The Weather U.8, Weather Bureau Forecast THE PONTIAC PHM —— —- a et i Fair, cooler tonight. S “* Cloudy, mild tomerrew. (Detalls Page 2) 117th YEAR xkkxkke«ktk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1959 —48 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SSS ge Ike's National Day’ of Prayer ’ . A trial econom) Point Dr., told the jury how she tions or answers during his house aéross the street. * ® * St set first pleaded with her father to put away his 38 revolver after he An original charge of careless ap pearances on “21 . : He also said he has no knowl- On such county use might be to Hill, vice president of . | w Ford Motor Co in charge of jasked her to have her mother edge of any assistance having piace she Juvenile Division's school s Tractor & Implement Division jcome to him. The Marshalls lived ———————___ —_________ ein — carried on in sien ngham, deplored ‘the fact ‘with the Fishells a haere at pnb grwmiglelcniig wm! most of the state's own citi “Almost immediately as she Convair B58 the Youth Home on Coaley L ke ” aren't aware that there are| ; a be be ho ee went out of sight into the bed ; . ™ « colleges and universities in > tao 2 Ee ; road, under one roof. R iroom I heard a shot and heard Proves Low This suggestin was advanced by wong | deutiaa (even puts her say, ‘Oh, Elmo.’ Mrs. Fishell . Mrs. Helen G, Bonner, chairman “WREAD THE TRUTH PROMOTING MICHIGAN — Meeting yesterday at Michigan Varner (center), MSUO chancellor. Seated with him are Merritt | Sted Sneak Possible of the Board of Supervisors’ Juve- 3 hairman of the Ambassa- State University Oakland, Michigan's Industrial Ambassadors were Hill (eft), chairman of the Ambassadors’ Executive Committee, “AN ACCIDENT’ nile Committee, ss Executive Committee, told) told that among the state's many ufiderpublicized assets are its and Edwin O. George, a member of the committee and chairman | Later in the hospital. Mrs. Fish FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI) — * * ® group ‘at many persons’ educational opportunities. Making the point was Durward B. of yesterday's meeting. : jell said, her mother said she didn't The Air Force's high-flying Hustler “Classrooms at the Youth Home #.\e Misconceptions about Mich- . 7 intend to press charges against —the Convair B5&8—has made a are adequate and the class loads - ind it's up to us to correct her 300-pound husband because “11 sk pet irae hedge - hopping are held to a maximum of 20 ’ Was an accident.’ trip to California to prove it can pupils . " she. sz NC n the past ye almost every Safeguard Curfew fly low and sneak under radar en citeoslel a an ‘lication you picxed up had ad- use of firearms was Pontiac-MSUO Road British Parties dropped defenses to hit the enemy next few years at the Youth Home ise publicity about our state,” The Hustler flew the 1,400 miles ti] noted Y th p d d | and a manslaughter warrant is- ; 7 _— : ; ‘‘However, the Center has one on Ou b) on ere e J e . . sued after Mrs. Marshall died. om Fort Worth to Edwards Ati » ¢ . * * * Force Base in the Mojave Desert adequate classroom = and six ee ee toe ; mM oun S annin rive 0 ire Marshall, who lives with his at 300 feet above the ground makeshift reoms which are poor- 7) feeling s@rrv for the ‘welfare (Continued From Page One) daughter und son-in-law testified ‘ = ly ventilated and entirely too ate’ are surprised to find no rying punishments of up to $100 in| | he We 46 Gxheke Marienian. was It made a simulated low-level small for the number of children eedence of the alleged horrors,” fines and 90 days in jail. Make Last Desperate found unconscious in the Fishel!’ @ttack on the base last week and using them during our peak 7 declared * * * Oakland County authorities are) City Manager Walter K. Willman pe home beside his wife, supposedly "en flew back to Fort Worth— | periods. ‘Attempt to End Labor, all in four-hours and three min- “There's been too much talk The ordinance also provides that) fonsigering Emusil nd S ie. alr that the Oakland County : from an overdose of ‘'six or seven” ; od ai ith i **At times it is necessary to pro- sbeut how bad Michigan Is and any adult convicted of encouraging) versity Oakland ar ithe "Pontiac oe a ae wes attempt Conservative Deadlock slecping tablets he had taken be" ae am Mihout SOPPIME Vide education for as many as 47 met enough about how geod it OF aiding a minor to break the | side of the school. city commi len to persuade t ar nary fore the shooting. Mrs. Fishel] said OF Felueting. children in these small, inadequate is.” Will declared. curfew is subject to the same $100 aor eee rol eh S-| Commission to build such a road FOSDON (APCoEH . col ~*~ * * {| “The low-level bombing run roems.”’ she said. She Ford 1 sd fine and jail term : — me J. Robert F. Swanson, chair- ....) ilies made. rian prin Martin. a 21-vear-old ex-convict. Proved that gMe Hustler has enemy | Presently, th education program re rganiza a a As introduced. the ordinance man of the Plan Commission, tion-eve canvasses oda a fina] “ent to tr al today. charged with Penetration capabilities _Rreater for boys and girls confined hy t J { the sta would allow children to be out e ° favored such an entranceway desperate effort to carry the coun. k'@naping and raping a 17-year than any other aircraft in exist- court order to the Center or Youth S1f the something \ don after eurfew hours only if ac New Lighting after @ study last year, according ,,. °. huge bloc of uncommitted old Pontiac girl last April after ence.” said Frank W. Davis,'Home is under the operation of Rees se Your vote at the bal. companied by parents. guardians . ° | to George N. Scrubb, the com. voters allegedly dragging her from her Convair vice president and man- the Waterford Township School L bex as an individua Hull said © some adult approved by them. to Stop Midair | mission's director. | The latest public opinion poll, 4? following a collision ager of the Fort Worth plant _—, which provides a _ prin- \D\ PROFIT GROUP It also would Jet teenagers in Crashes OK'd * * * showed 812 per cent of the voters : yee of ee Aacison ae : a alpied ee ta he ss cipal, 11 “ “ and “equipment The Ambassadors are anon the 15 to 17 group stay out j Willman said that the Roadin 0) key districts a the Bisail Refi raat the week fo , ee et bomber pone fly higher It t $33.847 last year to oper- non-political oragnizatior ae as might — MINNE > : Committee of the Board of Super. know” or “won't tell” column ‘i oom a “ ort 1 a ; is ‘NL, ~ . ne x cia _ ragniz Friday ME “APOLIS (UPI) — The visors has ‘sympathetically’ take Even the chiefs of the two ma-| “here he was serving time as a than any other airplane in the ate the court school program, at ott pa ws wane" ritgmbety This last prov n prompted the — Se le: apprased en under consideration the Pontiac )Or parties were cagey about pre- proper violator resulting from a world and can exceed ies 2— yee of which was paid by the meme moves by firme away from OMly enticism vowed last night. cc roorne Henting system proposal for a big highway be- dicting the results of Thursday's Ca? theft conviction. mice be SPEC OL am chains a _ i ‘way from cesigned to prevent midair col- tween the school and downtown election of a new House of Com 7 ‘ i ~~ “Why make any exceptions to lisions, it was announced yester- Pontiac mons. . | the hours?” asked Commission. day * * * I y t ‘'reing the ATpUasenioes to seek er Wesley J. Wood. “If they | The Minneapolis-Honeywell Reg. “LONG MT. CLEMENS The weather — a telling factor Horatio Earle Started It All a ~ . ms ‘ooking for @ should be home at midnight ulator Co, which built the device. Commissioner Floyd P. Miles in British elections — seemed un- .. to settle Hill pointed out: six days a week they should be said it consists of high intensity ‘e must not only be order- | ers We cannot wait for industry | home by then on Fridays. too.” flashing stroke lights mounted on e e urged that city planners prepare certain. with rain forecast in the / o plans for a broad boulevard along West, and sun for the east. Rain | e ad e S Ig way YS e] ) ) e | y Commissioners William \\ Don. 2 Plane’s wingtips. Mt. Clemens street from downtown tends to keep the voters away _ : = ene aV > et to the gates of the schoo! on Squir- p lec . aldson. Floyd P \ile nd John _ The lights have been seen at : Past elections have shown Labor-! peers ! ; a ; ; “The state needs sincere and | 4 Dugan said the move would: distances of 100 miles, according "el road in Pontiac Township. lites to be more easily deterred! LANSING (# — When the auto local businessmen actually paid’ Earle and other road reformers ‘sitive supporters to speak for need stud: to H. W. Atkins. a Northwest-| “Our planners should present than Conservatives. . industry Was young. a peppery! every man a dollar to go home finally met with success in 1905 i he declared. “Nothing sells The Comm i ,. Orient Airlines pilot who thought | the county planners with definite | Prime Minister Harold Mac- little man named Horatio Earle without listening with passage of the State Re- She euthwliice.” OMMission ignored OF AP oo we svatem ; . millan's Conservative party. seek. ‘@unched an uphill fight to give “In Reyal Oak tabouts “2rd Law providing state aid to Parently was unaware of the fact : | prepoests:ts shan that were real: ye ee , Michigan a highway system worthy " ng aN roustapeus townships and counties for road t inged the Ambassadors to;that Pontiac has had a curfew o del * ly interested,’ Miles said. ing a third term in control of the of the nan _ pote Beachy Taverne were hives druction stab h tt a saies of firms gewk- ia books fox slau 4a cen Minneapolis-Honeywell said the \government. could draw a grain ° ; “ am eed aad to break up his meeting and construction and establishing the @ A state in which to locate to : strobe lights give pilots of planes A wees ane bn rte Bard” encouragement from the latest bina em ain . sont, nb ee in Albion he was publicly ostra- Se all . selmde eee a ® Michigan Economic Develop-, A 1915 law sets a Spm. sum traveling 360 miles an hour more Met With members of the Board) naily Telegraph poll, which gave . Hite tM, Loo Ue cized for his prediction that ‘°S!S!ture appropria ed $90, or + Depart: mer curfew for children under than three times the 15 seconds Of Supervisors’ Ways and Mcansithem a 21% per cent lead over)? 