_—-- —_—_— as EOE EE EOE The Weather > f “- THE PONTIAC. PR EME OVER PAGES ee * (Details on Page 2) 117th YEAR ctattiadhatioll PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1959 —32 PAGES "UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIAT: RESS It's Farm Day in City a *. ‘Du Pont to Keep GM Stock’ Industry Offers Compromise | Would Trade 8-Cent _. |- Pay Package for Tight * | Control at Mill David J. McDonald, presi- dent of the striking United Steelworkers, today sum- moned the Union’s Inter- national Executive Board to a meeting here tomor- row, | PITTSBURGH, Pa. (M#— |Steel negotiators, meeting lin an unusual Saturday | session, explored an indus- (try suggestion that an |hourly pay package be igiven to striking Steel- |workers in exchange for itighter management con- trol in the mills. | The meeting got off toa late start when the United % ‘a ’ ad 0 TAKE SOME HOME — That’s what Dr. William H. Marbach, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, has in mind as he ‘stops Steel Settlement. PITTSBURGH (AP) — , Code on Union Road Officials to Hold Open House Oct. 5-9 Stop and think a minute, Where would you be with- Most motorists are inclined to take the miles upon miles’ of superhighways and little back country roads too much for granted. Roads are somewhat like our utilities — water, Would Force 0935S gas, you never really appreciate them until you have to without them In order that the R sion can better show Oakland tax oO £0 oad Commis payers how their money is spent open houses have been planned .° for next week. Monday through Monitors Ask Judge | Friday, at the Commission's spac jous and modern headquarters to Order Teamsters yi) pontiac Lake Re * Americans 4° to Adopt Vote Rules * * Today 10 million (UPI) — Court- the Team-/0ut of every seven persons em ployed in the United States wo WASHINGTON appointed monitors of sters Union have asked a federal ' ‘ F rtati re judge to order the union to adopt|!? highwé ail ze Let EI endent rt } a code of rules governing the elec- tries LL heed i s . quate modern road stems tion officers * * * OAKLAND LEADS The action came in a move tO) Jn Oakland County make sure there would be no ir- are 2.484 miles of state trunkline regularities in forthcoming elec-|primary. and local roads. TI pend on roads for their living. One STERN JUDGE jercal courtroor ies enters carrying Motors stock case Judge Its CLOSE RULES financial e with AP Wifephotc can end With’ reporter wafting to 1 Judge Walter J is decis in t Du Pont-Ge La B ! d that Du Po »>Mw posing of its nearly i Midwest Weather Wild: Ten Die, Seven Injured From Our News Wires Temp lous weather stung the nation night Authorities counted at least seven 1n) Okla! souri 10Ma and in irs Colorado » ACW rains measuring up inches hammered Oklahon day, whe more than sons have been driven fr * homes at a farmer’s mart on W. Huron street, admiring this delectable Steelworkers Union's nego- tions. About half of 900 Teamster|conswitutes more mileage than a display of fresh vegetables and fruit. The scene is typical of tiating team, headed by /ecals are % heduled to clect -of- other Michigan county has others throughout the downtown area today. The occasion is the president David J McDon- ficers within the next’ three; | And it) costs money annual Farm Day, when farmers bring their crops to the city al : ~ . " ; months mone, to keep these miles for sale on the streets. a d, showed up 20 minutes The monitors submitted the driveable shape For instance 4 late plan yesterday to Federal Judge ©! the Oakland Coun Farm Display Reliable sources in the indus F. Dickinson Letts, who estab- Commassion ant Ve " ae = ' try say McDonald has been told he lished the three-man board last ™4!c!) $510 a mile » main 5/0 in MSU0 § Downtown Ends can have an annual cight-cent! year to oversee operation of the 1,625 ale of local or less hourly pay package jncrease in a union. ed Lathe Harvest Days contract which contains language The rules would provide sal. The 671 miles of primary permitting management more con- : : the more traveled roads, costs F sh (| Juicy apples, golden corn, bulg- trol over working schedules, seni- guards for locals now in trustec- spout $1,985 per mile for upkeep re men ass jing pumpkins—these were among ority arrangements and other worx- — and iris = “ sens Ria Altogether, $2,243,006 was See ee —_ cana eh anes bit spent last year to keep Mr. and > isu arily eciared meigibie for = Oakland Leads Way rong a lor ia Malo The reported eight-cent pack- office. . Mrs. Motorist moving along With 438 Students; farmers helped ae bring) S#* ee, eee Pe ee * * * saonetety “wed palcty ‘excx: ticae the Downtown Harvest Davs sale| "? in welfare and pension bene- | The monitors and Teamster Teads. Macomb Has 105 to a climax . fits the first year of a two-year |President James R. Hoffa have The open houses with tour There were sidewalk and curb- ee and then be applied jheen negotiating unsuccessfully through the building and garages A total of 570 students has en- Side stalls right in the heart of, to a pay increase in the second (over election rules for 13 months, from & am unfil 5, are part of rolled in fall term classes at Mich- Own, along Saginaw and W. Hu- eee according to Mastin F. O'Don- Michigan's first “Highway Week igan State University Oakland, the ron streets. The company suggestion, appar-joughe, chairman of the monitors. Oct. 410 university's registrar's office an- This was the second annua] ently not submitted yet as a * * * It is being sponsored hb nounced today. Downtown Farm Day sponsored formal proposal, came during a! One key provision in the moni-,Michigan Good Roads Federation FS by the Downtown Merchants Assn. new round of ne aaa that tors’ plan would provide for anjiand Michigan Highway User Another 334 are enrolled in non- in connéction with the traditionalo pened in Pittsburgh Thurs-/outside, neutral agency to super- Conference credit, continuing education courses three-day fall sales event that ends day after President Eisenhower|vise elections in locals held in) Its purpose is fo foeus public a oday. rapped knuckled on both sides. |trusteeship ' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) offered in the evening for university alumni, parents, and _ interested persons in the community. Of the 570 matriculated students in the charter class—all freshmen—| 495 are full-time and 75 are part- time. Records show that 60 per| cent of the student body is male) and 40 per cent female. The single students total and the married students There are 52 veterans. ae 504 | 66. A geographical breakdown show- | ed that seven states are repre sented, and nine counties in Mich- igan, among the freshmen on campus. A There are two. students from, Alaska, and one each from Ken-| | tucky, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, New York and Texas. * * * Most of the students—438—are from Oakland County. Second high- | est number of students from a! county are the 105 freshmen from| Macomb. { Seven students are from Wayne, | five from Lapeer, and one each! from Allegan, Delta, St. Clair, | Tuscola, and Muskegon counties. The registrar's office reported that freshmen selected their college programs in the following pro- portions: 13 per cent in business administration; 24 per cent in (Continued on Page 2, Col, 2) Rain May Scuttle Brief Appearance of Indian Summer Scattered showers were expect: ed to dampen the Pontiac area late this afternoon and tonight with high temperatures dropping back to the 60s, } A warming trend during the night boosted temperatures into the 70's today, but the weather- man's prediction for tonight is a This mateing’s winds south to at 10 miles an hour will continue ‘this afternoon and tonight but will shift to northwext| READY FOR HIGHWAY — Forming: hérringbone patterns, new Pontiac aufomobiles in the Pontiac Motor Division storage Jot are ready for transportation to dealers throughout the nation. "82 degrees. At 1 p.m. the mercury The storage lot‘is at the north end of the plant (a portion of which had climbed to 76. | ‘ / ' Highwood avenue These It is bordered by two employe parking is seen at the lower right). (upper left) thousands of others like them remain jn the lot only briefly before and lots, ears and Four auto deaths were en the deluge, now in day. being shipped out, mostl is another in a series of being published by The Pres 4 m snow-clog} I yf ged our ' to per ‘ acer) their blamed its third Exclasive Pontiac big } th an but cial defen imned agains! a turn land homes until th the new. stor by ured Ciwil) defer (l it Bixby Tulsa, consider . city fo escape the hd * * * In the Ts (Continued on Pace hat VIews llaway trucks around the aul Ing New Pontiacs Await Delivery to Dealers Throughout Nation 3 Press Aerial This Pontiac Phote photo area the 10 persons dead and ired in rain-drenched, wind-lashed portions of Texas and Mis-’ U.S. May Appeal Court Decision 4 But Judge Rules Firm Stripped of Voting Rights Also Protects Smaller Shareholders by Many Policy Restrictions From Our News ‘Wires CHICAGO Federal at- torneys said today they may appeal the court ruling permitting the Du Pont in- dustrial empire to keep its 63 million shares of General Motors stock Federal Judge Walter J. La Buy yesterday stripped Du Pont of all voting rights in GM business, but over- ruled a government demand that Du Pont dispose of its 3 billion «dollars worth of Stock in the giant auto firm : The government lawvers said tne \ d have to study La Buy's ul fore deciding whether to ippeal it to the Supreme Court some court observers predict suct ippeal would be mac la Buy's action ended a 10 Year court battle. In 1957, the Supreme Court sent the case back to La Buy's court for dis- posal after overruling his 1954 decision that Du Pont's GM hold ings were not monopolistic. The High Court had ruled that the influence of the one industria: giant upon the other constituted Tendency toward monopoly.” * * * La Buy's plan was a compromise leaning toward the Du Pont arg ment. The government had asked the 20 million shares of the stock be sold on the open market di ing the next 10 years and the othe: 13 million shares be divided among Du Pont shareholders Du Pont asked to be allowed to retain ownership and continue dividends, but turn it« Votes over to individual Du Pont to draw stockholders. Ia Bu rejected the govern ments stand as innecessari hard and punitive 1d said more than 230,000 innocent stockholder « would be hurt f Du Pont was arced to” sell (Mostock ean the } ake ¥ * * First) reaction in) financial ci eS Was una mus that the rul Ww Was favorable to both sides EXTRA CONDINTIONS La Bu fecision came Jate F dat after domestic stock eX hanges sed for the weekend * * * Th d besides shifting Du } ! 