the basic issues and what must be done to get a settlement. One thing that has to happen is an acceptance by the union leaders of the concept ef change in ‘“‘working rules” in the steel industry, just as they have had to be changed in other industries te meet the new conditions brought about by new machinery and equipment. Dr. William Brady Says: Digitalis Impedes Flow of Oxygen to the Heart The right and left coronary ar- teries branch from the first half inch of the great artery (aorta) to supply the heart (muscle) _ it- self-with the pur- est, most freshly oxygenated blood. Next to vital or brief interrup- tion of a constant DR. BRADY supply of oxygen. The typical chest. belly, neck or arm pang of angina pectoris is due to depriva- tion of: oxygen. - Likewise the pain of coronary about care of the coronaries | men- tioned factors which constrict the coronaries and so prevent or im- pede delivery of oxygen to the heart muscle, namely, digitalis; unpleasant emotions, particularly fear, anger and worry (diluted fear); alcohol; and overexertion in an emergency where anxiety prevails. * * I took pains to say that observa- tion and study of a large series of cases show that as a rule angina pectoris or coronary thrombosis is less likely to occur when one is moderately active than it is when one is at rest, that alcohol con- stricts the coronaries and reduces the supply of blood (oxygen) to the heart muscle when it reaches a concentration of 0.1 per cent — that is to say one part of alcohol in 1000 parts of blood. I did not say that digitalis in- variably causes constriction of the coronary arterioles. I said that some physicians believe it is dangerous in cases of angina pec- torig or coronary insufficiency. Personally, I wouldn’t take the stuff in any circumstance i a doctor in whom I had great faith ordered me from day to day to take it or else. There is still tobacco. The sub- ject of the effects of tobacco—cig- arettes, cigars, pipe, snuff or chew- ing — on the heart, arteries, lungs, stomach, digestion, nerves, vision and general health — is 4 vast jumble of theories and fancies from which it is _practically tm- possible to draw sound deductions. In the first place as it seems to me, if the nicotine in tobacco is as deadly as the old timers imagined, how does the ball play- er who comes to the plate ingest- ing a cheekful ever get to first base? The best I can say about tobac- co and the coronatfy arterioles is this: 1. I believe the cause of the path- ological effects of smoking is the carbon monoxide generated by in- complete combustion 2. The signs and symptoms pre- sented by a person made il! by to- bacco smoke, whether his own or others’, are strikingly like the signs and symptoms of carbon monoxide gassing. 3. I am not prejudiced. although I prefer a pipe, when, I say that I gather from the clinical records that cigarette smoking is most harmful, cigar smoking less harm- ful and pipe smoking less harmful of the three—perhaps depending on the amount of carbon monoxide in- haled. Of course this is only my belief —which may or may not seem plausible to 100,000 other doctors Signed letters not more then page or 100 words long pertaining to persona! health and hygiene gynot dis- ease. diagnosis. or treatment. © be antWered by Dr William Brad: stamped. self-addressed envelope ts sem! to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac. Michigan (Copyright 1959) one fa Voice of the People UF Chairman Expresses Gratitude for Press’ ‘Help I've always had. some appreciation and awareness of the Mind of job The Press does for the United Fund, but until this year, I’ve never been fully cognizant of all the wonderful contributions you and your staff make toward the success of every campaign, * This chairman’s job has been humibling because you realize how in- effective your efforts would be without the superb Cooperation of so many people. I thought The Press did a most outstanding job for the community this year and want you to know how grateful the entire campaign organization feels. Another ‘Alumnus Defends Crisler Who was that bolshevik that took a pot shot at Fritz Crisler of Michigan? Crisler is the top col- legiate athletic figure in America, considering training, intelligence, achievement and potental. He was the pro’s number one pick for their top job and they offered him the top salary in professional sports. Indignant U..of M. Members Support Union Activities I'm sotry for Mrs. Auto Work- er’s rattling, because she has no facts. Before the union came in | had a family. The boss had a pet He. worked “that man four days a week and I only worked two days, because I didn’t have the money to take the boss out. * * * We are all equa! now in the shop. We have equalizing of heurs. Once I had a job as set up man, They hired a new man and the bess told him he would give him a good job if he’d buy a car from the boss. He got my job, I found out later. * * * God bless you. but please rattic facts. Auto Worker A letter spoke of the money unions spend. It takes a lot to run them. They’re like any other big business. They must have lawyers, writers, good speakers, and these people don’t work for their health. * * * Our first public school was got- ten by organized labor, as wag so- cial security, vacation pay, time and a.half and many other things. A strike anywhere in the UAW- CIO takes money. . * * * Reuther gets $25,000 a year, while some big industries pay $300,000 or more. The investigat- ing committee said Solidarity House and the heads of the auto workers kept the best set of books of any business they had. *® ® * Our dues are raised to $5.00 a month, but that isn't high con- sidering what the union has done. Unions are on a forward march and they won't be broken up. You must have a strike fund for our members. Thomas Thrower 114 E. New York Ave. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY He said, in a certain city there was a judge who neither feared God nor regarded man. — Luke 13:2. * * * Fear not the proud = and the haughty: fear rather him who fears God Frederick Saad Case Records of a Psychologist: R. R. Eldred Wants Campaign to Support State It is the duty of everyone to sup- port the government and state in which he lives. Our recent success with United Fund gives me the idea of a United for Michigan Drive, the money to be. used to support Michigan in its financial crisis * * *® The payroll deduction plan is good, along with cash contribu. tion. Additional sources of-reve-. nue could be obtained by profits from fund-raising projects of churches, lodges and clubs. * * * Now's the time for action. By supporting Michigan in this crisis, you're supporting yourself. A unit- ed effort for a just cause is sure to succeed A. L. Butorm Drayton Plains ‘Why Do You Do Nothing at All?’ You must have some kind’ of control for the labor min, but it’s been shown that they o1 alter ganized, they were out for them- selves, regardless of even the Gov- ernment. Thix is the members‘ fault * * * If union, were for the mem bers, the money should be mak- ing money for those members. Strikes have made members pay double for homes, cars, public service and almost everything went beyond the raises. * * * They haven't ‘gained one thinc but tragedy and suffering, and members are the only ones who can act, Tf a man called you a nasty name or stole five cents you'd probably fight to your last breath. I don’t understand why you do nothing. Observer Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE The market place is. wonderful . . With products that are good . And prices that glefy the stores .. . In any neighborhood Of course you have to purchase fhem .. . In larger quantity ... Yet certain items do provide .. . For real economy . . . Like bushels of tomatoes and . . . Of peaches and of pears .. . That you may want to cook and can... To store beneath the stairs . . . Fresh sea food is available .. . Fish, shrimp, and lobster tails . Oysters, clams and quahogs caught Beneath New England sails The market place is wonderful But as [for staple goods The stores that save vou monev Right in all neighborhoods (Copyright 1959) are Teacher Must Use Salesmanship Use Dr. Buley as an admir- able yardstick for rating good teachers. And don't make the mistake of thinking a Ph. D, automatically means a good teacher. A lot of Ph. D. pro- fessors put their students to sleep and exude no more vital enthusiasm than a dead fish. Send for the Rating Scale be- low. By GEORGE W. CRANE CASE C — 483: Dr. R. Carlyle Buley is professor of American History at Indiana University. ® *® * “And he is an excellent prof,” one of his students informed me. “In the first place, he doesn't use his lectures ready in thetext- just to parrot again what is al- ready in the text- books. “Instead, he amplifies and il- lustrates his his- tory lectures with dramatic cases and ‘human in- terest’ examples NOT in the text. And he can re- duce abstractions to simple terms. He uses clever analogies that clinch his points. “For example, he recently gave us a very lucid case to illustrate the production, consumption and acquisition of goods or capital. x * * “He told the story of a primi- tive native who spent all day try- ing to catch fish for his family. The native averaged one good fish per day. “That was his usual produc- tion. But his family devoured that fish in one day, so their con- sumption equalled his total pro- duction. DR. CRANE «_ * * “Then he worked overtime on a certain day and managed to catch * TWO fish. That gave him an extra day's food supply. “So he didn't have to go fishing the next day. Meanwhile, he sat around in his new leisure and be- gan to THINK. “As a result; he evolved the idea of a net. And by weaving bark or wild grape vines together, he fashioned a crude net ‘Next day, when his food sup ply had run out, he went fishing with his new equipment “And now he caught three fish, whereas he used to average only one. As a consequence, he had even more time to perfect his net. And soon he made a second net. “Some of his neighbors now wanted to use the first net, so he rented it to them on the shares They caught three fish and gave one of them to the owner of the net for rent * * * -“Tt wasn't long till he was in the net-making business. He was a manufacturer and a capitalist “Wasn't that a dandy analogy, Dr. Crane? And don't you agree that Dr, Buley typifies a topnotch teacher?” BRAVO, DR. BULEY Yes, I salute Dr. Buley as an example of our finest type of teacher. For g0od teachers have a fondness for students and an en- thusiasm to convert them into zealots for the course, so they try to dramatize their lectures. A good teacher is thus a ‘‘sales- man’’ of ideas. He doesn’t mechan- ically parrot what is already mw the textbook * * * Instead, he uses his lectures to emphasize the highlights, And he dramatizes the subject-matter with fascinating stories and new cases. A good teacher is thus half actor and half artist. And he always exudes enough vital enthusiasm to keep his students awake Tt thus takes far more than a mere Ph. D., to produce a super- lative teacher In fact, many men with only a B. S. or an A.-M. degree are far better teachers than some of the older professors, for they understand the interests of the under-graduates in their classes and can slant the material bet- ter. But a good teacher like Dr. Buley never loses his audience ap- peal for he follows the surefire public speaking formula outlined in tomorrow's [ee * * Meanwhile. send fo the ‘Test for a Good Teacher,” enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents (non-profit). It helps all teachers improve * * * Always rite to Dr George W Crane in care of The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. enclosing a long 4c stamped, self-addressed envelope and 20c to cover typing and printing costs when ‘ou send for bis psychological charts and pam phlets. (Copyright 1959) The Assoctated Prese ts entitied exclusively to the use for repudit- cation of eal) loca) sews printed tp this newspaper as @ell as al) AP Gews dispetches The Ponttac Prees tw delivered oy carrier for 456 cents s week, where carrier service is net available od mai) in Oakland . Laring- gon. Macomb Lapeer and Warb- tenaw Counties it is vee a year: P elsewhere tn * all other |. places tm the United G@tates $625 46 a year. All mal) gubserintions yable in adv Posters as paid at the 2nd ciase om Pontiec. Michigan Member of - THE PONTIAC PRESS, Fe “4 ¥ ‘ j vee? FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1959 , . Seattered Balloting Due Tuesday Retuses to Okay Waich State, Local Elections for Trends in south airica The question in New Jersey ism 105 Indiana communities and . 