800d head start. Fifty-six’ popees would someday be a pub. '* 1905-07 period and established ‘ \e P ~ re s . ’ a ne ag > YOCr » . f - ° ni > . 5 i y bs 16 and % p.m. in the winter. It he now has to observe another Committee and said that an MSUO| their Labor party rivals in 30 key years ago ne became the first lic nuisance in the cities of the 7” 4id schedule ranging from $250 < ‘ . carries provisions makin - 1 “os ul ye Denelicla “ ine Sle i s é ns eT e It cla g IT ; be LIKE TENAS also carries i king plane on a collision course and Doulevard would be beneficial to’ constituencies paints highway corgmissioner and state. bey mule tin ebiy Brake! Toes ‘0 “What we reed in Michigan are! Parents and guardiany responsi take evasive action Pontiac a ae a }six years later built the world’s $1.000 per mile for macadam high- Ale AR ek i ke they have | ble. x * rs * , first mile of concrete highw Wy - City dwellers set up a road- wavs ~ Thev st ; apes a , - | If ry cat ucted Accordin; to the poll. the Con- on Woodward avenue in Detroit be- block against his proposal for state : . I jown there) It's heen such a << (ine area : . such a road were constructed, gervatives can bank on support | |, Six and Sev Mil ; d for rosds casing ld Last year. 97 million dollars nz. teaching that this curfew » entnreral that it would only be after agreement oy : 7 ween Six and Seven Mile roads ald for roads, arguing it woul “ate : kline rf isenforced woeven ye V2 from 42'2 per cent of the elec- mean higher taxes to pay for rur- was allocated for state trunkline “ee Cisgest and best of veteran policemen cant remember ads Ul Ing on costs by the city, county anditorate, while Labor haz 40 'per| His career was recalled today al roads. Farmers maintained the, F=ee"* ee | ee ? aye a + : c « ‘ & : erything why enforcement stopned Pontiac Township cent sewed up and the Liberals’ by J. Carl MeMonagle, president ad sys . . | By 1910. 22 ¢ ; had adopt “Once the e hragged about; Most. officers rs } - - a Ae . of The Michigan Geod Roads | '°* system was adequate for their 3¥ 1910, 32 counties had adopt- =f Se eee te BAL Willman reported that the |{'2 per cent. . purposes and that bicyclists should ed the county road system er state they re obliged to;that the curfew probabls proved ’ i * * * Federation and chairman of u ‘ Sooo rom counly Toad sy: i ; g ! probe prove Road Commission plans to pave pay the entire costs through spe-. Earle’s stormy career as high- 0 , } : a . 2 Sts § 4 : : i : NP to be impii Featherstone road between the | Other recent polls have shown, Michigan Highway Week, now in clal taxes {way commissioner came to an end —_ the two main parties — Labor and progress. city limits and Opdyke road next in 1909 when Gov. Fred Warner , . year. Conservative — racing neck-and-| +-Farje’s interest in better road “Me after ¢ 5 : : eer , “é est in be ads ired him after a series of dis- some Show ers Expected | aS as Powerful as The job will be fm connection neck with up ‘o one among stemmed from his activity in the Al > . agreements. Russia a; It’s Delayed with paving Featherstone between the don't Heelan ritain has’ League of American Wheelmen, an leged Térrorist “But by then."’ said McMon- Adams road and the Auburn|*>:400.000 eligible voters organization of bicyclists that de- agle, ‘he had well earned the ti- Rainy Spell Eases Up By The Associated Press The monsoon-like weather that ~pped the mid-continent the last the lower through Ohio and Penns\Ivania into the New England states and Great Lakes eastward by Shortage of Funds BOSTON (UPI)—The United States is developing a rocket at least twice as powerful as those for, said Robert O. Felt, Commission chairman. HALF MILE GRAVEL Road Heights Nike site, which the fed-|_ eral government is going to pay!. In 1955 the Conservatives won 1 52-seat majority in the 630-seat' House of Commons. The party that gets a majority! in Commons will form the next, manded road improvements,"’ Mc- Monagle said * * * In the early 1900's, most road | improvements outside cities were! Will Be Given Sanity Hearing A Detroit man, arrested Sept. «More Layoffs loom tle as the father of Michigan's good roads movement.” eyera] days appeared, for the eee fe eee |government. If the Conservatives made by farmers who owned ad- along the western slopes of the, believed used by Russia in_ its . St0F ° The city paved Featherstone up;win, Macmillan will be back as joining land. in Commerce Township by Oakland | according to Mrs. Willipm Guinn. iviser, Jamey’ Howlett. j jlwg Sisters, a nephew and a nicce. of the United Auyo Workers Union. vost part, to have ended early Appalachians southward to the Space efforts but the American an (fe | th Britain's prime minister. If Labor Farl f legedly. Ghreckting a Dare in ce : Inc ‘ay Gulf Coast area project is lagging a year behind '0 the city limits three years ago,| Br! $ z pak earle organized a campaign for legedly terrorizing a Dearborn f Some rain however fell from -* « because of insufficient funds, Rock- Dut the half-mile stretch to Opdyke) wins, Hugh Gaitskell will take pette, highways but ran into stiff Township couple for seven hours, | . | Up to ‘Tuesday midnight. the &t expert Dr. Wernher Von Braun is still gravel. ONER: opposition from farmers protesting wif] be ‘xamined by a two-membor| (Continued From Page One) The W ather Weather Bureau reported. Glad- said Monday night. against the cost. sanity commission, win, Mich, got 1!2 inches of rain) Von Braun. chief of ee an . \ Appointed highway commission- | mareid G. BA “but they are not in the imme- Full US Weather Bureau Report in six hours; B nghamton N.Y | my’s rockets and missiles iro. |After 3 Hungry Days In Car ery oe ee Heda Hubbell esd mute tow charge mate ineg: edt aed ‘a fittle warmer’ teaay’ aioe got 1.24 and Chattanooga, Tenn..! gram, told newsmen before or aUunee Peter SOSRLEROAKING| oe caught: with inlent to murder | A layoff schedule has not been « Fair and cooler tonight, low 50 1.18 l@ 4 in = jcampaign that took him to nearly | f —s com pleted at the present time, he i, Nate weave eee ee . | dressing 2 business group that ( zloom Ebbs for Fami y levery city and village in the state; T¥esday before Wayne County | , 2 : some rain and snow fell in the! the nation’s penny-pinching pol. * ‘| Cirevit Court Judge Frank Fitz. %4 —_ , Fedey ie Foettse ; Rockies Cut) Bank and Great, icies are killing the United States | ; i * = gerald, who appointed the sanity * ud * cee “' *™ Falls, Mont, each had about 1! chances of overtaking Russia in A destitute family which spent his family to his home at 45 W. Earle often was rudely treated) commission. : Officials of the Saginaw Steering ae watie a mn Ph inch of snow on the ground - | the space race. three nights hving in their auto- New York Ave. and gave them by his audiences,"’ McMonagle Gear Division said at least 1,000 mle I Wear ae a a’ 4pm Occasional rain x il fall frem "We could eatrn up if we ; i mobile faces a brighter future a hot meal. said. “At a meeting in Iron County : Bloom was apprehended (i depu- workers will be laid off this week- pees ah ied Gee the northe aan das Ane . spenc Se ees , r ; —_——_—_——— ies at a gas station at Pontiac rhe pls ai we inet Tee at Aerie ma ward yg ao ae cae 7 “ enough money to do it.” he said are ‘ Vontiae oa: and He then gave them a Salvation trail and Haggerty road where he end. The plant employs 4,200. Downtown Temperatures from Flonda , ) ‘the E * aa “We could ‘go faster if we got the © ‘OC2! Salvation Army. Army welfare order slip entitling » 4, . ' ‘had driven Mr. and Mrs. George * : * f sm ea eee at renee © and over the a tie Northwest, funds We asked for. But we get ial them to a free pays lodging at Historical Foundation Barnes of 7017 Mayburn St “an ral the puewrole! a tin { a ai : . ae ae , 5 ” : ili : Vight;a Pontiac hotel and breakfast to- , y plants have n orde on am........ 58 Ep Meco nc, 64 Elsewher te a -;only about 50 per cent. | Patrolman William W. Night a am fe sewhere. it will be mostly fair.| Von Braun said the rocket un-|ingale was at the front desk when/ day. * ~ = @ four-day work weeks. Chevrolet is ——— | der development, called Project a young man walked into the Pub-| x e® airmen Selected. Barnes charged that Bloom had ithe only one of GM's car-manu- fas tserden denen Lake Huron Fishermen | Saturn, would have engines cap- lic Safety Building last night! “The baby was quite sick and| > on ang, Mad three hailed ape ing —— oe \ whest temperature cess 4), able of developing thrust of 1,500,- claiming thet a friend owed him) should get medical! attention,” é gun and had thrown ammonia in a } lawest temperature... |. 