1 rights in us GM individual Du Pont 1 Bars Du Pont—FE. -T. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., the big chemical firm-and two Du Pont nued on Page Col. 8) (Conti Northern Wins 25-20; Central Plays Tonight Pontiac Northern High School scored a 25-20 upset victory over Farmington last night. The Huskie gridders have won two out three contests in their first football season. Pontiac Central High School clashes with Kiver Rouge High School at & p.m. today at Wis- Stadium. The Chiefs are third straight win of of ner after their the year, The Dodgers pulled abreast of the Sox yesterday to tie the World Series at one win each, nipping Chicago, 4 to 3. The Sox invade I.os Angeles tomor for the third game in the best of seven row championship series, Turn to the sports pages for details. In Today’s Press Church News 10-11 Comics a | Editorials ‘ Home Section 17-23 Obituaries 5 Sports 13-15 Theaters a9 TV & Radio Programs at Wilson, Ear! 3 Women’s Pages . 7 t\ T _ SFVd HAO TV Road Olticials Holding Open House Oct. 5 to 9 TH a E PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, ‘1959 The Day in Birmingham Building Permit Values Up Over Last September (Continued From Page One) partments spaced throughout tention on the value of modern ©8.720 square feet of floor space. highways, roads and streets; the ‘They'll be made aware of the BIRMINGHAM — Building per-jemployes and the situation Fresuit- need for continuing improvement hours of work and money which mits issued in Birmingham ing from a 12-town drain alloc a of the system; and the economic) must ge inte maintenance of September show a better than 33jtion meeting held Wednesday in and safety benefits a better over-| street and ‘traffic control signs Per cent increase in value over|/Royal Oak. all system will provide. | scattered throughout the coun- Late ge Mlb 3 ah sane j sa wit igh Robert Q. Feit, chairman of - mn 4a ee ws Shyr clin on poet the Read Commission, urges | They will have an opportunity Building Inspector Andrew F.|struck a curb at Latham and “everybody in the county visit {to chat with Irwin P. Nichols, sec- Butt will deliver his monthly re-|Northlawn in Birmingham early the offices to see what part retary-clerk of the Commission. port at the weekly meeting of|this morning, injuring three of our Commission and staff play One of his many many jobs is to the City Commission 8 p.m. Mon-|the youngsters. ‘ in providing the best possible handle bid openings for the hun- day in the:Community Building highways and reads possible.” dreds of construction and main-| d é ¢ Police arrested the 15-year-old For many it will be the first,tenance jobs carried out by the. ws ee ee that 52 per- | driver for operating the car ‘without a license, Betause he is opportunity to browse through the $700,000 building, opened May 16, 1957 Although many Oakland taxpay- ers haven't visited the building, just west of Telegraph road in the Service Center, vet they have not been altogether void of contacts with the commission Robert W_ Osgood fic engineer and forester for the Commission. will vouch for this Osgood is the man who's respon- sible for the safety of the travel- ing public over local roads — no veteran traf Commission. a corporate body 1912. The three commissioners are appointed by the Board of Super- visors State Commission is responsible Records show it was formed as) back around to which. Highway along with Department tno the Cross Man Threatened With Death nine months in 1958, based on 346 . |permits,. small task when one considers the : nearly 2,500 miles he must check * * * ' ' Every traffic signal, sign, no ee ™ oo ission will also nee, covers all of the poll ony parking arees, and speed sence | MOUNT CLEMENS (UPI)—The| hear reports on a downtown flag} . soo) experiences from the first are the results of Osgood’s work. wife of an non-striking Cross display pr posal, group polio and grade through high school. It Preliminary te speed rome in. “anufacturing Co. employe told] dread diseas¢ insurance for city iustrates teaching techniques citation thorough radar checks tficials yesterday she stood tace-| _ and the various activities and are conducted along with sher. |'0-face with a man who threatened) phases of education in the Rys- iff's deputies and the state po- lice. So dont go running to your phone to call Osgood and demand the life of her husband. ¥ * * Mrs. Joseph Rein, 59, St. Clair Shores, told police she was! awakened early yesterday by the! Chinese Spout | | Double-Talk a lower speed limit in front of screech of tires your home. Osgood gets plenty)... of ures in front of her; ciety which spent the summer of such calls. And he gets his share Sh a 1958 in Russia on an educational of complaints She said she opened her {front | ; H field study tour “Most people fee! their road is deer te a man whe said, “tell | Receive Ike-Nikita Note an * * the only road in the county and Joe that if I ceme around here | Warmly, Call for Fight George Roper, director of Cit) we should drop everything to do work there,’ he complained NOT ENOUGH MONEY Felt says the same thing about, requests grading or paving roads He stresses that ‘‘there is not enough money’’ to do all jobs. The Commission's entire source of operating capital comes from the state gas and weight tax rev- for again, he won't wake up."” Mrs. | Rein'’s husband, Joseph, 62, is a | janitor at the Fraser plant which was struck Aug. 4 by the United Aute Workers Local 155. She was one of several witnesses to testify in Macomb County Cir-| cuit Court of alleged acts of vio-| lence and threats by union mem-} bers. The company is seeking a contempt of court citation against ‘Car Out Today Five Inches Longer Question Three Plane Theft Ford tor 1960 All New Design — Against U. S. TOKYO \ — Nikita Khrushchev neared the climax of his Red China visit today as his Chinese hosts waxed hot and cold over his pro posals for easing the cold war. A few hours after the Soviet | Premier’s fourth meeting with better visibility out over the hood, 65-year-old Red Chinese leader and Country School, was one of the delegates on the Russian tour. This is the first presentation of the. film in this area. US. May Appeal Du Pont Decision enues. The state reimburses the . In \ completely re-designed 1900, one's imagination immediately, | ; county for its care of 189 miles the local a Ford, originally planned for a and we began to explore the |and has a win'shield wiper pat) Mao Tue-tung, the official Peo- | (Continued From Page One) of state trunk lines each year P Judge Alton E Noe yesterday 2 M d G later year, was introduced today, possibility of advancing it to tern one-third greater than in 1959. | pee Daily carried a lead editorial | tamily be a. Supplementing these monies are dismissed a contempt citation! en an ir! Force with “greater passenger space and. the 1960 models. saying the Communist. world | eae ola firms, Chris Adding to the convenience of | «accorded warm response and Securities Co. and the Del- township and some individual con- tributions on a matching basis against one union member but re-! fused to dismiss similar charges! against 10 other members of the Cuban Airliner to Land in Miami improved roadabil ity and handling ease and perfor comfort and “When the engineers pointed out that a complete new car also the new Ford line are such fea- suppert” to the communique the tures as a trunk opening that | Soviet Premier jointly issued | aware Realty and Investment | Corp., from acquiring any addi- tional stock interest or influ- ‘ in i lon mance 1 . nin Pel ne bat re © local and the local itself Chanees which are immediately “OU!d enable them to design ad is only 27 inches from the | with President Eisenhower after | ence in GM: and Lee 0. Brooks. Willis Mm. _ He recessed the hearing unt'l noticed are the extension of the Ztional quality features into the) ground, a foot-pperated parking | his historic 13-day visit to the | ; . ; - Tuesday MIAMI ‘(UPI)—Immigration au _— a ee __. vehicle company management brake with the release knob lo- | United States. | 2. Prohibits the Christiana and Brewer is coordinates of a rend thorities today questioned two, 0d out to the edge of the car. cave the go-ahead cated on the instrument panel « ‘Delaware firms from voting GM projects and personnel director, : : ye BE eliminating fenders, and a greater > , ; * | That document stressed the re- ne ™- ; . Cuban men and a 16-year-old girk aay <. * * * and two-stage door checks. a \stock and wipes out any voting while Paul Van Roekel is high who commandeered a Cuban plane length. The 1960 Ford is five in One of the most important ; ,jnunciation of force in settling | rights of 535,500 GM shares held way engineer. , | wes ed er carrying 36 passengers last night ©Des longey than last year features of the new Ford,” Wright, me ae Ford line niuaes 15/international quarrels. 