2 it ? ‘ - wm Waeeeee G8 bon 2 2 ee Vee. =. LAP-vhy ; ‘ were: Ro +e ” Vaderiand”. ‘which has 47 municipalities in upstate New| In an interview jwith * * | whether the Democrats can cap vork. kaans language newspaper * A governorship contest in Ken-| ture control of the Senate. They} z ae about reports South Africa next aT es year would be the only country im | NEW YORK — Practice of med. mca BE pce nF oymtnmers y i S. is Hertsog Mitty sald the govern- and surgery in the U ment did net intend to tntreduce limited only to American citizens : mets ae ) are able to pick films for their examination -records ) children. This ts impossible with at 103 N. SAGINAW ST. television . . . * te ° “The effect of wrong pictures eR rica oa. gen te yr he TT ve sens ots Ne. FE on TOmET ER Monday & Priday Bvenings fights in such cities as Philadel- phia, Cleveland, Indianapolis and} San Francisco were viewed as the! ™most significant of the off-year * * * = Philadelphia will be watched be. == cause Harold E. Stassen, contro == versial Republican national! fig- lure, is trying to win the mayor's == entucky, New Jersey, Migpis- job from incumbent Richardson = sippi and Virginia will go te the Pjijworth. Stassen, one-time gov- == polis om a statewide basis ernor of Minnesota who failed to == but the only governorship at win the Pennsylvania GOP gub == stake is in Kentucky. ernatorial nomination last year, is == John Robsion, a former con- the underdog. ~ ~ = ssman, is the Republican can- * = ) wo iate against Bert Combs, the Another ex-governor, J. Bracken | { | | Democratic choice to succeed A. Lee of Utah, is running as an in == i B. (Happy) Chandler. Republicans dependent for the mayorship of = were hopeful a longstanding feud Sat Lake City. => between Democratic factions| Other key munictpal elections == might give Robsion victory in the, ” state. * * * President of Colombia However, Combs. backed in the Democratic primary by tormer| Will Visit United States Sen. Earle C. Clements but not tucky, a state legislative electi |. i —— te Now Jersey sand mayoral ok, over the House fromthe Re- Si MMMM NOW AT cee CL AYTON’S For a Limited Time Only MOST OUTSTANDING MAPLE VALUE EVER... > * ‘Ad * & ih tii? | by Chandler, is the current fav- orite to win. The enly other governorship balloting will occur in Missis- sippi where it is no contest for WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Eiser,nower announced Thursday that the president of Columbia, Dr. Alberto Lieras Camargo, will ar- rive in Washington April 5 to start a 10-day state visit. Democrat Ross R, Barnet. Re. The Columbian leader will stay publicans im the state, however, here for three days and spend the have offered a candidate for the rest of his visit touring the country. SATURDAY Knit-Trimmed Cotton Cord Car Coats * Gay paisley quilted linings! * Hood-converting collars! * Snug-fitting knit wristlets! 98 only MOST WANTED FABRIC... famous Dan River's cotton bedford cord—fully water repellent, crease and stain resistant! Wear it everywhere! EXCITING STYLE FEATURES ... . from the gay paisley = quilted lining, to the pop-up hood collar! Get yours = “in beige or willow green. Misses’ sizes. = WACREDIBLY LOW PRICED... for just a short time! So hurry—# value like this will be grabbed off fast. USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN... NO EXTRA CHARGE e 200 N. Seginew Street—Free Parking in the rect |; : *~ 7 Sprague - Carleton is truly the finest maple you can buy — A lovely combination of Early American simplicity adapted for today’s mdédern, functional liv- ing. And it’s yours now at the most outstanding value ever! See it for yourself — come in j Nptaque TRI SPECIAL PURCHASE Limited Time Only! LATFORM ROCKER ... $ 59.50 WING CHAIR .......... $ 59.50 END TABLE ........... $ 29.95 STEP TABLE ........... $ 29.95 COCKTAIL TABLE...... $ 29.95 HUTCH & BUFFET ...... $169.95 48” DINING TABLE..... $ 79.95 today ! 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH UP TO | 24 MONTH TO PAY wae ee enaiee-ceaaaee’ mere oe ‘ Rs eed ae ee te. Poe pies bg SiG ee ee 9 < " ae ‘ it “* : : $ x, 5 2 So ~~ i te ee eS — aA! OF TH . a}. i » i Y Se Ge so. cats S « continvelly That's why yeu should own it, sleep on 2, enjoy lt in your very own home. Posturepedic by Seaty—the best mottress, ee a oe ALL-EXPENSE 1-WEEK oun racist airr...win a FONTAINEBLEAU — POSTUREPEDIC VACATION FOR TWO | MATTRESS Sem 3 Svowrenre J} \*400,0004n Prizes tee ak Pes ail Wout My on — Nothing to buy! Bary to wink DELTA AIR LINES ° DC-4 Reye! Jet Service . > TN ) ( CLAYTON’S of KEEGO HARBOR THUMB BACK CHAIRS . .$ 17.95 FURNITURE CARPETS APPLIANCES OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS ‘TIL 9 P.M. Free Parking in Front of Our Store—Come in for Meter Pennies APPPAPA 1959 Electric Range and Refrigerator Clearance! Get mom the range or refrigertor of her choice for the holidays cook- ing, now at our clearance prices. Latest Frost-Proof Models Model F, P.-142-59 Reg. $699.95 $499.9 5 NOW ! = = = = : | = 3065 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor Phone FE 5-9474 = z = ; = = = = = = : 3 = = = Reg. $269.95 No $219% PT HTT nid Papen sates ces NO TRADE NEEDED — Now F No Paymen Til January 1960 HUE ui i TTT MINUULSVANIANVEHN TT | a ak ree , (Dee en #8a re pe aE ae a agen MAKEOVER > Typ ‘ PAG: On This Page Each Friday THIRTEEN , THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, _ . Ps ee of ta aa re 86°F} 5 F Gwen by: thp dm-)structor, with James Bank as slipjcellor of MSUO. He will give a department*4n ‘the «Centra Yentfal | dent director. Committee heads im short address which should be of ‘auditorium the} fiteg Weekend ‘in clude Sue Smith amd .dudy’ Ken-jinter@t to those planning to at- December. jney, publicity; Barbata Alton and | tend this university. Club members | i Judi Johnson, Karen Kessler, tickets; Douglas} will then hear qa short-talk given i hin — Lally Peter: | Sputlock, stage manager; Leroy|by Loreg Pope, assistant chancel. rren, Meip; Marilyn Ver- Cheyne, lights; Judy Whitmer and | lor. : : {Susan Constantino, props; and| After the meeting, delegates will |Kathy Beebe, makeup. jthen go on a tour of the campus, : ; | Tomorrow, the Linnean Society headed by Ron Hoekman. Ron is iV . ; . A’ Ven a Kay Slater horm| wil host the annual convention of! presently a student at MSUO. is a | Frank: Gary Relyea Mr. Kraler: the Michigan Junior Academy ofj|past president of the Linnean, So- ‘and George Sarros. Mr. Drussel. | SCience-Arts-and-Letters at Michi-|ciety and is now a student member | — ' |gan State University Oakland. ‘of Junior Academies, Executive | CO-DIRECTORS . ; x & * Council. The group will then leave held last- Friday, The play will be directed by | | At 9:30 a.m. the club will be|for a tour of the Cranbrook Insti- after school for the “Diary of Anne Garth Errington, dramatics in-; welcomed by D. B. Varner, chan-'tute of Science and Arts. , Waterford Pupils Tell Why St. Mike's Gentlemen Prefer Blondes Reioicing | : Continues — By BARBARA ARDELAN ' After scoring a 54-7 victory over | crosstown rivals,’ St. Fred- men are Judy “Hinkley, decora-| Frank,” to be tions; Fran Austin, tickets; Carol! matics Boutin, publicity; and Lynne. Vie- Tiech, cleanup. | Peggy Wa - non, Mrs_‘Frank; Xavier Garza, - |Mr. Frank; Evelyn Kerr, Mrs. Four Girls Join Cheering Squad |. A seflior, Sharon plans to major jin art at Western Michigan Uni- s jversity after she graduates trom {At Oxfor d High Central. { ; ee She began to study art in junior! By BEATRICE KRUG |high school and is now in Jean! Oxford High School had four Smith’s commercial] art class. igirls added to the junior varsity ‘DESIGNED POSTERS cheerleading squad. All freshmen’ By JOHN TEEUWISSEN “es ae then, are Carol Roberts, Sharon! The Waterford Township : Higi s s th st e gene ; ‘ship ign | es ptetl masta play, “The sites. Cookie VanHentenryck and school Dramatics Club launched lGed Heed” and‘ aleo planned the Connie Wilkinson. \its publicity campaign for “Gen- sea] and lettering layput for the The varsity cheerleaders from |tlemen Prefer Blondes.” . new Pontiac Central sweatshirts. | last year are Shirley Smith, Highlight of the campaign is an { { | } | ; Mesh # > —~ One of ‘these five. ~ schoo} gymnasium. ween tonight over home-*'* are (from QUEEN CANDIDATES candidates will reign as q coming festivities at Avondale High School., The? contest is with Clawsen High School, scheduled’ far 8 p.m. A dance will follow the game in the.- In contention for the crown 4 left) Marjatta Eskelinen, Starr Feath- erstone, Karen Lane, Judy Lunsford and Susan Randall. 7 some of the balloon decorations for the Coronation Ball last Sat- -urday. Homeroom eaptains will take ticket orders. } A | The student selling the most tickets will be awarded a free our 5 Vie tor Homecoming Queen The artist is active in many | squad leader; Genine Collier, es si on Se ee ai dinner and a trip to Paris erick’s, there. was much rejoicing school organizations and activities,| Linda Jacobs, Janie Langely, G0 gentlemen prefer blondes?’ Proofs for senior pictures ar. 29d celebrating at St. Michael's. . P including the A Capella Choir and| Ronnie Kintz and Kitty McMillan. ses student hee best answers od this week for these who haq this week e is question words or less ; “ ~*~ * * i varsity cheerleaders squad. The cheerleaders have been’... ai . their pictures taken by Powell's ; — Tonight, immediately following sing and selling blue and gold|! Teceive two free tickets ojo. 4:05 They were greeted with The Stephen Griffin) Memorial 8 g 0" the production, The runneru will ¥ the Ferndale football game, Pon-| -nakers to the students and facul- . P mixed emotions. Most students,Trophy, signifying the inter-city get one free ducket There were free tic |tiac Central Pep Club is sponsor- | ae ee By IRVIN GINGRICH, _(erstone, Judy Lunsford, Karen;dance, 9:30 p.m. to 12:39 a.m.,|ing a dance, the ‘‘Foot Ball,”’ to be 'Y for the games. cde 4 ; ; 4 sponsoring a dance after the game Students and faculty are pre- Lane and Marjatta Eskelinen. ‘diate Alumni,” and the held in the gym from 10 to mid- | ith Ortonville: donight were quite pleased with the photos championship came back to St. in ;which had “done them justice’ Mike's last Sunday after spending kets POO LIFERIKE a year at St. Frederick. This tro- The students and faculty were entertained Friday at the pep rally by a skit starring “‘beat- ; nicks’? Mike Keasling and Rus- sell Greenlees. * * . General chairman of the dance is blue pleated bee ea a eseesone of Lynne Vieriech. Committee chair- sweaters Avondale, are quite proud of Jean! Carpenter She was elected treas-| urer of Region 7 of the FHA in’ Michigan. | Won German Friendship GLEE CLUB Ten members of the Glee Club, | Student Was Ambassador i= Sess 22 |man, will be attending a music) | : ring for homecorm activities can ting will be that . hy can be viewed in the case at ~ Avcdhole High a A large A” for Avondale was “stg It should pallial pengrenay| A local disc jockey will be on! * x mi «aie e e There was, however, some slight he schoo) W here w“ . hope 5 "will The - cheerleaders sponsored .a|.*¢t ablaze. This added to the {fine dance as well as a colorful hand to spin records for dancing.| The profits from both of these dissension from a few whose pic- be retired pep rally last night on the football], SPirit and enthusiasm already | one , Tickets. are on sale for 75 cents /projects will go ee ae Z | lion tures were only. too lifelike. field. The band played and the can-| 8®¢umulated for the Avondale- drag, 55 cents stag. juniforms which will me | The annual fall festival of th {Choral Music Department was lgreeted with praise by the auci jence last night, The choirs, glee jclubs, ensembles and soloists did! a job that they may well be proud ‘of, according to those present * * * Another event which was looked upon with mixed emotions was the first report ‘cards of the year this didates -were presented. They in-| Clawson game at 8 tonight. SBE a ns clude Susan Randall, Starr Feath-- The theme for the Homecoming a Will Go to Black and White Cover | S h . { Clarkston Sells Hilltopper, CNOOIS art, LANSING um—After first balking, the Legislature has cleared the way The seniors are preparing for a field trip to Greenfield Village in Dearborn next Monday. Both United States history classes will. view the displa\s of early Amer- ican history * x os wat! = By PAULETTE KIMBALL iness Manager; Lucy Oakley. . . | ‘ clinic held at Rochester on Nov. 7. : 's Clark h Editor; Carolyn Talmadge, Mary | Michigan’ week. A few pleased and happy on a _ At 17, Sue Koprince is an experi-jhad three other children in her! + «+ « | oe ager Upward, Joyce Galligan, Craig nae Michigan's public schools to taces dotted a crowd of otherwise Sunday. opening day for Na. aul . School yearbook, the Hilltopper,|~?" 