58 ay : : |* : . Dr. Sara Van Hoosen J Ww ‘fo’ i in for Whitefish Boom “ - Sara Van Hoosen Jones, Yew lhis wile'’s face. n temperature gy 000 pounds, ‘‘about four times money and had failed to pay the! Nightingale said. / Ternbtedt said it ‘has enoagh Veather—Rain | ’ president of the Oakland County as _ a greater than our largest intercon. debt. * *« * ; . lies of finished materials for A One Year Age tn Pontiac LANSING (UPI) — A comeback ¢; tasile : , ..).,,. | Historical Foundation, has named! | . P ‘ pega 77 of Whitefish in Lake Huron could a —— eae e and eee! Upon questioning, Nightingale | A spokesman at the Salvation the following committees ohair--Richardson Leaves Bulk | *% cars GM expect- to build wean Pfeil licen m1 mean ‘‘a lot of money in fishies: ys ae ape oo learned the man and his wife, |Army Citadel said this Morning} men: ; f ie current steel inventories. eather—Rein men's pockets,” Conservation De- we think the Russians ae both 22, and their two-year-old | he would try to contact the desti- Finénce and promotion, James of Fortune to Charity GM and Chrysler Corp. officials ) Highest and Lowest Temperatares | ; 7 . in their space program. child, had been living in their |tute couple to tell them he al- a ¢ : Sule ate ao 0 Yeon | partment officials said today. ’ . Howlett; interior project, Mrs. FORT WORTH. T AP)—Ex.-|Said they hope to continue auto 0 1 et tare Goi? 47) A. B. Cook, head of the depart- : ii = 1961 Chevrolet for three days. ready has a job for the husband. /rary Mastick: accessions, Mrs. L ecutors for the ae bo Sid W [assemblies into early November ay’s Temperate t | ei: ane | cs . , poe ‘ : ‘Sere 8 "Warauette mss «| ment s fish division, said whitefish| 9 ate Third Polio Clinic “He said it had been that long L. Dunlap; membership, Mrs.|Richardson said Tuesday that the even if the steel strike continues. prmares 6 Miami Bch m #7| Populations vary to a great extentiqt Waterford School since they had a good meal.” Welfare Load Dropping | Harry Going; junior membership wealthy Texas oilman willed 13| Ford'Motor Ca., the other mem- nggtaio i” § SF Minneenons a Ggievery five to 10 vears and that! ie , Nightingale said. The man, who and tours, Adah Shelley. ‘million dollars in property ,and|ber of the auto industry's big three, \ Neneti 84 gh Rew York Be as nti aed are greatly affected by, A third Polio Clinic will be held| would not wlease his name for! DETROIT (UPI)~An upswing iri}~House and grounds, R. C. Poole: |trust funds to relatives. produces about half its own steel Sreiand 3 fs Qmiaba HI i eats conditions from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at Wa pinion fli he had been look- employment has dropped the De-| publicity, Joe Haas; fireproof!’ The bulk of the estate will go| and is in better shape. — 7s Bhoen'x » Bf nes. i 7 oe * terford Center School. _ ‘ing for a Jb troit welfare load more than 9 per vault, Alice Serrell and R. C. to the Sid W. Richardson Founda- | x *¢ * reo § 8 pp sf ay City times. in a dis» Dri M. G. Prosser will be in DOESN’T WANT CHARITY cent in the past month. The case |Poole; cataloging, Alice Serrell: tion for Charity, Religion and: Ed-| Ford officials said last week the eared I ro §. 8, Mare 1 ‘5 patch by staff writer Neil Smith. charge of the clinic, and residents “1 don't. went : arity t load now stands at 10.817, the low- barn restoration,. Dr. William utation ccmpany. hoped to continue as- —— ville Bt Hamme ww oo gcd Sere ease a any one Q the pape work,” Ge seid ant charity, just’. point singe last October. The Gordon, general chairman and 1!l, | Richardson. 66, died last week of semblies 45 days. Workers in the mph ile ‘ es as predicting a four shots for a fee of $1 each, ~ high point of this dec: as 10,- : -\t art attack. He is survived by Ford steel operation ar , Pre S } Tam 00 2 big catch in JO) or 9961, ' | Nightidgale took ‘the inan anadue a i ecade was 15,- restoration, R. C. Poole; legal ad- a heart attack. He is survived by Ford steel peration are members jTITRE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7! 1959 NAKE OVER PARES, res . > Ce US - . - = Zeta Eta Plans be prepared and distributed by the chapter. Surgery Quite Simple. Guests for the evening in- cluded Mrs. James Anthony, Mrs, Ozzie Watchpocket and Mrs, Richard ‘Templeton. Fall Projects, Talks History Zeta Eta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi met Tuesday eve- ning at the home of Mrs. Clyle Haskill. * Trimming Is Key x * brief program the | should be trimmed and graded history, aims and purposes of | — that is, one side of the the group. seam allowance should be cut Ge narower than the other. When « Plans were made to hold a | turned and pressed, the collar theater party in Detroit in or facing will be smooth and November, less apt to show a seam al- A Thanksgiving basket will lowance “ridge.” HELP YOU TO RADIANT MRS. 'HOENSTINE HEALTH? Yes, indeed! NOT all physical problems are of nutritional origin. However, scientific research has shown that most of us can léok better, feel better and live more zestfully through eatin the RIGHT kinds of delicious foods. And | said DELICIOU FOODS:, because I have definitely demonstrated . . . with hun- dreds of my followers .. , that a good nutritional program en- hances the pleasures of eating. Proper diet can immeasurably help to brighten your life in- many, many ways. You are cordially invited to come in and consult with me personally for a FREE MENU ANALYSIS. Learn the seven easy but importané ways in which you can quickly improve your nutritional health. There is never any charge or the slightest obligation for this valuable service. Telephone today for appointment. You'll be glad you did! Healthtully Yours, MRS. HOENSTINE VITAL HEALTH FOODS 140 W. Huren Acress From Pest Office FE 8-1981 Oh, how those corns and bunions can ache. ose In today’s column Josephine Lowman tells you what can be done. What to Do About Corns? » jtending the lectures of the Ameri- CLOSE-OUTS BOYS’ SHORT SLEEVE SUMMER SHIRTS Assortment of Colors Reg. 97¢ to $1.67 Reduced to 67° NELLIE’S “ Elizabeth Lk. Rd. FE 5-2761 Women's Association groups of the Oakland Ave. United Presbyterian Church have completed their ctober ses- sions. * * * The Peg Creswell! group met at the home of Mrs. G W. BaOrnhart. Study was led by Mrs. Omar McNutt and Mrs. David DuVall. » -s &«* The Eleanor Creswell group met at the church with Mrs. Guy Caswell presiding. Study and devotions were led by Mrs. LeRoy Koch and Mrs. William Coffing. * *® * Mrs. Theodore Allebach opened her home to Lucille } 4 | 23 W. Lawrence St. Your Choice of- ] | 1400 COLORS In any finish, expertly blended by our new Pittsburgh maestro color mixing machine ZA PONTIAC GLASS CO. ey FE 5-6441 or ae *~ 4 Pe transportation next to flying... lightest o BARBARA A. HOLDER Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Holder of Park street south announce the engagement of their daughter Barbara Ann to Kyle Everett Roberts, son of Mrs. Phoebe Roberts of State street. No wedding date Presbyterian Women Finish October Work McBane group. Mrs. Alex Joss presided. Devotions were led by Audrey Limekman. Joyce Sweet reviewed the book “Jungle Pilot."’ * * * The Margery Peters group met at the home of Mrs. Milton Blood. Study and de- votions were led by Mrs. El- don Powley and Mrs. Earl Shepherd. * * The Eleanor von _ Lierop group met at the home of Mrs. Walter Messer of Pine- grove street, Devotions were led by Mrs. Edna Matheny. Mrs. John Bee presented a thank offering program. Mrs. Floyd Levely presided at the * business meeting. * * * Mrs. Lexie Williams was hostess to the Mary Jo Mc- Curry teenage group at the church. Marilyn Bell led devotions and presided at the business meeting. The group worked on its sewing project. A thank offering report was given by Tleane Wilson. Old Itch Cure Rx for an itchy, irritated skin is a remedy of many years which doctors still rec- ommend: a warm bath to which you add a cup of starch and a cup of baking soda. Soak yourself for 20 minutes and watch your skin come clean, silky and soft. Minor ir- ritations begin clearing up at once. neckwear. Two-in-one or or stripes. Soup on the tie needen't be a} tragedy if he’s wearing reversible ties come patterned in one color on one side, the other side in a contrasting col- “THE SHOE THAT | WALKS FOR YOu" | U.S. Patent Ne. Tiel A new scientific principle called ‘The grectest shoe improvement in 2,000 yeors''$ mokes light of long hours of walking or stonding! Tests prove RIPPLE SOLE® Shoes absorb walking shock, bolance the weight heel to toe, propel you along effortlessly! Comfort unlimited! No breaking in ~ il you walk in your work or play you need ripple soles. “Licensed by RIPPLE SOLE CORP, “TODD'S - SHOE STORE “Shoes forthe Entire Family’ 20 W. Huron St. | FE 2-3821 fReeder's as 559 ORCHAR "TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INZERMEDIATE POINTS AK! By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN So many women write to me asking what to do about corns and bunions. These evidently are ex- tremely painful. In many instances they have been caused by wearing improperly fitted shoes. However, sometimes the trouble comes from weak arches or structural defects. Anyhow, once you have them what can be done? Encouraging news came from a recent meeting in San Francisco. Dr. Leo N. Liss told podiatrists at- rr, ¥ w\ i" s ° aa if can College of Foot