'by Christiana: The upkeep of every inch of road ~ and forced the pilot to land at Sculptured s cele si i 8 said, ‘is that it has been ‘comfort-|Titercnt at " fen At the tow | The U ca seat * sought | 3. Bars Du Pont, Christiana and in Oakland County rests with them Wild and Wooll Miami International Airport subdued “swallowtail” effect in engineered.’ There is substantially | : = } on es has sought nelaware officers and directors It is carried out by a staff of 375 * ie reer nee more hip room, shoulder room, leg = “ the ees Saag ions a ele ag Peiping from voting any GM stock; \ | cs } me , |series, which i a two- and say it will a orce as a) : fi ii —_ 5 (Continued From Page One) | Dade County police said Esteban . Hoom and head room in.the 1 -,|four-door sedan and a business T-;means of acquiring the island of! 4. Forbids of ard iad Their job is not an 8-hour one Bet ¢ 4: bis d f J. O. Wright, Ford Motor Com-'Ford than there was in the 1959 : , jof Du Pont, Christiana and Dela- Roads are being used 24 hours, of Andrews, a violent wind and ancourt, 4/; his daughter _ © president 4 Seed G fel |dor. In the Fairlane 500 series are| Formosa, now ruled by Mao’s arch ware from serving as GM offi t é ~t Gloria, 16, and Oswaldo Hernandez, Pany vice president and Ford D1- mode two models, a two- and four-door enemy, Chiang Kai-shek. “ a or directors, and bars GM from employing any employes of the three Du Pont ocmpanies; | | | Should the Chinese Communists ‘door sedan, plus! go s0, it would be a significant vision general manager, said ‘‘af- ter the car originally planned for 1960 was well under way, the ad seven days a week. Maintenance rain storm caused damage esti- emergency crews must be ready; mated at $75,000 to buildings and to roll out in their orange trucks property. A church was unroofed DOG-LEG OUT |sedan. The Galaxie series includes swept-back windshield pil-|a two- and four 28, used live hand grenades and a 45-caliber pistol to take over the New : prop-jet Viscount airliner while it lars have eliminated’ the trouble-| four-d hardto lied the| any time to make sure these roads and a transfer company damaged v tic = atthe _ ie . ;a tour-coor a Pp ca *| move in imprevi their rela- | will remain open and passable by the winds pitt at 65m San’ io de Ci t wom Havana te beat i Ltt ven einer i some ‘‘dog-leg’’ found in cars with)Town Victoria. tions with Washington . sid aipseeg eameed roi . : . Santiago de Cuba. Se Ge he ever ver 20° the full-wrap windshield . arrangements or understandings Winter storms pose one of the p.h vanced that our planned 1960 mod- Ne the te x = * | Chinese Premier Chou En-lai| between Du Poat and GM for a new two-door| An airport source said the plane So the new model Ford has 17 The Starliner, biggest headaches : ; Ane headache. according to 4 Mr aoe preys al a Cubana Airlines flight, had left © per cent more windshield area hardtop entry in the Ford line, is reain Wieuaes ee comed| waar kes come a : Lf et) Nt and electrical ‘Miami earlier Friday. “One of these captured - ‘than last year’s Ford, provides! aS mp (0 Peiping Wednesday he welco | year supplier contracts may be Osgood, is that people feel that storms, Mell and Digh winds er e of these captured every van last year’s Ford, p bi eSione of two special models. The | the communique. | negotiated. traffic signals ‘are the solution to everything.” “It isn’t true, as some claim, that the commission waits until someone is killed before we in- stall a light,” he said. 269 lights. flashers and direction signals placed throughout the county. There are 59 on state trunklines, 111 in cities, There are and 99 on county roads, all of which commission crews must maintain. Visitors to the office this week will see a device, devised by Floyd Harp, electrician for the Com- mission, which controls the cycle signals are set at based on six different speed limits In the same_ radio, room, manned most of the time by El-| mer Hess, radio dispatcher, peo-| ple will see a large board full of! red and green lights. At a glance! Hess can tell which of the Com-|Bermuda moving out across the ture,” are on Atlantic Ocean, away from land.|reasons are that production facili- mission's many vehicles the road or in the garage. All are! equipped with radios. Visitors will also have a chance} to view the engineering. account-| caused widespread damage. A five-day snowstorm in the Col- orado Rockies was blamed for six deaths Earlier in the week, Denver suf- fered millions of dollars of dam- age to utility lines, personal and| city property ° 30 INCHES SNOW ; } Unveiled Yesterday at Matthews-Hargreaves They re Ordering Corvair ‘Sight Unseen The Corvair, Chevrolet's entry vair, with chrome styling features, Snow in some Colorado areasjin the compact car field. made its radio, heater, automatic transmis- measured more than 30 inches. | In the East, Hurricane Hannah was reported 180 miles north of NEW YORK ®—An American debut yesterday and was “scarce” from the time it officially went on the market “People are buying the Corvair sight unseen,"’ says Curt Matthews Li The Corvair is 180 inches long, action-styled Starliner features a unique ‘‘fast-back"”’ roof that! sweeps gracefully back to blend with the elegant rear deck. The \other special model is the Sun- jliner, Ford's soft-top convertible. But Friday's Peoples Daily gave equal space to the reprint of an article by Foreign Minister Chen Yi which called on ‘‘all peoples in the world to wage a long and unrelenting fight against American | Better stability and improved |imperialism.” See ae ee ee | Sie ectltlg Wad as written for the Be partly through a wider | soviet newspaper lsvestia in tread, but mostly through the honor of Red China’s 10th anni- 66.9 inches wide and 51.3 inches in sion and including the cost of li- high meena oat Neches avant —— cense, title and sales tax, sells’ “As for passenger comfort,” added to the front tread width | It gave little or no encourage- for $2,609. says Matthews, “added room is) ang nearly four inches to the |ment to hopes Peiping was pre- “The lowest priced Corvair is Provided without the hump in the) 4) tread. pared to soften its attitude toward $200 less than the lowest priced | Middle such as is necessary in ; the United States. other automobiles. The floor is) All standard Ford engines — freighter with some 55 to 59 Of Matthews-Hargreaves Chevrolet, conventional Chevrolet in our Bis- persons aboard was reported with a fire biasing furiously in | 631 Oakland at Cass. The dealer, with mixed emo- cayne line,” Matthews says The Deluxe Corvair employs an her No. 3 carge hold about 65 tions, finds himself with a greater, OVeTdrive acceleration for passing miles from Bermuda today. How- |demand than there is supply for and the compact cars will cruise at ever, the vessel, the Mormacteal, asked no particular assistance. eee All shipping in the path of the | big storm was warned to exer- cise extreme caution, his ‘‘hot’’ product. “We will continue to be short-| handed for the unforeseeable fu-| Matthews says. ‘‘Two good} ties are limited and the three plants that are making the Cor- vair are facing a steel shortage.” Matthews explains the ‘‘imme- 88 miles per hour. Without a radiator, water pump and anti-freeze, the main- tenance cost is economical, sup- ported by a claim of 25 to 2 2% to 50 per cent better mileage than from a conventional auto- mobile, miles per gallon of gasoline, or | virtually flat because there is no need for a drive shaft tunnel with the motor in the back. * * * “And the gasoline heater is in- stantaneously responsive. The car warms up within 20 seconds."’ Gleefully standing by as hun- dreds swarmed over the lot and showroom at the dealership, Mat- |thews quips Corvair virtues spon- | taneously. “The Corvair engine pulls 1,375 pounds less automobile than the jboth ‘‘six” and V-8 — are designed | jto operate on regular grade gaso- te Wants Civil Service in License Offices | * * * | The Ford engine line-up for |1960 includes the economical 145 | horsepower six; the 185 horse? |power V-8; the 235 horsepower V-8 |with two-barrel carburetor, and ithe 300 horsepower V-8 with four- barrel carburetor. | Ford suggested list prices for 1960 model cars will average about te same as those for 1959 miodels. are sold, he said today. LANSING (UPI) — Secretary of State James M. Hare will ask the Civil Service Commission to take over full control of all 250 branch offices where auto license plates Hare's decision was prompted Judge La Buy's order retained jurisdiction by his court for en- forcement of the order. He reserved the right to review and amend the court's Terms if future justification should arise. Set Knight Hearing in Trooper's Death BRIGHTON (UPI) Alvin Wayne Knight, 47, today was sched- uled to appear for a hearing in Justice Court Oct. 14 on a charge of murdering state Trooper Albert W. Souden with his own gun last month. * * * The hearing was set yesterday at a conference among Livingston County Prosecutor Wilfred H. Er- win, court-appointed defense at- torney Martin Lavan and Justice Eric Singer. A trial in Livingston County Cir- cuit Court was expected to result from the Justice Court appearance. The U.S. Weather Bureau said) qiate popularity” of the new line ing. purchasing and executive de-| The horizontally-opposed pistons Hannah js sending gale force winds| this way: ; : | conventional two door Chevro- in Detroit’s 14th district in a aint! ve >| this provide for a Jower silhouctte and/ sy s abotft 200 miles in all directions.) .. . . Pa , | let,” he says. “You even save ies i io which the Secretary Sta | : | “The Corvair is not just aj|shorter stroke, giving a higher) “*" ys . Warren Man Dies in Ohio Ic ot te The W eather Highest winds are estimated **| chopped down car. It is a new compression ratio and greater dur-| money on the I neces branch office was ra ae | 125 miles per hour near the cen.er First MSUO Class Has 570 Students (Continued From Page One) engineering science; 28 per cent in liberal arts; and 35 per cent in teacher education. | Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Consider- a cloudiness teday and tenight with seattered showers er thundershewers later this afterneen and tenight. Te-| merrew partly cloudy with a few shew- ers likely and ceeler. High teday 77. Lew tenight 58 High temerrow 68 Seuth te southwesterly winds & - 15 miles teday and tenight. Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am 62 | | At 8 a.m: Wind velocity 5-8 mpn Direction: Southwest Sun sets Saturday at 6.11 pm Sun rises Sunday af 6:32 a.m Moon sets Saturday at 7:04 pm aenen tase Pant Students in the continuing edu- cation program had a selection | Dewntown Temperatures were xcie/ Oe 11 a.m & am HM am ; i m z eae rr} eRe: '® liberal arts, fine arts, engineering 10-o.m adil and business administration Friday in Pontiac areas, (as recerded dewntown) Righest temperature Lowest temperature temperature Weather—Sunny Year “Age in Pe m7 so, MSUO officials awarded scholar- 60 ships to 57 freshmen. Of these, 13 |students received $500 merit grants, Highest lee 68 | and 44 received $255 tuition grants. Lowest temperature 40 | * * * temperature .......... 52.5 | University officials said the en- Highest and Lewest Temperateres ‘This Date in 87 Yea +concept in American automobiles.”’ The new concept is the alum- inum, air-cooled engine located in the back of the car. The Cor- ability. The dealer expects to sell one The 80-horsepower engine weighs Corvair for every five conventional 332 pounds as compared to the! model Chevrolets. 600-pound engine in Chevrolet's V-8) vair is the only American-made automobile of rear-engine design. Only two bolts hold the engine in the chasis, enabling it to be removed and replaced in 45 min- utes The fact is air-cooled eliminates the necessity of anti- freeze, a radiator and water. The weight of the automobile is that it of 15 non-credit courses, covering {distributed evenly because of the engine placement and a short wheel base é “We don't even offer power steering.for the Corvair because there ig no need for it,’’ Matthews claims. ‘The Corvair steers as easily as a conventional car with power steering. Cornering is posi- tive. That is, the car doesn't sway when you turn a corner. “Rear engine drive gives bet- ter braking and traction. In tests, the Corvair has climbed 30-de- gree icy slopes that would stop a conventional car.’’ The present Corvair is offered only in a four-door, six passenger @9 in 1983 * 3 in 1ssa | figure. Late registration closed Friday's T watere Chart | , - Alpene "a “SLs Angeles " oe The winter term registration will ue Bismarck $1 31 Memphis t 70 pe mext Jan. 4 and 5. The present| Beirne +4 i Beach 88 81/fall term will end Dec. 14, follow- 6@ Milwaukee 65 59 ; ; % 66 polis $1 4$ ing ‘an examination period from } ey $2 62 New Orleans 90 73\ Dec 914 ™% 9 NewYork 7 56| : Denver @ 33 Omaha ” 41) Pert Worth & Ste. Marie 46 34 rer Ba heron” SS Invented Steam Engine 7 b wie 92° ¥3 Seattle 6s #8, James Wap, a Scottish engineer. | me ge bey . Tampa *! invented the steam engine in J765 model, but Matthews anticipates \twé-door, station wagon and con- \vertible Corvairs in early 1960. _ The four-door stangard mide! retails at Matthews-Hi yeteaves for $2,220 with heater. The Deluxe © conventional cars. ! compact car field) made its deb of p. M Pacsershby on the street at jare manufacturing them.” ¢: and attracted dozens {Wrereaves Chevrolet, 631 ut vester atthew s-]} “That's the’ ratio the factories MANSFIELD, Ohio (UPI)—Ro- land J. Kaira, 33, of Warren, died in a Mansfield hospital yesterday of injuries suffered in a two-car crash near hear Thursday night. as of Oct. 15 Hare will make the request the commission’s Oct. 23 MAKES DEBUT—The ‘‘Corvair,”’ Chevrolet's ent in the Oakland, near Cass. Curt Mattehews, behind anyone to take a test drive in Friday at the dealership. the wheel, invites phe new automobile. unveiled « PONTIAC VEIN i T+ rt HEU te “ae DR . geet Fy ae * ' Aieeep RS . Seg! SRO a Pek Po uc Ee ee NEC Raa: 92,000 Sellout Ready Sunday SCORES} Parchment 7, ' MICHI HIGH SCHOOL . poorsaLe SCORES Paw Pi Hur hy :s von wt I 8 Avondale 13, Madison 6 Pigeon 13% onrvile “glade ' Anchor Bay @, New Haven 34 Portland it Or 2 _ — ¢ mitts © Allen Park 41, Redford Union 0 pit Fon ores Pontiac Northern ; Farmington 20 Neal Is Hero of 4-3 — tholie 19, eal ae dl Quincy 14, Union Ci City 7 ° . Alma 26, 13 oscommon Victory Yesterday in Albion 31, Coldwater 0 RO Kimball WM Segnt Clemens 7 Ann Arbor 31, Flint Central 13 Rochester y 14 Cc isk P rk Arenac Central 31, Pinconning 15 Riverview 25, Detroit Thurston 0 omiskey Fa Addison 26, Onsted 20 se 33, Ashley 0 Adrian Catholie 14, Sand Creek 7 Romulus 13, Ecorse 0 Algonac 13, Marysville 13 (tie) Roseville 19, Inkster 0 Rock 26, Bark River 13 Bchoolcraft 40, Centreville 6 South Haven 40, Allegan Baginaw St. Andrew 32, Bad Axe @ Shepherd 13. Chesaning 6 St. Charles 12, Hemlock 6 Bebewaing 20, Harbor Beach 6 Seuth Lyon 35, Saline 13 &t Clair Shores South Lake 2 a St. Clair Shores Lakeview Traverse City 13, 8. 8. Marie, Ont) 18 Trenton 14. Plymouth 1 Tecumseh 45, Ypsilanti Liscota Ly) Vermontville 6, Potterville 3 Vandercook Lake 19, Springport 7 Vassar 39. Mariette 7 Vicksburg 27, Otsego 0 Wyandotte 14, Monroe 6 Whiteford 32, Summerfield 6 Wayland 52, Hopkins 14 Waldron 20, Hanover-Horton 19 Webberville 40, Bath 0 Walled Lake 21, Waterford 6 West Bloomfield 46, Milford 14 Warren Fitzgerald 46, Lake Orion 6 | Warren 18 St Clair Shores Lake Shore 1¢ Berkley 13, Southfield 6 Brighton 25, Holly 12 Blissfield 27, aac 6 Birmingham 28, Haze) Park 13 Buchanan 18, Porta, . ze Bangor 45, Richian Battle Creek Cabevicn 38. Sturgis 12 Bellevue 12, Olivet 6 . B. Creek St. Philip 19. Harper Creek 0 B. Creek Pennfield 46, Climax-Scotts 0 Britton 7, Deerfield 7 :tie) Bay City Centra) 14. Bay City Handy 0 Birch Run 20, Morrice 12 Beaverton 26, Arenac Eastern 0 Breckenridge 0, oo 0 (tie) Brown City 34, Capac 25 Benton Harbor 13, Alpena 0 Berrien Springs 6, Hartford 0 Birmingham Country Da Madison Heights ml 12 Clie 13, Mount Morris 7 Center Line 20, Utica 1 Cheboygan 12, 2, 8.1 +a 12 (tie) | Charlevoix 27, Gra ing 6 Colon 28, Mendon i4 Charlotte 32, Belding 0 LOS ANGELES (AP)—The Los Angeles Dodgers, backed by the screen that looms in left at the Coliseum, now are favored to whip Chicago's White Sox in their run for the richest payoff yet as the World Series comes to the West Coast for the first time in history. AP Wirephete GOING DOWN — Tom Perdue, Ohio State end, was grabbed * * x. After coming from behind yes- terday for a 43 victory and a split of the first two games played at’ Chicago's Comiskey Park, the Dodgers are tagged at 11-10 to win the best-of-seven series. Perdue had just taken a seven-yard pass that he fumbled later. with Ohio recovering. USC won, 17-0, to remain unbeaten. past the record $11,147.90 collected Key College Contests on Grid. Card Today e225 $331,070.26 in the players’ pool al- Coloma 20, Benton Harbor 8t John 0 3 Waterviiet 25, Decatur 0 i i . rena Matha . =—=' Warren Lincoln 34, Praser 13 Wayne 12, Taylor Center 6 Willow Run 14. Dearborn Lowrey 12 Detreit City Scores Central 19, Northeastern 6 Cooley 39. Mackenzie 6 Eastern 27. Northern 6 Lutheran East 25, Clintondale 6 Northwestern 44, Wilbur Wright v Osborn 25. Boutheastern 13 Redford 40. Cody 7 Southwestern 39. Chadsey 0 Western 38, Henry Ford 32 And they’re favored at 6-5 to morrow in the first of three games at the Coliseum—already a sellout at 92,000-plus. That should push the winners’ share of the loot a few thousand Chelsea 13, Manchester 0 Crosswell-Lexington 33, Richmond 19 Cass City 44, Sandusky Clare 18, St uls 6 Caledonia 7, Middleville 6 Cranbrook 40, L’'Anse Creuse Dearborn Edsel Pord 33, Delton 21, Sarenac 7 Dowagiac 19 —s Rapids Central 0 Durané 12, Ithe < Dewitt 29. \ateeuer kerville 31, Eikton 2 soa Lesit Melvindale 1 Dryden 12. Armade Detroit Cathelic League Delasalle 26, Salesian 12 St. Ambrose 46, 6t. Pau! | St. Francis De@ales 36 Visitation 6 AP Wirephete ready _ Fnwi tu une | LOLLAR FORCED WIDE OF PLATE — How is illustrated by this sequence of views. Los isle 9.1 Lenaing | ye Vocational 0 — nce total o . a cago. n t . ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)—Michigan meets Michigan State|” With time off for traveling, a far slow-running Sherm Lollar (10) of the Chicago Angeles Dodger catcher John Roseboro has the Plat Rock 31, Airport 18 | Two Vets on Waivers Saturday in a Big Ten battle that once was tops in the national clubs worked out today at the Col-| White Sox was trom scoring the tying run in ball, returned from outfield via shortstop relay, | Penavilie te, Bleomingsele 30 eye ues : kenmuth 26, Caro 6 | MILWAUKEE (UPI) — Enos spotlight. This it’ th tball iseum, a make-shift ball-yard once| the 8th inning rally at Comiskey Park yester- and forces Lollar to run wide. The Dodgers | pivierSt Sunfisld ¢ nd \ V potlig year it's just another foo game. a pint Souihwestern & Punt Northern | Slaughter, 43, and Mickey Vernon, more after a quick conversion fol- day in the 2nd game of the 1959 World Series won, 43, to even the Series at one win apiece. Sanertg ager ge ary Be Ba 41 _ each a SO-year veteran in the But despite the so-so status of the Spartans and Wolver- jj wwing last night's college football | wr: pore Bas +4 & Detrott 1 boedrie _ Malor Leagues, ave been placed ines, the usual capacity throng of 101,001 will jam Michigan (came between Ohio State and mint ae Bi Uey : on waivers by the Milwaukee Stadium. The Spartans are favored by about a touch- Southern California. Penton 15, Plint Mandeville 7 Braves prior to being given their down. x * | \ / : Pint ot “Mavthew 10 Punt Reever « ance oral a os vet- ‘ r ve / An oddity this year is nelther team has won going into its), Most of the Mite Sox, tad See a Re ee big game, 52nd in a rivalry begun in 1898. Both backyard foes|i"& Manager per, Gladwin 28. West Branch 20 tor the National League a" getting their first look at the Coli-| 4 be 13, Brookiya @ r lon gu pennant. began rebuilding campaigns on a sour note last week, the vic- seum and the steel screen that ce ueee FB ge Eeliogs : Se tims of upsets. rises 40 feet and runs from the’ . | Howell $8, Lansing Resurrection 21" Michigan holds a 35-12-4 edge in the series. But the Wolver- left field foul line to left-center.| . — a OPENS OCT. 5 ines have won only two of the last nine meetings. Last year,|It's only 251 feet to the be- pse | e Bat Not Anemic Mastings 12. 6t. Johns ¢ as heavy underdogs, they tied Michigan State 12-12. |leagured barrier down the line ledale 28, Morency @ | RUNNING RACES DAILY | The Coliseum gives you little i in| left, lots in center and right. “We'll have an ap re sires over | them at home,” * * * LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP)—Notre Dame and Purdue football teams loosened their muscles Friday in light drills at Ross-Ade Charlie Neal Smallest, eee Most Nervous Dodger | =: Green Bay Is Y Siti 6 Jonte 18. Orem Maltineves Stadium, where they will meet Saturday in a game that has Manager Walt eon yn aL a Toni 18, 6 eae ae been the toughest spot on the Irish schedule in recent years.|ways have it over a club seeing | After )nd Win | Semeeetey 0, renege « spoteon ; A sellout crowd of 50,362 will be on hand. Occasional |" Place for tied voila time. om LOS ANGELES (AP) — Charlie | 425 feet away. That one came with | Kisesfora € Neeasnay'8 == Alston picked righ Lake Linden 18, Ho Neal is the smallest, lightest, skin-| Junior Gilliam on base in the sev- thems al. He may. nino be tne sick. (emt inning, and broke a 2-2 te. est, as he claims, but there's noth-| |A few moments earlier, Chuck Es-| ing anemic about the way he segian, pinch hitting for winning pitcher Johnny Podres, had hit a rain is forecast. Purdue has defeated Notre Dame in three of their last five meetings, yet never has stopped the Irish in Ross-Ade Stadium. Notre Dame leads the entire series 20-8 with ton 6 Drysdale (17-13) to poy tomor-| —— omen 9, p'see Contral 4 row’s third game against the Figure Packers to Be White Sox and right-hander Dick Donovan (9-10). Neither manager| Big F r om Race would go further in outlining This Year Lakeview 32, — LF Lawton 6, ce 0 keshore 13 “Oeil! ‘on 12 keville 28, Flushing 19 metaeeee i bat. Lincoin Park 14, Dearborn 6 = an = asain Wil teakare fullback eb: 3 pitching plans for the three games se x tremendous 425foot plus homer to| Livenie Bentley 18. Believie « The ue attack again w eature ac aus, | here. Wisc 'tie the score. Midland 20, Saginaw 14 who scored three touchdowns in the Boilermakers’ 29-22 victory; Lopez, whose Go-Go Sox were| sore oterted "ie pert ed gong The Los Angeles second base ~~ * tk | Marshall 26. Three Rivers ¢ | rntenara star looked like the healthiest hos- | last year. beaten by three Dodger home| \the Detroit Lions had a “‘breather’’ Essegian, a former football star| Michigan Center 27. East Jackson 0 pital case in the country yester- - . Marine City 20, Yale 6 x *« * Aart is ty eas nae their schedule when they played| day as he powered two pitches by amir "Neal 3 pounce me | Memphis 6. Alme 0 iudingion | Ohio's Newest & Most Meders DALLAS (AP)—A passing duel between two of college toot-|t Seeds (4 might make| the Green Bay Packers in between | Chicago's Bob Shaw out of Chi-\riiny ounces. No one in oe 4 a T f ” ball’s best throwers—Don Meredith and Joe Tranchini—and the |esterday. | said’ he |meetings with the defending cham-| Comiskey Park in the : 4°! Marion 13, Coleman 7 rack of Progress cago's | Dodgers’ 43 triumph that evened The Packers took a $6 surprise the World Series with the White | victory over the Chicago Bears)/Sox at a game apiece tional League, not even spray- hit.) ting Richie Ashburn of the Phil-! lies, uses a lighter bat. Mattewan 35, Comstock 6 Marcellus 19, Constantine 6 Marne 19, Martin 19 (tie) Milan 33. Grosse Ile 0 \some line-up changes, after “I get} a good look at this place and think | PsN Baltimgre Colts. it over.’ explosive threat of talented runners should lure 50,000 into the| Post Time: 2:30 p. m.; Seturdeys 2 p. Cotton Bowl Saturday when Southern Methodist meets Navy. - CALL FOR RESERVED AND , } i Nashville 12, Lake Odessa 7 Southern Methodist lost its opening game of the season With left field so short, he| ast weekend, however, and now, «1 think I have an ulcer.” Where does Neal get all that) whee ‘3s. Washington Clay «Ind: 6 might shelve his usual platooning | power” North Adams 1%. Pittsford ¢ BOX SEATS last week, being nosed out by Georgia Tech 16-12. Navy practice and go with right-handed] |the Lions speed oa they will be moaned the 156-pound, muscle. “He gets it from those wrists,” Main ban me Orteaniie s has beaten Boston college and William and Mary and, jitters against Drysdale. That jfacing a team that is geared for) minus mauler. “My stomach has volunteered Alston, “and he’s} Nev Lothrup 40, Brron 0 GReenwood 9-7751 upsets when they play at Green according to scout Marvin Franklin, is a rougher team {would leave rookie Jim McAnany been giving me fits for a week.”’| stronger than he looks.” Oxtord 37, Romeo @ | The wording of Evy's brief announcement touched off passes ssceialiel that the popular Iowa coach might quit long aie Capac, phat ipa ngs os ares kickoff return FOR SALE before 1963, possibly after the current season. In announc- ie prbpe~ p< pup Ag Ay roy pepreer wa situation with alana perm Pointer , of PONTI AC . Bye Pegs eiaioenee, # bl like to nese = =. Tidy ie meee. ore Sy. ee a pope REGUISTERED—VACCINATED 5] West Huron St Open Mon. FE 4-1 555 a , a k trom the athletic board to review any opportunities which | j1, tone eneet “pas and went |Larry Kalbfiiesch was. scounting $75.00 est Mu and Fri. ‘tf 9 P.M. ‘ Piainwell 18, Ka'r0o 8t yAnqeating 13 than Georgia Tech. in right field and Bubba Phills at | °*Y Sunday afternoon. The 510 infielder pressed his |— eeeneaee — — third base in place of Jim Rivera George Halas, coach of the |fingers over the lower part of his SMU, however, will be in better shape for this game than last! | Billy Goodman. | beaten Bears, said ‘the Packers |abdomen, ever so gently, and week with fullback Jim Welch ready to go again. | «= «£ | are going to be a powerful factor |said: x~ *& *® n npreroa| im the Western Division race.” | “Right here. That's where I a IOWA CITY, Iowa—(AP)—Northwestern will carry bitter! ey ™ =a i "ct 1) Halas sald Green Bay has made [hurts I feel all knotted up, es: Wy lari btons., memories of last fall's bubble-bursting loss into its Big Ten Moon toss viene 3 @ 1 e211 a “great ation under Vince innit Leer eraishinag of mider cf _...eeee. Lombardi, head coach i ; showdown with Iowa here Saturday. Demeter at ayes esse ¢ 4 a Ge Packers: Nt comes and goes. That's why I = SS The Wildcats were the Cinderella team of the Big Ten ee 1 8% $10 ft] Formerty, it appeared that De- think it's an ulcer.” S and riding a four-game winning streak when they met [Rosedoro « { 9 1 8 € 8 troit would have little trouble with When it was suggested to him | aan ~ the Hawkeyes a year ago. dll ane ea 0| Green Bay. The Lions had won|that perhaps it was just a case of A—Fssegian 1 1 1 1 © © 45 of their last 18 games with|a nervous stomach, Neal shook his Fresh from a 55-24 victory over Michigan, Northwestern ap-|Fairly rf ......... SS ee *| the Packers, although the two head, parently was headed for a top spot in the conference after! Totais . 3604 9 64 77 14) ams fought to a 1313 tie in one| “Oh, no, it's an ulcer, all right . years of oblivion. CHICAGO (A) AB R A RBI PO A/ game last season. \I know the symptoms. It doesn’t The Wildcats put on a furious finish, scoring 20 points in| fpsrigie *s 8 2 8 $3 El Detroit head coach George Wil-|actually hurt. It just gets me right the last half, but were unable to overtake the Hawkeyes who |Landis cf 3 1 @ @ 2 son now says, “This is going tojhere, like something eating me up. | © 26-20 . ia soloda le wo ; : ' : ~ : be a big game for us." Not only that, but I lost 14 pounds a Lollar “¢ 4 @ 2 1 4 0 this summer. I started the season ~ if Northwestern lost three more conference games and finished |gmitn 11 2 8 1 1 2 8 End Jim Doran will likely be | 5+ 179 Now I weigh 1k poands Bi ' seventh. Iowa went on to win the Big Ten title and the Rose|PUips sb) 8 ff 8g] the only absentee from Sunday's ; ; Bow! MeAnany rf -.1.2 8 0 © 3 8 game, Defensive backs Yale Wit did the club doctor pi : * * * a J voeeeeees “ ; ' : : : Lary and Jim Steffen and tackle oe re saath ne t *. LOWE Do ciccccescs: 6 o 6 @6 6 6 Jerry Perry missed the season Char! le. obody Uobadad not even AUSTIN, Tex. (AP)—Texas, unbeaten and unscored on, and |p—cash 1 0 0 6 6 4 cener when the Liens were de- Alston (Manager Walt Alston). I a California, which absorbed a walloping last week from Iowa,| rotas ........ 