2S Nor-.c° ect four million dolJars in dd 3 ; . tional Cathofic Youth Week, il enced ambassador to a foreign|family and al) the other students! Those going are Starr Feather-|ha< been on sale during the noon Smith, Michael Beaumont, Nor ifederal matching monies for sci. sadder but wiser Waterford stu- high school students atteaded’ sot land. were aware of this and considered | ston. Nancy Fowler, lst soprano; pours this week. A deposit of $2man Masters, Fay Ann Burley. /..0, projects, “cl dents on the day of reckoning Hau} . * *® * Her role as a participant tn the American Field Service exchange student is considered ef- fective in the US. scheme to win teen it out of the ordinary.” emn high Mass. During the week, Holy Name services were cone: ducted for all the students | FIRST ISSUE f : llie Douglas, Larry) required to order. There wilj Sue Turek, Call Bed -_— & *&. \2nd soprano; Vicky Wiliams,|pe no ee he ‘is week Blackett, “ RaTey peers Pigeon : Schools are not coeducational in'Sharel Isanhart, alto; Mike Carry,| . - approved measure | * * Ls The one to whom we all owe so, 82-16 and sent it to the governor | er, to Sue, and' John West tenor; and Bob ; agers ~iw a daing much the Evans, Chuck Moss, bass. The black and white covered an-: much, though, is Lawrie Burnette,| for signing. Some supporters | Rochester High Jo Ellen Crawford, Elaine Crabb, | | The House yesterday passed j The first issue of the school friends and influence people of | same things as U.S. youngsters 2 = jnual is featuring a student index,' sponsor, under whom we all strive! Voiced reluctance at accepting | newspaper, the "stichaelite ei Other countries. ; é , : 1344 pages, and many pictures cov-!to go our best. federal help. : . i emilee ; * * * | The director of ‘the clinic will ' 4 nee dant! | ; } U S l aniZ issued this week after days of Sue, 319 W. Iréqiiites returned | «Nore vatue is ptaced on eulture|by Maynard Cline. jering: enc’ and every important} 7 Leda OPposed to federal aid to) ee ees as a senior to Pcntiac Ceatéal \by the Ge ‘ but | + « event of the school year. e ~~ ‘education,” said Rep. Frank D. jgraphing. The new mimeograpa Tman teen-agers, they | i Willi i “ resente High School this fall after spend- love American rock ‘n’ roll, too.) Judy Lunsford, Ruth Torretta,, The theme will be “Past, Pres. ‘Union Leader ays are ere). But we Sy MARCIA SEED acanes presented to St. Michael's ing the summer with a German ithey seem to participate ip sports|and Delores, Dunlap attended a| ent, and Future,” and will be | ta e ee sh as one of ee ‘ Se edn Y piel sd ii produced clear- family and attending school in more, rather -than be content as District Intra-Counci] meeting last! skflifully displayed throughout Schools lef Down ne nation’s biggest taxpaying ” ‘ochester Senior High School er copies than was ever expected, the industrial city of Hannover. rsa ‘Saturday at Detroit's Henry Ford! the entire book by use of art, | states if we did not get at least oy suits who have applied) Typists Jean Cassabon. Jane Ce youth, she § _ . visit to West Berlin Sue Hospital. The theme of Avondale’s| copy and pictures. a portion of all this money that is |to exchange students to any Bentham Judy Klinghamer, Shar- bright and, alert with interests|found the “very worried Future Nurses’ club is: Nursing as) _. blicat hich) DETROIT & — Leonard Wood- | being spread all over while we free foreign country in the sum-(on Daugherty and Barbara Arde- @omparable to those of their Ameri-|about the ‘‘split,” but hopeful. (a Career. alas es Pu ea fon. oti cock, vice president of the United Sit on our hands.” mer term of 1960 lan have put in many hours of jcover both the Wolf Cry, our sc ‘Auto Workers Union, said today! Rep. Robert E. Waldron (R-). The various clubs at Rochester work along with on og can counterparts. There were, how. “They talk about the divi . d_ th Hilltopper : c ng ith mimeograph ever.. some misconceptions about Berlin ” vistes | a nee: ae e ah |that schools should be freed ‘from Grosse Pointe) warned that federal High held their first. meetings of operator Patrick Donahue. Stencils the United Stabés of quite a bit,” says Sue. bee: will be taken by specia > jprimary dependenee upon property aid might lead to federal local:the year last Friday. Among the'were prepared by Jane Bentham, ; “The peo wear emblems on | earns S picked boys to work with Powe taxes for support.’’ |control. ;business conducted at the Science. ! Jean Cassabon and Barbara Arde- LIVE BY fr their lapels of the Bradenburg | —_— -_ red for the MUST MATCH Art and Junior-Senior Girls clubs Jan “An East Berliner said, ‘We| Gate. whieh eoparates Bertin, | Once a month, they will assist; Det ~ 7 7 at institete, | 5 sea) echonl digi was the election of officers se would believe more in democracy, M#Wing they want to keep it the studio while learning more B°'r® ely | Al ald dollan fae dae match) Top officers of the respective | if we could see you living by it.’ open.” } r labout the business Woodcock, who is a member of federal aid dollar for dollar under clubs. are George Griebe. Ron The seniors voted on a class . es | | — | the board of governors of Wayne the National Defense Education te le Poe Ds a ‘on motto last « eek. It is “Dare to be * e * The American Field Service aro . : ;Reeves and Kay Brannack. . “Their vi often exag-lgram is tnt js. sw eae . ‘WORK IN PAIRS | State University, said such de- (Act. It must be used for purchase | Different gerated.'I showed them a copy of|nations he amet really ey | They will split into pairs. The, pendence “is now politically of scientific equipment, construc- | Other officers named were | Es the Pontiac Central High School|Sue says: ‘| ort ern ifirst working there will be Larry| dangerous.” {tion of laboratories or related pur-/ Cian Rankin. secretary, and Kirk o gs yearbook, ‘Quiver,’ and they were x & * |Blacket? and Paul Bennett. Head-| He declared “the incipient tax- |POS€S- | eee sreasurer, for the Sci- Emmanuel Christian | j : pS . enc lub, I vaniza- at first amazed at the pictures of jed by Dan Cooper, Barry Breiden- yers’ revolts are instinctive re- All other states but Arizona and ce Club. In the art organiza | “The family I stayed with treated tion, Wendall Evans is vice pres- ‘baugh, and Bart Connors, teachers | t d . f . [Wyoming have taken advantage of ‘ Negroes and whites together in actions against unfair systems of B ge of; : classsoom, social na athletic ecm’ their own daughter. | By ED SANTALA of the high school, are the remain: taxation" |the program. ; ent ee oe secretary. T1a§$ €anup CeK | scenes, The Germans don’t regard Ameri-| Bruno Kearns. sports editor of|ing staff. . | The solution. Woodcock said, “is! The office of the State Super.) 8n@ ©ou Ann Carlson, treasurer. * * * ° cans as the ostentatious stereo-/The Pontiac Press, spoke to the! ~ *® * igreater state aid through revenues |"tendent of Public Instruciton has’ Class representatives for the club By EVELYN CHAPEL “They thought all schools were ‘YP. 1 think they now have a/polaris staff Wednesday on news-| Seniors: Cliff Irwin, Paul Ben- ‘collected in a fair and equitable 28"eed to administer the program 'are Sue Rock and Tom Cullen,; |... . y *fe|pretty good idea of us.” icohli ,on the state level without ial : ; Emmanuel Christian High segregated’in America,” pretty paper style and makeup. nett. and Ron Highlin. Imanner and, most necessary of; : a spec es Cec ily Donnelly and School has designated Nov. ° to 6 The Pontiac girl deseribes Han-| ~ & * | Junior: Larry Blackett. lall, federal aid to education in al] |2PPropriation {Carol Galusha, juniors; Vicky - “Cleandp Week.” Posters beinz nover, population 600,000, as a! . * f The editor offered suggestions Freshmen: Dave Smith. Peterlits forms.” God, and- David Price ais used in the campaign and students place where nothing is older than { f Eric S valuable to any newspaper staff.;Wilford and Mike Simonson. lo . ; . Ores ‘ wie ‘Ree le bucs 15 years, all rebuilt and modern. | ‘ This was Kearns’ second appear-. Dennis Krithers. John Jones and FALLING DOWN Lake Orion High | Joan Westermann is vice presi: ue Wearing -little bugs on their ance at Northern as a guest’ Ic ! Woodcock said ‘‘America is fall- collars -Jim Manfield also participate in). ee | dent of the Junior-Semor Girls with i age “re go bene | turer. taff. ling dawn on the job” of education Hosts Parents at Pat Hannula, secretary, and Carol! + * * ie 4g den who. najors in ( | The annual Fall Festival of , * * * i St percent of the a aisles With T Kreitmeyer, treasurer S Halloween party bas ‘hee German student w majors ; : i nsible for tl eae 4, than 4 per cent of the nation’s ame 1 roy | * & t scheduled by cach homeroom to- a foreign language studies that , the Pontiac Northern High | €sponsidle for the grea ehh (gross national product goes for cy | Lone ret f report carq (ay from 1:30 to 3 p.m language for eight years. Their | | School and Pontiac Central High done on project are Thespo Chris- education as aganist an estimated Y new System of report card, Nineteen students made the {first By DAVE NORTON idistribution has been employed at ; marking hontr roll | Lake Orion High Schoo! annual the Rochester Senior High School Family Night will be observed atiin which parents of the subjects are varied and many. | By PAT VILLELLA | School music departments will 'tidies, editor: Sue Larkin, Busi- eee Gomes ee © se 5 raiifications of the proposal ior, be held at 8 p.m. Monday in — a (10 to 15 per cent in Russia. | , , | | | students; “A’ average students were brief period she attended school. |. ‘ciudent Court at St. Frederick | Northern oF charm . ; 'H omin 8 tonight when Troy High School have been asked to pick up the| Sharon Carpenter, Janice An- Classrooms are crowded as are|High School has been brought be-| 2 ‘W Bloomfield High omec g invades the home gridiron report cards eacii marking period. derson, Sharon Smith and Judy livimg conditions in Hannover|fore the student body by Stu-; The several groups from the . W Bi C ] f ]; The parents will be issued num- FIRST CARD Spangler. . where the great majority of resi-|dent Council President Jack/two schools will combine for part . ° Was 1g, Oloriu bers to correspond to those on)’ ™ bape ‘ape students were Jj dents live in apartments rather |O’Reilly ‘of the program and also will per-| a eS enpin im itheir sons’ jerseys and will seat) The first card distribution took average students were Jim than homes. As a result of the . directly behind them on the field./place last Monday in homerooms..Carie. Lita Carpenter. Nancv Hal- at Walled Lake The president expressed the wish form separately. * war amd the sociological and eco-|of the Student Council in asking | * * ray After the game, there will be a/after which the parents had an lenbeck Jenifer Marion, Carolyn nomic conditions in Germany’s|the student body to back up the: Conductors for the evening will _, pom DWSeE _ By PAUL PROULX get-together in the high school,opportunity to talk to the differ. Brewer, Douglas Enon, Jack Giles. rapid construction era, families!student Court. ‘be Melvin Larimer of: Northern, Te fami amr Cry of strike 'S' Homecoming is still the topic of\cafeteria where refreshments wil] ent teachers. pie, John Landon. Carolyn Lingle, are small. |George Putnam, Mrs. Doreen Volt-\ONCe @gain being heard at Sylvan cchversation at Walled Lake this\be served. The program is spon-| This system was considered {Virginia Vincent. Martha Mercer Donna Buck “:Green and Frank Watts Sonny in the A pep assembly was held tast | | Friday to produce pre-game “The new housing developments! _ The purpose of such a court is icheal ‘ t Lanes Bowling Alley as the jUNIOT Week The exciting game and fes-Sored by the Lake Orion Athletie success by faculty members and Jane Mercer in Hannover are considered very| % show student reaction against Centr ee jand senior Bowling League of West jive program were highlighted by)Association: participating parents modern, but ‘Americans would! Students who are ~ ne \Bloomfield High aim for the elu- tye presentation of the queen and! ~ — - ——- probably view them. as substand.