Surgeons,} “Corns can be completely cured) and permanently eliminated by) new and simplified surgical pro- cedures.” THOUGHT INSIGNIFICANT Time was when the medical pro- fession considered the correction of chronic corns insignificant to best health and happiness. How- ever, these can cause the victim to change his walk and posture and foot surgeons have found that painful corns cause serious mental Strain, and they certainly have a dramatic effect on personality. It's} hard to sparkle when movement) is distressing. | Modern surgical techniques ben are much simpler than they | Ae Ams were in the past. The removal | __ of corns by a well-qualified podi- Ever-smart shirtwaist—ideal for, atrist takes only a fraction of the | half-sizer's figure and lively life. | time it once required. j It 8 crisply detailed with convert-| ‘ible collar, scalloped pockets, | Office workers who do not have! smooth skirt. Tomorrow’s pattern: | to be on their feet a great deal) For Misses. at Nguoi sineehagg Simats Printed Pattern 4921: Half Sizes le or workers Wha bend 12%, 142, 1642, 18%, 20%, 22%. = orkers who spend 4 size 16 takes 3% yards 39inch| great deal of time on their feet checks, print -or plain | nears about a week for re-' Printed directions on each pat- tern part. Easier, accurate. NOT BEAUTIFUL Bunions not only are painful but! pattern—add 10 cents for each pat- they are not beautiful to behold. In tern for 1st-class mailing. Send to the past, surgical procedures for, Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac this defect made it necessary for, Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West the patient to wear a cast for six! 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print weeks and another six weeks was) plainly Name, Address with Zone. required before regaining 80 per! Size and Style Number. cent of normal usage. |. ~— Today the patient who has this| Wise Mothers Start Good Habits Early joperation begins resuming activi-| jties after 10 days. It is entirely| |possible today to have a bunion-| jdeformed foot reshaped into a| The wise mother makes it a jlevely looking foot with a mini-| practice to have each child lo- imum of time and inconvenience | cate his clothing, books, over- | If you would like to have my, Shoes, and other school para- exercises for the feet, send a! phernalia in the evening stamped, self-addressed envelope, The next morning he can get off to school without wear and tear on mother’s nerves. She will not have to insist on this | too long before he forms the | \ habit. | 3 4921 | | { SIZES 1244—22M4 with your request for leaflet No.| 14 to Josephine Lowman in care of| this newspaper. | Tomorrow: Experts View Prob-| lems of Aged and Aging.” Send 50 cents in coins for this ° 79 e Za Y \70 Var WEEE OSOPPSOPEC 2/7 Elegant . . describes the quality, the feel fs and the @ look of basic wools by Jantzen, Ready in your choice of style and colors. y @ b / on ¢ € 700 West Huron St. EPICA AN Axe ee aad % WT dias § Paha ES : { STOP. Your Needs ROCHESTER’S North Hill Plaza TEN STORES © Young's Men's Wear ®@ Cunningham's Inc. ©S. S$. Kresge Co. ®D. J. Healy Shops © Wigleys ® Mercury Cleaners ® Linda Lee Shops ® Richards Boys’ and ® Mary jane Shoes Cirls’ Wear © Welch's Gifts Cards OPEN THURS. & FRI. NIGHTS "TIL 9 P.M. FREE PARKING 850 CARS Rochester at Tienken Roads SO ahaa CR ARE, — Spt Be RGM Fa 6 * | | Here's carefree lifetime moth protection and e storage for very little money. Here's ample st chest,’’ too. STORE ALL YOUR SUMMER CLOTHES MATCHING RED CEDAR CHEST — ONLY .......... your clothing, plus the added convenience of this decorative, beautiful cedar chest for your blankets, linens and for a ‘‘hope 2 in this beautiful GENUINE RED CEDAR DOUBLE DOOR WARDROBE epay “10 with purchase of wardrobe NOW ONLY xtra all year round Orage space for all AUTUMN SPECIAL! Metal Utility Table 3 Shelf with Electric Outlet AUTUMN SPECIAL! White, All Metal Wall Cabinet, 54 inch width 17 E. Huron St. 18 W. Pike St. AUTUMN SPECIAL! Modern Hassocks in Pastel Colors $ + So AUTUMN SPECIAL! Decorator Colored Clothes Hamper NO CREDIT PROBLEMS AT WYMAN’S! NO BANK OR LOAN CO... . YOU PAY RIGHT IN OUR STORE! BE SURE TO FREE ASK FOR DELIVERY WHEN Wyman’s Blue Trading Stamps. PROMISED! Good For Valuable Premiums FREE PARKING! THIRTY ON THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1959 —_————— \ Copyright 1959, Bureau of Advertising of the American Newspaper Publishers Association, Ina a GIANT to deliver just what 232,000 doctors ordered The man in white, carefully dispensing the doctor's prescription, is a pharmacist. He is one of 110,000 licensed practitioners across the land who contribute to safeguarding the health of all of us. He offers a strong hand in stopping disease—a hand that is constantly on guard to protect the well-being of you and your family. Throughout the year, these pharmacists stand ready to give you exactly what the nation’s 232,000 doctors order. It’s a giant task—a conscientious task that the druggists perform. Pharmacists have found that newspaper advertising is the most effective and efficient way to keep you informed about products and prices. That’s why seventy-three per cent of the Published in the interest of more effective advertising by .,. TH KE PONTIAC PRESS NATIONAL PHARMACY WEEK YOUR PHARMACIST WORKS FOR BETTER COMMUNITY HEALTH total advertising budgets of all drug stores is invested in the Total Selling medium—the daily newspaper.* The daily newspaper in observance of National Pharmacy Week, October 4-10, takes this occasion to salute the man who works for better community health—your pharmacist. The Total Selling Medium is the Daily Newspaper *Drug Topfice , , THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1959 MAKF VER THREE Monroe Catholic Leads ~ New Faces Will Start for Michigan Saturday ep "8" Ratios tussle ete DeSete . By The Associated Press South Haven ranked second with | SCHUTZ MOTORS riym, . . , ; wae ot 5. w ' = *.ii*¢ *& ++ *« * * * tt ey Three teams are waging a ter-|65 points while Dowagiac trailed In|] Mi 6-500 ages Me 6-1843 ott eS rific fight for the top spot in the|third with 64 points. Facing the No Time for Friendship When Spartans Play Iowa Wee Aaciae Pee | eittont test this week will be South) : . . at weekly poll finds the top three Haven, which meets No. 8 rated | Professional e Kalamazoo University High on Fri-| INEUD TOF VISI points, bat Monsoe Cathie man (2 Might f WRESTLING OOTDAa U les 6 RY ko as ; a jumbling. Second-ranked Cadil-| of Oregon State EAST LANSING —Old bellity De " ked . The panel of 11 sports editors lac, fifth-rated Sturgis and 10th’ PONTIAC NATIONAL football|ty Daugherty once worked shoulder) head coaching job. But he moved jhalfback, Wyandotte; Allan Miller,| ang writers who blanket the jranked Jackson St. John absorbed | GUARD ARMORY ; friendships will be forgotten Satur- ee whey telly sist-| om to Washington State in 1950 . , on eee Schont R Juli day Hr nets to shoulder when both were assist a - end, Flint Northern; John McMee-| Lower Peninsula voted Monroe beatings and tumbled out of the 6 opf, McRae, Julian a7 we phigan State meets) is here under Biggie Munn. and i 1908 tek over at lowe. | 4. halfback. Highland Park;| Catholic to the top position for (elite group. WED., OCT. 7 Gain Starting Berths! Forest Evashevski, head coach| Evashevski then was regarded | Under Evashevski's driving di-|wijliam Ringer, guard, Flint Cen-| tte second straight week, this | Here's the way the AP panel 8:30 P. M. With Wolverines at Iowa, and Michigan State's Duf-| as heir apparent to the Spartan |rection, the Hawkeyes have en-|tral- Robert Yauck, tackle, Sagi- <0 poll pointe. rates the Class B high school teams Louis Kline vs. Big Jim Bernard joyed some fabulous successes — naw, and Donald Zinn, center, * * * this week: | alyssi A vs. a . winning the Big Ten title in 1956 Battle Creek . | | Rating, Team Record Poll Pts.| = skin vs. The Mighty Ther ARBOR w — At least three/In County Scoring Race and again last year. UPI Rati z South Maven” 3.) gunn Mumphrey ve Bey Common new faces will be in Michigan's Michigan State has met Iowa 3. Dowagiac 3-0 a GEN. Adm 1.50 starting lineup Saturday against es ~ 8 | ~ only twice before—both games 3: font ® 30 8 | RINGSIDE : 2.50 ) Oregon State as coach Bump | He's well remembered here as) since the Spartans entered the "(Taye WoL | 7 Betod Rapids +0 ” ADVANCE TICKETS: Elliott tries to breathe new life into ris lan () | - the blocking back who cleared the Big Ten. i oun Brees 1 oli belie Creek ise ys 86 3 GRIFF‘S GRILL | the twice-beaten Wolverines. l way for Tommy Harmon from 1938 In 1953. his 1 ad head |}: Midiand Leen. 3 6 0 10. Northville 2 24 through 1940 and captained he! n . is last year a « hickory Phe 30 Dente Pipesia bah pag he Armory Phone FE 4-4130 a . | ~ j j , - Oran apids } Cent | o! son ¢& onn Manistee met Seer ae = greed Last weekend was a wild one for\fanky Terry Wills of Armada are University of Michigan team his or =. Eiexte Muen best Towa Lincoln Park | me eoneen 0 | Avondale. Gass City Bare Lote Matchmaker—Ber! Ruby h scoring performances around|now locked in an area tie with|last year with the Wolverines. — ; 8. Lansing Eastern |... ||, 3 6 o/ East. Howell. Cadillac. Sturgis. Oxford Jon Schepf, and halfbacks |hig . 