28 3 27 1) feated by. the Colts, 21-9. all [don’t want anybody to know. mix Saturday afternoon in a nationally televised game. A romered fi Peden in Th seem to have recovered. PE along eigen lrel a for Phill in 8th. * | The Longhorns are strong 13-point favorites in the first D—Ofounasa out, tor Lewa in. ®h, | Fullbacks John Henry Johnson| about the ulcer. Then I'll really meeting between the two universities. About 35,000 are- Ls Rm pery oe en bog eee eio—3/and Nick Pietrosante were hurt/be sick. No, I'd better wait until expected to see the 3:30 p. m. (OST) kickoff in Memorial obeertin Lopes" “Angeles (N)” 7 in the first game, but they definite-| atter the Series to let him look) Stadium. It will-be telecast by NBC ab Aparicie, Phillips, smith. mR—|ly will be ready for action along] at it.” uJ , ‘ Neal 2, Essegian. SB—Moon, Gilliam. with Gary Lowe, another member; If Alston can be guaranteed that | Texas, flush with sophomore speed on both offense and injsnu. a) ............. m™, ™ % FRlof the defensive crew. the other Dodgers would hit like | ; _——— 4d the defensive secondary, has a string of three shutout victories|Lown ..........+..+5-. 2% 1 © © Pro action gets started tonight/Neal he'd order an ulcer for ev-| — Podres (W) ..0+..05-. 6 5 2 2 the Balti Colts and Chi- going, including last season’s finale. California opened with a/jsherry ................ 3 3 i : when sect ‘fa a erybody ho ag is. baad fps ’ win over Washington State, then was crushed 42-12 by Iowa. ciloon). Podres’s (Mendis, Pox. om imitn) | oe Rrpot nthe aE rom nn Sic exis mane Resebere., : oy res 3 (Shaw, Lan-|a great bearing on the NFL race|jike a Kluszewski yesterday with Pencedl On, sate. wriey (AY first base jand a win for the Colts would/his two well-plastered home runs. | . Becory (N) second dase, Summers ‘A)/again put.them in prime position/ His first, a 370-footer into the low-) (Ny right” nea” 1). a Ana 308. 2 *°"|for defense of their title. er left field stands, came in the} Vy ans 0 esign fifth and ended a Dodger runless drought that had ‘extended through - j 22 World Series innings, dating] 103-Yarder Wins for Dryden ee ee IOWA CITY, Towa (AP)—The news that Iowa Coach ‘56 Seriés. + r . Forest Evashevski intends te resign—coming on the eve of today’s crucial game with Northwestern—has shocked Hawkeye fans and observers in Iowa City. what appeared to be the clineh- affairs| ing points but a penalty nullified | gre presented.” ‘$0 yards in the final minute for (for all the Capa¢ points Almont Upset Victim, 6-0 | Neal’s second homer was a! straight-away job that cleared the center field fence, landed in the| White Sox bullpen and was caught by southpaw Billy Pierce, some WASHER & DRYER 2-cycle washer with all wash temperatures and lint filter— Gas dryer with all fabric set- tings and SUN-E-DAY lamp— Free installation, service and warranty. > Your Choice The GOOD HOUSEKEEPE Payments of Your Choice Sh —¥ene « a > See ae ee te le eS i, aii ew fe. SE, Cnn , Sn a, An... i Ci ea te ee L. R, MATTSON Word has been received of the Huron St. will be held at 3:3 p.m. |in death of former Pontiac resident L. R. Mattson, executive vice pres- ident of Armstrong Furniture Co., Martinsburg, W. Va. Service was held this week at the Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Hastings. His body was brought to Perry Mount Park Cemetery for burial. A former owner of the Grand Rapids. Bookcase and Chair Co in Hastings, he was a past presi- dent of the Grand Rapids Furni- ture Guild and had been vice pres- ident of Michigan Seating Co. in Jackson. Mr. Mattson, 61, had worked at the Bromley Grocery Store here as a young man. Surviving besides his wife. the former Lura Howell, are two daughters. Mrs. Chester Kieken- veldt of Grand Rapids and Mrs Larry Fuller of Scotsdale. Ariz.. and a sister, Mrs. Ingaber Barker of Pontiac. Mr. Mattson died Sunday in Blodgett Hospital, Grand Rapids after a brief illness. MRS. EDWARD A. PROKSCH Service for Mrs. Edward A Credit Ireland for Tibet Debate India, Malaya Qualms Are Ignored in Call for Nation's Freedom By PIERRE J. HUSS UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. — It is to Ireland's everlasting credit that it has taken the bull by the horns and has formally brought before the U.N. Assembly the ter- rible anti-religious rampage and bloody massacres staged in Tibet by the armed forces of Red China ¥ * *® The Irish delegation, headed by Minister for External Affairs Frank Aiken and = square-jawed Ambassador Frederick Bolan d, brushed aside the qualms of India and with Malaya sponsored a resolution demanding the ‘‘restor- ation” of Tibetan civil and religi- ous liberties. Th® motion deplores the “re- cent events in Tibet as a result of which the people of Tibet have )(Clara K.) Proksch, 74, of 369 W. Monday at the Sparks-Griffin ‘Chapel. Burial will be in Roseland \Park Cemetery. Mrs. Proksch died yesterday at her home after an illness of sev- eral week» . . WILLIAM ROOT Mrs. Williany (Helen I.) Root, of 190 Oneida Rd., died yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital fol- lowing an illness of several weeks, She was 63. A graduate of Wellesley College. she was a member of Central Methodist Church and a charter member of O.M.S. sorority. Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Charles Inch of Pontiac; a daugh- ter, Mrs. David Willson of Pon- tiac: and two grandchildren. Service will be held at 1:30 p.m at the Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. ROY H. BENTLEY LAPEER — Service will be held 3:30 p.m. Monday at the Baird Funeral Home for Roy H. Bentley, 82. of 3008 Davison Rd.. who died yesterday at his home following a Bags Big Lion Near Gallup, New Mexico GALLUP, N. M. w — Plenty of hunters in the Southwest have bagged lions—but not like the | ome Stan McKee of Gallup brought down. * * * McKee was hunting just north- east of town among the sand- | stone cliffs when he lined his sights up with the critter — a 400 pound African version. He shot three times. * * * It turned out G. H. Graham of Gallup had owned the lion since it was a kitten. But kitty got too big and ate too much, so Graham turned it loose. Foil Gem Theft on Detroit Street Police, FBI Follow, Nab brief illness. Burial will take place Mt. Hope Cemetery. A retired superintendent of main- tenance at Lapeer State Home and Training School, Mr. Bentley was ‘a member of Lapeer Lodge 54, F&AM. Surviving are three sons, Harry R. of Grosse Isle, Capt. James B. Bentley, USN, and Fred F., a daughter, Jean G. Bentley of Lapeer, and six grandchildren. CLARENCE C. DILL TROY — Service will be held 10 a.m. Monday at the Guardian Angel Church in Clawson for Clar- ence C. Dill, 45, of 5350 Wright St. He died yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after qa short ill- ness. A Rosary will be recited 8 p.m. Sunday at the Manley Bailey Fu- neral Home, Birmingham. Burial! will take place in St. Lawrence) Cemetery, Utica. Mr. Dill was a member of the, Acorn Post VFW of Royal Oak. He is survived by his wife, Man-) nie Mae: a daughter, Mrs. Bar- bara Brunner of Troy; a_ son, Dennis of Troy: parents, Mr. and! Mrs. Edward Dill of Troy; two grandchildren; one sister, Mrs. Neil Scott of Troy; and two broth- ers, Clement of Rochester and Richard of Troy. MRS. HENRY ROSS MILFORD — Service for Mrs Henry (Mary Ann) Ross, 74, of Brighton, was held at 3:30 pm jtoday at Richardson-Bird Funeral |Home here. Burial was in Oak- jgrove Cemetery, Milford. Mrs. Ross died yesterday in Ingham Hospital, Okemos, after |an illness of two months. She was Motors stock, is a dignified judge) +1) applies to me. I'm a digni- |fied judge with a heavy load of |work,’’ he says. “‘It doesn't allow Surviving besides her husband 1 jove the game, but I haven't Much time for diversion. I enjoy had time to improve at it,’ he hunting and fishing for relaxation. ja member of the Milford Pres- byterian Church. are a sister and two brothers. ~ Deaths Elsewhere ‘last word and Buy is pronounced| | WIMBLEDON, England (AP)— Henry George Wandesford Wood- jhead, 76, veteran newspaperman and corre t in China, died |Sept. 29 after a short illness. He lwas interned by the Japanese in 1941 and repatriated to England in 1942. In 1949 he became editor of the Far Eastern Trader, a for- eign trade publication York. He retired two years ago to his native England KNOXVILLE, Tenn | | | (AP) — NEW DODGE TRUCKS—At right is the new Dodge half-ton pick-up, availa hdrsepower six-cylinder or a 200-horsepower V-8 engine. In the background is a THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1959 Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas ‘ ton truck with ble with a 120- which went on new Dodge two- a maximum gross vehicle weight rating of 19,500 pounds. There are 30 stake and platform models in the 1960 line of Dodge trucks display today. Stern Judge La Buy Relaxes After His Du Pont-GM Ruling By RUSSELL LANE CHICAGO .