| ©®™sing trouble. Often GUEST CONDUCTOR \Sive ten pins. ‘her court. Queen Donna Neigh-| ard.” says Sue.- ‘Almost everyone, Past, extra-curricular activities | Guest conductor will of Don x *« &* tors, a senior, looked lovely on lives in an apartment and they are have been cut out because of (Craig of Ithaca College. }thaca, At the first meeting these offi- her pink, white: and aqua float | small and overcrowded. _ these people. N. Y. He is a former member of cers were elected: president, Bon- She was gowned in white chiffon :AMILI 4 If these students are not willing the Fred Waring orchestra. This nie Urquhart; secretary, Carol; Senior attendant, Linda Dovle. anual) a ili “ Los ned only |t? hold to the rules and regulations| will be Craig’s fourth appearance Knapp; and treasurer, Pam Hogan. ‘wore a dress of yellow and orange | ¢ Ege ay ary dase for the good of the school andjin Pontiac The 10 teams vying for cham. chiffon. Barbara Kreza, junior at one gir MY ClASS themselves, it is felt that action] Members of the vocal classes are pionship are Little Joes, Alley ‘€ndant, chose red organdy and jshould be taker against them. _selling tickets at 50 cents each. © Kittens, Holy Rollers, Pin [saat he oge Sharon Under ,the court Operation, any | * * * Queens, 300 Club, Wood Chop- ; rown, pi c 0 student charged with seriously dis-' A new college club has been, pers, Bony Rollers, Pin Pointers, | sturbing the class would be brought! formed at Northern. It’s main pur-| Gutter Girls and Frantic Four. before the court. FAIR CHANCE He will be given a fair chance to tell his side of the story, or to plead guilty. Following this will be an account by the accusing student or faculty member. If found guilty he will be sentenced 6r put on probation. * * So far the Court hasn't been lcalled upon. It is the ‘hope of the |Student Council that it, shall never lhave need to be called upon. If ithis is possible, then we have ob- ‘tained one of the goals of a good school and a fine Student Council. SUE KOPRINCE spirit. Denny Garrels and his pose is to provide information to . | | | The Girls Athletic Association of| pep band and varsity andy re- | | | the college-bound seniors and jun-',.. ; jiors. It is limited to upperclass- | West Bloomfield High School, bm imen because most students have|4er the watchful eye of its spon- ; : sor Evelyn Vershire, has begun realized their college ambitions sd a new year of activities. then. * * serve cheérieaders led the stu. | | dent body in cheers and songs. George. Beeman, the 1959 cross | * . rm try team captain, presented | Karen Farley wais elected pres-/E. V. Ayres, principal, with the) ident and Salle Efwin, vice presi-jJnter-Lakes” Conference Cham-| dent. Both girls are seniors. Thé ip Trophy to be placed .in two junior officers are Nancy Bar-the “sports award . . ringer, secretary; and Jo Craw- Chfistian and John VanSickien, ford, treasurer, |football team co-captains, spoke to) . ithe students urging them to conie LEARNING SOCCER 'to the game. ace The girls dre now éngaged in| * * * The cle ip ‘iguneiges 0 visaor| Lindquist, assistant principal. Members will gather at din- mer meetings to hear college representatives and’ find out more about obtaining their high- er education. Field trips to cot- | erat Another topic of discussion. is the sineuaa pl iii oN i jlearning the rules of soccer. The language labofatory for’ French, | j . teams will participate in inter-|Latin and Spanish students. The! The results of the National Merit | school competition lab has nine booths with earphones! Scholarship Qualifying Test will x jand microphones, Students listen! to their own pronunciation and_a]- ; *® 'be discussed with the students con- | Extra activities and thoney-mak- | . so to recordings done by profes- | sionals. | { end of questioning at Pontiac ‘cerned and their parents 7:30 pn. jing projects are planned for the Tuesday at Northern. |coming year. | vourgausm class and the Polaris School this we®k. Kearns deftY lectured to a TURNABOUT — Bruno Kearns, sports editor of The Pontiac Press, found himsetf at the other Northern High tiac Press spor Pauley, “Polaris staff on the art editor in chef i 5 Ss Pontiac Frees Phote of makeup. Here Kearns demonstrates on a Pore ts page. Observing are Benme sports editor, and Jean Isbell, i ‘ \— EE ——-“— oo ~_ ~-- ¥ + nf £e * “Ue ‘ ; Sa0Vd HINO Se EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER. 90, 1059 . j of the steelworkers to the steel) Jobless Toll Still Above 3 Million 5, Ponders Cutting Dodge Truck Down [plants." SYSTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE Toe comers have ‘wied 20 77 Mitchell's Promise Fails; Assist Today, Idling 2,200 sexes rece" | nay sear) mney yar wer user weer any | ance ’ 7 | rs In ‘ ¥ \ B > = } out of state plants. 300 }- ‘ ‘a8 a ee an : t | 3 | |He'll Dine on Fedora WASHINGTON (APA. stay said its Dodge truck plant in De- . . , an 280 + ‘ ; ~ bas ' A A wa ; e tion j troit will be closed after today's | Cts Big Tax Writ Y . + 7 : = EBBLE or Be pr —— 1 oficial ae the fall meet- "cut miliary id. first shift because of the steel]! WASHINGTON — The govern 260+- : _ nearer Labor Agios Pete w mechiene diana tek Coun (ere pe tinge ga strike, «The ‘shutdown will idle ment biy-ag A a 4 ' é od _ _ she oen gyre aren _ hict a tae try’s deficit na- 2,200 employes Aviation Corp. of Ann Ar | 2404- > ~ bel rng LS October , , , i, Gomes T company said assembly id writeoff certificate for 60) H RISE IN DEATH RISK DUE C4 — : og yr ert ca be resumed “uh iper sent of $2,414,000 for missile | Zon ; 1O OVERWEIGHT PLUS le? "| oT will dine on fedora figures to be issued about Nov. 10 the government announced til some weeks a after the return'research and development. _| js 220+- A HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE J lage ‘etit eee at lsatl ender én of 7 t within hy a large part of the — la H = ht, but failed to go belo three|That would be roughly a million |must i hai. ; RISE IN DEATH sri because of Tom aad less than fo> October a year : pel at FR A T - + ‘ RISK DUG TO —} |by the steel strike. and 1% million under the total ide deficit, but it re- pe H HIGH BLOOD + | - - a last February when the secretary ~ jong-standi ing policy of Sad Bi PRESSURE ~1 | che advance word on unem-(made his not-so-rash prediction. ‘oans available with 5 wot : wi here from ec: 2.3 attached, “0 : ployment was brought that 5 + . —{ |Washington, D.C., by government} The goal would have achieved there was a r (Average! s easily if the steel strike hadn't backstage fight over the 3 40+ ' loan Policy. But Secretary of i jeath 5 idled some 325,000 workers in allied the i= =~ . . industri The strikers One| ee eee B. Snderne y RCA VICTOR gives you all 20+ eavals J a =] G ham Drive selves are not counted as unem- considered to have’ gotten his. + : Ais iN DEATH a [d | ployed in the certsus reckoning. |9Y,. these Extra-Value, Extro be wo+- ooens RISK DUE TO The other half of Mitchell's fore- ia {OVERWEIGHT =a . . cast — that employment would , Best Financially | s== «== co 80> 7 | x ed to come eon, number of - 40 Ibs. 80 Ibs, pe-hetters rete wien gies mids Orpen a +20ibs, +40 lbs +60 But Budget Is Slashed;|! met, Se said. YOuR SIZE YOuR DEATH RISK BY CAUSE ‘ H the advisory council here, includ- L | on Provided Too Little we Oe bende of vg (0) Find your Weight ’ equals 100s country’s biggest corporations, - C 5 E F | Class here. Read INDIANAPOLIS «— Evangel-|scheduled a closed-door appraisal your Risk here ist Billy Graham said Thursday|of the domestic economy with Sec- M Height Weight al | C —E fF the people’ attending his crusade retary of Commerce Frederick H , here have contributed an average|Mueller and other officials. a ~ - of 40 cents a person — more gen- of 53 w 56" 15-4 175-115 -214_215-B4 Cancer 98 lo” 124 (75) erous than in any of his previ dl penne those inter- 5'T* wo 5' 1g" —175-194_195-214_215-2M_25-24 |; Diabetes ae se weet dee steel 7 S835 | SW ene ng 138 azn his 27-day crusade had been cut me. veful during summer months. 3 SU"w6' 2 _JG-ZU_25-7h_ZS-B4 from $375,000 to $254,000, He said Heart & Circulatory $43,000 remains to be raised be- 156 Sq. In. In parenthesis are Digestive diseases 111 132 175 (212 Graham said the cru- PRICED AP Rewsteatores recs small number of cases $ = = ee yond my expectations, he af eon $ 95 blamed —— cutback on tite Sots ° sponsors” failure to raise ‘ Statistical Tables Suggest: eee Bean one. , see - e e the crusade, About $60,000 was | ‘ owe assis raised in advance here | oem 170005 Cut Your Weight to Live Longer | 3 sare ws a t iInancia trouble n Sound headquarters in Charlotte, N. hs “moderate overweight’’ (the exact stemmed from a solicitation etter, poundage varies with height). With |he wrote in Augsst, whien $186,000 this—degree of excess bulk, the|in bills had piled up. By The Associated Press If you wish to live to be an older statistic, lose weight. While the study contains im- plied medical advice,’ the actu- aries refrain from giving it out- 2 YRS. TO PAY — 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH - ann hhh nh hh This is the implication of statio-| right. “We're not doctors,” says {line rises in ratio to increasing of | ‘ties compiled by the Society of Edward A. Lew, ae bloor pressure. ; ’ Vn! COMBINATION ‘ | Actuaries — the mathematicians of| the study committee. “We're Putting three lines C UJ 5 §| 6 5” SAW Cuts wood, masonite. metal in € | | the life insurance business. actuaries, We try te calculate gether, it = be seen roel as 10 S owe ams 2 a coe gerelia. wa ‘ ne 4 an Sgt eur. hel ale eaty showy tat bmarance | gu fe static verses — m= ‘lonored by Red Press'$ faecti irises | athe eee S s in years, was!) 60 ov ve in- . < rel OPEN FRI. & MON. NIGHTS | ached from the records of about; Companies have been wise bn creased their mortality risk mote | eed Gee : a cuts ™ ai a ee $24.95 > DOWNTO five milion persons examined by! setting = Fates for the | than 40 per cent. The average | MOSCOW \#—It may be because $ PARK-SHOP “Your Appliance Specialix” —[ asurance ‘phyicans durin. the, everweah man with wormal weight bat a (the moon-voyage accomplishments 39.95 $17.9 20 years prior to 1954. These rec-| The medical profession has in| systolic bleod pressure of 168 (of Lunik III and Soviet parliament e e : ords contained age, height, weight, | dicated it is less than happy about! to 177 has booster his mortality |activities take up most of the Regular $54.50 PLETE KIT 121 WN. Saginaw FE 5-6189 blood pressure and notes on physi-' the report. A New York doctor, risk to about 15@ per cent ef space, but Cuban Prime Minister, n _ cal impairments. who insisted on anonymity, called; combined with this same range Fidel Castro's latest attacks THOR SPEEDWAY it an “insurance rate gimmick.” , jagainst the United States aren't Another said, ‘This is a situation to al. |getfing any play im the Soviet ; oN e-« ii J urs \ ey (ee 3 0 TO GRANTS ,. SAVE TIME... STEPS... MONEY of making a story out of statisti- cal averages, none of which ap ply to the individual man or wom- jan... Certainly the statistics | Pressure | have validity, but they have little| existing impairments would appear or no application to the individ-| from the statistics to increase ual.” their deadliness significantly. So, as you consftler these statis-| The actuaries also found a sta- menst 300 per esatle brerage |press. Another possible explanation is the continued existence uf surface warmth toward America as a re- sult of Premier Nikita Khrush- chev’s recent U.S. trip. Ya" DRILL The Century plant, a relative | ties, it is certainly your privilege tistical relationship between a per- to remember that you’ might be) son's build and the risk of death | the exception to the rule. of the desert yutca, takes from 25) to 100 years to bloom. As soon! CENERAL Warehouse to 2255 D e(rce wt Qautiac. Wich |from several other diseases (see|as blosioms appear, it dies. | Here are some of the study’s bottom section of chart.) LADIES’ » [raq, UAR Won't The average American is to WHITE the best rereingea ponds over the best volorical' Join With Israel merase weight by that max Sponsoring Gift vw -PULLDOWN FIXTURE BEDROOM FIXTURES = reCYEwwov Tvryy | pounds live longer. 