3 kt * * 8. Lanai seine Penetl tcl Miterineeaaline L —— Bennie McRae and Fred Julian |‘De area but Walled Lake speed-/32 digits. Smith and Art Massucci A native Detroiter, Evashevski | \junn always was proud because |"? “tells Ee Renders soneodne 3 ¢ 0 | ster Bob Christian emerged head-|of St. Ben. follow with 26 arried the f r Ruth Brown (Others Ferndale. Detroit Pershing. | nEAee He Beavers. Oakland C k for OAKLAND COUNTY SCORING m — row, 'so many of his assistants struck|Pontiac Central. Walled Lake. Birming- CLEA Schopf, a strapping 230-pounder he araghe Pig a ‘cecum, ick G TD PAT TP — be former U.S. Senator | out as successful head coaches on|"2',s5 = N UP SALE ON . tian, - Lake .....3 98 4 588 ren rown. ; -|1. Dowagiac Loon 0! from Grand Rapids who has de- |Stott, Oxford ...........3 7 1 43 their own. But he also loved noth « sseseeeens 3 0 0 ’ veloped fast in the past two weeks, The senior star garnered So = Newton, W. Bloomfield. 3 6 0 36 ~*~ * * ing better than walloping one of his|3: Ranieiane sone 3 8 0 BRAN D NE W 59 figures to get the starting call at his team’s 21 points at Waterfo nel St. Fred ..... 3 5 © 30| AM aggressive recruiter, Eva-| former associates. . puede SHocemnconcheciooc 3 ° e| oe aeaktie adiegergaBme ery oe ee ‘+13 5 © 30) shevsii has battled MSU and U. of Evashevski is known as one | #2i22 Rapids .......-s.0e.- 3 9 0 right . 0° ey » CUBPKSLON ..cceee . . = . ee . It Schopt starts it will mark the| rain No. 2 with 43 (tem ios Segue cs} $f Bel t gae ine Prune joral football ma-| of the tricklest coaches in the |f) Maniac Catholc Cental "". 3 8 0 EDSE L third straight game in which a new , : |Demrtek, Cranbrook ee ee ae Apa the ee oe highly competitive business. {10 Mason | “3 8 Ic ke; 6. LyOM - 2... 606 6 ~ ( . Bom Dean who Ped ore| Jack Newien romped for for (fie, Aang. | |S lemamnd hee 10 impor | yar yee the gan nee ng, Geseeene, =| KERRY Y ONLY A FEW LEFT! n 2 play more b, ene . chester are 2 : year use grass was s0 (Versity Scr en: Alma) than any other player on last] TDs to gain 3rd “sn = oe Meadows, Dondero 3 § 9 34| Michigan, tall on the Hawkeye gridiron. |; Nharevote Soa hae DOO ° ; year’s team, opened there against) er ve nts. ephaph e anh 3 4 0 24 ; a efield | dee ihcedacuieane $00 Missouri but gave way last week| Haas of OL St. Mary and tiny [wot Oar Park ..3 ¢ 9 3¢| Familiar names on the Jowa|, Munn claimed it was high as the)} tmiay cuty |) S000 .000, 3 @ | mae ; heask Ch de |LeZotte, Dondero ...... 34 © 2%/roster include: Iowa corn and thick enough to hides) pangor 30 6} to junior Will Hildebrand. gsi gr Ready ahaa [Dixon " Rochester .300302~=«20 pen Behrman. tackle Cassop-|his pony backs like Billy Wells § Marine City a 8 8 our- ow | Hill, Madison 3 3 2 20) °* ’ , SOP- | : tt, eter ul .. 2] McRae, who blossomed into | wie Chuck Graves went over Sh#rpley, Fernaale 3 3 2° 29/olis; Charles Hill, halfback, Detroit }294 Leroy Bolden. i, bon ee MERCURY-EDSEL-LINCOLN-ENGLISH FORD LINE the team’s top running threat COUNTY AREA 8CORING lw : ASH Gey * * * tl three times for Pontiac North- G TD Pat rp, Western; Al Hinton, tackle, Sag 10 Portland 3 0 0 . when he tallied two touchdowns ern against Farmington . Jim (Wills. Armade 3 $ 2 32)inaw; Arnold Klott, halfback, De-| Daugherty lost to Iowa 14-10 in jo. ‘ptt’, ‘“eai een 232 S. Saginaw Street FE 2-913] against Missouri, saw little ac- Kennedy, St. Fred, Clarkston’s |Massucci ‘gt Benedict’... 3 . 3 32) troit St. Thomas; Gerald Mauren,' 1954. his first year as head coach. 'tal7 eessee mm 7! tion against the Spartans Satur- , a Smith, New Haven + 3 @ 2 26} oe glue-fingered end Dick Caverly [Kaintiiesch. Capac. 903 4 1 ant day after suffering a painful hip and Ted Barszczewski complete |Houck, Brown City .....3 4 0 24| bruise early in the game. orth |Lints, Brown City Ae? 3 2 20] group. | Vignesux, St. Clements ...3 3 1 19} The swift, 170-pound scatback) Jim williams and Tom Demrick oe pel sag News, Va. showed combined for 33 of 40 Cranbrook! ' 0. 1 work- : | ott seeray, He wa rep Sen Hat Crate of sou Lo FACTACT LIF|VEL Darrell Harper, who suffered bad-| ' ibs i "| 18 ther big county) ly bruised ribs in the MSU game. yet in other big ty ie decor ae ett tt Sets 4 Marks a eae ake vera Cranbrook, Rochester, Orchard) | casualty of last week's shellacking Lake, Ferndale and Royal Oak} Myers has been hospitalized with|Dondero all have two representa-| Thompson Heads Home, severely torn tendons in his left Wes in te op & | After Smashing Long ; , _| Larry Kalbliesch of Capac had . cae lost for Satur-| 11°25 of his team’s points for the) Standing Records Eniett he o best outside area single perfor- sent the team through |mance. New Haven’s Al Smith . ; . its first full-scale midweek |scored 19, Don Nellenbeck, North) Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah scrimmage in nearly two weeks (Branch, and Les Houck of Brown (AP)—America’s fastest automo-| YOU MAY WIN A yesterday in an effort to find a (City 18 each | bile driver headed for his Cali-| winning combination for the | Don Kurkowski of St. Rita and|fornia home today richer by four Oregon State game. jinternational speed records and The nearly three-lkour drill, held| V ~ |wiser by at least two brushes with! on a rain-soaked field, consisted of | i; | death. a long session devoted to ving eas on d x * * a defense: against the Beavers’ | n Thirty-year-old Mickey Thomp- single wing attack, topped off by a| pprove O son of El Monte, Calif., in three! one-hour scrimmage. I days of running on the salt flats Oregon State lost its opener 9 fOr Ball Pa k ee Western Utah, smashed four in- Southern California 27-7 and lost | DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — Dallas|ternational speed marks that have 15-14 to Texas Tech and 74 tO and Tarrant County voters ap-| Stood since the late English driver| Nebraska in its next two outings. proved by a margin of almost 9| John Cobb, set them in 1939. |to 1 Tuesday a $9,500,000 revenue * * * NIGHT RACING bond issue to build a major league} In one of Thompson's record at- baseball stadium in the Dallas-\tempts yesterday, his oxygen . Fort Worth area. | mask tube broke loose in the x * * |furne-choked cockpit behind the With 323 of the 337 boxes in the TOaring four engines of his little bicounty area reporting, the vote blue racer, Challenger I. Thomp- was 14,988 in favor and 8,230/S0M drove the car with an oxygen against. In Dallas County, the|tube in his mouth in order to pre- count was 6,625 for and 3,253| vent being overcome by the against. In Tarrant County (Fort fumes Worth) the vote was 8,363 for and *- * * 4,978 against. The California newspaper press- * * * man in two earlier runs yésterday The New-Size Ford * ] i ] | ] 1 I i I 1 I ] ] t l i i REGISTER AT , ANY 1 FORD ! DEALER'S IN rl THESE 1 MICHIGAN 1 i ! ] 1 i ] i i i I l i 5 i t ' ] i i ] i ] | i ' sh O-ent ?? } P The election was on the proposi- | S¢t the following international NGG lel.) tion of whether revenue bonds|Marks which must be confirmed HARNESS RACEWAY shall be issued to build a 45,000. | by the International Automobile] JACKSON MICHIGAN seat stadium, which sponsors says | Federation lis needed to obtain a seine For the flying five - kilometer league franchise. {351.95 mph. compared to Cobb's | 326.71; the flying five-mile at 342.- 54 compared to Cobb's 302: the! flying 10-kilometer at 325.65 com-| UNMISTAKABLY FINE! p=". :°-": =: ® jand the flying 10-mile at 282.72) jcompared to the old mark of | 270.4 | The new 2-door Falcon. The New-size Ford, the Falcon, is the world’s most experienced new car. COUNTIES THURSDAY, OCT. 8 TO BE GIVEN AWAY THROUGH SATURDAY, OCT. 10 * - . . and reserved for men of fine-bred taste. The man who wears a HARWOOD CUSTOM-TAILORED SUIT is understandably proud of its matchless flair. . . - and we're proud, too, of our incredible collection of ' finer Domestic and Imported woolens. They cost no more! | MACOMB MONROE OAKLAND ST. CLAIR WASHTENAW Races at Rolling Rock | LIGONIER, Pa. (AP)—A field! TUXEDO RANDOLPH |of 264 thoroughbreds is competing for $21,000 in purses in the two- RENTALS HARWOOD lday 22nd annual Rolling Rock “ool weddings, parties, | Steeplechase this year. So senelSh mem and CUSTOM TAILORS & CLOTHIERS Five races are to be run today $80 W. Huron FE 2-2300 jand five more Saturday. Proceeds of the affair will be turned over Complete Tailoring Service — Tuxedo Rentals to the home for crippled children - in Pittsburgh's Squirrel _ Hill section. Register to win a Falcon free at your NEIGHBORHOOD FORD DEALER'S 1. To be eligible to win the new Ford “‘Judges’ box,”’ also nearby. Falcon, visit your neighborhood Ford ’ ; : 3. Everyone 18 years old, or older, is HERE 5 ALL pesker on Thumity, Oct 6) Fiidsy, Oct: eligible to participate except Ford Dealers’ YOU HAVE TO Ghee fom and fill t ond sign employees and their families—Ford Motor ° : , Company sales department personnel and DO TO QUALIFY 2. Deposit the "Dealer's stub” half of their families—and members of the Ford * “ your completed entry form in the box Dealers’ and Ford Motor Company's ad- Due to recent refinements FOR THIS marked ‘‘Dealer’s box,” on -the Ford vertising agencies and their families. in blending... FREE FALCON Dealer’s showroom floor ... and deposit | Should eligibility of an entry be questioned the other half of your completed entry the decision of the judges will be final. form, the ‘‘Judgea’ stub,” in the box marked today so fine Its .»» YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN! The winner will be announced in this newspaper after he or she hag been officially determined. If the winner has already bought a new 1960 Ford