—Judge Walter J. La Buy, who prescribed plans Fri- day governoing the future of Du Pont's 63 million shares of General and a frustrated golfer. IS CONSERVATIVE says The 70-year-old US. district judge's name is accented on the sometimes almost awesomely stern on the bench. Reminded of his mein, he smiled, * * * “And I intend to relax a bit now, although only on weekends.” Judge La Buy, whose working ” is an impeccable dresser. He and Holds Ist Fall Meeting Honors 5 Cubs of Pack 9 The first fall meeting of Cub at the Webster School. Highlighting the meeting was the presentation of awards, followed go, mother: Mike Larson, Robert |Practice in 1912. | prospect. by meetings of parents and pack Would-Be Crooks After Sheriook Hope, veteran newspa- officers : perman for the Knoxville Journal, ; been deprived of their liberties | Tip From Salesman \died Friday at the age of 4. Hope. The following Cubs received Chafets, Mark Hable, Michael ard Boyce, Cubs. Den .. — Mrs. Cressy Larson, Benson, David Rogers, Gary Ken- drick, Gerald Hampton and Ste- phen Bass. in violation of fundamental hu- | iwho had worked for newspapers in ‘Silver arrow awards: Gordon | Pack 9 meets the first Thursday man rights and of the guarsntees DETROIT (UPI) — Three men Birmingham. Ala. Chattanooga, | oe Don ec tank Bruce of each month at the Webster attorded them. |identified by police as nationally; 1e™.. and Gary, Ind., as well as Levine, Sam Ewalt and Randy (School. 7 * * Yithe Journal, suffered an apparent| Pike. net both th |known jewel theives were held to- ane consequence is that Doth the day after being trapped in the act * free and the Iron Curtain worldg 5+ making off with $30,000 in gers. | M in coming weeks will have orally *« * * TA, paraded before them the trials) Those arrested on charges of and tribulations suffered by @ peo grand jarceny were John Mazzeo ple hidden behind the crags or the 42. Detroit, William Berkowitz, 45,/night. semasgre ee te te hie and Abraham Katz, 49, both of can O ( : e Miami, Fi: million inhabitants from the grip mam 10,000 Due heart attack. Pack officers for this year are: | IAMI, Fla. (AP)—Pete Reed,|Dave Wealt, cubmaster; Willtam dance man and father of comedi-|Tice Levine, institutional —repre- jenne Martha Raye, died Thursday sentative; Andrew Gulacsik, treas- juere: Chalmer Robinett, awards; Harold Wagg, color guard and halls: Robert Stierer, attendance; |Wallace Schloerke, activities, and y McMillen. of the Communist dragon Police and FBI agents picked © Don Mc . + © up the trail last Tuesday atter [Or Gas Heat wg ttn. tree ~ > Frank V. Gentile, 32, of Cleve- .- Pack 9 consists of 12 dens. ree | But the public airing in the U.N . eo ; asse ae a ie Paes camnvnl ted land, Ohio, a jewelry salesman, 1]] State Soon of these dens have been added hy this supposedly responsible "Ported he was being followed. \recently. ana ma © ¢ will damage Gentil to JACKSON (UPI) — Consumers) These new dens were made up ec in Peiping wi amagt entile, following police orders, Power Co. today announced it will of the following den mothers and the prestige of Red China to a made his regular business calls in ; i edi ce t nnect Cubs: s.e extent in Bhuddist countries his automobile with his case of take immediate steps to connect 10,000 gas space heating appli-| Den 4—Mrs. Kenneth Gilboe, den h as Ceylon, Malaya. Burma, jewelry locked in his trunk. The cane mother: David Lans. Thailand. C ia, F : : ‘ke. j y satan. Camb, Fre woulda thieves folowed him, ad A" samiar amnouncement_made Sceetie, Don Bers, Ricard Wal naz ally Japa! , e ieves. in July covered an additional 30.- lis, Rickey Wilson. Gary Wilson, * * * trail led all over Detroit while Johnny Leach and Marty Trip 000 applicants. * * * The tatest report followed the dissolution of a court order | which had delayed the effective- Ness of a Federal Power Com- mission ruling allowing Pan. To those in the Western world authorities waited for the men to who like to believe that Red China make a move. { can be reformed simply by seating * * * the Peiping regime in U.N., the Yesterday, Gentile parked his lesson will be that soft words and car in front of a restaurant, called friendly diplomacy merely whet on a customer and then went to! the appetite of the Red dragon for eat. A car driven by Mazzeo pulled, Den 5 — Mrs. William Lacy, den mother; Jimmy Lacy, Joe McMillen, Jamie Clarkson, Joe Zoology Professor former vaudeville song and Brace, assistant cubmaster; Mau-| National Guard Not Efficient, Says General WASHINGTON (UPI)—Air Force Gen. Curtis E. Lemay was quoted today as saying the nation’s Na- tional Guard is “not efficient’ and “cannot live.”’ * * * |later said that any reports imply- ' He's been called conservative, degrees by the Du Pont case for, ins that the U.S. military person- reserved and serious. And he's | 9 years, has said many times a! ' judge must be mindful of the law's ‘effect on individual lives. During the long Du Pont anti- trust litigation, he once read from the bench a letter he had received from a 90-year-old wom- an who said she was following the case with interest because her sole Income came from Gen- eral Motors shares. with a strong tendency to curl. He | his wife live in a gold coast apart- ment on Chicago's Lake Shore drive. Their married. ON FARM on a Wisconsin farm, he acquired his interest in law early from an uncle who was for 65 two daughters are in New Scout Pack 9 was held Thursday) Serokin, Roger Bergo and Rich- years a justice of the peace. He midst of a neck-and-neck race for took his law degree at De Paul | University in Chicago, and entered * * *® He took a fling at Chicago Demo-| cratic politics in 1930 and was elected a member of the Cook County Board of Commissioners. | In 1933 he won his first of | twe terms in the Cook County | Circuit Court, and President | Franklin D. Roosevelt named him to the U.S District Court bench in 1944. The Du Pont case, one of the| ‘most important ever tried in the| Chicago federal jurisdiction, rep- resents the high point of Judge ‘La Buy’s career. His most recent other headline} jwinner was his ruling directing | the deportation to Italy of Paul, Judge La Buy has graying hair | for Transfers Why Were 3 Officers Before Hearings? WASHINGTON (UPD — The Air Force was under pressure from a congressman today to explain why three high-ranking officers were transferred Irom a U.S, air base in Turkey ish mistreatment of American air- men. The officers were reported to have resented State Department apathy about the brutality charges. Rep, Frank T. Bow (R-Ohio) asked Air Force Secretary dames H. Douglas for a full re- pert on the matter, Bow referred to reports from Rome that Air Force Col, Robert N. Wilkinson, Lt. Col. Charles N. Moss and Army Lt. Col. Hal D. Stewart had been victims of a “purge’’ at the U.S, base at Izmir, Turkey, Moss is in the medical corps. * * * The Defense Department last jnight confirmed the three had been transferred. But the depart- |ment said no information was available here as to why they were being transferred, or where. A State Department spokesman nel were being transferred from Turkey to keep them from testify- jing at the hearings of the service- men in Izmir “are false." Campaign Gets Warm | in London LONDON (UPI)—Prime Minister Harold Macmillan’s Conservatives jand the opposition Labor Party |began lith-hour drives today to |win over an estimated six million |still-undecided voters before the Oct. 8 general election. * * * With only five days left to elec-} tion day, both parties were in the control of Britain's next govern- |ment. A close photo-finish was in ; * ¥ * | Macmilan canceled two cam- paign speeches and unexpectedly called a news conference this aft-| ernoon to ‘‘set the record straight’’) on Labor promises and make an) appeal for the undecided votes. Macmillan and his aides wefe reported deeply disturbed over! grass-roots soundings by Conserv- ative Party workers as well as newspaper polls that showed 18 to 19 per cent of the nation’s 35 million voters still haven't made up their minds whether to vote Conservative or Labor. News in Brief The blunt-spoken Air Force vice (The Waiter) Ricca, one of the! Eli Cook of 120 Jackson St. told! chief of staff was reported to have few leftovers of the old ‘Scarface Pontiac police Friday that someone | made the statement in an off-the- ins ‘cuff speech at a Reserve Forces ing the prohibition era in Chicago. seminar in the Pentagon last week- . -o wy |end. Gilboe, Kart) According to the Army-Navy-Ait the seminar that in the event of sud- den war there would be no time to mobilize and ‘weekend soldiers Force Journal, Lemay told will not do.” Waterford Man Held After Car handle Eastern Pipeline Co. to discontinue service to another company and supply Consumers with some of the gas involved in the court action. devouring its neighbors. Laos and up behind Gentile’s car. Berkowitz! India have found this out got out and using a set of dupli-| == cate keys, started Gentile’s car) and drove off. Then police and FBI men moved in, stopped both cars From U. of M. Dies | ANN ARBOR (UPI)—Paul S. U. A. R. Warns China logy at the University of Michigan) CAIRO, UALR. (UPL) — The 77d arrested all three men. United Arab Republic threat * ® * is a waiting list of more than day night of a heart attack, He orderly after his car went out of ened last night to close the Chi. The Jewel thieves didn't even 110.000 gas space heating appli. Was 77. get a look at their loot cants An outstanding teacher and re- Communist consulate in Damascus if investigation proves it is in contact with Syrian Com munists, The government also delayed the departure of a new ambassador to Peiping in a deep- ening rift with Red China. U. S., Italy Friends nese * * * searcher, Dr. Welch gained na- \. H. Aymond Jr., executive wrist 4 vice president, said the additional ®'S' 4" installations would be distributed esh water bodies). through the 29-county.area served 2 Member of the facuity from 1918 by Consumers, including Bay © his retirement in 1952. City, Flint, Jackson, Kalamazoo, | Lansing, Pontiac, Saginaw, Royal PO Needs Postage Hike Oak, Alma, Marshall, Midland, . . nd suburban Detroit communities.| BRISTOL, Va.