1 Men today tend to be ‘ive| UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) (2 pounds heavier than the men of 30|—Two Arab countries have re- $] 23 $2.50 Value years ago; women a few pounds fused to png el the rates lighter than their counterparts in accepting the Ford Foundation’s | RIPPLE SOLE the ’20s. |gift of six million dollars for a/4 LAMP & POST | Men start putting on weight in new U.N. library. P | their 20s and level off in their 40s.) The reason: Israel is also spon- Women stay slim into the 30s. then|soring the resolution. \4 begin to bulge after 35, | Iraq and the United Arab Re-|9 public originally sponsored the ae lacey ae oe along with 44 acher higher than if he is modera‘-ly |countries. Then Israel signed up, underweight. Formerly, being ant the two Arab states quietly | underweight carried the danger withdrew their names. | of contracting tuberculosis, in- fluenza or pneumonia, but these ilinesses have been pretty well whipped. The overweight dis- eases — diabetes, coronary ar- tery blocks, gall bladder stones, strokes and the like — are as dangerous as ever, however. SHOES *2.89 Cood Range of Sizes Never Needs White Polish Very Soft and Comfortable A at Ble CMMes/. OT UGS Se ruvvvr L PRAPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP PP PPPPEP PP PRPAPPAAAS The Irish potato is not a native | of Ireland. Potatoes originated in ; South America. i GUARANTEED WARM. DRY THOUSANDS OF be LL rr Cr we Nr 9 . \ | EVEN AT 30° BELOW eee mA ane ae paseo your | | setae" CAR eWEATHERSTRIP 69c LIGHT HEAVY ° . | ace Said ge paeae aoaee LOADS LOADS 4-OZ. DACRON , average incur a penalty of about | For Bad Weather re | 49c - ‘ 10 per cent higher mortality; WINDSHIELD WIPER SOLVENT . s2°° . ‘ s2” INSULATED UNDERWEAR prerage af sibect fo per ca Cu 3[earara 44 , |excess mortality, and so on (see) 2 OZ. DRY GAS. ...-5..055s Reg SPECIAL na | = BOX OF 25—REMINGTON | BLOOD PRESS e Den't Lose Anti-Freese « ° | DUPONT “’STOP-LEAK” . c $10.98 9 8 age blood pressure for men begins $ Layaway for : REAL ° lat 117 mm. systolic, 71 mm. dia- Christmas ES Long Weed a 79¢ | stolic — usually given as 117/71— | SCRAPE 'N ON SQUEEGEE lb A | repr ra rv It rises to 132/80 LEAF RAKES PERMANENT FILTERS VALUES in GUNS As with weight, the lowest mor- For Furnece No weight—just warmth. Pennleigh’s was ww SS rapaetigde neigh’s washable, drip- low blood pressure, Even a small $329 REMINGTON AUTOLOADING SHOTGUN ry insulated underwear. Quilted Nylon filled with | rise in blood pressue significantly $ MODEL 58 Deluxe. 50 stay-dry 4-Oz. Banded Dacron. Highly absorbent 50 % increases the risk of early death 13645 Choice of 12 or 16 Gauge . 92 catton, 50% Nylon lining. Strong nylon-cotton knit (see chart). me St ee REMINGTON VENT SHOTGUN erotch, Full cut, action free. Sm., Med., Lge., Ex. L. BOTH they're lean “aesin $ WincuasTen 47 are: $ e Overweight and high blood pres- 11055 "sm" eeeeeee 1190 sure have lethal power by them- woop can ~~ (again see —— 94 30/30 Caliber... 5 -F5Q9S ; To permit plotting this third and HAMMER ee on | ‘Sy OPEN 10.A. M. to 9 P. M. DAILY faorcsrglig hie g Eg the oy — ply ioe ee $10975 y Down wil th Grants (a lelaeie if at whet Iemwnce ame a $ 49 WwW. r. GRANT co. PANTS "wool $295 T Complete New U.S. Post Office Now Open. Ride the Bus to Grants Miracle Mile |] 3 yin ; Miracle Mile Shopping Center S. Telegraph at Squore Lake Rd. 7 ae aii penal dieliesaidl dl mS t : ° CLOSE-OUT SALE of ° : : Fine Imported China | Service for 12 Was $124.95 | Now #495 | eHig peer gina tet sigma fl 53-Pe. Set Was $68.10 NOW %$84% WE HAVE ON HAND 32 IMPORTED CHINA meeting with Mrs. Hope PATTERN SETS FOR CLOSE - OUT AT 4 PRICE DIXIE POTTERY | OR 3-1894 5281 Dixie Highway of Waterford Laura Belz, left, president of the Pontiac League of Women V oters, talks over plans for the Altrusa Club dinner THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1959 : Pontiac Press Phete ber of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. The dinner meeting will be held at the Birmingham Community Lewis, mem- House at 6:30 p.m. Nov. 10. Hits Jackpot on First Try Altrusa Club to Hear Growth Talk The Altrusa Club of Greater Birmingham, which _ includes Pontiac and Royal Oak, will hold. a dinner meeting at 6:30 Nov. 10 at Birmingham Com- munity House Dr. Walter Blucher, execu- tive director of the Southeast- ern Michigan Community Re- | growth of Metropolitan De- | search Organization, will be the | tlt. | Dr. Blucher will talk about featured speaker. * * * | Oakland County's | The organization is a six- tion in this project. | county effort to handle prob He is a consultant on the Na- | lems tional Committee on Urban participa- Sundown Si collection of after dark fashions artfully interpreted for your evening moods. Exquisite one-of-a-kind BRIDAL SALON A bewitching holiday Cocktail Dresses. FOUNDATIONS ACCESSORIES lhouettes 55 W. HURON Transportation and the only American honorary correspond- A d ing member of the Town Plan- war Reducing Trophies ning Institute of Great Britain. * * * Since this is a program the League of Women Voters is | studying on a statewide level The Fashionette Club met Tues-' day evening at Adah Shelly library. Mrs. John Reichert took home the trophy for losing the most weight for the week and Mrs. David. this year, members of the group are especially inyited. Cowan won the monthly weight. losing prize Reservations may be made by calling Edythe Peck of the Birmingham branch of the Detroit Bank and Trust Co. or Kathryn Vedder of Sloan, Whit- field, Jenkins, Price and Esh- man * * Mrs. Ralph Walton introduced a home reducing plan Last week's program was a Halloween pa.ty. Mrs. Fred Root won the prize for the most original costume and Mrs. Jack Brauher won the prize for the funniest costume. * * * Mrs. John Newbigging was in| charge of games and refreshments. | The club banquet will be held Tuesday evening on the sixth an- niversary of the club which is sponsored by the Department of Parks and Recreation. | ... brighten your day with. carefree beautiful... . Stainless UMterne, Heavy weight stainless steel ‘with lustrous finish that never needs special care! Hollow Handle knives have forged serrated blades. 32 pe. Service for 8 only $ 39° International| Exclusively o 8 teaspoons 8 salad forks or F . 8 dinner forks 8 soup speons rings. 8 dinner knives Made to the cencting Handards of American Cratttman ship by THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY Sui he a“ See how EVENING STAR'S dashing design seems to “float” the diamond actually providing more diamond protection than = most ordinary mountings. This distinctive original is created especially for those who demand the ~ Trade InO Lay-Away Now for Christmas A small deposit will put your choice in Lay-Away ... or use our budget pay- | mos Rah down, 10% per month. ‘| 16 W. Huron In Pontiac At Connolly's a new achievement aqer-favi-ze i yc Artcerved’s award-winning artistry now cap- tures your imagination with the beld, fresh excite ment of an utterly new dimension in diamond = We Will Allow Exactly It for Today JEWELERS a itis ok.. tied CHRISTIANA STURGIS Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sturgis of Fourth avenue announce the engagement of their daughter Christiana Nancy to Marine Pfc. John Bilbey, son of Mr and Mrs. Stephen Bilbey of Colgate avenue. No date has been set in diamond ring design | | ' . said, { The when story about hospital life. The short st jary agent in New York. In three jmonths she heard the word that Hospital Attendant Becomes Author re) riches commenced Telfer began a short ory grew to novel length. Mrs. Telfer, unknown author, sent her pounds of pages to a liter- flutters a writer’s heart and pads the bank book: Sold. The book, ‘‘The Caretakers,’’ is fiction, Mrs. Telfer said in an in- terview. “It is about the lack of heart in mental hospitals.” Mrs. Telfer, fortyish, still can’t believe that Simon and Schuster when she tells about movie com- panies dickering over the book. That means more money. Mrs. Telfer is a music teacher by profession. “There's not much opportunity for music teachers in| Pueblo,”” she said. | That's why she went to work in| a mental hospital. And when that job didn’t go smoothly any’ more, Virginia Bedrosian, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Osgian Bedrosian of Detroit married Harry Topalian, son of “4 Mr. and Mrs. ” Charles a4 Topalian of Navajo road t \ recently. MRS. HARRY TOPALIAN ay ea ee Wedding Rites Are Held HERO AN ATTENDANT | The heroine of the book is Millie, an attendant. But Mrs. Telfer, iat St. Sa rkis Church a pro, points out that “‘any likeness |between me and fictional Millie is’ purely coincidental.” ' “Mental hospitals,” Mrs. Telfer, ‘‘never have enough help. They don't pay enough and the help is transient. re . i . | “My book doesn’t end on a Club after the ceremony. |happy note. How could it? It | jlife jsoie gown. ry Topalian of Pontiac at | hospitals, she said, seem to for. maids were Rose | get that they are taking care Ruth Vartanian, In a recent wedding, Virginia and Mary Topalian Bedrosian of Detroit married Har-|gowns similar to the bride's. St * * * Sarkis Apostolic Church. A recep- tion was, held at the Piementese The bride wore a white peau de Matron of honor was: Too many within state mental Mrs. Margaret Stephanian. Brides- Aprahamian, Doris Sarafian All wore John Stephanian was best man and ushers were Nick Stephanian, Harry Yangouyian, Paul Begian and Oscar Topalian Michael Stephanian was ring- bearer and Jane Demirgian and Vicky Badorian were flower girls. A party was given by the bride- groom's sister and brother-in-law, Cora Garbutt Weds Clifford Clare Guyett Cora Garbutt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Gar- butt of Cherrylawn street mar- - ried Clifford Clare Guyett, son of Mrs. Mildred Guyett of South Astor street, Oct. 24 at Columbia Avenue Baptist Church The Rev. M. F. Boyd offi- ciated at the candlelight cere- mony before an altar decorat- ed with vases of mixed white flowers = The bride wore a gown of Chantilly lace and nylon tulle with a fitted bodice, a scal- loped waistline and a bateau neckline. The floor length gown had a front and back panel of lace and ended in a chapel sweep * * * Her headpiece was a crown of pearls securing a fingertip veil of pure silk illusion and she wore a pearl necklace and earrings, gifts from the bride- groom Her bridal boucuet was @ cas- cade arrangement of white car- nations with a corsage of white roses in the center. ~ MRS. CLIFFORD GUYETT Annette Tippett. maid of hon- or, wore a. pastel pink chiffon dress with white pearl acces- sories and carried a cascade Star in space, while = grereeneenereneoe ED UJ§ Joven pence tg craftsmanship. Naturally, your = ; i 3 j| EVENI AR is by the Artcarved | @ Full 88-note keyboard 3 vale : : Nationwide Permanent V Plan'— proof of oan Sellored e Sp ty rinieide ond 3 3 PIECE z thet's unequalled anywhere! then any ring stapled hammers : FREE : ee you've © All spruce sounding board 3 HOSTESS SET : peaiaemaanne 27 : : : Bride's MAG nnn 10 } with purchase Sugar Spoon, reg. $7.00 value’ BALANCE ” IN 36 MONTHS Your Diamond FE 2-0294 ‘ Special! . Henry F. Miller Console _ WALNUT AND MAHOGANY SLIGHTLY HIGHER Open Mon. and Fri. Evenings ’til 9 P.M. CALBI MUSIC CO. Pontiac's Locally Owned Home of Conn Instrumenis and Baldwin Pianos and Organs } 119 North Saginaw Street PARK FREE REAR OF STORE | bouquet of pink carnations. Bridesmaid Norma Reid wore a blue chiffon dress with pearl accessories and carried blue carnations. Cindy Lou Lintemuth, the flower girl, wore a pastel pink chiffon dress and carried a pink lace ribbon basket with rose petals. Robert Boneman was best | man. Ushers were Kenneth Guyett of Rochester, Robert | Guyett of Belleville and Ron- ald Guyett of Waterford, | brothers of the bridegroom. | Bobby Guyett was ringbearer. j * * * A reception was held at the | UAW-CIO Hall following the ceremony. The bride’s mother wore a | pink taffeta dress overlaid with | white lace, and pink acces- sories. Her flowers were white rosebuds. The bridegroom's mother wore white lace over a blue taffeta gown with white ac- cessories and a red rosebud |Mr. and Mrs. John Stephanian, a ,few days before the wedding * * * Highlight of the evening was a skit, “This Is Your Life,”” in which the bridegroom's friends and rela- jtives participated After a wedding trip to Florida, the newlyweds are living on Nava- jo drive Harts of Utica ‘Are Honored With Reception The Merry Mixers Room at the jCAL Building was the scene Sun- da evening of a reception honor- ling the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. George Hart of Utica. Mrs lis the former Mrs. Isabel Cum- mings of Waterford Mrs. Harold Wilson presided at the punch bow! * * * Guests were from Utica Com- merce, Linden. Smith's Creek and Mt Pleasant Mrs.) Murlin Vaughn. Mrs Junior Baum and Mrs. Lee Kaines were hostesses, all of Waterford ‘Huron Gardens Club Hears Budget Talk The Huron Gardens Extension Club met Tuesday at the home of \Mrs. Romeo Guibord on East iBeverly avenue. Following a cooperative dinner, la lesson on ‘‘Planning the Family Dollar’’ was conducted by Mrs. {Norman Brown and Mrs. Howard Revnolds Mrs. Harry Gimme! will be hos- tess for the Nov. 17 meeting when the Christmas lesson will be given. Meods Are Project of Camera Club The Bloomfield Hills Camera Club will meet at 8 p. m. Thurs- day at Cranbrook Institute of Sci- ence. * * * Monochrome print and _ color slide competition will be featured in assignment and general cate- gories. The assignment category will cover various moods: joy, sorrow, love, hate and others. Ninety-six per cent of all bank deposits in the U. S. are protected by the Federal Deposit Insurance |Corp. © Pure solid copper wound bass strings | © 10-year guarantee ® Bench included Reg. $750.00 535" Phone FE 5-8222 Hart” . ‘ 4 * ~~ See - v* 5, as eco National Mythical Title at Stake Mississippi, without costume or morrow against Wiliam & Mary.|Curiey Flowers. This group is ai mask, visits Louisiana State's In other action tonight, ‘Boston/one-point underrog. home on Haljoween Night with its College is at Detroit, Texas Tech | The Army-Air Force game pits trick or treat bag full of gim- at Tulane and College of Pacific: ewe unranked teams but still has micks that may decide the myth- at Hawaii. sold out Yankee Stadium for six |Ten ical national collegiate footal! * * * | weeks. A crowd ef around 72,000 | while title. But none can touch the LSU- will watch the expected passing | plays + * * Mississippi game. Ole Miss has battle between Jee Caldwell of Tomorrow night's game at Baton been on the outside looking in for Army (3-2) and Richie Maye of Rouge, La. is the biggest game of the past two years, r losing) the Air Force (¢1), The game the year and tops a weekend card :140) last year in a game that had will he televised regionally over that begins tonight with a hand- additional billing like tomorrow) NBO-TV beginning at 1:38 p.m. ful of games. [t continues Satur- night's-for the Southeastern Con-| EST. Ole Miss-LSU Clash in Top Game By The Associated Press The Citadel gets its chance to-|and Bobby Franklin, and fullback; The other members of the topjranked ‘seventh, plays rival West!” day afternoon with the beginning ference title and the ensuing host ee of a new service rivalry when ‘he spot in the Sugar Bowl. Air Force Academy travels t New York to meet Army in the . town's biggest college game in 10 years. Tonight, Kentucky meets Mi- ami, Fia. (3-2) in the Orange Bowl, in an intersectional game. The Wildcats (1-5) have left the whipped the interest to a frenzy. Both teams are so even that this delight. : age the Los Angeles Ole Miss has the statistical edge arain next year. with its No. 3 ranking nationally Dodgers | second defensively, but will dare jumbus demonstrated the earth is Another top game pits Virginia have quarterback Warren Rabb eclipse Military, co-leader with The Cita- and All America halfback Billy del in the Southern Conference Cannon. with a (30) mark. against George Mississippi's offense is Washington in a conference game. around quarterbacks Jake Gibbs, foremost citizen of a pay increase Alston. who took the Nour breath never tells! = : While this may not be the most|The club didn’t mention any fig- in offense and defense. LSU is astounding development since Co-|ure. since expired when the Dodgers) sign jto replace Chuck Dressen."’ kee northern state rival (1-5), going after its sixth win without a loss. oe me Xe weet Dodgers Rehire Alston’ | aren | The other major unbeaten, un-| LOS ANGELES (AP) — Walter from seventh place in the Nation- tied team, Yale, plays Ivy League| becomes a dream-game maker's Alston, the quiet man who turned aj League to first place in the foe Dartmouth, which won its first| out to be quite a man, will marr world in one year, probably will jin five last week. The Eli are the the Rebels to stop its three first shaped like a baseball, there was'@ one-year contract,” said Gener. |"¢xt week. units of the White. Go and Chi- a time this year when Alston's al Manager Buzzie Bevasi, “‘and| There are no major tests in- nese Bandits. The Bengals 4lso career was rumored heading into) be But such speculation had long! jor league» (winter) meetings to|/meets Rice in an_ intersectional’ . = our managers, but we have tilt; Big Eight kingpin Oklahoma, built‘ announced yesterday that the/a coaching situation this year and goes after its 73th conference’ Darrtown,/0f course, we would want Alston game without a loss against Ne- Ohio, will be back in 1960 with)to sit in on the selection of a man, braska, and North Texas, unbeaten jin five games, and (24) in the Mis- Dodgers! Dressen has left the World Se-;souri Valley Conference, plays: winners to manage Milwau-|Wichita. Skyline leader Wyoming : : comes to North Carolina State. | REX ANTI-FREEZE WITH MR-8 Protects better chemically... prevents rust clogging NOW! $4939 COSTS LESS IN THE LONG RUN IF YOU PAY YOUR DEALER TO INSTALL IT PROPERLY! Wynn Awarded Young Trophy as Top Hurler BOSTON w—Burly Eatly Wynn, the Chicago White Sox’ batter- ' hating right hander, is the 1959) winner of the Cy Young memorial | award as the season’s outstanding | pitcher in the Major Leagues. \ “I'm tickled pink,” Wynn) chortled at his home in Nokomis, | Fla.. when informed of his selec- tion by the Baseball Writers Assn. of America. ' Wynn led the majors with 22 | victories last season, while losing 10. and was given credit as being ,a@ major factor in Chicago's drive |to the American League pennant. Wynn, who leads all active pitchers with 271 victories, started 87 games last season at the age lof 39. He was around at the end of 14 of them. and turned in an / ARROW LIQUEURS CORP, DETROIT 7, MICH. 90 AND 100 PROOF, DISTILLED FROM GRAIN earned rin average of 3.13. | a ® SILVER DOLLAR DAYS at JACK COLE, Inc. 1000 W. MAPLE — WALLED LAKE If you find your name on a card in our showroom you collect a silver dolier. 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New jobs in port areas and ogee ees reat area of copper and industries.“ BOARDING HOUSE 6 Reduction @f truck ‘hd rail =u art , pe SS See ag SPUTT-TT/> HANE: YOU SLUGGARDS Spee ee a # NO REGARD FORPUREGENILS 2 - =: = He matic but it will’. touch every » WE BE SURE He's FOR industry, wage earner . and con-| ‘ y endl Fig Rr aS ANYTHING ——— | = A SIDE DOOR FoR DR , ‘ F IV + @ 4 ZA“ DOWNSTAI oe S' PASSENGERS* ae oo es x gi REMEMBER. R THEY LAUGHED | | Se AT EDISON, T00 = 3 Hazard reports huge petroleum | reserves in western Canada now) offer “tremendous potentialities for development of. a new petro- chemical indgstpy “in Michigan.” As for pulpweed, Hazard be | lieves the waterway Will benefit | consumers, please censervation- ists but put preddcers in stiff | competition with ,foreign sup | pliers. i/ a ase ( Vy © 1959 by NEA Serve OUT OUR WAY SAUSAGES, DETECTIVE THRILLERS AND CIGARS¥ YE GODS, TH MAN'S GOT HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE / WHAT ARE THEY 2 POOR NO, HE'S A BIG SHOP BOSS, AND TH’ MEN CAN'T GIVE HIM WHAT HE LIKES, WHEN HE CAN HAVE IT, FOR FEAR OF BEING ACCUSED OF TOADYING State Advances Bill ontJobless Funds LANSING —Thp- House Thurs: | | YW day steered td themgevernor a bill bringing Michigan’ into conform-| ance with federal legislation con-, trofting distribution of unemploy-' ment compensation funds to the’ states. : fe,7 Hey, cuz! Ov’ uxt | | [ANT YOU GONNA SURE BLT RELATIONS TRYING TO -- SO THEY HAVE TO GIVE HIM KING WUR SEEMS HE \ TELL GUZ HE: ~ Fe HAS JUST / FIGGERED HE 6O CLOBBER : THERE S NO KILL HIM? WHAT HE LIKES WHEN HE — OOKS LIKE AN HIG: / MUSTA GOT | MIGHT WANT 10 1 VACATED * WAS ABOUT HIM FOR WHAT | HURRY OOP CAN'T HAVE [T/ / THE DINOSAURS \ BOYS | TIRED BEN’ | DO SOMETHING [ HE DONE FIRST THINGS iT } KING OF t + * It requires employers having an’ ‘unfavorable’ balance in the fund because of a high layoff record: to wait three years. before pay-| ing reduced rates levied on em-} ployers with steady employment records. | Without conforming legislation, | Rep. Joseph J. Kowalski (D. | Detroit), said Michigan employ- | ers could have lost between 36 | and 50 million dollars in federal | - jobless pay allocations. The bill also faises the pay of) the director of the Michigan! Employment Security Commission! from $16,750 to $18,000. } * * * } Salaries of MESC Appeal Board! By Leslie Turner CAN'T EXPLAIN THAT. [ | LET'S fACE IT, ONLY KNOW I TOLO THE | HONES...IT BORE TRUTH) AS TRECALLIT.. / OUT WHAT YOU AND THE MACHINE / THINK |S THE BORE ME OUT! TRUTH. WERE UP AGAINST SOME- THNG UNCANNY! TM CONVINCED SHE DOESN'T KNOW HOW THE REDS GOT INTO ROHATCHS SAFE! LIE DETECTORS \_ AND THAT HER ALIBI WILL STAND LP AND WHAT ABOUT IT ALSO PROVED BUT. as ue Rena pine ABOUT \ LYING EITHER! HIS EEING E FRIENDS | AMA, WAS : apices VICAR WHEN THE SUBJECTS REACTIONS WERE TRWALAMS I9- members will go up from $40 to! “Tat Rag. US Pat OF THE BULL 0’ b Aad ba Loonie > $45 a day and that of the board: chairman from $42.50 t0 $47.50. | ‘nana a —_ NANCY Y , A REMY Avs WHAT A I'LL HAVE A THRILLER PICNIC TYPE LUNCH WHILE IL WATCH DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney Peo am ANTI-SOCIAL=- WHAT DOES THAT MEAN? IT MEANS I WHA) THE TAR OUT OF SPIKE NELSON! BUEY,. YOU'RE HOME FROM SCHOOL AN HOUR LATE! si -FRNE .t -38- BUSHM ILL EP By Dick Cavalli GETTING YOU A CAB reece ) MORTY MEEKLE By -Franklin Folger l BRUTUS, I THINK I've IF WHAT LICENSE AND HAVING A METER om FIGURED OUT A WAY FOR DOESN'T INSTALLED IN THE CAR. You'll: Find >) US TO BALANCE OUR COST US | a PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac | Press Want Ad Section | Take sdvaritage of this easy way to solve your buying and TM Rem Uo Pat. OF. @ 1959 we MEA Go: vine, mo to hee selling problems. K : To Place Your Wrigle s Spearmint Gum WANT AD By Charles Kuhn SHUCKS, I'VE GATHERED WALNUTS BEFORE / / GRANDMA OK., BILLY, I'LL. GO DIAL FE 2-8181 HECK, IT WON'T RAIN... YOU'LL NOT NEED AN UMBRELLA, GRANDMA ~~ MY BIG UMBRELLA, / x BUT WAIT TILL I 1) ty - ' = "Saw ER a <.)- ee | ‘Now would be a good time to see the building superintendent and ’ demand more heat.” 7 ad ~~ ewe ~ tf HAO VW THE PONTIAC PRESS, -_ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1959 Hourly Rate Big Istye — . : in Strike; Range Runs) - Says lke Golfed | MARKETS |Mofors Higher Fron 2.13 10 sata) aa | . | : : { | You can register your car for : The following are top prices| . | WASHINGTON (UPI) — Steel as | a | a | a |” ee 1960 beginning Monday, but it covering sales of locally - grown workers hourly wage rates.— @| me — won't look as if you're getting ~~ . i 1 4 see T é produce brought to the Farmer's key issue in the 108-day-old steel | much for your money. 1 Market by growers and sold by strike ;. PE aipe gece} The peice ie the sume ss last - : them in wholesale package lots eee _ borers to $4.14 for top ‘ year, when yellow green English Field Marshal Quotations are furnished by the NEW YORK uw — Motors ai specialists. : license plates were distributed. Alanbrooke U.S. Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of 2tive and higher tn an irregular’ Three of every five workers nor- ° é But this year, all you'll get is a > he oye ‘ Wednesday stock market which trended to the nally can increase their pay by. and yellow tab, bear- Mil Leadersh ednesda} Z y i little green , litary Leade ip upside earty today. Trading was 19 tg 15 per cent under incentive ‘ ; ing the nuniber "60." . Y active. plans based on the more-you-work, | The tabs go on sale at 9 a.m. LONDON ® — A new book of Detroit Produce = ne ia . pivotal aS more-you-earn theory : Monday at the Secretary of State's wartime memoirs says Gen ee ee | ‘The structure in the ba- Ww branch office in Pontiac, 9% E. Hu- . vautrs .@ point. More volatile stocks rose wage omen ay Dwight D. Eisenhower played golf apoies Deuicious. bu. "32/0 or 3 points. . sie steel Industry is based on 32 Height 15-16 17-19 20-24 - 25.29 30-39 40-49 50.59 ron St. , instead of guiding allied military appies Jonathon, bu ...--. 2.50 job classifications. Common la- "10" 97 a) 102 107 15 122 125 277 You’lt have 121 days to get one I rations at crucial] stage of Apples. McIntosh. bu . 2.75) American Motors and Stude- in grades 1 4 -— prepa a f . : borers are placed g 9) before the Feb. 29 deadline for World War II in Europe. en Gore ee... 760/ baker - Packard recovered from | 444 > The pay and skill by. 50 0s 10S5——CSOWSCOVS 12TH driving on 1959 license plates * * * Apples cadet ant case's....11.... 2a, (ROI Sutin Of VoMtenday: air | Creases ap you go up the ladder. . 2 We Ns NS SSCS HS 13 without the "60 tab, The bOok is based on the diaries ROR’ wieter Been..." 2"). 248] qhdle Studebaker common rece | A %et maker with a grade of | 4 T1771 The state is putting out the little of Field Marshal Viscount Alan- = Bose. bu sf 7 Tho Stadebeher 18, for example, makes $3.20 an tab in an effort to save money. brooke, who as Sir Alanbrooke was caanaia , t i d il in hour. "jo ter Tt , ial } I chairman of the British chiefs of VEGETABLES . made @ similar show the “8 32/134 136 1a 146 155 a aes it’ on the ” . . Beets. topped. bu. $2.00 while the preferred gained a Government figures show 1a Yea i back to show it’s yours. staff in the war. Besta. J 1 des. — ony point. ; average steelwerker earned $3.11. 10 o. 142 14 LU Is — | The tabs will be attached only TO CO ° : P 5 : — a ; The second instalment of his — ety bu Ls The big three motors also ad- an hour il June, = = be 6’ 0” 152 154 1 'to passenger cars. Trucks and oth- diaries and correspondence is in- Cabbaze Keg | 0: ‘33 vanced, Chrysler rising about a fore the strike began. This figure |er vehicles will have to have new . corporated in. “Triumph in the C#08ee Sprouts bu aps va ‘ ahie ced and Cenmral’ Ao includes overtime pay, incentive 'plates, the same color as the 1959 West.” which gors om sale here Carrots, dor pcb, Tie Pon . eae ugh Pay, holiday pay and other prem- — | plates. eal w : £ ted b : Si Cauiiflower. dow. ...... . 3se lors gained fractionally although iums higher death rate A ; Willis M Brewer Pontiac branch . it rf sree thE ory we was that C ras fac-| . ; : t x - h — — a a4 Fa pe aN meg a tae Bons wee the i es el The Labor Department says the People who live longest are people whose body and age had a 10 per cout to 2% per |manager, reminded drivers that Arthur Bryant from priva Fennel. doz ochs 200 ing @ virtual standstiH in produc ; ; eights and_blood pressures are below normal 25-pound average shot the death rate pe ir t papers of Alanbrooke, now living Oourds | px. 12° tion due to steel shortages ie terme ie ket tha ina! ‘ on the average. Weight tablés, above, are a. cent above the norm. When the excess reached = to — "om orga fran rene : A lescale | : te these terms. are hi ae . : li in the south o teke don bene . sodas Lt te chute aieuate “ aed in most other industries. The $3.11 distillation from a massive, 20-year study repre- 50 pounds, the 7" rate reached adage _— - . Onion Teen doz s - os ‘tgs ; a 1 % . te dee fed uacierd. ie Onions. dry SD. 130 strike situation. Bethlehem was figure compares with $2.68 for the senting life-and-death experience of 26 life insur- 5 per cent above the average brooke rapped Eisenhower “as a man whose strong point was charm rather than military ability. He also cmtucized the wartime leader- ship df Prime Minister Churchill. ' saving his drive made him trouble- some and “he never faces reali- Pumpging bu...... . -..-s nen et | ties Radishes, black. 's bu a ing with the ticker tape falling x * * cedenen ga ages iis briefly behind transactions. The new instalment, quoting from siaughter steers utility cows 16 00-1700: and hetfers weak Mostly 25¢ lower. cows around 50c lower tn week. unchanged in a cleanup sliair, canners off slightly following the report |@uto workers and $2.23 for factory of its record third quarter loss, | workers as a group. and cutters 1350-1600. Compared last week Youngstown Sheet dropped more|LAYOFFS CUT PAY Parsle 4 Jey Root. doz. bu. Parsley curly doz bchs Parsoips Cello Pak. dos. Parsnips ‘, bu Peppers Cayenne ps Potatoes, $@ Ib. beg.. Rutadeagas, bu Squash. Acorn. bu 1. 1.4 ar} than a point while U.S. Steel was The United Steetworkers argue. 328 about unchanged and Republic | owever. that this comparison is - 18¢ gained a fraction |misleading. The Union contends Trading was heavy at the open- iat lengthy layoffs cut the yearly income of its members so that ‘one-third receive less than $4,070 00 i : ea 200; Overnight ‘news that Martin Co pte 150 ance companies with almost five million policy holders. Actuaries — insurance determined, for example, that men who weighed 20 pounds more than the average statisticians — . for their height Ruling on Firemen |. | Reds Up Budget by Billion Rubles Laos King Dies, Cub Pack 200 Displays Work, Due in About a Week | : en Sa ON Se, oe . 1.0 has acquired more than 10 per cent gq ; 7 . ‘cuts and suspensions ad- diary notations of November 1944, Pheer st ie or Genel Proidos frond Mar Steelworkers have averaged 40 for Year 1960 Puts On Skit \vemaset ‘wil a cullen empected said there was “a very unsatis- Squash, Delictous, bu. .............. 13¢ : i ia a Block wl 5,000 | hours a week for an entire year j on OW in about a week. oe ee Mae ane Turaibe dom bea, oe sharea, up 1% at 45%, while Gen-|OMY once since 1946. the Union’ \ocnow (AP)—The Soviet gov- Cub Scout Pack 200 met Wednes- * * * rit nih e ok : pee ; i | | nie Rg naa “ SALAD GREENS eral Precision opened on | eee ernment today increased its rec-| Death Comes Durin day night at the Alcott School.| The trial started yesterday A Celery Cabbage. doz $228| shares, off 2% to 47. | Management spokesmen coum- ord-breaking budget of expendi-| ING | Handicraft displays were presented;both sides were presented. ,The “Eisenhower, though supposed [rome ba 11s - The ticker tape ran late for the) ter by citing payroll cost fig- tures for 1960 by slightly more, [yl] in- Survival Fight |>y dens 10 and 8. and a skit put firemen are seeking a writ of man- to be doing so, was on the golf Lettuce. lest. bu 225 second time as buying interest be- | ures averaging $6,456 per work- than a billion rubles. on by den 2. ~ |damus to compel the township to links at Rheims — entirely de- |fomsine. be 2.00 came more p: | er im 1958. includes prem. | <_- | With Red Rebels ese restore them to their a : ais tase Ike amet? aha: OuEENs a ee ; Premier Alexei Kosygin| | Bruce Couture, Kirk. Calvin, status and to reimburse them for in rening the war,” Alce- | York Stocks insurance. ond ‘a Deputy Pre xej ygin, age Lea ary , ce Ro 1 ou... nse, New Yor oc as pensions for ‘1d the Soviet parliament, the Su-- LUANG PRABANG, Laos (AP) David Parker, aacagh rel ond Th. par cuts and suspensions \ , so bad, he added ae te 190 ggmiral 108 Kresge, 88 an preme Soviet, that the budget —King Sisavang Vong of Laos, the Gregory Avery mith | were pat in effect last May 1 in latters got so bad, he added. Mustard. No 1. bu 1 ip Air Redue 8 «=. Kroger 31.7, Labor Secretary James P. Mitch- committee had allotted additional world’s senior monarch, died the Webelos and presented with) by the town- Fiat prevaneimbelisiie merebiaed| "~~ - MRR CSORnS ORES 200 Anied sire ‘364 Lig & My g8€ll's background study published funds for the manufacture of con-/ Thursday night during a lull in their den insignia. — John Whitely. a senior British of-}swis Chard. ov. [33 Allis Chal 383 Lockh Aire . 265 statistics compiled by the Ameri- sumer goods in response to re-jhis tiny Indochina kingdom's fight _ ship. ‘ ficer on Eisenhower's staff, and Tursips. bu. Alum Ltd 31.7 Loew's Inc 296 s : to far survival : the threat of Michale Hegwood, Teny Lei * * US. Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith Aecaurtin <1. tg eee @ Gee ee el nrg ee Moet Inatitute on quests made ‘during the parlia-| Oy ee aoe | Rosa and Gerald Baumgras re-| Among the plaintiffs are Clyde and others decided to tackle the Livestock Am Can 42} Lous Nasn 764 Yearly wages. fe acent senate | celved their Bear badges. Gerald schmidt. recently suspended fire ene Alalceanenie | Am MbPay 1918 Marta Co 3.1 The \average production or main- + * * The ‘T4year-old King passed) poumgras alsé received his geld |chief whose case is before a civil supre! oe Se BETRONT LIVESTOCK Am Met Ci 287 Mead CP 443 tenance worker earned $5,350 in Both houses of the Supreme So-|2¥ay in his red-rodfed, gold-spired| : and Acting ETROIT. Oct. 2% ‘AP —Cattle— Am Morse 572 Merr Cha&s_ 174 197. This fell to $4,840 last year. : the Palace on the Mekong River | — | service o tas E. Meitz They “went up to him to tell him saiabie 200 Most early sales limited to AM TD Gas _ | 302 Meare oo 1294 hecaus viet unanimously approved \- | Bobcat pi were nted to|Fire Chief } rvin ; ? slaughter cows: these about steady with oi 78 : cause of recession layoffs, the . : g| where he has lain for five years, ns prese +} : wate Lbs . 2 7. Anaconda 626 Minn M & M 1454 budget as well as the Kremlin's hat he rust get down to it and’ Wednesday's late S0c decline: bulk aan) Armco St! 74 Minn P&L 334 institute said dg ) ‘bed-ridden with rheumatism and Michale Bennett, Gene Perazzo.| run the Gar." Alanbrooke wrot. | i! Stet ot'Riese cared rom waruer (Armee & co 34 Honey ii, — =. Ineck cancer. 4 ‘George Marsh and Danny Lune Gos Chamber Ordered ere is a contention that short- choice to prime 1125 |b steers” Aveo Cor 137 oo Pr 4 “This data showed that less than } - * * ‘ . ' , roun loads 1 ¢ 950-1140 | te ‘ Mot Wheel 176 : comungs in American lea jers.up ccake Ade west chiles ceerk sie-itts [pale 5 a Motorola oe one-third of all steelworkers (The ruble is valued officially, na) are Savang Vai | Thomas Hegwood and Ray Black m Southern Rape Case threw away a chance to end the | Rtas tn ont oss weed, te low choice seeere |BoTing Air . 27 Nai 'B —- 3 4 earned $6,000 a year or more in at 25 cents, but the tourist rate | appointed regent by his ailing fa- were introduced as pack commit-) BURLINGTON, N. C. (UPI) — European a we saan ot high’ chetee bedlors 38.0; ment (Eee, ame: SS Ba Daley. fey ays = —— eget less of 10 SS eae ar gap & MOF lther two months ago, becomes|teemen, and Mrs. Edna coal Negro canvict was foyr to average choice heifers 24.50-)Brist My 484 Nat Rood 1190.4 than ast year, t gures accurate x purchasing | -uier of the revolt-torn land of a and Mrs. Emily White as den last night to die in the gas cham- ne eee pil +33 00.20.00. witty. etters 18 50-22 00: oul te et Poe howe |powee ! . — a a jber for raping a white grand- : ame on. Els - S cutter bulls 18 60-20.00; utility coWS Burroughs . 302 Am Av 38.1! e so-called fringe benefits in parasol Guest of the evening was Pon-) ac m4 < - 17.50; late; « } a ? Pac 7 ; . . | him asa poor strategist. hy cuttert 138010 0, few chin cae Colm, & H = Nor ste pw ; the steel industry were valued at Sf f C . 8 The Paris-educated, 52-year-old|tiac District Scout Commissioner); ap all-white male Alamance 3 70 . c cP) ‘ ast a ' ‘ 1 i Mock gieek aulien SMS; Genk ‘et caer oo is. Q¥ens th oi: 6263 cents an hour in 1957 by the ree ommissioner prince has already been acting as Glenn Lackey. | Superior Court jury deliberated less cr Hod es ‘Bats’ good 452 ib weights 28.5. fs bead geod Case JI 19.6 a ‘4 wok gis American Iron & Steel Institute. in chief of the 25,000- prea coare: anid t in 7) steers , J SF 5 com mander s } three brough g "vesure aan Xot enough to Guics Bre * ge) Penh Eph el mis —_— premium pay for Quits Utica Post ‘man, U.S.