car, full purchase price will be refunded. In case of a tie, duplicate prizes will be awarded. Ford Falcon to be given away will be a 2-door sedan equipped with radio and heater. V.D.AP. See A Wonderful New World of Fords for 1960, at - stamped UT I soitdieen Beattie Motor Sales Eddie Steele, Inc. Cy Owens, Inc. 5806 Dixie Hwy. 2705 Orchard Lake Rd. 147 S. Saginaw St. Waterford, Mich. Keego Harbor, Mich. Pontiac, Mich. $Id WING JVM own > —-—-—_—-. — THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1959 _THIRTY-EIGHT WANTED 1,000 COMIC BOOKS 1000 True Love Story Mags. We Handle Tricks, Jokes. and Novelties. PIPER'S MAGAZINE OUTL EY 33 Aubern Ave +5240 VAN HEFLI GEORGE STEVENS DOWN TO. TERROR | Grace Kelly is hold while happily ruling HAPPY RAINTERS REIGN — Former her Monaco her husband, Prince Rain el , See eS ne ee av? 4 a ae Bia Si Ean at RS rincipality with a firm, benevolent and pro- hand. It’s obvious to anyone that this nance is far from going sour. resslve controls storybook rom Looks Forward to Future With Grace 3) AU RY 4 DRIVE-IN THEATER 2150 Opdyke Rd FE 4-461) SENSATIONAL FIRST RUN! HURRY! LAST 2 DAYS! IS FOR BARDOT vor ~ Beaks | | 1 4 final His relations railroad tracks that bisect the na- ; is Grate ane Prince ihe treaty of tion Rainke he and | : . ; Fittingly, this new acreage — By ROBERT MUSEL ing Peady (pay @ state SOS! Which probably will be the site MONACO (UPI) — It was the '° President de Gaulle while [ was) luxury hotels — is along ‘‘Ave- nanny's day off and Princess ‘CT eotc any Bue Princess Grace,"’ named in Grace was taking care of the two 7 ih NEAR or ue an oe honor of his lovely wife. ‘midren herself Prince Albert ane a von ' - . ; : a - Rainier has many other proj sho is a \ear-and-a-half old and oriis Moree 4 . domain ects under way, some for his sub- he het t | throne. was no filling in me i \ ects, such as low-cost housing, ouble al a dirt taken from constru fa and some to attract tourists But Princess Ca “ey who is tunnel ‘through which run the Among the latter are an ‘‘ocea- mearly three sears ole is going _ = —— — = ‘through a phase that any mother vould recognize She used to be Phe center { ention and now She has t with a baby Hrother So at the hideaway ranch house Prince Rainier has built in the French hills beyond Monace, his beautiful wife was busy ca- tering to Caroline's whims. in the palace of the Gri n its fortress-rock far be- A I was talking about the fu f his little country with plan pians for nit noth v of thelr th ] ted ‘WF f sor aster 1 de ner sitio does fo a chances year-old sov i tre ndous drive y e lik to be fae amare a STARTING FRIDAY “4 DRAMATIC STORY OF A HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER AND A BEAUTIFUL NIGHT CLUB ENTER. TAINER!” Starring - CURT JURGENS MAY BRITT “the BLUE ANGEL CP BP te wre CNA ROE He oe So7strand pm A Heroic New World of High Adventure erous wind tunnels! The amazing pre-. * flight and in-fight tests! Jets cruise at the 4 speed of ao AS <" calibre bullet! > . 3 © ples! A Great Ster in His Mest Colorful Adventure! TYRONE POWER rap \fARK ) | IA ad Co ot , a Mt. g VVLe eto LINDA DAKNELI i i Tiall > RP eww i i a a ee Rain Threatens We State Potatoes Dry an. Farmers Are Too Since Grain Futures [MARKETS Quite Stable CHICAGO (®#—Grain futures prices showed little tendency to move up or down in extremely quiet dealings in most pits on the Board of Trade today. x * * The following are ‘top prices « aca aun @ uly coe produce brought to the Farmer’: Detroi Tuesday. Detroit Produce NEW YORK WA scattering of) speculative issues advanced in a slow and irregular stock market ard today. A few of the “glamor’’ stocks | rose as much as 2 points or more. Most activity was in soybeans, YRUITS * B d B Di ; the bean crop which have been strong for days, |Apples. Crab % bu. ....., .81.60| Pivotal issues = narrowly, =f Near er enson igs, Each Merit Scholarship is a made clear they want to give the Excessive moisture rots potatoes but price changes in early deal- Apples, prema be trt--eni:> 78 Swing gang or louees running to four-year award covering the un-| Plan close study below comment- nnd dscolors beans ings held within a narrow range. 4B wou's ost stmt" Was World Art Authority Sr et eee ees de eae Rain in helping fall planted |Fractional advances at the start “350! Raytheon, recipient of Air ao Fe ace woaun Walent coneee hides eke grains and seedings and early (of trading were attributed to pro-|! es camteacta, Willing alent | pe nee nine hon awen Aabaaen 8 . * « : October pasture conditions are (cessor buying and a belief that 138) $39 990,000 climbed about 2 FLORENCE, Italy (AP) — aging >! the best in recent years. wet fields will delay the harvest | Pras | 358] points Bernard Berenson, 94, the acids 7 It appears virtually impossible at least another week despite a/Piums, Prune, bu. 450 leading authority on Italian ren. For students who already pos. for the West to turn down the — — of gd gmc forecast of clearing weather. + -narpoun online oa Samu 200 Brunswick-Balke dropped around, aissance art. died today | Sess the financial resources to [atest Soviet proposal, which calls winter wheat acreage ant , 3 ints. It is calling all its 4%) 7 me h N. to s sor an interna- and mélot Fee al .| There was some early buying vuanraetes > po I Seri . bah 4 An American and a graduate of attend the college of their choice, 0n the U.N. to Spars al Me ue ayy clace,| @f wheat which trade observers (Beans, green round. bu ...........s400 Per cent convertible debentures. Harvard University, he left Bos-; 8Wards of $100 per year are onal parley of scientists to ex lent for germination. Early plant- |Beans, Ky. Wonders, bu. ........., 350 Rails continued a slightly higher ton shortly aft d | granted. For those who need fi- Change experiences in exploring ed fields and| 2ttributed te a holding policy om (pian: Roman. bu |... 4 00 ‘ i ter- y after graduation and . generally are up tone following their rally yester had lived Ital nancial assistance, awards may OUter space. growing well. tho part haa — air — = iene Nei. dos. behs. |... "1, 100 day on news that President Eisen- ‘La ved in Italy for 73 years reach $1,500 per ea . . It was feared, however, that the ~*~ * * —— ™ Risse ; : ed hower had invoked the’ Taft-Hart- re am life “he ‘said be ood ; ee west at such a corfference might ; opening, trading in the 139! ley Law in the dock strike. considered Boston his home. He; The Merit Scholarship Program, pe confronted with a Soviet bid to This: year’s huge corn crop is! pit came to a standstill for a 1.15) | willed his beautiful 40-room Villa,'was founded in 1955 with grants space s : 1725| Most leading steels were frac- T set up a key space study group maturing without any significant! time. 200 tionally lower as the steel strike! I’ Tatti, Just outside Florence, and/of $20 million from the Ford outside the U.N. on which the frost losses. Silo filling is almost Aideash &) +4 tual 3th week. Oils c its superb collection of art treas-|Foundation and $500,000 from the —.. j< woukk demand completed in many areas but pick- ln tata ie oe 22,,entered its 13th week. alii ures to Harvard for use as a cen-! c LOMImUnsIs WOU GUE a pany P has been pending for weeks, trad-!Celery. pascal. 24 doz. ............ > 3.38! 4; backslide. arnegie Corp. of New York. many seats as the West. ; as pending tinued to backsli y s ing for grain is still slow. Most | elery. doz. stks. ..........000..., 1.75, ter for scholars abroad * “ a air en j : : ers appeared reluctant to take |Celery. |) nee 1.75! : : . In making the space proposal in corn is still too high in moisture, iti til f f-[eeet Cee Bees shesiewene a35| Weeters Walon Fase sreend - * Sponsors so far have awarded the General Assembly policy de- ong positions un oreign pu Corn, sweet. 5 doz. ..... oe. eae 1 00 . , Pont | saat le Lener a aes 2 for safe storage in conventional point. Goodyear and Du Some of Amer es chases of wheat and flour actually|Cucumbers. slicers. bu — 350 nd. t lower, Gen- : ica’s greatest art over $15 million worth of scholar-' bate Tuesday, Deputy Foreign cribbing. come into the market. Dill. des. bet esaininis wi9\ cecarei caine 1 25 —— ha a — eal m collections are monuments to Ber- ships. More than 3,000 students. Minister Vasily V Kuznetsov: Sugar beet factories launched There was little activity in the joa a gi es 150 can ed. ~— enson s scholarship and taste now are attending some 400 col- served notice the Soviet Union processing operations the first |feed grains and rye declined frac-|Gouras, pr veccleseeseaeereceee 100 . He began his career as art buy- leges on the program. would continue its boycott of the of the month and the harvest ts (tions in early transactions. ee or $30' General Tire, Chrysler, Scher- er for Mrs. Jack Gardner of Bos- NEXT T present U.N. Committee on Peace- Kobirat = dor — apeceecs 1 50 . = t | EXT TEST DEC. 5 ; . Leeks. doz. .e..ee.... 1.75 ing, Woolworth and Sears Roe on, assembling the nucleus of the | : {ul Uses of Outer Space continuing in all but the wettest * * * Onions, green. dor. debs. 85 buck were slightly higher. Fenway Court collections she left, John M. Stalnaker, president of “Kuznetsov declared the make-up fields. Soybeans are defollated Near the end of the first hour ‘Onions, el sad a 135 * * * iS a museum the National Merit Scholarship of the committee does not ensure a areas. 