-Tenn, (UPI)—The a U.S. Post Office Department will continue to operate at a loss if Congress does not raise first class East Germans Hoist New Flag — in Defiance? BERLIN (AP) Communist WASHINGTON (UPI)—Italy and East Germany Friday announced the first raising of its new na- the United Stz Q : e United States have agreed that | ional flag. there are no problems of ‘‘major , significance” Netwuen cher. =e Until now, both East and West Hungary Issues Stamp Rips Into Yard held today by Waterford police on Consumers officials said there died at his home here Thurs-'a charge of being drunk and dis- N. Drayden, Jr. control and ripped into private property on Walton boulevard in- juring a girl. tional eminence as an entomolo-| Alva Jones. 25, of 4931 Waterloo |b limmologist (study of St. was booked at the Oakland Nick, Curtiss Potter, George A He had been County Jail to await arraignment Taylor, Charles Rosenberg, Robert before a Waterford Township jus- tice later today. Dorothy M. Hemminger, 15, of 8967 Eston Rd., Clarkston, was treated for facial cuts at Pontiac General Hospital and released. She was a passenger in the Jones car. : . : . \Germany have used the same ° Police said the auto went out of reassuring word was contained in : ; oo Markin Moon Shot letter postage to five cents, U.S. ; : tant a joint communique issued last see pli stripes of black, g | Postmaster General Arthur Sum-/control shortly after midnight, red and gold. On the Communist’ yIENNA (UPI\—Comm unist merfield said yesterday. eneseed int 4 nwing. type’ night by visiting Italian Premiér} id , Antonio Segni and Secretary of = ate red flag is usually flown Hungary has issued a new stamp) jnearby | State Christian A. Herter. jcommemorating the successful So- |t’s 72 in London —— * * * 'viet moon shot, according to Hun- Pontiac Theaters | The new Communist flag has an &arian newspapers. LONDON \®—The temperature emblem in the middle of the red The stamp depicts the rocket, in London at noon today was | stripe, a hammer and compass in hitting the moon and carries the| 72, the warmest on record for October. Eagte ‘obvious adaptation of the Soviet date Sept. 13, 1959. Sat.: “Don't Give Up the Ship,” hammer and sickle. It is similar Jerry Lewis; ‘Young Captives,” to the emblem that Hungarian. Tom Seldon |rebels cut out of their Communist Sun, - Tues.; ‘‘The Hangman,” flag during the 1956 revolt. Robert Taylor. Fess Parker; ‘‘Is-| A law adopting the new flag land of Lost Women,” Jeff Rich-;was approved Thursday by the ards. |East German Parliament. Wed. - Sat.: ‘‘Shane,"’ Alan Ladd, | kt * In Quiz Probe Next Week May Turn Up TV Deceit . Jean Arthur; “Step Down From| jt a ' a | ppeared to be a new asser- Terror, ar Drake. tion of individuality by the Com-| WASHINGTON (AP) — A con-jday night, “The subcommittee 1s: oe uron ,{ntunist regime, which has been/gressional investigation of TV/interested solely in where com-| ~ : ret phe omer gens \trying hard to get foreign recog-|quiz shows next week will turn| mercial deceit has been practiced . “— orth by North- | nition. up chicanery and deceit “even be-|on a national scale by means of west, Vv arte Saint, Cary/ yond dg ty had originally 4 wg ngiad og willful holding out} ~ : pected,”’ p. Oren Harris to the public as honest contests, ~~ Thess te _ _ Reports on Russians Ark) predicts. performances which were rigged -, © os ingler, * * * in ance,"’ saa Price in new Percepto| MOSCOW (AP) — U. S. Secre- | Harris is chairman of the House adv kk & ilming « | tary of Agriculture Ezra Taft |subcommittee on Legisla-/ The subcommittee has subpoe- dat. - Tuer, rand | Benson completed a four-day |tive Oversight. It will hold four/naed winners in some of the quiz) Pr The Sign of the tour of the Soviet Union today |days of hearings starting next/shows who have told previously we or, _Anita Ekberg. with the declaration that Rus- | Tuesday on alleged rigging of TV! of contestants being ‘coached and| Jet 7 enn Sat.: “Here Come the sians are “people who want to [quiz shows: igetting answers in advance. Most 8," “The Mark of Zorro,” Ty-| do right. who want to love their : * * * lof the quiz shows have long since| rone Power. | country and their families.” ' Harris said in a statement Fri-, disappeared from the TV acreen.| Fi , } through a grapevine and tore up the lawn on the property of Ralph Rowley, 4468 W. Walton. AP Wirephote MAPPY 92ND—Sen. Theodore F. Green, (D-RID, smilés happily after receiving a stack of birth- day cards and well wishes. The oldest member in the history of the/Senate turned 92 Friday. Al’ Capone gang that reigned dur- ‘Four Candidates in Royal Oak | Mayoralty Race | ' Royal Oak Mayor pro-tem Wil-! liam Hayward will face three op- ponents in the Nov. 3 election. | John Kronenberg, manager of the| |Secretary of State’s Branch Office | in Berkley, filed his petition late} |Tuesday, just before the 5 p.m. | deadline, |Welch, professor-emeritus of z00-| A Waterford Township man was| Others opposing Hayward are| Seymour Devereaux and Howard, * * * Three commission posts are be- ing sought by 13 candidates. They are Louis Dwyer, William A. Hass- berger, Jr., Malcolm Sewell, Ted F. Patnales, Wallace J, Reynolds, \John C. Scowcroft and Mrs. Paul-' ine Mott. Incumbents for the commission) posts are Arthur H. Frief ard Vern-| ald E. Horn. The remaining com- mission post was held by Hayward before being appointed mayor pro- ‘Waterford Twp. Dinner ito Highlight Girl’s Act | Tonight's Waterford Township! |Community Activities Inc, dinner and program will be highlighted by the pantomime act of a nine- year-old township girl, Michelle Burns, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Van H. Burns, of 939 Lakeside Dr. The dinner is scheduled to begin at 6. Michelle has won several talent shows in the Qakland County area recently. Way Out With Names MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (UPI — True space age tots are the three Miller ‘children. Mr. and Mrs. Blan Miller yesterday named their newborn daughter Rockette. She has two brothers, Space An- drew, 2, and Solar Alexander, 1. Scores With Suggestion EVANSVILLE, Ind. |Major J. William Davidson offered jone final suggestion for the city employes’ suggestion box which he |discovered| was used for litde but idiscarded chewing gum wrappers: (UPI) —/ Right ‘broke into his home and stole $65 in a paper bag. Bank certificates worth $3,000 yesterday were reported stolen from the home of Martha Twite. | 23 Park PlL., according to Pontiac police. Thieves broke into the Linabury and Lawson Service Station, 2925 Dixie Hwy., Waterford Township. last night and took an estimated $10 from vending machines, ac- cording to state police. Turkey Shoot, Aurburn Heights Sportsman Club, Sun., Oct. 4, Roberts Court off Churchill Rd., just follow the signs. —Adv. R Sale: — Church of 8. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Priday, Oct. 9 am. to 6 p.m. Rummage Sale Tues., Oct. 6 & Wed., Oct. 7.9to 9 pm. B & B Auction, 5089 Dixie Highway. | _ Jee | } | 9, Vv. Lodge Calendar Areme Chapter 503 OES. will) hold annual meeting Oct. 5 at 8 rm Roosevelt Temple. 22 State treet. Ethel Clark, Annual wiece Chasen oon officers. Pontiac number 228. O.E.S. Monday evening, Oct. 5 at 8 P.M. 18% Lawrence Street. Edith Coons, Secretary. —Adv. Fails in Suicide Leap From Brooklyn Bridge NEW YORK (UPI) — A _ 27- year-old man muttering ‘I'm sick of life’’ attempted suicide last night by leaping 170 feet from the Brooklyn Bridge into the East River. However, he was unhurt by the! impast of his fall and after coming up for air glumly swam 200 yards to shore where he was dragged in by two policenien. He identified himself as James Benson but refused to give a home address. Kings County Hos. pital spokesmen said he suffered No apparent injury. He was to be transferred to the hospital's psy- chiatric section today. De Gaulle Foes Meet ALGIERS, Algeria (UPI) — wing to President opponents Charles de Gaulle’s Algerian peace plan scheduled a mass meeting to- day to map strategy for their drive to vote his government out of of- fice. They were given little chance itake if down. ¥ of success, Ordered From Turkey) following alleged Turk- | £ af u & den — ar the Ledge. Ts. corge Whalen and Family. ‘ WISH TO THANK OUR MANY riends. a * and Der esd for thetr- many acts of k 88. p ar aay an floral offerings du last illmess and ihe death of my beloved husband A special thanks te Dr. Neil Sullen- Rev. Arvid Ander- ple Fu- 2 ow aE ¢ c missed by Mother. Martin, & Eari. 4 Funeral Directors Donelson-Johns ___wpasigued for Funeria | Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Plane or Motor PE 2-378 COATS NERAL HOME Drayton OR 37757 ~~ sPARKS-ORIF PIN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service 2-504! Cemetery s 5 PPP PP ED PERRY MT. PARK CEMETERY graves. $25 & up. FE 4-0682 At 10 a.m. Today there > No matter how loud you blow your horn ... it could never be heard by as many people as a little Pontiac Press Want Ad Dial FE 2-8181 and ask for a friendly ° Want Ad Sales Clerk The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 All errors should be re- ried immediately. The ress assumes wu Pets ment which h When cancellations Closing time for advertfse- ents containing type sizes 4 than te the day of is now 8 a.m. amet eg after the first rtion. CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 1-day 3-Days 6-Days $1.40 $2.08 0.12 97 4.50 130 4.50 es BsBssse S3ssse —— Se2S3Sa 2 2 3. 3. 4. ‘ 4. . 5. S2sae > Sewravaun Lk] eo wih be mon mo | made use Pontiac Press box numbers. For Sale Houses OP SUNDAY 3 TO 5 2671 SYLVAN SHORES 6 <. poreh in, ov Sylvan Lake. 3 bedrooms up, dén_ down, a 9 baths. wi k. Excellent swimm and that kating = 8 e sion in the winter. r Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 76 West Huron Street ' FR 5-8161 or y FE 2008