-equipped Laotian army, 0 ° . a verdict of guilty = ~ a = make a market compared last week Clark Equip 834 Penney sc 130 Overtime, shift differentials, pai \ in the campaign to crush a red New Y rk Ci Vies crime of rape agains! «- for 1mm Hotta eee, ee eee meet, San Geen Cae 166.2 Pa RR 16.1 vacations, paid holidays, j duty ' revolt . Gra The death sentence E ] bri Li vm eater 00-41 00st ndarde Ar Coltm Ges ai Pliner . oe pay: Peer ance Pay. unemployment UTICA — Street Commissioner Prince Savang has visited! . . . cea a tilecy because the jury good - : t . i. elps On Tere rity Ist i223 ‘Con N Get a4 Philco 2 benefits and employer payments Sreten Novak, 41, who has been|grerica twice. In 1952 he led ce With Vienna for Fair did not recommend mercy. Sheep—saiabie 100. Not ‘enough &8DY Consumer Pw §46 Phill Pet 424 for insu e sio nd social ° tenced ‘LEVELAND | ; one class to make a market compared Cont Can «= Proct &¢ a nsurance, pensions a : suspended from his $4,620-a-year Laotian delegation at the San’ Judge Leo Carr sen c by. —. pe oh a. eater suae sod (emer ads, ee es Rea go 2 Security job for the second time in three| Francisco conference to sign the) WASHINGTON tAP) — After|Graves a few minutes later to be — "Glow thet qnasnal evtich came {Ef “t,o womeg jamie 180-(coet On eee a : . months, resigned today. |peace treaty with Japan, and/peating its American rivals, New|*xecuted in the gas chamber in Shon wie ld yeskeriny ky Oe e3. ututty toe ood wooled | Corn oa 2) oe =< Castro Aide Missing * « * jthree years ago he made a state york City now takes on Vienna/|Raleigh Dec. 11. : . - 5 = Pa choice Curtis Pub 123 Reval Dut 414) | Acting in his ¢ city of| visit. : the World t e sh lambs No. ¥ pelts 100 / g in his new capa in the scramble for 1964 oe — —— penaed ibs nt F ad choice No ‘i pelts cround Oe Seag 33 ‘ at Ren. Pap 332 | * | supervisor of all city departments, Fair. and editor of the forthcoming 95 :5. ; eull to chotee slaughter | Doug Airc 39s Sears Roeb “8 | pb, : * “International Celebrity Regie ¢*fs 490-650: most good and choice | Dew Chem 8; Shell Oil 45.6 on U an ane fl | Police Chief Hazen Anderson said . . * * ° ter,’ an 864-page directory that { *Hioge—eslopie 390. Butchers andar Sis "hoe ae L783 oh pr a3 i | he told Novak that if he er ae Y ientists Py ed President ee Listen to | includes more than the persons [P Miicaiy aie Wed wind Re. Sans Er aute “I $0” Bou Pac 712, HAVANA u®—Cuba's revolution.| Charges against him would not jmended Ne ' . 3208 ‘Ibs 13 gou Ry 525 ; "| ; ’ ° York be picked as the site, Wash- mr ge Ee pea Se ee meco by Balloons Lights Geset= "=| THURSTON = 1290: small lot x und 241 Ibs | Erie 1 \lo Cienfuegos, has been missing! : _ Py = t = bival ai site scomourear HR Th-L0 jouer | Ford Mot #28 sia Olletnd 416 for more than 36 hours on a short, @ffieial was just “not qualified” w GTON (UPI Pu Oye vecomme ndation will be H pial adie S 'rrueh Tr ee : |flight across central Cuba, the air| for the job. ASHINGTON (UPI) — Pur- | ! the Teamsters Union, was sched am ak we ee ‘s.sitorce reported early today | oe. ; _.| aled scientists sought an explana. |™ade to the International Bureau > . " uled to be among the 2.400 celeb- Pp It d E Gen Dynam 433 Tenn Gas 315) ~ Novak's second suspension was the : jof Expositions at its Paris meet-|}° . * ouliry an ggs Gen Fd 99.4 Te A widespread h began ; tion today fer mysterious ih. rities listed in the directory. Gen Mills 1 Ter G Sul oe . Psi 82" to go into effect Sunday. He had/ ,, lights” reflected trom ing Nov. 34. The bureau also has “But t t te- DETROIT POULTRY Gen Motors 53 Textron 249, !eursday for the 28-year-old com-! peen reinstated. his former dancing a bid from Vienna. 6.0.P. Natienal Cheirmen ie a scream went up from ser : Seige on ver G Tel & El. 714 Tims - : : > the giant space balleon launched | dustritists.” Amory related, DETSET G28 AP ve UTM Sex tine’ bt EOE Rar Hé-rade im arms of Prime Minister iayoft on Sept..J#'by order of the| tee fiaat space baneam lected | + * * : + _ live poultry la 366 Transamer 335/Fidel Castro. = | Utica Civil Serviée Commission. md Without the bureau’s approval, |f} . = * Heavy type hens 16-18: light type! Goodvcar 12% Twent Cen 31. | Cienfuegos vanished Wednesday Island, Va. a fair does not have much ctrance {fi to be intervi Since the part of the book that Neo: 9. heasy type brolers and fryers Gran’ Paige 14 Un Garkile 1a ciWhile flying with two others haa) » * They had expected the alumi- le - on was to include Hoffa already 21-22 caponettes over $ [bs 25-26 Steyn ky 311 On eRe ‘12 Camaguey ‘to Havana, a distance Seven charges were levied) gum-coated balloon, big as a 10 | on success. was in type, a search was made hie 26. turkeys heavy type young Gulf’ ou e NS Bat ae 36 8. of 300 miles There wa onan | Against him earlier by. Mayor Ed- story building, to glow brightly — | i ikesstice cat of ibe’ cpaen | Hollang FINE Unit pret 354 0 . ‘|ward R. Church. Chief among| as it camght the rays of the |\A Qu Conversation o $s s sc 5 ) “A r ; tor pamcone who would Me pernor. rm iAP tes toy Hat ty BE ER Lies” BE Tay in announcing he was missing (MEM were that he made certain! setting. wan. ctouts Guartérilom ie b> emaaraa la The man picked was Hodges, |Detroit in case Srletawi fede alu letate Inland a? os Rub 2s ‘Air force officials refused to PUTchases without authorization/ But they were completely un $3 Million Due to Strike Piece e n "a > pS 5 Pius | j | } the veteran first baseman for the | Whiicecareie Wo Yoibe 34 «stil liners OC ne i act cominent on the possibility thar, 2nd that he could not get along} prepared, said » spokesman for | Steel |h: | large 42: large 40: medium 25-28 «mall Int Bus Mch 41] Van Real - : | with local businessmen or city| the National Aeronautics and | DETROIT W— MclLouth § ih j ‘ . . 21-32. grade B large 33-37: browns crade Int Herv 523 Ward Bk PP 04 Cienfuegos’ plane had been sab- Corp. lost $3,193,566 in the third President in Hospital A extra Fee large ‘o medium 25 int Nick 98 4 West Un Tel ~ pe otaged , employes. * Space Administration (NASA), leaariee pee ro Sept % because i smal : gr arge 36. checks nt Paper 1295 Weste A Bk ] be for what they actually saw } . " c e n Traded 1 ve Wes El . 97.2 . a4 s ; . ig Miter grade A “exira large 30-40:. Int re * Tel Hr White Mot = in Se oe : oe paid ® , | This has been variously de- of proton ge ge M. A. Cudlip, me Hae me i [Is r _ 4 ‘ Ss, s j for Annual Checkup ssi: Ses yet Sastae BE Hematn Hi ot te more court member ot — BUSINESS NOfES ° | sctce by competent servers resent of the company, report “—e —— : Kennecot ui Youngst {SHOT 1272 the Castro hierarchy. His trade. chev: sparks and flashing | In the same quarter a year ago WASHINGTON (AP)—President . . imp cis * - Bewiel ‘ a Lash doled are Otto Trzos, a dealer for Janitrol| ,.mng reminiscent of twinkling ithe company earned. $2,766,781, or Eisenhower is in Walter Reed N B f STOCK AVERAGES witen he wears all the time. H* Heating and Air Conditioning Di-| cyristmes tree lights. ,$1.39 a share. Army Hospital today for his EWS In re oie ORK Oct 28-1 Compiied by toured New York with Castro last vision of the Surface Combustion i ase G | Despite the third quarter loss, annual physical examination Mrs. ficien B ae heres dl February Corporation jn the Pontiac area, ats ‘ 'McLouth earned $7,463,567, or The 63-year-old President en- a panecel | he ets mE oes Gay Coe te ay ae a: * has returned today from the firm's P Firm Merger $3.93 a share, in the first nine tered the medical center kate Ct. Peported to Pontiac Police yes- Fe), pe 3308 1334 0963 2213 - . three-day conference in Columbus ape r, |months of 1959. In the same period rsd The Wh iq teTday that someone entered her Month ago 3309 1365 97.6 21 Vo h | pee y "Ok ed H Kalamazoo j . rhe ; t - i House ee home through an unlocked door yea" 88° ee date apes oer a ven | ren ie ' Ohio. ay in : ,@ year ago the company earned or Sunday. o eneck oun Sararday and stole $3 from her purse. __ 1958 low. 3061 1272 3.4 2116 . . It was the second “Select-Dealer- KALAMAZOO UF — A merger of 2): 083.618, or $2.25 a share, 1968 high : ‘ set: : history. ° : = ~ *& * Sat., Oct, 31 at 1 p. m. Hunter's '%# io 2347 80.9 72.9 156.6 in Slum Home Fire a pale “1000 other Sutherland Paper Co. and KVP She Eisenhower still is bothered by Gar ioet ay carves — with pOW-JONES 11 AM. AVERAGES functors hs Oe the tatrod tion | CO bas been approved by direc- Wilson Tries Drama - lingering cold which he caught vw aie cuiseoure itr eae fa oe ‘att om OTTUMWA, Iowa (AP)—Seven of two new lines of’ heating and tors of the two poe making | early last month. And he said a week ago that during the last three years has developed chronic bronchitis. * * * But press secretary James € Hagerty says those ailments did not cause the President to go to Walter Reed. Hagerty noted that. Eisenhower has been getting an ble top. Nice set of 4 old ladder- 19 utlls 8750 up 0.09 back chairs Furnishings for every vite a ee 000 room. Appliances, rugs, dishes ; ; utensils and tools) Sam Proulx, auctioneer, at Oxford Community Auction. On M24, just north of Sa S Pasternak Set Oxford. Ed Proulx, manager. OA 8-268! adv, fo Talk in Chicago Rummage Sale at Stevens Hall. Exchange St. entrance. Fri. 30, 10-12. Guild 4 of All Saints. Adv. young children, crowded into a small two-room house with a baby sitter, died today when ‘fire de- stroyed the slum area dwelling The baby sitter, Sharon Ann Dooley, 14, owes her life to a fire- |man who was familiar with the |house, having helped remodel it air conditioning products. Richard P. Huttenlocher, a part- of Sutherland in anticipation of ner in the H. W. Huttenlocher In- stockholder approval of the mer- le /surance Agency representing the Aetna Casualty and Surety Com- pany in the Pontiac area, has been CHICAGO (AP)—Joe Polowsky, a brush salesman who hobnobs with Soviet bigwigs, says he will be host to the famed Boris Pas- annual checkup for several years. | Rum . } mage Sale by Rebekahs, |S. Woodward, Birmingham, na 14—MKT—CLIO— 'Oct. 30, 9 - 5. Adv. Oc Clio Doctor Trapped | Rummage Sale Saturda y, Octe- ber 3lst from 8 until 1 p.m. )197/te™mak. in His Wrecked Auto cow FLINT, Mich. \®—Dr. George D. Rummage Sale Sat., Oct. 31, 8-12. Seymour of Clio was trapped for 82 W. Huron. Epsilon Signi Alpha. {Parke Street. St. Vincent de Paul Church more than 2% hours in his Adv. wrecked car early today on Clio Good Values in Reconditioned) Road north of Flint ° Furniture of all kinds. A wide se- . . »_lection of newly upholstered and The physician, about 40. was re-| rerinished articles in stock at the ported in critical condition at! selvation Army Red Shield Store, Flint’s Hurley Hospital with mul-|118 West Lawrence. n daily tiple injuries. 9:30-5; Priday evenings ‘ti) 8. Adv. ‘ber 31 t TX Bry Oct. | : ’ st from 8 until 1 p.m. 1 Coffee is Costa Rica's principal pare street. St Vincert Led ow. f Church Adv \) Polowsky told newsmen that he| had invited the Soviet author to! ° Ga speak at a dinner Dec. 27 in chi |Engine . Explodes, cago, and that an official .of theInjuring Repairman {U.S.S.R. had telephoned approval ‘of the plan Thursday night. Pasternak was named winner of|Paddock St., suffered first the Nobel Prize for literature injburns of the face yesterday when after the Communists criticized |plosion. jhis book ‘Dr. Zhivago.” The dinner will honor an earlier |Smith’s Gulf Service) 1144 N. Perry t \Russian writer, Feydor Dostoev-|St. Westfall was treaeted at Pon- of General Motors Corp. |tiac General Hospital and released. naw. iski s ; contract té furnish all, structural! The accident occurred at Al |stee! for a $3 million biilding addi- | " "award bhie ribbon for several years ago, | Peers re i ly dividends. Sutherland approved Six of the victims were children) session of the ¢ompany’s gales}? CeMt per share Dec. 15 for jot Patricia Van Horne, about 28,| . ae ee ae who police said was out with| im pay ‘Lorraine Campbell, whose only| tne Riker Balidg, we nogcated| Dee: 100 jena. StS! "| the award at theyconclusion of the tsadad speurtet o nit prot five-week school at the Aetna Cas-| o¢ $1 725,788 for the ualty home 6ffite in Hartford, anne oe KVP had a profit Conn % “ot $2, for the b Er ending Sept. 0. Glen R. Westfall, 22. of 290 N. Buy Steel in Détroit acide _, Pomse sale on 7 DETROIT #® — The’ structural | feo "Arrroes . 1958. But he did not travel to|gas in the motor of a car he was steel division of ’. RC. ieee Pe — Stockholm to accept the award repairing ignited. causing an ex- Mahon Co. has been awarded Sat ion to the steering gear division) be at Sash | poptiae eet Ponting ‘ iat