1 e : : most | heat was 's hes 35 Fir De} Parsley. a io. = SnCnO Cus a Moderate losses were taken by ART ADVISER Corp. which conducts the —_ equal cooperation of all countries A shortage of experienced pick- cember $1.96%s; corn unchanged to) parentt. Cello Pak. doz. ..)-)-.-.) 225'Factman Kodak_ International _— ; hunt, predicts that over 95 ers is slowing apple picking in all| ‘4 lower. December gas Maringl| ge VAI 128) Harvester and Westinghouse Elec- BERNARD BERENSON But his biggest influence came cent of the semifinalists aaaunees areas. Dropping has taken a heavy |unchanged to ‘x lower, Decem-'peovers not bu 1H tag as chief adviser to the late Lord today will get past the second toll ber 7233: rye unchanged to % Ptr pes Bos | bu. 17s ric, ‘Duveen, the dealer who assem- hurdle, the Dec 5 examination, n Us f us eS : f 1.3242, and soy- : ; SehGno EAn aes 20 bled most big private American ; : .* * oti einer t *s higher, No- | otatons "te io bee arene 1 New York Stocks ” collections before World War II and Decor: Tinalists The grape harvest for process- vember $2.15. Radishes, black. %) bu. .. i 1 $0 Fe the process Berenson amassed, .Th¢ announcement of winner ing is expected to wind up this) Radishes. Tie “Gor a: 100 admiral 19 Isl Crk Coal x a comfortable fortune for him. Of the Merit Scholarships is tent ee Or ages t 5 Joh Man : “ee | Grain Pri ee en ee i Se Allied Ch use yonrs KL... oo self. ale el ime d | i Get bal OOo Coc somor , “57 Kennecott ’ xact number n rain rrices jSaeesh. Buttercup. bu. oe Oir cuar . Vs Kin Clk ap f A | | Berenson ak wn o da st ing on the degree of depend Magazine Claims Many ; : oo bees cecuce 150 Alum Lid . 345 s . é > s also ~oduce : i Want Signal “_STCAGO. MOT ar Opening arin "aasterd, bel settee ees LTS ae nirtin a is yy eee Or U 0 qd eS cession of books on Renaissance’ *“PPort ef the Merit Program. | C Back Stand C 7 + Wheat May . “a he siecle see ensGa ges lenses ise Am Can - 435 ae ie eered ue art which are considered classics. In the competitions, considera- onsumers ac an at TOSSING Ln 7: 65‘, furnips topped bu | eee eee nese 25 = B deal i a Lockh a a7 Blame Steel Strike and in the field. Among the most fam- tions are given to extra-curricwat of Management Wh 5 Di d a 19925 Dec 1323, GREENS Ade 7 ey bene Come at ous are his first, “Venetian Paint- activities, school citizenship and ere 1e “Gorn bases rat Hote sabvage Mo 1. ou seseesee, 8190 Am Smelt 442 or ee : 1 Premature Publication ers of the Renaissance.’ pub- leadership qualities along with ae ; . 110. Jhy 127s Kale be eos ia,c ou eS Mick Trk -24 of ‘60 Features f Sa lished in 1894, and “Drawings of scholastic talents. The program is “EW YORK (UPI)—Many steel LAPEER—Efforts are under way ani 114%, Lard acta Mustard. No 1. bu. ................ 1.25 Anaconda . 886 Martin Co ... ae U or g of the Florentine Painters.” open to students in any public, ComSumers have soft-pedaled steel A eS et eee nac a. . nae oo > p 0 we today to have a signal light in-' te 11k, Rev _ 7" euch. ke: : 238 Araceae gL ie Merck 17 In his later years his villa at private or parochial high schoo] Shortages because they support tt stalled at an unprotected crossing ,O*** 12°, ie a? oe ee ihe as Mpls fon > i194 DETROIT (UPI) — The auto Seltignano became a mecca for in the United States and posses- Steel industry's stand for a nor near here where Lynn D. Morris! Mar an Greens Av-o Corp .... 12.6 Minn M& 3 183 ¢ industry recorded its second worst,the world’s famous, royalty and sions inflationary contract se¢tlement of Otisville and four of his chil- fae cappage. 6 soe wees as is eek mal Cal Pack 29 33 gel. 1186 Buckingh J C Ced- get s sembiance of order in Officials said 11 persons have |. A ei oe papel red was Livestock |Catom aH 24s hE oe a The statistical agency noted, Iner. 31624 Glencoe. George D Dick 380 . flow of shipments fost their lives at the Mayfield on icku y ck a fs Serene aeraetaed lCan’ Dry. 307 Ne Ont” °.) 3g 2 however, that the industry's sales Waterford PTAs inicied 6 Ganenen cr Tensi, “Sarr Township crossing in recent | a p p tru riv y ae oa Gcl. € Hartman of Detroit) Thomas M Jone Nealere—Selehic 16 plensy: choice) Derr Fdis : 432 pos an : i “ent di A dec! music instructor Mrs. elen Glenn of Colorado: Charles FE Kuschinski _ of ; Scie ee gy wey eaaSR Bie C foes BURGE rae < e Ghich Ward's called. “more” then Mill Present a mock music class. Bray, tia. demen Haier “ish Ernst Kern Store Seeks Vote In 5-2 Pattern sin eal alable 1 2. nbd one load | Doug an , vs Bcovilfe cm i 7 which W ard’ . called “more than) This will be followed by an CLARKSTON satan SCHOOIL f | choice woole a em ears - . . , * : ee el itn eee ae oa eee tashioned communty sing, pte at, te sh annrr ana OK From Court for Sale ce woole ambs st I 4 ne A oh | | | 22.25. this not a criterion market tet Am . 85.2 Socony. : } * * * [BERKLEY HIGH SCHOOL ; DETROIT (® — A request for - be¢ ee 7-45 vid S F Richard L Gran- ae ; _ dy Gq e wi an | pe : ei ou = . $2 5 5 ,000th Ship Through eectinaing at 7 : p.m., me re “i gil a cornea} rey = inte permission to conduct a going-out- ae Derry Rd 22 an election of new officers at bicki and Morley A Wineograd ane s sale he Ernest Ker Poultr and Eaas Emer Rad 2 std Brand poe kato etc of-business sale at the Ernest Kern fe y id Ex-Cell-O 384 Std Breeds cg. Ot. Lawrence Seaway ithe Drayton Plains PTA meeting, CLAWSON HIGH SCHOOL Dagartiient Store will be heard DETROIT POULTRY Ford Mot .... #2 | Sa Gans ae MASSENA, N.Y. w— Th jand visiting nurse Miss Ayleen seRNDALE HIGH SCHOOL Tuesday in Circuit Court In its hottest session in weeks, Landry stressed that he was not aad eb. a en a a faa 7. ws Std Oil On ; $22 Sain ship wae saiaed eae | |Wright will explain the tuberculosis Dovid B Beckoit Anita Jackson and 4) the came me, @ thieatencd the City Commission split twice|worried about Willman’s probable | li live Poultry: he “ite tan |Qaraner Den =) Stud Pack 175 the at. Lawrence Neeeay which ‘tests to be given this year. At the oax PARK HIGH SCHOOL . suit to put the 77-year-old firm in ; ‘ Fy ; eavy 8 t h . un notin . . 2 Robe A B. ! G Id § : ~ . : . last night into the 52 pattern of administration of the new parking | ,,: avy type ‘prollers' and fryers 34Gen Dynam .. 46. Buther Pap’. 37 opened April 25. ’ jconclusion of the meeting. parents) Robert A. Barris. Gerald § Coo! receivership also will be heard voting that has cropped up often|meter authority but was con-|Ibs. whites 18-19: Barred Rocks 2-122. |Gen Elec - 785 Swift & Co... 426 . |will be invited to visit their child's Michael Ho Meili and Susan L. Sand- if it is filed, Judge Frank Fitz- the 1 2 “ caponettes under 5 Ibs. 19-23: over 5} iGen Pads 95.4 Tenn Gas 32 It was the Seaway Queen, | " le . e last months. cerned, rather, ‘‘with the actions Wes. 71-28: turkeys heavy type young|Gen Mills — i 1s which headed through for Sept jclassroom. «ket HOLLY HIGH SCHOOL jgerald said yesterday. . issi nD . to : u rv C r : . . The hard core majority of five of future — and) Pure | IG Tene 68.6 Textron 23.7, Hes, Que., Tuesday. ; DONDERO HIGH. SCHOOL | City Clerk Thomas D. Lead- senior commissioners pushed {city managers. DETROIT EGGS igen (time 70.6 Timk R Bear . $9.3 : An Open House has been set rovaL Oak sen |better refused last week to approve a . FIR 1 Tan er » 7-3 80 el s tchma « ic , through the administration’s park- | The clause in the new law that! a roit lease ote terre ee Garene . a LL dcogbatdd . - 30.3) eae ae A Us a ine Pontae Oeneis % Ke “at Tete A ‘ Mules a license for the sale. The licensé “ 51.4 t Cen .. 318 ake Sc or introduction of and Sancra M~ Stor as y » Henry Srause ing meter proposal over the strong allows commissioners to retain) "WnitesGraae A Jumbo 51: extra large iis Prod ale Undersea 2 a. Lodge Calendar on ~ cn nich” — was sought by Henry H. Krau objections of newcomers Milton| power to approve or disapprove |$3° i polo ~ Nae Gear ae be Goebel Br... 27 Un Carbide _ 142 parents to the teachers. After the “patricia. K Cohb Terrence if Davis of Cleveland, who became com- = 7 , ° n a i : 25 5 R. Henry and Robert A. Landry. meter changes was inserted be- | reported pe ntastth ai . a. nea — us ae Snecial Communication Cedar esular meeting in the all-purpose rh a F Handelma Edwin Kober pany president in August =. Checks 20 . Ace Te ’ 387 Lodge No. 60 F&AM. Clarkston. room, Roy Alexander will give the Leadbetter said he refused afte: Henry and Landry were again hind the scenes during the month | Commercially graded Orah Pate 24 Unit Aire 387 g A : defeated later in Henry's attempt | that the measure has been under | Whites—Grade A large 38-40. medium ae ee ae Heit Fralt 2m EA. Oct. 8 7 PM Work in complete story of the newly 1 report by the Better Business to reopen his fight for a strong! study. aodida’ Sedeo ose B ph _ Grevhound 201 Us ities eae YM. degree. — Gordon oe opened Michigan State University Detroit, Windsor Object Bureausindicated maker otha Human Relations Commission. When debaie over Meary's pre- | ; |Guir on 7 ” 2 us Rub 003 : * Oakland. to Tunnel Fore Increase stocked up on certain ty pes of : Folland - 122 us Tub 24 merchandise Siding together rotes | posa new . ’ 5 495 : . were Mayor Phiap T. Mowsten amiete D ackeinien peck. Lost Windsor Priest Hooker Ch. an4 Von Resi. 33) News in Brief Wants 100 ‘Metermaids’. DETROIT A proposed five. Ernst F. Kern, grandson of the and Commissioners William W. | Rowston stepped out of his usual Ine Rant... 774 West Un Tel. 405 cent boost in bus fares by the De- Store's founder, has said he will . Westg A Bk . 29.7] Donaldson, Floyd P. Miles, John | role as moderator and won ma- Safe in Wild North iar wea Mea ae Werte Fl... 93 Basil Tuck 1 634 E. First St.' NEW YORK (AP)—The city to-| itroit & Windsor Tunnel Corp. has ask that te He ine ae : ; THtetiaete 29.5 White Mot $56, Ba ucker 0 rs ; awl 3 for|drawn o ition from officials of iM receivership, He s ( A. Dugan and Wesley J. Wood. : jority atte indet ores a be aia | told Pontiac police Tuesday that 4 ricoh maanirs rage omelet cities. ler in the firm. The i meter table . 20 et oe eee turned poy be entered tenes! No crying need for a new com-|__ WINDSOR # — The Rev. Joseph! tat shee” “IMS Young. S&W a leech cue — and who can be anywhere from 21 to| The firm wants to raise fares VV VV VV VV = : Kutney, lost 48 hours on a huntin Int Silver _.. Young Sh&T 136 | . 45 years old, are wanted to tend|from 15 to 20 cents in the Windsor version of City Attorney William| mission has come’ to my attention Sitnt Tel & Tei 335 Zenith Rad .. 98 | connecting Detroit and Conference E. Ewart's suggestion of two months ago that the commission hand over to the city manager all its authority over installation of new meters. As finally adopted, the commis- sion still retains the power to ap- prove by resolution, or disapprove, changes that the manager recom- mends. Stripped from the procedure, though, is the legal necessity to make changes official through the complicated machinery of ordi- nance, “Passing an ordinance every time we want to make a little change is too unwieldy,” admin- istrative officials complained. Henry and Landry said they were in favor of retaining the ordi- nance method “as a_ safeguard against abuse."’ “The people can fight an ordi- nance through referendum, but they can’t bring about a referen- dum election over a simple resolu- tion,” Henry said, NEW METHOD NEEDED City Manager Walter K: Willman said that ‘streamlined’ methods are especially needed now in the face of many, changes con- templated in connection with the Urban Renewal project and the Saginaw street progressive light system. nor has any lack in the present commission been pointed out to me yet,” the mayor firmly stated. * * * Henry tried to introduce an ordi- nance providing for an 11 -mem- ber board that could draw upon city funds for an office and staff of social workers. Besides promoting ‘‘understand- ing and good will,’’ Henry's board would have powers to investigate community problems and bring about solutions through negotiation between disputants. The present five-member Hu- man Relations Commission is, , a shadowy continua- up earlier this year, tha-com- mission is on call to act in an advisory and negotiatory capacity to the cit;’ or any of its citizens. called on yet. this “The is an example 2 trip in Ontario’s rugged brush country 700 miles to the north, has found his way to safety. * * * The assistant pastor of a Wind- sor Catholic parish, Father Kutney had been the object of both a land and air search. He became separated from a hunting companion when he at- tempted to take a short cut to a * STOCK AVERAGES | (Complied by the Associated Press). | 30 15 1 60 Som Rails Util. Stock«! Prev. ‘day :.... 33 1363 968 Week ago "aes 135.2 96.7 221 4 Month ago ....333.3 132.6 97.4 222.8! Year ago ..... 292.7 1250 85.5° 197 9| 1958 High .....3356 147.6 1026 235.8) 1959 Low 306.1 127.2 93.4 211.5) 1958 High 3120 136.5 95.7 214 3| 1958 Low ,. 2347 809 729 1566 Net change .... —7 4 +2 Noon today . 330.3 1367 970 2225) good hunting area Saturday. * * Father Kutney sand a guard. caretaker at a remote lumber, camp yesterday, after wading a river in near-freeezing tempera- tures. Retired Manufacturer Warren Farr Is Dead DETROIT (#— Warreg H. Farr, 70, retired president of Ainsworth Manufacturing Co., died yesterday at his home in suburban Grosse Pointe Farms. A native of, Flint, Farr had Baldwin Rubbe 93 Ross Gear Co : 23 «(23.6 Great Lakes Oi] & Chem. Co* 13 15 Howell Electric Motor Co * + iO 11 song cre Metal Prod. = *.. 10 104 The Prophet Co.* Beog HL hd en Menafecturing ie 19.4 106 Tolédo Edison Co. --.. 162 16.2 162 DETROIT STOCKS (C, J. Nephier Co.) Figures after decimal ifs are eighths Low — Allen Elect. & ean leeent tbo a Co 23.2 Postal Progress Exhibit in Detroit Oct. 14-17 WASHINGTON (# — A “Parade of Postal Progress” exhibit which has been on display here the last! several weeks will go to Detroit next week for its first showing ; Detroit 32 7% W. Lawrence, 2nd floor aed cok "oe a ou wees outside Washington, Postmaster |Priday ae 8 p.m. Sat. 8 to "10 ¢0 48 hours following surgery! The twins — named Jeanett ee of the Grosse Pointe Yacht |General Arthur E. Summerfield a.m. — Adv. — z the most iene period. ea pee ae Linn aa were Club announced yesterday. e delicate operation was per-|born face to face, a , The Detroit exhibition, free to aie teen, eKE m 128 W | formed by a team of 17. As ex-| joined at the abdomen. He retired as Ainsworth presi-|the public, will open Oct. 14 and Pike. —Adv. |pected, they found that the twins) The parents are Mr and Mrs dent five years ago. Prior to continue through Oct. 17 at the d a common breastplate, and James Stubblefield of Parma, last night. when we're not,” he - |joining the firm in 1951, he was Cadillac Square, It will be open a vice president of Budd Wheel Co daily from 9 a.m, to 9 p.m, 68 Area Students Vie for Merit Aare First National Bank Building on $1.95. shea List Scholarship Semifinalists Three Pontiac Central High School students and 65 others from this area have been named semi- finalists in the 1959-60 Merit Scholarships competition, it was announced today. Included among them are two students from Waterford Township High School. S. Windeler, 5601 Hatchery Rd., Drayton Plains were Waterford’s semifinalists, Sponsers who support the Merit Program include approximately 100 business and industrial or- ganizations, foundations, profes- sional societies and groups. Their purpose is to insure higher spring as the first step in the competition. The tests have been scored, leaving 10,000 of the highest ranking students in each state as semifinalists. Semifinalists from Pontiac Cerie tral are Sherry L. Fink, 9 Ottawa Dr.; Suzanne M. Koprince, 319 Iroquois Rd., and Valerie A. Vas- Some 550,000 Juniors and binder, 118 Spokane Dr. education for a large number of seniors peas American high x * * jable high school graduates and) 4) s National Merit | John W. Teeuwissen, 4269 Mon- provide hundreds of scholarships Scholarship Qualifying Test last |roe, Drayton Plains and Donald for them to be used at American icolleges and universities. 4-YEAR AWARDS A power hand saw valued at sxo parking meters and enforce the/Tunnel, was reported stolen from the home Tegulations on the meters, issuing Windsor beneath the Detroit River. of Kenneth C. Heisler, 457 Mont-|/Summonses for violations, The The firm cited rising expenses and ‘calm St., Tuesday, according to starting salary is $3,150 a year. fewer passengers. ‘Pontiac Police. Rummage Sale: First Picaky-| terian Church of ae ee |1669 W. Maple. Thursday, ‘8,9 am. to 8 pay Friday, oct "3 Se Siamese Twins Live ort Sgt, te ‘After 5-Hour Sur gery Rummage sale 1064 W. Huron. ‘ Friday 1-6. Saturday 9-6. —Adv. PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)—The mon blood vessels tied off. The Rummage & Bake Sale, Oct. oth Newly Separated Stubblefield Si-| breastplate, too, was severed. & 10th. 9 1S. 9 to 1. 2012 Cass Lk.|amese twins were alive today, | The skin of the twins was used \Rd. rob hans Club, Roosevelt, but a medical spokesman said it|to cover the wounds. | Schoo —Adv.!was ‘‘nip and tuck"’ for the three- x * * month-old girls. Surgeons also found what were, “They are getting along as well/in effect, large hernias. Surgery as can be expected,” said a to correct that condition could not spokesman for the University of! be performed for months, per- Oregon Medical School Hospital,/haps for years, doctors said. where the five-hour operation was; After being separated, the twins, performed Tuesday. each weighed about 8% pounds. Be ne Sb Sern Eke x * * When born last June 29 at Nyssa, ‘| The operation was termed ajOre., their total weight was 9 errr = sale, Business Moat: | success but doctors said the 24) pounds, 10 ounces. POO I Cwwwwwwww Rummage Sale: Women of St. Phillip’s Church, Rochester. Am- erican Legion Hall. Oct. 9th. ny —Adv. Rummage sale. Fri. Oct. 9th and Sat., Oct. 10th from 10 a.m. p.m. St. Patrick's Church, Union Electric light fixtures, bedroom Idaho. Stubblefield is a sugar beet Factory close out. Michigan) vet bridge. Idaho. Stubblefield is a sug 393 orchard Lk. Ave, The liver bridge — 2 2x4 incM/farmer. They have three other -—Adv. oblong — was severed, and com:| children. ovief Proposal (Feared by. West Plan for International Space Conference May Be Gimmick UNITED NATIONS, N.Y, (AP) — Western diplomats’ speculated today that a Soviet proposal for an international space conference may be a companion gimmick to Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s tot- al disarmament plan, As in the case of the Soviet Pre- mier’s sweeping call for a world without arms or armies, Western reaction was guarded. Delegates ROOM An Added Facility at the SAVOY MOTEL RESERVE IT TODAY FOR YOUR SALES MEETING Phone FE 5-9224 120 S. Telegraph Rd. ROOM RATES Single ..........$7.00 Double ...... .. .$9.00 Twin ..........$11.00 Kitchenettes. .. $12.00 aL eC eC CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC FREE TV \ rwwwewrewevwvwvwwewewe* x. 7